Handling the Dana Jacobsen scenario
Personally, I can’t see that firing Jacobson accomplishes much, besides showing that Christians can flex their muscles and get people fired just as well as any other group. “Bless those who persecute you,” Paul writes in Romans 12:14, “bless and do not curse.” As followers of Christ, we’d be better served by an ESPN-arranged meeting between Jacobson and a group of local pastors. She could apologize in person—something she’s already done in a prepared statement—and they could explain, with grace and understanding, why they accept her apology in the name of the one she denigrated.
But all that is less important, to my mind, than an issue raised indirectly by the Chicago Tribune’s Manya Brachear. She wrote yesterday on her blog, The Seeker: “Jacobson works for a sports channel, and sports rivalries can get heated. Should she have restrained herself? Or, when you’re up against a religious institution, is their chief sponsor fair game?”
That Jesus, or any religious figure, can be treated as part of the hype and hysteria surrounding a sports team—something like the Dallas Cowboys’ cheerleaders or Duke’s Cameron Crazies—indicates something unbalanced about our country’s sports obsession. This is an obsession I share, so I am speaking as much to myself here as to anyone else. In CT’s September 2007 cover story, “Why We Love Football,” Eric Miller pointed out that sports can become a channel of common grace, of community and fellowship and shared dreams. Yet he also noted the ever-present temptation of fans to worship the teams they follow.
John Calvin wrote that “the human heart is a factory of idols.” The last time I checked, taking the Lord’s name in vain was a sin, a breaking of the Third Commandment. But so, too, is having any other gods before the one true God, the subject of the First Commandment. The underlying issue in Jacobson’s curse wasn’t blasphemy, but idolatry. In that failing, she certainly isn’t alone.
Labels: Judgmentalism, Popular culture
1 Comments:
I am a Christian and I hear a lot of Christians say that it is acceptable to berate Christians. There are people that are going to dislike any group of people because of religion, race, sexual orientation, etc. But Christians are not a passive group and we stand up for ourselves pretty well. I do not hear people saying that Christians should get over it. As an African American, it is routine for me to hear that attacks against African Americans are overrated if they actually exists. I was reading up on MLK Day and saw where Jesse Helms (R-North Carolina) questioned whether King was important enough for a holiday. The Conservative hero Ronald Reagan also opposed the bill before signing it behind a veto proof majority. Let's take those same two people and have them oppose an important Christian ideal and see if they would be as revered as they are today. So, I would argue that insulting the African American community is much more acceptable than insulting Christians.
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