Where do I leave off and does God begin? Or: Six Degrees of Tim Tebow
Sitting under a tarp during a rainstorm we three counselors were killing time while our campers were doing their own best to make the most of a down day. We were on a weeklong climbing trip and at our base camp so there were no indoor activities to fill the time or an alternate destination to slog to.
I think the conversation was within the context of preparing an evening talk for the campers that would connect with both climbing and faith. One of the counselors was apparently on the trip more for his climbing interest and ability than his faith in that he exhibited a basic indifference to spiritual things. In spite of growing up in the church and having attended a Christian private high school, he, at this point in his life, seemed to have neatly compartmentalized church and religion well removed from his vocation and other interests. I was somehow cast as the “most likely to be overzealous” of the three of us so when we started discussing how our faith impacts our climbing, he thought he had fully anticipated my response.
“What does your faith in Christ mean to you as a climber?”
“Well- it’ is just part of who I am and what I do, and if that helps me relate to God and to others in some way I otherwise would not be able to, that’s what it means.”
In “Chariots of Fire”, Eric Liddell says, “When I run, I feel his pleasure”. Well- he was a world-class runner and I was no world-class climber. If God was at work in my climbing, he didn’t seem to be giving it much attention. Frankly, I don’t think God’s focus is on making us great climbers, runners or successful in other ventures. I think his focus is on working in us to transform us to be more Christ-like. If being Christ-like leads us to be more diligent and good stewards of our abilities, then we can be confident that we are performing “as unto Christ”.
There was a movie a while back called “Touching the Void” about a climber who survived an incredible ordeal in which he fell into a crevasse and was presumed dead, but crawled to safety over several days. When asked whether he encountered God during his ordeal, he responded that he had no spiritual epiphany or yearning- there was nothing. I don’t think he had a need to lie, so I’ll presume that he was truthful. People do function without an awareness of God. I won’t assert that they are unaided by God since Christ is declared as the active sustainer of all creation.
As Christians, we acknowledge Christ’s involvement in our entire life. It betrays a theological naïveté to suggest that there is a point at which God takes a situation we are incapable of handling adequately on our own. I also have no doubt that there are individuals who do not acknowledge Christ who have accomplishments I will never achieve or have triumphed over some incredible predicament. The non-Christian has been the unwitting beneficiary of God’s general grace, the Christian can respond in gratitude to his maker and sustainer.
Maybe that’s what underlies the polarizing affect Tim Tebow has on the football world.
(I’ll admit the extent of my knowledge about Tebow consists of a few headlines and articles on Yahoo sports or in Sports Illustrated, and endless segments of Sports Center- And I have no idea how he interprets Gods role in his sports success)
He doesn’t have the right mechanics, he has colossal miscues coupled with a determination to drive for success with whatever skills he has- and he appears to respond both the scorn and praise with humility and recognition of God as his sufficiency. Tim may or may not develop into an NFL superstar- whether he does or not should not change his testifying to God’s work in his life, which includes who he is as a football player. The media and the church are much more comfortable giving the microphone to those who are at the top and will tolerate whatever one-liners they throw in about God’s involvement. Rather than an emerging story of success against all odds or a player personnel selection soon to be revealed as a wasted selection which has delayed Denver’s rebuilding, Tim’s story is about not being ”ashamed of the gospel”- or thinking that God is needs us to be at the top to establish his own credibility.
Somehow I managed to start out climbing and end up talking about a football player, skipping twenty-five years in the transition. I hope I kept it connected.
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