Football under the Aspect of Eternity

Football under the Aspect of Eternity November 23, 2007

This morning, as I write this, I am watching the recording we made of the Packer game before the power went out. When I called my brother last night, he let slip that the Packers won, and today’s paper told me that this victory over Detroit was another career highlight for Brett Favre, who completed 20 straight passes, setting a team record, and tying his career record with seven 300-yard games in a season.

As I watch this game, knowing how it will end, Favre’s first quarter fumble didn’t bother me. Nor did the way Detroit dominated the first quarter. I am enjoying it in a different way, free of anxiety.

This is the way life should be for Christians. We know how all of this ends. We have a happy ending ahead of us. We should not be paralyzed with worry or defeated by our troubles. From the aspect of eternity, our problems are not going to mean all that much.

True, this is not the best way to view football, since a big part of the fun is the suspense, tension, and agonizing, all of which accentuate the hope, the relief, and the joy that we also experience in the game as it unfolds in time. And this too speaks to us of life and why we go through what we do.

"For the first 250 or so years of its existence, the Church was a minority ..."

Conservatives Conserving a Liberal Status Quo
"So essentially you don't believe the First (or Second, etc.) Amendment should have applicability to ..."

Conservatives Conserving a Liberal Status Quo
"Setting aside the 14th Amendment, I don't see a conservative (as I defined it above) ..."

Conservatives Conserving a Liberal Status Quo
"Somehow you omitted the 2.5 wave conservatives who opposed the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments ..."

Conservatives Conserving a Liberal Status Quo

Browse Our Archives