sports
Djokovic against the gods
Humans crave stories that create order, whether they’re about the supreme being in the universe or the greatest tennis player in history.
Good citizenship starts on the playground
Through play, children acquire fundamental skills for living cooperatively with others.
Marcus Rashford is keeping Christianity in the British limelight
To find religious activity among the nation’s young, look to Afro-Caribbean athletes.
State anti-trans bills aren’t just culture wars skirmishes
They’re acts of harm against living, breathing people.
The problem with specialization
Chess players and golfers might benefit from an early, singular focus. Most people don’t.
Should Christians hunt animals?
A book of essays offers an array of perspectives for and against.
by Tony Jones
How Muhammad Ali influenced public debate
Jonathan Eig's biography shows how the boxer took on opponents in multiple arenas.
The military doesn't own the American flag
The controversy over athletes kneeling during the national anthem reveals America's unholy trinity of patriotism, militarism, and sports.
Love and horses
In C.E. Morgan’s world, anything goes as long as it’s couched in the language of the equine.
by Win Bassett
The weave
The fifth-grade team had been coached since the Council of Trent by Mr. Torrens, whose idea of offense consisted of one utterly useless play.
by Brian Doyle
The other reason people are ignoring Jason Collins's faith
I keep seeing T. F. Charlton's Jason Collins post everywhere, and with good reason:
Tim Tebow is an example of how the public face of Christian athletes, like the public face of American Christianity in general, is overwhelmingly white—despite the fact that black Americans are the racial demographic most likely to identify as “very religious.” A recent Barna poll found that Tebow is by far the most well-known Christian professional athlete in the U.S. (with 83% awareness from the public), with retired white quarterback Kurt Warner a distant second at 59%. Robert Griffin III (RGIII), a black quarterback who’s had a far more successful season with the Redskins than Tebow’s had with the Jets, trailed at 34%.
It's a good point, but I don't think it's the whole story.
The NFL's predictable bad day
The NFL gambled on fans’ willingness to endure the replacement refs. It was wrong—a good development for whatever ethical margin a football fan might claim.
Unnecessary roughness: The moral hazards of football
A sociologist might see in football a society's need to control and ritualize violence. The church fathers, however, weren't much for sociologists.
A new playing field
Title IX revolutionized sports at the scholastic and collegiate levels. The results show up elsewhere as well.