Football and Religion
Summary: A commentary on opposition to Scripture.
Comment / Review
It was nearly thirty years ago, so I
cannot remember the details accurately but the local primary school
P&C meeting ran something along the following lines.
“There
is no agreement amongst the community as to which football code to
follow. Some want Soccer others League or Union and still others want
Aussie Rules. So we, the staff, have decided that the school will not
play any football this winter.”
“But all the boys like League, surely we can have one team for them.”
“Some of the parents think it’s too rough and are worried about injuries.”
“What about we change to soccer?”
“There are injuries in soccer too.”
“But this school has always played League and nobody was injured last year.”
“Well,
we have a couple of families who have moved from Victoria and they want
to have Aussie Rules, and we can’t provide everything.”
“So why not provide for the majority and keep going like we always have?”
“That
wouldn’t be fair to the ones who want Aussie Rules. So it is better to
have no football at all. That is fair for everybody.”
“It’s not fair, it’s stupid!”
“That’s the only way we can treat everybody the same. We don’t have any football - so nobody misses out.”
“You mean everybody misses out! My boys and their mates will miss having football for sport. They’re all mad keen on footie.”
“Studies
have shown that in sporting development the girls are the same as boys
in primary school and so we have to offer sports that both boys and
girls can participate in together.”
“I don’t want my girl playing football.”
“No, we won’t be offering it, so your girl won’t have to.”
“But
my boys want to play footie. They’ll be so disappointed. They enjoyed
it last year. Do we have to integrate the sports? Can’t the boys have
football and the girls play something else, they like?”
“Girls can play football just as well as boys.”
“I don’t believe that, but if it is true then why not have football for all who want to play?”
“Football
is not really suitable for children. It is too violent and it
encourages violence in the playground. The staff think there are more
suitable games for boys and girls to play together.”
“You mean the staff do not like football. How many of them have ever played it?”
“That’s
an irrelevance. The staff are all professional teachers and will coach
whatever sport is considered appropriate for the age and development of
the children.”
“Has this decision got anything to do with the
last male staff member leaving? Now that Mr X has left the school, does
that mean there are no men left to coach the boys in footie?”
“No,
it has nothing to do with that at all! Our staff are all professional
educationalists and could coach football if needed, but they feel that
we have to reduce the level of violence in the playground and teach the
children how to play quieter, less anti-social games together.”
“You mean games for girls.”
“Not just for the girls, the boys can be taught to enjoy them, also.”
“So there is no place for what boys like in school?”
“No,
that’s not true. Studies have shown that boys and girls can have the
same interests, if the environment in which they are raised encourages
cooperation and removes anti-social behaviour fed by competitiveness
and physical violence. Furthermore, there are some boys who are very
good students but do not like football. They feel alienated and left
out by the social status of football in the playground. School is an
educational institution and it is a shame when some of the best
scholars feel they have no place in the school.”
“You just don’t like football!”
“No,
it’s just that there is no agreement on which football the community
wants, and we cannot offer them all, so it is better to have none.”
“When did you last go to a footie game?”
“My
personal preference has nothing to do with it. It is purely a
professional educational issue. Football has no real place in an
educational institution.”
Strangely, it was
almost the same argument that I was experiencing about the place of
religion in the university, where as a chaplain I saw Christians and
Christianity being continually marginalised.
“There are too
many religions, and so nobody can be catered for lest others are
disadvantaged.” For many, religion was deemed to be anti-social and
anti-feminist, the staff had no competence in it, people in powerful
positions did not like it, and felt that it was not what a university
is about - so “better to have none than any”. Of course this had
nothing to do with personal opinions or private prejudices! It also
flew in the face of students’ widespread interest in religion and the
place of religion in history, literature, music, culture and society.
It
is much the same today in the media, politics and public debate and
wherever secularists are given sufficient power to censor others’
opinions in a “free and open society”.
Contributor: Phillip Jensen. Updated 11-Feb-2010 09:31 AM.
Website: http://www.cathedral.sydney.anglican.asn.au/pages/posts/football-and-religion299.php.
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