What is This?
This guide offers you a sampler lens through which to view one of the biggest sporting events in the world and to stimulate prayer as you watch.
The Need
To love God is the greatest commandment. Too often we love the blessings of God more than God Himself. A central theme in the Bible revolves around the human propensity to worship created things rather than the Creator.
We desperately need instruction and reminders to flip that narrative. What would it look like to enjoy God’s blessings—like games and sports—in a way that draws our attention back to Him? This guide explores a path toward experiencing God in the midst of watching a game.
The Path
Imagine you see the Grand Canyon for the first time. Your immediate thought might be: “This is amazing!”
As a Christian, the view of the Grand Canyon and all of its majesty gives us an opportunity to take that thought further: “God, you are incredible for creating this! Thank you!” In this case, the Grand Canyon triggers a thought in the mind of the Christian that brings him back to God.
Apart from God, we pursue experiences and goals in a quest for lasting satisfaction, enjoy them for what they produce when we acquire them, but then must return to the same questions that drove us toward the experience in the first place: “Can I find something that really lasts? Is there any bigger purpose to these experiences? Why do I still feel a sense of emptiness?”
Cultural route for happiness
You ---→ Event ---→ Happiness
But God offers a better way. In Christ, we can pursue experiences that He creates for us and enjoy them as good gifts from His hand. In the midst of the experience, we can deepen our relationship with Him through prayer, giving perspective and ultimately producing a fuller satisfaction that transcends temporary experience. With our life anchored in Christ, the experience becomes an accessory to our relationship with Him, not a final goal in itself.
Christian’s route for happiness
You ---→ Event ---→Turn to God ---→ Deepen Relationship--→Happiness
This guide is meant to do something similar. As you watch the Super Bowl, we want to draw your attention to a few elements of the game so that when you see them, you are triggered to think of and pray to God.
Our culture—frequently even the Christian culture—has tried to separate God and sport.
It’s time to equip ourselves to engage the game differently by being properly conscious of the God who oversees all things. It’s time to flip the cultural script.
The City
San Francisco, CA. An interesting statistic: less than 6% of San Franciscans attend church.
Key Quote: “San Francisco is a beautiful place to live and work. Yet, the city is also a broken place filled with busy people seeking fulfillment and finding identity in everything except the God who created them. As we all do, San Franciscans need Jesus.”
Action Point: When the blimp gives a city-wide shot after commercial, pray for the people of San Francisco. Pray that God would use His local church to spread the gospel.
The Week
In the days leading up to the game and even during the game itself, reporters and analysts will broadcast on location in San Francisco. Tens of thousands of additional people will descend on the city, bringing with them an estimated $100-300 million dollars to spend. Alongside the influx of men and money, a global evil makes its way to the host city every year, one that most people hardly associate with sporting events.
Human Trafficking. This is not a San Francisco problem, it is a world problem.
Human trafficking is when someone is taken away from their home, family, or community and transported to another city or country, many times under a false promise of employment or a better life.
Victims are stripped of their identity, then forced to work against their will with no hope or way to return home. Many times they are sold directly into the sex-slave industry.
Super Bowl weekend means thousands of men with money coming into the city to have a good time and to throw off restraint, and thus the host city historically becomes a key trafficking venue. Texas Attorney General Greg Abbot called the Super Bowl "the single largest human trafficking incident in the United States."
Action Point: When you watch analysts and reporters on location, pray for the victims who are in the sex slave trade industry and who rely on law enforcement to escape. Pray that law enforcement would act swiftly and effectively. Further Learning: To learn more about the human trafficking industry and what you can do to help, go to: enditmovement.com
The Breakfast
Since 1988, Athletes in Action has hosted an NFL sanctioned Super Bowl Breakfast on Saturday morning of Super Bowl weekend.
The breakfast is a platform to celebrate the Bart Starr Award winner. The award is given annually to honor an NFL player who best exemplifies outstanding character and leadership in the home, on the field and in the community. This year’s honoree is Carolina Panthers linebacker Thomas Davis.
Action Point: Pray for Thomas Davis and all previous award winners who undoubtedly face even more temptation to do wrong after being honored for doing so much right. Pray also for the sold-out crowd of 1600, many of whom will get to hear the gospel message for the first time in their lives.
The Teams
Unfortunately, you will not have an impact on who wins or loses the Super Bowl. You can, however, have an impact on the players' lives through prayer.
Action Point: Click on the team roster and choose a few guys to pray for. Know that many of these men on both teams are already actively involved in attending chapel and discipleship with Athletes in Action and staff from other ministries.
The Refs
The head referee for the Super Bowl is Clete Blakemen. While he recently made headlines for the "coin flip incident," he has slowly risen up the ranks of qualified officials for his savvy ability to lead his crew.
If you do any research on Clete Blakemen, you will see that when he is not a referee, he works as an attorney at Carlson and Burnett in Nebraska. This is a smart, educated man.
Do you know how many rules an official needs to know? Check out the rulebook.
On top of knowing all of that, they also have to make multiple decisions every single play on whether to throw the flag or hold it. And they do all of this while dressed like a zebra with 110 million people watching! As Christians, we need to consciously give them grace, in spite of the emotions that come with watching.
Action Point: When the ref inevitably makes a bad call, relax. Your friends notice your actions when things don’t go your way. Your family—your kids!—notices too. Be a model of grace for those around you and cut the refs some slack.
The Behavior
Jesus says in Matthew 5:16, “In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven.”
Jesus commands us to do good works, but also, when we see good works, to glorify God. As a fan, your biblical mandate when you see someone act admirably on the field is to give glory to God! Let’s make this really practical.
One attribute that is so prevalent in sports culture is pride. Pride is essentially self-worship. Pride is refusing to believe and act in a way that shows God is the provider and sustainer of everything in your life.
“What do you have that you did not receive? And if you did receive it, why do you boast as though you did not?” (1 Corinthians 4:7). That is why we give God the glory—He alone deserves it.
The key word to focus in on for the Super Bowl is humility. Humility sits on the opposite end of the spectrum from pride.
Action Point: Whenever you see someone display an act of humility, give glory to God. Here are some actions to look for:
- Helping an opponent get up from the ground
- Tossing the ball to the ref
- Giving credit to a teammate after a successful play
- Not yelling at the ref after a questionable call (or no call)
- Not drawing attention to oneself after a big play is made
- Rallying around a teammate after he makes a mistake
- “God, thank you that the world just saw that act of humility.”
- “God, your ways are better than the world’s”
- “God, thank you that Jesus was the ultimate example of humility.”
The TV Event
The season finale of "The Walking Dead" saw 15.7 million viewers, making it the most watched episode of a television show ever. By comparison, the last few Super Bowls corralled viewing audiences of over 100 million. The World Cup and the Olympics have seen 900 million.
According to the BBC, Sunday's match between India and Pakistan in the ICC Cricket World Cup drew an excess of 1 billion television viewers—which would be the first time a sporting event has cracked the 10-digit mark.
Sport is a universal language unlike any other. As you are watching the game on Sunday, there will be over 110 million people around the world watching it with you.
Action Point: As a Christian, we can actively pray that God uses the game to reveal a glimpse of Himself through the game and its theatrics. For instance, if there is an unusual act of sportsmanship that causes you to think, “Why would they have done that?” a portion of those 110 million people will be asking the same question.
In that moment and others like it, pray that curious people would have an opportunity to meet a Christ-follower who can explain God’s transforming grace clearly and succinctly. Like the players, pray that a longing gets created in people post-event for something more substantive, for an answer to the question, “Is that all there is?”
The Commercials
For a 30 second commercial this year, advertisers will need to fork over $5 million. They would not pay that much money to advertise their product if they didn’t think it would be worth the money. What makes it worth it for them?
The consumer’s discontentment with life. Yes, you and me. Advertisers convince us that our lives would be so much better if we had their product. Not only do we buy into it, we buy it. As a Christian, our contentment should come not from things (or who wins a football game), but from walking with Christ.
Action Point: When the game goes to commercial consider your own vulnerability to the tempting nature of “stuff.” Confess your own idolatry regarding the mindset “If I only had ____, then my life would be better,” and ask Jesus to be your contentment.
The Vince Lombardi Trophy
Our society celebrates the championship as the finish line. The Super Bowl trophy is in honor of a man who had this to say:
“After all the cheers have died down and the stadium is empty, after the headlines have been written, and after you are back in the quiet of your room and the championship ring has been placed on the dresser and after all the pomp and fanfare have faded, the enduring thing that is left is the dedication to doing with our lives the very best we can to make the world a better place in which to live.”
When the game ends and the trophy is handed out, know as a fan that the experience of joy that players feel will not last long. At some point they will ask the question: “What next?”
Tom Brady famously said in a CBS interview a few years back: “Why do I have three Super Bowl rings, and still think there's something greater out there for me? I mean, maybe a lot of people would say, "Hey man, this is what is." I reached my goal, my dream, my life. Me, I think: God, it's gotta be more than this. I mean this can't be what it's all cracked up to be.”
Action Point: Pray for the winners of the Super Bowl. The joy will not last long and when it wears off, they are going to wonder why it did not satisfy. This is prime time for God to enter in as the ultimate satisfier of our souls.
Pray that the discontentedness that inevitably follows reaching a goal would spur a desire to resolve “something missing in my life” and that God would make Himself known at the opportune time. Winning is fun. Spending eternity with God is better.