When Manchester City
had won the Premier League I sent congratulations to my girl friend in
Aberystwyth. Don’t worry she is in her eighties! She is a fan but not a
fanatical one. When I saw the scenes of the euphoria and adulation, I was
beginning to wonder what it was all about. For some fans their players become
not just heroes but idols.
Football becomes their religion and their
players become their gods. Just imagine all the money that is spent on going to
watch game after game. Could some of it not be spent on some more useful causes?
I was reminded of all this when I read the loving reflection by Sr Melannie Svoboda, S.N.D. in Living Faith for May 19th. She is reflecting on Paul’s and Barnabas’ visit to Lystra. They have cured a man who had been lame from birth. Immediately the people who saw it treated them as gods coming down from heaven in human form. The missionaries tried desperately to convince them that it was not them but Jesus who procured the miracle, saying that they themselves were mere mortals as they were.
I was reminded of all this when I read the loving reflection by Sr Melannie Svoboda, S.N.D. in Living Faith for May 19th. She is reflecting on Paul’s and Barnabas’ visit to Lystra. They have cured a man who had been lame from birth. Immediately the people who saw it treated them as gods coming down from heaven in human form. The missionaries tried desperately to convince them that it was not them but Jesus who procured the miracle, saying that they themselves were mere mortals as they were.
Fr Piet Wijngaard, O.Carm.
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