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THE WINNER’S CIRCLE IN ATHENS
#2
NO GIRLS ALLOWED!
Have you ever had one of those terrifying dreams where
you’re suddenly IN something like an athletic situation WAY beyond what
you’re capable of? There’s nine other basketball players on the floor
. . . and . . . YOU. And of course, five of the nine have jerseys that
say “Lakers” on them. Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant are right there
next to you — and they’re HUGE! Huge and quick! And on play after desperate
play, they just blow right past you. Slam dunks and rim-rattlers . . .
and it’s all your fault. You’re supposed to be defending against them,
and you’re just not able to do it. You wake up from your nightmare in
a cold sweat.
This week and next as we watch the Olympic Games coming from Athens, maybe
you have a bit of that same feeling. These people are SO FAR ahead of
you and me. Their physical talents, their agility, the unbelievable endurance,
the skill . . . here are 11,000 people who really belong in a different
universe. We turn off our TV sets after watching NBC all evening, and
go outside and try to run one mile — and it takes eleven minutes.
And yet we find in the story of THESE Olympics a spiritual truth that
gives you and me great hope. The great achievements of others, the heroic
gold medals others are winning for God . . . they don’t have to make us
discouraged. Here’s why. Friend, in the race toward God’s Kingdom, there’s
room for you to win.
That may sound kind of trite, but let me illustrate.
A cover article in Newsweek back in 1996 was entitled “Year of the Women:
Why Female Athletes Are Our Best Hope for Olympic Gold.” Sportswriter
Frank Deford then told the story of a number of U.S. female athletes who
had a real shot at gold medals down in Atlanta, Georgia. And some of the
statistics were very interesting.
In the first modern Olympic Games, Athens 1896, women were completely
barred from participating. Golfer Margaret Abbott was the first American
woman to win a gold medal, in the year 1900 in Paris. It wasn’t until
1948, London, that high jumper Alice Coachman became the first African-American
woman to win a gold. As recently as 1976, just 20 years ago in Montreal,
the male-female breakdown on the U.S. team was six to one. Women were
still almost a rarity. But by the time they got to Atlanta, just four
years ago, the ratio stood at 4-3, almost 50-50, with close to 300 females
wearing star-and-striped sweats for the 1996 games. Overall, women made
up 37% of the worldwide field of participants that year.
What does that mean? Very simply, the door’s been thrown open; a whole
new segment of society which didn’t used to even get onto the playing
field can now participate AND win! These six words tell it all: “All can
play, all can win.” In fact, as Deford’s title indicates, we might get
our best performances from the better half. We’ll see how the gold medals
get distributed this week and next. Plenty has changed from the early
days of the OLYMPEAN Games where women weren’t even allowed in as spectators,
and where the mother of Pisidorus was almost thrown off a large rock to
her death as punishment after slipping into the stadium to see her son
win. Being born female no longer means that you don’t have a shot at a
gold medal.
I like how in the Bible, which certainly comes to us from rigidly male-dominated
cultures, God allows this principle to come shining through. So many times
it was the WOMEN and even the young girls, who played pivotal roles. Miriam.
Queen Esther. Rahab. Mary. The little slave girl — we don’t even know
her name — who stepped forward and witnessed to the power of her God before
Naaman, commander of the army of the king of Aram.
Sometimes we look at ourselves in the mirror and we see severe handicaps.
It’s not our fault; it’s something we were born with, but we feel disqualified.
“Well, that’s it,” we shrug. “I can’t compete.” But you know, the annals
of history and especially the Olympic Games are bursting to overflowing
with the stories of people who overcame huge odds to go on and win gold
prizes.
Have you ever heard of Rafer Johnson? Maybe you saw him as a returning
Olympic hero carry the torch on its final leg during the 1984 Games here
in Los Angeles. He took home the decathlon gold medal in the 1960 Olympics
in Rome with a new record of 8,392 points in the grueling ten-event, two-day
competition.
But did you know that Rafer, as a 12-year-old kid, caught his left foot
in a cannery conveyor belt? He had to have stitches and face weeks on
crutches. In 1956, going for his first Olympic gold medal in Melbourne,
he suffered a knee injury and then torn stomach muscles. In ‘59 more leg
trouble, and then serious back trouble due to a head-on auto collision
while traveling to his sister’s high school graduation. As late as February,
1960, just a few short months before the games in Rome, he couldn’t even
JOG. How in the world was he going to participate — and win — the 100
meter, long jump, shot put, high jump, 400 meter, 110-meter hurdles, discus,
pole vault, javelin, and the grueling 1500-meter run? Ten impossible events,
especially in his condition. But friend, he did it. He trained and he
worked and he went to Rome for the Olympic Games. It came down to the
last event, his weakest one — the 1500-meter race. He had a 67-point lead
over his nearest competitor, fellow UCLA student Chuan Kwang Yang of Taiwan.
All he had to do was stay within ten seconds of Yang’s finishing time
in this last race, and the gold medal would be his. Rafer was exhausted,
but he glued himself to the other athlete, and followed him the whole
way. “He clung to him with leechlike persistency,” said one sportswriter,
and finished just ONE second back, giving him the gold medal. Despite
all the strikes against him, including the lingering racial prejudices
that even swirl around here in 2000, Rafer Johnson triumphed. He didn’t
let hardships and handicaps keep him from participating.
Listen, friend, whatever shortcomings you think keep you from being a
player in God’s Olympic Games — God can help you gain victories despite
them. There may be hurdles in your way, just like we see on the track
night after night in Sydney. You may think the high bar’s set far beyond
where you can REACH, let alone JUMP. But Olympic stories AND BIBLE stories
give us confidence to know that God has a plan to give you a gold medal.
I want to return to our earlier illustration about how so many women are
competing in the Olympic Games today. Why the recent surge in female participation?
Why did the floodgates finally open, and give us the opportunity to thrill
to the Jackie Joyner-Kersees of the world? What happened?
At least here in the United States, many people point to the year 1972
when President Richard Nixon signed into law Title IX, legislation that
mandated full equality for women’s school athletics. Up until that time,
even though half of all boys participated officially in school sports,
only 1 out of 27 girls did so. But after Title IX, in just 24 short years,
that number has skyrocketed; today a THIRD of all American girls take
part in school sports, and now a huge contingent of them is in Atlanta
competing for Olympic medals.
Now, besides the gender balancing at the Olympic Games, we can notice
other benefits for the girls who take part in sports. Those who do — also
do better in academics, they don’t drop out of school, they don’t do drugs,
and they don’t get pregnant.
But the point I want to make is this: that 1972 decision, Title IX, was
an OFFICIAL opening of the door to women. “The club is now OFFICIALLY
opened,” it said. “Women are welcome.” And the signing of that statement
into law reaped huge benefits.
Friend, in the Christian church we need to deliberately and prayerfully
and OFFICIALLY make the same proclamation. WHOEVER you are and WHATEVER
you are — you can be a participant for God. Regardless of gender. Regardless
of handicaps. Never mind where you were born or how you were raised. The
community of believers needs to be avidly and enthusiastically and deliberately
and officially OPEN . . . so that all can compete.
It gives me a thrill when I go to a church or a religious rally or a camp
meeting appointment — and when I look on the platform, it’s a mosaic of
humanity. Men AND women. Teenagers. I LOVE it when kids are brought up
onto the stage or platform to sing or share their testimony or tell about
their mission trip. But somebody’s got to think to invite them.
Back in 1996, I went over to the Philippines for a Christian adventure
called Target 50,000. Fifty thousand people won to Christ in one huge
nationwide campaign! And it was largely because of KIDS that the whole
thing worked! I mean it! The teenagers and even the children were swarming
everywhere, giving Bible studies, organizing the meetings, handling transportation
details, picking up the offerings. The church over there has flung open
the doors with their own heavenly-mandated version of Title IX. “Everybody’s
welcome,” they proclaim through their loudspeakers. “These Olympics are
OPEN!”
There’s no denying we have a ways to go, friend. But that gives me a big-screen
picture of what God wants us to do.
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