Recently
in the news, a long-standing sports champion admitted to taking performance-enhancing drugs for years in order to win his races. I’m not going to name the
man, because this kind of cheating is not new. He is not the first one who has done such a
thing, even knowing the rules and the possible consequences. And because, if
the confession is heart-felt—which only God and the man know for sure—he may
have a second chance, which we all want when we make a mistake.
If
I am to believe what I’ve heard and read on the news, the man has made many
enemies and sued countless people in order to keep his secret. It had become a
complicated affair.
This kind of cheating has happened,
sadly, at national and international sports events, including the Olympics. It
was so important to win, in fact, that these competitors flouted the
possibility that their cheating would be found out. And when it happens, it’s
world news. Fortunately, there are still many athletes who play by the rules and can be proud of their performance.
If the person confessing falls hard, so
do those who have followed him, or looked up to him. After the disappointment,
people ask, “Why would he do that?” The followers have become the judges too.
Thou shalt not’s fly in the cheater’s face for he has done wrong and should
have known better.
How much harder it must be for a public
figure whose name and actions are practically a household name, when wrongful
actions and lies become public knowledge.
And yet, who of us, privy to that news, are
free of temptation ourselves? Our actions may be less public, but it
doesn’t mean that no one is watching. Instead, it will be our children and
those who look up to us.
Back to the fallen sports hero. The talk show
host, upon hearing the confession, probes deeper and asks hard questions. Yet,
at the end she declares that the man can be a hero again.
How could she say that? Certainly the
man must pay some sort of penalty. Would the sports body or International
Olympic Committee give this errant competitor the same punishment as his
teammates, or more, since this man was the leader? The fallen hero has said, on
national television, no less, that his punishment was life, while others got
off with less.
A reporter accused,
saying this confession was planned; he questioned the sincerity of the man.
Then I wonder if the man
was tired of living the lies, and I ask myself, does he truly want forgiveness.
I’ll borrow an analogy that
I’ve never forgotten, from our pastor, Rev. James Bindernagel in a sermon some
years ago. Imagine putting all your wrongful actions into a bag, rowing out
into a deep lake and dropping the sack overboard, letting it go entirely. It
would be impossible to gather the contents again. They are gone for good.
What if that judge and
jury were God himself, offering to take on our heavy load of sin? It’s already
been done for us in that bag dropped to the bottom of the deep lake. It’s like
that when we ask God to forgive our sin. In Acts 13:38 of Scriptures,
we read, “Therefore, my friends, I want you to know that through Jesus the
forgiveness of sins is proclaimed to you.”
Just as Jesus forgave countless people of
their sins when they asked, this man, too, has a chance, if he asks God with a
contrite heart, even as he bears the punishment—including legal action. Perhaps then he can be a hero again.
While we read and hear in
the news of such fiascos, ultimately, we are still responsible for our own
actions. I’m glad of forgiveness. That’s some of the best news going. Better
than anything else I can think of.
Carolyn Wilker
Author of Once
Upon a Sandbox
4 comments:
Forgiveness and hope. I'm so glad God doesn't leave us in our messes. Thanks for the bag-in-the-deep-water illustration.
You're welcome, Janet. Every so often I remember that analogy and thought this was a perfect way to share it and honour the person who offered it. Thanks for stopping by and commenting.
Carolyn, thank you for your sensitive treatment of the topic and also the human subject in view.
Ah, yes, the idea of our sins and iniquities being buried in the sea is a beautiful biblical metaphor. For example: Micah 7:19 "You will again have compassion on us; you will tread our sins underfoot and hurl all our iniquities into the depths of the sea" (NIV). You may be aware already, that Corrie Ten Boom is often quoted as saying that when God forgave her, he buried her sins in the deepest sea and posted a sign saying: "No Fishing!"
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Thanks, Peter. I hadn't remembered Corrie's words since it's been quite awhile ago that I read any of her books. Thanks for your kind comments, as always, Peter.
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