THE GOLD MEDALISTS and the cheering crowds have departed from
Olympic London, but the 2012 games were such an outstanding success
that the focus has shifted to their legacy. The politically correct
consensus says that the L-word should be applied to tangible
projects such as expanding sports coaching in schools; building
more velodromes and rowing lakes; or raising extra funds for
training athletes to win more medals at the 2016 games in Rio de
Janeiro.
These are worthy objectives but too narrow. Thinking out of the
box toward the world that is not seen, there are deeper questions
to be asked: Is there a spiritual legacy from the Olympics? What
can the church learn from the games? Are there connections to be
made between sporting inspiration and religious inspiration?
The athletic world and the spiritual world have never been far
apart. The movie Chariots of Fire is a contemporary
reminder of the link. Twenty centuries earlier, the New Testament
frequently compared athletic contests to growth in the life of
Christ. Try these words from St. Paul:
Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in
the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that
will not last but we do it to get a crown that will last for ever.
(Corinthians 9:24)
Writing in a culture that prized both spiritual virtue and
physical athleticism, St. Paul used training as an image for
Christian development. The Greek word he used in this context for
“to train” is gymnazo, from which comes
gymnasium. So this metaphor used by the earliest Christian
writers may have a message for our modern world: Train for
virtue.
Augustine of Hippo defined a virtue as a good habit consonant
with our nature. In sport and the spiritual life, good habits are
acquired by repetition and by discipline. A disciple must be a
disciplined person.
The strongest Olympic athletes, like the strongest Christians,
commit themselves to a set of rules that point to life at its best.
They cooperate in a community, often with loving values that are
unselfish and supportive of their neighbors. Two examples of this
were striking among the 2012 gold medalists.
The British superhero of the games was Mo Farah, who won both
the 10,000 and 5,000 meter races. After he crossed the line to take
gold in the 10,000 meters, his actions spoke volumes. First he
embraced Galen Rupp of the USA, his training partner, who came a
close second. Then Farah went down on his knees to do
sujud, the Muslim genuflection which is accompanied by the
prayer “Glory to God, the Most High.” Then he kissed his wife and
daughter. Only afterward did he acknowledge the cheering of the
crowd. He had made it clear that his priorities were his God, his
family, and his fellow athlete.
Some of the same symbolism was shown by the “fastest man on
earth,” Usain Bolt. Before he bent himself into the starting blocks
for the 100 meters, 200 meters, and relay (he won gold medals in
all three) he made the sign of the Cross. After his victories he
was kindly solicitous toward the two other Jamaican runners, who
came second and third to him in the big races. The bonds between
these fiercely competitive athletes had evidently been welded
together in their island community and in life at their shared
training camp. Their closeness suggested that they were mindful of
the commandment to “love thy neighbor.”
One of the common themes running through the life stories of
Olympic athletes is that they are transformed by their dedication
to sporting excellence. At one level, this transformation is simply
a matter of raising talented athletes into the league of medalists
and champions. But at another level, the transformation can
penetrate to an individual’s character and soul. One gold
medal–winning British boxer was able to take part in the games only
because two years earlier a judge had given him a second chance and
spared him from a jail sentence. His sport had turned his life
around.
The Church is in the transformation business, too, but the
language it uses to describe this process is often banal in
comparison with the language of Olympic sport. The verbs are
significant here. Christians speak of “attending” church. The
problem is that “attending” is a static, passive activity. If you
“attend” something, you just go to be there, not to be active or to
participate, or to do something that is exciting in its commitment.
We “attend” meetings, interviews, lectures, court hearings, and
services. No athlete would speak of “attending” the Olympics. They
go to run, to win, to rejoice in victory, and they train
intensively to prepare. By contrast, the Church has an image of
being static. It is somewhere you go to sit, stand, sing, listen,
and that’s about it. Somewhere along the line our spiritual leaders
seem to have forgotten what St. Paul did not forget in his
Epistles: Spiritual life is a demanding race with a prize of
everlasting joy.
THE TRANSCENDING SPIRIT of the 2012 games was joy. We British
have a reputation for being rather inhibited, standoffish,
self-deprecating, and dour. We take pride in our stiff upper lips.
Hardly ever do we as a nation really let ourselves go with pure
unadulterated joy. But that is what happened at the Olympics.
Of course, it helped that we won many more medals than expected
and came third in the league table behind the U.S. and China. But
what we most enjoyed was being a successful host nation.
Hospitality—another important spiritual discipline—is a
mega-professional undertaking at the Olympics, involving venues,
transport, logistics, administration, and above all 80,000 cheerful
volunteers who worked amazingly hard to keep the show on the road.
They were the face of a nation of good neighbors.
At one point in the games, I went to the International Olympic
Committee headquarters hotel, the Park Lane Hilton, to have
breakfast with Henry Kissinger. He, although not naturally built
for an Olympic role, is a high-ranking honorary official of the IOC
to whom the other committee members come to pay homage. It was only
there, at his breakfast table, when I heard these great panjandrums
from all corners of the world showering compliments on the
excellence of the London Games, that I grasped quite how
successfully they had been run.
The Church can learn so much from the Olympics. God gave the
athletes their bodies and the IOC organizers their talents; but
what made it all work was the training, the commitment, the
disciplined spirit, and the goal of joy. Spiritual victories are
eternal and far outweigh temporal athletic successes. But both must
be worked for on earth. So let one learn from the other, starting
with the legacy of these amazing London Games.