ESPN Columnist Reilly Condemns Nebraska Asst. Coach Brown as Un-Christlike for Affirming Biblical Views on Homosexuality
Rick Reilly's wide world of sports, apparently, has little use for conservative evangelical Christians and their convictions. Last year he mocked a teenage Christian wrestler who defaulted rather than wrestle a girl. Now the ESPN columnist has set his sights on Nebraska assistant football coach Ron Brown, who has been politically active in local government debates about expanding anti-discrimination laws to include sexual orientation. [Related item: ESPN Columnist Agitates for Coach's Firing for Proclaiming His Religious Beliefs]
"Like to meet one of the doomed sinners who has Ron Brown so inflamed?" Reilly asked rhetorically before introducing readers to one Brett Major who "thanks to Ron Brown himself" became a Christian:
Story Continues Below Ad ↓"He came and spoke to a youth group I was in," says Major, now 24. "I think I was 11. He was such a dynamic speaker. And he was a Nebraska football coach. We idolized anybody that had anything to do with Nebraska football. I just sat there and went, 'Wow. He's cool and he's Nebraska football and he believes in God.' And that's all it took for me."
At the frenzied peak of his speech, peppered with Huskers football stories, Brown called any listeners who were ready to devote their lives to Christ to come stand with him and join his "team." Brett Major came forward. Ron Brown took him by the hand.
"That was a milestone for me," Major says. "I decided I wanted to live a Christian life from that moment on."
And now Coach Brown says he's going to hell.
"I couldn't care less," says Major, who is getting his master's in psychology at Wake Forest. "I know God doesn't make a mistake. He didn't put me on this earth to be banished to hell."
It's a cute convention upon which Reilly is building his column: pitting a young man who became a Christian, and an outwardly devout one at that, thanks in no small part to Brown. Of course, Reilly is hardly a theologian or Bible expert, so he found a liberal Christian to bolster his argument, all in service of damning Brown as a hypocrite who is "living a lie" and will one day answer to an angry Jesus Christ (emphasis mine):
There are millions of Christians who think Brown is wrong on homosexuals. "The Bible gives no account of Jesus encountering homosexuals," says Pastor Craig Finnestad of the Water's Edge Methodist Church in Omaha. "Jesus loved everybody and his love for others didn't depend on their behavior or beliefs."
The Omaha anti-discrimination law passed, despite Brown's fiery warnings, and now Lincoln is considering a similar law. Public debate begins Monday. Brown has not said if he will be there to campaign against it, but he has the right. Apparently, he can spew whatever bigoted, hateful, un-Christian message he wants, without risk of losing his job.
"It reflects so poorly on the state and the team I love," Major says. "Nebraska is known for respect for everybody. Even if we get beat in Lincoln, we stand up and clap for the other team. I'm proud of that. Ron Brown is not only going against what his own university wants, he's going against our unwritten law of respect for all."
No, Ron Brown shouldn't be fired. He should quit. He works for a school that welcomes homosexuals as equals. Which means he's being paid by people who don't share his moral values. He's living a lie. He should retire from football and campaign full-time for our right to fire each other purely for being gay.
But the question I have for him is: What is he going to do with Jesus?
Reilly appears to be conflating Ron Brown's statements on public policy with the sort of extreme, un- and anti-Christian hatred that spews from the mental gutters of say the Westboro Baptist Church folks. But at no point can Reilly produce anything that's actually "bigoted, hateful, [and/or] un-Christian" about Brown's public testimony on proposed anti-discrimination laws.
Reilly would do well to stick to sports and lay off the theology until he's actually prepared to cogently examine the questions involved in a fair and intellectually honest manner.
- Ken Shepherd's blog
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Comments
Double standards there, Reilly?
Submitted by drsamherman on Fri, 05/04/2012 - 4:53pm.
Ron Brown may have a morality or moral turpitude clause in his contract that says certain behaviors are grounds for dismissal "for cause" as the lawyers might say, but even a large university has no right to control what opinions he expresses in his personal life except when he is engaged publicly as an acknowledged university official or employee. The University of Nebraska is a public institution, and as such I doubt that it could legally prevent the coach from expressing his opinions away from the university grounds or in his capacity as a citizen with the same rights as the rest of us.
ESPN writers and reporters, as a rule, tend to come off like schizophrenics obsessed with politically correct diatribe and unmerited, unearned egotism. The poster boy for journalistic dysfunction, Keith Olbermann, is one such example of an ESPN talking head who is an OCD narcissist with zero accomplishments but serving as a bad example.
ESPN writers and reporters
Submitted by KornKing on Fri, 05/04/2012 - 5:11pm.
Are trying to make themselves relevant, and show how "smart" they are, just like most of the idiots in the lapdog press
The New Blacklist
Submitted by motherbelt on Fri, 05/04/2012 - 4:53pm.
People who don't accept homosexuality as normal can't be employed by college sports departments.
For starters.
mother
Submitted by Tugboat Phil on Fri, 05/04/2012 - 5:05pm.
People who don't
acceptworship homosexuality as normal can't be employed by college sports departments.I fixed it for you.
Horse Hockey
Submitted by Lord-come-soon-... on Fri, 05/04/2012 - 5:05pm.
"The Bible gives no account of Jesus encountering homosexuals," says Pastor Craig Finnestad of the Water's Edge Methodist Church in Omaha. "Jesus loved everybody and his love for others didn't depend on their behavior or beliefs."
This is what passes for a "pastor" in a Methodist church? Jesus also didn't encounter anyone who ate their own children, or had sex with buffaloes, but that doesn't mean He didn't speak out against sins like homosexuality. Jesus did indeed love everyone, but part of that love was pointing out their sin and, as He told the woman at the well, "go, and sin no more".
Ken Sheppard is quite right in saying the Reilly should stick to sports. His ignorance, and the ignorance of that "pastor" is quite amazing.
ahhh the old argument from
Submitted by JdfinCT on Fri, 05/04/2012 - 6:52pm.
ahhh the old argument from silence route...because he (Christ) didn't talk about it it must not be a sin.
And of course if there was a scripture in which Christ did confirm it was sinful, they would just go the other liberal route of denying he really said it or that he even existed.
Reilly
Submitted by Niall on Fri, 05/04/2012 - 8:10pm.
Reilly is a very good sportswriter. Plus he defended Tim Tebow when other journalists were piling on.
There Is No Opinion In Sports
Submitted by HardRightTurn on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 12:08am.
If you want to be a commentator, cross over to the editorial profession. Otherwise, keep your politics out of sports. Just call the game the way it is played. The final score is the score. Game over, go home and tell your opinion to your dog. He's the only one who cares what you think.
To more fully comprehend the Left, one must read “Leftism As Psychopathy” by John Ray, M.A., Ph.D. Caution, it might scare you a little bit.
http://jonjayray.tripod.com/psycho.html
Christians and Homosexuality
Submitted by Netstatter on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 2:31pm.
Jesus had disciples. At least two (Peter and James) knew St. Paul. Paul recorded several passages that condemned homosexuality. Paul was never condemned by any apostle, at least that I am aware of, for having un-Christlike beliefs. Also, Paul had books that include the condemnation of homosexuality make it into the New Testament, and one of the tests for a book making it into the New Testament was that the work was apostolic.
So I would take it that by association Jesus would have condemned homosexuality (as he did other forms of sexual immorality). He would have us "go and sin no more".
Jesus does love us unconditionally. But unconditional love does not mean we don't also have to accept someone's bad behavior. That is not love. Jesus proved His love for us by dying for us and opening that door to eternal life for us - if we only surrender to Him. That means a major heart-change and consequential behavior change for, well, all of us.