Count me among those pulling for Tim Tebow.
Frankly, I dont think the former University of Florida star now playing for the Denver Broncos has much of a chance at long-term stardom in the NFL, at least not as a quarterback. But right now hes winning, and hes exciting, and I like the kid. At least I like what I know about him, which is what most of us know, which is what we see and hear on TV. Hes a great story, like most underdogs who seem to be good guys.
Heres what he isnt: He isnt a doctrinal obligation on anybodys part to root for his team or his success because hes a Christian.
For what its worth, I think he sincerely is. A good Christian, I mean. Not because he always works Jesus into sports interviews (the list of jocks who have done that includes some major league blowhards and slimebags), but because the evidence of his life off the field is pretty eloquent witness that the guy doesnt just talk the talk.
And while many of my fellow believers have drafted him into the unfortunate cultural category of religious hero, its not a role Tebow himself seems to be wallowing in. In this age of shameless hypocrites and latter-day Pharisees, that alone is a relief.
Where many of us get exasperated with our brothers and sisters in the faith -- and Im far from alone here -- is in this curious mental and moral universe where almost anything sincerely said or done in the name of Christianity automatically demands our support.
The word I would choose to describe that fallacy isnt one Id use in church.
It ought to be an obvious point but apparently isnt: Human claims to godly virtue are not divinely binding. You dont have to be a theologian or biblical scholar to understand that, or look far in scripture to find it. (The sixth chapter of Matthew, as Ive noted before, seems to have been expunged from contemporary Bibles.) Somebodys claim that his life, his actions, his convictions or his politics represent Christian principles doesnt make it so, and the rest of us arent obliged to buy it.
Yet a police chief in south Alabama gets publicity for giving criminals the choice of church or jail, and good Christians are supposed to line up behind him. A judge puts a religious display up in his court -- a public facility funded with the tax money of Muslims and Buddhists and, yes, nonbelievers as well as Christians -- and pulpits resound with a call to spiritual arms. A sincere but misguided young man is ordered not to evangelize patrons at a public library, and were supposed to see this as religious persecution.
Its a pretty safe guess that at least some of the library patrons who complained at being accosted about their spiritual lives are religious people. So am I, in my own deeply flawed way. But when Im on the beach reading a treasured old paperback, listening to ancient radio rock and roll and perhaps enjoying a cold malt beverage, I try -- politely -- to dissuade earnest-looking people descending upon me with religious tracts.
And while the idea of criminals turning their lives around through faith (indeed, it happens) is an inspiring one, you dont have to be a cynic or a militant atheist to wonder if sentencing people to church doesnt, well, sort of miss the whole point.
If God judges us on religious allegiance to pamphleteers on the beach, proselytizers at libraries, publicly devout sports figures, police chiefs and politicians, then Ill answer for my lack of it at the throne of judgment.
There are plenty of things I have ample reason to worry about come Judgment Day. Im fairly sure none of the above will be among them.
Dusty Nix, 706-571-8528; dnix@ledger-enquirer.com.




