There is a high school football coach in New Jersey who is at the center of a court case regarding prayer with the team prior to their games. Apparently, he has had prayer with his team, one way or another, for twenty-three years.
I don’t know the content of the prayers, whether he wants God to lead his team to victory, protect the players from injury, teach them the lessons of clean-living through knocking people on their hind ends, or all of the above. But, official prayer at a school-sponsored activity is a controversial subject. Hopefully, the courts will order him to cease and desist and prevent him from further imposing his religious views on his players.
To me, it’s amusing to imagine the football coach at my high school leading the team in prayer. I don’t know whether he ever did, because, despite his urgings, I didn’t play football. But, I know the school received numerous complaints from neighbors whose backyards ran up against the football field at our school. The complaints were about the high volume profanity emanating from the coaches during practice sessions.
It was my good fortune to experience some of this first-hand, because the football coach also was the junior varsity baseball coach, and I played on that team during my freshman year. (I probably would benefit from speaking to a therapist about THAT period of my life!) He was proficient at stringing together crude images, epithets, and vulgarities that likely are not allowed today. Actually, it was pretty funny, but the laughing had to wait until after practice. None of us especially cared for the extra wind sprints. We already were a better track team than baseball team that year.
I can’t imagine anyone taking him seriously if he were to say, “Gentlemen, take a knee, and let us pray.” Of course, in the violent, mixed-up world of football/militarism/patriotism non-compliance would have its consequences.
And that’s exactly why the coach in New Jersey needs to knock it off.
