World Cup Fever

For many, the next four weeks will be a turn-off with seemingly legitimate complaints about ‘Too much football on the television’.
For others, this will be the highlight of the year, ether because they are football fanatics or see the games as a diversion from all the problems and troubles which have been dominating the headlines and news media in the past few months.
There will be some who, after England’s success in reaching the European Cup final last year, even have hopes that England might repeat their 1966 triumph.
It is not surprising that such an event as the World Cup generates opposing views for we are thinking beings, created by God in His image and given the freedom of choice.
So we don’t all have to think the same way or do the same thing.
That’s part of the joys and also the difficulties of being human.
It is a joy that we are expected to think. God has not made us like robots but given us minds so that we can work things out, recognise His creative power and discover His love for us. Hence the progress that man has made in science and technology and the enormous amount of charitable work that is being done by Christian organisations.
Freedom to think and to choose becomes a difficulty when we cannot accept that others may have different opinions and views or may have genuine reasons for supporting different teams. The Lord asks us to live together in peace but the antagonisms generated by different views are often the cause of major conflicts on a personal level and, as we see almost daily, on the international stage.
Whether you are eager to turn off the television or are waiting anxiously to turn it on so as not to miss a moment of what will be happening on football pitches across Qatar, whether you are desperate to know every result or just want the moment when ‘normality’ will resume when it is all over, please remember that God has given us minds to think, together with the generosity of choice, even the choice of not wanting to know Him.
And a last thought - depending whether you are turning off or turning on, have some sympathy for those who feel compelled to watch, even when the game is too poor to be worth viewing, or for those who can’t avoid the football because others in the household insist on seeing every match. Have some compassion, too, for those who will be devastated when their team is eliminated and for those who have lost the highlights of their normal viewing and listening because of World Cup fever.
If we can do this, then we really are thinking, thinking about others rather than just ourselves, which is thinking in the way Jesus recommended when He said ‘Love your neighbour as you love yourself’ (Luke 10.27b[Good News Bible]).








