Little known fact- My list of dream jobs has included sportscaster, sports photographer, and for a fleeting moment before I realized I had the athletic talent of a thimble, pro athlete. Actually, I still want to be a sportscaster or sports photographer. But reality is knocking.
One of the segments on the show was about the optimism of the Chicago Cubs. Being a Marlins fan, I endure endless ridicule for my loyalties. Daily heartache. Crushing defeats. But night after blown-in-the-ninth-inning-loss night, I go to sleep and thank God (in my optimistic way) that He did NOT make me a Cubs fan. As of today, the Cubs are in a four way tie for 16th place in the MLB with an average of .511. Respectable, but it would take a miracle for them to reach the Big Kahuna. And when October fatefully rolls its fatefull self around and the Cubs are left again empty handed, it will have been a grand total of 101 years since they held glory in their cursed hands.
If I wanted you to get bored reading this, I would include a paragraph or two on the poor cursed Cubbies. But it is not my intention. Of you really care, here is a link you shall find interesting (Alexis- you should read it, remember how fascinated you were with all the superstition surrounding baseball?)http://www.cubbiesbaseball.com/goats.htm
If there is one thing I am not, it is a fairweather fan. The definition of a fairweather fan is someone who gets interested when a team is winning and drops relations once they begin to stink worse than the Beaty Towers garbage chute. Although my sweet lovings with the Marlins quite accidently began in 2003, which happened to be the second and last time they won the World Series, I have since cheered my way through five and a half seasons which ranged from almost decent to absolutely abysmal. And yet I hold my head high, wave my Billy the Marlin flag, wear my Cabrera jersey (although he has becomg a dirty rotten Detroit stinking Tiger traitor since my obsession with him commenced) and root root root for the home team.
But I do not think I could ever be a Cubs fan. Defeat and dissapointment year after year after year. I would hope that I would have the spirit to withstand over a century of besmirched records, curses, scandals, and heartbreak. If you read the article or are a die-hard Marlins, Cubs, or ESPN fan, you will know of the 2003 scandal. It was game 6 of the NL championship playoffs, Cubs vs. my very own Fish. It was the Cubs year. Magic filled the Windy City and the whole nation seemed to rally around the Cubs. The great Sammy Sosa and his boys were working every field like they were meant to be there. The Cubs were winning the series 3-2 and were a mere 5 outs away from their first trip to the world series in almost 6 decades when Luis Castillo hit a foul ball into left field, totally reachable by Mosies Alou, which would have resulted in a much needed out, when a fan, poor Steve Bartman, reached out and caught the ball. One thing led to another, and a few weeks later I spent my first ever high school homecoming dance in the courtyard with my friend Kristen (with whom I credit my obsession), listening to a radio (oh yes, I am that nerdy) with pure joy as the Marlins beat the NY Yankees in the World Series in 6 games
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Bartman_incident
Ouch. It got me to thinking, how can millions of people endure such bitter, painful, dissapointment day after day, year after year? Then I realized there is someone who endures a lot more heartache than even the most seasoned Cubs fan.
Segway to God.
If Jesus was a baseball fan, I am pretty sure he would be okay with being a Cubs fan, because really, we are all like the Cubs. Follow me here. We constantly screw absolutely everything up. But Jesus doesn't care. He still loves us just the same. He is the ultimate fan, the fan who ACTUALLY died for his team. Not just metaphorically. God is an optimist. He relishes in every single victory we get. It doesnt matter if that victory is the World Series trophy. That victory could be winning a game or as simple as getting a strike on the batter you are up against. And when we blunder, whether it is missing a catch or losing the most important game of the season, He says "It's okay. I still love you. Here is another chance" Time and time again. A real fan would never say to their team "you better make it up to me in the next inning/tomorrow/next season." You love the team. As Christians we should do the same. Relish EVERY single victory, no matter how minor. And for every mistake we make or others make, let it be a chance for forgiveness. Loyalty, my friends, should never lie with the highest bidder. Loyalty is derived from the one who sacrifices the most. And no greater sacrifice will ever be made than the one that has already been made by the Maker Himself. You want to shock people?. Be quick to praise, but even quicker to forgive. People will notice. And people will wonder. And in the end, hearts will be changed. What greater victory is there than that?
"My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends"
John 15: 12-13
