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Baseball Player Struggles Between Greed and God

Albert Pujols

First Posted: 02/24/11 10:38 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

By Tim Townsend
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ST. LOUIS -- As contract talks broke down between Albert Pujols and the Cardinals, St. Louis baseball fans began nervously asking themselves a host of questions.

He's a Cardinal for life, right?

He wouldn't go to Wrigley Field because he likes winning too much, right?

But a particular group of Cardinals fans -- those who share his evangelical faith -- was asking a different kind of question. What does holding out for the largest contract in the history of baseball say about Albert's Christian testimony?

Pujols and his wife, Deidre, are evangelical Christians. They describe their charity, the Pujols Family Foundation, as "a faith-based nonprofit organization," and participate in Christian events around the city.

So as Pujols began looking to many like a typical mega-wealthy superstar athlete angling for a record payday, some have asked how Pujols' public, God-fearing image squares with a private quest for wealth.

Team officials have declined to describe the details of their offer to Pujols, but it's widely believed to have been worth about $200 million.

The Rev. Darrin Patrick, pastor of The Journey, a church in St. Louis that counts a number of professional athletes as members, said Jesus warned against greed.

"Nobody really confesses to that sin," Patrick said. "Lust, anxiety -- sure. But very few people say, `I'm greedy,' and I absolutely think that (Pujols) should be on guard for that."

A verse from 1 Timothy says, "The love of money is a root of all kinds of evil, and in their eagerness to be rich some have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many pains."

That's the fear of many people who love Pujols, both as fans and as Christians. They fear, as the author of Matthew's Gospel wrote, that no one can serve two masters.

"For a slave will either hate the one and love the other, or be devoted to the one and despise the other," the Gospel says. "You cannot serve God and wealth."

The Rev. Sean Michael Lucas, a former professor at Covenant Seminary in Creve Coeur and currently pastor of a Presbyterian church in Hattiesburg, Miss., describes himself on his Twitter page as, among other things, "Cardinals fan, lover of Jesus."

At the end of January, Lucas tweeted, "... how is AP's testimony affected if he holds the Cards hostage for $30m/10yrs? @ what pt does 1 Tim 6:10 apply here?"

In another tweet, Lucas wrote, "Unless there is a big part of this contract that goes to Pujols Foundation ($30-50m) he's open 2 the question. Legitimately."

Baptist pastor Scott Lamb, the co-author (with Tim Ellsworth) of a new Pujols biography called "Pujols: More Than the Game" that focuses on the first baseman's faith, said the contract talks have opened up an interesting debate in Christian circles that goes beyond baseball to the uncomfortable intersection of the New Testament and capitalism.

"Consumption mentality is very American, but it's not very biblical," Lamb said. "People are asking whether (Pujols) should grab all he can get, and what his moral responsibilities are in terms of what to do with that money."

What to do with so much money has not always been a problem for the Pujolses. In 2000, when Albert was in the minor leagues in Peoria, Ill., and Memphis, Tenn., he was bringing in $125 a week.

By 2005, the couple set up their foundation to help children with Down syndrome, and children living in poverty in Albert's native Dominican Republic. In 2010, the foundation spent $800,000 on its programs, according to Todd Perry, its executive director.

"Albert and Dee Dee are extremely generous, not just to the Pujols Foundation but to other charities in the community," Perry said. "Their foundation is their passion."

Pastors say the more important point for Pujols is not how many millions he makes, but how he spends it.

"What you do with your money is a factor," said Patrick. Pujols "has a track record of generosity that is without question. God does use money to help people, and I see God doing that with Pujols."

In 2009, Pujols visited The Crossing, a Chesterfield, Mo., church that also claims professional athletes as members, to help the congregation launch its "Advent Conspiracy" program, which encourages people "to celebrate Christmas in a different way, by serving those in need," according to Tony Biaggne, the church's director of creative communications.

"I've never met anyone with more passion for serving, and serving the poor than Albert," Biaggne said.

Ultimately, Christian Cardinals fans and others who benefit from the Pujolses' largesse are praying for a big payday for No. 5, and for his generosity to continue, even grow.

"I reject any idea that a person's Christianity should cause them to step away from what the market would demand for them," said Lamb. "Albert will go down in history as one of the great ones -- someone who grabbed the money, and gave it away at the same time."

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By Tim Townsend St. Louis Post-Dispatch ST. LOUIS -- As contract talks broke down between Albert Pujols and the Cardinals, St. Louis baseball fans began nervously asking themselves a host of question...
By Tim Townsend St. Louis Post-Dispatch ST. LOUIS -- As contract talks broke down between Albert Pujols and the Cardinals, St. Louis baseball fans began nervously asking themselves a host of question...
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tamazul
Badges? What Badges?
10:39 AM on 03/02/2011
Pujols, according to Wikipedia, is also the recipient of the, much coveted, honorary Badge of Merit during Glenn Beck's Restoring Honor ralley in Washington D.C.

And THAT, pretty much, "says it all!"
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Greenkid
06:51 AM on 03/01/2011
Albert will probably use a lot of that money to support family and friends in his home country, like a lot of latin american baseball players do.
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bearchao
Un-Holy Cow
01:54 AM on 03/01/2011
If the wealth within the Vatican walls isn't an indication as to whom the wealthy faithful serve, I don't know what is. Certainly can't be God.
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bearchao
Un-Holy Cow
12:36 AM on 03/01/2011
"You cannot serve God and wealth". Never stopped a televangelist. Why should a baseball player be held to a higher standard?
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02:23 AM on 03/03/2011
Because a baseball player might actually be Christian .
02:58 PM on 02/28/2011
$30 Million a year for 10 years is not a guarantee of $300 million. Professional athletes are always one play away from the end of a career and the end of their highest earning power. AP has been earning millions for years and he has continuously demonstrated compassion and committment to Biblical values through his foundation and other charitable works. If the money is there, would you rather see it in the hands of someone with a track record of care for others, the government, or team ownership? Out of those three my faith is in AP.
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Hunter W
Bring more than your standardized leftist mantras.
05:41 PM on 03/15/2011
Baseball contracts, unlike other sports, are typically guaranteed. He could go into a coma the day after he signs the contract and he'd be paid.
Califishing
I work smart
06:47 PM on 02/27/2011
The only problem with money is when you do give it away and if it ever comes to a a point of not having anymore some of those who you gave to don't know you no more. Then how much is too much. Compare some of the wages of the ordinary people with those in other countries.

Someone making $50,000 in the US would seem mega wealthy to some in places like Calcutta.
So how much is too much? Then there's the thought of maybe Albert was chosen to do what he is doing with the money. He could hoard it like some would do. Tis better to have the money option rather to not have it.. Broke people don't have many friends. Now that's real.
12:47 PM on 02/27/2011
God loves the Cardinals, but he loves the Yankees more
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Libby123
Where are we going? Why are we in this handbasket?
12:36 AM on 03/04/2011
Right. I never heard anyone say of any player, "Gee, I hope he doesn't go to the Cardinals," except maybe a Cub fan. But whenever some top player comes to the end of a contract or becomes a free agent, people all over the country hope with all their hearts that he doesn't opt for the Yankees and the subsequent loss of perspective.
By the way, the Cardinals have a winning record against the Yankees. Cardinals rule. Yankees suck. 'Twas ever thus...
12:41 PM on 02/27/2011
This is a vexing issue. One of the things that always holds me up in these conversations is how charity gets rendered to justify enormous aggregations of wealth--the argument being that virtuous people can and should accumulate wealth because they will be generous in helping others with it.

While I prefer the generous rich to the miserly rich, casting charity as the only or most important manifestation of economic virtue worries me for two reasons (a) charities rarely address systemic injustices and inequalities; (b) charity is predicated on economic disparity; the rich are always in a position to control the terms of aid.

Charity certainly is good. But perhaps a more radical act of faith by someone like Pujols would be to demonstrate a new type of celebrity--one who says "I reject the presumption that I should gather to myself all I can; it is fundamentally unjust for someone to have the sort of money being offered to me. Enough is enough."

Dissenters might say, if Pujols doesn't ask for his "market value," then someone else (e.g., really rich ownership) will pocket the money, and maybe not be as charitable with it. Isn't it better that a charitable person have the wealth? Isn't it being self-righteous to refuse all that potential charity? A reasonable point. But if Pujols articulated his rejection in moral terms, he could complicate the all-too common evangelical reduction of economic justice to private charity. This would be an enormous shift.
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GrantS
I'm liberal through and through.
11:34 AM on 02/27/2011
It's easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than enter the heaven of god. Of course the needle they were talking about was a low height arch entranceway.

Take the money and give to charity.
10:35 AM on 02/27/2011
I'm an evangelical Christian. But I can't help but notice that the people who are criticizing Pujols are Cardinal fans. How convenient that their desire to see their star baseball player continue to play for the home team finds a rationale in Scripture. Pujols' willingness to work for the employer that pays him the most (something that is generally accepted in our society) is not nearly as bad as quoting Scripture for the purpose of producing a winning baseball team.

As for the non-Christians who are criticizing Pujols, well, how much do YOU donate to the poor?
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Radical Logic
Surrender indecision and become your dreams
12:59 AM on 02/27/2011
Yet the church certainly wants its biblically contracted "10%" at all costs. Such hypocrits. They don't want you to be rich.. because you may not feel the need to be "sheeped" to death.
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BlueZoo
Independent voter, Independent thinker!
06:14 PM on 02/26/2011
LOL! I'm giving 10 to 1 on which one wins!
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01:24 PM on 02/26/2011
sort of reminds of vegetarians who eat fish, and chicken--christians who are millionaires.

i guess that is a mighty small camel and large needle as the wealthy man heads for paradise.
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Mr Sick Of Greed
06:52 PM on 02/25/2011
anyone who makes 200 million plus to play a sport must give some of that away.
what the hell do you need 200 million for?
"Blessed are the poor! For they are God's children"
those who have 200 million and hold out for more money, while calling themselves a christian, is quite contradicting, granted, none of us are perfect, but Albert needs to wake up.....humility is a great trait, which seems to be lacking with these super athletes.....
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Hunter W
Bring more than your standardized leftist mantras.
05:43 PM on 03/15/2011
Wouldn't someone in rural China say, "What the hell do you need $12 an hour for?"
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people don't taste good.
06:15 PM on 02/25/2011
Baseball Player Stuggles Between Greed And God.......

Don't waste your time...............money is real.
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signgrrl
typeface geek
12:49 PM on 03/01/2011
okay, how about greed and humanity ? humanity is definitely real.