iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Henry G. Brinton

GET UPDATES FROM Henry G. Brinton
 

Religious Roots Of The Olympics

Posted: 08/01/2012 8:47 pm

(RNS) When the Summer Olympics opened in London, there was a version of a religious ritual in the Olympic oath, procession of athletes and lighting of the flame. This was no accident because the modern Olympics have religious roots, though they appear to have largely secular fruits.

I'm reminded of this fact because it was in London in 1908 that Anglican Bishop Ethelbert Talbot first said, "The most important thing in these Olympics is not so much winning as taking part" -- a phrase that became part of the Olympic creed. He was following in the footsteps of the Rev. Henri Didon, a Catholic priest who gets credit for the official Olympic motto "citius, altius, fortius" (faster, higher, stronger).

The founder of the modern Olympics, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, was educated by Jesuits. "The first essential characteristic of the Olympics, both ancient as well as modern, is to be a religion ... above and outside the churches," he said. He was influenced by proponents of "muscular Christianity," who turned away from traditional Christian contempt for the body and used sports as a method of strengthening faith and morality.

Muscular Christianity became popular in Victorian England and spread to the U.S., where it shaped the programs of the YMCA and Boy Scouts of America, as well as church sports leagues. Although it declined in mainline Protestantism in the 20th century, it remained strong in evangelical organizations, such as the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and Promise Keepers. Today, muscular Christianity is alive and well in professional athletes such as Tim Tebow and Jeremy Lin.

Contrary to de Coubertin, I don't believe the Olympics should be a religion, but I also don't think athletic competition should be completely secular. Sports and religion belong together because health involves both body and soul.

At the London Olympics, some representatives of majority Muslim countries have complained that the Games are being held during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, when Muslims are required to fast from sunrise to sunset. They say this will put their athletes at a disadvantage.

They have a point. Christians would be perturbed if the Games were held during Holy Week, just as Jews would object if they were asked to compete on Yom Kippur. In London, Olympic organizers are making an effort to help Muslims cope by providing food at night (when Muslims break the daily Ramadan fast), and offering special evening snack packs for breaking the fast.

The Olympics should reconnect with their religious roots. Just look at the obese parishioners who praise God and then stuff themselves with doughnuts after worship. Reconnecting body and soul is one of the solutions to our nation's obesity epidemic.

Ancient Greeks are partially to blame. While they provided the inspiration for the modern Games, they also created a dualistic philosophy that included antagonism between the physical and spiritual. Christians embraced this approach for many years, until muscular Christianity came along and people began to reclaim the ancient biblical truth that human beings are created with a unity of flesh and spirit.

Now, a focus on physical fitness is a growing trend in U.S. houses of worship. A 2007 survey of more than 6,000 American congregations, conducted by the National Council of Churches and supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, revealed that 70 percent of churches provide health care services to their communities. A prominent example is the Daniel Plan, initiated by California megachurch pastor Rick Warren, which includes healthy eating, regular exercise, stress reduction, prayer and group support. Warren himself dropped 60 pounds last year.

I have run marathons and done 100-mile bike rides with members of my church, and I have discovered that training is good for the individuals and the Christian community. I am not alone. Across the country, congregations are adding fitness facilities, and sponsoring programs such as "Christian Yoga" and "Bod4God."

While some of this is a reflection of our weight-obsessed culture, it also reflects a positive development in religious thought. Religious people are finally taking the body seriously, and it's a needed change as Americans struggle with obesity, diabetes, heart disease and other health problems.

As for the Olympics, perhaps the opening ceremonies should have had a celebration of religions as well as a parade of nations. Most of the world's great faiths honor both body and spirit, and encourage health and vitality. This would correct the error made by the ancient Greeks, and would pay tribute to the religious leaders who made the modern Olympics possible. It could even inspire a few religious people to get off the couch and into the gym.

 
 
 
FOLLOW RELIGION
 
 
  • Comments
  • 11
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
06:25 AM on 08/17/2012
While a follower of one religion might think their religion is inclusive, it tends to exclude those of other religions and atheists. It is hard enough already to get 200+ nations to compete together, without creating another set of barriers.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:58 AM on 08/03/2012
Evidently you do not know the history behind the Olympics.
Religion introduced may fall on a side you do not like.

The original Olympics
Done in the nude.
No rules.
No weight classes.
Death or mutilation the norm.
http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/ancient-cultures/daily-life-and-practice/the-olympic-games-how-they-all-began/
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
SonnyBono
Cogito ergo sum ​​liberalis
05:38 AM on 08/03/2012
Just wondering which of the Greek gods the Fairfax Presbyterian Church prays to? Zeus and the rest of them or just the big guy? Modern sports are polluted enough with rampant nationalism and shoe contracts without bringing in religion to further muddy the waters.

Regarding the comment - "Rev. Henri Didon, a Catholic priest who gets credit for the official Olympic motto "citius, altius, fortius" (faster, higher, stronger)." - the main reason they used a priest was probably because he was the only one around who spoke a dead language like Latin.
photo
Mac Howard
Thank god we got convicts, you got the puritans
10:48 PM on 08/02/2012
No! No! No! A thousand time no! Keep religion (and politics) out of sport!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
grailknight
is happily godless
06:12 PM on 08/02/2012
Imams have the discretionary authority for dispensations for Ramadan. Bishops can authorize dispensations regarding fasts and rabbis can do so regarding dietary restrictions in unusual circumstances.
01:33 PM on 08/02/2012
I'm an atheist. It's very boring to watch people pray. I would respect people of religion more if they refrained from having to make a show of their devotion at almost every public occasion.

Can't you be a totally devout (and humble) person of faith by communing with your deity in the sanctity of your place of worship, in the privacy of your home, and in the vastness of your own mind? Must it become a show that requires (and DON'T say it doesn't) everyone else in the vicinity to stop what they're doing and wait quietly until your show of devotion is over. It's very boring and an imposition on others.

I know it would be considered by people of faith to be rude of anyone else to talk during the public show of religious conviction; so we just stand their quietly and wait for you to finish. But, try to see it from our side when you go to an event, sports or otherwise. Please remember that not everyone wants to pray with you -- and prayer is (or it should be) a very personal activity that you can do in silence in your mind a thousand times a day. Please don't share. It is seems so sanctimonious and ostentatious.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Eckert
Anybody looking for a nerd?
12:52 AM on 08/02/2012
The original Olympians believed that the human body was sacred and required all athletes to be naked.
11:58 AM on 08/02/2012
Mandatory full monte exposure is a good motivation for staying in shape.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dr Idris
polymathy is not understanding
12:35 AM on 08/02/2012
"Ancient Greeks are to blame" This is very dated Christian apologetics-Hellenism cannot be simply separated from Christianity. The NT Being in Greek alone shows that. Also no Greek philosophical Logos, no 4th Gospel Logos-to oversimplify in a short space. The "muscular" Christians and co, tried to say Christianity was in pure form non-dualistic-but Platonism "infected it". Well for one thing-Paul, Origen, and Augustine & co were pretty deeply "infected". Also this is cliched Platonism-though body/soul dualism is a feature of Orphic/Platonic/Pythagorean thought.
Christianity developed in late antiquity-an ascetic era of "world flight"-at least to an extent. Mainstream Judaism was already there-and although some of the same ideas influenced certain strains of Jewish thought, the basic outlook is much less ascetic and much more pro-worldly.
But most important of all, the Blogger is not clear re the Greeks. They founded the games in honor of Zeus. And the Greeks if that period glorified the body. Just look at their sculptures!! As for Sport not being only secular, I do not agree. If for some Christians and other religious people, Sport involves "body and soul", then for secular people, the same basic sense can be expressed in the purely secular terms of a "sound mind in a sound body". Or to be really non-dualistic, but rather monistic and Spinozistic, mind and body are the same thing, viewed in different ways. The mind is the idea of the body.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
clearasmud
Obama Is Nothing More Than A Moderate Republican
12:31 AM on 08/02/2012
As long as every religion is covered "correctly", which would be a pretty big job, and one in which no mistake would be justifiable to the religion's adherents. Even the slightest "slight" could start WWIII, or at the least a Team(s) leaving in a huff. But, I like the concept.
photo
GoodwithWood
Dis eas all yoooour fault
08:59 PM on 08/01/2012
You’re right. But it was more like Greek Olympian Gods, you know, Pagans.