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Rev. Jonathan Weyer

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The Jim Tressel Scandal: Smashing Celebrity Icons

Posted: 06/02/11 12:15 PM ET

Living in Ohio, the words: "tattoo," "scandal," "lies" and "integrity" have been a daily part of my conversation for the past few months. Ohio is a state that lives, breathes and eats Buckeye football. As can be expected, the events surrounding Jim Tressel will affect our state psyche for years to come. Tressel's lies about player's tattoos and his cover up have rattled Buckeye nation in deeper ways than Lebron James leaving Cleveland for Miami ever could.

As a campus minister, who spent most of my time at Ohio State while serving as the University Interfaith president for a year, I have intimate and deep connections at the university. I have had a lot of conversations with friends, colleagues and students about the events of the past few months. The words shock, surprise and disappointment have now joined our football vocabulary.

Truth be told, none of us thought we would ever be here. We thought Tressel was incorruptible, a paragon of moral virtues who never bowed to the pressure of winning a football game at the expense of moral fortitude. The last few months have slapped us in the face with our misplaced faith in the man.

This is especially true among the Christians in the Buckeye state. Tressel started bible studies, wrote books about character values, and preached integrity in all things. He spoke at Christian rallies, talked about the importance of his faith, and how much it influenced his life.

Tressel had become the darling of the Christian world in our state. He became the personification of that curious American creature that is part sports hero and part religious icon.

The Tressel Icon has now become tarnished beyond repair. Christians are left stunned because another one of our idols has fallen flat on his human face. These feelings come out through either unreasonably defending Tressel's actions or throwing him to the wolves to be eaten alive for his lack of integrity.

I'll confess, I have gone back and forth between the two extremes.

The more I thought about it, the more I realized that Tressel is just a guy, a man, a human being. He is not the idol I created because he is subject to every temptation, pressure and sin of every normal human being. In fact, Tressel lines up with nearly all of the so called "heroes of the faith" as presented in the Bible.

The idolization of Tressel and his downfall tells us a gruesome story about American Christianity. There is an old parable, (That Tressel quotes in one of his books) that what we do in private is a true measure of our character. I have always thought this parable is fairly useless as it is commonly used. It's a morality test that every one of us would fail.

I think a better test of our character and what we value comes when we examine our heroes and idols. Who we spend the most time talking about and holding up standards for our lives tells us much more about who we are as people.

Christians (and others) held up Tressel as an idol or moral superior. In doing so it shows who we really are and what we value. Too often I, and other Christians, have used the moral superiority argument with atheists and other religions. We are saddened when our idols go toppling to the ground because their feet are made of clay.

The Tressel debacle shows us how much American Christians are in love with fame because we think it gives us some sort of credibility. We think if someone famous bows their name to Christ, it automatically gives Jesus badly needed street cred. If Snooki ever came to Christ, we would rush her out on talk shows, write books and speak at Christian events that focus on the evils of a party life style.

We strangle Christian celebrities for their credibility instead of caring for them as people. Why? We do it because we are scared and doubtful and because being famous is more important. We fight against that fear by sacrificing famous people to the gods of fame and credibility.

It's a sick and twisted view of how we are in American Christianity. It shows us that we value fame, credibility and even more, moral values more than we value Christ. We value our image more than we value the lives of people. Instead of taking St. Paul's words to heart about lifting up Christ, we lift up golden calves as our gods and goddesses. And then, when the idol is crushed, we rush up to kick it, bash it and spit on it because it didn't fulfill us. We never stop to think it was us who created the idol in the first place.

I hate what Tressel did. I hate that he lied. But even more, I hate that I put him in a position to break my heart so much. He should never have been there in the first place. Tressel is just a guy, a good football coach who messed up for a variety of reasons. He should never have been my idol and it's not fair to blame him for my own sin, the sin of making an idol in my life.

I really hope the Tressel situation will really make us as Christians examine our whole point of view on our icons by asking the questions: Are they icons for the right reasons? Are they icons because they are poor in spirit, meek, peacemakers who admit their sins, weaknesses, Are they servants, lovers of God and humans, or good neighbors?

Or are they icons because they are famous, supposedly moral, powerful, and influential?

The nature of the Gospel tells us who should be in our icon gallery, those who are like Christ. Those who know they are sinners, admit it, and brag to the world about their failures. When we get to that point, Tressel and the long list of Christian celebrities will no longer haunt us. We will know they are fellow patients under the same Physician with no special powers to fight temptation. We will know they are having one of their "bad days" that all of us have and that they need extra care. We will drop our stones and embrace the naked prostitute, because she is us, in need of grace and the love of Christ. We will no longer blame the celebrities for our own failings. We will no longer be shamed in the public eye because Christ will be our focus, not moral values, fame or celebrity.

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rsttho557949
What is Job's Crucible?
12:48 AM on 06/08/2011
Too bad Jesus isn't in the flesh right now to write on the ground with all these self righteous posters saying the things that they would never do. A wise man told me once, "Never say what you'll never do!"

I must dmit that people (Christians and non beleivers are very harsh and falsely philosophical about the Coach Tressel incident.

What would Jesus do? He would cut the BS and say to Coach Tressel, "Neither do I condemn you: go and sin no more." (John 8:11).
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datenutloaf
.......not approved by the moderators...........
06:57 PM on 06/06/2011
Tressel taught his athletes to cheat........and cover up.... and lie.

What a legacy....

Shame on Tressel.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kire
"Nothing becomes funny by being labeled so."
09:16 AM on 06/09/2011
How did he do that?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wbthacker
Can YOU pass the Turing Test?
06:47 PM on 06/06/2011
Your use of "icon" focused the issue for me. Our icons are chosen because in some way they exemplify a trait. Stephen Hawking is an icon of academic brilliance, scientific discovery, and achievement despite overwhelming handicaps. If we learn tomorrow that he's been cheating on his income taxes, why would we care? We didn't pick him as an icon of honesty.

But we want our idols to be perfect.. Once we make someone an icon, we hold them to a perfect standard of behavior. Few can live up to that, which is why our favorite icons have been dead for hundreds of years. We're never going to discover that Moses cheated on his taxes.

Which brings me back to Jim Tressel. Some college athletes sold championship rings and other mementos, against NCAA rules, and got improper discounts on tattoos. Instead of turning them in to the NCAA, Tressel kept it private.

Parents: Suppose you catch your child driving drunk. Do you call the police? Not one of you in a hundred can honestly say yes. You'll try to make him learn the lesson, but protect him from punishment that seems too extreme for a "youthful error".

If you would help your son cover up an actual *crime* that could have killed someone, how mad can you be at Jim Tressel for helping his players cover up a minor contract violation that harmed no-one? Was he being selfish, or fatherly?
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michelesda
My micro-bio is empty.
12:08 PM on 06/06/2011
So who is jim Tressel and what did he do?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kire
"Nothing becomes funny by being labeled so."
09:14 AM on 06/09/2011
I don't know. Somebody tell us.
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Indigo1941
Time Traveler
12:15 PM on 06/04/2011
I get it, all except for the part about whatever it was that he did. He's a Christian who got a tattoo and said he din't? So what?
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Jonathan Weyer
10:08 AM on 06/05/2011
No, that's not what happened. Go to google and type in Jim Tressel, scandal. That'll give you the info. :)
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Indigo1941
Time Traveler
10:13 AM on 06/05/2011
I don't care enough to bother and you don't care enough to give background to your own writing. Yet you blog.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kire
"Nothing becomes funny by being labeled so."
09:16 AM on 06/09/2011
I went to google. There is a very very long Sports Illustrated investigation about it. I don't have time to read it. If you know about it, can you give us the highlights?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
figneutron
01:44 AM on 06/03/2011
Enough of the 'he's only human!" excuse! Mr. Tressel fell short of a reasonable standard of ethical conduct and did so deceitfully and hypocritically. He is not Every Man, a common sinner; no, here is a con man and a pathological liar. The dude's a stinkin' bum in whole cloth. The crux of the issue The Tressel Affair raises concerns the prevalence of suckers in the Christian community who are highly susceptible to psychopathic manipulation.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Jonathan Weyer
12:28 PM on 06/03/2011
Not sure where you got the "he's only human excuse" in this article. The point is to call out the Christian community for their unreal expectations of so called "Christian celebrities". It has nothing to do with providing excuses for Tressel.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jbrandimore
Calls 'em as he sees 'em
10:20 PM on 06/02/2011
To me, the most shocking thing about the whole Tressel scandal is that to this day he has not owned up to what he did.

Every time he has addressed the topic he bathed what he said with excuses and blame deflections.

I would be the first to say Christians deserve grace and forgiveness, but as you know you have to own up to your sins.

It doesn't seem Tressel is there yet. If you have his ear I would hope you can reach him and get him to face up to what he has done and to be forthright in the future about all this - especially as the investigation is not yet over.
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JewishPhysician
fraternity, trust, discourse
08:02 PM on 06/02/2011
I went to Youngstown State University during Coach Tressel's hight point of his career in the early 1990s. He really was an inspiration and we all admired his office and work greatly. I am not so amazed that there would be a dark side to such a rise in stardom, but that said, we must be cognizant that Mr. Tressel did a good amount of positive reinforcement in many of his athletes. That is always going to be a part of his legacy as well. But as for his indiscretion and his lack of responisbility and forthrightedness in this and maybe other events in his tenure as a coach, I think that it is ultimately a lesson to all of our youth that our future is dependant on keeping our ways right and walking the walk regardless of what the talk is that we talk.
01:11 PM on 06/02/2011
This article illustrates the real problem with religion and society. People thing that somehow, someone who can adorn themselves with the trappings of faith is hoisted above the fallabilities common to all human beings. We see it time and time again as men of faith are revealed to be just men. Yet religion continues to foster unrealistic expectations and the conversant shame in failing to be more than a human being. Religion does have valuable lessons for how to live, but we need to leave the trappings of hoary superstitions where they should remain - in the distant past.