St. Augustine and the New England Patriots

Published October 6, 2007 by pastor john in featured
"Pears and Pigskins" - BreakPoint by Chuck Colson   chuck colson.jpg
As I record this, the New England Patriots are off to one of the greatest starts in 
NFL history, winning their first three games by an average of 26 points.

But their on-the-field accomplishments have been overshadowed by off-the-field 
controversies -- controversies that say more about our culture than they do 
about football.  A few weeks ago, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell fined the 
Patriots and  Coach Bill Belichick $750,000 for videotaping opponents’ 
signals in violation of league rules. In addition, the Patriots will probably 
forfeit their first-round draft choice in the April 2008 NFL draft.

Some commentators insisted that the Patriots and Belichick got off too lightly, 
but theirs was definitely a minority view. For most commentators, it was much 
ado about nothing. 
They argued that the “strategic advantage” to be gained from breaking the rules was minor.

In fact, many were shocked that Coach Belichick bothered to cheat. After all, the Patriots’ 
lopsided victories proved that they did not need to cheat to win -- as one writer put it, “it’s a 
whole lot easier to catch the spy than it is to actually beat him.”

This is why we do not, or at least should not, turn to sportswriters for moral guidance.

Perhaps a better guide would be St. Augustine of Hippo. In Book Two of his CONFESSIONS, 
Augustine recalled the “past wickedness and the carnal corruptions of [his] soul.” The sin 
whose memory caused him the most anguish was not his sexual misconduct and debauchery. 
Instead, it involved fruit.

Specifically, it was a pear tree close to his family’s vineyard. He writes that neither the pears’ 
flavor nor their color was tempting. Yet, one night he and his friends “went to shake and rob 
this tree.”

Augustine wrote that he was “compelled to [robbery] by neither hunger nor poverty.” He had 
plenty of pears at home that were of “much better quality.” He did not “desire to enjoy what [he] 
stole, but only the theft and the sin itself.”

He recalled how he and his companions “laughed because,” as he wrote, “our hearts were 
tickled at the thought of deceiving the owners, who had no idea of what we were doing and 
would have strenuously objected.”

As he put it, he acted out of “a contempt for well-doing and a strong impulse to iniquity.” He 
stole the pears precisely because it was the wrong thing to do.

This “impulse to iniquity” was, for Augustine, what it meant to be fallen -- original sin. People 
are not calculators whose actions are solely, or even largely, determined by rational 
self-interest. Our natures have been, in C. S. Lewis’s words, “bent” -- we often do the wrong 
thing because it feels better than doing the right thing.

We break rules because our fallen natures tell us that the willingness to break them proves 
our “superiority” to those who do not. We test the limits, not because it yields an advantage, 
but to see what we can get away with. Belichick and the Patriots cheated, got caught, and 
were punished. Good. But it should come as no surprise to Christians that someone who 
does not need to cheat to win, cheats anyway. That’s what we humans do.

The attempt to explain human perversity solely in terms of “strategic advantage” is a reminder 
that without Christianity, a culture not only cannot understand God -- it cannot understand man, 
either.

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