MIAMI – Football’s faithful will file into house parties, bars and, of course, Dolphin Stadium on Super Bowl Sunday to observe their holiest of holy days. But they’ll also turn out in force at churches across the country, which are tapping the popularity of sports in hopes of saving souls.
Organizers of church-sponsored Super Bowl gatherings see the events as a departure from the formality of organized religion – the type of events that could make someone who doesn’t typically attend services feel more at home.
“It’s a way of reaching out into our community in a very informal, low-key way where we show people we’re regular Joes like they are without the pressure of church,” said the Rev. Luis Acosta, pastor of Pines Baptist Church, a Southern Baptist congregation north of Miami in Pembroke Pines.
Pines Baptist has been holding Super Bowl events for a few years and expects about 300 people, mostly men, at its flag football game and watch party this year. The church drew about 250 people to a block party Jan. 13 that featured NFL-themed games, former Dolphins players signing autographs and giveaways including a plasma television.
Acosta said the church doesn’t take a heavy-handed approach to nonbelievers who join in such events. There won’t be so much as a prayer at the Super Bowl Sunday event. If a guest enjoys himself, a member might invite him to a church social group meeting, then maybe a Bible study, then perhaps an actual service.
“We just follow God’s lead,” Acosta said.
William Baker, a retired history professor from the University of Maine in Orono, has written two books about sports and religion. He says the interplay between the two goes back to ancient times, and that in modern America, evangelical Christians make the most of the relationship. He calls sports part of the new “American trinity” – along with religion and patriotism.
“Any visitor from Mars on Super Sunday, whether he watches television or goes to the stadium in Miami,” Baker said, “would say these people believe, maybe in God, but for sure they believe in the American flag and in the flyover military display and in patriotism, but most surely they believe in sports.”
Pastor Mike Pierce of the nondenominational Poplar Creek Church in the Chicago suburb of Bartlett, Ill., says about 100 people will watch the game on the big screen in the sanctuary. Like other church events – including a carnival, a play and a pig roast – it’s meant to simply create a friendly, fun environment, but not an overtly religious one.
“We don’t turn everything into a spiritual event,” Pierce said. “Good, clean fun is still spiritual.”
Many pastors agree, simply trying to make their churches welcoming environments for new guests. Carrollwood Baptist Church in Tampa has been holding a Super Bowl gathering for more than 15 years and attendees have become so comfortable at the event that some bring recliners from home.
“I like it because it’s very laid back,” said Robert Smith, a 32-year-old Rockford, Ill., resident who has attended Super Bowl parties at Dominion Christian Center there. “There’s no pressure.”
Some churches are using the Super Bowl as an opportunity to reach the poor.
A number of Nashville, Tenn., churches will host the homeless, feeding them, washing their clothes, letting them watch the game on big-screen TVs and giving them a bed to sleep in on Super Bowl Sunday.
And at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Libertyville, Ill., members will gather donations to help fund the parish food pantry, another one for the larger community, and a school under construction for African orphans.
Churches also are aware many people are unwilling to do anything other than watch the game on Super Bowl Sunday.
“We can offer a good event surrounding something the culture uses or we can just hold church and no one’s going to come,” said Jim Waters, an associate pastor and minister to students at First Baptist Church in Milton in the Florida Panhandle.
Like many other churches holding Super Bowl events, the Milton congregation will screen “Power to Win,” a video featuring Christian NFL stars, during halftime.
Baker said evangelicals had long rejected sports – for the gambling it often fueled, for it often being played on the Sabbath and for the general bacchanalia that it was associated with. But they eventually realized they shared athletes’ win-or-lose take on the world (only one team steps off the field victorious, and only believers are rewarded after death) and wanted to take advantage of the immense reach of athletic competition.
“Sport becomes a kind of fish hook to catch the unbelievers,” he said.
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