Bryan Fischer
St. Louis Cardinals reject homosexual supremacy
By Bryan Fischer
Follow me on Twitter: @BryanJFischer, on Facebook at "Focal Point"
Host of "Focal Point" on American Family Radio, 1-3pm CT, M-F www.afr.net
Lance Berkman – nicknamed "Big Puma" – was a bona fide baseball star in his 15 year major league career. He hit 366 home runs, retired with lifetime batting average of .293, and was named to six All Star teams. He won a World Series title and Comeback Player of the Year with the St. Louis Cardinals in 2011. He was only the second major leaguer in history to hit more than 40 home runs in a season as a switch-hitter. Mickey Mantle was the first.
Forbes Magazine recognized him as one of the "30 most generous celebrities" in 2012. In 2001, He started a group called "Berkman's Bunch," an outreach for underprivileged kids who meet with Berkman before Saturday home games for autographs and other gifts. When West, Texas was ravaged by an explosion at a local fertilizer plant in 2013, Berkman purchased and donated a fire truck to the reeling city. Altogether, he and his wife have donated $2,500,000 to a charity they started called "The Lord's Fund."
However, the rabid homosexual supremacy movement doesn't care anything about all that. When Berkman was invited to be the speaker at the Cardinals' July 30 "Christian Day," the Gay Gestapo went into hyperdrive to pressure the Cardinals to rescind the invitation.
Their reason? Berkman, who has four daughters, quite sensibly does not want boys showering with girls. As a longtime Houston Astro, Berkman opposed a Houston city ordinance in 2015 that mandated that male students given unchallenged access to girls bathrooms, locker rooms, and shower rooms as long as they self-identify as a girl on any particular day.
Berkman said,
Berkman along the way has denounced the "virtue" of "tolerance," which Aristotle said was one of the "last virtues of a dying society." Berkman said,
Berkman's position on this volatile social issue is rooted in his sincere Christian faith. As he said on The 700 Club in May 2007, "What you're running after, what you're trying to find will not provide you with any lasting fulfillment. The only place you can find that is Jesus Christ. It's in the service of God you'll find that lasting fulfillment."
The Cardinals, to their credit, have refused to be bullied, intimidated, and cowed into meek submission. The club is standing by its decision to support both Christian Day and Lance Berkman, and brilliantly doing so on the grounds of inclusivity. How in the world, the Cardinals seem to be saying, can you consider yourself inclusive if you deliberately exclude the 71% of Americans who call themselves Christians?
Said the Cardinals,
Many other major league baseball teams hold similar faith-based events. Last summer, for instance, my family and I attended "Fellowship Day" at AT&T Park in San Francisco, if you can believe it, a post-game event which was attended by thousands of Giants fans and featured five-time All Star catcher Buster Posey.
So here's a tip of the hat to the St. Louis Cardinals and a fervent prayer that Christianity will once again resume an honored place in America's public life, including in our athletic stadiums. It's the least we should expect in a nation founded on the truth claims and moral standards of the Judeo-Christian tradition. As the Supreme Court ruled in 1892, "This is a Christian nation." It's time we started acting like it again.
(Unless otherwise noted, the opinions expressed are the author's and do not necessarily reflect the views of the American Family Association or American Family Radio.)
© Bryan Fischer
June 19, 2017
Follow me on Twitter: @BryanJFischer, on Facebook at "Focal Point"
Host of "Focal Point" on American Family Radio, 1-3pm CT, M-F www.afr.net
Lance Berkman – nicknamed "Big Puma" – was a bona fide baseball star in his 15 year major league career. He hit 366 home runs, retired with lifetime batting average of .293, and was named to six All Star teams. He won a World Series title and Comeback Player of the Year with the St. Louis Cardinals in 2011. He was only the second major leaguer in history to hit more than 40 home runs in a season as a switch-hitter. Mickey Mantle was the first.
Forbes Magazine recognized him as one of the "30 most generous celebrities" in 2012. In 2001, He started a group called "Berkman's Bunch," an outreach for underprivileged kids who meet with Berkman before Saturday home games for autographs and other gifts. When West, Texas was ravaged by an explosion at a local fertilizer plant in 2013, Berkman purchased and donated a fire truck to the reeling city. Altogether, he and his wife have donated $2,500,000 to a charity they started called "The Lord's Fund."
However, the rabid homosexual supremacy movement doesn't care anything about all that. When Berkman was invited to be the speaker at the Cardinals' July 30 "Christian Day," the Gay Gestapo went into hyperdrive to pressure the Cardinals to rescind the invitation.
Their reason? Berkman, who has four daughters, quite sensibly does not want boys showering with girls. As a longtime Houston Astro, Berkman opposed a Houston city ordinance in 2015 that mandated that male students given unchallenged access to girls bathrooms, locker rooms, and shower rooms as long as they self-identify as a girl on any particular day.
Berkman said,
-
"The issue is, what to do about a 15 or 16-year-old boy who thinks he's a girl and wants to shower with the girls. Maybe he is [transgender], maybe he's confused. But I wouldn't want him in the shower with my daughters. We shouldn't have the rights of 2 percent of the population trump the rights of the other 98 percent."
Berkman along the way has denounced the "virtue" of "tolerance," which Aristotle said was one of the "last virtues of a dying society." Berkman said,
-
"To me tolerance is the virtue that's killing this country. We're tolerant of everything. You know, everything is OK, and as long as you want to do it and as long as it feels good to you then it's perfectly acceptable do it. Those are the kinds of things that lead you down a slippery slope, and you'll get in trouble in a hurry."
Berkman's position on this volatile social issue is rooted in his sincere Christian faith. As he said on The 700 Club in May 2007, "What you're running after, what you're trying to find will not provide you with any lasting fulfillment. The only place you can find that is Jesus Christ. It's in the service of God you'll find that lasting fulfillment."
The Cardinals, to their credit, have refused to be bullied, intimidated, and cowed into meek submission. The club is standing by its decision to support both Christian Day and Lance Berkman, and brilliantly doing so on the grounds of inclusivity. How in the world, the Cardinals seem to be saying, can you consider yourself inclusive if you deliberately exclude the 71% of Americans who call themselves Christians?
Said the Cardinals,
-
"As an organization, the Cardinals have always been committed to bringing like-minded groups together to share in the unifying experience of Cardinals baseball. We are an inclusive organization with a social responsibility to be welcoming to all types of people and organizations."
Many other major league baseball teams hold similar faith-based events. Last summer, for instance, my family and I attended "Fellowship Day" at AT&T Park in San Francisco, if you can believe it, a post-game event which was attended by thousands of Giants fans and featured five-time All Star catcher Buster Posey.
So here's a tip of the hat to the St. Louis Cardinals and a fervent prayer that Christianity will once again resume an honored place in America's public life, including in our athletic stadiums. It's the least we should expect in a nation founded on the truth claims and moral standards of the Judeo-Christian tradition. As the Supreme Court ruled in 1892, "This is a Christian nation." It's time we started acting like it again.
(Unless otherwise noted, the opinions expressed are the author's and do not necessarily reflect the views of the American Family Association or American Family Radio.)
© Bryan Fischer
The views expressed by RenewAmerica columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of RenewAmerica or its affiliates.
(See RenewAmerica's publishing standards.)