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You Really Can’t Take It With You

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Written by Basil on 06/28/2006 5:42 AM. Filed under:


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This is for Brother Bourbon:

But why are so many stories about sports and religion so shallow? The fact is that sports have superseded religion in most areas as the dominant means for communal interaction. Athletes are much more popular than saints or religious figures. Team colors are donned much more fervently than liturgical colors. Sports arenas are viewed by many as places for worship and devotion — and, sometimes, as sanctuaries — more than cathedrals are. Fans may spend more time tracking their fantasy stats than they do studying religious texts. And there’s little question that religious feast days are being displaced by more important days (Superbowl Sunday comes to mind).

These are all aspects of an interesting sociological phenomenon. So when Major League Baseball contracts with a company to use team logos on urns and caskets, I wonder if Reuters’ reporter might get a comment or two from folks who could provide perspective.

Read more: GetReligion: Kicking the bucket through those great goal posts in the sky

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One Response to “You Really Can’t Take It With You”

  1. JohnNicholas Says:

    Sports mania fits in nicely with the basic psychological needs to belong to an identity group, claim its exertions and victories as your own, and thereby achieve “self actualization”. Of course, Marketing gurus love it because it generates megabucks of revenue. Poor substitute for religion.