Godball
How Athletes are Saving Christianity
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- 予約注文
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- リリース予定日:2026年6月9日
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- ¥2,200
発行者による作品情報
From a New York Times bestselling author, sports journalist, and fellow believer comes a riveting exploration of the sports-centered Christian revival sweeping America.
After a thirty-year reduction in Americans who identified as Christians, the 2020s have seen the birth of a new Christian revival bordering on revolution. Pastors and Christian leaders see it, as do many secular observers. But nowhere is the trend more evident than in sports.
Tune into any post-game interview or press conference, and it won’t be more than a minute before you hear someone giving a Jesus shoutout: “First and foremost, I want to give all glory and praise to my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ!” Language that was once limited to more intimate circles of faith are now being broadcast to—and is also being embraced by—the mainstream. Some of these events turn into full-blown testimonials. Acclaimed sports journalist Steve Eubanks argues something deeper is at play here: these athletes have become Christianity’s most powerful evangelists. Why is this happening, and what role is it playing in the increase in young people (particularly men) declaring themselves as Christians? And, more importantly, what does it all mean?
A man of deep faith, Eubanks embarks on a reporting journey to find the answer to these questions, interviewing many high-profile Christian athletes. Eubanks explores the pivotal role of the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in Kennedy v. Bremerton; traces a common conviction among Christian athletes and coaches who see the revival as part of a larger spiritual battle; and warns that the rapid rise of sports gambling may be a toehold of sin capable of undermining the entire movement.
In this inspiring and revealing book, Eubanks takes readers inside the explosion of Christian evangelism in sports—and shows how the world’s top athletes are doing God’s work to save the church.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Today's athletes are doing more than thanking God in postgame interviews," writes sports journalist Eubanks (All American) in this scattershot polemic. "They are changing the culture of teams, leagues, sports, communities, and nations." Eubanks begins by celebrating high school football coach Joe Kennedy, who was disciplined in 2015 by his school district in Washington State for leading prayers at midfield but vindicated in 2022 when the Supreme Court deemed his prayers protected speech. For Eubanks, this signals a welcome thinning of "the wall separating church and state," fueled in no small part by the rise of "sports-driven evangelism" that finds athletes using their platforms to praise God and coaches leading prayers in locker rooms and on sidelines. The movement has emerged at a moment when trust in institutional churches has plummeted to historic lows, putting athletes in a unique position to organically spread their faith to fans, especially young men, who now outnumber women in identifying as Christian. The author sees this "revival" as an antidote to a secular culture rife with sin and starved of positive Christian American values. Unfortunately, most of the account is spent scare-mongering about everything from "goat-headed statues of Satan" on U.S. state capitol grounds to the supposed proliferation of "drag queen story hours" in schools, leaving little room for Eubanks to develop his thesis about athletes and Christianity in depth. This misses the mark.