7.15.2010

Observation #10

Theological study becomes considerably more confusing if you get Arians mixed up with Aryans.

7.04.2010

Observation #9

Few events illustrate the sinful excess of American culture like a televised eating contest where the winner consumes 54 hot dogs in ten minutes and wins $20,000 for doing so.

7.03.2010

A New Post! (Sort Of)

I haven’t updated in quite some time, as I feel like I’ve been going non-stop since the beginning of June (if not before). After preparing for and coordinating VBS and taking the youth group to summer camp, I’m now fully immersed in reading roughly 1,500 pages of material for my grad school class which I have to travel to Memphis for on July 12.

This has resulted in me having absolutely no time for blogging (really I probably shouldn’t even be writing this; I’m just taking a break from reading). This inability to find time to blog is unfortunate, because I have several things I’d like to write about. Hopefully some time will open up after my I have class in a couple of weeks.

6.03.2010

So Long, Junior


This morning as I was watching Sportscenter I learned that Ken Griffey Jr. had retired after 22 seasons in the Major Leagues. I wrote about Griffey back when he hit his 600th home run, but now that he has retired, I just wanted to make a couple of remarks about his career.

Although I still love baseball and expect that I always will, my obsession with baseball likely reached its peak in the early to mid 90s. At that point I played league baseball every year, watched every Braves game I had access to, spent every cent I could scrape together on packs of baseball cards, and each baseball season I devoted every ounce of free time I could to the imaginary baseball league I created in the back yard (I would play all the games myself and keep stats for all the players; it was pretty awesome in an OCD kind of way).

And during that time, Ken Griffey Jr. was the undisputed king of the baseball world. You could maybe even argue that we was the king of the entire sporting world—everyone respected Michael Jordan, but they liked Griffey. And how could you not? He did everything well and seemed to have such a good time doing it.

As time went on though, Griffey started to suffer through a string of injuries which somewhat limited his production, while at the same time a lot of other players suddenly got really muscular and started jacking home runs in quantities that made Griffey’s numbers look modest by comparison. At the time, Griffey was often overlooked because of this, but in the long run, I think it’s what will secure his legacy—he hit 630 home runs over his 22-year career, and he did it the right way. Only Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth and Willie Mays could make the same claim, and that’s impressive company.

Finally, Griffey retiring is kind of sad for me personally as it sort of marks the end of an era—the up and coming young superstar of my youth is now too old to play. If “The Kid”—who always wore his hat backwards in batting practice while blowing big bubbles with his gum—has to retire, I guess all of us are getting older, huh?

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