A list of puns related to "Christianity and association football"
Should be enough to have Sauce named a consensus All-American, if not unanimous. I canβt remember the five organizations that need to name him for that to be a thing.
Names like Adam/Zakariya(Zack/Zach)/Ismail are all more common from my experience.
I'm an American so this is mostly about white Christians in the US. Many of the Christians in my life love Trump and fear immigrants and refugees. They have backwards views on LGBT people and many don't acknowledge that orientations other than heterosexuality even exist (and if they do, they're "intrinsically disordered"). They are pro capitalist and anti union, they might say they aren't racist but their churches are 95% white and they get super defensive when I ask why they don't go to a church with a more diverse congregation.
I also understand and appreciate that there are many Christians who want nothing to do with the religious right--but it remains the case that Christianity's reputation in the United States has taken a beating because the most cantankerous voices are the loudest. If following Jesus is supposed to change you and make you a more loving or generous person, the evidence seems to point in the opposite direction. Why should I want anything to do with Jesus when so many of his followers are so terrible?
EDIT: Changed the first line to read "white Christians in the US" instead of "the US church"
If I never hear an announcer say it again it'll be too soon.
With an estimated global following of 4 billion people, football (or soccer as the North Americans call it) is the world's most popular sport, and this is also the case in the Eastern European country of Romania, where the fans are so passionate, they will angrily chase the players of the opposite team and referees if their team loses, and the football club owners are uncreative enough to come up with team names such as "Methane Gas Medias", "Oil Ploiesti", "Romanian Railways Cluj" "Textile Factory Arad" and the now defunct team known as "Chinese Man Timisoara" (which surprisingly, has nothing to do with China). But today we will talk about Romania's top football club, it's eccentric owner and how it lost it's name and brand
The Golden Era
In June 1947, in the then Kingdom of Romania, the Ministry of National Defense founded a football club called Steaua Bucharest, fully owned and controlled by the army. Steaua quickly rose through the ranks of the Romanian football divisions and eventually became the star of Romanian football, literally, as "Steaua" means "the star".
The club reached it's peak in 1986, when Steaua faced Spain's Barcelona in the final of the Champions League, the biggest football competition in Europe and the second biggest in the world, right after the FIFA world cup. After 120 minutes, neither team managed to score a goal so the match entered the penalty shoot-outs, where each team has 5 shots and takes turns shooting at the goal, with the goal only defended by the opposing team's goalkeeper. Fortunately for Steaua, their goalkeeper, Helmuth Duckadam, was about to set a world record and managed to defend the goal from 4 consecutive shots. (this is the only source I could find in english, the full penalty shoot-out I could only find in Romanian).
Steaua became the first Eastern European club to win the Champions League, they were praised personally by the communist dictator, Nicolae Ceausescu and the club continued strong until 1989, when the Eastern Bloc fell. Now, in a democratic, capitalist country, many of the football players of the "golden generation" departed Steaua to join the richer football clubs of Western Europe and despite Steaua still being a strong competitor in the Romanian football league, it would never again compete at the highest levels of European football. In 1998,
... keep reading on reddit β‘Link to the thread:
https://twitter.com/tomparkes_/status/1436267820636114945?s=21
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