When I was a kid in San Diego, it was a special treat to go to a professional baseball game and watch the Padres in action. There were many years our local team was the "cellar dweller" (last place!) and did not field a competitive team. It was rare for the Padres to keep young talent because good players were expensive, and the ownership was not nearly as financially invested in building a championship team as today. Sometimes the most exciting thing that happened during a baseball game was when a fan jumped the barrier and ran around on the field until they were corralled by security. It happened with such frequency that we developed a term for such trespassers: crowd pleasers. There were likely many times the roar of the few thousands in attendance was the loudest as unfit men ran onto the field and deftly dodged equally unfit and uncoordinated security guards.
Over the years, strict penalties were enforced to deter fans from running onto the field for the protection of the players. All in attendance were warned anyone who ran on the field could expect to be arrested, be fined and perhaps be banned from entering the stadium. Another step taken by the MLB television networks was to pan away and not broadcast anyone who went onto the field. As a result only the people present in the stadium could witness the silliness and served to remove any hope of worldwide notoriety on television (even if infamy!) by breaking the rules. These deterrents have proved effective and have greatly reduced the number of people who decided to storm the field of MLB games.
There is wisdom in the MLB network's refusal to provide air time for hooligans and trespassers whose disruptive and dangerous antics cause stoppages in play. Fans may still enjoy watching people embarrass themselves as they scramble away from security guards like pet dogs trying to avoid capture by their owners in the street. We Christians may not make millions of dollars through our networking, but we can choose to walk in wisdom concerning what we choose to broadcast to the world in our social media feeds, blogs, messages and comments. God has given us His wisdom and discernment by the indwelling Holy Spirit to choose what stories are worthy of repeating and drawing attention to and those we should avoid mentioning. There are funny jokes that should not be retold and stories left unsaid that paint others in a bad light.
Focus on "crowd pleasers" who run around on the field can tarnish the MLB brand, and as Christians we ought to consider if our broadcasts bring honour to Christ or distract from Him. Messages that sow fear, doubts and controversial subjects should not be given the spotlight when we have God's word that speaks truth, provides wisdom and brings salvation. Many times my family and I left the stadium after a forgettable game and it was an obscene heckler or crowd pleaser who took the field, gave security guards the slip and managed to slide into second base which provided the most memorable occurrences during the game. Every day we have opportunities to focus on the infamous and please the crowd or to extol the glorious greatness of our God and please our Saviour Jesus Christ. May the LORD teach us when to be silent and how we ought to speak.
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