The anti-Christian snowflakes are at it again. This time their frail pathetic worldview crumbled at the very sight of Tony Dungy mentioning God in a tweet about the Super Bowl.
He posted a comment on Twitter:
Congratulations to the Eagles. Nick Foles told me last week that he felt the Lord had him in Philadelphia for a special moment and he played like it tonight. pic.twitter.com/BgYvucnK6Q
— Tony Dungy (@TonyDungy) February 5, 2018
How is this controversial? He just said what Foles told him he felt, and he made an observation about it. SO WHAT?
Well if you’re a whiny pathetic atheist, you just can’t handle it:
@TonyDungy unbelievable you would use your employer, @NBCSports, to spout this nonsense on the air. @TweetofGod
— € (@eladler) February 5, 2018
What a pathetic loser. If all of this is “nonsense” to him, why is he so threatened by it? And if ESPN wants some faith-based observations in their coverage, WHO CARES?
Dungy responded:
NBC pays me to express my opinion. And it was my opinion that Nick Foles would play well because his Christian faith would allow him to to play with confidence. And that he’s a good QB. I think I was right on both counts. https://t.co/4HOfXt78UZ
— Tony Dungy (@TonyDungy) February 6, 2018
Why would you find it hard to believe that the Holy Spirit could speak to Nick Foles just as much as a coach could speak to him? If he credited a coach for saying “Stay calm and be confident” that’s good. But if he tells me Christ says that to him I shouldn’t report it??? https://t.co/I7P4IU26GH
— Tony Dungy (@TonyDungy) February 6, 2018
What sad empty lives these people lead to have to complain about such things.
How exactly does Jehovah God go about deciding which side to take in a sports contest?
— Tom Bayer (@keepawake2) February 6, 2018
The idea strikes me as utterly bizarre.
This is one of the more common complaints from idiots who don’t understand Christianity and whine out of their ignorance. Most Christians don’t believe God takes a side in sports contests. But that doesn’t mean a player can’t pray for God to help him be his best, and then give God the glory afterward. That is perfectly reasonable – unless you’re an anti-Christian fascist whose beliefs are so shoddy they can’t handle opposing beliefs in the public square.