M
arvin Olasky on what the media failed to report after US gymnast Gabby Douglas won gold on Thursday:
It was hard to miss yesterday the Christian beliefs that gave Gabby
Douglas the foundation for all the work and concentration that went into
her gold medal performance. Interviewed on television directly after
her triumph, the gymnast said, “I give all the glory to God. It’s kind
of a win-win situation. The glory goes up to him and the blessings fall
down on me.”
Later Douglas tweeted, “Let all that I am praise the LORD; may I
never forget the good things He does for me.” Earlier in the Olympics
she had blogged for ESPN, “Gotta give God the Glory! Thank you everyone
for praying for me! It means so much to me!”
[...]
Stories in USA Today and the Los Angeles Times didn’t mention it, nor did The New York Times story, but The Times did note that Douglas’ mother and the mom of the family she lived with in Iowa “shared religious beliefs.” The Times did not specify what those beliefs are.
The Christian Science Monitor also left out what is so important to Douglas, but it did quote her saying
“’hard work really does pay off’ in the astonished tones of someone who
had just bought a Ginsu knife and was shocked to learn that it really
can cut tomatoes wafer-thin.” Good line.
Reporters are surprised and sometimes shocked to hear that faith in
Christ (except among people they think are crazy) makes a difference.
When I did a Nexis computerized search of “Gabby Douglas” and
“Christian” in publications yesterday and today, only Agence France Presse came up: “Douglas, a devout Christian.” No major publication apparently quoted her “glory to God” remarks.
But that makes sense, within standard journalistic understandings.
Newspaper space is limited: Why waste it by bringing up something
irrelevant, even though the subject of the story benightedly thinks it
important?
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