Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Sporting Our Spirit Club Membership Application
Promoting the spiritual significance of sport as integral to personal well-being, building community, and communing with God.
Club Membership Application- for all ages and abilities
Print Names: First ______________ Last___________________T-Shirt Size____________
First ______________ Last___________________T-Shirt Size____________
First ______________ Last___________________T-Shirt Size____________
Address:_____________________________________________________________________________
City:_____________________________________State: _________________ Zip:_______________
Home Phone: _________________Cell Phone: _______________________
Date of birth______________ Age now____________ USAT Member #________________
Email: __________________________________________
Emergency Contact: Name:_____________________________Phone #______________________
Club membership dues:_________$35.00 per individual.
Each additional family member, add $15. ________. Annual renewal $25.00________(family or indv.)
Dues include: SOS T-Shirt, email notifications of trainings and races, sponsorship discounts, invitations to SOS socials, and the inspiration to get fit together and to build the mission to help others do the same.
Date _________________________ Signature_____________________________________________________
Parent: Please sign for any family member under the age of 18.______________________________________
Parent Name: Printed_______________________________________
Catch the spirit of sweat!
"God made me for a purpose. But He also made me fast! And when I run I feel His pleasure."
Eric Liddel, 1924 Olympian.
Total number of family members applying ______________. Total amount due:_________________.
Mail CHECK and APPLICATION(S) to:
Coach Susan Kelly
Sporting Our Spirit
2301 LaSalle Ave.
Fort Myers, FL 33907
For further info,
Call Coach Susan: Cell #: 239-822-6507 or Email: Susan@SportingOurSpirit.com
Website: http://sportingourspirit.com/
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Is Lent about controlling our appetites?
Is Lent about controlling our appetites? Fr. Tugwell offers a different perspective.
"I am the LORD your God, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt. Open your mouth wide, and I will fill it (Ps. 81:10)"
"The ideal is for us not to control our appetites at all, but to allow them full rein in the wake of an uncontrolled appetite for God. We all too easily speak and think as if righteousness resulted chiefly from the curbing of our appetites, as if our appetites were only for sin. But strictly speaking we have no appetite for sin.
"What we experience as an appetite for sin is a sick appetite which has mistaken its object. In moments of despondency we may perhaps look around and think that we should be much happier if we gave up trying to be good, if we could enjoy all the vices of the world around us. But that is only a fantasy. The desire for goodness is really a much more robust desire than any alleged desire for evil...
"We must be content to grow slowly towards goodness, taking, if need be, a long time to convalesce. Most of us, maybe, will still be barely at the beginning of our recovery even when we die. But that is better than killing ourselves pretending to be healthy...
"St. Thomas says desire is the faculty that receives, so that the bigger our desire is, the more we can receive...Our part in this is to learn to want largely and earnestly enough to make us capable of the infinite righteousness of God's kingdom...The more we try to tame and reduce ourselves and our desires and hopes, the more we deceive and distort ourselves.
"We are made for God and nothing less will really satisfy us. We we must allow our innate appetite for infinity to dislodge us whenever we are inclined to settle down and call it a day," or throw down our spiritual toys and quit playing. (The Beatitudes: Soundings in Christian Traditions, Tugwell)
"The ideal is for us not to control our appetites at all, but to allow them full rein in the wake of an uncontrolled appetite for God. We all too easily speak and think as if righteousness resulted chiefly from the curbing of our appetites, as if our appetites were only for sin. But strictly speaking we have no appetite for sin.
"What we experience as an appetite for sin is a sick appetite which has mistaken its object. In moments of despondency we may perhaps look around and think that we should be much happier if we gave up trying to be good, if we could enjoy all the vices of the world around us. But that is only a fantasy. The desire for goodness is really a much more robust desire than any alleged desire for evil...
"We must be content to grow slowly towards goodness, taking, if need be, a long time to convalesce. Most of us, maybe, will still be barely at the beginning of our recovery even when we die. But that is better than killing ourselves pretending to be healthy...
"St. Thomas says desire is the faculty that receives, so that the bigger our desire is, the more we can receive...Our part in this is to learn to want largely and earnestly enough to make us capable of the infinite righteousness of God's kingdom...The more we try to tame and reduce ourselves and our desires and hopes, the more we deceive and distort ourselves.
"We are made for God and nothing less will really satisfy us. We we must allow our innate appetite for infinity to dislodge us whenever we are inclined to settle down and call it a day," or throw down our spiritual toys and quit playing. (The Beatitudes: Soundings in Christian Traditions, Tugwell)
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