Pope: Basketball helps young people to ‘look up’

By Vatican News, 5 June 2021
Young people play basketball during the at the Catholic Youth Parramatta LIFTED Sports Day. Image: Diocese of Parramatta

 

Pope Francis highlights teamwork and discipline as important aspects of sporting activities in his address to a delegation from the Italian Basketball Federation.

On Monday 30 May, Pope Francis received a delegation from the Italian Basketball Federation (FIP) as it celebrates a centenary since its establishment.

Founded in 1921, the FIP is the national body for Basketball in Italy. It is a member of the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) and it is responsible for organising competitions in Italy and the Italian basketball leagues.

Addressing the officials of the governing body, the Pope acknowledged the words of greeting from the president Giovanni Petrucci, and recalled a game played in 1955 in St. Peter’s Square in front of Pope Pius XII.

The Holy Father also underscored the relationship between the Church and the world of sport, which has been cultivated with the awareness that “both, in different ways, are at the service of the integral growth of the person and can offer a valuable contribution to our society.”

Teamwork to combat individualism

Pope Francis went on to emphasise two important aspects of sporting activities – teamwork and discipline.

He noted that even though some sports are “individual,” sports bring people – often from unknown and different backgrounds – to form relationships with each other in order to “come together and fight for a common goal.”

“Two things are important: being united and having a goal,” the Pope said, adding that in this sense, sports become “a medicine for the individualism of our societies,” which sometimes creates isolated, sad individuals incapable of being “team players” and of “cultivating a passion for good ideals.”

Commitment to sports, the Pope continued, reminds us of “the value of fraternity, which is also at the heart of the Gospel.”

Discipline: a school of formation and education

“An attitude of the sportsperson is discipline,” Pope Francis pointed out, adding that many people who are passionate about sports often do not know how much work and training go into a competition.

Speaking further, he noted that discipline is not only physical, but also internal, as it requires “physical exercise, constancy, attention to an orderly life in schedules and nutrition, as well as rest alternated with the fatigue of training.”

This discipline, the Pope continued, “is a school of formation and education,” especially for young people, as, in the words of St. Ignatius of Loyola, it helps “put one’s life in order”.

At the same time, it “is not meant to make us rigid, but to make us responsible: for ourselves, for the things entrusted to us, for others, for life in general.”

Discipline for spiritual life

Pope Francis also noted that discipline helps spiritual life “which cannot be left to the emotions alone nor can it be lived in alternating phases” or when it is convenient.

In this sense, it also requires “an inner discipline made up of fidelity, constancy, and a daily commitment to prayer” because “without constant inner training, faith runs the risk of dying out.

Promoting healthy play

Turning his thoughts to the sport of basketball, Pope Francis reiterated the words of a famous basketballer who said that “it is a sport that looks up, towards the basket, and therefore it is a real challenge for all those who are used to living with their eyes always on the ground.”

On this note, the Holy Father urged the governing body to “promote healthy play among children and young people, to help young people to look up, to never give up, and to discover that life is a path made up of losses and victories.”

In all, the Pope stressed that the important thing is that young people do not lose the desire to “play the game” and understand that even if they do not “make the shot” they have not lost forever.

“You can always go to the court again, you can still team up with others, and you can attempt another shot,” Pope Francis said.

With thanks to Vatican News, where this article originally appeared.

 

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