Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 228
Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-0-7425-6247-9 • Hardback • October 2009 • $22.95 • (£17.99)
Tom Krattenmaker is a member of USA Today's Board of Contributors and a frequent contributor to its weekly On Religion series. His work has also appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer, Los Angeles Times, and Salon. He resides in Portland, Oregon.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Chapter 1: On Any Justice Sunday: Evengelicals, Pro Sports, and the (Conservative) Campaign for Jesus
Chapter 3 Chapter 2: A Cross on the Logo: Representing for God in the High-Drama, High-Profile World of Major League Sports
Chapter 4 Chapter 3: Faith Coach: Discipling Athletes for a Roster Spot on God's Team
Chapter 5 Chapter 4: Winning for Jesus (But Finding Him in the Loss Column): The Tricky Relationship between Evangelism and Sports Success
Chapter 6 Chapter 5: Church at the Ballpark: Baseball Chapel and its Exclusive Theology in an Age of Growing Religious Diversity
Chapter 7 Chapter 6: From Coors Field to Eternity: Faith Days in Major League Baseball
Chapter 8 Chapter 7: For God, Country, and the Republican party: The Conservative Politics of Jesus' Pro Sports Warriors
Chapter 9 Chapter 8: Domesticated Christianity: The Political Acquiescence of African American Christians in Sports
Chapter 10 Chapter 9: A Match Made in Heaven—or Hell: The Dissonance between the Values of Jesus and the Values of Big-Time Sports
Chapter 11 Chapter 10: The Salvation of Sports: "Getting it Right" in an Emerging New Era of Faith in Sports
Chapter 12 Index
Chapter 13 About the Author
With the skill of a journalist and the diligence of a researcher, Krattenmaker makes a persuasive and compelling case that conservative Christian groups have a virtual religious monopoly in professional sports—and that there signs of change. Remarkably fair and readable, insightful and important for anybody interested in either Christianity or sports.
— Marcus Borg, New York Times best selling author and author of The Heart of Christianity
I have been waiting for someone to write this book for years, and Krattenmaker does not disappoint, Onward Christian Athletes fills the gap in our understanding of the way religion and religious organization shapes the players and the teams we follow. Anyone serious about understanding 21st century sport needs to read this book.
— DAVE ZIRIN, author of The Kaepernick Effect and sports editor for The Nation, Sports Editor at The Nation, author of A People's History of Sports in the United States
Onward Christian Athletes is compelling, judicious, prophetic—and deeply disturbing. This is a superb book.
— Randall Balmer, professor of religious history at Barnard College, Columbia University
Tom Krattenmaker—in my opinion—is one of the most informed and relevant writers on the Evangelical movement today. His critique is fair and his knowledge is impressive.
— Kevin Palau, executive vice president, Luis Palau Association
In this fascinating book, Krattenmaker maintains that 'spontaneous' displays of faith on or off the playing field (including team prayer huddles) are not so spontaneous at all, that they're part of a concerted effort on the part of a 'network of evangelical chaplains and sports ministry organizations' to join Christianity—in particular the Christian Right—with pro sports. The author makes a persuasive argument that athletes are encouraged, sometimes even cajoled or pressured, to make public statements of faith, and that being a pro athlete can mean committing to becoming a spokesman on behalf of Christianity (and, by extension, a supporter of the Christian Right's political agenda). Yet this isn't an attack on religion in sports; the book argues its case but does so in a largely balanced manner. Expect both book and author to attract criticism and controversy from many on the Right; Krattenmaker won't mind; he's all in favor of a spirited debate.
— Booklist
Tom Krattenmaker leveled a comprehensive critique of the evangelical Christian message that, as he laments, permeates so much of the sporting world at both the college and professional levels. Krattenmaker correctly traces evangelical influence in sports to the 'muscular Christianity' movement so popular in America between the Civil War and World War II. He expresses appreciation for the moral influence of evangelical Christians and Christian conviction within the lives of athletes. Nevertheless, he is clearly alarmed by evangelical displays of the Gospel.
— Albert Mohler; Crosswalk.Com Blogs
Tom Krattenmaker's new Onward Christian Athletes is a brilliant and much-needed investigative analysis for those viewing post-game, on-field prayer meetings as foolish displays of exclusionary, only-through-Christ silliness. . . . This is a book that many Americans, and many sportsfans, have been waiting for and Krattenmaker has performed a public service in his rigorous and often funny investigation of something everyone sees in sports and then lets go by like a Miller Lite commercial. . . . Thank you Tom Krattenmaker!
— Uppity Wisconsin
This is a remarkably interesting read.
— Bill's 'Faith Matters' Weblog
Krattenmaker has a keen awareness and knowledge of conservative evangelical Christianity, which promotes a particular brand of faith in all the major professional sports. This is a creative treatment of a serious problem in sport and society more broadly. Highly recommended.
— Choice Reviews
This work should appeal to both academics and the general public, no matter what religious persuasion, who have an interest in and concern about the place of religion in sports today.
— Library Journal
An incisive, example-filled look at the often overlooked, seldom-examined ways in which sports and faith converge.
— Between the Lines