Devout Christian Ben Shelton gives first thanks to God immediately after BMW Open title win – Sportskeeda
Devout Christian Ben Shelton gives first thanks to God immediately after BMW Open title win Sportskeeda

Devout Christian Ben Shelton gives first thanks to God immediately after BMW Open title win Sportskeeda

World No. 3 Coco Gauff proudly celebrates Easter Sunday with family and friends ahead of testing times in the clay-court swing

Jaden Ivey blasts critics questioning his mental health, defends controversial Christianity and LGBTQ remarks, and insists he’s “proclaiming truth” while doubling down after admitting suicidal thoughts.

This high school coach is getting his players ready for football season… and Easter weekend. We are coming up on the day that Christians recognize as Easter Sunday, which celebrates the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Good Friday marks the day that Jesus was crucified, and that story is told in many books of the New Testament – specifically the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. It was actually in John 19:16-17 that Jesus was described as carrying his own […] The post “Feel A SMALL Part Of What Jesus Did”: High School Football Coach Goes Viral For Having His Players Carry 100 Pounds For Half A Mile first appeared on Whiskey Riff.

Jaden Ivey was waived by the Chicago Bulls this week following significant backlash over a string of social media rants.

Right now, Ivey seems far less concerned with where he plays next than with making sure people hear exactly why he believes he is out of Chicago.

Jaden Ivey isn’t a good enough player to push a message about the Pride Month.

PHOENIX — The controversy stirred by the Chicago Bulls when they released guard Jaden Ivey on Monday after he voiced opposition to gay pride events spread to social media throughout the day as, shockingly, people took sides on the matter.That bled over to the NFL, where New England Patriots running back TreVeyon Henderson defended Ivey by quoting the Bible.Henderson put the story on social media and replied directly from Scripture: "Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heave," Henderson wrote, quoting Matthew 5:10.Henderson obviously believes Ivey is being persecuted for espousing righteousness. Well, that put Henderson in the crosshairs of some NFL media who took his message of support directly to coach Mike Vrabel, asking him at the NFL annual meeting on Tuesday his thoughts on Henderson's stance.And to be fair, the question to Vrabel at the AFC coaches' breakfast was in the context of asking the coach what the line between conduct detrimental to the team and a player expressing his opinions and world view is for the New England Patriots."I think there's a fine line," Vrabel said. "I'll tell you, I love TreVeyon. I love the person. He cares deeply about our team. He cares deeply about his faith. He cares deeply about his family. His wife. The people in our building."And so, I want them to be able to express what they believe in their heart and in their mind. But also, I want to make sure that they're educated. We want to be inclusive. Everything we want to do wants to provide an environment for people to feel comfortable. "But also to share their personal beliefs and, also, we represent the team and we represent the organization.""I think there's a fine line," Vrabel said. "I'll tell you, I love TreVeyon. I love the person. He cares deeply about our team. He cares deeply about his faith. He cares deeply about his family. His wife. The people in our building."And so, I want them to be able to express what they believe in their heart and in their mind. But also, I want to make sure that they're educated. We want to be inclusive. Everything we want to do wants to provide an environment for people to feel comfortable. "But also to share their personal beliefs and, also, we represent the team and we represent the organization."There's a lot to unpack here.So it is true that every player, coach, everyone getting a paycheck from a team or workplace represents that team or workplace. Henderson represents the New England Patriots.But … to suggest defending a fellow Christian falls into the possibility of not representing the team well is troubling. It would put Henderson in the same company with Patriots employees that get busted for DUI or shoplifting or doing some other disreputable thing.Henderson's reaction was none of that. He was sharing his faith as the United States Constitution gives him that right.Secondly, the education part. Vrabel wants to make sure Henderson is educated about what he's saying, his opinion and perhaps how other people feel. This raises the suggestion that Henderson isn't educated on the subject.So he needs indoctrination to get him in line? Really?It's interesting that even in basically supporting Henderson – because he's a good player, good citizen, good husband, good man of faith and has a right to express himself – Vrabel couldn't just leave it at that. He had to raise the possibility Henderson might be somehow wrong because supporting another athlete that doesn't embrace gay pride is not "inclusive."

New England Patriots running back TreVeyon Henderson has expressed his support for Jaden Ivey amid the latter’s recent string of controversial posts. Ivey was released by the Chicago Bulls on Monday shortly after he went on a rant disparaging the LGBTQ community. The former Bulls guard also criticized the NBA for hosting Pride Night, which … The post Patriots player backs Jaden Ivey after his anti-LGBTQ rant appeared first on Larry Brown Sports.

After Jaden Ivey blasted the NBA's Pride Night celebration, he was let go by the Chicago Bulls. And fans blasted the team for their reasoning behind Ivey's unceremonious exit.

The Nashville Predators celebrated Pride Night on Thursday vs. New Jersey. The night included a gay country band that seemingly mocks Jesus Christ and Christians in its debut single.
