Sasha Pachev
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« Reply #3 on: November 08, 2012, 03:59:39 pm » |
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We want to see people as black and white, hero and villain, but that is rarely the case, or we should say for regular mortals it is never the case. People that are generally classified as "bad" have some good qualities worth emulating, sometimes really admirable, and the "good" people have their flaws, sometimes very despicable. So it does not surprise me that Lance Armstrong would be running a charitable foundation while being involved in drug cheating. We live in a world where it is fashionable to justify sin by doing some good somewhere.
On the subject of an athlete being a role model. The probability, unfortunately is very small. Only a small percent of the population can be at the top. When you have a high general sin rate in the population, the chances of finding an athlete that comes reasonably clean just on the Ten Commandments are going to be next to nothing. I do hope, however, for people with athletic talent, particular those who belong to the LDS Church, and have been taught the Ten Commandments from the nursery age, to step forward, and continue to develop and show their talent while keeping the commandments "as they are written" showing their faith in our Savior Jesus Christ.
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