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Another public figure has found themselves given the finger by today’s moral umpires.

Despite a promising match, Robinson was caught out by a series of tweets that he posted as a teenager.

Ollie Robinson is, or rather was, England’s newest Test cricketer. The 27-year-old fast-bowler made his international Test debut during the week against New Zealand. Despite a promising match with the ball, Robinson was caught out. In fact, he is now suspended from all international cricket until a disciplinary investigation has been completed.

It wasn’t Robinson’s on-field performance that led to this very public humiliation, but a series of tweets that he posted as a teenager back in 2012-13. I’ve read Robinson’s tweets and they’re not great. They are inappropriate, tasteless, and at times crude. Despite issuing an apology, the England and Wales Cricket Board, have cancelled his next Test appearance and his future in cricket is now far from certain.

The New Inquisition

Ollie Robinson is the latest of what is becoming a very crowded space of people who have had their careers and even lives ruined because of past transgressions on social media.

Do I think his sins deserve suspension? No. I think the apology was appropriate and hopefully he will learn and grow. But should stupid words from childhood serve as cause to lose his place in the nation’s cricket team? The England and Wales Cricket Board certainly believe so, and I suspect the same would occur in many sporting codes today.

If you break the rules, you’re damned to hell.

In our culture’s obsession with finding hidden skeletons, there is little nuance or attempt to understand. If you break the rules, you’re damned to hell. This is problematic for several reasons. First of all, these rules are constantly moving about like Warnie bowling to Gatting. One moment you’re safe and the next the rules have shifted and you’re stumped! There is no scale for measuring wrongdoing. A person who misspeaks someone’s preferred pronoun can as easily lose their job as someone who bullies a colleague. A Christian may pray with a person and find themselves facing a prison term that’s longer than a real criminal who inflicts bodily harm on another. The rules are often made by the mob and with authorities bowing before whoever is appealing the loudest on the day.

The Walk of Shame

For a few recalcitrants, there is a way out of Hades; sure, you’ll lose your soul but you just might be allowed to return to your sport or place of work. All you have to do is fully endorse and join groupthink. Just carry around your Twitter handle a placard of shame, and then nod and repeat everything that our culture’s new bishops tell us to say, think, and feel.

In the case of Ollie Robinson, did he make comments that were bordering on sexist and racist? Yes. Was he a teenager at the time? Yes. Was it malicious? I doubt it. Foolish? Certainly. I also suspect that if the trolls and governing authorities dig deep enough, every single player in the English team will find themselves suspended for one transgression or another. And let’s not forget the Aussies either!

We all have done dumb things in our past and said things that we’ve later regretted. We are masters at messing-up, and with maturity, we realise our hopeless inability to erase the past. As the Bible reminds us, “you may be sure that your sin will find you out.” (Numbers 32:23)

Yet, as a society we are moving well beyond anything the Bible envisages. We are creating a hyper-moralistic, self-righteous, and legalistic culture where there is easy rage, much finger pointing and very little forgiveness.

Finding Forgiveness

Where is the forgiveness? Do we even believe in forgiveness any longer? I don’t mean for us personally, but offering forgiveness to others.

There are still moments when I’m horrified that God knows my entire past … my distress finds great comfort through knowing the Lord Jesus died for all my transgressions.

We are living in strange times. I remember a time not so long ago when Christians were portrayed as moralising and judgemental. Christians were supposedly the crowd who went around condemning every moral failing and sinful shift in society. No doubt there was a touch of truth in that. But the whole fabric of the Christian faith is about knowing the forgiveness of a loving and holy God and how this good news transforms our lives.

There are still moments when I’m horrified at the thought that God knows my entire past: every sinful deed and thought. Of course, God’s measurement for right and wrong isn’t defined by the latest social theory or groupthink, it’s shaped by his unchanging character and purposes. However, my distress finds great comfort through knowing the Lord Jesus died for all my transgressions. The God who sees my true failings has, in love, offered forgiveness and reconciliation.

The thing is, as societies like the UK and Australia turn our backs on the Christian faith it shouldn’t surprise us that they are becoming less tolerant and more fractious. It really is the Gospel of Jesus Christ alone that can hold together justice and mercy, righteousness and forgiveness.

The England and Wales Cricket Board are simply echoing the cries of a failing society that is bent of bowling bouncers and little else. We are seeing lots of shots being pulled in anger, but surely we are desperate to find grace and mercy. If we are not going find forgiveness in our decaying culture, then perhaps we can revisit those communities that are founded upon divine forgiveness and which are learning to live in the light of the goodness.

Meanwhile, I hope to see Ollie Robinson playing in the upcoming Ashes series … and watching the Aussies make lots of runs!


First published at murraycampbell.net

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