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Nihil

(13,508 posts)
10. If it's so few then there is no need to make special arrangements is there?
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 01:04 PM
Apr 2012

FWIW, I've known a couple of Christians who held to the "keep the Sabbath day holy"
doctrine to the extent that not only would they not take part in any sport (as in the
famous case in the 1924 London olympics) but neither would they take part in the
dress rehearsal for amateur operatics society shows (when we opened on a Monday,
the dress rehearsal was on a Sunday but they would always politely send their
apologies right at the start that they couldn't take part in any Sunday rehearsals).

Again, as I mentioned earlier, the majority of believers and non-believers are sufficiently
flexible in their interpretation of "rules" that scheduling a sports event on a nominal
"holy" day isn't going to be an issue so it brings it back to my original point: leave it
as a personal, individual choice (as all such decisions should be) and don't cause a
mess for everyone by trying to enforce & special case all *potential* conflicts.


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Two possibilities: Nihil Apr 2012 #1
Certainly some accommodations will need to be made. cbayer Apr 2012 #2
Does every team member from Israel follow religious doctrine? cleanhippie Apr 2012 #3
Strikes me that you'd end up with a four-day week (or less) if you adopted that approach. Nihil Apr 2012 #5
Very few religious believers have restrictions on what they can do on specific days or times. cbayer Apr 2012 #8
If it's so few then there is no need to make special arrangements is there? Nihil Apr 2012 #10
The article talks about some accommodations that have been easily made and cbayer Apr 2012 #11
The world record holder of the triple jump wouldn't compete on Sunday in the early 1990s muriel_volestrangler Apr 2012 #12
I recognize that there are exceptions, but as pointed out by others, most believers cbayer Apr 2012 #13
Consider the following hypothetical situation: trotsky Apr 2012 #6
I have an answer: ONLY ATHEISTS ... SamG Apr 2012 #15
Surely this is not the first time the Olympics have.. SamG Apr 2012 #4
Because we need to find religious persecution, even when it doesn't exist. cleanhippie Apr 2012 #7
Religious athletes must be the most persecuted people in SamG Apr 2012 #14
Wow. Please let the Israel olympic team know how you feel. cbayer Apr 2012 #16
So you are saying the German Olympics massacre happened because... SamG Apr 2012 #17
No, I was responding to your snarky statement about religious olympic atheletes cbayer Apr 2012 #19
The attack had everything to do with hatred, and SamG Apr 2012 #20
This message was self-deleted by its author SamG Apr 2012 #18
Good question. From the article it looks like they may be taking a unique approach. cbayer Apr 2012 #9
Not 'important' or 'controversial', so much as "tied in with a BBC comedy", I think muriel_volestrangler Apr 2012 #21
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