UFC fans hear a fair amount about devout Muslim fighters, particularly the Dagestanis. Khabib and Islam have won renown, and their excellence brings credit to their faith.
We hear a good deal less about Christian champions. So I thought to add some perspective.🧵
The highlighting of great Muslim fighters and the relative silence about Christian one leave one with the vague impression that Islam is the dominant religion of the sport and contribute to the larger narrative that Christianity is not for hard men.
This is not the case. There have been and still are more than a few Christian champions and top-level contenders. Here's a very unofficial list:
Ilia Topuria—
The newly crowned featherweight champion is an Orthodox Christian from Georgia who has found a home in Spain. He is on the shortlist for the most skilled boxers in the sport. His faith is all over his X account.
Charles Oliveira—
Here’s the former lightweight champion, the man who holds the record for most finishes in UFC history, offering a striking prayer as he cuts weight before a fight.
Jon Jones—
Perhaps the greatest fighter in the history of the sport, Jones famously drew a reprimand from Dana White when he won the light heavyweight title and thanked his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
(Jones has a troubled past, no doubt—I don’t offer him as an ideal Christian. But you know what the Lord said: "They that are whole need not the physician: but they that are sick. I came not to call the just, but sinners to penance.")
Sergi Pavlovich—
Before losing to Aspinall recently, the Russian heavyweight had established himself as one of the most frightening men in the UFC, finishing six straight opponents in the first round. The man crosses himself like a maniac when he finishes an opponent.
Beneil Dariush—
Dariush is one of the most outspoken Christians in the fighting game. Prior to losing to Oliveira, Dariush had won eight straight fights and appeared to be on his way to a title shot.
Aside: I once saw an interview with Dariush in which he was asked how he squares his faith and his profession. The very premise of the question annoyed me. Is it preferable to be a Christian banker or bureaucrat than a Christian fighter?
Wonderboy—
Kickboxer Stephen Thompson is probably the most wholesome fighter on the roster, clearly a believer. At one point in his career, Thompson was 13-1 and fought welterweight champ Tyron Woodley to a draw. In a previous career as a kickboxer, Wonderboy was 57-0.
Benoit St Denis—
As for up-and-comers on a crash course with greatness, there's Benoit St Denis, the official favorite fighter of then Chivalry Guild.
Bo Nickal—
Another up-and-comer and likely future champion is Bo Nickal, the legendary college wrestler turned MMA stud. His X bio reads: Jesus+Nothing=Everything.
This is not to mention the previous generation of fighters, which includes some devout legends: Silva, Yoel, Chael, Fedor (not UFC, but still), etc.
To sum up: the old claim that the Christian faith makes men soft is 👇...
Postscript:
It's not meant to be a definitive or exhaustive list. Please add anyone I'm missing!
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One of the best lines from LotR is Gandalf's observation, after Boromir's death: "It was not in vain that the young hobbits came with us, if only for Boromir's sake."
It suggests the hand of Providence.
Initially the decision to include Merry & Pip in the Fellowship didn't make strategic sense. What could they contribute? Conventional wisdom would suggest fellows who can fight, even if the mission is one of stealth rather than force.
Few understand how imperiled Western life was after the rise of Islam, which swallowed up 75% of formerly Roman and Christian world and was soon pressing into Europe.
It is only because very hard Christian men that they were turned back.
Of course simping is lame. But H. Pearl Davis is out of her depth when she talks about chivalry. She's only talking about a fake modern sissification of the ideal, not the real thing. Real chivalry is all about serving God, king, country, and brother.
Meekness is not a synonym for weakness. It is instead the virtue that “restrains the onslaught of anger” and “properly mitigates the passion of anger,” in the words of Thomas Aquinas (Latin: mansuetude).
Though anger too often gets a bad name, it’s obvious that unchecked anger can undo a man. It actually makes him weak, too easily set off, lured into pointless squabbles because he can’t help himself. Ungoverned anger compels him waste his strength by answering every provocation.
An obvious reason is because it demands so little of the faithful. Fasting is the best example. 🧵
Once upon a time, Catholics were called to eat no food until sundown 2x/week (on Wednesday and Friday). That’s not just during Lent—but all year. Communion fasts began at midnight.
The austerity was dialed up during Lent: one meal plus a collation Monday through Saturday, no food at all on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, bread and water only during Holy Week, no meat and no dairy during the whole forty days.
An invaluable resource for those of us with too many books to read & not enough time to read them—
🧵
In general I'm trying to cut down on the noise I allow into my ears, even if it’s good noise (educational podcasts, audiobooks, great music). We need to be silence-maxxing, or if not maxxing, at least upping.
Better men than I spent far more time in silence. Too much noise, too much talking—it all gets in the way of clarity. The ubiquity of dumb pop music for instance: every store you enter seems obliged to force it upon you.
If you're anything like me, you internalized a sense (from both your religious instructors and the movies) that Catholic ethics amounted to a warm-over sentimentalism of niceness, tolerance, and prudery.
Jesus was a chill liberal, like John Lennon, except that he also wanted you to feel a little weird about your natural desires.