"Michigan is a spiritual team." Jim Harbaugh

Submitted by StephenRKass on November 29th, 2022 at 5:37 PM

I found it interesting that a number of the leaders on the team made a point to give credit to God, and to praise the spiritual atmosphere on the team. Here are several quotes, and links:

The coaches, they’re incredible. It's a happy locker room as you can imagine, but they're down there giving thanks to God. I told you this: It’s a spiritual team. And they're happy. They’re celebrating but they’re giving thanks. 

LINK:  Harbaugh postgame interview, Nov. 26

This isn't anything new. Harbaugh regularly used personal time to go on service trips to Peru. When the team went to Italy, including the Vatican in Rome, Harbaugh said:

"The role that (faith) plays in my life is in the priorities that I have," he said April 26, "faith, then family, then football."

LINK:  Jim Harbaugh, Catholic News Agency, Apr. 26, 2017

This came in the time he was able to personally present some Michigan shoes to Pope Francis.

Harbaugh humbly wanted to give all the credit to the team. He left the immediate field interviewer with JJ McCarthy to go fetch Donovan Edwards. When Edwards was asked about his performance, his first words were:

First and foremost, all praises to the Lord,” he said. “He blessed us to be able to come play in this game. All of us who played in the game, we came out healthy and we got the victory. So all praises to the Lord.”

LINK:  Donovan Edwards, Sports Spectrum, Nov. 28, 2022

Edwards had a lot more to say, with Detroit WXYZ-TV and in the postgame conference:

“The Lord has blessed us to be capable of a lot,” he said. “We trust in God, we trust in each other; we have love for the Lord and we have love for each other. … We give glory to the Lord at the end of the game. . . . The reason I was able to do what I did is because of the Lord. I pray all the time and I talk to God all the time. He told me this is going to be our game for us, that I was going to have a breakout game.”

JJ McCarthy, as many of you know, is very generous with NIL money. Among other things:

JJ For the Kids supports a number of children’s hospitals across the country. Originally started after an interaction with a young fan, McCarthy’s foundation was founded “as a way to make a difference in the lives of kids in my communities, in the Chicagoland area and in Ann Arbor.” The foundation has branched out to also support the ChadTough and Oxford Strong foundations.

LINK:  JJ McCarthy donates NIL Money to O-Line and to Charity

But more than that, JJ is an incredibly centered young man, who spends 40 minutes a day in meditation, and 10 minutes before every game.

Somewhere between leading Michigan's offense, being a college student, navigating a handful of NIL projects, and attending various events, the 19-year-old finds 40 minutes daily to close his eyes and meditate.

"I (meditate) every single day, twice a day," McCarthy said following Michigan's 59-0 win over UConn. "Before the game, it's about getting into that present moment and finding that flow. I wake up, and I'll meditate for 30 minutes. And as everyone sees out by the field goal post, I'll meditate for 10 more minutes before the game."

LINK:  JJ McCarthy's X-Factor is daily meditation

The star of the team, Blake Corum, is also spiritual. As a boy, working for his Dad's landscaping business, his father shared:

Blake always wanted to put some of his money that he earned in the church offering,” his father, James Corum, said in a telephone interview Monday. “Everything he does on and off the field, it just makes me proud to have him as my son.”

This continues with using NIL money to help the local Ypsi Community:

A day after hurting his left knee in a win over Illinois, he used funds from name, image and likeness deals to donate 300 turkeys, green beans, apple sauce, milk, a winter hat and hand sanitizer to families in Superior Township and Ypsilanti, Michigan.

Corum is humble, and not looking for credit, or just for good PR:

“The impressive part is, he’s not just out here as a volunteer doing the work, he’s writing the check,” said Bilal Saeed, who assists Corum on community service initiatives and NIL deals.

Corum, who also donated hundreds of turkeys last year, had to be convinced that publicly sharing what he does in the community served a greater good than worrying some people may think he’s trying to get credit for his charitable efforts.

LINK:  Michigan RB Blake Corum gives thanks during Ohio State week

Of course, as fans, we're going to focus on the X's and the O's out on the field. We will see the 2nd win in two years against OSU. But on the team, particularly with the leaders, their focus is on the strength they get from God, and in being humble, working together as a team.

There has been a lot of talk about the "culture" of the team. And about the culture elsewhere. I'll just say that in their interviews and comments, Jim Harbaugh, JJ McCarthy, Blake Corum, Donovan Edwards and many others are happy to spell out what that culture is.

Ernis

December 4th, 2022 at 11:32 AM ^

Meditation in the Christian tradition is explicitly and exclusively to meditate on scripture. Meditation in what we often call Eastern traditions, aligned with concepts such as "centering yourself", inner peace, yoga, chakras, etc. is considered derived from demonic influence in Christian mythology. So, if these people actually knew what was in their holy book and had a fundamentalist approach to it, they would consider JJ's meditation to be a corrupting influence. They have every reason to burn him at the stake.

All that's taking Christian scriptural ontology as if it means anything in tangible reality. In actual practice, religion is more defined by what is considered socially acceptable by the cultural norms of living people and communities and less by the formal traditions or any real spiritual experience.

Anyway, cult dynamics are powerful stuff. It can lead to great cohesion and success, but also can end in catastrophe. Jimmy is playing with fire. While I'm trying to give him the benefit of the doubt re: being inclusive of religions other than Roman Catholic or other European-aligned Abrahamic traditions, even so it would be very easy for the locker room to turn sour on people who don't fit the mold, and exactly how precisely they draw that line of what is considered acceptable, and how they respond to someone who maybe has some different ideas, will determine how much risk they are bearing in their activities. But I expect he should have a fairly smooth road since the overlap of US football players and upbringing in some form of Christian church is very large, indeed. But how this charismatic phenomenon responds to a test -either internal or external- will tell us more than just looking at the people who bought in.

Wendyk5

November 29th, 2022 at 7:56 PM ^

When you're in the minority religion, or no religion at all, and the majority does something religious, you feel compelled because of the group dynamic to join in. I'm Jewish and have been in that situation. I can imagine that guys who don't want to say the Lord's Prayer would do it anyway because they are very committed to the team and don't want to be that guy, the one who breaks the chain. I think communicating spirituality in a general sense is fine, but when you start doing things that are specific to one religion, it becomes an issue. 

Perkis-Size Me

November 29th, 2022 at 7:30 PM ^

I’m not religious at all and am a deist at best (I just can’t wrap my mind around the idea that out of all the thousands of religions out there, people are so certain that their’s is the right one) but to me as long as all religions and viewpoints on the team are welcome and Harbaugh doesn’t impose or pressure his beliefs onto the rest of the team, and I’ve been given no reason to believe that he does, then I’m good with this kind of stuff. 

Religion and spirituality can definitely foster a sense of community, and if it helps them grow as a team, then so be it. Again, as long as they are welcoming of all faiths and there’s no pressuring anyone into any particular religion, prayer, etc.

 

Phaedrus

November 30th, 2022 at 12:12 AM ^

I would say it's especially hard for those who don't have a strong religious upbringing like Gelb. When you're at temple every Saturday growing up, it's a lot easier to explain why you're not participating than when you've just never given religion much thought. From the article, Gelb appears to be fairly conservative (faith-wise), so it's not surprising that he wouldn't feel any social pressure.

I know that, personally, I get roped into religious displays all the time because I come from a Christian family and I went through catechism. I participate just because that's less awkward than explaining why I no longer participate. My wife gets off easy. If anyone asks her, she quickly shuts it down with the reminder, "I'm Jewish."

MJ14

November 29th, 2022 at 11:00 PM ^

In fact there are plenty of guys at U of M who do, but do so respectfully. And guess what? They’re not looked down on nor punished. Again you are making up scenario that just aren’t there. A few guys are prominent players. There’s mutual respect between them and the ones who partake in prayer with the team. This doesn’t have to be some dividing thing or some thing that Harbaugh forces people to do or not play them. You’re again making up scenarios that aren’t real. Which goes back to Michigans culture being so good. 

A2Townie

November 29th, 2022 at 6:27 PM ^

I also was noticing Harbaugh's increased god and faith references as well as the players, most notably Edward's.  As long as we don't go all Clemson and Dabo then I'm ok with it.

MGoGoGo

November 30th, 2022 at 5:05 PM ^

I'm going to try to say this as respectfully as possible, especially because I don't think that the comment above was particularly respectful and I don't want to escalate this. But, using "sweetheart" in a clearly derisive manner comes across to me as borderline homophobic. I'm not going to presume that you meant it in this matter, but I wanted to let you know that it could be interpreted by others that way.

ToledoBlue

November 29th, 2022 at 6:35 PM ^

For me this is very simple, if all the religious types (nothing wrong with it) did a little thought exercise. What if they were praying to Allah? The same reverence given same prayers etc. Do you feel the same? Are you just as thrilled with your coach? If yes then I guess you're right and I don't have a leg to stand on with being slightly uncomfortable with this.

 

Quick edit: By uncomfortable I don't mean when singular players show their faith I mean the thought of it being a "team" activity

Perkis-Size Me

November 29th, 2022 at 7:38 PM ^

The God of Christianity and Allah from Islam may be one and the same, but you’d find a lot of people in many parts of this country who would have very strong opinions against that, whether those opinions are informed or not.

If you had a Muslim head football coach leading salat at midfield in a school in, say, Alabama or Mississippi, I highly doubt it would be received as well as a Christian coach leading his team in the Lord’s Prayer at midfield. Strong bet there would be calls for that Muslim coach to be fired, or at least encouraged to do his praying elsewhere, out of sight and away from all the parents who are made uncomfortable by it.

CaliforniaNobody

November 29th, 2022 at 6:35 PM ^

Ugh. I'm fine with him and anyone being religious but I really don't like him applying the label to the entire roster. Must be pretty uncomfortable for the guys who don't believe to feel like they might not be able to be honest about it. 

jmstranger

November 29th, 2022 at 6:39 PM ^

I’m from an extremely religious background and this kind of thing makes me uncomfortable. In my opinion, all religion is like penises. It’s wonderful if you have one, great for you to be proud of it, great if you think it makes your life better; but you shouldn’t go around showing it to people unless they’ve asked to see it. 

Wendyk5

November 29th, 2022 at 8:08 PM ^

I'd like to add that not everyone has a penis so to assume that having a penis is the best thing ever is very egocentric (penocentric?). Try looking at this without the penis-colored glasses and see that those without penises are happy they don't have one and live a very full life without one. (I'm just taking your analogy a bit further -- this really isn't about penises).