Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Lance Armstrong’s Shame
Lance Armstrong’s Shame
May 15, 2026 10:45 AM

It seems yet again (and again) that we find ourselves scratching our heads about the lives of well-known athletes asking the question, “what happened?” Lance Armstrong has managed to anger people all over the world by his confession on Oprah Winfrey’s television network that he participated in a culture of deception using an host of performance enhancing drugs while winning seven Tour de France titles then followed that by several years of passionate denials. Armstrong admitted that he likely would not have won several Tour de France races in a row had he not cheated in some way. We are reminded that there is a culture of “doping” in the world of cycling so that cyclist can acquire that extra advantage that they were not given by nature. But are we surprised that there is cheating in the world of professional cycling? Are we really that surprised that someone, when challenged about their actions, would lie about them?

Lying and cheating are ancient vices that have plaqued the human family for centuries. What is more amazing is the moral outrage in an American culture that spurns religion from public life yet believes that there is some objective philosophical, moral, and dare I say, “spiritual,” basis from which to label Armstrong a “liar” and a “hypocrite.” Americans have been so desperate to purge religion from public life yet feel free embrace religious virtues about truth-telling when convenient. Perhaps what makes the Armstrong confession so devastating is that we continue to believe that sports participation builds character when it, in fact, does not. Participation in sport does not build character, it exposes it.

While some may say that Armstrong lied and cheated for the glorying of winning or the windfall profits e with endorsements, and the like, it is possible that Armstrong’s cheating and lying were driven by shame. What if Lance Armstrong is a man who believes deep down, as Brene Brown argues, that he is a man who is unworthy of love and belonging and was willing to do anything to get obtain those things. If one’s sense of dignity and humanity is directly tied to one’s performance, and the things that one produces, then one’s pass will align itself accordingly. Shame is this sense that one is unworthy of love and belonging because of something that is inherently wrong with how one is made. Shame-driven people not only believe that they make mistakes, like we all do, but that they are mistakes.

What if the Armstrong problem is a different kind of moral problem. Yes, the cheating and lying are serious vices but what if Armstrong lied, cheated, pursued profits, fame, personal glory, and the like, in order to obtain love and belonging? What if he was willing to lie and cheat in order to pursue a dignity he believed he did not yet possess? One of the advantages of the Christian tradition is that love and belonging are both found in one’s relationship to the Holy Trinity and the church of Christ therefore one is free to live a life of virtue in the public square because one’s dignity is not derivative of what one achieves. Instead, in Christianity, one’s dignity is derived from what has been done for us by the Triune God. There is no shame in being made in the image and likeness of God (Gen 1:26-28) and having the opportunity to live a virtuous life accordingly. There is no shame in a life lived on the basis of gratitude.

In the end, what the Armstrong debacle reminds us is not only does sport participation not guarantee character but neither does a life, perhaps, that is characterized by the empty pursuit of love and belonging divorced from the Creator.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The ‘evil’ unleashed by Abp. Justin Welby
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, has denounced an increasingly prevalent working relationship as “evil.” However, a new report shows the condition he abjured as immoral has been exacerbated by another economic practice that he favors and advocates – that is, by the archbishop’s standards, his fiscal advice inadvertently increases “evil.” Archbishop Welby made headlines last October for a speech in which he excoriated Amazon for not paying a “real living wage” and calling zero-hour contracts“an ancient evil.” As it...
For nature and neighbor: Economic lessons from an Icelandic goat farmer
For over 1,100 years, a unique “heritage breed” of Icelandic goats has sustained the country’s population, serving as a staple of cuisine for centuries. Yet as dietaryneeds and preferences shifted, the goat population slowly dwindled, reaching the brink of extinction at under 100 animals by the late 20th century. Although one might imagine the solution to be found in a government protection program or a widespread endangered-species campaign, one Icelander saw a different path—focusing not just on the restoration of...
‘Is it OK to still have children?’
Is it morally permissible to have children? That question – which should have gone out with “What’s your sign?” or “Who shot J.R.?” in the 1980s – e roaring back in a United States in which the birthrate continually hits new lows. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez asked the question in a video she posted on social media this weekend. AOC fears that children will degrade the environment through increasing our collective carbon footprint, and that a world ravaged by climate change would...
Catholic hospital can’t fire doctor for violating morality: Court
The Roman Catholic Church cannot hold its employees accountable if they break their contractual obligation to live by the Church’s teachings, a German court has ruled. In an Orwellian twist, the court ruled that firing a baptized Catholic from a Catholic institution for violating Catholic teachings constitutes religious discrimination. Germany’s Federal Labor Court (the Bundesarbeitsgericht) decided on Wednesday that St. Vinzenz Hospital in Düsseldorf impermissibly fired a doctor who got divorced and remarried. The nonprofit hospital, which is under the...
Nicaraguan Jesuit, ex-Sadinista gets last chance at exercising priestly ministry
t is inherently unjust to point to any one “wild” market, any single “greedy” industry captain and conclude that the entire system essentially immoral, wrong and sinful. This is what is called, idiomatically speaking, “throwing the baby out with bath water.” Read More… In a recent move that garnered little public attention amidst the tense media coverage enveloping this week’s Vatican summit on clerical sexual abuse and the protection of minors, Pope Francis restored priestly faculties to a Nicaraguan Jesuit...
Google and surveillance capitalism
Business Insider reported last week that Google failed to disclose the existence of a microphone in their home security system, NestSecure. This came as a surprise to many Nest customers plained that they were not informed that the security system even had a microphone. Google apologized, saying it was an error. A Google spokesman told Business Insider: “The on-device microphone was never intended to be a secret and should have been listed in the tech specs. That was an error...
Explainer: Supreme Court constrains civil asset forfeiture
What just happened? On Wednesday the Supreme Court ruled in the case of Timbs v. Indiana that the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution applies to state governments and that some state civil asset forfeitures violate the Clause. The implication, as legal scholar Ilya Somin explains, is that “the ruling could help curb abusive asset forfeitures, which enable law enforcement agencies to seize property that they suspect might have been used in a crime—including in...
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: Justice after liberation in Venezuela
This past weekend in Forbes, Alejandro Chafuen, Acton’s Managing Director, International, offered some perspectives on the current situation in Venezuela. Basing his analysis on traditional principles of justice, he outlines some important points to keep in mind in any project of transitioning from socialism to a more just political and economic model. Liberation should ing soon for Venezuela. After liberation e celebration. Almost immediately e justice. Punishing the culprits will be difficult, but it will be easier than making restitution...
The male-only military draft may be unconstitutional, but conscription itself is immoral
In 1981 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that women could be exempt from the military draft since they were excluded bat duty. But in 2015 Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced he would lift the military’s ban on women serving bat, a move that allowed hundreds of thousands of women to serve in front-line positions during wartime. The next year the top officers in the Army and Marine Corps followed that policy to its logical conclusion and told Congress that it...
West Virginia’s teachers’ union wins battle to prevent educational choice
This week, roughly 19,000 West Virginia teachers went on strike, closing down every public school in the state in a united resistance against educational choice. Now, after only two days, the strike is over, with the legislation in question dead on arrival in the state House. It marks a defeat against student opportunity and a victory for union-induced conformity and the dismal status quo of public education in West Virginia—a state that consistently sits at the bottom of nation-wide education...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved