Football over the last century has come to define everything America:
teamwork, pride, strength and community. Even so, football is one of
the most dangerous sports in the world, considering the 1,300 broken
bones, pulled muscles and traumatizing head injuries players suffer from
each season. It begs a pathologist from Nigeria to make America
question, "Did God intend for man to play football?"
This certain
pathologist, named Dr. Bennet Omalu, came into America to continue his
doctoral profession as a U.S. citizen.
While working on a clinically ill
former league player named Mike Webster, he discovered a terrifying
disease known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE. This
triggered his ambition to persuade the NFL to provide players with
further protection.
This last Christmas Day premiered Concussion,
a retelling of the groundbreaking discovery as directed by Peter
Landesman and starred by Will Smith. The movie follows Dr. Omalu's story
rather faithfully, with the greatest impact made by the career-defining
performance by Mr. Smith.
While being interviewed,
Smith said how his grandmother left the greatest influence onto his
portrayal and that she "was really my connection to God. ... She was my
spiritual teacher, she was that grandmother at the church, the one
having the children doing the Easter presentations and putting on the
Christmas plays and her children and grandchildren had to be first. She
was the most spiritually certain person that I had ever met in my entire
life. Even to the point that when she was dying she was happy, like she
was really excited about going to heaven."
Smith even got the chance to work with Dr. Omalu himself. The pathologist later spoke
about his experience working with Smith, recalling that, "The spiritual
stuff is deep. We met, we shared and we communed the love of God, and
he also saw the light. The Spirit of God also touched him."
Director Peter Landesman made sure Omalu's Christian faith transpires
throughout the film, shining a spiritual light in two places where it
seems to be totally absent: the NFL office and the research lab. Very
rarely does a scientist single-handedly use his scientific knowledge to
state a claim for Christ. It also rarely happens for a man of faith, or
any individual, to stand up on his own against a growing corporation as
monstrous as the NFL.
Yet, like several people called to service, Omalu also admitted to
that he was the "wrong person" to discover the issue. He even humbled
himself further by naming himself the "vessel used by God to help others
understand the dangers of CTE." He "did not want the credit but had to
share the truth."
Here, Dr. Omalu demonstrates the unthinkable
awesomeness of God, who uses the most unwilling and improbable people to
leave the greatest impression upon the world. Omalu continued,
"Sometimes people think that being American or being a scientist are
diametrically opposed to being a Christian. No! Because science [and]
America are all founded upon the truth, our faith seeks the truth. So
there's a commonality, there's a common goal. Our faith as Christians
synergizes with our ethnicity as Americans and our practice as
professional scientist. That is why it is being released on Christmas
Day. What could be better than that?"
Concussion addresses
difficult realities that should trigger some thoughtful discussion.
However, Omalu's life as depicted in the movie focuses less on which
argument is correct, and more on the incredible man who embraced his
God-given skills and passions. Omalu's discoveries will influence this
current generation as well as many generations to come.
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