With all 339 Olympic medals awarded, the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games have come to an end. The fact that the games took place the year after the name suggests will be a lasting reminder that they were significantly impacted by the global pandemic. In fact, some would say that the Olympics encompassed the worst of our pandemic-ridden world. At a time when most foreigners were excluded from being inside Japan at all – never mind from Olympic stadiums – the global elite could still attend while everyone else watched at home.
At the same time, however, it’s hard to begrudge the athletes their moment, after four long years of training became five, with a significant part of it carried out in very difficult circumstances. Even in normal years, so many Olympic stories are those of triumph over adversity - never mind preparing yourself for an event which was postponed for a year, with cancellation looking a possibility right up until the moment it finally began.
However if there was ever an Olympic Games to remind us that there’s more to life than winning and losing, surely it was this one. For a start, the Covid backdrop has been a reminder that life is a gift that none of us can take for granted. On top of that, perhaps the biggest headline of the Olympics was four-time gold medallist Simone Biles pulling out of the women’s gymnastics team final to focus on her mental health.
While some attacked her as a quitter, it was heartening to see that such comments were only by a minority. Let’s not forget that Biles was abused for years by team doctor Larry Nassar, who in the words of her lawyer, is ‘the worst child predator in American history’. Although he was convicted and jailed in 2018, the US Department of Justice report into FBI failings in the case was only released days before this year’s Olympics began.
One of the most moving responses to Biles’ withdrawal was by Rachael Denhollander, the lawyer and former gymnast who was the first person to publicly accuse Nassar. Denhollander shared a picture from a children’s book she had written in the wake of the trial. The book is entitled ‘How much is a little girl worth?’ – one of the questions Denhollander had repeatedly asked in her victim impact statement. The page from the book she shared said that a little girl was worth ‘more than money or trophies or fame’.
It’s a sentiment that many would agree with – but it does raise the question of who defines a little girl’s worth? In fact, who defines anyone’s worth? The answer to that is surely their Creator. And in fact, that’s the answer that Denhollander gives in the introduction to her book. She wants each of her own girls to know that ‘she is of infinite worth because she is made in the image of her Redeemer’.