
Rome Didn’t Fall Overnight — Are We Following the Same Path?
In Australia, paramedics who regularly save lives often earn between approximately $95,000 and $157,000 a year, depending on experience and overtime. Yet in our major professional football codes, elite players commonly earn more than $1 million per season.
That simple comparison should give us pause.
Paramedics work overnight shifts, confront trauma, and carry the emotional weight of life-and-death decisions. Yet in many cases, elite athletes earn in a single week what emergency workers earn in months. This is not an attack on sport. It is a reflection on priorities.
We have built a culture where spectacle commands greater reward than service.
Bread and Circuses
The Roman poet Juvenal described the decline of Rome with two words: panem et circenses — bread and circuses. As long as the people were fed and entertained, they remained distracted from political decay, economic instability, and leadership failure.
History shows that Rome did not collapse in a single dramatic moment. It eroded gradually — through corruption, moral confusion, fiscal irresponsibility, and declining civic virtue. The public, absorbed in gladiatorial games and grand spectacles, often failed to notice the foundations cracking beneath them.
Sport itself is not the enemy. It builds mateship, discipline, and teamwork. It fosters community and healthy competition. But when entertainment becomes our highest value — when spectacle becomes sacred — we must ask what we are no longer paying attention to.
Are we discussing debt, family breakdown, and cultural fragmentation with the same passion we reserve for grand finals?
Or are we content with modern circuses?
When Ceremony Becomes Symbol
Major global sporting events increasingly function not merely as competitions, but as cultural statements. Take the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, where a performance widely interpreted by many Christians (including myself) as a parody of Christ sparked mass controversy.

(Image of the 2024 Paris Olympic opening ceremony that generated widespread discussion for its theatrical and symbolic imagery.)
Supporters called it artistic expression. Critics viewed elements of it as provocative and spiritually unsettling.
Regardless of one’s interpretation, the broader point remains: global spectacles now serve as platforms for ideological messaging. The Games are no longer culturally neutral. They communicate values.
Christians are right to pay attention to symbolism. Scripture reminds us:
“Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness.”
— Isaiah 5:20
When symbolism challenges biblical moral order, believers are not extreme for noticing. They are discerning.
Excess and Emptiness
Reports from previous Olympic villages have also highlighted the culture surrounding the Games — including the large-scale distribution of contraceptives to athletes.
Take the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, where, according to an article by the ABC, over 10,000 condoms were used in a matter of 3 days by the athletes. The quick depletion of the condom stock has sparked widespread commentary and serves as a vivid cultural moment that many Christians, such as myself, find troubling.
For the supply of contraceptives to athletes, organisers frame this as practical health management. Critics argue it reflects a broader moral climate where restraint is no longer expected, only managed.
Again, the issue is not prudishness. It is a worldview.
When self-control — once considered a virtue — becomes outdated, we should not be surprised when cultural confusion follows. Scripture identifies self-control as a fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22–23). A civilisation that normalises indulgence over discipline cannot sustain moral clarity indefinitely.
The Wage of Service vs. The Wage of Spectacle
This returns us to the paramedic and the footballer.
Markets reward demand. That is economically true. But culture determines demand. If a society esteems entertainment above sacrifice, its wage structures will reflect that.
Christians must ask a deeper question: What do we honour?
Jesus said: “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” — Matthew 6:21
If our treasure flows overwhelmingly toward spectacle, our national heart will follow.
Controversy Means Conversation
Some will say this argument is controversial. Perhaps it is. But controversy does not equal falsehood. Often, it simply means a cultural nerve has been touched. This is not a call to abolish sport. It is a call to reorder affection.
Sport should serve society — not define it. Entertainment should enrich life — not distract from its decay. Celebration should reflect virtue — not moral confusion.
Rome teaches us that civilisations rarely collapse because of external invasion alone. More often, they weaken from within — distracted, entertained, and spiritually hollow.
Christians are called not to panic, nor to withdraw, but to discern. And perhaps to ask, gently but firmly: Are we building a nation of courage and conviction — or merely perfecting the circus?
___
Republished with thanks to Young Conservatives for Christ. Image courtesy of Adobe.
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This article is deeply thought provoking and should be read by everyone concerned with the state of the western world. There are so many quotable gems. Thank you so much.
Great work Riley
The person driving the garbage collection truck has more community worth than the greatest athlete.
The checkout person at your supermarket has more community worth.
Was a time when athlete’s even the best of the best AFL players had jobs for their income.
Today you see grown men and women ooohing and ahhhhing over an athlete young enough to be their own child trying to get a selfie with them and idolising them. Its quite pathetic really.
I remember when one of the top AFL playerscat the time G Train was in our town at some shop and one of the workers came up to me gushing about it “look look its G Train, isn’t this amazing” I replied no, whats the big deal he’s just another person! The looks I got from people who heard me was as if I had threatened someone with violence. Yep, quite pathetic.