Major League Baseball stirred a hornet’s nest it probably had no idea it stepped on when its chief communications officer let the media know the Christian San Francisco Giants pitchers who inscribed Bible verses on their Pride Night caps last week had been “warned” about their “violations.”
The message was meant to be routine and succinct that uniform violations would be dealt with as others typically are by MLB: a warning, then fines, then something more intrusive if it continues.
Except this case isn’t routine and the league seems to know it caused itself some trouble. That’s why on Tuesday, MLB issued a follow-up statement:
“To be clear, this routine verbal warning not to wear the hat in future games is not disciplinary and had absolutely nothing to do with the content of the message,” the league said in its follow. “We respect players’ right to free expression. However, writing of any kind, with any message, is prohibited per Major League Baseball’s uniform regulations which provides in part that, ‘(a) player may not write, attach, affix, embroider or otherwise display nicknames or messages on apparel or playing equipment…’
“We have given the same warning numerous times in the past to players for messages such as ‘Dad,’ ‘Happy Mother’s Day, I Love Mom’ and names of family members.”
Too late.
The clarification tones down the initial statement but doesn’t change its intent, which is to keep the Christians from showing their disagreement with Pride Night. And that obvious intent has reached a segment of the public that simply doesn’t abide Pride Night and supports the Christians.
DODGERS BREAK OUT ANNUAL PRIDE NIGHT HATS, DRAWING BRUTAL REACTIONS
That root issue is that some people do not agree with Pride Night for myriad reasons, just like they probably wouldn’t agree with heterosexual night, or any other night of sexual “inclusion.”
That root issue also includes the Giants pitchers who are Christians and reject, for religious reasons, the idea they must not only comply with, but endorse, Pride Night and its rainbow signage messaging — all of which is counter to the God they worship and Bible they use as His life manual.
And now, to MLB’s chagrin, this uniform issue has bled over to a not-small chunk of the American public.
So, baseball has committed an error.
After the league put the Giants pitchers on notice, the reaction from fans, politicians, even celebrities, was not what baseball needs.
Actor Rob Schneider amplified MLB’s reaction to the caps controversy and offered to pay fines that “any” Christian player wearing a Bible verse on his uniform incurs.
And the cringe moment for baseball: “MLB is anti-Christian,” Schneider posted.
Actor Kevin Sorbo agreed with Schneider and similarly volunteered to help pay fines.
“Happy to chip in with you on this,” he messaged Schneider.
And with that, Sorbo reached his 2.6 million followers on X and Schneider reached his 2.2 million followers on the platform. Those millions might now feel a certain way about Major League Baseball that they didn’t feel last week.
Senator Josh Hawley (R, Missouri) fired off a letter to MLB Commissioner Robert Manfred in which he expresses his “grave concern” about the matter and further states, “you must answer for what appears to be a pattern of discrimination within MLB against baseball players who profess their Christian faith.”
Hawley is demanding MLB produce materials that would allow his office to review the sport for review within the Senate Judiciary Committee purview.
Those materials include …
“MLB has a sweetheart deal from the federal government,” Hawley told Fox News Digital. “They play by different rules than any other business in America. But now MLB is using its power to target Christians and trample free speech. It’s anti-American. And MLB needs to course correct immediately.”
Baseball needs this investigation and attention like it needs a 105 MPH fastball to the jaw.
Baseball was once the national pastime.
Now, it has needlessly painted itself as a villain in the eyes of potentially millions of people. Conservative pundits and websites have amplified MLB’s initial statement and called the league intolerant, bigoted and divisive.
So everything that is opposite to what baseball hopes its Pride Night celebration should be has turned against the MLB. It looks like an organization that forces conformity regardless of its players’ religious beliefs.
Major League Baseball is being painted as an inclusive league that is quite willing to exclude its Christian players.
This, by the way, is new regardless of MLB’s Tuesday statement stating nothing is new.
In June of 2023, Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw did the same exact thing the pitchers on the Giants did last week. He wrote “Gen 9:12-13” on his Dodgers Pride Night cap. That Bible passage contains God’s covenant message to humankind that He would never again send a flood to wipe out the population of the Earth, no matter how wicked it became.
God sent a rainbow to seal His covenant and assure everyone.
Giants pitcher Sam Hentges wore his usual Giants cap instead of the Pride cap. Landen Roupp, JT Brubaker and Ryan Walker did exactly what Kershaw did, except they were “warned.”
The rebuke flies in the face of tolerance — you know, one of the things Pride Night is supposed to be about.
FOLLOW ARMANDO SALGUERO ON X: @ARMANDOSALGUERO