As the 2026 FIFA World Cup approaches, a provocative call from a Jamaican Seventh-day Adventist pastor has ignited widespread discussion across faith and sports communities. Godfrey Jesse Williams, the religious leader at the center of the conversation, is urging all Christian believers to forgo watching the tournament, warning that the global sporting event can pull followers away from their spiritual commitments and even put their salvation at risk.
In an interview with local outlet *The Jamaica Star*, Williams laid out his full argument, framing the issue as a core conflict between worldly devotion and spiritual loyalty. He explained that World Cup matches absorb massive amounts of time and emotional energy that Christians ought to reserve exclusively for their relationship with God. Over time, he argued, many devout believers gradually shift their priorities, becoming overly invested in sports outcomes that ultimately have no eternal significance.
To back his position, Williams draws directly from biblical text, citing 1 John 2:15, which commands believers not to love the world or the things in the world. Beyond time commitment, he points to the cultural values that competitive sports like the World Cup promote: individual pride, cutthroat competition, and extreme emotional volatility that run counter to the humility and peace central to Christian teachings. As a concrete example of this emotional upheaval, he references Germany’s historic 7-1 semi-final defeat of host Brazil at the 2014 World Cup, a result that left millions of fans across the globe in despair and triggered widespread public outbursts of grief and anger. For Williams, this moment is a clear illustration of how the tournament can consume believers’ emotional lives in ways that disrupt spiritual stability.
What makes Williams’ stance notable is that it comes from personal experience, not just abstract doctrine. He openly shares that he was once an avid sports fan himself, closely following NBA legend Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls during the team’s dominant 1990s run, as well as soccer icon Lionel Messi and FC Barcelona during Messi’s tenure with the club. Eventually, however, Williams made the decision to step away from following professional sports entirely, saying the shift allowed him to refocus his full attention on his religious calling.
Williams’ warning has already drawn mixed reactions across Jamaica, with some believers affirming his call to prioritize spiritual discipline, while others argue that recreational viewing of the World Cup can coexist with a healthy Christian faith.
