8/3/08

Language




He has an impact on the space in Stanford's locker room, too. Out of respect for Madsen's strong religious beliefs, Cardinal players say the locker room has gone from an R to a PG rating the past couple of years.
"I have no control over that," says Madsen, laughing. "I do know I'll walk in some times, and all of a sudden stuff is getting censored. It's not like I'd be offended or get mad, but I appreciate the effort the guys make. It's not something I've asked them to do . It's just something they do."
They wouldn't do it for just anyone. "Not everyone embraces his views, but everybody respects them, " Gelbard says. "He's so eternally positive and optimistic that he might put off people a little at first. But gradually, by sheer force of his personality, he wears you down. It's hard to have an absolute, unended faith in anything.But he just believes what he does, and he lives it every day and you have to admire that."
By David Leon Moore
USA TODAY

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

We did the family home evening lesson tonight and it was really cool to discuss living the standards and arming ourselves against the adversary as a family. Mark Madsen followed those teachings by not only living the truth of clean language but also setting an example to his team therefore teaching the gospel.

Anonymous said...

The FHE evening lesson was great and we had fun with the game and fiery darts!