Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Charlie Menditéguy: Golf and virtue
Charlie Menditéguy: Golf and virtue
Feb 1, 2026 11:43 AM

Now that I am full-time at the Acton Institute (I had been associated since the beginning, but on the governing board) I am trying to read most of its output. Not an easy task giving the numerous books, articles, academic papers and blog posts it publishes each year. Acton has an outstanding Journal of Markets and Morality, which has already reached 21 volumes. I browsed the contents of the most recent edition and saw that it devoted 40 of its 200 pages to a symposium on Golf, Business, and Leadership. My first reaction, since I have practically never played golf, was to skip those pages. But as this short blog proves, I decided to take a look at what these bright individuals were saying about golf.

I will let you look at the Journal for yourself. I will share what first came to my mind, though, and it has to do with humility, pride and envy. I am not a golfer. I have tried it for fun, but not more than ten times in my whole life. The ball would seldom go where I wanted it to go, the ball and the sweet spot much smaller than my usual tennis implements.

Sportsmen who do not play golf in my native country of Argentina pay little attention to the sport, but we do have a favorite true story. One of the most talented Argentine athletes, Carlos “Charlie” Menditéguy, excelled in multiple sports. He bet one of his best friends, a top amateur golfer, that he could e a scratch, zero handicap, in a matter of months. People debate whether it took nine months or two years, but he did it and won his bet.

It is certainly true that Menditéguy excelled at sports: junior tennis champion, perhaps the best polo player ever, Formula 1 race car driver…his contract with Maserati was cancelled, but he said it was worth it. He had skipped the trials and the race. No one knew where he was—except Brigitte Bardot, who spent the weekend with him in the Côte d’Azur. Few contributed as much as he did to the myth of the Argentine playboy. (For millennial readers, the French actress Brigitte Bardot was at the time the most famous symbol of feminine beauty.)

Reading his biography, some would think that “Charlie” had it all. He was not the most humble, however, and his success led to occasional arrogance. His life was short. Parkinson’s disease led to surgery and he died at 59.

Some might pass close to well-manicured elite golf courses and feel envious. Not I. Being used to hard work and more active sports, I am still puzzled about golf, though perhaps one day I will enjoy it.

One last lesson I learned after these articles on golf, human values, leadership, management and more is: if we learn to see, using our spirit plement our minds, we can find God in all good things. We can even draw good lessons from evil.

Now back to reading Markets and Morality’s more typical articles on the importance of a free economy.

(Homepage photo credit: public domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Support for Obamacare Dwindling
Obamacare, the popular name for the Affordable Health Care Act, continues to find opposition from both individuals and states. The act is scheduled to take effect on October 1, 2013 for most of the country, but a USA Today/Pew Research poll finds that 53 percent of Americans polled oppose Obamacare. The numbers are even lower when one accounts for political parties. Overall, just 13% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents approve of the law while 85% disapprove. Fewer than half of...
Sex-Selective Abortions Linked To Abuse Of Females
The U.S. House Foreign Affairs mittee held a hearing last week on India’s missing girls. In today’s Washington Times, Chris Smith, Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New Jersey and chair of the hearing, discusses the connection between sex-selective abortions and India’s massive problem with physical and sexual abuse of females. The roots of the present problem lie not only with cultural factors, such as the demand for dowries paid by the bride’s family, but also misbegotten...
HBCU Funding: A Tale of Executive Orders
One of the things I never learned in my U.S. government courses in high school was just how quickly government agencies and programs grow without undergoing Congressional vetting. For example, I recently discovered that there exists a federally-funded White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). When did that happen? How did that happen? In fact, a few days ago, the White House announced changes in the leadership of this initiative. President Obama names two dynamic new leaders...
Audio: Samuel Gregg Discusses Tea Party Catholic
Acton’s Director of Research, Samuel Gregg, has begun making the radio rounds in support of his soon-to-be-released book Tea Party Catholic: The Catholic Case for Limited Government, a Free Economy, and Human Flourishing, talking extensively about the intersection between support for limited government and Catholic thought. Here’s a roundup of recent interviews. First of all, here’s Sam discussing the book with Glen Biegel on 700 KBYR in Anchorage, Alaska last Thursday: Also on Thursday, Sam talked with Chuck Wilder of...
Friday Night Videos 9.13.13
Giving (Via: Neatorama) What Surfing Can Teach You about Ownership (Via: Values & Capitalism) John Piper on the Prosperity Gospel (Via: Justin Taylor) ...
Quebec’s Religious Symbol Ban and the Myth of Religious Neutrality
Last week the ruling party of the province of Quebec, Parti Québécois, unveiled a new charter which would prohibit public employees from wearing overt religious garb. The document states: We propose to prohibit the wearing of overt and conspicuous religious symbols by state personnel in carrying out their duties. This restriction would reflect the state’s neutrality. Included in their examples of “conspicuous signs would not be allowed to state personnel” is the dastar, the turban worn by Sikh men. The...
Poland Attempts To Reduce National Debt By Dipping Into Pension Funds
Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, announced Wednesday that the government would attempt to cut government debt by taking money from its citizens’ private pension funds. Poland currently has a two-fold pension system: mandatory contributions are made to the state pension fund and then to private funds. It is the state funds, known as ZUS, that the Polish government plans to “transfer” money from. According to Reuters: …Prime Minister Donald Tusk said private funds within the state-guaranteed system would have their...
Animal Sacrifice Powered Ancient Jerusalem’s Economy
Everyone knows the story about Jesus entering the Temple in Jerusalem and overturning the tables of the moneychangers. But what most people forget is that he also overturned the “benches of those selling doves.” While there was likely a lucrative business in changing foreign currency into Hebrew money (the only form of acceptable payment for the Temple tax), the selling of animals for sacrifice was probably the true Big Business in the city. A study published in the September issue...
Piper: ‘Work Is a Glorious Thing’
At Desiring God, John Piper explains how both the act and product of work are blessings, and that the God-designed essence of work is creativity — “not aimless, random doing, but creative, productive doing.” In addition to avoiding the hump of idleness, this means being ever diligent, discerning, obedient, and energetic in the work of our hands: When the book of Proverbs tells us to go to the ant and learn how to work hard and work smart (Proverbs 6:6–11),...
Pope Francis’ Cardinal-shaming Mini-popemobile
A couple of months ago I teased Pope Francis engaging in a “war on the Vatican’s luxury cars” while driving one of the greatest luxury cars of all time — the Popemobile. Although he probably won’t be able to give up his 160 mph, armor-plated, bullet-proof sedia gestatoria anytime soon, he’s make a bold, symbolic point with the latest addition to his fleet: a 1984 Renault 4. Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Ciro Benedettini, says Francis accepted the 1984 Renault 4,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved