Life · Ministry · Faith

Tag: football

When our heros are watching

crowd of fans cheering you on

What would it be like to be the quarterback of the high school football team? The ball is on the fifteen-yard line. Unfortunately, it is your fifteen-yard line. Your team is down by four points. There is a 1:47 left in the game. You have to get in the end zone to win. Your coach calls a timeout to regroup the team. And as you approach the sideline the person standing there, waiting for you is Payton Manning. He looks at you, tells you he believes in you and what you have to do to win this game and as you are walking back on the field to the huddle you can hear his cheering for you.
It’s great to have your parents on the sideline to see you at the moment. Your coach’s confidence in you means a lot. Even your teammates telling you they have confidence in you iwonderful. All of these are more special than can be described, but there is something extra special about having your hero, the best of the best, saying you can do it. Someone who has been there and knows what it is like. Who knows how many hundreds of times Manning has been in this place where the game came down to his ability to execute and lead his team down the field. He knows what the pressure is like. He knows the hunger of the defense and seen the fire in their eyes. Every profession has its unique challenges, and we all know, despite people telling us they know what it is like, they really don’t. If they have not been where you are, they really don’t understand. So it means something extra special to have a person who has been there, who understands the pressures and challenges encouraging you on.
Hebrews 12:1-3 says to us:
Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured such opposition from sinners, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart.
This comes at the end of a long list of great heroes of faith from the Bible. These men and women who comprise the “great cloud of witnesses” are not only witness of us but they are witnesses to us. Witnesses of the character and faithfulness of God. They are heroes who have been where we are, and they call us through the cloud of our temporal perspective to press on with perseverance. They cheer for us to put aside our doubts, fears, and struggles to grasp hold of the promises God has given to us. They have been there and understand.
Think about this. You might be saying to yourself that you have screwed up. You have disqualified yourself from every achieving your hopes and dreams. Your failure is too great. But let me ask you:
When was the last time you committed adultery?
But not only that, when was the last time that adultery led to a child being conceived?
But not only that, when was the last time that you used your power and authority to try to cover-up up what you had done by having the women’s husband killed?
But not only that, you take the women to be your wife in hopes of covering the whole thing up?
But not only that, when was the last time child conceived because of your failure dies because of your sin, and you have to live the rest of your life with this burden?
Hopefully, not of us has screwed up this badly. But even if you have there is a man standing before you as a witness of God’s faithfulness and forgiveness, David, saying to you today to put aside your sin and experiences God’s love.
When was the last time you faced an utterly impossible situation? You didn’t know what to do and even if you did you lacked the resources to make it happen? Two men call you to step into the impossible. Moses and Joshua, men well acquainted with impossible barriers, whether they are a sea, a river, or a walled city, they witness to you of God’s deliverance in the face of the impossible and they call to you to put aside that which entangles you, all those doubting thoughts, and step out in faith.
The list could go on and on. I would even challenge you to sometimes read the stories in the Bible and ask yourself what these men and women would say to you if there were on your sideline coaching you through whatever situation you are facing in life.
For we are surrounded by a great cloud of witness to God’s grace, forgiveness, and character and they call us to step up.
Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

A Fight Was Breaking Out

Dear Friends,

I stood at our back window looking out. I was waiting for the coffee to finish brewing. Despite my years of attempts, I have yet to develop a perfectly brewed cup of coffee without having to wait. With nothing better to do I gazed across the yards between the houses the next street over.

To my shock I saw a concerning site. The middle school had just let out for the day. I watched a group of boys surge forward against another then disappear out of sight, hidden by a house. A few moments later the group returned, this time chasing a single boy. Thoughts raced through my head as to what might be happening. Was this bullying at its worst? Were two groups breaking into a fight? Then another surge as one group pushed back. In the few moments I watched the battle I wondered if I should quickly drive over to the next street to see what was going on or just call the police. It was then that I saw it. The thing that would change everything. A boy ran through the gap, chased by a dozen others, holding a football.

What I had thought was a fight was only a pick-up game of America’s favorite sport. What had prevented me from seeing the truth were the houses on either side of my field of vision. If I had been able to magically blast them away I would have known the true context of the battle between these boys on this day. I would have known this was not a neighborhood falling into pre-gang violence but a community united. What I lacked was the full context.

When we read our bibles we can too often be guilty of the same thing. We can read a few verses without seeing what is around. The results can be devastating. There can be many houses which block our vision: chapter and verse markings, headings, and pages to be turned. Left unmoved we can fall victim to the same errors I made watching football.

During a class I took in seminary I endured a near daily drill from Dr. Ben Witherington, “A text without a context is a pretext for anything you want it to be.” And a football game without a Good Year blimp overhead becomes gang warfare. Whenever we read our bibles it is a good exercise for us to step back and read the surrounding verses, chapter and book. This is also why it is a good practice to occasionally commit to read your bible through (yes, from Genesis to Revelation). The practice will help implant into your mind a general context of scripture as a whole.

Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

P.S. Did you know you can read through your whole bible in a year by reading 3 chapters on week days and 5 chapters on weekends?

Knowing the End

Keep Calm and Kingdom On

Dear Friends,
My promised post about the practices I take to restore my soul will come, but I have decided to hijack my own blog and squeeze this one in ahead.

Seven years ago college football history was made in one of the most stunning games every played. The Boise State University Broncos came head-to-head with the University of Oklahoma Sooners in the 2007 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. On paper the games should have ended with a lopsided pounding of the Broncos by the Sooners. What happened was something totally different. To this day, as a Boise State fan, I can watch the game and feel the intensity, the rise of emotions, the sense of victory slipping away and the ecstatic excitement from and unbelievable victory. When I watch the game today I watch it with a different feeling than I did when I saw the plays unfold live. I know how the game is going to end. The seemingly game ending interception in the closing minutes of the game really isn’t the end of the game. I know how it is really going to end. Boise State is going to win and Ian Johnson will propose to his cheerleader girlfriend on national TV.

As Christians, our life in this world can feel like the impossible football game. We may experience victory and defeat, joy and sorrow, good and evil. It can be easy to feel as though evil has driven the final nail into the coffin of the Kingdom of Heaven.
Jesus said, in Matthew 13, “The Kingdom of Heaven is like a mustard seed” and “the Kingdom of Heaven is like yeast.” What power could tiny seeds and microscopic fungus have against all the powers of this world? In them are all the creative and redemptive power found God himself. In them is the power of Satan’s defeat. In them is hope, justice, mercy, joy, and love. In them is the good news of the Gospel.

As Christians we go through life differently than others. We can go through life with an impenetrable optimism, because we know how the game is going to end. Whatever happens, as Christians let us “Keep Calm and Kingdom On” let us never forget we know how this game will end and never lose our eternal optimism for the Kingdom of God until, as the song says, “earth and heaven are one.”

The graphic you see at the top of this post is one that I created to go along with a sermon series I a preaching at my church. This November I will be going with a team from my church on a mission trip to Guatemala. I am selling shirts with the slogan on it to help raise money for my trip. Click the picture below to go to a page to find out more information and to order a shirt.

Keep Calm Shirt

Of course, you don’t have to buy a shirt to help me on my trip. If you want to help, you may send a check to the church (Hope Wesleyan Church, 857 N Farnham St, Galesburg, IL 61401) made out to the church with “Guatemala” in the memo line.

Thank you everyone for your prayers and support and for indulging me on this post.
Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

 

© 2024 jumpingjersey

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑