Sunday, January 31, 2016

For the Good of the Team

Great players make the Pro Bowl. Great teams reach the Super Bowl.

Every year when the Pro Bowl squads are announced there are star players who are left out. You have to be great just to play in the NFL today. The league is chock-full of superb athletes.

But great teams are harder to find. And the Super Bowl has two great teams this year. The Panthers and Broncos will provide the quintessential marquee match up.

Coaching legend Bud Wilkinson said, "If a team is to reach its potential, each player must be willing to subordinate his personal goals to the good of the team."

And that can be a hard thing in such a high-profile enterprise. Every season sees its share of gridiron gripers who whine that they are underappreciated and don't see the ball enough. They are frequently labeled prima donnas, defined by Merriam-Webster as "a vain or undisciplined person who finds it difficult to work under direction or as part of a team."

Sometimes a team will pin their hopes on a player like this, only to find out they are a better team without him.

In my view, running backs and quarterbacks (yes, even Newton and Manning) are overrated. I've always thought linemen should have stats detailing how many rushing and passing yards were gained while they were slogging it out in the trenches, opening holes for runs or holding off hordes of pass rushers so the big-name stars could make the spotlight plays.

The 1972 Miami Dolphins managed the only perfect season in NFL history with a group of guys known as the "No-Name Defense." The unit was better known than the individual players.


To succeed in life, you need to play the right position and be on a great team. While you will not likely play in the Super Bowl, the church of Jesus Christ can be your team: "And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds. Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another" (Hebrews 10:24,25, NIV; see 1 Corinthians 12).

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

"Dull and Drowsy" in Church

Samuel Pepys's diary is an often fascinating way to discover the realities of life in England in the 1600s (while our — at least "my" —ancestors were still setting up shop in "New" England). Here is an entry for a Sunday:
"Sunday 18 January 1662/63
(Lord’s day). Up, and after the barber had done, and I had spoke with Mr. Smith (whom I sent for on purpose to speak of Field’s business, who stands upon 250l. before he will release us, which do trouble me highly), and also Major Allen of the Victualling Office about his ship to be hired for Tangier, I went to church, and thence home to dinner alone with my wife, very pleasant, and after dinner to church again, and heard a dull, drowsy sermon, and so home and to my office, perfecting my vows again for the next year, which I have now done, and sworn to in the presence of Almighty God to observe upon the respective penalties thereto annexed, and then to Sir W. Pen’s (though much against my will, for I cannot bear him, but only to keep him from complaint to others that I do not see him) to see how he do, and find him pretty well, and ready to go abroad again."
{His church was St. Olave's, Church of England.)
Even though he was inordinately busy before the services, and considered the second sermon "dull" and "drowsy," he at least managed to feel guilty enough to legalistically consider his waning New Year's resolutions ... and the penalties for not doing them.
["Sir W. Pen" is the father of William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania.]

Thursday, January 14, 2016

A Testimony: Looking Back 7 Years

A Facebook-memories reminder of God's goodness: 7 years ago today we found out that Peggy's breast cancer surgery did not get everything and she would have to go through aggressive chemo. The treatments were extremely difficult but Peggy handled them like a trooper (as she does everything) and 7 years later Peggy is healthy and cancer is just a memory. As I reflect on this I am thankful to God, but I am also reminded of the many of you who stood with us and contributed to the prayer that went up that brought about this victory. Thank you! For those of you going through a battle with cancer right now, take this testimony in faith as a glimpse into your future. Our God is a Healer, and He is good.