The Wisdom of C.S. Lewis

I very much enjoy reading C.S. Lewis.  Here are a few quotes from him that will at least make you think:

We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.

The heart of Christianity is a myth which is also a fact.
“Myth Became Fact” (1944)

I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen. Not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else.
“Is Theology Poetry?” (1945)

God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pains: it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world.

There have been men before … who got so interested in proving the existence of God that they came to care nothing for God himself… as if the good Lord had nothing to do but to exist. There have been some who were so preoccupied with spreading Christianity that they never gave a thought to Christ.

Some day you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again.
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (1950), Dedication: “To Lucy Barfield”

To love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything, and your heart will certainly be wrung and possibly be broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact, you must give your heart to no one, not even to an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements; lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket — safe, dark, motionless, airless — it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. The alternative to tragedy, or at least to the risk of tragedy, is damnation. The only place outside of Heaven where you can be perfectly safe from all the dangers and perturbations of love is Hell.

Need-love cries to God from our poverty; Gift-love longs to serve, or even to suffer for, God; Appreciative love says: “We give thanks to thee for thy great glory.” Need-love says of a woman “I cannot live without her”; Gift-love longs to give her happiness, comfort, protection — if possible, wealth; Appreciative love gazes and holds its breath and is silent, rejoices that such a wonder should exist even if not for him, will not be wholly dejected by losing her, would rather have it so than never to have seen her at all.

Friendship is unnecessary, like philosophy, like art, like the universe itself (for God did not need to create). It has no survival value; rather it is one of those things which give value to survival.

The Christian does not think God will love us because we are good, but that God will make us good because He loves us.

Atheism turns out to be too simple. If the whole universe has no meaning, we should never have found out that it has no meaning…

To be a Christian means to forgive the inexcusable because God has forgiven the inexcusable in you.

The safest road to hell is the gradual one – the gentle slope, soft underfoot, without sudden turnings, without milestones, without signposts.

You don’t have a soul. You are a soul. You have a body.

 

Pleased in Us

If I having  just completed mowing the lawn, stare out the window and proclaim, “The lawn pleases me!” I do not mean that the lawn has done anything that pleases me.  What I do mean is, “The lawn in the state in which it now exists, because of the completed work I have accomplished in it and to it, pleases me.”  I am not pleased with the lawn instead I am pleased in the lawn.  If you are a believer, when God sees you He proclaims, “I am pleased in my Son!” and His countenance rises upon you.  Be Blessed!

Two Incredible Schools – Two Incredible Coaches

The Commonwealth of Virginia has been blessed by God with beautiful mountains, fruitful valleys, incredible rivers and a wonderful coastline.  The state is also filled with wonderful institutions of higher learning and great athletics on many levels.  But still one of the most amazing things about the Old Dominion is the head basketball coaches at the two ACC schools within the state.  Tony Bennett at the University of Virginia and Buzz Williams at Virginia Tech are two of the finest college basketball coaches in America but more importantly they are two of the finest men in coaching in all the world.  They are very different men and yet their core values are very similar.

Tony Bennett was born in 1969 (the year I graduated from high school) and has seemingly done everything well for 47 years.  He played college basketball for his father Dick Bennett at Wisconsin – Green Bay from 1988 to 1992 and was twice named conference player of the year, was a two time Academic All American, was named the best player in the nation under 6 ft tall and still holds the record for NCAA percentage 3 point shooting – 49.7%.  He was then drafted by the Charlotte Hornets in the NBA and after 3 years in Charlotte, Tony tried other levels of professional basketball before beginning his coaching career.  Once he determined he could coach without the stress he had seen in his coach/father while maintaining his integrity and patience, he decided to become a coach.

Tony Bennett’s college coaching career actually began in 1999 when he agreed to be his father’s manager at the University of Wisconsin so they could spend more time together.  Stress led to Dick Bennett’s retirement from coaching in 2001 but his replacement, Bo Ryan asked Tony to stay on his staff.  Tony stayed at Wisconsin until his dad decided to come out of retirement and when Dick Bennett became Washington State University’s head coach in 2003, Tony left Wisconsin to become an assistant at Washington State.  A year later Tony Bennett was named his dad’s successor and promoted to associate head coach.   He became head coach in 2006.

Since becoming a head coach Bennett has achieved as much success as any coach in America, having been named the Naismith Coach of the Year,  having won the Henry Iba Award as the best coach in the Nation twice, having been named the ACC coach of the year twice and having earned the reputation as the best defensive coach in college basketball.  His teams have won 70% of their games and his teams hold the records for most games won in a season at both Washington State and the University of Virginia.

But Tony Bennett is not defined by his success as a basketball coach.  Bennett is married and has two children, one son and one daughter. Bennett met his wife at a church in nearby North Carolina, while he was playing for the Charlotte Hornets.  He is a Christian, and has spoken about his faith saying, “When you have a relationship with the Lord, there’s a peace and perspective you have. The world didn’t give it, and the world can’t take it away.”  Bennett also has cited his faith as impacting his coaching philosophy, in particular his use of his father’s “Five Pillars”: humility, passion, unity, servanthood, and thankfulness.  Tony Bennett is a terrific basketball coach but he is a far better man and Virginia is blessed to have him in her midst.

Brent Langdon “Buzz” Williams was born in 1972 (when I was a junior at Virginia Tech).  He earned his nickname because of his boundless energy as a student assistant in  college.  Williams is one of the rare coaches in college basketball who has never set foot on the floor as a college player. He makes up for that now as a coach as he spends most of the game walking up and down the floor in front of the bench encouraging his players.

Buzz began as an assistant coach in 1994 and remained an assistant coach for 12 years at several schools until he was named head coach at New Orleans in 2006, just seven months after Hurricane Katrina.  By then he had earned the reputation as a great recruiter and after only one year at New Orleans he was lured away by Tom Crean at Marquette.  A year later, Williams was named Head Coach at Marquette.

Immediately after being named Head Coach, Buzz went right after the big three (Wesley Matthews, Dominic James, and Jerel McNeal) the same way he did Bo McCalleb at New Orleans, always pushing, proding, and demanding their best every day. Buzz always went after the best players, forcing them to set the tone and pace for the rest of the team. Lazar Haywood, Jimmy Butler, Darius Johnson-Odom, Dwight Buycks, Jae Crowder, all NBA players that were never top 100 high school players. Buzz forced them to lay it all on the line and it made them the professionals they are today. A magazine article one time read,”With Buzz Williams you have to Practice” practice, you better not miss your turn in line, every drill, every day is a much better synopsis of a Buzz Williams practice.

At Marquette Williams led his teams to NCAA bids in each of his first 5 seasons as head coach and his teams won 67% of their games.  His NCAA tournament record is 8 – 5, having reached the Sweet Sixteen twice and the Elite Eight once.  After 6 years as Head Coach at Marquette Buzz shocked the nation in 2014 by accepting the job at Virginia Tech.

In his first season at Tech, the Hokies finished 11 – 22 (2 – 16 in the ACC) and people were sure Williams had made a huge mistake in coming to Blacksburg.  But by working hard and recruiting harder, Buzz led the Hokies to an NIT berth in his second year with an overall record of 20 – 15 and an ACC record of 10 – 8.  This season while playing with only 8 players most of the season, the Hokies are 18 – 7 and  7 – 6 in the ACC.  Until Chris Clarke was injured in a double overtime victory over UVA, Virginia Tech appeared destined for an NCAA berth.

But like Tony Bennett, Buzz Williams is a better man than a basketball coach.  He and his wife, Corey, have established a program called Buzz’s Kids first at Marquette and now in Blacksburg.  Buzz’s Kids works with children with disabilities and invites these special heroes to several games a year to be introduced before the game and honored during the game.  At Virginia Tech the Williams have also established a Buzz’s Kids scholarship program for students with disabilities.  Buzz Williams also tweets profound wisdom nearly every day @TeamCoachBuzz on Twitter and I invite you to enjoy.

We are truly blessed to have these two young men in our midst for this season of our lives.  They are true leaders of men and true examples of humility with boldness.  May God bless Tony Bennett and Buzz Williams!

 

Don’t Rebuild That Wall!

The Apostle Paul had established churches throughout the province of Galatia in what we now know as Turkey.  Whether it was southern Turkey or northern Turkey is up to debate but we know that that these churches were relatively close to Paul’s hometown of Tarsus. These churches were dear to Paul not only because of their location but because of their enthusiastic acceptance of the Gospel of Jesus Christ through the working of the Spirit of God and the mercy and grace of the Father.  They had been set free by an obedience that came through faith.

But then, some Jewish believers from Jerusalem came through Galatia. These Jewish believers had been raised in the Jewish tradition and were proud of their strict adherence to the Jewish law.  Now that they had been convinced that Jesus was the Christ and acknowledged that salvation came through faith in Jesus dying on the cross and having been raised from the dead, they had a dilemma.  What about all those years they had spent following the law? Following the law was part of being a good Jew.  Just because a Jew had become a Christian he didn’t stop being a Jew therefore if following the law was part of being a good Jew then of course it must continue.

Now what about these Gentile sinners? How could Gentile sinners become Christians without having to first adhere to the Jewish law?  How could Gentile sinners get off easier than Jewish believers?  Jesus was a Jew.  How could a believer be a believer without being a Jew or at least by following the Jewish law?  Who was this man who was telling Gentile sinners that all that mattered was listening with faith? Who is this Paul?

Paul was not part of the Jerusalem church.  In fact when he first visited Jerusalem as a Christian following his encounter with Jesus in Damascus he was run out of town.  Prior to his encounter with Jesus he was dragging Christians back to Jerusalem to have them imprisoned or killed.  What authority did this man Paul have to tell these Gentile sinners that they could live in the freedom and joy of the Spirit, being changed from the inside out by the Spirit?

In the self righteousness of a good Pharisee these Jewish believers insisted that the Galatians believers follow the Jewish law in order to prove that they were really saved.  Ignoring the works of the Spirit and the transforming hearts of the believers, they demeaned Paul and exalted themselves above him based on their heritage and their behavior.

Sometime in the early to mid 50’s A.D. while in either Tarsus, Antioch, Ephesus, Athens or Corinth Paul is informed that his precious churches have been infected by this insidious heresy.  He is understandably upset with the Jewish believers whom he has never met but he is astonished with the Galatian believers to whom he has poured out his spirit, soul and strength.  He cannot believe they have fallen prey to such a foolish exchange.  He cannot believe that have rebuilt the wall!

In his letter to the churches in Galatia Paul, in response to the Jewish accusations, says, “We ourselves are Jews by birth and not Gentile sinners.”  He tells us in another letter that he was in his pre-Christian days “as unto the law, perfect.”  He understood the law but now he understands its purpose.  As he had clearly explained to the Galatians, the purpose of the law was always to show us our utter sinfulness and our need for a savior who rescues us from the wrath of a perfectly righteous and holy God.  When the Galatians had listened attentively to the message of the Gospel (The wrath of God is justifiably on everyone because all have sinned and continue to fall short of the glory of God but in His mercy and love God in the person of His Son Jesus Christ came to earth as a man, lived a sinless life in perfect communion with the Father, became all of the sin of the whole world, died on the cross as the payment for those sins, and was raised from the dead by God the Father after three days as the ultimate proof that He was who He claimed to be, the Son of God, in order that all who by hearing with faith are persuaded that in believing they are made the righteousness of God and the children of God who will live with Him forever) they received the Spirit of God and were changed from the inside out into the children of God who walked in the freedom and truth of God’s mercy and love.  God’s love compelled them to first love Him and then love one another as they loved themselves.  The love of God had allowed them to move beyond the wall of the law and as they did it crumbled because it had completed its work.

But now the Jewish believers had bewitched them and convinced them to rebuild the wall of the law.  As they began to focus on the law, the law simply convinced them of their sinfulness and life, joy, hope and growth vanished being replaced by enslavement, fear and guilt.  Paul writes to them, ” You foolish Galatians”, “I am astonished how quickly you are deserting the Gospel”, “Who has bewitched you”, “If you rebuild what you have torn down, you prove you are a sinner once again”, “If righteousness is possible through the law then Christ died for nothing!”, “Did you receive the Spirit by works of the law or by hearing with faith?”, “Are you so foolish, having begun with the Spirit are you now being perfected by the flesh?”, “For all who rely on the works of the law are under a curse”, “The righteous shall live by faith”, “But when the fullness of time had come, God sent His Son, born of woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law so that we might receive adoption as sons”, “and because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying Abba (Daddy) Father!” “So you are no longer a slave (in need of a wall) but a son, and if a son then an heir through God.”

Don’t rebuild that wall.  The Holy Spirit is now your guardian and God has written His law on your heart.  Let the Spirit change you from the inside out as your listen attentively with faith and you will walk out His ways in His strength and in His time.  He has prepared good works for you to do in advance and He will accomplish His purpose in you and through you. “It is no longer I who lives but Christ who lives in me.”

 

 

 

A Man of Integrity

There is much we do not know about the Old Testament prophet Isaiah who was first recognized as a prophet by King Uzziah sometime prior to the King’s death.  He continued in his ministry as a prophet for as long as 64 years through the reigns of Kings Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah.  We believe he was the nephew of King Amaziah, King Uzziah’s predecessor.  But one thing we do know is that Isaiah became a man of integrity in the year that King Uzziah died.

What is a man of integrity?  We have come to say that a man of integrity is a man of honesty, blamelessness, and innocence but integrity is actually something deeper than that.  The word integrity comes from an old French word, integrite which means “wholeness, perfect condition” and the Latin word, integritatum which means “soundness or whole” from which we get the term integer.  All of you remember from Algebra that an integer is a whole number.  Our words entire and entirety come from the same root.  So you see integrity means to be whole.  Integration means to be made one or whole and disintegration means to tear apart or scatter.

No one is born as a man of integrity.  The Bible tells us “there is no one righteous, not one”. No one is born perfectly integral.  But because Isaiah was born in the kingly line, was the nephew of the king and the prophet of his uncle’s successor, people would have certainly thought that Isaiah was “a man with his act together.”  But he was not!  How do I know?

In Isaiah chapter 6 we discover Isaiah’s imperfection but not before Isaiah is shown what integrity looks like.  The chapter begins with, “In the year that King Uzziah died…” (meaning in a year in which one of Isaiah’s foundations of security and position was taken away) “I saw the Lord sitting on his throne, high and lifted up.”  Becoming a man of integrity always begins with being shown who you are not (God) and then in the light of that revelation being shown who you are.  The passage goes on to say that God is so powerful that his train (the symbol of a King’s majesty) fills the entire temple.  A powerful King might have a train of his robe that filled the entire aisle upon entering the temple but no earthly king could wear a robe whose train filled the entire temple!  In addition the angels are crying, “Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord of host” and the foundations shake and the temple was filled with smoke.  Isaiah thought Uzziah was powerful but now he had seen the Lord.

Isaiah’s response to seeing the glory of the Lord is “Woe is me, I am undone…”.  Because he is a prophet, literally he is saying, “I am accursed and I am unraveling!”  And why does he pronounce a curse upon himself?  Because having just seen the Glory of God he now sees the truth about himself – “I am a man of unclean lips and I live among a people of unclean lips.”  He declares that he is a liar and he lives in a nation of liars!

Now Isaiah is ready to be remade.  He has come undone much like a ball of yarn having been wrapped tightly into a ball unfurls when released.  But he’s now ready to be put back together perfectly and become a man of integrity.  Only he can’t do it.  Becoming a man of integrity is something done to you and it always involves (1) an acknowledgement that God is God and you are not, (2) a declaration of your own sinfulness and the sinfulness of the people around you, (3) a surrender to your own emptiness, (4) a sovereign act of God purging you of your sinfulness, (5) hearing with believing that your guilt is taken away and your sin is atoned for.  In Isaiah’s case, an angel takes a coal from the altar and touches his lips and says, “Behold this has touched your lips; your guilt is taken away and your sins are atoned for.” When Isaiah hears and believes that he no longer needs to feel guilty and that his sins have been removed as far as the east is from the west through God’s work and not his own, he is made whole.  He is now for the first time in his life perfectly integrated without blemish – not in his own perfection but in the perfection of the Lord.  He is now a man of integrity.  God can now ask, “Whom shall we send?” and Isaiah can answer, “Here I am, send me!”

Make that an Orange!

Alright, here’s the story of me being nearly strangled at the Belvoir Grill in about 1966.  The name of the perpetrator is withheld because I have no idea who he was, but even if I did, on the off chance he is still alive, I don’t want to make him mad again.  Trust me on this one.

I worked alone 5 days a week from 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM serving as the cook, cleaning crew, and server for a small grill on the western side of Rt. 1 almost as far south as Ft. Belvoir, Va.  Interstate 95 had only recently been built so there still was some truck traffic on Rt. 1.  The Belvoir Grill was owned by an Asian man whose name I do not remember.  He was a nice man but he was very cost conscious and very suspicious.  He was so afraid that I was going to give free food or drinks away to my high school buddies that every day at 6:00 PM when he took over, he would count all the burgers, buns, hot dogs, etc. and would weigh the drink cartridges to see if I had given away any drinks.  We sold mostly hamburgers, cheeseburgers, hot dogs, chili and half smokes, although occasionally I would fix eggs over light or scrambled egg sandwiches.  The place was known for the size of the fountain drinks.  A large fountain drink was served in a cup that held 48 oz. of liquid when half filled with crushed ice. (A large Mcdonalds drink holds 32 oz.).  You can see why he weighed the drink cartridges every day. (Little did he know that none of my friends would be caught dead in the Belvoir Grill).

So one day as I was earning my $1.25 an hour grilling hot dogs and hamburgers a customer walked through the front door of the grill.  He was a big man, about 6 ft. 2 and probably weighed 280 lbs.  As he walked up to the counter he announced, “I’ll have a half smoke with everything and  large coke.”  As was my custom I first grabbed the giant drink cup filled it half way with ice and then placed it under the coke dispenser so it would fill up while I fixed the half smoke.  I then went to the rotisserie grill containing hot dogs and half smokes with buns in the warmer beneath.  I picked out a large bun with the tongs, chose the best half smoke off the revolving grill and placed it on the bun.  I grabbed a plate, placed the bun and half smoke on the plate and proceeded to load the half smoke with cheese and chili, mustard and ketchup and topped it with onions.  I deftly spun around, grabbed the giant 48 oz. coke in my right hand while holding the culinary delight in my left hand and placed it on the counter.

I said, “That will be $2.00” and then the nightmare began.  The large trucker, who had watched me fix the half smoke and fill the large coke step by step said, “Make that an orange!”  All I could think of was that I was going to have to pay for that large coke if I had to now fix him a large orange, so I decided to be funny.  I said, “Poof, it’s an orange.  Oh, sorry, it didn’t work.  I did my best.  Guess you’re going to have to drink the coke.”  Then as quick as a cat, the big man reached across the counter, grabbed me by the collar and yanked me to himself until we were face to face.  He said, “I said I want an orange!”  He had convinced me.  I squeaked, “Ok, an orange it is.”

I spent the rest of the day drinking my large coke.  I wish I could say I learned my lesson that day when it comes to trying to be funny.  I didn’t.  But I did learn some valuable lessons – Never underestimate the quickness of a big man and don’t mess with a man who is twice your size in a confined area.  Those lessons came in handy years later in business.  God is good!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Oh Foolish Galatians

In Romans Chapter 12 Paul writes, “Be no longer conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind so you may know the will of God, that is what is good and acceptable and perfect.” Conformed here means “to be pressed into the likeness of” or living according to the pattern of the world.  Transformed comes from the Greek word from which we get metamorphosis – a change in form and habits.  (Caterpillar to Butterfly).  Renewing means “to be made new again” and mind is as you would imagine, “the intellect.”

So basically Paul is saying, stop living like caterpillars because the truth of the Gospel has changed your form and habits into those of a butterfly and you need to begin thinking and acting like a butterfly. Caterpillars are eating machines, devouring more food than they can actually contain within their bodies.  They selfishly destroy the leaves and trees that support them as they eat voraciously causing them to shed their skin four or five times in order to grow large enough to contain their appetites.  Caterpillars predominately eat leaves and are not able to drink, so all water that they require for life is contained within the leaves they eat.

Once a caterpillar receives the internal signal that metamorphosis is at hand he attaches to the branch (“I will raise up for David a righteous Branch……”Jeremiah 23:5) and through a process of literally dying to itself the caterpillar is metamorphosed into a butterfly.  Once a caterpillar has become a butterfly it has changed form and habits.  A butterfly has wings to fly and no longer lives off of eating leaves.  In fact, whereas a caterpillar has no ability to drink anything, a butterfly can only survive by drinking.  Butterfly’s ingest everything they need for life by sipping nectar, fruit juice or water.  They have no ability to eat like a caterpillar because they have been transformed.

When Paul wrote his letter to the Galatians, he was astonished that the butterflies he had left behind had foresaken flying by the power of the Spirit and drinking in the nectar of the Spirit.  They had abandoned new life because caterpillars or butterflies living like caterpillars had come behind Paul and “bewitched” them.  Paul reminds them that they do not need to eat leaves in order to survive, in fact trying to eat leaves through the straws they now have to sip in life will ultimately destroy them.  The wings they now have to fly will make crawling like a caterpillar difficult if not impossible as well.  In fact trying to live like a caterpillar once you’ve become a butterfly will only condemn you and fill you with guilt while negating the transforming work of metamorphosis.

You see, as Paul points out to the Galatians, the law was given as a guardian for the caterpillar state of the believer.  In the fullness of time, God sent His Son to fulfill the law and to redeem us from the penalty of sin so that we could become butterflies and live in a new way – by the Spirit.  We now have everything necessary to drink in Life and thereby we are changed into His image.  Paul says we do not need to rebuild the leaves of the law because the law has done its work in our lives – we know we are sinners and in need of a savior.  Now that we are butterflies we need to learn to think like butterflies with a new mind. We need to sip in the Life of the Spirit and we need to soar on wings like eagles.  In our new nature we cry, “Abba (Daddy) father” because we are no longer slaves (caterpillars) but we are heirs (butterflies) through God. (Metamorphosis while attached to the Branch).

We need Jordan Spieth to Shine

Golf needs Jordan Spieth to win, win regularly and win majors.  But more importantly, we need Jordan Spieth to win.  Jordan Spieth is the kind of hero we need right here, right now.  But who is Jordan Spieth?

Jordan Spieth is 23 years old, born in 1993 in Dallas, Texas.  His parents are both former college athletes and Jordan grew up playing golf, football, basketball, baseball and soccer.  At age 9 he mowed a spot in the his family’s lawn as short as he could to practice his putting.  He won the U.S. Junior Amateur at age 16 and age 18, joining Tiger Woods as the only two time U.S. Junior Amateur champion.  At age 17, Jordan was invited to play in the PGA Tour event, The Byron Nelson Championship and finished 16th.  He enrolled at the University of Texas and was named College Player of the Year as a freshman leading the Longhorns to the NCAA National Championship.  At age 19 he was Low Amateur in the 2012 U.S. Open and at year’s end he turned pro.

Since turning pro Jordan has tasted much success, winning both the Masters and the U.S. Open and being ranked Number 1 in the world for a time.  More recently however he has struggled a bit by his standards, having blown a big lead in last year’s Masters and finishing 37th, 30th and 12th in the other 3 Majors.  He helped the United States win the Ryder Cup last fall but seemingly lost his swing for most of the year.

As good as Jordan Spieth is as a player when on top of his game, his excellence is not why we need him right now.  When Tiger Woods was golf’s hero it was all about his greatness as a player and our fascination with his astounding ability.  That’s not why we need Jordan Spieth right now.  So why do we need him?  We need Jordan Spieth to be our hero because of his sister, his caddie and his heart.

Ellie Spieth, who is 16 years old, was born prematurely, with a still undiagnosed neurilogical disorder that has left her developmentally challenged.  But she remains the brightest star in the Spieth household and Jordan Spieth’s hero.  When people tell Jordan how much they admire his devotion to his sister he replies, “You might as well compliment me for not robbing the bank.  Loving Ellie is the most natural thing in the world and she is my hero.”  Ellie doesn’t care if Jordan wins or loses, she just loves him.  Life in all of its fullness is seen by Jordan Spieth through the lens of Ellie Spieth and it’s keeps him humble, respectful and appreciative.

Michael Grellar was a 6th grade math teacher in Washington State when in 2006 he was watching the U.S. Public Links Championship at Gold Mountain Country Club near his Gig Harbor home.  Having played NAIA golf in college, Michael offered to carry the bag of a player he saw carrying his own bag, Matt Savage of Florida State.  Savage advanced to the quarterfinals of the championship and never forgot Grellar’s kindness.  When the U.S Amateur was played at Chambers Bay in 2010 Savage recommended Grellar to Justin Thomas as his caddie and when the U.S. Junior Amateur came to Gold Mountain in 2011, Thomas recommended Grellar to 18 year old Jordan Spieth and together they won the U.S. Junior Amateur.  Ironically, on the first hole that Grellar caddied for Spieth he gave Jordan bad information forgetting that they had started on the 10th hole instead of the 1st.  They have been together ever since, Grellar leaving his $55,000 per year teaching job supplemented by caddie fees at local courses in exchange for making over $2,100,000.00 as Jordan’s caddie in 2015.  At age 39, Michael is able to keep Spieth grounded and focused when together they face difficult times.

But most importantly we need Jordan Spieth to succeed because of Jordan Spieth.  He is a great athlete.  He throws left handed but he swings right handed.  As he says, “because that’s how my dad did it.”  But it’s not Jordan’s athletic prowess that makes Jordan special.  It’s his heart.  It’s how he lives his life and how he works hard to be the best he can be.

Jordan Spieth does not have a naturally fluid or perfect golf swing.  When Tiger Woods was at his best his swing looked effortless.  But Jordan has to work at his swing mechanics and he has to work at the game just like you and me.  He gets out of rhythm and fights to keep the ball from hooking or hanging to the right.  Spieth does not hit the ball as far as the really big hitters on the PGA Tour.  He is a terrific putter but even his putting excellence is not so much mechanical as it is his will.  Jordan works his way around a golf course in the same way a great chess player wins a match or Greg Maddox pitches a shutout.  He does it with guile and grit and the person he is is the reason he wins.

Jordan Spieth is grounded in the security of the unconditional love of his family, in the incredible relationship he has with his sister Ellie, in the depth of his friendship with his caddie and in the comfort of his faith in Jesus Christ.  Jordan is driven by a desire to be the best and by a competitive spirit developed by playing other sports on a high level.  Jordan Spieth is the perfect hero.  He is humble and bold.  On the course he wants to win as much if not more than anyone else, but he never forgets that other people are more important than he is and that love is the most powerful force in the universe.  We desperately need a hero to step forward who is humble because he is secure in who he is and who cares more about the people around him than he does about his own ego.  Jordan Spieth is that kind of man.

 

An Obdience that comes from Faith

I actually enjoy cooking and baking.  I don’t do it very often anymore but I really do enjoy it.  One of my first paying jobs was as a short order cook at the Belvoir Grill on Rt. 1 in Alexandria, where I was nearly strangled by a trucker who failed to fully appreciate my refined sense of humor. (But that’s a different blog). At any rate I love to cook.

Many times when I cook I do it totally by memory, experience or instinct but when I bake I nearly always follow a recipe or the directions on a box.  I sometimes vary from the recipe or the instructions but only to the extent to which I trust my own knowledge or instincts above my belief and trust in the writer of the recipe or instructions.  If a recipe is a treasured favorite of my mother or someone else for whom I have tremendous faith I follow the recipe very carefully.  That is a perfect example of an obedience that comes from faith.

As I have written before, the word translated “obedience” most often in the New Testament means to “listen attentively”, that is to pay close attention to the words spoken or any other kind of communication.  The word translated faith most often in the New Testament means “persuaded”, therefore when describing the faith that Abraham had in God, Paul writes, “….Abraham was fully persuaded that God had power to do what He had promised…”. Faith always has an object.  Faith can only be as strong as the faithfulness of the object of your faith combined with the measure of your personal knowledge of the object of your faith.  Because I know my mother to be faithful in her writing of her recipes and I know my mother well, I pay careful attention to the details of her recipes.  Obedience that comes from faith.

Ultimately, having paid very close attention to my mother’s recipes I am transformed into someone who, because of my faith in her, is changed into someone who thinks about baking in a way very similar to her if not in exactly the same way.  The more attention I give her words when combined with the faith I have in her because of her faithfulness, the more I am changed and the more I bake like her by my new nature even when I am not baking one of her recipes.  Everything I bake will reflect my attentive listening and my faith.  An obedience that comes from faith.

At some point I no longer need the recipes.  I have been changed by my attentive listening and my baking reflects my obedience and faith.  Life is meant to be lived spontaneously.  Life is meant to flow from a transformed mind.  As Paul writes, “Be no longer conformed to this world but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.”  A renewed mind comes from attentively listening to the object of your faith and the transforming power of God’s truth.  As I listen to God’s word (reading it, singing it, listening to it, studying it, praying it, writing it, sharing it, applying it, and believing it) I am changed in how I see life and all of the creatures and elements God created within it. I especially am changed in how I see myself.  By nature I will begin to do the following, “Love the Lord your God with all of your heart, soul, mind and strength and the second is like it, Love your neighbor as you love yourself.”  An obedience that comes from faith.

Man to Man or Zone

I would always start basketball practice with a question – “What is the purpose of defense?”  Players would answer, “steal the ball”, “keep the other team from scoring”, or “stop your man.”  I would respond, “The purpose of defense is to get the other team to take the worst possible shot!” You see that if you can get a team to take a bad shot most of the time you will have a chance for a rebound because most bad shots are missed.  If therefore you are a good rebounding team every bad shot basically becomes a turnover by your opponent and you have created a turnover while focusing on the most important thing – guarding the nest.

You see in “steal the ball”, “keep the other team from scoring” and “stop your man” your focus is not on the most important thing – the nest.  In each case you are either focused on the ball, the scoreboard or the man and not the nest.  Just like with bees, the nest is everything.  When an intruder tries to get close to the nest we defenders swarm, pushing the intruder away from the nest.  As defenders we start at the nest and push out from there, collectively not individually.

Playing defense collectively lends itself to zone principles.  I believe even if you intend on playing man to man defense as your primary defense you should start by teaching zone defense.  A zone defense when taught well will teach your team the fundamentals of playing team defense.  It will teach your team the importance of help side defense and will make them better rebounders because rebounding out of a zone defense takes discipline and floor balance.  A zone defense will train your focus on the nest and teach your players the importance of teamwork.  When you switch to man to man after playing a zone well your team will by nature help each other and scramble to close out on the back side. Most importantly it will set your focus correctly – on the nest.