Category: College Football (Page 12 of 12)

Don't You Know There's A King In Zion?

TheJesusWay“I have installed my King on Zion, my holy hill.” ~Psalm 2:6

 Psalm 2 is the psalm most used by Bible writers, quoted or alluded to nine times in the New Testament. Psalm 2 forms the very center and focus of the Church’s first recorded prayer in Acts 4.

“Why do the nations conspire
  and the peoples plot in vain?
The kings of the earth take their stand
  and the rulers gather together against the Lord
  and against his Anointed One.”
  ~Psalm 2:1-2 & Acts 4:25-26

Like those very first Christians, when we pray Psalm 2 it allows us to personally realize and internalize the tremendous canyon between the world’s ways and the ways of our God. It puts the reality of this unbridgeable gap between our ways and the ways of “the nations” right into our hearts and minds and muscles and guts.

Eugene Peterson translates Psalm 2:6 this way, “Don’t you know there’s a King in Zion?”

Peterson expands on the idea in his book, The Jesus Way:

“The first generation of Christians took Jesus at his word when he announced that the Kingdom was at hand—a real (not ideal) Kingdom with a real king, King Jesus. The words and sentences of Psalm 2 dismissed the pretensions of all these other ways and let Christ the King permeate their preaching and prayers and following. They followed the resurrected Jesus with an air of triumph and praise. The gospel was not something private that they cultivated in the cozy security of their homes and hearts; it was public, the most powerful force in human history, shaping the destiny of nations as well as the souls of men and women.”

Following Jesus is a unique way of living. It’s like nothing else. There is nothing and no one like Jesus. Following him gets us little or nothing of what we commonly think we want or need. Following him accomplishes nothing on the world’s agenda. Following him takes us right out of this world’s assumptions and goals and straight to a place where we can “insert a lever that turns the world upside down and inside out.” Following Jesus has everything to do with this world, but almost nothing in common with this world.

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TheChallengeI’m preaching my first Gospel Meeting (they’re not called Gospel Meetings anymore, are they?) beginning this Sunday evening through Wednesday at the Keller Church of Christ. My good friend Kyle Bolton is the preacher there, a long time friend of the family that traces back to his parents and my parents and my grandmother at P-Grove.

Here’s the lineup:

Sunday: “The Challenge to Know God” God reveals himself to us at Sinai & Zion
Monday: “The Challenge to Trust God” Isaiah 46 and Matthew 8
Tuesday: “The Challenge to Obey God” Abraham and the binding of Isaac
Wednesday: “The Challenge to Share God” The parables of Luke 15

My personal theme for the week is “The Challenge to Preach Four Straight Nights.” I invite you to join us for any and all those evenings.

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BigFootballAnnouncementHereMondaySome of you have asked me lately, in emails and in person, why I’m not doing a 99-Days of Football on the blog this summer like we did last year. Well, we can’t do the exact same thing every year. Where’s the joy in that? Something much bigger and much better and much more interactive is coming soon. In fact, I’m planning on announcing it this Monday, July 28 on this blog. If you’re a hard-core college football fan, this will be right up your alley. If you’re interested in the 99 Days of Football, you can still click on the green tab at the top of this page to relive the glamour and excitement of last year’s countdown to football season. In the meantime, bone up this weekend on your college football scouting reports and predictions and join me back here Monday.

Have a great weekend.

Peace,

Allan

Prayer, Momentum, & Once More on the Incarnation

“Seek the Lord while he may be found; call on him while he is near. Let the wicked forsake his way and the evil man his thoughts. Let him turn to the Lord and he will have mercy on him, and to our God for he will freely pardon.” ~Isaiah 55:6-7.

PrayerThe disciples asked Jesus in Luke 11 to teach them how to pray. They want to be like him in every way. So they want to pray just like him, too. They want to identify with their rabbi and to be identified with their rabbi by praying like him. So Jesus gives them the basics as far as the words go and then he tells them a story so they don’t lose the big picture.

The parable of the persistent friend. It’s midnight, the guy’s in bed, his whole family’s asleep. He doesn’t want to get up and get his friend the bread he needs to feed his surprise guest. In fact, he tells the neighbor at the door it’s not going to happen.

“Hey, it’s late! We’re all in bed! The kids are going to school in the morning! I’ve got an early meeting at work! Buzz off!”

In Jesus’ story, the man does get up and give his neighbor the bread he desperately needs. But not because he wants to. He does it, Jesus says, because of the friend’s boldness or persistence. And I’ve heard this story traditionally interpreted like this: keep praying. Even if God says ‘no,’ keep praying. He’ll give in eventually if you keep praying. Keep bugging him. He’ll change his mind. He doesn’t want to give you this thing you’re asking, but he will if you just keep knocking.

For that to make sense, God has to be the guy in the bed. For that interpretation to hang with the story, the guy in bed is God. The guy in bed. The guy who’s already turned out all the lights. The guy who’s locked his door. The guy who’s only thinking of himself. The selfish guy who doesn’t want to get up from under the covers and give his neighbor what he needs. That guy represents God?

No way.

If Jesus had put God in this story, all the lights would be on in the house. All the doors and windows would be wide open. There would be huge search lights criss-crossing the sky and giant neon billboards with flashing arrows pointing to the house saying, “Get your bread right here! Get as much bread as you want right here! And it’s free!” You couldn’t even get to the door to knock because the man would be out in the street looking for you and running to meet you and give you the bread before you could even ask.

The guy in the bed is not God. The guy in the bed is the opposite of God. And there’s the point. There’s the teaching of Jesus. He’s drawing a stark contrast. He’s not making a comparison. Jesus says here’s a man who will eventually get out of bed and give bread to his neighbor, if not because they’re friends, then certainly out of a sense of duty or honor or hospitality. You fathers, if your child asks you for something he really needs, you’re not going to give him something that would hurt him. So if this reluctant sleepy guy and you imperfect human dads know how to provide good gifts, why would you ever assume that God doesn’t? Our God is definitely more kind and generous and loving and giving than any man, regardless of how decent or good that man may be.

Jesus’ point in telling the story in Luke 11 is that our God is never reluctant to help. We ask God knowing he’ll honor our requests. We seek God knowing we’ll find him. We knock on God’s door knowing he’ll give us what we need.

“This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us. And if we know that he hears us — whatever we ask — we know that we have what we asked of him.” ~1 John 5:14-15

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FootballWith 6:23 to play in the third quarter of last night’s Fiesta Bowl, Oklahoma scored a touchdown to pull to within five points of West Virginia. By this point the Mountaineers had proven clearly that they were the faster, more athletic, more explosive team. And by kicking an extra point, the Sooners would only be down by four with some real positive momentum. Maybe even some potentially game-changing momentum.

But Bob Stoops decided to go for two. The pass was incomplete. And OU trailed by five. Not only that, but instead of feeling good about a success, the team felt bad about a failure. Instead of West Virginia feeling negatively about their failure in giving up a touchdown on a long drive, they felt positively about their success in stopping the two-point play.

Momentum is huge. The psychology of what happens in the course of a football game and how it all shifts back and forth at a moment’s notice is generally tied to turnovers and failed two-point conversions.

And then, to defy logic even further, Stoops calls for an onside kick. Halfway through the third quarter. West Virginia recovers at the OU 39 yard line and goes on to score three of the game’s next four touchdowns to salt it away.

It was like Stoops thought he was playing OSU or something.

If I were the owner or GM or AD of a football team, I would put it in my coach’s contract that he could never, ever, go for two before the start of the fourth quarter. Period. No exceptions. I don’t care how far we’re down or how lousy our kicker. Going for two, going against the percentages, unnecessarily risking that precious momentum, it doesn’t add up. It’s never worth it.

Someday we’ll discuss “the chart.”

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IncarnationFinally, my good friend Todd Lewis, down in Marble Falls, sent me a Christmas article he wrote last month exploring the ways the Christmas season produces cheer even in the midst of war, disease, and crime. His words go right to the heart of what we preached here at Legacy for the past three weeks, how we see ourselves in the infant Jesus — God’s intentions in creating us, our own potential, our high calling. Click here, Observations on Christmas Cheer, to read Todd’s excellent article.

Peace,

Allan

The Break & The Bowls

FootballI love Christmas break.

For a couple of weeks nobody has to wake up super early and rush around to get ready in the mornings. There’s no agonizing at the kitchen table doing homework in the afternoons. Everybody stays up a little later in the evenings. We all get to spend much more time together playing games, laughing, sharing, relaxing. Everything slows way down and we get to enjoy each other in the family so much more. The trip to the mall to see Santa Claus always happens the afternoon of the last day of school, straight from the school after early release, and then out to eat and look at Christmas lights to kick off the break. One or two of the days is spent wrapping all the Christmas presents, which is always fun, anticipating together how this cousin or that grandparent is going to love this or that gift. There are those three or four days in the middle when we get to hang out with uncles and aunts and brothers and sisters and cousins that we don’t see nearly as often as we’d like. And everything just seems so relaxed.

And right in the middle of all that, TV gives us 32 college football bowl games!

How beautiful is that?

The bowl season coincides so wonderfully with the school break. It’s perfect. Very few commitments to interfere. Extra food and snacks all over the place. I love it.

The bowls start slow with a couple of matchups between lightweights in games with funny names. But then they increase in frequency and intensity—games with traditional names in familiar stadiums with floods of attached memories—before climaxing with the big four and the national championship. 32 of them! What’s not to love?

We’ll pick the kids up at 1:00 today, head straight to the mall, get our family picture made with St. Nick, eat a big meal together, check out the beautiful Christmas lights in the fancier neighborhoods (David & Krista, make sure your blowup Santa in your front yard is turned on), and then head home for the Poinsettia Bowl tilt between Navy and Utah. Nothing wrong with that.

In honor of the bowl season kicking off this evening, here are several of my favorite quotes from college football coaches. When the success of your career is predicated on being able to predict what 20-year-old boys are going to do you have to have a sense of humor.

“At Georgia Southern, we don’t cheat. That costs money and we don’t have any.” ~Erk Russell, Georgia Southern

“I don’t expect to win enough games to be put on NCAA probation. I just want to win enough to warrant an investigation.”  ~Bob Devaney, Nebraska

“There’s nothing that cleanses your soul like getting the snot beat out of you.”  ~Woody Hayes, Ohio State 

“They cut us up like boarding house pie. And that’s real small pieces.”  ~Darrell Royal, Texas 

“We played like about three tons of buzzard puke this afternoon.”  ~Spike Dykes, Texas Tech

“If lessons are learned in defeat, our team is getting a good education.”  ~Murray Warmath, Minnesota 

“A school without football is in danger of deteriorating into a medieval study hall.”  ~Frank Leahy, Notre Dame

“It’s kind of hard to rally around a math class.”  ~Bear Bryant, Alabama

“Take the shortest route to the ball and arrive in a bad humor.”  ~Bowden Wyatt, Tennessee

“The only qualifications for a lineman are to be big and dumb. To be a back, you only have to be dumb.”  ~Knute Rockne, Notre Dame

“It isn’t necessary to see a good tackle. You can hear it.”  ~Knute Rockne

“Gentlemen, it is better to have died a small boy than to fumble this football.”  ~John Heisman

John McKay, the legendary USC coach, was probably the funniest football coach who ever lived. His deadpan and self-deprecating humor was always perfect in its timing and pointed in its message and absolutely knock down funny. Following a 51-0 loss to Notre Dame one afternoon he told his team in the lockerroom, “Those of you who need showers, take them.” McKay is also remembered for telling reporters once, “We didn’t tackle well today but we made up for it by not blocking.” My favorite McKay line, though, comes from his days as the coach of the expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers. During the middle of that first 0-14 season, McKay was asked about the execution of his offense. His reply? “I’m all for it.”

Peace,

Allan

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