FCA DAILY IMPACT PLAY Game-Changer | |
“But everything that was a gain to me, I have considered to be a loss because of Christ.” - Philippians 3:7 | |
Everyone has one at least one favorite game-changing sports moment. It’s that one play during a game that changes everything. In a single moment, momentum shifts, and it alters the outcome of the game. Sometimes, the play not only changes the game, but also an athlete’s entire career. Some of my personal favorite game-changers include David Tyree’s catch from Eli Manning on fourth and long in the 2008 Super Bowl, Christian Laettner's last-second jumper in the 1992 NCAA Tournament, Kirk Gibson's 1988 pinch-hit HR in the World Series, and, of course, Doug Flutie’s famous “Hail Mary” pass in 1984. Game-changers have a huge impact on sports history. Some would say those moments are why we watch and play sports. But the real question is not what sports game-changers are the most impacting, but rather, what spiritual game-changer has most impacted your life? Do you have one of those moments—one that altered everything in your life and forced you to see life differently? The ultimate game-changer for anyone is the moment we place our faith and trust in our living Savior, and we ask Jesus Christ to be the Lord of our lives. If you have done that already, what would be your next spiritual game-changer? Has the Lord ever gripped your life in such a way that shifted the spiritual momentum and changed the way you see things? For me, this happened on August 4, 2007. I was standing in front of a grave in Seoul, South Korea. It was the burial site of someone I didn’t even know. I was in Korea with an FCA ministry team doing a sports camp during the 100 year anniversary of the Pyongyang Great Revival. In 1907, God had stirred in the hearts of men and women in Korea to be authentic—to come clean before others. It started with the leaders going before their congregations to lay down their pride and admit their sins. Revival pushed back the gates of Hell, and Heaven crashed to earth. Many early missionaries to Korea were beheaded, speared and burned. Their blood was the catalyst that brought massive revival. So, on August 4, when we visited a cemetery in Seoul that honored the first Christian martyrs in Korea, we saw about 510 of the graves in the Foreigners Cemetery Park that contained the remains of foreign missionaries and their family members. To see all the graves of those missionaries who had been beheaded was a real spiritual gut-check. As I walked through the grave sites and saw the quotes and Scriptures on the graves, I was overwhelmed. But the one that altered everything for me was the tombstone of a woman named Ruby Kendrick. She was a young missionary from Texas who had responded to the call to preach the Gospel to the Korean people. She died at age 24, only eight months after she arrived in Korea, and her death inspired other missionaries to go and take her place. This was the quote on her tombstone: “If I had a thousand lives to give, Korea should have them all.” Ruby Kendrick was totally surrendered to the Lord’s work. She sacrificed everything, even her own life, for the sake of the call. I thought to myself, if I had a thousand lives to give Christ, who or what would deserve them all? I couldn’t shake that question. What am I so sold-out to that I would offer up life after life for it? More importantly, what am I willing to do with this one life that I have? The desire to serve Jesus with reckless abandon is what He wants from me. When people get to a point where they are willing to lay down their life, God takes that surrendered life and uses it to break down strongholds and release revival. That was a game-changer for me. I will never forget that moment and the spiritual momentum that shifted in my heart. It was not shown on ESPN’s Top 10, but it was a moment that changed my life. God confirmed in me that if I had thousands of lives to give, athletes and coaches should have get them all! I long to see the entire sports world transformed by God’s love, and I ask the Lord every day to bring revival to the athletic community and what He wants from me to help make that happen. I daily strive to offer my life to His service, no matter what the outcome. His work; His way! How about you? If you had a thousand lives, who or what would deserve them all? | |
What is your favorite sports game-changer? When you remember it, how does it make you feel? Do you have a spiritual game-changing moment? What happened? Since that time, what has happened in your life? Has there been significant change? What would you have engraved on your tombstone? Why? | |
“Lord, if I had a thousand lives to give, You would deserve them all. But what I struggle with is how to live that out. Who or what deserves a thousand of my lives? How should I offer my one life? Help me, Jesus, to see clearly how my life should be lived. Reveal Your desire for me. Thank You, Jesus, for touching my life and transforming it. In Your name I pray. Amen.” | |
Dan Britton serves as FCA's Chief Field Officer and has been on staff since 1990. Dan played professional lacrosse for four years for the Baltimore Thunder. He has coauthored six books, One Word, One Word for Kids, Life Word, Wisdom Walks, True Competitor and Called to Greatness; and he is the author and editor of twelve FCA books. He still plays and coaches lacrosse and enjoys running marathons. He and his wife Dawn reside in Overland Park, Kansas, and they have three adult children and two sons-in-law. You can e-mail Dan at dan@fca.org and read his blog at GetOneWord.com. | | |
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