In the high-pressure world of sports, we are obsessed with metrics. We track shooting percentages, 40-yard dash times, and, ultimately, the win-loss column. But if you claim to follow Christ, there is a metric that carries more weight than any trophy on your mantle.
Martin Luther once said, “The more a person loves, the closer he approaches the image of God.” As a coach, you are a leader, a mentor, and a strategist. But according to Jesus in John 13:34-35, your most defining characteristic should be your love. He didn’t say the world would know us by our theology or our championship rings; He said they would know us by our love for one another.
The Sideline Diagnostic
It's easy to be loving when you’re up by twenty points. The real test of Christian love happens in the fourth quarter when the officiating is questionable, your star player is making mental errors, and the parents in the stands are chirping. Or, let’s take it off the court or field for a moment. The real test is when you have to sacrifice your own comfort, time, and resources to help those who are in need.
In 1 Corinthians 13, Paul gives us a diagnostic tool for cold love. Think about how you might apply this to your coaching or with your family this week:
- 👉Are you losing patience with the player who learns slowly? How about with your child who seems to struggle with the same things over and over again?
- 👉Are you irritable or resentful when things don’t go your way?
- 👉Are you boasting about your program’s success while forgetting the hearts of the kids who built it?
- It's a tragedy to be a hero to a hundred players and a stranger to your own children. Ephesians 5:25 calls us to a sacrificial love that starts at home.
- 👉Do your family’s needs take a backseat to your career aspirations?
- 👉Is your love observable to your spouse and children? Do they see you increasing in patience and gratitude, or do they get the leftovers of your emotional energy after you’ve given your best to the team? When we prioritize things over people (a winning season, personal fulfillment, etc.), our love is on the decline.
Beware the Coaching Counterfeits
Theologian Jonathan Edwards warned that we often mistake “natural affection” for “Christian love.” In coaching, this is a constant temptation.
- Reciprocal Love: It’s simple to love the star athlete or ideal assistant coach who works hard, listens, and wins games for you. But Jesus says in Luke 6:32, “For even sinners love those who love them.” The test of Christlikeness isn’t how you treat those who are easy to love; it’s how you treat the player at the end of the bench who, from a worldly perspective, provides little value to your team. It’s how you treat the rookie coach compared to your best friend who has helped run your program for the past decade.
- Self-Serving Love: Sometimes we love our players because their success makes us look good. This isn't love; it’s an investment. True Christian love continues even when the other person doesn't perform or can’t perform anymore. True love cares about the person and the relationship, not just the potential benefits they may provide.
Body and Soul: Holistic Coaching
True love, as modeled by Christ, is never one-dimensional. A Christlike coach aims to train the body with excellence and care for the soul with urgency. You might feel like your progress in this area is agonizingly slow. You might have lost your temper yesterday or succumbed to win-at-all-costs thinking. The point isn’t immediate perfection; it’s direction. Are you making convincing progress in Christlike love, or are you regressing into a colder, more self-centered version of yourself?
The Challenge:
Take one specific step today. Identify one unlovable person—a difficult player, a frustrating parent, or an unruly child—and choose to show them the bounty of Christ’s love without expecting a single thing in return.
After all, that is exactly how Jesus loved us: “But God proves his own love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8).
Caleb Lenard