Creation Part 2: Coaching In Light of Creation
We know that moment when chaos hits the court. It’s the second half: those adjustments you just barked out to your team aren’t being executed, communication has broken down, and frustration is boiling over. As a coach, your instinct is to step in. You call a time-out. You restore the order and help them find equilibrium again. But have you ever considered that this very impulse—the desire to bring structure and alignment out of frustration—is a divine characteristic?
When we think about God as the “Creator,” we usually focus on the “how.” How did the universe begin? It's easy to get stuck in the first few chapters of Genesis, focused only on origins. But as we saw in Part 1, a deeper look at the biblical narrative shows us that creation is not a completed event in the distant past. It’s an ongoing process— “God’s Creation Project”—and you are invited to participate.
Consider these three shifts that can redefine your coaching perspective:
In scientific debates, we often obsess over the mechanics of how God made the world. As coaches, we do the same. Many times, we concentrate on the "how":
These are good questions. Science and “best practices” are valuable. But they are only the physical aspect. The Bible pushes us past the physical to the metaphysical:
God’s creation project reminds us that we aren’t just building skilled players; we are cultivating image-bearers who need a game plan to fruitfully use their God-given talents for his glory and fame.
When a team fails, we often talk about “fixing it.” But let me encourage a shift in language that might be helpful: go from fixing to
re-aligning. In the Bible, when sin and the fall corrupted God’s good creation (Gen 3), God didn’t discard the world. He redeemed it. Redemption isn’t about escaping the world; it’s about reinstating the original design and purpose to something even greater.
Your team is like that ancient creation project. When chaos arises—when laziness sets in or a player’s ego takes over—you are not just putting out fires. You are helping them re-align with the “Who, What, and Why” that was first set for them. You are reminding them of the DNA or pillars of your program, of who you know they can become under your leadership.
We often truncate our mission. We see the final score, the end of season win-loss column, or the full trophy case as the end goal. Those things aren’t bad in and of themselves. The ultimate goal, however, isn’t just the physical and temporary; it’s a realized human flourishing in each of your players.
Your coaching is a form of culture-making. You are teaching your athletes:
Winning is important. Competition in sport is good. But your job is more glorious than fleeting success. You are a prophet, priest, and king over your team’s culture, ordained by God to establish a vision, care for his people (your athletes and fellow coaches), and execute his righteous rule.
The next time chaos hits the court or field, take a breath. You're in the middle of a divine project. You're restoring order from chaos, and you're helping your athletes mature as humans, as they build resilience and face adversity with hope in what the future holds.