As a coach, your life is built on knowledge. You spend hours scouting opponents and studying the tendencies of your own players. You know that your success depends on how deeply you understand the game: your own strategy and that of your opponents as well.
But there is a level of knowledge that goes beyond the X’s and O’s. It's the knowledge that transforms not just your win-loss record, but your very soul. The most important scouting report you will ever read isn’t about a rival team; it’s about the God who created the the players and the coaches.
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Knowing with Our Head and Our Heart
Most people that consider themselves to be Christians in our culture have head knowledge of God. They know the stories or the basic rules of the faith. Knowing the right things about God is essential. But for those who have been truly redeemed by the work of the cross, they don’t just know facts about God, they know Him personally.
In John 17:3, Jesus says, “And this is eternal life, that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent.” Think of it this way: You can study a legendary coach’s biography and memorize his career stats, but that’s not the same as being his son or his close friend. True salvation is a heart knowledge—a relationship where God’s laws are written on your heart, giving you an insatiable thirst for His presence, not only His blessings.
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Scouting the Creator’s Work
A great coach sees things others miss—a subtle shift in a defense or a player's fatigue. When you truly know and seek God, you begin to notice His handiwork everywhere:
- 👉In Creation: When you stand on the field at sunrise or watch the intricate physics of a perfect spiral, you see God’s glory
- (Ps. 19:1–2).
- 👉In Providence: You realize nothing happens by chance. From the “lucky” bounce of a ball to the major shifts in your career, to the hardships and triumphs at home, an intelligent God is in control (Matt. 10:29).
- 👉In the Scriptures: The Bible becomes your ultimate manual. It is “perfect” and “sure,” making even the simple coach wise
- (Ps. 19:7-11).
We often respect leaders for their attributes—their toughness, their integrity, their mercy, or their vision. When we seek God, we find the perfect blend of all these things. He is the Creator who gave you your talents. He is the Governor of history, working all things according to His will (Eph. 1:11). He is the Savior who adopted you into His family despite your failures. And finally, He is the Judge. Knowing that we serve a God who is “merciful and gracious” yet “will by no means clear the guilty.” (Exodus 34:6-7) He creates a deep, steadying peace within us.
The Impact on Your Sideline
Knowing God doesn’t just change your Sunday morning; it changes your Monday practice.
- 👉Personal Life: You begin to live Coram Deo—in the presence of God. You realize your chief end is to glorify God, whether you’re in a post-game interview or a private meeting.
- 👉Family Life: You become the spiritual head of your home. You don’t just delegate your kids’ learning of the faith to a youth pastor; you model a life of devotion that convinces your family that God is real.
- 👉Professional Life: Work is no longer a necessary evil to pay bills. It is worship. You view your players and your position as a stewardship from God (Gen. 1:28). You coach with maximum effort (Eccl. 9:10) because you are doing it for His glory (1 Cor. 10:31).
- 👉The Final Whistle: Every coach’s career eventually ends. There is a final whistle for all of us in terms of our career and our very life. For the coach who knows God, those days aren't filled with fear—they are filled with joy. Like the Apostle Paul, you can look toward the end of the game and the end of life and say, “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith”
- (2 Tim. 4:7). The ultimate victory isn’t a trophy that gathers dust in a hallway; it is meeting the Lord and being with Him forever.
Coach, don’t just study the game. Seek the One who designed it. Knowledge of the Creator is the only thing that will sustain you when the stadium lights go out.
Caleb Lenard