Monday, November 4, 2013

what it was, was football









Andy Griffith had a hit in the 50’s with a parody trying to explain football to someone who had never seen the game, after his first impression of it.  “What it was, was football,” was funny, mostly because it was true.  A light hearted look at our new national pastime.  And then there are the Chargers, who may have benefitted from listening to Andy.  Finding ways to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory, they were first and less than a yard for a touchdown to win the game.  No way they could lose-or was there?  First down was a replay of the running paly that they used to lose to the Raiders.  Second down was throwing a pass 5 feet wider than the field.  Third was throwing it 10 yards longer than the end zone.  They went into OT, then lost quickly, wondering what had happened.  A unique combination of wrong personnel-starting running back and fullback not on the field, poor play calling-an arm’s length from a score and you pass, and poor play execution, they displayed, with apologies to Mr. Griffith, that what they were playing wasn’t football!
My first year of college was at Union College, a JC.  No intercollegiate sports, but a tough intramural program, known for its competitive flag football.  Now we joined as ACE, a group of hippies, freaks, greasers, Viet Nam vets, and bikers, quite the opposite of the clean cut athletic types we were to compete against.  Add to that we were from a satellite campus, that once was a Mayfair grocery store, and we were a joke.  We went to school where the produce section used to be, and took English by the check out stands.  They even kept the old in/out electric doors-so much for the ivy halls some went to.  But we were tough, and at the end of the first game we were tied.  Our last time in the huddle, we decided that this one particular jerk was going to get his, so we all ran at him, and landed on him.  Game over-a tie.  But we had set a precedent for the season, as we tied every game.  Now we liked to think we were undefeated, but we also hadn’t won any either.  But more importantly, we decided that the last play of every game we would gang up and tackle one guy who was a particular irritant to us.  And as the season progressed, we learned that you weren’t allowed to tackle the guy first, then pull his flag, and tearing off a jersey didn’t count the same as a flag either.  And we also proved you don’t have to be on the field for us to go after you, as we proved more than once.  And soon opponents, and the officials were onto us, leading to our last game-forever.  Win Phillips, the AD was at the game, he had been warned about us, and the best ref was to officiate.  They would show us-and the contest began.  He cut us no slack, and when the game ended,  instead of chasing a player, we chased the ref to his car, where he locked himself in.  Blow your whistle now tough guy!  The last person we ever would get to chase.  And we had gone undefeated!  Just not sure what legend we left behind, that of the ref or of our perfect, undefeated season, but years later when I heard someone talking about the ref being chased to his car, I smiled-I had chased him.  What it was, was football.  Played our way.
My first time coaching football was a Pop Warner league, called Young American Football League, or YAFL for short.  We were the Rams and had a 4-4-1 season record, with the –1, the tie, being our biggest victory of the year.  It came against Bloomfield, who had the toughest parents, prettiest cheerleaders, and coaches who all had whistles and shirts that said “coach” on them.  They ruled with all the compassion of a drill sergeant, and they practiced, warmed up, and did everything with an emotionless vigor, almost like robots.  They would applaud each other after jumping jacks, and were as good as they were obnoxious.  We considered them ripe for the picking.  This year’s success story was one kid, who was so good, he looked too old, and it was rumored the coach kept a copy of his birth certificate if the players age was questioned.  We were more like the bad news bears, more bad news than bear.  But falling back on an old high school lesson, we put Jose in the position of Monster on defense.  His job was to go wherever this kid went-follow him into the bathroom if needed.  And Jose did, if not in on the tackle, his was the first face he saw when getting up.  Jose was always there, and even would follow him back to the huddle.  Jose was his shadow, and his coach and the kid didn’t like it.  They loved attention-just not like this.  And at half time Jose followed him to the bench-he was relentless, and the kid became paranoid of Jose.  Looking out for him, and losing his concentration.  We had shut him down, and soon the whole team was energized, with the opposing coach complaining as they went down to defeat-in a tie.  We bragged after that that we didn’t always win, but never lost.  The opposing coach called it unfair, they had never lost, but what it was, was football. 
Scripture tells us that Satan, our enemy is like a roaring lion, seeking to destroy  us.  To rob us, confuse us, and in any way intimidate us and rob us of our joy in the Lord.  2 Corinthians even tells how we are beaten down and persecuted for Christ.  But we win the game of life, even if we lose some battles in between.  Yet some blame Satan rather than praise Jesus, seeing devils in each trial, never seeing God, and never taking credit for their own sin.  They believe the lie of “the devil made me do it,” when he cannot make you do what you don’t want to do-it is your choice.  Yet through intimidation, can mess with our minds and draw us away from Jesus.  We get sidetracked from Jesus, like the running back did with Jose, and once you are confused, you start to find fault with others, starting arguments, and at that point you have lost.  It is someone else’s fault, when it is your decision to make excuses.  And like football, and like the Chargers showed us yesterday, you can have the wrong personnel-no Jesus.  Keeping Him on the bench in your daily life.  You can have the wrong plays, calling your own as needed, based on your judgment not God’s.  And you can have poor execution, giving up, not allowing God to finish the good work He started in you.  When you, not God become the play caller, you are inviting defeat.  And like our undefeated season, in which we never lost, we never won either.  Each game a battle that ended in a tie.
So when scripture tells us we run the race to win, hang in there. Life is not a sprint, but a marathon, and not just one play, but many that make up a drive.  And we need Jesus until the end, until the final gun, or trumpet in our case and we are called home.  Game over, victory, in Jesus.  So life can be like a football game, and the time is running short.  Choose Jesus as your coach today, and face any and all intimidation.  For He also tells us to resist the devil and he will flee.  Much different than blaming him-chase him away in Jesus!  Some contests end in defeat, some in a tie.  There is no reason to be anything but victorious in Jesus.  In a game of inches, don’t get it confused by measuring it in feet.  Missing by that much is still a miss-just ask the Chargers.  Fourth and inches is supposed to be different than first and inches.  Let Jesus lead, and you will find that you may not always win, but you will never lose.  What it is isn’t always football, but is always Jesus.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com