Gamechanged: Hope For Vontaze Burfict

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We drove through Cincinnati for the first time two weeks ago. Around a deep curve on I75 north, boom, there it was, a lovely city across the Ohio River. It kind of sneaks up on you coming from that direction.  So because we had so recently waved to the Bengal’s stadium from our north-bound CRV, we watched the Bengals/Steelers game Saturday with a tad more interest than we normally would have.  And then a tad more.

I’ve been thinking about Vontaze Burfict ever since.

First, a word to his mother.  A mother’s worst nightmare is for the whole world to be mad at her child.  I think that might kill me.  So my first thought is for you, Vontaze’s mother.  There is a place to take the sorrow in your heart when you see repeated evidence of the rage in his.  You know the reasons for his rage.  You lived them.  Take your sorrow and your son’s rage to Jesus.  Jesus wants you.  And He wants Vontaze too.  And only He can protect you from the world’s razor-sharp condemnation.  Anyway, you’ve got a friend in me, to quote the song.

Second, they don’t all give in to rage.  Obviously.  And those who do don’t have to stay there.  My prayer is that someday Vontaze will be featured in a lengthy Sports Illustrated article recounting how his actions Saturday weren’t just gamechangers for a Bengal’s loss, but far more important (No, Cincinnati, your loss is not as important as a man’s soul) were gamechangers for his life’s gain.  I hope someone – Tom, you up to this? – will sit with him as long as it takes and tell him that he has a heavenly father who loves him so much, unlike his earthly one, and that the hatred he is hearing from the world is a beckoning from the One who knows how that feels.  With one difference.  That One was perfect.  He did nothing to earn the hatred.  The other is Burfict.  And he did.

Perhaps someone has told him that.  A grandmother?  A coach?  A team chaplain?  Well, he didn’t hear it, so I will tell him again.

Vontaze, are you listening?  The videos of all your hits are hard to watch.  They make us angry because they ruin sports and ruin people.  But I can’t hate you because when I watch your clips, I see me – someone in desperate need of grace.  I see Burfict who needs Perfect.  I need Perfect too, and when He offered himself to me at my fork in the road, all I did was say yes.  That’s it.  So if you can soften for one minute, the One who loves your soul stands ready to declare you perfect and then to spend a lifetime making you a new man.  Gamechanged.

Also Because It Makes Me Happy

Spring-Craggy-Garden-North-Carolina-photo-via-kris

(Photo cred:  www.carolinamountaindog.com)

I recently discovered a new depth of ‘amazing’ to the grace I’ve known since I was eight years old.

It is, of course, amazing because I’ve never deserved it, and because God is so amazingly different from me.  Everything He has done has been exactly opposite of the way I would have done it, and has been achingly, beautifully successful according to His plan.  I am talking here about everything from the two hummingbirds fighting over the feeder to the certain moment when He returns and every knee will bow, willingly or not.

But it dawned on me the other day that His grace is also amazing because He kindly knows I love, need, and want to be amazed.  I am made to be amazed by Him and my highest joy is when my mouth is wide open in awe that, yet again, He has orchestrated a beauty that none of the masters of any artistic medium could come close to; that He has calibrated a meeting of two people, or moments, or events that no engineer or architect could approach even with impeccable mathematics.  He, the chief Architect, Engineer, Mathematician, Artist, and Lover of His children, amazes me because He knows it makes me happy.

And that’s just another way of saying that He loves me.  And that’s amazing.

It’s amazing, too, because it is so easy not to believe it, or to forget it.  As the hymn writer says, sometimes, “darkness veils His lovely face.”  It does.  A cloud of my ignorance and dust-weakness covers me, and I feel the God of the universe at war with me.  Being thrust exposed before the lions in the coliseum, heart-stopping as that must have been, is nothing to being thrust exposed before the Lion of the tribe of Judah in His righteous wrath.  This is the outer edge of darkness and abandonment.  But the hymn writer reminds me that when that happens, as it does to every earnest heart, it is then that “I rest on His unchanging grace.”

His grace hasn’t changed.  It is there all the while, a rock for me to stand on as I grapple with the darkness that would vanquish me, but can’t!  It is the daily experience of one of God’s own that ‘weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning!’

The shell-shocked man whose wife has left him discovers new love in a sweet woman.  The anxious mother takes her child to college and the first person she encounters on the new campus is a blood relative!  The rebellious, drug-addicted teenager stands before his church a repentant young man declaring God’s drawing him out of the fire. The sweet and sassy saint waiting three more long weeks for her cancer surgery dines with friends under the evening sky and says, “God is faithful.  He is taking care of me.”

Examples of amazing from the last 24 hours of my little life.  How kind He is!

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