The Running Game

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

 

Photo Credit: CBS News, Heisman Trophy

THE RUNNING GAME

By Gail K. Kachnycz; 09 February 2022 

     What I know about football would fit in a fortune cookie: a touchdown is worth six points; then they can kick for an extra one point. For me, down is what makes a comforter puffy, and a turnover is a pastry filled with apples, sugar and spice. If this parable bears any resemblance to actual football, it is certainly a revelation of knowledge from the Lord, with some advice from my friend Dan, a graduate of Penn State where the fans dress in white. 

     When I first shared this, a friend said, Jesus can't both be the quarterback, and run interference/intercept the ball. My opinion is, when Jesus is on the team, He can do whatever He wants!

     THE RUNNING GAME 

     God and the devil were meeting for a football game. On the devil’s team were all the demons, the third of the angels that rebelled against God. The devil says to God, “You have twice as many angels as I have, that’s not fair!”

     God replies, “First of all, look who’s complaining about being unfair. Second, my angels are not the players, they are the spectators. My players are the humans.”

     The devil thinks, “Winning will be a piece of cake! Humans are so weak!”

     The angels, all dressed in gleaming white, fill up the stands.

     The teams each emerge from their locker rooms and run onto the field. The last player to come onto the field for the human team is their quarterback, Jesus.

     The devil complains, “That’s not fair! Jesus is God’s Son, He is divine!”

     God replies, “First of all, look who’s complaining about being unfair. Second, Jesus is fully human, and He belongs on the team. But, just to show good sportsmanship, you can look at our playbook, the Bible, any time.”

     The devil looks at the playbook. Every play is a running game; there are no plans for passing the ball. There is no Hail Mary Pass to be seen. The devil returns to his team and says, “If we can just confuse the humans and get them to doubt that the Quarterback is calling the right plays, we can win this game.”

     The teams line up and play begins. Every time one of the humans says, “I trust Jesus,” a demon gets crushed and the human team gains ground toward their end zone. This happens time after time. The devil tries to throw a pass, but it is always intercepted by Jesus and the human team gains possession of the ball. The angels in the stands go wild and wave their towels like crazy. At half time, the score is a zillion to zip in favor of Jesus’s team.

     During half time, the devil gives his team a pep talk. “We can do this,” he says, “Let’s try a double fake-out like sickness and job loss all at once.” “How about a fire or a hurricane?” one demon pipes up. “Good thinking,” says the devil, “let’s go for it.”

      So, the game resumes. Are we in the third quarter? Some people think we may be in the fourth quarter or even at the two minute warning. All I know is: I need to suit up, put on my helmet, and follow through on whatever plays that Quarterback Jesus calls. A running game is not glamorous; no adrenaline rush as a player leaps for a catch and does a victory dance. A running game is gritty, some may even say plodding. But, play by play, yard by yard, it gets the job done. And, every time we say, “I trust Jesus,” another demon gets crushed and we gain ground towards our goal.

 

 

 

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