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Tag Archives: Carolina

On Love and Basketball…

21 Thursday Feb 2019

Posted by jandrewsweckerly in Uncategorized

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Tags

basketball, Carolina, confidence, criticism, doubt, Duke, game, gifts, God, Jesus, Joseph, love, redemption, rivalry, talents

basketball

Photo credit:  https://usatodayhss.com/2019/why-im-afraid-to-go-to-a-high-school-basketball-game

As we headed into the Duke-Carolina game tonight, my daughter asked me if I thought Duke would win.  She’s finally starting to pay attention to my passion for Duke Basketball, and so I sat her down to explain the phenomenon of the Duke-Carolina basketball rivalry.  I told her what every Duke or Carolina fan knows:  no matter what ranking either school has (including if one of the teams in unranked), no matter how well one team or the other has been playing against other teams, no matter which team’s arena they are in, when Duke and Carolina play you NEVER know who will win.  The rivalry is so intense that every time the two teams play, either team could win.  I am not sure whether the rivalry is so intense and so long-standing that both teams get inside their heads too much, or whether there is some weird psychological reason why this rivalry produces so much uncertainty.  All I do know is that when Duke and Carolina play, it truly is any team’s game.

As I was thinking about the game today, I was realizing how we often have people or entities in our lives that get in our heads and make us second-guess our gifts and talents.  We may be full of confidence, doing what we are born to do, and all we need is skeptical relative or an old high school rival to say something and our confidence stutters.  We may have thoughtfully prepared our next steps forward, consulting experts and resources, and in the middle of executing our well-thought-out plan someone raises a question we did not think of that makes us question our abilities or even the whole process.  Criticism can be tough, but what is worse is when we allow that criticism to erode our strong sense of self and purpose.

This coming Sunday, we will hear the story of when Joseph’s brothers discover that Joseph is alive and thriving (Genesis 45.3-11, 15).  Often when we read this story, we read it from the perspective of Joseph – being thrilled to have the persecuted one redeemed.  But more often, I think we are a little more like Joseph’s brothers – filled with jealousy, impulsive, and longing for love and affirmation.  In a moment of hateful weakness, the brothers sell Joseph into slavery; and in our lesson from Sunday, their reckoning happens.  As they come to pharaoh for help in their weakness, they are confronted with the one person who has every right to punish them.  But instead, Joseph is filled with love.  Joseph is able to see goodness.  Joseph is able to offer redemption.

Now I am not saying Duke and Carolina fans should just turn their hearts to love (I cannot look at that Carolina blue without feeling a bit nauseated).  But what we can all stand to remember from rivalries is that when we root ourselves in God’s love, when we live and operate out of love, things like criticism, self-doubt, and challenges have less power over us.  When we root ourselves in love, we are able to love ourselves the way God love us.  And, when we root ourselves in love, we can also see past ugliness of others and instead see God in them too.

So whatever you are facing this week, whomever is trying to tear you down (or beat your team), I offer you the collect for this Sunday:  O Lord, you have taught us that without love whatever we do is worth nothing:  Send your Holy Spirit and pour into our hearts your greatest gift, which is love, the true bond of peace and of all virtue, without which whoever lives is accounted dead before you.  Grant this for the sake of your only Son Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.  Amen.  (BCP, 216)

Getting back in the game…

21 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by jandrewsweckerly in Uncategorized

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Tags

Carolina, Duke, faith, God, journey, rivalry

Courtesy of http://chapelboro.com/calendars/duke-carolina-the-blue-blood-rivalry-2/

Courtesy of http://chapelboro.com/calendars/duke-carolina-the-blue-blood-rivalry-2/

I am a huge college basketball fan.  Well, actually I am a huge Duke Basketball fan, which means I tend to know more about college basketball than any other sport.  This week is the Duke-Carolina game – one of the biggest rivalries in the country and certainly one of the biggest sporting events all year in my home.  What is so great about the rivalry is that no matter what the rankings are for either team at any point in the season, and whether the game is played at Duke or at Carolina, you never know who will win.  Something about the intensity of the rivalry means that no matter how dominant one team might normally be that season, and no matter what advantages being the “home” team might bring a team, there is very little way to predict how the game will evolve.  Consequently, watching the Duke-Carolina games each season make me intensely nervous and anxious.  In fact, as I have gotten older, I have even turned the TV off when I get so stressed.

I have been thinking about that phenomenon and wondering what in our faith life is like the anomaly of the Duke-Carolina game.  Where in our lives do our normally highly functioning spiritual selves get short circuited?  I have begun to wonder whether my prayer life might be the Duke-Carolina game in my faith journey.  There are times when I feel like my prayer life is solid – I find a practice that I really love and I find that keeping the practice is easy and enriching.  But then I have weeks when I get to the end of several days and cannot remember the last time I prayed.  Or I realize that instead of sitting down in the empty church for a time of prayer each morning, I have just starting praying as I pass through, not feeling like I have the time to really stop.  Sometimes the season – in particular Lent – makes me more disciplined.  But even the steady rhythm of Lent does not guarantee that I am steadfast in my prayer life.

The truth is, whatever the Duke-Carolina hiccup is in your faith journey, I am not sure there is much you can do about it.  Much like neither team can seem to master the intensity of the rivalry, I think we will always have a flawed area in our faith life.  Perhaps knowing that fact will allow us to not be so hard on ourselves and enjoy the ride.  Certainly that does not give us permission to sit back and pretend things are out of our control.  Neither team goes into the Duke-Carolina game resigned to lose.  Our task is to keep on trying, to keep tabs on when we are getting slack, and to slap the floor, and get back in the game!

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