Easter sermon focuses on faith and hope in times of tribulation
God prefers losers.
That statement sounds positively un-American. As General George Patton famously remarked, Americans love a winner. America will not tolerate a loser. Then we have this from Coach Vince Lombardi: Show me a good loser, and Ill show you a loser. We all want to be on the winning team, dont we? Thats why millions of people filled out brackets during March Madness, and its also why over 100,000 people gathered at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky last Saturday for the Kentucky Derby. And its why millions more watched the live telecast. That multitude included my wife and me. I learned about the back stories on a number of different horses and their owners. So you find yourself inevitably pulling for this horse or for that jockey or for that set of owners. I say that as someone who generally has no interest whatsoever in horse racing. But the truth is, if Im watching a sporting event where I dont already have a favorite team, Ill pick one of the teams to root for. I just do that automatically. I suppose most people are like that. We like competition, and we like to be on the winning side.
But the preeminent example is football. At least down South its always football. Here in Mississippi we have a heated rivalry between Ole Miss and Mississippi State. A few miles east you have Alabama and Auburn. Further south you have Florida and Florida State. Up north you have Ohio State and Michigan. In South Bend you have Notre Dame versus everyone else.
A year ago I attended the Ohio State-Michigan game in Columbus, Ohio. I was one of over 100,000 fans who gathered in the stands to watch one of the most storied rivalries in college football. A few days after the game a friend sent me a copy of The Winners Manual by Jim Tressel, head coach of the Ohio State Buckeyes. Besides being a fine coach (his teams at Youngstown State and Ohio State have won five national championships), he is also a man of character and a strong Christian. In his chapter on Handling Adversity and Success, Tressel includes this provocative quote from Bill Gates, founder of Microsoft:
Success is a lousy teacher. It makes smart people think they cant lose.
Then he adds his own commentary:
I love that quote because it puts so many things in perspective. When smart people think they cant lose, theres an upset brewing. Thats when David beats Goliath and the underdog triumphs (p. 156).
Thats the problem with winners. Once you think you cant lose, you feel invincible. At that point, youre about to become a loser. You just dont know it yet. You can win too much, too soon, too easily. Before long you prove the old adage that its just a short step from victory to defeat. For all the problems that losing brings, at least it cures the illusion of invincibility.
When I say God prefers losers, I mean he prefers people who know their weakness, see their flaws, admit their mistakes, and cry out to him for help. God specializes in taking losers and displaying his power through them. During a radio interview I was asked why so many of the heroes of the Bible had serious flaws. My answer was simple. Thats all God has to work with. All the perfect people are in heaven. The only ones on earth are the folks with serious weaknesses. The talent pool has always been pretty thin when it comes to moral perfection. So God works with sinners because thats all he has to work with. In heaven we will all be perfected by Gods grace. But until then, he uses some pretty ornery people who fall short in many ways, and he does some amazing things through them.
Consider the roll call of Gods imperfect heroes:
Noah got drunk. Abraham lied about his wife. Sarah laughed at God. Jacob was a deceiver. Moses murdered an Egyptian. Rahab was a harlot. Gideon was fearful. Jephthah made a foolish vow. Samson had serious problems with lust and anger. Eli failed as a father. David was an adulterer and a murderer. Solomon married foreign wives who turned his heart toward idolatry. Elijah struggled with depression. Jonah ran away from God. Peter denied Christ. Paul argued with Barnabas. Barnabas compromised the gospel. James and John wanted special seats in the kingdom. All the apostles argued about who was the greatest.
If God chose only well- rounded people with no character flaws, some of the credit would inevitably go to the people and not to the Lord. By choosing flawed people with a bad past, a shaky present, and an uncertain future, God alone gets the glory when they accomplish amazing things by his power.
I am really, really tight with Him since I am the Keeper of the Losers.
I have been tasked to show all of you losers the guiding light to redemption so that you may follow or I am to channel you and your ilk through the gates of Hell.
You are at the fork in the road to either destination, the route you choose to follow will be of your continued making.