Thursday, March 7, 2013

Half Time



(Inspired by the encouragement of a dear friend as I sat in the dark corners of the locker room)

I don’t pretend to fully understand the game of football.  I know I could if I truly wanted to; however, the reason I enjoy watching the sport has nothing at all to do with the rules or purpose of football.  

I watch football, because every now and then, a player has a moment when they forget that they are mortal.  In the heat of that moment  a split-second decision must be made.  The player cannot confer with a buddy or pause for a moment of prayer; he must act swiftly without ample time to weigh out the consequences of his actions.  

Spectacular scenes unfold before the viewer’s eyes when a player makes a confident move, takes a risk, becomes vulnerable and doesn’t look back or change his mind as he fights to move his team toward a victorious finish.

When all goes well, the teammate is hailed a hero.  Just as in real life, many times a player gets the life kicked out of him; sometimes he is able to stand up and hobble off of the field, with or without the help of his teammates.  There is always that moment of dead silence as the crowd watches and waits to see if the player will rise or whether the medics will circle the scene of the incident like an army of ants drawn to freshly cut watermelon at a picnic.

From the stands or from the comfort of our living rooms we cheer for our favorite team and for our favorite players.  By the time half time rolls around, we have cast our predictions for the victor.  In our minds, half time is not really a part of the game, it’s a resting period.  This is not the case at all.  Half time is not a time of rest for the players; rather a time of action.  It’s often what happens during half time that will determine the outcome of the game.  

In real life, things don’t always go as planned.  Getting kicked in the teeth, blindsided, having the air knocked out of you—not in the game plan.  It doesn’t take long to figure out who is on your team and who is not.  Sometimes the size of our team shrinks when we are in the fetal position wondering if we have the strength or desire to stand back up.  When things look hopeless, predictions are cast, and it would serve us well to run, walk or crawl to the locker room to figure out what half time is really about.

When rugs are pulled out and disappointments strike, in the dark corners of the locker room we must pause and reconsider everything we are doing, everything we believe, everything we are.   

Whether or not our team supports us or chooses to abandon us, we must know who we are in the presence of an audience of One; the One who will never turn His back on us.  The One who loves us no less whether we are hailed the hero or dubbed the loser.  

Half time may linger for many days, months or years as we wrestle with questions that require a deep searching of our souls.  It is in the silence of the locker room, not on the field, that we can clearly hear the voice of God.  In the dark loneliness of the valley His care for us is ever so gentle as He mends those parts of our hearts that are frail and torn.  

At just the right time, at the perfect moment, His breath of life fills us with renewed hope.  Though it seemed impossible to come back and finish a strong game, we are ready.  We are no longer playing for ourselves and our eyes are no longer scanning the crowd for approval.  We are bold, we are confident, we are His.  

The game is not over yet-- this is only half time.

Stay the Course...

Sheila Cote

Friday, March 1, 2013

The Emperor Has No Clothes



“At that time Jesus said, “I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children.” Mt. 11:25 (NIV)

In Hans Christian Andersen’s Danish fairy tale published in 1837, The Emperor’s New Clothes, we read about an emperor who cared only about his clothes and showing them off.   Two swindlers tell him that they can make the finest suits from the most beautiful cloth.  This cloth, they inform him, had the special capability in that it was invisible to anyone who was stupid or not fit for his position.

The emperor was nervous as to whether or not he’d be able to see the cloth so he sent two of his trusted men to see it.  Neither of his trusted men would admit that they could not see the cloth so instead they praised it.  Everyone was curious as to whether or not they’d be able to see the cloth.

Thinking that the people might think that he was stupid, the emperor allowed himself to be dressed in the clothes for a procession through town.  All the townspeople wildly praised the magnificent clothes of the emperor, afraid to admit that they could not see them, until a small child said, “But he has nothing on!”

This was whispered from person to person until everyone in the crowd was shouting that the emperor had nothing on. The emperor heard it and felt that they were correct, but held his head high and finished the procession.

The expression, “The emperor has no clothes!” is a metaphor that involves a situation wherein the majority of the population of observers willingly shares in a collective ignorance of an obvious fact, despite individually recognizing the absurdity. 

Purity within innocence is depicted when the truth is clearly seen through the eyes of a child. A child is too naïve to understand group pressure to see contrary to the obvious.

God’s Word is unadulterated truth.  We don’t have to try to read between the lines to wonder if Jesus is trying to trick us or to misguide us.  Jesus has chosen to reveal His Father’s heart to each one of us and we need only trust Him with the abandon of a child.  God is not willing to share His throne with another; we must purpose daily to go to God and not man in our endeavor to concern ourselves with only what the King of Kings shows us to be His truth.

It is our Father’s heart that we should all be humble, patient and gentle as we work together with one faith for His glory.    

If God has given you eyes to see something that perhaps those around you have chosen to ignore, may I encourage you to stand strong in your faith, eyes set like flint on the God of all truth?  In spite of criticism or possible betrayal, let’s not be timid. Now is not the time to close our eyes and ears or to strive for matching the majority; instead, we must strive to emulate the purity of the child who innocently proclaimed, “The Emperor has no clothes!” 

Stay the Course...

Sheila Cote