Given the events of recent days, the firing of
a prominent mega-church pastor who also served as a team chaplain to a
professional sports team, I would like to reprise an article I first submitted
to you on November 30, 2012. I believe this week’s grievous news makes this
most poignant.
Behind the Scenes vs. High Profile
Many of our colleagues
serve in rather obscure settings, with almost invisible teams or clubs and with
coaches and competitors who are much less than household names. Others of us
serve with clubs which are on television every day, with high profile people
who are seen daily in advertising of all sorts and whose sporting gear is worn
by fans of all ages. Many of us are somewhere in the middle with our service
being among “local celebrities,” sporting people who have some profile in their
communities, but not so much celebrity across the nation or the globe. While
serving in any of these stations, it is wise for us to consider how to manage
our own approach to obscurity vs. celebrity.
Some of our colleagues
trade on their position and use their favor with the club as a central part of
their fund-raising, to obtain outside speaking engagements and occasionally to
prop up their own sense of celebrity.
Some of our colleagues
serve faithfully in more remote situations where the spotlights and television
cameras never even appear. They’re not tempted by the allure of celebrity or
reflected glory of fame, simply because they never even encounter it.
I’d like to have us
consider the tension between serving entirely “behind the scenes” and holding a
“higher profile” position as a sport chaplain, a character coach or a sport
mentor. These are in no particular order, but I do hope they’re each insightful
and spur you to contemplation and wise decision making.
• A higher profile in a
community makes it somewhat easier to do fund-raising because people will
associate you with their favorite team, institution, community, etc…
• A higher profile can
help one build a platform for ministry in a community from which one can gather
volunteers and other ministry partners to further your ministry goals.
• A higher profile in a
state school (USA) can raise scrutiny from prying media members seeking a
controversial story, university officials with conflicting agendas, lawyers
with an axe to grind, and others who could jeopardize one’s freedom of service.
• A higher profile can
cause those one is serving, the coaches and competitors in the club or team, to
question his or her motives. “Is he here to serve us or to build his “brand?”
• A higher profile is
perceived by some as indicative of self-promotion, betraying a self-centered
attitude.
• A couple of simple
scriptures which can help us check our attitudes and inform our hearts are
these:
o Proverbs 27:2 “Let
another praise you, and not your own mouth; A stranger, and not your own lips.”
Self-promotion is less than wise.
o Proverbs 27:21 “The
crucible is for silver and the furnace for gold, And each is tested by the
praise accorded him.” Praise, celebrity, fame and public honors will certainly
test our hearts to their core. Some of us will pass and others will fail this
test.
Let’s live wisely in
this tension. Understand that the alluring nature of fame and celebrity can
afford us some things which will enhance our ministries, but they can also
serve as traps which can seriously hinder as well.
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