“Believe in something even if it means sacrificing everything.”
Nike launched an advertising
meme in the summer of 2018, using Colin Kaepernick as the exemplar. It took the
nation by storm. Kaepernick became a galvanizing figure in 2016 when he took
the knee during the national anthem. He did this as a silent protest of social
injustice, at a time when the “Black Lives Matter” cause was on the rise. He
was scorned by some and appreciated by others. To many he was a traitor and a
two-faced opportunist. But to others he was a hero. He sacrificed his NFL
career as a quarterback, (although he did pick up a great sponsorship from Nike,
who also reaped a huge profit). Midst all the debate and backlash, though, the actual
slogan was hardly even noticed or appreciated.
I happen to think that the
slogan is a good one. Perhaps even a great one.
Apart from the debate over
disgracing the national anthem, or the legitimacy of the social cause to which Kaepernick
was seeking to draw attention, the slogan is profound. It should stir our mind
and our heart to think about causes which we endorse, and the level to which we
are willing to be “all in”. You see, most of us are animate and opinionated
about causes, but our level of involvement is merely to repost on facebook, or
forward some cute email, remaining pretty safe in a circle of friends that
mutually endorse our cause. There is another saying for that, “preaching to the
choir.”
For those of us who hold a
reverence for the Bible as God’s word to mankind, there are many stories which
illustrate this slogan, “believe in something even it means sacrificing
everything.” Jesus is the greatest story
of them all. He believed in the eternal plan of his Father, a plan to redeem mankind
from the penalty of sin by his own death on a cross. He believed, and it led
him to willingly sacrifice everything. But there are many other examples. Abraham left Ur of the Chaldees to go to a
land where God led him. He sacrificed family, security, position and prestige. He
is known as the father of faith. Many prophets of old sacrificed their
respectability in their community and nation by believing God’s call to deliver
the word that He told them to proclaim. They were shunned, mocked, tortured, and
many were killed. The widow who gave her two mites at the temple treasury was
praised by Jesus, because she gave everything she had, not just a small portion
of her pocket change. Twelve disciples of Jesus believed in the Messiah enough
to leave behind their nets, their occupations, their families. They were
persecuted but would not look back. They sacrificed everything.
Not everyone can appreciate
my own stories of sacrifice, but my children need to know. In the early days of
my ministry as a youth pastor in Gladstone we became involved with helping a
teenage girl be set free from demon possession. As it grew more and more complex,
confusing, and demanding, we had to repeatedly make the decision to press on,
rather than abort the mission. Even my
wife, Carol, helped, in the face of fear and uncertainty. She knew the risk,
the possibility of retaliation upon her own family, but she would not back
down. God told her, “If you can trust me with your life you can trust me with
your children.” God told me, “I called you to help. Don’t expect any one else
to understand.” The girl was miraculously set free, but we eventually were
dismissed from that church, after a heresy trial, and lost everything – our
home, our income, our respectability, our ministry.
Another time, another place. We
were grievously disappointed that some good friends were “fired” by the elders
and run out of the church. We sought to bring about reconciliation, first
gently, then more confrontively. While many in the church were willing to
accept it and move on, we lost our ministry in that body, becoming less and
less welcome, the rug pulled out from under us.
People, always, should be our
greatest cause, not winning arguments over political or religious issues.
“There is no greater love than this, that a man lay
down his life for his friends.” (John 15:13)
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