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A few years ago, I was an assistant coach for a kindergarten basketball team.
Every Saturday morning, kids flooded the gym hyped up on adrenaline and Timbits. Our objective was to reinforce the basics: dribbling, shooting, and passing. But for the last practice, we introduced a new game. Each child was to dribble their own ball within the circle of center court. The goal was to knock the ball out of your opponent's hand. The last man standing would be declared the winner.
When the game commenced, the most seasoned player, Ben, swatted the ball repeatedly from the others, causing it to roll across the court.
“You’re out Zoey!” I mumbled with the whistle between my lips.
Zoey froze and glared up at me in horror. Alligator tears welled in her eyes.
“Ben is mean! He hit my ball right out of my hand!”
“Honey, he's supposed to. That’s the point of the game. It’s called stealing.”
I realized in that moment, none of the kids knew what it felt like to have their ball stolen. It was a shock to their systems. We spent the whole season working individually on their skills. They had never played a game.
“Why would you let him do that?” Zoey stammered in between sobs while waving her tiny finger at me.
I was being reprimanded by a five-year-old.
She stormed off the court and into her mother’s arms, vowing to never play basketball again.
Many of us have stormed off the court of life in this same fashion.
John 10:10 states, “The thief comes except to STEAL, kill, and destroy. But I (Jesus) have come that you may have life, and have it to the full.”
Something of great value was stolen from you:
A loved one.
A marriage.
A dream.
Your health.
It's not supposed to be this way.
I know the feeling. My oldest daughter Mara was diagnosed with autism in 2012. It took a full year for me to catch my breath and sense a glimmer of hope when I thought about the future. During this time, we decided to trust God and conceive another baby. My greatest fear, the fear I dared not speak aloud:
What if my son has autism too?
Three years later, my son was also diagnosed with the same six-letter word.
Why would God allow this to happen—not once—but twice?
The One with the whistle in his mouth, the Big Man who calls the shots, stood by and did nothing.
How could a loving God not intervene? Like Zoey, staring up at me in shock, our hearts well with anger and we refuse to play on his team anymore. If we can’t trust the Coach—then we’re out.
A spirit of passivity overtakes us.
We lose heart.
And to lose heart, is to lose everything.
Why?
Because it skews our perspective.
We become victims of the one who robbed us, rather than victors of the One who saved us.
Our anger is valid, but what if it’s pointed at the wrong person?
Listen to me, the ball was stolen from you because you are a great threat and the strategy of the opposing team is to take out the best players first.
The enemy may have stolen the ball, but I promise you, we will win the game.
“The Kingdom of God suffered violence, and the violent take it by force.”
-Matthew 11:12