May 24, 2013

Brett Favre, McCarthy & Church Leadership

Posted on 05. Aug, 2008 by in Faith

<br />One of my alltime favorite players in my all-time favorite sport, along with his coach, is teaching me some lessons about church leadership this week.? Ever since I took the plunge into church planting I’ve given myself the label of “Coach”.? To me, the term is far more concrete than “pastor”.? Pastor is sort of a nebulous term that most people don’t understand.? Add to that the fact that what most people THINK they understand about what a “pastor” is SUPPOSED to be is so off-base, and you’ve got a good reason for choosing a different title.? So, I’ve chosen “Coach” because I truly believe that the title is an accurate description of the biblical role of “pastor”.

With that being said, I’m learning some interesting lessons this week watching the drama unfold in Green Bay between Favre and his coach, Mike McCarthy.? Favre is without a doubt one of the most remarkable players in NFL history.? He is a three-time league MVP and holder of virtually every quarterback record of significance.? In some respects, Favre IS the Green Bay Packers.? He has been the face, heart and soul of the organization for years.? McCarthy on the other hand has only been the coach of the Packers for two years.

Sort of a mismatch, wouldn’t you say?? Certainly no coach in his third year can hold a candle to a future Hall of Famer and face of a franchise…… can he?

Check out this report from news sources:

Packers coach Mike McCarthy said Tuesday evening that after approximately six hours of what he called ?brutally honest? conversations with Favre over the past two days, the three-time MVP just isn?t in the right mind-set to be part of the team.

Even with the chance to win his starting job back potentially on the table, McCarthy said Favre couldn?t seem to get past emotional wounds that were opened as tensions mounted in recent weeks.

?The football team?s moving forward,? McCarthy said. ?The train has left the station, whatever analogy you want. He needs to jump on the train and let?s go. Or, if we can?t get past things that have happened, I have to keep the train moving.?

Far too many churches are led by “pastors” who have fallen into the trap of thinking that their primary job is to please everyone and keep everyone happy.? And it certainly seems that the number one expectation of a majority of church-goers is that the “pastor” should do just that.? As a result, many pastors, with God-inspired vision and dreams in their heart, set that aside to keep the peace… to make sure everyone is happy.? Meanwhile, vision suffers and a church that has the potential to be a devil-crushing, kingdom-building juggernaut becomes yet another playground where Christians play church and souls go unreached.

I know in the church-world it comes across as crass and uncaring, but I’m on the same page as Mike McCarthy on this one.? Is Favre one of the best ever?? Without a doubt.? but McCarthey’s job is not to keep Favre happy.? His responsibility is to the ownership to build a winning team —- with or without Favre.? And if Favre is an impediment to that outcome, then he is a problem and not the solution.

No church leader in the world can keep everyone happy and it is a incredible misuse of time to try.? Jesus Christ commissioned his team to GO… not sit around singing Kum-Ba-Yah!? Go is an action word.? And he placed a coach on every team to lead that team to become a devil-crushing, kingdom-advancing powerhouse.

As much as I love Favre, I applaud the coach who has had the courage to look him in the eye and tell him get on or get out.? And while that same sentiment may be a bit too strong for the church, I echo the heart of it.? To church-goers everywhere…. Jesus Christ has called you to be a player and he has put together teams that represent him all over the place.? if you can’t “get on the train” with the church you are at, then find one you can… and give him… and give that church… everything you’ve got.? And serve with passion!

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Tags: ,

No Responses to “Brett Favre, McCarthy & Church Leadership”

  1. Mark Doebler 5 August 2008 at 9:39 pm #

    Readers,
    for a very different perspective on the Favre saga, check out this link on Mark Batterson’s blog… http://evotional.com/2008/08/ex-packers-fan.html

  2. Bob 6 August 2008 at 2:50 pm #

    I totally agree with your perspective on this. No one player or member is bigger than the team/church. So many very talented athletes/members, because of egos, hurt feelings, jealousy etc. become a cancerous element in the Team/Church. Instead of mature leadership or involvment they bring self serving dissention. Instead of Championship/Kingdom building they side track the Organization. As a life long Packer Fan and a career long Farve fan I agree with, Coach McCarthy that if player is not on aboard with the Coach and team direction they should stay off the train.

  3. winsome.one 7 August 2008 at 12:25 pm #

    I like how you ended your entry. We need to find our calling and be faithful, not sit around complaining or being ineffective.

  4. Don 8 August 2008 at 10:52 am #

    Without a doubt McCarthy has made the right move for the packers – Great teams require 100% from everyone.

    Great Churches need 100%. Consider that 20% of the membership will give 100%. Encourage ALL and the TEAM/CHURCH will grow. Also, the 20% members, “that GIVE 100%” will grow.

    Keep a 100% focus on growing the Church. The next new member may be the non-believer that will give 100% to Christ as well as the Church — Go Big

  5. Mark Doebler 8 August 2008 at 11:31 am #

    thanks for the great thought Don! Isn’t it interesting that for those who are already giving “all”, there’s still room to grow for them too?


Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. prayers for blowouts » Blog Archive » Notes & Quotes: 08.07.08 - August 7, 2008

    [...] + Pastor Mark Batterson has officially renounced his love for the Packers now that they’ve cut ties with #4. Pastor Coach Mark Doebler sees the Packers-Favre saga as a good lesson in leadership. [...]

Leave a Reply

Please fill the required box or you can’t comment at all. Please use kind words. Your e-mail address will not be published.

Gravatar is supported.

You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

UA-4827893-1