Winter 2025

QB Trevor Lawrence leads Jaguars to playoffs, seeks to make ‘my relationship with Jesus’ known

The NFL playoffs are set, and the Jacksonville Jaguars may be the hottest team few seem to be talking about.

Led by fifth-year quarterback Trevor Lawrence, the Jaguars are 13-4, AFC South champs, and finished the regular season by winning eight consecutive games, including Sunday’s 41-7 division-clinching demolition of the Tennessee Titans. Their 13 wins are the second-most in a season in franchise history (one win behind the 1999 squad).

In an AFC playoff bracket in which all seven teams won at least 10 games, the Jaguars’ 13-4 record was good enough for the conference’s No. 3 seed. They will host the No. 6-seeded Buffalo Bills (12-5) in the wild-card round.

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Paralleling the team’s success, Lawrence quietly had one of his best seasons as a pro. He played all 17 games, eclipsing the 4,000-yard plateau in passing yards for the third time in his career while tossing a career-high 29 touchdowns with 12 interceptions. Three of those touchdowns came in the first half on Sunday against the Titans, all while wearing a wristband that referenced the Bible verse Galatians 6:9.

Lawrence also contributed 359 yards rushing and nine touchdowns this season, both career highs.

“We know there’s more for us,” he said in Sunday’s postgame press conference while looking ahead to the playoffs. “It doesn’t stop here. We’ve put in all this work to get here. Let’s not let it go to waste.”

This year’s playoffs will not be Lawrence’s first postseason experience; the No. 1 overall pick by the Jaguars out of Clemson in 2021 also led Jacksonville to an AFC South crown after his second professional season in 2022. In that wild-card matchup, the Jaguars fell behind the L.A. Chargers 27-0 in the second quarter before mounting an incredible comeback on the back of Lawrence’s four TDs. They won the game, 31-30, on a field goal as time expired, before falling to the eventual Super Bowl champions, the Kansas City Chiefs, the next week.

Now, with his performance this season, Lawrence has quieted many of his doubters. The 2023-24 season saw the Jaguars collapse down the stretch (losing five of their last six), and the 2024-25 campaign was arguably his most frustrating as a pro. He went 2-8 in his 10 starts last season before a left shoulder injury and a concussion sidelined him. Prior to that season, in the summer of 2024, Lawrence signed a lucrative five-year contract extension that tied him for the highest-paid player in NFL history.

But through the ups and downs of life in the NFL, Lawrence has always been consistent about his ultimate purpose of glorifying God in all that he does.

“It’s something I really want to be known about me,” Lawrence told the Florida Times-Union in September 2024 about his faith in Christ. “I wouldn’t be who I am if it wasn’t for my faith or my relationship with Jesus. It’s the biggest thing in my life. I know the peace that it’s given me, especially in this crazy job that we have.”

Lawrence has spoken publicly about his faith on numerous occasions throughout the years, even dating back to before he had started a game at Clemson.

Lawrence grew up in Cartersville, Georgia, with faithful parents who pointed him to Christ. Yet as he fell in love with football, won two state championships as a starting quarterback, and turned himself into one of the most sought-after high school football prospects in the nation, the outside adulation began to take a spiritual toll.

He arrived at Clemson early, in January 2018, sensitive to what others thought of him and troubled about what it meant to be famous. He found himself too often surrounded by the wrong crowds, crowds that puffed up his ego and led him away from Christ. Amid his crisis of faith, he sought — and found — spiritual mentorship to ground his identity in Christ. By that July, after experiencing anew the depths of God’s love for him, he recommitted his life to Christ and was baptized. By that September, he was making public declarations about his faith, and by the following January, he was the starting quarterback for the college football national champions.

“When God came into my life, that unsettled feeling about the way I lived and acted that came over me, that is really what has humbled me more than anything,” Lawrence told the Florida Times-Union. “And now, especially having success and making money, that really doesn’t make me happy, it really doesn’t.

“… My faith in Jesus and believing that there’s something bigger in this world is what matters.”


Lawrence wants another taste of postseason success as badly as anybody when the Jaguars and Bills kick off on Sunday at 1 p.m. ET. But as a father and a spiritual leader in the Jaguars locker room, his soul can be at rest, knowing that no game will ever put his identity as a son of God at stake.

>> Do you know Christ personally? Learn how you can commit your life to Him. <<

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