“So you also, when you have done everything you were told to do, should say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done our duty.’” — Luke 17:10
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Both of my daughters were recruited to play college volleyball. During the process, I got to know some of the coaches that were recruiting them. One coach told me that whenever she goes to a large, regional volleyball tournament, she has a list of players on her tablet that she is going to watch. She then told me she is not only watching how they play on the court, but also watching how they treat their teammates, coaches and parents.
If the player displays any sort of entitled attitude, the coach crosses her off the recruit list. This coach refuses to have players who have a sense of entitlement on her team, no matter how talented they are. You can’t have a championship team when individual players are only concerned about themselves and what they deserve.
Even Georgia football head coach Kirby Smart, when asked how the Bulldogs were able to win back-to-back national championships, said, “As long as you don’t have entitlement in your program, you got a shot. And right now, we don’t have entitlement. We’ve got a lot of humble guys.”
In Luke 17:7-10, Jesus tells us that we are His servants and He is our Master. And as His servants, we shouldn’t have an entitled “I deserve” attitude. In fact, if entitlement says “I deserve so I demand,” humility says “I don’t deserve so I give thanks.”
Everything you do and every ability you have comes as a grace-gift from God, so give thanks.
— Ikki Soma, Iowa Wolves chaplain
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