“For what gives you the right to make such a judgment? What do you have that God hasn’t given you? And if everything you have is from God, why boast as though it were not a gift?” — 1 Corinthians 4:7 (NLT)
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I have been a basketball trainer and coach for a while now. During that time, the demographic I hate working with the most is semi-successful college players.
Many (not all) in this group have had just enough success to assume they have it figured out. Since that is their mindset, once they taste just a small bit of success, they abandon the path and the people that guided them to success. And as it relates to hiring a trainer, they do not want a caring coach who passionately guides them down the path to better, but instead they desire a careless cheerleader who tells them how great they are, even when they are not so great. I believe this is what my young fellas call “glazing.”
On the other hand, when I have worked out with pro hoopers, despite accomplishing far more than the college guys, believe it or not, they are more often humble, coachable and they embrace true coaching that challenges and guides them to be better. In fact, I have had pro clients who have expressed before hiring me that they are not looking for a cheerleader who is just going to tell them how great they are, and if that’s what I was going to do, they’d fire me.
These pros shared that the road to being a pro player, and remaining one, is a narrow road they cannot travel without continued guidance.
Many of the college guys I work with that prefer the cheerleader who never challenges — because they think they have acquired enough success to have everything figured out — will never reach their competitive potential simply because they lack the humility of a (true) pro.
For many people, as they navigate this world, they do so like the college kids I work with. While they have the potential to be all God called them to be and do all God called them to do, they will fall short simply because they choose to live like an amateur and not a professional.
What about you? Are you God’s pro? Are you walking with God, allowing Him to lead and guide to a spiritually intelligent and humble heart, knowing that regardless of all the success you have, you still can’t rely on your own understanding, strength and heart?
Be God’s pro! And as you are, remember the pro tip from the pro hoopers: “The road to being God’s pro, and remaining His pro, is a narrow road you cannot travel without His continued guidance.”
The road to remaining in God’s will is narrow and requires continued guidance. Amateur hearts won’t cut it.
— Nick Graham
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