The Faith & Sports Institute (FSI) at Baylor’s Truett Seminary is a place where the locker room, the classroom, and the Church converge.
As part of a Christian research university with Power-4 athletics (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, SEC), our mission is to develop and promote the integration of faith and sports in leaders, cultures, and organizations. We provide students with opportunities to engage in theological formation, learn from cutting-edge research, and pursue flexible educational pathways. These include residential and online graduate degree programs, as well as a non-credit online certificate program.
As director of FSI, one of the things I love about our work is the opportunity to collaborate with campus partners like Baylor Athletics. I sat down with Baylor sports chaplain Kevin Washington to discuss some of the work we get to do together and also to hear his vision for the transformative potential of sports.
To start, can you tell us about the work you do at Baylor and how you connect faith and sports?
I’m the Associate Athletic Director for Mission Impact and Enrichment, which involves overseeing sports ministry and also character formation within Baylor Athletics. We work with our student-athletes to help them develop as whole people: spiritually, vocationally, and as leaders in the community.
A personal passion and calling of mine is helping people connect faith and performance so that they can thrive in both. I love getting to do that work with student-athletes here.
What are the key parts of your sports ministry work? How do you engage with college athletes?
We focus a lot on the basics: one-on-one discipleship, evangelism, Bible studies for teams, and chaplain services. Those are always happening.
We also have some main pillars that structure what we do each year. We take a group of athletes through a semester-long faith and sports chapel, where we talk about integrating faith into all of life — not just athletics, but everything we do.
We also have an eight-week intensive discipleship cohort for athletes who already know Christ and want to go deeper in their faith as leaders.
Then in the summer, we hold our Champions Redefined Retreat, where student-athletes practice the things that we’ve been preaching. We help them see in real time how their faith can be part of the experience of competition itself.
On top of that, we have our summer mission trip. We want to create global citizens who see that the Kingdom goes beyond Waco and beyond Texas.
How does FSI partner with you in those efforts?
There’s a lot we could talk about. We have a fellows program, where select students in FSI’s residential grad program get hands-on experience serving within Baylor Athletics. They help with chapels, programming for discipleship and evangelism, and other roles.
FSI students and staff also help out with the Champions Redefined Retreat in the summer. And one of the newer things that we’re doing is an “Integrated Coaching” cohort, where we’re creating space for coaches to better integrate their faith with their vocation. FSI has been instrumental in that effort.
Last year, we also had a grant with FSI designed to help us think together about character formation in sports and how to connect research with practice.
FSI has been transformational for us — a partner we can lean on, press into, and serve with.
This summer, you were a key part of several FSI events, including serving as a keynote panelist for the 4th Global Congress on Sport and Christianity. What was that like?
For me, the exciting thing was bringing in people from across the country and all over the world who are interested in this conversation. The conference was really a space to shed light on the integration of faith and sports in a way that was tangible to a variety of people, cultures, ages, and levels of competition.
I tell people all the time that faith is always theory until tested. And with the work we do together, we’ve got the theory and research, and also the testing and practical application.
I think that is part of what is special about Baylor. We are a research university, we are a Power-4 university, and we are a Christian university. We don’t shy away from any of that.
📸 Highlights from the 4th Global Congress on Sport and Christianity
Part One: Keynote Talks
Last week at @TruettSeminary we hosted 250+ people from 35 states and 10 countries with the goal of exploring sports and Christianity in a deeper way.
Scenes from 4 of our speakers: pic.twitter.com/A6EyP7iD68
— Faith & Sports Institute (@FaithSportsInst) August 6, 2025
What are your hopes for Baylor in the years ahead?
We want to bring light to the sports world, right? If the sports world is the room, I think Baylor Athletics is like a light bulb. It’s the part you see.
But there are filaments inside, there’s electricity, there’s a whole infrastructure you don’t see that actually makes the light shine.
The research, support, and collaboration from FSI are a part of the wiring that helps to shine our light. When we link it up with the Christian mission that is our power source, we can get something special.
That’s what I hope for Baylor. Not that we’ll be perfect, but that we’ll be one of those Christian lights at the highest levels of college sports, where everything we do — the research, the competition, the character formation — is part of our Christian witness and is a blessing to others.
Learn more about ways you can learn, grow and collaborate with FSI.
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