This may cut into the ire of may, but I’ll say it anyway.

Watching the Nick Saban {coach of the Miami Dolphins leaving to coach Alabama football]drama has made me think of the church today. How different is he than most pastors?

If you look over Sabin’s career, he’s been a man, never really committing, but always looking for the better job and bigger paycheck.

I look at most pastors today and see men driven by a paycheck and not a calling. They move from church to church following the almighty dollar. If they can increase their numbers, hopefully, they can move to a bigger church and make big church money. The church is no different than corporate America (and our sports have long since sold out as well).

What happened to those who were called? What happened to the mission? What happened to men (and women) driven by passion? What happendd to recklessly following after our wild God? What happened? 

 

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6 Responses to “The Nick Saban Church”
  1. I agree.

    I will go further. I don’t condone lying but how many people have to put up with what happens to these coaches when they are interviewing for a position? What would we do if we were hounded and asked daily if we were leaving our present job?

  2. Interesting reflection
    God bless
    Maria in the UK
    http://www.inhishands.co.uk

  3. ps noticed you have Eldredge’s latest book ‘The Way of Wild at Heart’.. a good friend of mine said it rocks!

  4. Hmmmm . . interesting comment. We once knew a guy who was going to join a church conference in one state rather than in another because the one state conference paid its pastors more than the other did. And he said a LOT of pastors tried to get hired in this good-paying state for only that reason. Sad.

  5. Since I’m an AUBURN fan, I really don’t care who goes to the school in Tuscaloosa.

    But, you have a very valid point concerning people in “professional ministry.” Maybe that’s the problem, it’s a profession now…and not a calling.

    We are more in tune with the “church board” than we are with the Heavenly Father.

    So Brother Greenback is now helping us determine what we should do, and where we should be.

  6. Fair Opinion says:

    WILL SABAN DO BAMA LIKE HE DID THE DOLPHINS ??

    Saban left Dolphins as a loser, weasel

    BY DAN LE BATARD
    dlebatard@MiamiHerald.com

    The punctuation on the Nick Saban Dolphin Error is greasy and greedy. You know what he was as Dolphins coach? A failure. A loser. A gasbag. And one of the worst investments Dolphins owner Wayne Huizenga has ever made. He was less of a success than Dave Wannstedt and more of a traitor than Ricky Williams. There has been very little in franchise history that came with more expectations and fewer results than this hypocrite who at the end avoided the hard questions one last time.

    Talk like a warrior. Behave like a weasel.

    Maybe Saban would be better off in college. Because, in the pros the last few days, he has looked like a complete and utter amateur.

    He will be remembered in these parts as a quitter and a liar. He leaves the franchise in last place, with what used to be his good name somehow far lower than that. And for this he’ll get a $25 million raise and more job security in Alabama. Makes you wonder what USC’s Pete Carroll or Ohio State’s Jim Tressel are worth, doesn’t it?

    Larry Coker, a decent man, gets fired for his one championship. Saban, a duplicitous one, gets the most lucrative job in college football.

    Saban could have fixed his reputation today if he had that mental toughness he is always sermonizing about. We have the meandering spiel memorized by now. About ”competitive character” and ”overcoming adversity” and blah, blah, blah. You preach it, Nick. But you don’t live it. Not when it’s easier to run away and hide.

    Miami, 6-10 against an easy schedule, was swept this year by younger teams in its division — the Jets and Bills. The team isn’t better than when Saban arrived, just older. What little winning Saban has done has been with players left for him by Jimmy Johnson and Dave Wannstedt. What’s the best decision Saban has made in two years? Can you name one?

    So it makes sense that he would lack hope. But when his players are losing, he asks them to be proud and fight and overcome, even though what they do hurts a hell of a lot more than what he does. But now, reputation in tatters, integrity stained, he runs away from this fight — to be a dictator to kids who question less and have less power to challenge him. Of course he’d go. It’s a good deal easier. And a new crowd eager for a savior can hear his hot-air speeches about being a gladiator.

    Saban made Huizenga look like a public fool with all his condescending talk of integrity recently, reprimanding reporters at every turn while his agent secretly kept taking slimy calls from Alabama in the shadows. What a raging fraud Saban sounds like today, every bit as counterfeit as Miami’s Super Bowl expectations.

    Oh, a man, even one under contract, is allowed to change his mind and listen to other offers, especially those that double his salary. But what makes Saban’s behavior so unctuous recently is that he had the audacity to question the questioners with super-sized arrogance even while lying all along to his players and his boss. Huizenga has given this man everything he has wanted — given him more than any NFL owner anywhere has given any other coach. He deserves better than this. He deserves better than Saban leaving him to answer the hard questions today.

    Makes you wonder, too: Huizenga went after Ricky Williams and his money with cutthroat zeal, and Williams is still paying him back. But Saban just broke a contract, too. There are no outs in Saban’s contract to go back to the minor leagues.

    Remember how mad you were when Williams retired? Well, he wasn’t cheating on you. He wasn’t grabbing for more money. His body hurt from a beating, and he wanted to rest. What Saban has done is a more traitorous act — the most traitorous act in the history of the franchise. He’s leaving simply because he couldn’t handle a hard job on the sidelines of a game in which he asks others to be violent. He gave up, in other words. And filing it under ”family” now as a diluter, in search of understanding, rings hollow because you can’t believe anything the man says about this situation. You think he’d be leaving if he were 3-13?

    Saban, infomercial sermonizer, talked a lot about loyalty and integrity and toughness.

    But, in the end, these were not his guides.

    They were only the kinds of things he demanded of others.

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