“Winning isn’t everything. It’s the only thing.”
Vince Lombardi
By the end of tonight’s Super Bowl,
someone is going to win and someone is going to lose. Few though will remember
the losing team. It’s a winner takes all world. That’s even though the 2nd
place team made it all the way to “The Game of Games” but they just didn’t win
the final prize.
Our
culture is addicted to success, yet very few are ultimately successful. Consider
sports. While everyone makes the team in grade school, fewer make it even in
high school. Your abilities have to be in the top percentile to make it to a
college team and those percentages dramatically drop to make it in professional
sports. That analogy holds true in every field and category of life. Few will make
it to team lead or branch manager and even fewer to VP, President, or CEO, particularly
of a large corporation.
Yet,
it doesn’t matter where you work or what you do, if you’re a homemaker or a retiree,
we tend to be addicted to success. It can be things as innocuous as tic-tac-toe,
receiving public recognition for a job well done, or even how many likes your
post on social media receives.
Executive
Coach, Katy Trost, developed 7 markers to use to evaluate yourself on whether
you’re addicted to success: *You find purpose in achievement. *The
expectations you have for yourself are way higher than average. *You ask
yourself what else is there to life? *You measure your self-worth through your
achievements. *You’re at the peak of your professional life but don’t feel
fulfilled. *You’re very results-driven but you don’t feel content. *You’re
constantly tense.
Recently,
I finished, When Pride Still Matters – A Life of Vince Lombardi. It’s a
must read for every Packer fan. The candor of the author, David Maraniss, was
refreshing.
Growing
up in poverty in an Italian family in Brooklyn, Lombardi wasn’t a fantastic player.
Where he truly began to shine and showed his genius was in coaching. It’s why he’s
been lionized by fans and former players.
Yet,
Lombardi was far from successful as a husband and father. When his famous book,
Run to Daylight, came out in 1963, it was jokingly suggested it be called “SHUT
UP, MARIE!”
Though
he and his wife, Marie, began madly in love, she couldn’t compete with Lombardi’s
greater love – football. They’re constant fights and bickering were legendary.
It was a miserable marriage with Marie ultimately succumbing to alcoholism
When
Marie announced her desire to marry Lombardi, her status-conscious stockbroker
father didn’t like the idea of his daughter marrying the son of an Italian
butcher from Brooklyn, a prejudice Lombardi faced much of his life. Yet, he and
Marie nonetheless wed on August 31, 1940.
But even on their honeymoon, Lombardi was preoccupied with football and cut
it short to be able to get back to his assistant coaching job.
His
two children never lived up to his expectations and suffered throughout their
adulthood because of it. His players were more like his sons than his own son,
Vince Jr.
It’s
very easy to be seduced by success. Nearly all of us struggle with it at some
level. True success, God’s standard of success, is centered on obedience to and
glorification of God (Rom. 13:14; Gal. 5:16). Success is first obedience to
God, empowered by His Spirit, motivated by love for God, and directed toward
the advancement of the kingdom of God.
The Bible teaches that success begins in our closest circle of
relationships – our spouse and our children. Those relationships are so
important, failing in either of those spheres is a disqualification for vocational
ministry.
Please
understand, one can be a successful Christ-honoring spouse without having a successful
marriage. The same is true of parenting. We are to be obedient to the Lord and live
out godliness in our area of responsibility, even if our spouse or children do
not.
For
example, John Wesley was faithful to the Lord and greatly used by God though he
had a miserable marriage. Many a parent has sought to honor the Lord yet had a
child who rebelled and later repudiated everything their parents had sought to
instill in them about God and in the home. Often we forget that the very first father
with rebellious children was God.
What
is success? What is true winning? It’s boils down to living for an Audience
of One. Every Christian can be successful because every Christian can choose to
do that. It’s choosing by God’s grace to live out Colossians 3:17; “And whatever
you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord
Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through Him.”
To
live for an audience of one means that I have to stop thinking about what’s
good for me and how to make myself look better in the eyes of others, or how I
can get ahead in this world. Instead I must focus on living for and pleasing
God. It means waking up every morning and dedicating the day, the
schedule, the pain and problems, the hopes and dreams of my life to God. It
means going to bed at night thanking God for everything that has happened and
asking Him to shape the day to come. It means setting godly priorities for
my life and committing my marriage, my family, my job, my free time, my rest
and my reflection all to God. It means seeking to truly live for God
alone.
On
one occasion when he was asked why he was not offended by a vicious attack
from a fellow Member of Parliament, Winston Churchill replied, “If I respected
him, I would care about his opinion. But I don’t, so I don’t.” In the same way,
we who live before the Audience of One can say to the world: “I have only
one audience. Before you I have nothing to prove, nothing to gain, nothing to
lose.” Winning is everything and the only thing if you win where it matters…with
your Heavenly Father!
Can we help you spiritually? Can we help you know Jesus
better? Please check out more resources on our church's web page,
Gracechurchwi.org. Or, call us at 262.763.3021. If you'd like to know more
about how Jesus can change your life, I'd love to mail you a copy of how Jesus
changed my life in "My Story." E-mail me at Carson@gracechurchwi.org
to request a free copy. Please include your mailing address.
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