Coach Mahr - Godspeed and Guideposts for Your Journey
I have always believed the old saying: "Defense wins championships." And in sports, that's often true. But over the years I've come to realize something important: Defense may win championships, but offense is what moves life forward. Think about it. A defender reacts. An offensive player initiates. A defender responds to circumstances. An offensive player creates opportunities. A defender protects what already exists. An offensive player builds what could be. Life does require some defense. We all face unexpected challenges, setbacks, illnesses, disappointments, and interruptions. But if our entire life becomes reactionary, we spend our days putting out fires instead of building something meaningful. The question is simple: Are we playing to win, or are we merely playing not to lose? Most people drift into defensive living without even realizing it. We wake up and react to emails. We react to the news. We react to deadlines. We react to problems. We react to other people's priorities. Stephen Covey described this reality through his famous Time Management Matrix that he built from the Eisenhower Decision Principle with the Four Quadrants. Quite simply, living in Quadrant 2 (Important/Not Urgent) is living on offense. It is the quadrant of being proactive, planning and critical thinking. This is the quadrant for long term achievement. Whereas living in Quadrant 1 (Important/Urgent) is living on defense. It is the world of crises, emergencies, firefighting and being reactive. Many people spend a majority of their lives there. Every day becomes another problem to solve; another issue demanding attention. The danger is that living this way creates the illusion of productivity while producing very little progress. We're busy. We're exhausted. We're stressed. Yet we often aren't moving forward. It's like being a football team that spends the entire game on defense. We might stop the other team, but we'll never score. We'll never advance the ball.We'll never dictate the pace of the game. Eventually life becomes maintenance instead of mission. Survival instead of significance. Living on offense doesn't mean becoming aggressive. It doesn't mean being reckless. It means becoming intentional. It means choosing our direction rather than allowing circumstances to choose it for us. And nowhere is this more important than in our faith. God never called us merely to avoid sin. He never asked us to only listen to His word. He called us to pursue purpose. Not simply to survive the culture. But to influence it. Not simply reacting to darkness. But bring light into it. So how do we begin living life on offense? First, spend more time in Quadrant Two. Quadrant Two is the realm of important but not urgent activities. The domain of Long-term growth. Most people know these things matter. The challenge is that they don't scream for attention. They require intentionality. Yet these are the activities that prevent future crises and create long-term success. Second, make our second move first. The expression “make your second move first” was a favorite used by one of my College Football coaches. He was our defensive coordinator and valued preparation, anticipation, and being proactive. A rule of football is, 'he who makes his second move first wins.' Healthy marriages often employ this mantra. A good marriage involves couples that know the right things to do. Thriving marriages build off the first move with impactful second moves. Turn date night into a lifelong memory. Turn a routine weekday dinner into a catered feast. The best way to learn how our partner thinks and acts is to be intentional and notice patterns and habits. Know what is going on, be aware. In business it can be referred to as "staying ahead of the game." Adapting quickly to market trends, meeting new government standards before they go into effect, and implementing technological advancements. Anticipation is the way to stand out. Customers remember those businesses that take care of them before the need even arises. It is selling value and providing solutions to problems, even before a customer voices a concern or, better, before they even realize they have a problem. Being one step ahead in our thinking is particularly effective in strategy games like Chess and Mancala. We are acting as opposed to reacting. We anticipate future events or needs by considering potential outcomes and plan accordingly. Third, focus on being different, not merely better. The greatest breakthroughs come from doing things differently, not simply doing them better. Henry Ford didn't create a faster horse. Netflix didn't build a better video store. Uber didn't improve taxi dispatching. They changed the game. I love how Christianity is different. Every other religion teaches being better and earning God’s glory. Other religions have laws or pillars to appease their god with the hopes of getting into eternal paradise. Christianity teaches that God came to us. He sent His Son to die for us. We don’t have to appease God to receive His favor. No other religion has an empty tomb. Christians are not asked to be better, we are asked to be different. We are not meant to simply "try harder" with outward actions and rule-following, we are asked to experience a fundamental transformation of the heart, to change from the inside out. Living on offense means being willing to think differently, act differently, and trust God enough to walk through new doors. Fourth, Call Strategic Timeouts. If the entire message is "be on offense, take action, move forward," some may hear that as "go faster, do more, stay busy." That's not what I am really saying. As part of living on offense, we often need to stop, pause. We need to take a timeout. Only after stepping out of the noise can we regain perspective and decide what offensive plays matter most. The timeout is not just a practical tip. It can be the turning point of the entire message. In sports, a timeout is a key strategic tool. It can serve many purposes: stopping the clock, extending the game, allowing readjustment, avoiding a penalty or turnover, and providing the opportunity to talk things through and regroup mentally. A family going 90 miles an hour in five different directions needs a timeout to slow down, reconnect, and remind each other of the priority of family. Companies will use an annual kickoff meeting as a timeout where they pull everyone off the floor and into a huddle. A personal timeout allows us to pause, reflect, and pray. We can take the off-ramp from life’s highway and evaluate the road we are on. A timeout can keep us from making a bad decision because we don’t have a clear perspective. A timeout isn't removing oneself from the game, it isn't retreating. It's preparing to run the next play. It's alignment. It's making sure the next play is the right play. The timeout becomes the bridge between where we are and where we want to go. The art of pausing can be as simple as breathing, stretching, drinking a coffee, or gazing out the window or at a photo of a loved granddaughter. The act just needs to be done with intention to allow for clarity, rest and realignment. This is also very biblical. Before God sends people forward, He often pulls them aside first. Moses in the wilderness. Elijah under the broom tree. Jesus in the desert. The disciples being told to "come away and rest awhile" in Mark 6:31. Jesus regularly called timeouts. Not because He lacked urgency, but because He understood priorities. This week I want to challenge us to identify one area of our life where we've been playing defense. Maybe it's our health. Maybe it's our marriage. Maybe it's our career.Maybe it's our faith. Ask ourselves: What would an offensive approach look like here? What conversation needs to happen? What phone call needs to be made? What habit needs to start? What opportunity have I been waiting for instead of pursuing? Don't try to redesign our entire life. Just move the ball forward. One intentional play. One deliberate step. One faithful act of obedience. Jesus never lived reactively.He was never rushed by the crowd. Never manipulated by circumstances. Never distracted from His mission. He always operated with purpose. With clarity. With intention. Even when others saw chaos, He saw opportunity. Even when others saw obstacles, He saw a path forward. The beautiful news for us is that the ultimate game has already been won. Christ secured that victory. Our job is not to earn it. Our job is to faithfully play the position we've been given. Let’s make sure we are doing our part and trust we will set the world on fire. Let’s stop waiting for life to happen; stop spending all our energy protecting the status quo. Let’s take the field; run the play; call a timeout when needed. Let’s live life on offense, leave a legacy and make a difference in His Kingdom. Rejoice and Godspeed
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