Through the Lens of Eternity Podcast
Welcome to Through the Lens of Eternity, a space where we slow down and think biblically about the stories, emotions, and conversations shaping the world around us. It’s about asking deeper questions. How should followers of Jesus think?How should we live?And what changes when we keep one eye on eternity? This week the Premier League season has come to an end. After a long wait, Arsenal are champions. But we see managers move on. Some clubs celebrate success. Others face disappointment. And then there’s relegation. One team survives and celebrates wildly, almost like they’ve won the league itself. Another club drops down and supporters are devastated. And if we’re honest, every season this happens. People become genuinely anxious. People lose sleep. People feel depressed. People’s moods rise and fall with results. And from the outside, it can seem strange. Because at one level we could say: It’s twenty two people kicking a ball around a field. Why does it matter so much? But perhaps that question misses something deeper. Because football has never really just been about football. It’s about belonging. It’s about identity. It’s about community. It’s about being part of something bigger than yourself. Think about it. People wear the colours. Pass it on through generations. Travel long distances. Celebrate together. Cry together. Suffer together. When you hear people say things like: “We did it.” “We survived.” “We’re going down.” Even though they never kicked the ball. Because something much deeper is happening. People are attaching themselves to a story bigger than themselves. And I think the Bible helps explain why. Ecclesiastes says: “He has set eternity in the human heart.” That’s fascinating, because perhaps the reason people long to belong to something bigger is because God built us that way. Human beings were never designed to live isolated lives. We were made for: relationship, community, purpose, meaning We were made to belong. So, football itself isn’t the problem. Community isn’t the problem. Celebration isn’t the problem. Joy isn’t the problem. These things can be beautiful gifts. There is something wonderful about standing shoulder to shoulder with people from different backgrounds, different ages, different stories, all united around something they love. The church can learn from some of that. But there is also something we need to be careful about. Because good things can sometimes begin carrying a weight they were never designed to carry. Football can become more than entertainment. Success can become more than enjoyment. A club can become more than community. And suddenly identity becomes attached to something temporary. My joy rises with results. My peace rises with results. My emotional health rises with results. And that becomes a heavy burden for something temporary to carry. Because football seasons end. Managers leave. Players retire. Trophies gather dust. Relegation happens. Records get broken. None of it lasts forever. Hebrews says: “For here we do not have an enduring city.” Everything around us eventually changes, even the things we love. And perhaps this explains why disappointment in football can hurt so deeply. Because when something carries part of our identity, its loss feels personal. And we all do this in different ways. For some people it’s football. For others it’s work. Success. Relationships. Money. Status. We all attach ourselves to things hoping they will give us lasting meaning. But the Bible gently points us toward something deeper. In Isaiah God says: “I have called you by name, you are mine.” That’s powerful. Because our deepest identity was never meant to come from what we support, what we achieve, or what we belong to. It comes from God. And perhaps that’s why even the greatest sporting moments eventually fade. Because they were never meant to satisfy the deepest longings of the human heart. They point towards something bigger. Maybe what people are really searching for through football is something football only gives in glimpses. Belonging. Joy. Shared purpose. Hope. Community. And those things ultimately point beyond sport itself. They point towards the Kingdom of God. Because in Christ we are invited into the greatest story of all. A family. A purpose. A community. A Kingdom that does not end. Living with one eye on eternity doesn’t mean we stop enjoying football. Enjoy it. Celebrate. Feel the joy of victory. Feel the disappointment of defeat. But remember where your deepest identity rests. Because no club can carry the weight of your soul. No trophy can satisfy eternity. No result can define your worth. Only Christ can do that. So maybe the question this week isn’t: “Why do people care so much about football?” Maybe the deeper question is: “What does football reveal about what we’ve all been looking for?” Let’s pray Lord God, Thank You for the gifts of joy, community, and belonging. Thank You for the things we enjoy and celebrate together. Help us to enjoy them without making them ultimate. Teach us to find our deepest identity and security in You. And remind us that the things of this world may come and go, but Your Kingdom lasts forever. Help us to keep one eye on the present and one eye on eternity. Amen. Scripture References Ecclesiastes 3:11Hebrews 13:14Isaiah 43:1 This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit benorris1977.substack.com [https://benorris1977.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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