𝗧𝗵𝗮𝘁’𝘀 𝗛𝗼𝘄 𝗬𝗼𝘂 𝗗𝗼 𝗜𝘁🫵
Kane Springer had a solid week at the plate for @SNUBaseball. Check him out!
⚡️ .467 ob%
⚡️ .692 slg%
⚡️ 3 doubles | 5 RBI
𝗔𝗯𝘀𝗼𝗹𝘂𝘁𝗲𝗹𝘆! He’s your SNU Male Boom-a-rang AOTW!
#BoltsUp⚡️
I asked Dan Hurley the same question I asked Tom Izzo: why does the media have a problem with coaches coaching players hard?
Hurley: "Society has gotten soft in a lot of ways... The real world is tough and cruel... I'm preparing my players for life."
God has ordained preaching to be done by biblically qualified men. Preaching necessitates the active work of God's Holy Spirit. The text must saturate and impact the heart of the preacher before it can do the same for the hearer. Sermons written by AI are lifeless, flat and dead. They are devoid of the blessing of the Holy Spirit because the Holy Spirit indwells men, not machines. AI has some benefits, but under no circumstances should the preacher ever - ever - use it to replace his time of study in the text. Don't be this guy.
I read this story a hundred times and missed the point.
Not the resurrection.
What happened before that.
A man climbed a hill with three crosses.
The crowds were gone. The soldiers drunk. The women weeping.
And one wealthy man with clean hands decided to get them dirty.
He walked to Pilate — the man who just murdered his Lord — and asked for the body.
Then he climbed the ladder.
Grabbed the first nail.
Pulled.
Feel the weight of that moment.
God's body in your arms.
Blood not dry yet.
Staining expensive robes.
Hands.
Under fingernails.
The smell of iron in the air.
Here's what wrecked me:
Passover was three hours away.
The holiest day of the Jewish year.
And touching a dead body meant one thing:
Unclean for seven days.
No temple.
No worship.
No Passover.
He knew this.
He'd spent his entire life following these laws.
But Jesus was still hanging on that cross.
So he climbed anyway.
Joseph of Arimathea didn't do this expecting resurrection.
He did it expecting nothing.
Jesus was dead. Gone. Finished.
This wasn't faith in a miracle.
This was love for a corpse.
He gave up his purity.
His Passover.
His reputation.
His seat on the Sanhedrin.
His safety.
For a dead man who couldn't thank him.
Modern Christianity wants clean obedience.
Safe obedience.
Obedience that doesn't cost you Passover.
But Joseph shows us something else:
True discipleship gets your hands dirty.
Three days later, that tomb was empty.
Joseph gave his grave to Jesus.
Jesus gave it back.
The twist Joseph never saw coming.
Your messy obedience?
God's using it too.
Even when you can't see it.
So here's the question:
What are you avoiding because it's too messy?
What grave are you unwilling to give?
Joseph held death in his arms and missed the holiest day of his life.
And earned his name in all four Gospels.
Religion says stay clean.
Discipleship says climb the ladder.
What are you choosing?