Tomorrow we kick off my favorite event in the Cornerstone campus calendar. We call it night of nets...and it combines two of
my greatest passions in life: the beautiful game called soccer or futbal and
the people and communities of a sub-Saharan African nation called Zambia...
This is the 4th year we've done this event at
CU and it is now one of our best attended and embraced student activities...the
event is designed to use the platform of athletics in our culture to bring
awareness and real change to one of the world’s greatest global issues. We are trying to raise funds to provide
insecticide treated bed nets for families that face incredible health dangers
caused by the deadly disease malaria.
We've watched this event grow quickly in the
amount of money we've raised, the attention given to the issue on our campus,
the number of students involved, and now this year has been exported to other
university and high school sports and teams to expand the impact of these truly
life changing items...
To be honest, this little idea I shared first
with a few CU soccer players in an impoverished community in the Dominican
Republic has morphed into something I hoped and dreamed it could be...and with
that growth has demanded more of my time, my resources, my thinking, and my
skills as a leader and educator...
And this thing we dubbed night of nets keeps
perhaps most importantly grabbing a deeper and fuller grasp of my heart...I am
quite sure that many of my co-workers, friends, students, players, and family
members wonder at times why I tweet so often about malaria, create & post a
multitude of different visual pieces of promotion about NETS on our campus
walls and doors, and cast vision almost hourly in classrooms, leadership
trainings, staff meetings, soccer fields, and conversations in my office about
the chance we have right now to change lives forever on the other side of the
world...
So as we head into our 6 night of nets
matches for this year, here's a little list and explanation for why I am all in
on this event, why I think it is one of the most important things we will do as
a Christian college during the 2013-14 school year, and why it causes my heart
to jump and my voice to speak loud as I join so many other people to try and
end malaria in our generation...
1. I can't think of anything more
ready to be used to invite large numbers of people in my world to do great good
than the power of sport...soccer is our world’s global game and there’s
something so special to connect as people and friends through a game we love to
watch and play…and we have watched athletes, coaches, and fans embrace with
gusto their chance to make sports something beautiful and brilliant as a tool
to draw many together to both watch and do something extraordinary on and off
the field of play…
2. I love the way God has given a
ragamuffin group of young men a cause that unites them and allows them to come
together to do something that others would never expect them to do...the
driving force in night of nets has been a large crew of male college soccer
players who have thrown off their selfish and entitled mindsets to be
remarkable advocates for a people often forgotten and marginalized in our world…and
their involvement badgering and cajoling fellow students to buy a Night of Nets
shirt or fund a bed net has caused them to eventually end up in Africa where
God changes them into people they could have never imagined they would become…
3. The scope of the issue is so
massive that it demands an immediate and real response...malaria is an awful
disease that affects hundreds of millions of lives...and as Rick Warren has
said the greatest issues in our world do indeed respond the greatest
responses...when you end malaria, you impact positively economics, health care,
education, families, and the churches of communities in unprecedented ways…
4. Something so cheap and so
simple can produce transformational change. A bed net that costs $6 can alter
the life, the future, the ambitions of children and families simply because
they no longer have to worry about an insect bite ruining their lives...I can’t
even begin to describe the opportunity bed nets provide to prevent sickness,
death, orphans, and immense heartbreak and grief…a bed net is something almost
everyone I know can provide for another whose life hangs in the balance without
it…
5. I love the sense of unity and
connectivity that this event brings to my life and the college community I love
so much...Night of Nets might be one of the very few things that can draw
together students from all residence buildings, student interests, and friend
groups to be part of something at CU…I love seeing hundreds and hundreds of
students walking across campus
6. It's personal for me...I’ve taken
hundreds of malaria pills to prevent being infected while I travel to Africa and
it’s something I’ve read about in all kinds of books and journals and websites…and
I am committed to trying to stop my African friends from getting infected by
malaria because I’ve seen friends lose their children because a mosquito bit
their son or daughter in the night as they slept…and I refuse to accept the
fact that anyone dying from a ridiculously preventable disease is the way God
wants our world to be in 2013…
7. I am convinced that it is
something that Jesus and the Scriptures call me to do as a follower of Him and
a person who is seeking to live by the words of the Bible God has written to
call me to live a different life...Jesus brought physical healing, a call for
justice, uplifting of the oppressed, and a love for those the world had
forgotten…and He invited His disciples then and His followers even now to announce
and help bring about the coming of His Kingdom…and I can’t help but want to be
like Him…
The Apostle Paul in Romans 12
says it better than I could as I think about God’s call on my life to be a
person who tries to have God’s love for me to move me to action…
Love must be sincere. Hate
what is evil; cling to what is good. Be devoted to one another in love. Honor
one another above yourselves. Never be lacking in zeal, but keep your spiritual
fervor, serving the Lord. Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful
in prayer. Share with the Lord’s people who are in need. Practice
hospitality. Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse. Rejoice
with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn. Live in harmony with one
another. Do not be proud, but be willing to associate with people of low
position. Do not be conceited. Do not repay anyone evil for evil. Be
careful to do what is right in the eyes of everyone. Do not be overcome by
evil, but overcome evil with good.
So I am called by God’s voice and moved by
His Spirit to be all in…to be OK with being thought of as a little overzealous,
a little crazy, and a little too focused on one thing…
And being all in means I can’t wait to invite
people to share God’s blessings in their live with others in great need through
the gift of a bed net at Holland Christian, at Calvin College, and at
Cornerstone University in the next few weeks…
And being all in means I
can’t help but dream…dream of providing 5000 bed nets via Night of Nets for
families that are praying God will provide one for them tonight on the other
side of the world…dream that many more college and high school soccer and
volleyball teams will join us to bring Night of Nets to their campuses in the
near future…and dream that one day malaria will no longer be on the minds of
people in Zambia just like it is never thought about by people living in my
city, my state, and my country…
I can’t wait to see friends
in Zambia sometime soon again…and tell them a little story about how students
in Grand Rapids, MI responded to Jesus’ call in an event called Night of Nets,
and then watch them sing and dance and whoop with joy as they receive a net
that ends malaria in their house…
That’s why I am all in, why
I love being part of Night of Nets, and why I invite you to be part of a
campaign to held end malaria…
You can check out more at: www.cunightofnets.com
1 comment:
Chip, this is amazing. It is so inspiring to see how God is working through you. Thank you for being all in.
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