|
SUPER BOWL XXXIV The Spirit came on me unexpectedly two years ago during the Super Bowl and lingered for
days. During the game the Lord spoke a number of prophetic messages concerning the players, the significance of
their numbers, and the game's outcome. Several months later, Meri Burlingame posted a word from Canada that Bob
Jones had spoken the previous year. At that time, Jones had prophesied several things the Lord had also shown me
including the significance of John Elway winning his first Super Bowl.
The prediction: In the coming year burnt-out pastors will return to ministry and embrace Five-Fold ministry, and particularly Apostolic ministry.
In 1981 the Philadelphia Eagles were taken to the Super Bowl by their driven coach, Dick
Vermeil. Vermeil was young, intense, and known throughout the league as a controlling micro-manager. He often slept
in his office after working late into the night. The Eagles were defeated in the Super Bowl by the Oakland Raiders
27-10 and shortly thereafter, Vermeil resigned from coaching and coined the term "coaching burn-out."
For the next 14 years he observed football from a network broadcasting booth. When coaxed out of retirement two
seasons ago, the St. Louis Rams (formerly of Los Angeles) were one of the worst teams in the league and badly in
need of a miracle. Most experts doubted that Vermeil would be effective. He was, afterall, known for his almost
abusive intensity and control, traits modern athletes would not easily respond to. In his first two years his team
won only a handful of games and his team was reportedly on the edge of mutiny. Things appeared even more dismal
early this season when the Rams' new high-dollar quarterback, Trent Green, went down with a knee injury in the
third pre-season game. Onto the field game Green's backup, a much-traveled and unheralded second-year pro named
Kurt Warner.
Two years ago, after attending a conference in Dallas for apostles and prophets, I returned to the home group I pastored to find a visitor. A retired pastor from Iowa. The man and his wife had traveled to Montana to visit her son, a member of our group, and also because the Lord had told the man "someone in Montana will have a word for you." This man had risen in the ranks of his Pentecostal denomination through the years and had pastored several large churches. A couple years before his first wife had succumbed quite suddenly to cancer and he soon remarried a divorced woman. His denomination did not take kindly to this second marriage, and burnt-out by years of church service, he retired from the pulpit. "I had believed in the five-fold ministry for years," he told me. "But I'd never seen it used." Like Dick Vermeil, he had labored with intensity but had fallen short of his goal. Like Vermiel, in spite of his micro-managing, this pastor was a man of love. He often got "tickles in the spirit from Abba daddy." Vermiel, even in his first tenure with the Eagles, was known as a man who cared passionately for his players and was often chided for his emotional displays of crying.
This past Sunday the St. Louis Rams edged the Tennessee Titans 23-16 in one of the best games in Super Bowl history.
Warner tossed the winning pass with two minutes to go and the teams tied. He was named the game's Most Valuable
Player. Dick Vermeil finally had his Super Bowl victory. Curt Warner had gone from supermarket stock boy to the
super market of NFL riches. But the spiritual lesson in this is the wedding of the pastoral with the apostolic.
Dick Vermeil represents the church as we have known it with one man in authority, running the show, and often burning
out and disappearing into the secular world. Curt Warner represents the apostolic. First of all, he wore number
13, not a number of ill fortune, but the number of Matthias, the 13th apostle chosen to replace the disgraced and
deceased Judas Iscariot. Warner's path was one of perseverance and humility. He was qouted in USA TODAY as saying:
"I've learned alot about perseverance; I've learned a lot about being humble and enjoying everything you get."
|