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The God of Second Chances - Jed Zayner

Not a lot of people get second chances, but God, by His grace, gave me one.

I grew up in a Christ-centered home with my mom being the single mother of four boys. It was pretty fun having three older brothers but it was also really tough. We grew up in poverty: Mom worked 78-hour weeks just to have food on the table in the morning, clothes and a roof over our heads.

My senior year in high school, I got into a big car accident. The driver broad-sided me, and I flew into a ditch. When I woke up my window was the only one not broken. There was not a scratch on me, but our car was demolished. I had an epiphany — I didn’t know if I’d be going to Heaven right then and there, but God showed me that He had mercy on me and my soul, and He wanted me to know Him. I thank God that He did that because it’s made my life better, having His peace and joy.

And a highlight in my career is an injury, which probably almost no one would say that, but I would say that because, in the end, it’s made me who I am today. It’s made me a better man. God allowed me to have this injury to show me that soccer’s not everything. You know, I come out here, I play, I do it for a podium for Him, and as in John 3:30 it says, “He must become greater and I must become less…” That is the biggest thing — I must become less, soccer must become less, and God becomes greater and greater and greater. And that’s what God taught me through my four tears in my knee. He said, “No matter where I take you, it’s all about Me (the God of second chances), it’s not about you.”

God gives us a purpose, and He gives us a hope — a hope that even though this life is so short, Heaven is forever.

The Lord calls us to complete the task at hand and do it hard and willingly. As athletes, God has called us to compete with fire in our eyes, with a competitor’s spirit, but also in love. He calls us not to cheap-shot nor to do anything against the rules, but to lovingly be warriors.

—Jed Zayner, USA footballer

The God of Second Chances - Jed Zayner

Jan 22, 2020

Not a lot of people get second chances, but God, by His grace, gave me one. I grew up in a Christ-centered home with my mom being the single mother of four boys. It was pretty fun having three older brothers but it was also really tough. We grew up in poverty: Mom worked 78-hour weeks just to have food on the table in the morning, clothes and a roof over our heads. My senior year in high school, I got into a big car accident. The driver broad-sided me, and I flew into a ditch. When I woke up my window was the only one not broken. There was not a scratch on me, but our car was demolished. I had an epiphany — I didn’t know if I’d be going to Heaven right then and there, but God showed me that He had mercy on me and my soul, and He wanted me to know Him. I thank God that He did that because it’s made my life better, having His peace and joy. And a highlight in my career is an injury, which probably almost no one would say that, but I would say that because, in the end, it’s made me who I am today. It’s made me a better man. God allowed me to have this injury to show me that soccer’s not everything. You know, I come out here, I play, I do it for a podium for Him, and as in John 3:30 it says, “He must become greater and I must become less…” That is the biggest thing — I must become less, soccer must become less, and God becomes greater and greater and greater. And that’s what God taught me through my four tears in my knee. He said, “No matter where I take you, it’s all about Me (the God of second chances), it’s not about you.” God gives us a purpose, and He gives us a hope — a hope that even though this life is so short, Heaven is forever. The Lord calls us to complete the task at hand and do it hard and willingly. As athletes, God has called us to compete with fire in our eyes, with a competitor’s spirit, but also in love. He calls us not to cheap-shot nor to do anything against the rules, but to lovingly be warriors. —Jed Zayner, USA footballer