Today, we released Spiritual Fitness Exercises as a podcast episode under From the Touchline. In this episode, I suggest some helpful starts to get your spiritual fitness journey underway.
I have always had trouble with some of the devotional and spiritual discipline parts of my walk with Jesus and I share a few suggestions to help spur you on. From devotional resources to prayer apps and more. Tune in and send us your feedback or topics that you might like to hear in a future episode.
From the Touchline is a short-feature (10 min) podcast with Rev Brad Kenney and occasional guests touching on various issues around faith, family, and football.
Check out the Soccer Chaplains United App and go to the Media section. Under podcasts you will see a new podcast for 8/28/2019 entitled “Spiritual Fitness – Exercises.”
If you don’t have the app yet, you can download the Soccer Chaplains United App from the Google and App Store. Search “SoccChaplain” and look for our logo (see photo above)!
Today, the Colorado Rapids introduced Robin Fraser as head coach. Robin becomes the 9th “permanent” head coach in Rapids history. And, looking back upon the club’s history, only one of those 9 coaches is someone that I haven’t known or served under — whether as a PR staff member or volunteer chaplain.
In what has become common place in football, people come and go. Fraser becomes the 3rd former Rapids player to have opportunity to be head coach of the 1st team. Pablo Mastroeni (2014-2017) and Conor Casey (interim 2019) the other two former players to coach the club prior to Fraser’s appointment. Other players have had coaching roles, too, — Roy Wegerle was a player/coach for one game; David Kramer, served as goalkeeping coach for a number of years; John Spencer was an assistant coach for one year; and, current goalkeeping coach Chris Sharpe also has spent time playing for the club.
Because the world of football is so small and, in many ways, a tight-knit and connected community there are often times when a player, coach, or even a staff member may circulate through the organization at different times and in different roles. Many times a former athlete comes back to coach the team or work in the front office. Some times a position is more of an ambassador role — being a face and representative in the community. Other times, a role may have more far-reaching implications.
…some of the emerging values for a football chaplain is constancy and consistency.
Because of this particular tendency, some of the emerging values for a football chaplain is constancy and consistency. There are times when the face (or faces) of the club go through radical change and transformation. History is lost. Corporate memory can fade as the organization or team goes through a constant revolution of athletes, coaches, and staff in his history. It is usually the role of a fanbase to maintain some sort of organizational memory and history, if the club itself fails to keep good record and intentional moments of celebrating or remembering its legacy.
The chaplain, in many ways, too, is a keeper of a different type of history. A spiritual history, if you will. For the moments, when a team celebrated or grieved. For players and staff that have had to say goodbye. Or, in welcoming (or re-welcoming) those that have come and those that return. In many ways, too, a chaplain keeps the memory of those who are away from a club or organization. There are several former staff and athletes that I try to keep some modicum of communication with.
If you are an athlete, coach, or executive in sport — I encourage you to consider the role that a chaplain can serve to you and your people. An objective, professional chaplain can be a source of comfort, guidance, and encouragement for many different parts of an organization. And, in a turbulent and often high-pressure culture and environment, a chaplain can help provide stasis and peace for the issues that happen on and “off the field” so to speak. Not just for elite athletes, but at all levels of an organization – from the part-time security guard to the multi-million dollar athlete.
If you are a chaplain in sport — let me encourage you to work really hard to be that constant and consistent presence. No matter how difficult things might become for you. Demands of time or fundraising or being pushed to the margins of a club or context may make that difficult, but God is faithful. And, as we re-present God to those in the sport, we can hopefully demonstrate the faithful, unswerving presence of God to those we have been called to serve.
/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.png00Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2019-08-27 13:00:362019-08-26 16:31:28Coming and Going and Coming Again
We’re just a couple months away from the 2nd Global Congress on Christianity and Sport. This year’s congress is being held at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, MI October 23 — 27 and it’s not too late to register. Here is a place for dialogue and sharpening between academics, theologians, practitioners like chaplains and counselor, and others connected into the world of sport.
I really enjoyed the last congress in York, England back in 2016. And, as I have mentioned before, it was at the congress that God gave us a new vision to change the name of our ministry to Soccer Chaplains United.
At the York congress, I gave a presentation entitled: Foundations of Pastoral Care- Recovering the Spirit of Chaplaincy in Sport. Additionally, I had my first professional article by the same title published in a special edition of Practical Theology. It was an exciting and challenging time.
Theologian Miroslav Wolf will be a keynote speaker this October
During the upcoming congress, Soccer Chaplains United will feature in two parallel sessions. One session, entitled, Chaplaincy and Counseling in Sport: A Necessary Partnership, will have myself and Brooke Ewert presenting on the challenges of linking chaplaincy and counseling in sports. We will share about our work of serving in football (soccer) and how the chaplain and counselor can serve simultaneously and differently from one another.
I will also present in a separate session, A Biblical Foundation for Chaplaincy in Sport. In this session, I will propose a different starting point for considering chaplaincy and sports chaplaincy from a biblical framework. Currently, there is not an article being published, but hopefully there will be something to add into the library of sports chaplaincy at some point.
Please pray for Brooke and me, and other chaplains and people working and interacting and bridging the world of Christian faith and sport.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/tebowpeoplemag-92-2.jpg600400Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2019-08-26 10:00:532024-03-04 12:27:36Michigan On the Horizon
This past week, Ghanian football forward Manuel “Junior” Agogodied in a London hospital at the age of 40. As I watch the different tweets and acknowledgments come from different clubs and teams that Junior played for, and as news outlets produce similar sounding stories, there is a sad feeling inside. While we might say “kudos” for the different clubs acknowledging Junior, how many with those clubs and news sources even were around to know him?
I knew Junior. Serving as an assistant for Public Relations for the Colorado Rapids, I met Junior when he came to the club in 2000. He was an exciting, dynamic player. I remember his quickness — it surprised many in the league and he scored several goals from his sheer pace and beating defenders to the ball. You can get a little taste of Junior from this archived article by Terry Frei of the Denver Post.
Junior was a few years younger than me. Born August 1, 1979 our birthdays were just slightly more than a week apart. For the past number of years, I have always made an effort to reach out to Junior on his birthday — a customary part of my chaplaincy. And, if I cannot find or communicate a particular player or staff member on that day, I make it a habit to pray for them and their family on that day.
Today, though, as I sit and reflect on Junior. I want to share a few distinct memories.
Lifting Junior
When Junior was with the Rapids, he would always like to show off his muscles. He was cocky and a bit of a braggadocio. He did have a strong upper body. I recall the fitness specialist back then telling him that he lifted too much. But perhaps his love of exercise was why, later in life, he opened his own fitness club in London where he did physical fitness coaching and training.
One day when Junior was in for a lift, I recall the banter starting to fly between him and a teammate and somehow, I got roped in.
How much can you curl?, he asked with a curious grin.
Man, I just did bicep curls yesterday, I replied. Leave me out of this.
Naw, c’mon. Just askin’?Heh, heh… I should have known that trademark Junior laugh, he was going to egg me on until I got suckered in.
I can hold my own. I tried to get around it a bit.
I don’t remember much more of the dialogue other than, soon, we had each grabbed 30 lb. dumbbells and were challenging each other back and forth. For the next ten minutes, we were trying to outdo one another. I think I only managed two curls with the 50’s and he started laughing his head off as he finished out 12 reps.
Heh, heh, you’re weak! Or something like that, came from Junior as he fancied himself.
I told you I lifted yesterday. I’m spent! But it didn’t matter. I had been “Juniored.”
Losing Junior
Now recall, I was only the assistant PR guy. But even in my low position in the front office, the PR guys were the liaisons between the front office, the players, and the media. Junior was with the Rapids just for a short time, but even I knew that he had developed a bit of a reputation. This was always a bit of tough thing for me. And in those early days, I struggled with the darker side of sports. And to be honest, I was largely naive. It didn’t take long for people to talk about Junior and his struggles. Teammates whispered. Coaches rolled their eyes. Management got into closed door meetings.
To be honest, even now as a volunteer team chaplain, there is often little that I know about what way athletes get into — until it gets picked up by TMZ or unless someone confesses their indiscretion or sin (and sometimes they do). I wasn’t serving as a chaplain when Junior was with the Rapids, so he never knew me in that particular way. He might have noticed my Christian faith in other ways. I don’t recall any particular conversations with him, though I had conversations with others in the team, back then.
I really liked Junior — he was funny, bright. But I know that there was another side to Junior. And there was a part that was filled with hurt and pain. Maybe it was being so far from home. Maybe it was his desire to excel. Maybe it was the pressure
A few years after I began serving as the Rapids volunteer chaplain, I felt God impress upon me,
What about those that have come before me? How do I serve them as chaplain now, today?
Even for the players and staff that didn’t know me as chaplain (or didn’t know me at all), I felt that I needed to keep reaching out. I need to some how pursue them, to let them know that they weren’t forgotten. That God remembered them. God cared for them.
From that point on, I started to collect birthdays. I would reach out and contact people — whether they were here when I was a chaplain or PR guy or before and I would introduce myself, offer support, and let them know that I was praying for them, for their families, for the work.
But I couldn’t’ find Junior. He was lost (at least to me). I tried reaching out to him, but his email and contact info was dated. Many times when athletes and coaches from overseas come to Major League Soccer they get an American telephone number for a temporary time before they return home. But I kept trying. I kept reaching. And then I came across the website for a fitness club that he had bought into or owned. There was a form field to reach out via email, and I sent a message.
Finding Junior
Now, Junior didn’t know me as chaplain with the Rapids. I re-introduced myself. I asked how he was doing. He told me about the stroke that he had suffered. I wish I had held onto the email. It would be a treasure for me, today. I told him that he was in my prayers. Perhaps, though, I took it for granted — I thought that one day, Junior and I would see each other. In a gym or coffee shop in London. I didn’t know, but I felt it might happen. It has happened with others.
Junior snaps a photo during his post-stroke recovery.
If I am honest, I probably feel differently about Junior because we shared that little gym challenge so many years ago. And my writing this is a step in catharsis for me — because I grieve knowing that Junior is dead. I have seen several other players from Ghana message and tweet their regret that they didn’t keep in touch. Perhaps, we all need absolution. We all need forgiveness for losing Junior. And truthfully, I have little right here. My time in Junior’s life is minuscule compared to others — teammates, friends, family.
But I love Junior. He was like a younger brother when I knew him. And I love Junior because God loves Junior. And I know that God was always reaching throughout the years. I believe that God was reaching beyond more than me. There were others, perhaps, always reaching, always lifting Junior to the Lord.
Today, as I sit and write and remember Manual “Junior” Agogo, I will lift him and his family once again to the Lord.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/junior-agogo.png432768Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2019-08-25 08:00:342019-08-26 09:44:56From the Rev: Remembering Junior
The team from partner church, Cherry Creek Presbyterian Church, returned from Kampala, Uganda and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in July. The team of 19 students and leaders returned with some great stories and pictures of their time in these two African countries.
While the team was in Uganda, they ministered with Youth for Christ (YFC). Youth for Christ has recently moved from the capital city of Kampala to the city of Matugga. On their new property, they have a soccer field where they hold community soccer games. On one of the days the CCPC team were there, YFC invited kids from the community and nearby schools to come play soccer in their field. Members of the CCPC team went down to the field to meet the kids. After meeting the people who came, they had the opportunity to give their new friends the gift of Rapids jerseys. They continued to grow their relationships with the people who came by playing two soccer games.
The boys of Uganda pose with some new soccer gear from Soccer Chaplains United and the Cherry Creek Presbyterian Church team from this past summer.
After the games were finished, the team gathered and sat on the field. One of the YFC staff members and Chris Piehl, the CCPC youth pastor, shared the Gospel and gave people the opportunity to put their faith in Christ. Slowly, two of the boys raised their hands. Pastor Chris led them in a prayer to accept Christ into their lives. He also gave them each a Bible that the team had brought.
One moment that stood out to the team happened as they were driving back to the guest house. After loading onto the bus, and driving away, the team noticed that one of the boys with a Bible was excitedly reading his Bible as he walked away from the field with a group of boys.
We are grateful for the ways our ministry was expanded by the opportunity to give people Rapids jerseys. Giving away the jerseys was a way for us to show the community in Matugga our love for them, and point them to the love of Christ. As the people who came to play soccer with us continue to wear their jerseys, their jerseys serve as a constant reminder of our enjoyable time with them and the message of Christ’s infinite love for them
Cherry Creek Presbyterian Church Trip Participant
When you support Soccer Chaplains United a portion of your gift automatically goes to help our community projects and requests. You can give specifically to help cover our costs by making a gift through PushPay — simply select Community from the selectable funds. Your financial gift helps us purchase new soccer equipment, sponsor individuals or organizations, and to cover associated costs of providing Bibles, soccer equipment, and other outreach tools locally and around the world!
*A CCPC team member contributed the content for this article; it has been edited and formatted for use here by Soccer Chaplains United.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/K09A1139.jpg12801920Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2019-08-22 17:00:432022-05-09 22:25:11CCPC in Uganda
In this edition of From the Touchline, Rev Brad recalls the cross-training movement of the early 2000’s and applies the principle of being cross-trained for one’s spiritual fitness as well as one’s physical and mental fitness.
From the Touchline is a short-feature (10 min) podcast with Rev Brad Kenney and occasional guests touching on various issues around faith, family, and football.
Check out the Soccer Chaplains United App and go to the Media section. Under podcasts you will see a new podcast for 8/21/2019 entitled “Spiritual Fitness.”
If you don’t have the app yet, you can download the Soccer Chaplains United App from the Google and App Store. Search “SoccChaplain” and look for our logo (see photo above)!
In a first for Soccer Chaplains United Community Project requests, Larry and Micah Koorneef are heading to Cambodia this August. The father and son team, members at Cherry Creek Presbyterian Church, met Setan Lee and his ministry TransformAsia. It was through a series of conversations and Micah’s own studies, that God put a burden on their hearts for traveling to Cambodia to serve.
As a family we have been praying for years about the specific destination and timing of such a trip…this past fall we started studying up on SE Asia (because that was my dream) and eventually Cambodia in particular. God enabled us to partner with TransformAsia this spring and plan a way to serve with them this summer.
Micah Koorneef, on God leading them to Cambodia
TransformAsia is led by Dr Setan Lee who was once imprisoned by the Khmer Rouge and was nearly killed because he had attended university. At a critical moment of despair, as soldiers of the Khmer Rouge were beating him, Lee called out to the ‘God of the Universe’ to save him. Miraculously, the guards stopped and…well, you need to hear Setan’s story for yourself. See the short (8 min) video below.
Setan’s story as told by CBN
While in Cambodia, the Koorneef’s along with Setan will specifically be spending much of their time at the David Orphanage Center in Anlong Veng near the Thailand border. There, Larry and Micah and others will serve by caring for the nearly 60 kids who live there at a time. The volunteers that serve regularly at this center, help show love to the orphaned preschool and elementary aged “jungle kids” of the Khmer Rouge killing fields. Larry and Micah will help with school work—especially English and math lessons, play with the kids through sports and crafts, go on special trips and share meals with them.
Setan Lee in Cambodia
I am excited to be traveling with my dad and Mr. Setan Lee! We actually read Setan’s biography called Miracles in the Forgotten Land and Beyond and even invited his wife Randa and him over for dinner the other day. Reading his book, I knew he was an amazing man who serves Jesus Christ with his whole heart, but after meeting him, I also know he is a really cool and funny guy! I love that we joke around looking each other right in the eye!
Micah Koorneef, on meeting and getting to know Setan Lee
In addition to the orphanage, Micah and Larry will also spend time at the Kambour Feeding Center in Kambour Village – a working farm, feeding all who come, reportedly 150+ kids/day! They will also visit the Joy Day Care which is located in the garbage dump/slum area near Phnom Penn. The Day Care center serves young children of poor families who collect refuse or look for other work during the day.
In the weeks and months ahead, I hope to learn a lot about God’s love for me and how He can use me starting right now…and forever. I hope to be a conduit of God’s love to those I meet. I hope someone will come to know and trust Jesus because of me. Will you please pray for all of this?
Micah Koorneef, on his hope for the trip and time in Cambodia
Specific to the request, the Koorneef father and son team will be looking to take about 70 pounds of soccer gear and equipment on their trip.
When you support Soccer Chaplains United a portion of your gift automatically goes to help our community projects and requests. You can give specifically to help cover our costs by making a gift through PushPay — simply select Community from the selectable funds. Your financial gift helps us purchase new soccer equipment, sponsor individuals or organizations, and to cover associated costs of providing Bibles, soccer equipment, and other outreach tools locally and around the world!
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/cambodiaflag.jpg284425Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2019-07-25 06:00:482019-07-23 14:59:11First Time Community Request for Cambodia
As the summer season moves closer to fall, many college and high school students are starting to get back into the swing of fall soccer pre-season preparations. We check in with Moody Bible Institute Men’s Soccer Chaplain Pete Distler to see what steps he and the team are taking ahead of a mid-August campus report date.
The student athletes at Moody Bible Institute are busy ‘sweating’ a summer regimen of personal training routines designed by Coach Jon. Inherent competition and accountability is seen in published key performance metrics that keep team chat channels buzzing. Freshman players are already preparing to make the cut are showing impressive numbers and looking to push MBI veterans to elevate their game.
Chaplain Pete, on the athlete preseason preparations
Different from years of old, college athletes are rarely far from being ready for the season come fall. There’s not much “offseason” or moments when soccer team members don’t have an eye toward the season goals and coming into a pre-season with as much athletic fitness as possible. But the athletes aren’t the only ones readying themselves as Pete shared with me,
For myself as chaplain, spiritual preparations include praying for the team roster, healing prayers for several injured players and wisdom for developing meaningful devotionals to lead the team through for the season. Once we begin pre-season training in mid-August, discipleship will evolve to transitional needs for freshman players and a variety of concerns from returning players.
Chaplain Pete, on the chaplain pre-season preparations
Of course, a new season means implementing some new practices for the team’s ongoing spiritual, emotional, and mental development. Mixing in with some standard practices that have been built into the Moody Soccer culture — Pete will continue to find the balance in serving the needs of the athletes and the coaches, alike. And, as a new rotation of students athletes come into the fold the ongoing development of leadership and the mainstay goals will continue,
Representing Jesus on and off the field with excellence will be a predominant focus during our season. In sports it can be really difficult to see the truth that winning games really only represents short term fruit. Winning must be superseded by understanding the eternal value of ministering the Gospel, and this many times through our on-field Christian character behavior.
Chaplain Pete, on the season goals looking ahead to 2019-2020
We invite you to pray for Chaplain Pete and the Moody Men’s Soccer Team. And we encourage you to join us, not only as a prayer partner, but also as a financial partner.
Soccer Chaplains United is non-profit, 501(c)3. Our chaplains all volutneer with the teams and communities that they serve. We are dependent upon the financial support of our partners to carry out our work of developing chaplaincy, counseling, and community service across all levels of soccer.
Click the PushPay logo below or text soccerchaplains to 77977 to make a secure electronic donation. You can also mail a donation to Soccer Chaplains United, PO Box 102081 Denver, CO 80250.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/21192229_10156609618732571_4900719511245640419_n.jpg660660Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2019-07-24 06:00:352019-07-22 14:20:37Moody Chaplain Pete Preps For Return
Back in February of this year, I had the privilege of meeting Reverend Parker Smith. As an alum and emissary for Sterling College (KS), Parker was manning a table at the Presbytery of the West regional gathering in Leoti, KS. When the Soccer Chaplains United video played, Rev Parker approached and we discovered some mutual connections within the local soccer scene in Colorado. A follow up coffee back in Denver, and Parker was able to share about Sterling College a Christian institution of higher learning with whom the Evangelical Presbyterian Church has some association and connection.
As we talked more about soccer, the subject of possibly finding and placing a chaplain with the soccer programs at Sterling continued to be part of our conversation. During the EPC General Assembly in June, I was able to steal away for a local Sterling College gathering of area alumni. It was here that I met Scott Downing, Vice President for Athletics, and Justin Morris, Director of Athletic Operations, for Sterling College. Justin had just stepped down from coaching the women’s soccer program into his new role. I shared more about Soccer Chaplains United and offered to submit a short proposal on how we might be able to help find and support a chaplain.
Please pray for Sterling College and our work to develop chaplaincy with Sterling College. Pray that our recent proposal will be well received and that we will be able to find some suitable candidates for consideration to serve the men’s and women’s programs at Sterling College.
And as always, we would love to have you join our support team. Soccer Chaplains United is non-profit, 501(c)3. Our chaplains all volutneer with the teams and communities that they serve. We are dependent upon the financial support of our partners to carry out our work of developing chaplaincy, counseling, and community service across all levels of soccer. If you, your church, business, or foundation would like to support our work please consider making a contribution today or reaching out for more information to us at info@soccerchaplainsunited.org.
Click the PushPay logo below or text soccerchaplains to 77977 to make a secure electronic donation. You can also mail a donation to Soccer Chaplains United, PO Box 102081 Denver, CO 80250.
For Kimberly Beach, the pathway to becoming chaplain for Trinity International University’s (TIU) Men’s Soccer Program is, to say the least, an unusual one. But, then again, God’s planning and work to bring about something amazing in us and something powerful for His kingdom is usually born out of things that would confound the wise of the world.
Chaplain Beach, known affectionately to players and coaches as Miss Kim, started serving TIU in 2017. At first it began as a female soccer player and friend of her son (a student athlete at TIU with the men’s soccer team) asked if Kimberly could meet with and mentor her. Pretty soon, Kimberly was giving pre-season devotionals at the women’s team workouts. But the ministry didn’t stop there — her home routinely open to the athletes on her son’s team, meeting with the female athletes, and providing what she has come to term as “intentionally unintentional discipleship,” Kimberly’s ministry started to grow and expand beyond the typical “team mom” duties.
The growth of ministry, coupled with Kimberly’s own calling and story beginning back in 2000 led her to look for information on soccer chaplaincy. She landed on the recently rebranded Soccer Chaplains United webpage.
With the role of Team Chaplain at TIU, I was looking for an organization that would provide community. I found that in Soccer Chaplains United.
Chaplain Kim Beach
Chaplaincy wasn’t necessarily a new concept for Kimberly — in the early 2000’s through the medical issues her young daughter had faced, Kimberly had felt an initial call to pediatric chaplaincy. She desired to show love and care to those parent’s going through dark and difficult times as she and her husband, David, had but the time wasn’t right.
Ten years later, she again felt the tug toward chaplaincy. Within the span of a week, from sitting in an emergency room for their own child and then attending a number of sporting events and watching the ambulance pull up and take injured athletes away, Kimberly told her husband,
We need a chaplain here that can help these families…even if it is only sitting with them in dark times.
Kimberly Beach, 2010
David agreed and encouraged his wife to pursue training and licensure for chaplaincy. Her initial start came with Chaplain Fellowship Ministries and she began to visit local emergency rooms, church members and friends in the hospital, to speak with families while they were at the regional children’s hospital, and to facilitate online support groups.
In 2016, God called the Beach family to move — this time to northern Illinois for better treatment options for their daughter. With her son on scholarship with the TIU soccer team, the way forward was being led by God. It wasn’t long after that Miss Kim began serving the soccer teams at TIU.
Miss Kim’s approach, hospitality, and ministry soon came across the radar of then assistant coach men’s coach Josiah Larson. Promoted to head coach in December of 2017, Coach Larson asked if Kimberly would consider being chaplain for the men’s team.
With a full season of experience, Miss Kim has served the full gamut — from the highs and lows of the season, to the weddings, parents of athletes struggling with health issues, and other moments of pastoral care and counseling. Heading into the 2019 season, Soccer Chaplains United will look to bolster Miss Kim’s ministry as she continues to serve the athletes, coaches, and families of TIU’s Men’s Soccer.
I had the privilege of meeting Kimberly and David last summer, as they were leaving Denver, where David works, to return to Illinois. I was able to share about the mission and vision of Soccer Chaplains United — so much of which resonated with Kimberly’s background, calling, passion, and equipping. The pastoral care emphasis that Kimberly had already discovered and begun to cultivate was one of the key values for our work of chaplaincy amongst soccer. And I am really pleased to see the conversation which began last summer, cultivate in Miss Kim joining Soccer Chaplains United as chaplain.
Please join me in welcoming Kimberly Beach and the Trinity International University Trojan’s Men’s Soccer Team to the family here of Soccer Chaplains United!
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/DSC_3616-e1563817120804.jpg230300Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2019-07-22 06:00:392019-07-22 11:39:07From Team Mom to Team Chaplain
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