2021 saw the continuation, in many ways, of the challenges that came to be nearly normalized in 2020 — for non-profits and for soccer, alike.
For the most part, Soccer Chaplains United maintained in the midst of challenging times, and as 2022 begins, we feel poised to step into further and greater opportunities as the sport continues to grow in North America and beyond.
The Soccer Chaplains United Annual Report 2021 reviews the work of the ministry over the course of the past year.
You can view the annual report like a booklet by utilizing the link below.
Soccer Chaplains United is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization that relies on the generous support of individual donors and church partners to carry out its work of chaplaincy in soccer.
You can give a safe, secure, electronic, tax-deductible gift via PushPay by clicking the button below or by texting soccerchaplains to 77977. You can also mail a donation to Soccer Chaplains United, PO Box 102081, Denver, CO 80250.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/Screen-Shot-2022-03-01-at-3.01.46-PM.png17981422Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2022-03-01 15:00:002022-03-01 15:22:432021 Soccer Chaplains United Annual Report
One of the Soccer Chaplains United’s values is continuing education (CE) for its chaplains. The CE that is often needed for the chaplaincy work seeks to incorporate a number of different areas that are unique and specific to the role. CE can be around pastoral and spiritual care, chaplaincy, or sports in general, or soccer specific. Because Soccer Chaplains United is not quite resourced or staffed to provide all of the necessary CE for its chaplains (a future aspiration), we partner with and have chaplains undertake CE with different institutions. One institution that has risen of late is Baylor University’s Faith and Sports Institute (FSI) which is a part of Truett Seminary.
Soccer Chaplains United is developing a partnership with FSI having already known several of the key leaders through several academic and practitioner conferences (ie, Congress on Christianity and Sport, etc.).
Recently, chaplain Jordan Medas undertook an offering for a certificate course with FSI and he shared his experience.
This past fall, with the encouragement of my home church and SCU, I participated in an 8 week entitled “Mental Health in Sports”…While the class doesn’t make one ready to counsel athletes directly…on…eating disorders, addictions, and anxiety, the class more than prepares (chaplains) working with athletes to be aware of signs leading to mental illness, it’s potential causes, it’s effects, what to be on the look out for and resources to support athletes.
Jordan Medas, on the class content and outcomes
Mental health issues have risen to the forefront of many sport and athletic conversations as we see a cry from athletes of all levels around the mental and emotional needs. Chaplains must be careful to not overstep bounds and to effectively refer or “signpost” athletes to appropriate resources (counseling, therapy, etc.). But sometimes recognizing the signs and symptoms of mental health can be a challenging space for volunteer chaplains who are in and around the team to varying degrees.
FSI is a group leading the way in creating content that helps those working in sports industry. Jordan also shared his future hopes for more CE through FSI:
I cannot encourage this class enough…for anyone working with athletes at all age levels. The class and professors are flexible and work with any schedule. The information given is helpful, current, not overly scientific or difficult to comprehend and can be put into use almost immediately in helping athletes develop good mental wellness.
Jordan Medas, reflecting on the FSI course work
I’d like to encourage you to financially support Soccer Chaplains United. A portion of every donation goes toward subsidizing and creating chaplaincy education and support. And your support of our work helps us to develop partnerships with other faith and sport groups for the betterment of our chaplains and the advancement of God’s Kingdom. You can make a gift through PushPay or mail a donation to Soccer Chaplains United, PO Box 102081, Denver, CO 80250.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/372263.jpg360640Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2022-02-15 10:00:002022-02-17 09:56:30Chaplaincy CE at Baylor’s Faith and Sports Institute
It has been awhile since I have undertaken the pastoral writing mode of the From the Rev genre. So much of my time is now spent in writing for podcasting and the production of such. But this past week Saint Martin of Tour’s feast day (Thursday, November 11 – also known as Veteran’s Day or Remembrance Day) is slowly starting to become a rhythm of rest for me as a chaplain. I usually take the day or couple of days surrounding 11 November to retreat and reflect on ministry and life. I call these times the Founder’s Retreat — Saint Martin being the “founder” of chaplaincy in the 4th century.
In certain spaces and epochs, chaplains and chaplaincy has been fraught with controversies and questions as to appropriateness, legitimacy, constitutionality, as well as methodology and much, much more. Different contexts, wherein a chaplain may exist, bring unique aspects of the arguments and concerns around validity of the chaplain — so much so that the chaplain often must dwell somewhere amidst the vocational tension of flourishing to non-existence. Hospital, military, sport, or other contexts each come with their own set of challenges.
Even amongst one’s “own,” the chaplain can be seen as second-class clergy. The chaplain has no parish, per se. The chaplain serves an ever changing people – no real flock or people of constancy, usually. The chaplain must straddle the sacred and secular divide much more so than the typical clergy person. There is a beauty in that but also a difficulty, as well. Different context have different requirements. For example, a hospital may require board certification and other post-seminary training regimens; meanwhile, the hospice down the road may require alot less. Different faith traditions latch on to chaplaincy with different endorsement and processes for credentialing and certifying. Some less developed and less formalized branches of religion may have minimal requirements for a chaplain to pass muster. Perhaps the muddling of the waters or approaches and attitudes of “anyone can be a chaplain” doom all chaplains to be considered less than the ordained clergy of the high church denominations.
Despite all the challenges the chaplain faces — from the secularized institutions where they serve to the dogmatized denominations from which they tend to emerge — the chaplain must not lose hope. The chaplain must find some way to salvage the heart and spirit of Saint Martin. Who, in the course of everyday life and duty, found some way to serve, found a way to cover and clothe a person in need; someone vulnerable, someone marginalized, someone unseen and forgotten by the surrounding world.
If I am honest, the past two years of my ministry of some 20+ years of ministry have been among the most difficult. I wonder how Martin dealt with the forced conscription into military service. Perhaps it felt like a mask or vaccination mandate back in those times. Martin was born during a time in which the Roman Empire was undergoing, yet again, more change. Constantine the Great was coming into power and he had begun reforming the empire before Martin’s birth. Christians were not brutally oppressed and persecuted as they once had been. Still, though, some things still remained — and because Martin’s father had served as a tribune (a senior officer) Martin was also forced to serve — no religious exemption existed.
There is debate around the period of time that Martin served as a soldier. Some accounts mark his service at 5 years, some longer. But a pivotal moment comes when Martin, after having been baptized, can no longer continue his military commission. It is said that with Julian coming to power, Martin, on the eve of a battle in Germany, refused his military pay and refused to submit to the authority of Julian (a non-Christian emperor) saying, “I am the soldier of Christ; it is not lawful for me to fight.” Charged with cowardice, Martin was put in prison. In response to the accusation, Martin offered to go to the front unarmed — however, the battle never happened as a treaty of peace occurred and Martin was discharged.
I would be curious how the end of Martin’s military service felt. Shame? His family had long been servants of Rome and privilege to the benefits afforded. Much to the chagrin of his father and mother, his military companions of whom he had fought alongside of — I imagine that it was not easy for Martin to leave such a life to exchange it for one of serving God and serving other people.
Martin leaves his military commission
Certainly, Martin’s life and story are likely romanticized. I only know Martin in a historical vacuum. Dependent upon loyal historians with an unascertainable bias — where is the line between fact and fiction? But we can see and note the changes that Martin went through — a potential rejection from his family because of his Christian faith and beliefs, a forced military service, a military retirement/discharge, a transition from career military to career clergy. Unlikely that such changes were any easier back then than they would be today.
And still, Martin serves. Still Martin takes the cloak off his own back — not just once, but time and time again. It is in this spirit that the chaplain must continue. The chaplain may face opposition from both sides — secular and sacred, and still we must salvage something of that heart of service that Martin offers as an example to us, an example which is borne out of the love of God. An example which perseveres in the midst of mandates and forced conscriptions. An example which carries forth in spite of questions of constitutionality and clerical authority which swirl around. An example which endures through tests of time and travail.
And God willing, we will do so,
Rev Brad
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/898px-Simone_Martini_028.jpg1079898Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2021-11-14 00:00:002021-11-22 07:59:51From the Rev: Salvaging St Martin
A number of results this past Wednesday night solidified the playoff destinies of teams where Soccer Chaplains United chaplains are serving.
In Major League Soccer, while my own Colorado Rapids lost to league-leading New England, Ben Dudley and Troy Ready’s Portland Timbers won 2-0 to clinch a spot. In the Eastern Conference Billy Cerveny’s Nashville SC won with a thrilling come-from-behind victory over Cincinnati to clinch a playoff place with a few games in the season remaining.
In the National Women’s League, Christina Garber’s Portland Thorns clinched the league shield (most points in the season) and will have the top seed for postseason play.
In the United Soccer League Championship, Soccer Chaplains United chaplains are serving six different teams. In the Mountain Division, with four teams, there will be a tense playoff battle which will either see Chaplain Isidro Piña’s Rio Grande Valley Toros or Clint Moore’s New Mexico United go through. Erick Jiménez’s El Paso Locomotive clinched the top division spot weeks ago and Kurt Trempert’s Colorado Springs Switchbacks recently secured a home playoff game. In the Pacific Division, Jubal McDaniel’s Tacoma Defiance are in striking distance, but need results to go their way and a win against division leader Phoenix, this weekend. Elsewhere, Greg Aydt’s Memphis 901 FC finally secured a spot with Wednesday night’s home victory.
On the college front, Kim Beach’s work with Trinity International University will see the last home game and senior night this weekend. TIU has stumbled a bit this season to a 3-13 record and with an ever-shifting landscape from the ongoing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, Kim’s work as chaplain will continue well into the offseason with the student athletes of TIU.
In High School, Greg Navitsky’s Valor Christian High School team advance out of the first round of the Colorado State High School playoffs with a 1-0 win over Doherty Wednesday night. Ryan Doyle’s boys team at Christ Presbyterian Academy play in the spring and Jordan Medas’ work in central Virginia is just getting going.
The extension of ministry due to the playoffs means that chaplains have more opportunities to serve and love and care for the athletes, coaches, staff, and families that they serve. More touch points and potentially some difficult places as teams flourish or fail — sometimes the failing places offering more space for a chaplain to represent God to people and to bring comfort in the midst of disappointment and loss.
Please keep our chaplains and their respective teams in your prayers.
Soccer Chaplains United is non-profit, 501(c)3 and depends upon the financial support of our partners to carry out our work of developing chaplaincy across all levels of soccer. Please consider making a contribution today to help us continue growing our work. You can text soccerchaplains to (833) 245-5091 to link through your mobile device or simply click the PushPay Logo on the bottom of the page below.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/g9sny0almf0.jpg7371600Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2021-10-29 00:00:002021-10-28 12:55:16Playoffs at Fever Pitch with Soccer Chaplains United Chaplains
Jordan Medas is a pastor. Jordan Medas is a bass player. Jordan Medas loves soccer. But more importantly, Jordan Medas (MEE-das) loves people and he loves to serve them — and he begins his tenure with Soccer Chaplains United poised and posed to do exactly that — to love people, especially people in soccer. Medas has recently joined Soccer Chaplains United and will be serving as chaplain to different soccer teams and communities represented in the Central Virginia region — where he and his family live, work, play, and call home. You can read more on his bio page here.
Jordan, Associate Pastor at The Lake of the Woods Church, has been serving the Young Families and newly formed Online communities of the church for the past four years, but his passion and heart for people in soccer has been an emerging point of emphasis.
Our church has a chaplaincy program and I started to look into what chaplaincy might look like for soccer and I came across Soccer Chaplains United.
Medas, on finding out about Soccer Chaplains United
A conversation in early 2019, led to Jordan and myself (Brad) looking into different opportunities and discussion what chaplaincy in soccer looked like. We also talked about the heart and mission of Soccer Chaplains United — not just to serve professional sports, but all levels of the game.
Jordan, shares a Liverppol FC moment with some of his kids.
Jordan’s children have been part of the Orange Fire club team and also the area’s school teams. Part of the passion to serve people has come from meeting and being part of these teams — with a variety of moments and opportunities to be “pastoral.”
A lot of the parents know that I am a pastor already, and that has led to conversations. Sometimes they will come and ask me to pray about something. Sometimes they may come to me with a struggle that they or their child are going through. Or, sometimes we just have everybody over to the house for a game and sharing some food. All of this started to stir in me looking for a way to serve them more.
Jordan’s background includes serving in public schools for a number of years teaching music — it was during that time that he began to feel a call to full-time vocational ministry. Prior to his teaching career, he traveled and played for a number of years as bassist and writer (among other things) for the band Carbon Leaf.
I’m looking forward to serving the soccer communities in Central Virginia and partnering with Soccer Chaplains United to offer the kind of care that is specific to the soccer players and their families.
Jordan, on his hopes for the future
We want to encourage our supporters to be praying for Jordan and the various opportunities that exist and will continue to arise in Central Virginia.
Jordan joining Soccer Chaplains United, brings the ministry’s chaplain corps back up to 17 chaplains. Jordan will serve in the Central Virginia region as a chaplain at-large for a number of different informal chaplain opportunities amongst various teams and organizations.
Soccer Chaplains United is non-profit, 501(c)3 and depends upon the financial support of our partners to carry out our work of developing chaplaincy across all levels of soccer. Please consider making a contribution today to help us continue growing our work.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/headshot.jpg15421091Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2021-06-28 06:00:002021-06-28 08:50:54Jordan Medas Joins Soccer Chaplains United
Chaplain Rubèn Rodríguez, the volunteer serving with me and with Colorado Rapids, closes this chapter with a heartfelt letter signaling his stepping away. Rubèn came to work with me after stepping in for a Rapids Development Academy Life Skills training night. I remember watching as he commanded the attention of the young boys that were gathered and we talked through a difficult issue of discrimination and some of the impacts on the game. Not long after, he agreed to come on board as chaplain for the DA and when Gerardo Alvarez, my assistant at the time, moved on, he helped me with first team duties as well.
Nicknamed the “preachers” by stadium security, me (left), Rubèn (middle) and Gerardo (right) get ready to lead a life skills session for the Rapids DA.
I asked Ruben to share a little bit about his time working with me, Soccer Chaplains United, and the Colorado Rapids. He shared a warm and heartfelt letter,
I am preparing to step out of my role with Soccer Chaplains United, serving the Colorado Rapids here in Denver.
In my time with SCU, I have felt proud to serve alongside Brad Kenney, and many of the SCU and Rapids’ staff. But the brightest and fondest memories of which I feel most proud, are the moments I got to spend alongside players from the Rapids Development Academy and First Team.
Whether it was meeting a player to talk through their personal and professional issues on and off the pitch, or just finding the time for a quick prayer before a game or important conversation, these small intermissions between games, practices, and daily life are the moments I will miss most. These fractional interruptions between and before whistles were where I often found the most joy and peace, and where true relationships seemed to form.
One of my very favorite memories came after the SCU staff had conducted a life-skills session at the stadium one evening. The players all rose, bound for the parking lot, but they took the time to line up and shake our hands before they left. A simple formality, yes. And anyone familiar with the sport will recognize its ritual as one that is often practiced between players on opposing teams before matches.
And yet this ritual is the crux of the memory: the shaking of hands is a show of respect, but even more so, of solidarity. It is an acknowledgement of same-ness, of respect for the mutual drive of sport and competition and passion for something much loved.
With this simple gesture, those young men helped form a bond between us that said, “You are like us, and we are like you.” And this solidarity was the basis for all conversation and relationship to come – it was the moment that made all others possible.
I am a writer by trade, and the demands on my time as both a commercial and creative writer have become such that it is no longer fair for me to split my time between SCU and my work. I am looking forward to spending more time on my craft and to creating better pieces for others to read and enjoy.
But I will deeply miss the SCU and Rapids families, and all the little moments that came with them. Though I will be stepping out of my position as chaplain, you’ll be sure to find me on some scorching afternoon or chilly October night, standing in the seats, watching the boys in burgundy play the beautiful game.
I hope to see you there.
Cheers.
I am sad to see Rubèn move on. I had shared with him that my hope would be that he might one day replace me as the lead person providing chaplaincy to the Rapids, but I am really hopeful that God’s call on Rubèn’s life for writing becomes a place of flourishing for he, Kayla, and his daughters.
I told Rubèn my favorite memory will forever be the “Rapids Faith Day Game” that never was — I will never forget I was out of town on business trip to visit one of our other chaplains and he called asking me where the Faith Night event setup was because he hadn’t been able to find anyone. Unbeknownst to me, the Rapids had canceled it last minute. Rubèn had wandered around the stadium for at least a good 30 minutes asking people about it before he called me. 😂😂
Rubèn, God bless you in your next endeavors and thanks for being part of the work and ministry these past few years.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/RubènRodríguez.jpg10611152Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2021-05-31 07:00:002021-05-24 18:03:39Rodríguez Ends Time with Heartfelt Letter
Jubal McDaniel serves as the Volunteer Chaplain to the Tacoma Defiance (USL-Championship) in Tacoma, WA. With a late-2020 placement and that coming in the middle of a pandemic, his first steps to serve the Defiance were put on hold as the team ended the 2020 campaign. The door was opened; however, for Jubal to get a brief introduction to the team via Zoom with two weeks remaining in the season. But, as is the case in USL, there is frequently a lot of change. The head manager moved on to a new opportunity, several athletes moved to other teams around the country and, in many ways, 2021 would be a bit of a re-start.
With the 2021 season quickly approaching, there was a sense of urgency to begin the season serving the team well. Given that the USL still has COVID protocols in place that limit in-person interactions, Executive Director Rev Brad Kenney and Jubal needed to work on a way to show hospitality to the team from somewhat of a distance. Jubal’s passion and hobby of roasting coffee combined with his longevity in the Tacoma area, paired nicely in developing an idea to create welcoming gift bags for the players, coaches and staff. The bags would serve to help introduce and remind players and staff of Jubal’s availability and role as chaplain to the team. In addition, Jubal was able to create some uniqueness for each bag as a way to celebrate the start of the new season and show support from a distance.
Jubal shared about some of the unique considerations as he put the project together,
I confirmed the list of names and coordinated the drop off with the Team Admin. The beauty of a gift bag is that it can be anything you want it to be. I like details, and so I made sure that the bags and ribbons were in team colors. I chose items that didn’t have any nuts, hand wrote a personalized note to each person, created labels with their name on it, and took care to not lick the envelopes. In fact, I created an assembly line and my kids helped me put the bags together! They loved it!
Jubal, on the season-opening gift bags
Many times in the lower divisions of soccer here in North America, those plying their trade do so at a greater expense and cost. Wages are lower. Contracts are shorter. It’s difficult to support families on the soccer income alone. Athletes, coaches, and staff are often traveling most of the year and living away from typical support structures and resources such as family and friends. It is in these moments that a gift and sign of hospitality can go a long way to showing care from a chaplain.
…these simple gift bags deeply impacted the team. I received numerous notes and messages from players and staff thanking for me for thinking of them.
Jubal, on the response to the gift-bags
One email Jubal received, recounted how the training session that morning was particularly hard. When the team walked into the locker room and saw the gifts — some have said the look on people’s faces was something to behold! Even though the chaplain cannot be physically present with the team at this time, these simple paper goodie bags helped solidify Jubal’s role, his reception and trust within the team, and will likely open new doors of relationship.
Soccer Chaplains United is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization that relies on the generous support of individual donors and church partners to carry out its work of chaplaincy in soccer.
You can support Jubal and his volunteer work with the Defiance. Select the Tacoma fund from our PushPay or by writing Tacoma in the memo section of a check and mailing it to Soccer Chaplains United.
You can give a safe, secure, electronic, tax-deductible gift via PushPay by clicking the button below or by texting soccerchaplains to 77977. You can also mail a donation to Soccer Chaplains United, PO Box 102081, Denver, CO 80250.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/IMG_3226.jpg640960Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2021-05-06 06:00:002021-05-05 15:24:57Hospitality A Hit as Tacoma Gift Bags Bring a Smile
Today marks the first day of Ramadan. Ramadan is a month-long fast observed by Muslim people. It can last 29 or 30 days (dependent upon lunar calendar) and during this time, adherents of Islam abstain from food, drink, sexual intercourse, and smoking from dawn to dusk. They are also to abstain from evil intentions and actions in a way that is to promote “a life of complete submission to the will of Allah.”1
In certain parts of the world, the fast of Ramadan can be difficult for those in football (soccer) to undertake especially here in the U.S. when our soccer leagues are just beginning. Sometimes the fast occurs in the middle of summer — especially difficult in places like Colorado, Texas, and other states where heat and humidity can have a massive impact on the physical drain that the fast can take on a person.
So how does a Christian organization like Soccer Chaplains United, with Christian chaplains, support athletes, coaches, and staff that believe and practice a different religion, such as Islam?
Club Advocacy
On way is that our chaplains look for opportunities to serve and be advocates for people of different religions during special times like Ramadan. While our chaplains are Christian, helping teams and clubs understand the nuances of different religions is a key role for the chaplain. Coaches or people in certain key roles (like an athletic trainer or medical staff) around the club may not have particular understanding of different faith requirements. A chaplain can help understand what the typical faith observances may be.
Chaplains can also help bring key people within a team together to better understand, support, and accommodate different people’s faith and belief requirements. Sometimes this may involve a compromise from the person. For example, some athletes in certain years have made requests for an allowance (from an Imam – Muslim clergy) to makeup days of the fast at different parts of the year (like the offseason) when their jobs and livelihood won’t be severely impacted by the physical demands.
Individual Assessment
Another key way that chaplains support people from different faith traditions is by understanding a particular individual’s desire to observe different parts of their faith. As is usually the case across many different faiths the level of devoutness or the particular observances varies from person to person. For example, a Catholic Christian may observe Ash Wednesday whereas a Baptist Christian believer may not. Chaplains must critically understand where an individual is in terms of their desire to observe or participate in certain practices or traditions of one’s faith.
Practical Provisions
A chaplain may also need to help provide certain things for people of different faiths the ability to practice their faith as it relates to football. For example, the chaplain may make arrangements with a particular team/club to designate a space or room for someone to practice their faith — Muslim prayers occur five times a day. Often, these prayer times can conflict with training or game times. Chaplains may also advise the club on making provisions (prayer rugs for example, or dietary accommodations) so that people can feel comfortable in the stadium or office environments.
Local Connections
An important way that chaplains help support people of different faith traditions is to help connect them to local faith community resources. Again, understanding an individual’s needs or desires is key, but the chaplain typically will have greater knowledge about local resources and different constraints — for example, traffic patterns or accessibility to particular parts of town where a synagogue or mosque or temple may be found. Chaplains can do work to build relationships with clergy members of different faith traditions to build trust or understand when and how to make particular referrals.
Personal Prayer
A final way that our chaplains can support people of different traditions is to personally pray alongside of them during important feasts, fasts, and faith observance moments. Chaplains can join in observance. For example, fasting lunch during the season of Ramadan to pray for peace between Muslim and Christians in the world.
We encourage the supporters of Soccer Chaplains United and our chaplains to being praying for Muslim people during this year’s fast of Ramadan. Pray especially for the athletes here in North America as the professional seasons for the various leagues are beginning. The fast which began at sundown on Monday, April 12 will end on Wednesday, May 12.
1: Taken from A Chaplain’s Companion by Judith C. Joseph, 2002.
Tonight at 7:00 pm Central, Rev Isidro Piña, volunteer chaplain to the Rio Grande Valley Toros FC of the United Soccer League — Championship division, will be leading a bilingual (Spanish and English) service with his church El Buen Pastor (United Methodist) which will air on Facebook Live. Click the link here to watch and participate in the service.
El Buen Pastor is located in Edinburg, Texas and Rev Isidro has been serving RGV Toros FC since 2018.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/IMG_1778-scaled.jpg14401920Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2021-04-01 16:33:362021-04-01 16:33:38Rev Isidro Piña to Lead Bilingual Maundy Thursday Service
Soccer Chaplains United has three different offerings during Holy Week for 2021.
Spy Wednesday — Betrayal | This week’s From the Touchline podcast with Rev Brad Kenney looks at betrayal in football and in the life of Jesus. Click here to listen.
Maundy Thursday | Join Soccer Chaplains United with Rev Billy Cerveny, Rev Brad Kenney and and some special guests as we look at Jesus’ foot-washing example from a unique angle and also celebrate Communion, or The Lord’s Supper, virtually. This virtual experience (approx. 20 min) is on our YouTube channel or on our website.
Good Friday | Join Soccer Chaplains United with Chaplain Ben Dudley, Rev Brad Kenney and a special short-feature video designed to help you reflect on the sacrifice of Jesus. This virtual experience (approx. 10 min) begins Friday at 12 am ET on our YouTube channel (Services playlist link) or on our website.
Don’t forget!
You can also download our app (SoccrChapUtd) in the App and Google Play stores to experience these offerings on your mobile device.
https://soccerchaplainsunited.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/icc4gi5xaj4-scaled.jpg12801920Brad Kenney/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/SCU_Seal_Logo-300x300.pngBrad Kenney2021-04-01 10:00:002021-04-01 10:08:50Holy Week Offerings — Maundy Thursday and Good Friday
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