Friends in the soccer ministry community, just passing along an opportunity, here. Please see below:
As part of our community initiatives, Soccer Chaplains United would like to make people aware of this free webinar on the subject of college soccer recruiting. The webinar will be hosted by Bill Bufton, the Assistant Athletic Director and College Recruiting Coordinator at Valor Christian High School in Colorado.
Bill Bufton will be hosting the recruiting webinar with Jennifer Thomas, former soccer coach at Cal-Berkeley, specifically geared to soccer players on April 16. The webinar is FREE. All you have to do is click the link and register. This is open to all players and families.
Soccer Recruiting Webinar
Topic: Making Sense of College Soccer Recruiting w/ Jennifer Thomas
Date/Time: Monday, April 16 @ 7pm Pacific Time (8:00 pm Mountain Time)
Registration Link: https://vcs.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_JrgZvHx8TBKvOUVSF4iuVw
Description
Jennifer “JT” Thomas will be presenting on student athletes and the college process. As a former college soccer coach at CAL and current college counselor, JT will provide insights into the recruiting process for all divisions of college soccer. JT’s experience as a college soccer player, commentator for the Women’s Professional Soccer league, high school athletic director and current competitive soccer coach gives her a unique perspective on both sides of the student athlete college search.
More About JT:
JT earned a BA from UC Berkeley in PEIS (Political Economy of Industrial Societies) and her MA and secondary teaching credential in Education from Stanford University. She spent the next several years teaching, coaching, and acting as Athletic Director at the high school level. JT returned to Berkeley to coach the Division I CAL Women’s Soccer team for eleven seasons, commentate for the women’s professional soccer league, and coach Olympic Development Teams. Wanting to return to her high school roots, she pursued a Certificate in College Advising from UC Extension. JT is now a college counselor in addition to coaching her son’s competitive travel soccer team. She also chairs NACAC’s Student Athlete Advisory Committee.
A principle value of Soccer Chaplains United is to connect communities to provide meaningful service for soccer. Midwest based Sports Crusaders is forming three teams of college athletes to travel to Ukraine this summer to teach children about soccer and salvation. Soccer Chaplains United is reaching out to athletes who may be interested in joining one of these teams. If this appeals to you, find the contact information for Sports Crusader representatives at the bottom of the included information.
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A final few thoughts from my time in Costa Rica. One day, after our work time, we all jumped in the ocean. The waves were hug! The riptide, though, was pulling us further and further down the beachfront and out to sea. I reflected to the team and on the Valor Discovery blog and I want to share that reflection with you here:
Not many of you know me. I was born in Denver, but grew up in Arizona. My grandparents lived in Laguna Nigel, CA for several years and I have many fond memories of the beach and the ocean. I learned early how to body surf and boogie board and I love playing in the ocean.
Now, I was a bit disappointed to miss out on all the big beach days for the trip (I joined Sunday afternoon and left Friday). But the moments we did get to jump into the ocean were refreshing and fun after a long, hard, hot day at work.
One of the days we were all out playing the ocean there was particularly strong riptide. If you don’t know what a riptide is, it’s a strong tide or current that is particularly dangerous because it can pull you out to sea. This particular riptide was pulling everything sideways up the beach and if you didn’t pay attention, you oddly find yourself not only out to sea, but far from your original insertion point.
The team was having a blast because the waves were huge and crashing down on everyone, but the riptides kept pulling us further and further away.
We gathered the students in and pointed out what was happening.
We setup a boundary — play, have fun, enjoy the waves, but stay aware of your surroundings. When you see you’ve been pulled to this point, get out and walk along the beach back to the other boundary line.
It seemed silly at first, but it was safe.
God, in many ways has marked out similar boundary lined in his Word, the Bible.
There are strong, dangerous currents — ways in which the world is trying to pull you, me, and our children out into an overwhelming sea. God acts as lifeguard — He lays down a boundary line for our safety and protection and in the times when we are nearly swept away He is able to save.
As parents, you and I have been entrusted, for the time that our children are in our homes and under our stewardship and care to help them understand the marking out of the boundaries. To help encourage awareness of their surroundings. To help remind them that sometimes they need a break from being out in the ocean where waves can engulf and knock one off their feet.
I pray that we will not take this task lightly and that this powerful lesson, learned from a Costa Rican riptide could be firmly planted into your son and daughter’s minds as they navigate the sea of life with Jesus.
Pura Vida,
Rev
So, one of the more interesting parts of Costa Rica and our time there was seeing the many different animals in the wild. Not usual for someone from Colorado! Sleeping bats in the morning hut where we did devotions. Monkeys dropping mangos on to cars in the hotel parking lot to break them open for a mid-morning snack. Gila monsters crossing the road. Gecko lizards in the luggage and more!
One of my favorite moments was seeing a stick bug who had found one of our green walls to have a similar color to a tree. Such a small and fragile feeling creature. An amazing wonder and complement to God’s created world. I literally thought a small twig or branch had fallen across the fresh paint of one of our walls, and yet it moved!

But that wasn’t to be all! The last night that I was with the team (Thursday) I decided to take a shower before heading out for dinner. The rest of the team was down at the beach to watch the sky after sunset. Ahh the peace and quiet of a room all to myself!
Then — pinch!
Ouch! Must be a muscle tweak from all the hard work today.
Pinch.
Ahh! I must be getting old.
And then, pinch!
What is going on?
I turned my towel over to reveal another of Costa Rica’s critters. I snapped my towel in surprise and he happened to land on the shower curtain as pictured below.

Yes, folks, that’s a scorpion!
I loved it when Coach Brian Shultz walked in and asked if I had any last requests. A team member said, “I remember when I had my last meal with my best friend.” Comforting words to be sure.
Team doc kept his eyes on me that night just to make sure.
What was even more fun was when we returned from dinner that night. The body of the crushed scorpion was missing. This put all the young lads in the room into a bit of panic. It wasn’t until a couple of red fire ants sauntered into the bathroom for a late night snack that we realized they had probably taken up a scorpion take-out order for dinner!
Driving through some of the towns and villages in Costa Rica, it was amazing to see some things which stood out. Namely, the cancha fields. Here in the midst of tin roof buildings on the side of a road would be a beautiful turf field with lights and netting. “Cancha” in Spanish means court. The small-sided field would host a 5 v. 5 match. Games were fast-paced. The ball, more like a futsal ball, had less bounce and a softer feel. (I know because one hit my face!)
After several hours at the work site, our Valor Discovery Team made up of members of the boys and girls soccer team at Valor Christian High School would play small-sided games against local teams from the surrounding towns. After the games, which would sometimes feature a mixing of the players in order to build relationships, the Valor team would hand out soccer cleats. Several of the Ticos only had tennis shoes to play in and no studs. They would gather around the bags and say which number or size they would like to try on.

With a beautiful Costa Rican sunset in the background, the team poses before starting to play a small-sided game in “La Cancha.”
On one night, the team leaders were invited to mix-in and play with the students before the local teams showed up. Reluctantly, I got situated in goal. Goalkeeper. Great. There was a slight fear and trepidation in me as I had seen how hard some of the student athletes had fired the ball on their local opponents. To be honest, I did better than I thought I would and it was fun to engage with the students in this way.
I did make a “Scott Sterling” type of save with my face and took some studs in the thigh, but tried to hold my own.
The redemptive nature to our time in the evenings was in the relationship building and the provision of soccer gear to those who had so very little. A goalkeeper with duct tape to hold his gloves together. A player with holes in his cleats. Another wearing shoes too small. Another with shoes too big for him.
We are not possessors. We are not consumers. We are stewards.
As Christian people, when we realize that everything we have has been given to us by God, we realize that we are called to steward what we have. We are not possessors. We are not consumers. We are stewards. The new and slightly used boots (cleats) that we would give away at the end of the night might be regarded as garbage or unusable in American culture, but here, they became prized possessions.

I met Josef the first night — a spry, goalkeeper he found a pair of boots (cleats) that fit him just right.
But more important than a new pair of boots or gloves, is showing the love of Jesus. Many of these young people come from homes broken. Many have little in this world to call their own. I heard one story of a flood last year. As the waters rose, a young man we were playing with put all of this prized possessions into his hammock some 5 feet off the ground — a pair of cleats, a ball, and a jersey out of the floodwaters. Everything else was ruined or washed away.
The Bible says,
Better is one day in your courts
than a thousand elsewhere;
I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God
than dwell in the tents of the wicked.
The cancha fields of Costa Rica are not the reason why Valor went down to Costa Rica. Rather, it was to introduce those that we played with and against to a heavenly court, God’s court. And while many might appreciate the beauty of a nicely laid out, turf field there is a better place where we can run, and live, and breathe. An eternal place.
The third stop over on my recent 10-day business trip was in Costa Rica. The Valor Boys and Girls Soccer Teams had a Discovery Trip. Discovery is a program through Valor Christian High School that gives students experiences serving others around the world. This particular trip combined members from the boys and girl’s teams. The students and leaders worked during the day to build two homes. After a short break in the afternoon, the students would then dress and get ready to play small-sided soccer games against local Ticos (Costa Ricans) or to host soccer camps and clinics for children in the different towns and villages.
As the chaplain for the boys soccer team, one of my roles on the trip (besides a lot of lifting and painting) was to help add spiritual insight and guidance to the team. As team members were confronted with issues of poverty, language and cultural barriers, and spiritual issues I was there to help guide conversation and encourage students to see the greater spiritual realities beyond what was plainly visible.
Below is an excerpt of something I shared with team members, one particular evening after a tough couple days of work on the casas (houses),

The truck in the background hauls off our broken concrete mixing machine and Team Fuego smiles and soldiers on!

Our wall building team took some time, but soon learned how to work well together.

Manuel (background with red shirt) was overlooking each team and making sure we got it right.

The Valor Girls rocked the paint crew. They even made up a little song about me! Link to come…:)

Team Fuego pauses for a picture before putting up that last exterior walls of the house.
Timothy Project: One Child Matters will travel to Honduras in April to visit four of their Centers in Choluteca and other locations. The partnership between Soccer Chaplains United and One Child Matters (OCM) is just beginning thanks to Soccer Chaplains United’s Kurt Trempert.
Chaplain Kurt Trempert of the Colorado Springs Switchbacks suggested to One Child Matters, also based in Colorado Springs, representatives to request soccer gear from Soccer Chaplains United for their upcoming trip to Honduras. One Child Matters staff will travel to four Centers run by the organization. In each Center, there are over 200 children served. The Choluteca Center serves children primarily under 10 years of age.
One Child Matters serves children in extreme poverty. The organization does this in two ways, Hope Centers or Partner-Based Schools. Hope Centers work with local evangelical churches within the community to provide holistic services and activities. OCM works with the local church community so that the children w
ill grow within their own cultural context. Partner-Based Schools provide a formal education recognized by the local governments. OCM is not seeking to westernize the children, nor does it promote a particular cultural mindset or create a state of dependence.
Soccer Chaplains United is pleased to come alongside this organization. One Child Matters has requested soccer gear that would impact around 800 children. For each Center, OCM would like to be able to outfit players with jerseys, shorts, cleats, shin guards, balls, cones and some goalkeeper gloves. While Soccer Chaplains United cannot supply all 800 children with gear, we will make sure each location has some to share.
To support Timothy Project: One Child Matters Honduras, 2018 or future Timothy Project ventures please donate through PushPay — simply select Timothy Project from the selectable funds to contribute to. Your financial gift helps us purchase new soccer equipment, sponsor an individual or organization in an outreach effort, and to cover associated costs of providing Bibles, soccer equipment, and other outreach tools locally and around the world!
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This past Sunday, the Valor Costa Rica Discovery Team gathered to pack for the trip. All of the collected soccer gear had to be crammed into bags and distributed as the team prepares to head down to Costa Rica. While there, the team will build a couple of homes and host a number of soccer camps and clinics.
Parents and families of the team members came later to pray over and commission the team before leaving. After listening to many of the leaders share about the trip, I offered a brief reflection from Isaiah 58, and specifically verses 11 & 12 as an encouragement:
The Lord will guide you continually,
giving you water when you are dry
and restoring your strength.
You will be like a well-watered garden,
like an ever-flowing spring.
Some of you will rebuild the deserted ruins of your cities.
Then you will be known as a rebuilder of walls
and a restorer of homes.
With the poverty that exists in Costa Rica, students and team leaders will have a great opportunity to repair and rebuild — more than brick and mortar, but relationships with God.
The Valor team made a request to us for gear and through Soccer Chaplains United’s Timothy Project, we were able to provide the following:
- 40 soccer balls

Costa Rica items packed and ready to be delivered!
- 90 jerseys
- 100 pairs of socks
- 14 pairs of cleats
- 144 cones
- 100 sliders
- 10 whistles
If you want to follow the team’s progress visit the team’s travel blog.
Below are some photos from the packing day.

Over 30 bags of soccer gear!

It took nearly 3 hours to sort, clean, and pack.

Boots had to be sorted, cleaned and banded together.

There were a lot of soccer balls to deflate.
Timothy Project: Valor Christian High School, Kolkata, India 2018. A vision was cast years ago by a Valor Christian High School Discovery team that has taken root and is beginning to become a reality. The next team of students and teachers to travel to the slums of Kolkata will continue to grow the boy’s soccer program with the dream of establishing a fully sustainable soccer club.
Valor alumni, teachers and students desire to reach the boys of the slum with the gospel message. This is challenging, and retaining them is even more challenging. John DeYoung, a Valor teacher, came up with an idea that could help solve the dilemma, a soccer program.
About three years ago, one Valor Christian Alumni asked how he could help the boys in the slums. I had mentioned a soccer program would be huge for the boys, since it is a little more difficult to get the boys involved with Christ in the slums.
Momentum Global has been working in the area for many years, it has established schools and churches. Valor partnered with Momentum Global and the soccer program is becoming a reality. The first Soccer Training Team program is up and running, a collective effort between Valor and Momentum Global. DeYoung shared,
The adult soccer program has been going on now for about seven months, and we have 20 young men involved, and we have seen such growth mentally, physically and spiritually.
The Discovery Trip team that will travel to Kolkata will join with a Valor alumnus who is living in the area and working to establish the program. He is partnered with three professional Indian soccer coaches.
Our goal is to develop young men of faith through soccer in the slums. We believe that strong men of faith can change a culture and community. We eventually would like to create a fully sustainable soccer program where the children enter our program to hear the gospel and train hard.
To support Timothy Project: Valor Kolkata, India 2018 or future Timothy Project ventures please donate through PushPay — simply select Timothy Project from the selectable funds to contribute to. Your financial gift helps us purchase new soccer equipment, sponsor an individual or organization in an outreach effort, and to cover associated costs of providing Bibles, soccer equipment, and other outreach tools locally and around the world!
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