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Sam Bender has spent 50 years praying with professional ball players.
He says rubbing elbows with some of the greats is a dream come true for a kid with a
lifelong love of the game.
People said, "Whenever you saw Sammy smiling,
you knew he had a baseball glove."
My whole year revolved around sports.
That’s kind of been true my whole life.
Growing up in the ‘40s, Sam spent most of his time on a ball field or in church.
But he says he didn’t have a relationship with God until he was 25
and attended a Youth for Christ meeting.
The man was speaking about sin.
"All have sinned and come short of the glory of God."
And I said to myself, "That can’t mean me, because I’ve got all these ribbons;
I went to Sunday school and didn’t miss a Sunday for 12 years.
I lived in the church,”
But you know, it was haunting me because it said "all,"
that meant Sam too. And that was a struggle for me.
And they gave the invitation at the end to receive Christ
and I thought, "Sam, the fight’s over with." And I literally ran up the aisle
and, I made my profession of faith and received Jesus as my Savior in that meeting.
And that was the beginning of an exciting, fabulous journey.
Sam started teaching a Sunday school class. That soon led to running a street ministry
in downtown Toledo. Then, at a Billy Graham conference, Sam met the man who would change
his life forever, sportswriter Watson Spoelstra. And we hit it off (snaps fingers) just
like this. And so, everything that was going on in Detroit, he’d let me know,
Spoelstra’s influence and Sam’s love of sports led to friendships with top athletes of the day.
Many were Christians, including Bobby Richardson and Bill Glass.
Sam learned from Glass that for an athlete on the road, faith was sometimes a challenge.
He was bemoaning the fact that he couldn’t go to church on Sunday morning
a little bit, you know, boy it's tough. And before we finished our meal he said, "You know, Bender,
I got an idea. Why don’t we have our own church? Why don’t we have our own chapel?’”
So Watson pitched an idea for a national chapel system to baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn.
Within three years, all 26 major league teams had baseball chapel programs.
And I jumped on it.
As a full time baseball chaplain, Sam traveled
the country, recruiting speakers and player representatives for the teams. One player who stepped
up to the role of chapel team leader was Reggie Jackson.
And I got to the park early. I walked in the Yankee clubhouse
and the only person in there is Reggie Jackson.
He'd just been trader, they just had acquired him; and he’s a lightning rod. Reggie’s
a lightning rod, Well, the bus comes and all the guys are coming in,
and I’m excited and I’ve got 15 minutes and I’m cranking.
And when I finished, I said, "Guys, we got two minutes.
Do you have any prayer requests?"
Reggie said, "Yeah, I’ve got a prayer request.
Pray for this miserable, unhappy ball club."
And I said, ‘I’m going to take 60 seconds
of our two minutes and have absolute quiet. And I want each one of you to examine your
hearts and if you’ve got problems with somebody, I want you to ask God to forgive you and in
your heart have some reconciliation."
That was the longest minute in my life; just
sat there quiet and the ballplayers were all sitting there. And I said, "All right, I
sense that God’s speaking to some hearts. Let’s pray." And I prayed for the team,
that there’d be reconciliation and that they could go out and have a great year.
They did have a good year. In fact, at the end of that season, in 1977, the Yankees won
the World Series! Sam doesn’t know exactly how they went from rock bottom to the top,
but he believes that unity in prayer was part of the process.
I’ve been around people, kings and princes and ball players and all kinds of people who’ve
bent their knee and said, "Lord Jesus, come into my heart. Forgive me of my sin and be
my savior," and whose lives have been changed. When you think about it, God, a loving God
who loves us desperately, regardless of who we are, what you’ve done, He loves us.
There’s a battle out there all the time. But Jesus is there, lovingly, wanting to give
us a joy-filled, happy, fulfilled life. Don’t be afraid;
don’t be afraid to give your heart to Jesus.”