Edges and Centers 8.7.2025
When I was a wee lad sports teams were built according to a fairly universal, predictable, and time-tested plan.
• Baseball=Strong up the middle.
• Basketball=Strong in the paint.
• Football=Strong inside running.
I’m not sure if there is any analysis of this phenomenon and it certainly has changed over the years. In the 21st Century, particularly in football and basketball the key is the edge rather than the middle. In an attempt to keep these sports contemporary there has been an unrelenting focus on scoring, at the expense of all else. Baseball is an odder duck because of the nature of the game. The defense has the ball and the older concept of strength up the middle from catcher to middle infielders to center fielder still seems to pertain. There is, however, a way that the pronounced move from the center to the edge pervades even baseball. We see it in terms of expectations for pitchers. Today the thought is that a “good” pitcher does a very few things well (speed and spin) and things like durability, grit, the ability to win with bad stuff—has all been shuttled aside for a new conception of the game. Any way you slice it there is no Wilt Chamberlin, Jim Brown, or Bob Gibson. Things are different. Purists would claim that they are not better. Just different.
Even the proclamation of the Gospel of Jesus Christ is constantly wrestling with this evolution. Whether public worship, leadership structure, or the preaching moment we are constantly tempted to reconsider what is most important and to swap the center for the edge. The constant question, not unlike the situation with contemporary sports is whether anything is gained. Is it better? Will it be more resilient? What have we lost?
Paul’s constant calibration
In his epistles Paul is constantly calibrating the work of Church leadership, whether local or his own delegates, to the work of maintaining a strong center against the ever-encroaching edges. A central reason for keeping things rightly aligned is that cultural and social elements tend to drive those change agents seeking to move the conversation from the periphery to the middle. This usually begins with the adaptation and adoption of an otherwise neutral tool from the culture and falling in freaking love with it. Every hoops squad wants to be able to shoot dependable outside shots and to use the 3-pointer as an advantage. Now it has now become the whole point. What were great, high-percentage shots are now scorned. Making that edge strategy the whole point has changed the nature of the game of basketball and the kinds of players who become superstars. The same is true of pitching. We now have hurlers who can reliably hit 100+ miles an hour. They never finish games and often have only a few seasons in their abused arms. When edge strategies supplant the center, the result is often change that redefines entirely the point of the organization. And friends, I’m not talking about the National League—I’m talking about Christ’s Church.
In a sense the entire point of 1 Corinthians is an argument for keeping the center secure in the face of edge encroachment. The things Paul addresses—good leaders, the purpose of marriage, use of spiritual gifting, theological drift, and economic disparity in a congregation—all are issues that should be dealt with in a well-rounded Christ-focused community. The problem in Corinth was that they kept moving edge issues into the center, losing track of the main purpose of the church.
Contemporary Observations
1. What is central must be constantly reinforced. “but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles,” (1 Corinthians 1:23 ESV). Allowing the culture or what other believers are doing to determine what is central is the recipe for disaster.
2. Not all issues are easily addressed. We should seek to provide information which is as simple as necessary.
3. The church can both be nimble and secure the center. Creative engagement in culture does not demand a shifting center. If it did, the Church would have been completely culturally assimilated generations ago.
4. Not everything that makes us uncomfortable must be immediately addressed as an evil. Paul said we preach Christ. Why not do so in word and deed, allow for the Spirit to move and see what happens?
5. We need to understand Scripture on its own terms and recognize that while universally true, there are issues that it does not address and that we will need to make some difficult calls.
Not all truths are equally important. Some require greater investment if they are to be learned. Some require greater diligence if they are to be applied. All require greater attention if they are to become habits.
The contemporary Church has spent too much time chasing its tail, allowing the center to weaken and the periphery to define both doctrine and preaching. Everything from COVID denial to Christian nationalism, to unbiblical preaching, and a vast morass of distractions and chaotic thinking flows from an inability to identify and stand upon the central doctrines of the faith.
It is not duct tape that will allow the center to hold but the weekly decision of preachers and teachers to make a clear distinction between edge issues and the center. If we fail at this we ultimately will preach, not Christ, but our own nightmares, fantasies, and delusions. We have two jobs. Maintain the center, call out heresy