From the start in San Francisco there were high
expectations, and by all accounts Barry was a failure. He was booed and
criticized by fans frustrated with his string of yearly sub-par performances.
He struggled for years as the highest paid pitcher on the team, yet with the
worst record. He hit bottom in 2010 when he was left off of the team’s World
Series roster. He watched from home while his teammates went on to win the
championship without him. Fueled by
millions of dollars in salary, the expectations of thousands of fans and the
merciless media were on his shoulders. It looked like the pressure would crush
him. He was injured in a car accident
and had a recurring foot injury that wouldn’t heal. He was replaced as a
starter on the Giants. And Barry began
looking for answers and God was there. Even though Barry had previously rejected
Christ as a valid option in his life, Jesus graciously began to set him on a
course of restoration. Barry began the 2012 season with renewed hope and
determination, and also a new life surrendered to Christ.
And what a turnaround. His first game of the season was a
7-0 shutout. He won 14 games straight to finish the season and lead the Giants to
the playoffs. In game 5 of the National League Championship, he pitched what he
would call “the best game of my career” bringing the Giants back from the edge
of elimination. In two years he went from watching the World Series from the
sidelines to being handed the ball to start Game One of the most important game
of his life. And he won that game, opposite the best pitcher in the league for
the Tigers. He left the game to a standing
ovation. He inspired a Twitter hashtag #rallyzito
which trended worldwide. The guy who had become the biggest punch-line, was now
the team’s biggest punch-out. Restored to his proper place of a valued and
respected player, he walked off the world series mound to a standing ovation of
cheering, adoring fans. That was an incredible moment of redemption. A career
rescued from the ashes. A life given a second chance. And the once vilified was
now reconciled to a city and team that had all but given up and turned their
backs on him.
It’s not just a feel-good story. It’s the real-life triumph
of a man newly surrendered to Christ, who finds that God has the power to make
all things new and to bring reconciliation among even the most hopeless
situations. That’s our God. And I couldn’t be happier that I get to see
restoration and reconciliation lived out in high-definition clarity on a
baseball team that I love.
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