Building Gospel Culture

You may never preach from a pulpit, but every practice, every locker room, every sideline is your platform.
As public school coaches, you walk a line: you can’t preach, but you can live the Gospel. Through your character, conversations, and care, you reflect Christ. And when athletes lean in or open up? That’s your moment to point to the Source of your hope.
You don’t need a microphone, you need faithfulness. Let’s talk about what it means to be Gospel-carriers in one of the most influential roles in a student’s life.
Devo:
Your influence opens hearts, but the Gospel transforms them.
As a coach, you are a culture creator. Every whistle, word, and decision shapes not just skill, but identity. Practice may not start off with the verse of the day, but the way you lead and love can prepare the soil of a young person’s heart for Jesus. It’s not about having all the answers. It’s about pointing them to the One who does.
At FCA, we use The FOUR as a simple way to share the Gospel:
- God Loves You
- Sin Separates You
- Jesus Rescues You
- Will You Trust Jesus?
Even if you can't explicitly teach this in your role, you can reflect it in your team culture.
What does Gospel culture look like on a team?
- Belonging: You are loved here, not because you earn it, but because it’s given.
- Grace: Everyone makes mistakes. We own them,and we move forward together.
- Redemption: You always have the choice to return. To return to what matters. To return to love.
When you lead with this kind of culture, your team becomes a reflection of the Gospel story even before it’s spoken out loud. And when they ask why, you’ll be ready to share the Who.
Scripture Focus
- Romans 10:14 (CSB): “How, then, can they call on him they have not believed in? And how can they believe without hearing about him? And how can they hear without a preacher?”
- 2 Corinthians 5:20 (CSB): “Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, since God is making his appeal through us. We plead on Christ’s behalf: Be reconciled to God.”
- Acts 8:35 (CSB): “Philip proceeded to tell him the good news about Jesus, beginning with that Scripture.”
Coach’s Reflection
- The Window: Your athletes trust you. They look up to you. Like any offense, we look for the opening. God’s placed you in their lives to share hope, not just to develop skill.
- The Word: Philip didn’t give a lecture. He listened, opened Scripture, and pointed to Jesus.
- The Witness: You don’t have to preach. You just have to share. Start with your story. God does the heart work, you do the story-telling.
Challenge for the Week
- Do you have an intentional culture within your program? Is it Gospel-centered?
- Have you prayed for God to transform the hearts of your players?
- Would you be ready if a student asked, “Coach, what do you believe?”
- This week, try using The FOUR to to think through your story, how would you share it with someone?
Don’t assume they know. Be ready when they ask.
Billings FCA Coaches







