Cage Fighting In The USA

Just finished watching the special, Cage Fighting in the USA, on Current TV. I wanted to take a moment and share my thoughts. I have to be honest and say I was nervous how my church was going to be presented when I saw the trailer. I was blown away by how positively they presented our church and our MMA ministry. So quickly my thoughts…

It was awesome. I loved seeing our worship pastor lead worship on national television. I loved seeing clips of all the fighters who are a part of our church. I loved the footage of Tim getting baptized. I loved that my dad was shown wearing a referee jersey.

Most of all, I love the way Jesus was represented. Our mission with Fight Pastor has always been to make Jesus look good. I think that happened.

I know the camera puts on 10lbs but after seeing that, I need to lose 20….

Also wanted to mention that Emma also attends our church. For whatever reason that was not shown in the special.

I want to thank Mariana van Zeller and Alex Simmons for presenting me and my church in a fair manner.

In case you missed it, here is the link.

Fight Pastor Insider

Tonight in about an hour a special called Cage Fighting in the USA will air. It is an hour long special about how MMA is becoming a mainstream sport in America. I was interviewed multiple times for this special. With all the media attention our Fight Pastor ministry has received over the years I have come to understand the misconceptions that arise. I figured I would address them before I have even seen the special.

To be honest, I have no clue how they are going to present me, our MMA ministry, or our church. In anticipation here is an inside glimpse at Canyon Creek Church, Fight Pastor, and me.

Relationship with Current TV:

This past summer I was approached by Current TV about a special that was going to focus on faith and mixed martial arts. They wanted to focus on our local ministry and some fighters that were in our church. This request came right after the fighters in the picture above got baptized. I agreed to do the interview.

The film crew flew out and spent the weekend interviewing several fighters who attend my church. They also filmed our church service and then interviewed me after church. Several months later they came back and filmed at our church again. After that service they interviewed me along with one of our fighters. At that particular time the fighter shared with me some news about a life altering decision he was making. I had no previous knowledge of his decision, which I still believe is a very bad idea. His decision was sprung on me while the cameras were rolling.

I love Tim. I ignored the cameras and ministered to him as I would have had they not been in the room. I was very candid. I have no clue how that will be portrayed. Just be aware that Tim and I met for about an hour. I love Tim. I believe in Tim. I also believe there is a battle going on for his life. As his pastor I will fight for him, just as I would for anyone else in my church. I hope that is accurately portrayed.

What about turning the other cheek?

After any interview I get bombarded by people who are shocked that I am involved in MMA. They quote Matthew 5:39 and say Jesus said to turn the other cheek.

I believe in the principle of turning the other cheek. If someone wrongs you. Don’t return evil with evil. Don’t wrong them back. If someone lies about you. Don’t respond by lying about them. If someone offends you. Don’t offend them back. Be the bigger person. Turn the other cheek.

This has NOTHING to do with MMA. MMA is a sport! It has regulations. It has rules. It is a combat sport. I have no issue with an MMA fight within the confines of a sanctioned event. I am not for professionally trained MMA fighters getting into a fight outside of a sanctioned event. Just as I am not for an NFL player getting into a fight in a bar. Or a hockey player picking on someone outside of a shopping mall.

MMA is a sport. A combat sport but a sport. I grew up loving boxing. My loved for boxing has evolved into a love for MMA. I grew up loving watching Mike Tyson fight. I still have the Kid Dynamite Sports Illustrated issue. I now love watching Anderson Silva fight.

Are you a fighter?

This is the biggest misconception people have about our Fight Pastor ministry. They think I am a pastor who fights. No, I am a pastor who ministers to fighters. I do not, nor will I ever compete in Mixed Martial Arts. I am a 40 year old man with 3 kids and a bad shoulder. My opportunity to compete passed by me long before the first UFC event.

So I am a pastor who enjoys watching MMA and loves people. My love for people and MMA has allowed me to minister to a great number of fighters. I am their pastor.

Do you have fights at your church?

No, we do not have live, actual fights at our church. We could never insure such an event. We do, on occasion, pay for the licensing rights and show a pay-per-view UFC event on a Saturday night for the community. We haven’t done this for awhile though. Our next scheduled event is in January.

So what is Fight Pastor then?

Fight Pastor is our chaplaincy ministry to mixed martial artists. Fighters have coaches, managers, promoters, and trainers. Those individuals do a great job training the fighter and managing his career. But who helps with their spiritual life? Who helps them when they are struggling with something in their life? Who steps in when they are having marriage issues? That is where we come in. We have no desire to manage or promote fighters. We are simply here to support fighters. We are here to meet the spiritual needs of fighters.

We attend their fights. Pray for them before their fights. We support them win, lose, or draw after their fights.

So you have a church of fighters?

No! We have a church with fighters in it. Most of those fighters are married and work other jobs. They attend our church along with 800 other people. I consider it one of the greatest privileges of my life to pastor Canyon Creek Church. Our church has many different ministries to our community, our MMA ministry is just one of them.

Final Thought:

I am not sure how you feel about MMA. I am not sure how you feel about a pastor being involved in MMA. If you have a personal conviction to the contrary, I don’t have a problem with that. I unapologetically enjoy MMA. I unapologetically love people. Those two passions have grown into a pretty cool ministry for me. We call that Fight Pastor.

Here are a couple other blogs I have written that might interest you:

Fighters Who Love Jesus

Breaking the Silence

Never Back Down 2

I recently rented the movie Never Back Down 2 The Beat Down from the Red Box. There are very few things that I would ever complain about paying $1 for, such as tap water, candy bars, chewing gum, stamps and now this movie.

I bought the first Never Back Down movie for $4 in a back alley flea market in Central Mexico; I liked it because it was a Mixed Martial Arts version of The Karate Kid. My expectations and excitement levels were as high as Lindsay Lohan on the freeway.

The first thing that drew me to this awful movie was the director/actor Michael Jai White. Most people would think of the guy who played Spawn in the movie from 1997, not me. My mind flashed back twenty years and I got him confused with Jaleel White, the kid who played Urkel in the show Family Matters.

Once I realized I wasn’t going to watch Urkel catch someone with a flying knee-bar, the movie went down hill faster than the Georgian Luge team.

*************Spoiler Alert**************

Four strapping young lads all wind up training under Case, a former World Champion who now lives in a motor home in a lumber yard, or maybe a garbage dump, or shipping yard, it wasn’t important. Each of these young men share a difficult past, as well as a lack of body hair. There is Mike, a former All-State wrestler who is angry at his dad for leaving his mom for another man. Word of this gets out and he often  gets picked on about it which causes him to fight angry. Zack is a former boxer who is forced out of the sport due to partially detached retinas, so he decides to train for an underground, unsanctioned MMA tournament as a safe alternative. Justin is a long haired, dorky kid who works at a comic book store. One night he is walking home when he is attacked by three bullies. After they stab him, he stumbles across Case’ “training camp” which is a pull-up bar, a punching bag, and a section of carpet set up next to his RV. Justin has all the anger issues of being picked on his whole life and does not know how to channel that energy so he lashes out. He is later kicked out of the dojo for brutally attacking those hooligans who beat him up in the beginning of the movie. The last fighter we meet is Tim, or Ted, who cares, his name isn’t important. He is played by former UFC fighter Todd Duffee. He is the giant with the heart of gold. One night while waiting for his mom to get off her shift at the strip club, he stops a fight and is offered a job as the security chief on the spot. He agrees to take the job as long as the boss fires his mom so she doesn’t have to work there anymore. I’m not really sure why that scene was in the movie.  I met Todd Duffee in Las Vegas before his fight with Mike Russow. I asked him to say “Hi this it Todd Duffee, check out FightPastor.com” into a camera. He looked at me, looked at the camera and said “NO!” Come to think of it, Rampage did the exact same thing to me. After I wiped the big boy tears away I went out and got plenty of other fighters to talk to the camera and make me feel validated as a man.

The think I did not like about the movie, besides not having Urkel, is that they only show 3 angry kids with troubled pasts training for an underground unsanctioned fight.

Real MMA takes a lot more training and discipline than these movies are willing to show.  Some of the best fighters in the world are college educated family men who don’t live to fight but rather they fight to live. I believe the Warrior had the best depiction of a true MMA fighter who  is played by Joel Edgerton, a teacher with a wife and kids who is fighting to keep his house. Movies like Never Back Down make MMA look like human cock-fighting which is one of the main reasons it has taken so long to become what it is today. The only good thing about the movie, besides the 2 minute scene with Not-Urkel practicing Karate with Lyoto Machida for no reason at all, is the fact that Eddie Bravo was brought in to help with the jiu jitsu to make it look more believable. There were some great submissions in the movie.

If you are looking for a movie to watch and feel great about yourself, watch the Care Bears movie because Never Back Down 2 left me wanting less.

UFC 136 Predictions

I am currently traveling with a group from my church around Israel. This trip has been inspiring and moving. I wouldn’t change anything about it (other than than the bad falafel I ate). If I was any where else in the world I would be bummed I wasn’t in Houston to be a part of this incredible fight card.

I will be wandering around Jerusalem during the actual fights but here are my fight predictions none the less.

Steve Cantwell by decision over Mike Massenzio

Aaron Simpson by decision over Eric Schafer

Tiequan Zhang by 2nd round submission over Darren Elkins

Joey Beltran by 2nd round TKO over Stipe Miocic

Jeremy Stephens by split decision over Anthony Pettis

Demian Maia by 2nd round submission over Jorge Santiago

Melvin Guillard by 1st round KO over Joe Lauzon

Leonard Garcia by split decision over Nam Phan

Chael Sonnen by decision over Brian Stann

Jose Aldo by 3rd round TKO over Kenny Florian

Gray Maynard by decision over Frank Edgar

I will be checking the results via MMA Junkie once I have some time. Let me know what you think. How did I do? Did the Holy Land inspire me with my picks or not?

UFC 132 Predictions

It seems like the UFC has a fight card every weekend now. It is hard to keep up. This Saturday’s UFC 132 event is debatably the most stacked card this year. Great fights from top to bottom. Several intriguing subplots, not the least of which is Tito Ortiz. Are we about to witness Tito’s last UFC fight or will he pull off a Rocky Balboa type comeback? We find out on Saturday!

So with a diet Cherry Coke in hand and Escape From L.A. as ambient noise in the background. (By the way, the events in Escape From L.A. take place in 2013. Be prepared like my mom and have a bottle of water and a can of food in the trunk of your car, just in case.) My picks for UFC 132.

Jeff Hougland by 3rd round submission over Donny Walker

Anthony Njokuani by decision over Andre Winner

Aaron Simpson by decision over Brad Tavares

Brian Bowles by 2nd round submission over Takeya Mizugaki

George Sotiropoulos by 1st round submission over Rafael dos Anjos

Melvin Guillard by 2nd round TKO over Shane Roller

Dennis Siver by 2nd round KO over Matt Wiman

Carlos Condit by 2nd round KO over Dong Hyun Kim

Ryan Bader by 3rd round TKO over Tito Ortiz

Chris Leben by 2nd round KO over Wanderlei Silva

And in the main event, for the bantamweight championship….

Urijah Faber by 5 round decision over Dominick Cruz

So what do you think? Let me know if you agree or disagree.