What  

A Team Huddle is a targeted study within a unique individual team setting/environment that encourages and challenges team members to live and compete according to biblical principles.

The Team Huddle can be organized to include one or both of the following elements:

  • Weekly Team Devotion – organized to occur around practice times or whatever works best for the team schedule.
  • Team Chapel – A game-day gathering designed for athletes and coaches to experience a time of spiritual devotion and fellowship.

Where  

The best answer to this question is “Wherever works best for your team.” Team Huddles can meet in a variety of locations. Many meet at their practice facility/field/locker room for a brief time before or after practice. Ultimately, this is determined by what works best for the team.

When  

The best answer to this question is “Whenever works best for your team.”

Who 

Huddles can be led by:

  • A coach
  • An athlete
  • A parent or other adult

A community team huddle can be led by:

  • A coach
  • An athlete
  • A parent or other adult

Get Started In 4 Steps

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Complete A Ministry Leader Application

All adults, coaches or sponsors who lead or provide support need to complete a Ministry Leader Application online.

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Complete The Ministry Certification Request

Complete the request for local staff to certify your community sport ministry

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Contact FCA Staff

Find the staff person nearest you and let them know you'd like to get started.

See a Team Huddle in action...

Coach-Led Team Huddle

Volunteer-Led Team Huddle

Do create a conversational environment

Strive to create a conversational environment where your athletes discover Biblical truth. Allow multiple people to respond. This is not a time to line them up against the wall and preach at them.

Don’t be afraid of silence

Let the people sit for a moment and think.

Do value input

Do whatever it takes to affirm people’s comments, but do not be artificial with your praise. Be delicate with answers that are clearly wrong (you probably don’t want to point and laugh). Do not feel like you have to finish, complete, or correct an answer, unless the comments could be destructive to the faith.

Don’t feel like you have to know all the answers

We are human, and it’s good for your group to see that you are limited.

Don’t read questions off any guide you’re using

Understand the questions and be prepared to ask them in your own terms. Feel free to generate your own questions during your preparation AND even “on the spot.”

Do clarify some responses to your questions

If a person’s answer or comment is long-winded or unclear, repeat it back (summarize it) for clarity. This proves you are listening and it keeps the attention of the rest of the group.

Don’t move to a new question too quickly

After a person answers a question, ask, “Would anyone like to add to that?” or “Does everyone agree/disagree with that?”

Do keep the group focused and on purpose

Don’t go down a rabbit trail and leave the topics and/or Scripture passages unless something “big” that comes up (e.g., a family crisis). Be sensitive to the Spirit (but that’s not an excuse to be lazy and let the group wander). Wandering is easy, being a leader isn’t!

FCA provides some great resources designed specifically for the Team environment.

These resources provide content developed by experienced team chaplains & sports ministers that speaks directly to the competitive mindset.