Episode Summary
Youth sports is a $40‑billion industry that promises opportunity, growth, and success—but for many families, it delivers exhaustion, anxiety, and disappointment. In fact, nearly 70% of kids quit sports by age 13. In this opening episode, Ed Uszynsky and Brian Smith invite Christian parents to imagine a better way forward. Instead of pulling out of youth sports entirely—or passively giving ourselves over to its values—we explore a third way: staying faithfully engaged. What if sports became a context for discipleship instead of a battle for control, identity, and performance? This conversation lays the foundation for the entire series by reframing sports as a God‑given opportunity to build relationships, form character, and disciple our kids’ hearts.
Key Themes
The problem with modern youth sports culture
Why kids are quitting—and parents are exhausted
Sports as a discipleship environment, not just an activity
Parents as primary disciplers
The “Daniel in Babylon” metaphor
Key Takeaway Our kids don’t need us to help them win more games as much as they need us to help them walk with God—and still want to come home for the holidays at 25.
