Greg recently officiated the wedding for Scotty Moore and Lauren Asimakoupoulos
This thing called love’s not hearts and doves. It’s struggle, sweat and grime. It’s hanging tough when life gets rough. And so I wrote this rhyme.
I’ll say it slow. I hope you know. This is no average day. This is the time for love to shine and so my friends I pray that you will find the means to mine the gold that’s buried deep. You’ve got to dig. You can’t renege. That’s how your vows you’ll keep.
For we’re inclined to clutch what’s mine and seek what’s best for me. But love that lives won’t take, but gives like Christ on Calvary.
For in this life a man and wife can see that joy and pain each play a part to win the heart. And so make this your aim…
Be quick to say, “I sought my way. I’m sorry. Please forgive.” With each new dawn, let tiffs be gone. Show grace in how you live.
And if it seems you’ve lost your dreams, ask God to give you more. To aim for goals will fuel your souls to reach for what’s in store.
And when there’s pain, don’t try to blame each other for the cause. Just recognize that life breeds sighs, discouragement and blahs.
But in those times when lines don’t rhyme and you’re reduced to tears, confess your cares to God in prayer. Acknowledge that He’s near.
So here you stand. Please understand. These words aren’t just for you. They’re for us all so we’ll recall what makes true love stay true.
Greg Asimakoupoulos and his soon-to-be-married daughter Lauren Star
Seventeen years ago I had the privilege of officiating the wedding of Coach Mike Holmgren’s youngest daughter. It was the natural culmination of a fifteen-year friendship with the Holmgren family.
Mike and his wife Kathy became personal friends when I was a pastor in Northern California. Shortly after he left the Forty-Niners organization to become head coach of the Green Bay Packers, our family moved to Illinois. My allegiance to the leader of The Pack in the heart of Bears Country found me cheering for the Packers. I was definitely in the minority on Sunday afternoons. As a result, I wore my Cheesehead discreetly.
After a handful of years and two Super Bowl appearances, Mike moved to Seattle to become head coach of the Seahawks. And in 2005 when I accepted a call to a church in suburban Seattle, I became the head coach’s lead pastor. And as you might expect, I also became a devoted 12. Amazingly, within a few months of our move to Washington State, I was cheering for Mike and the Hawks in Super Bowl XL.
When Mike’s daughter approached me about coaching her and her fiancé through their premarital counseling, I was delighted. We huddled at our local Starbucks to review the plays I’ve discovered lead to a committed relationship. Over lattes, we planned their ceremony.
As the big day drew near, I pictured the Xs and Os that inevitably were going through Coach Mike’s head. I wanted to share something with my friend that would be meaningful. Because I had never been the father of the bride at that point, I could only imagine the emotions that were crowding his heart. Putting pen to paper, I came up with the following:
When you stand beside your daughter and you hear the Wedding March, I am guessing you’ll feel something like a sliver in your heart.
Though you’re thrilled beyond description that your baby’s now a bride, you will have a strange sensation like an itch deep down inside.
It’s a bittersweetish splinter that you cannot tweezer out cause it’s wedged and twisted sideways. It’s what good grief’s all about.
It’s a shard that’s caused by memories of those precious years you had planting seeds of faith and wisdom as her mentor, as her dad.
It’s a sliver that you’ll live with. You’ll thank God that it is there for it’s just one more reminder what you’ve shared is really rare.
Within four years of handing the coach my little poem, it was my turn to walk my middle daughter down the aisle. I discovered that what I had imagined was going through the coach’s mind was spot-on. That was back in 2011, but I still remember the lump in my throat and the tear in my eye.
And this weekend I will once again have an opportunity to put into practice the advice I’ve given countless other fathers-of-the-bride. This time it’s my baby girl who will be pledging a lifetime of love to the man of her dreams. In anticipation of the center aisle stroll Lauren and I will be taking, I’ve reread the words I composed for Mike Holmgren seventeen years ago. And even though I’m the one who wrote them, they speak to me of the sacredness of what’s ahead.
Poetry is like that. There is something about rhyming words and phrases that capture what prose often can’t. The emotions that dance in the heart of a bride (and her father) on her wedding day are more easily described in word pictures. In the forty-five years I’ve been a pastor, I have used poetry to create such portraits of life’s sacred moments. The birth of a baby. The death of a parent. The completion of a degree. A couple’s engagement. Unexpected unemployment. A job promotion. A doctor’s dreaded diagnosis. Or even a coach’s Super Bowl victory (or defeat).
But for this weekend, I’m taking my own medicine and practicing what I’ve preached.
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In addition to each week’s post on this website, Greg Asimakoupoulos offers daily video devotionals on his YouTube channel. Here is a sample video. If you are interested in receiving these devotionals Monday through Friday, you can subscribe on Greg’s channel.
Pairs skating is not just for the Winter Olympic Games
“Not good for man to be alone!” God said when life began. “To skate through life with joy he needs a pair. Someone to share the thrills and spills. Someone to hold his hand, a partner by his side when he is scared.”
What God intended from the start is what makes life complete. A spouse or friend to navigate thin ice. When sharing joys and sorrows, we find meaning in each day. Companionship is needed (not just nice).