Chicago Sun-Times

MESSAGE MATTERS MORE THAN THE DENOMINATI­ON

Amber Stocks, Chicago Sky coach, grew up in nondenomin­ational Christian congregati­on, mom a choir director, dad a church administra­tor: “I don’t think you can open up a science book and see the wonders and have doubt of the existence of a magnificen­t lovi

- Email: rherguth@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ RobertHerg­uth

In first season coaching the WNBA’s Sky, played basketball herself at the University of Cincinnati, previously was an assistant coach at college and pro levels.

Came from a large family in Ohio that played sports, including sister Tamara Stocks, a former WNBA player. “Basketball is, and was, a huge part of our family.”

At 6- foot- 8, her dad, James Stocks, played for the Kentucky Colonels in the old American Basketball Associatio­n.

“I wouldn’t say he pushed basket

ball on us, we all gravitated toward it, and it was something that we

all could do together. So, on any given Saturday morning, you would see all of us out on the driveway.”

“We grew up in a Christian home, and faith, worship was not just a Sunday thing. It was every day. And so going to church on Sundays was never anything I dreaded as a child. I looked forward to it.”

Between choir, business meetings, Bible study and services, her family “was always there. . . . The church often became the playground.”

Faith “was just a part of our lifestyle: If you offend somebody, you make amends, and you ask for forgivenes­s. And if you owe somebody something, you pay ’ em back, and you tell the truth. . . . Love your neighbor as yourself.”

“In college, I would say because of . . . my exposure to so many different people . . . and sports gives you that,” she had an “open mindset” about attending different Christian denominati­ons.

“It was more about what the actual messages were that the pastor or the minister was sharing, and so I might have a stint at a Methodist church . . . a Lutheran church . . . Church of God in Christ.

“The denominati­on has never been a priority to me. It’s been the message.”

The kids in her family sometimes stayed up late on Saturdays, and that meant one Sunday her sister was tired and fell asleep at church.

“We nudged her to wake her up, and she yelled at the top of her lungs, ‘ Hallelujah!’ ” The congregati­on had been quiet, listening to a sermon. “We could not stop laughing.”

Stocks, 39, has two kids.

Her dad would cite a Bible verse for “comfort” if there was a “rough patch” during the basketball season.

One parable that “was always shared” — and not just in a sports context — emphasized that people should not “bury” their talents.

Being a coach is not just a career to Stocks but “a ministry.”

“To empower, to encourage, to edify, to uplift — which sometimes means to challenge or to admonish.”

“There’s a bigger picture than just winning,” such as “trying to share and lay nuggets along the road that can help somebody on whatever path that they are on.”

“I never felt the . . . urge to pray before a basketball game. . . . I never prayed for wins. . . . Prayer was a part of life, not . . . basketball.”

What does God look like? “You, the chair, the tree, the cat walking down the street, the rock that somebody’s using to hold something in place, and nothing. He looks like everything, and She looks like nothing. And She looks like everything, and He looks like nothing.”

A Bible passage that’s “become a fabric of my identity” is the one that begins, “Blessed is the man who perseveres under trial.”

“There are certain gifts that everyone has, and then what do you do? Do you cultivate that and grow that into something magnificen­t, or let it lay by the wayside?”

“The world we live in today, there are so many tools and vehicles that we have to receive and be fed spirituall­y, whereas years ago the primary way . . . was to go to a church service.”

“Ministry as a vocation is one type of ministry,” but it’s also “the love you show at the cashier at the grocery store who’s struggling and everybody else is being rude.”

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