Rangers’ spring training yields ‘incredible’ ministry

About 120 Texas Rangers attended the team's 2016 Easter chapel service, led by spring training chaplain Jason Griffin. (BP photo courtesy of Jason Griffin)

image_pdfimage_print

SURPRISE, Ariz. (BP)—For Major League Baseball players, coaches and fans, Opening Day offers a time to look forward in anticipation of the season ahead. For Jason Griffin, it also was a time to celebrate the work God did during spring training.

Griffin, pastor of Phoenix-area Freedom Valley Church in Surprise, Ariz., and a church planter with the Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board, serves as chaplain for the Texas Rangers facility in Surprise, where about 400 team personnel descend for spring training each February and March.

More than two dozen professions of faith in Christ

Over four years ministering to the Rangers, Griffin estimates 25 to 30 players and coaches have placed their faith in Christ as Lord and Savior, and countless hours of discipleship occurred.

Baseball chaplaincy is “a lot of opportunity,” said Griffin, who serves under the auspices of the Baseball Chapel organization. “I’m amazed about what God is doing in the organization of the Texas Rangers.”

Texas Ranger chaplain 350Texas Rangers Arizona chaplain Jason Griffin (back left in purple shirt) hosts a cookout for players and their families at his Phoenix-area home. (Photo courtesy of Jason Griffin)Among the highlights of Griffin’s ministry are housing players and their wives in his home each spring, leading team chapel services every Sunday for 30 to 60 players and coaches and being available for individual counseling at the ballpark at least five days per week.

During spring training, he also gathers daily at 6:30 a.m. for prayer and a devotional with about 15 coaches.

Easter worship service last year

When Easter fell during spring training last year, the Rangers’ leadership agreed to shut down all baseball operations so players and staff had the opportunity to attend a 45-minute chapel service. The result was a service attended by 120 players and staff and led by Griffin, along with the Freedom Valley worship and media teams. The service included a gospel message and an invitation to trust Christ for salvation.


Sign up for our weekly edition and get all our headlines in your inbox on Thursdays


“The response was incredible,” Griffin said. “You had Major Leaguers just in tears about how God encountered them.”

He noted a “ripple effect throughout last year” of men coming to Christ in the minor leagues and Major League Baseball as they grappled with truth from the Easter service.

On another occasion, Griffin led a Bible study with several players and a coach on Jesus’ conversation with Nicodemus about being born again. At one point, a participant interrupted Griffin, asking him to “stop talking and tell us how we can be born again.”

Griffin did just that, and six men committed their lives to Christ on the spot.

Chaplain has a ‘pastor’s heart’ for young athletes

Jon Edwards, a pitcher in the Rangers organization from 2012 to 2015, lived in Griffin’s house during 2014 spring training and said the chaplain has a “pastor’s heart” for young players.

Griffin and his wife, Mindy, provided personal discipleship to Edwards and his wife, Katelyn, including Bible studies together and regular family worship. The Griffins replicate that ministry with at least one young couple each spring, attempting to strengthen their marriage in preparation for the rigors of professional baseball.

Griffin “connects with players,” said Edwards, who was traded to the San Diego Padres in 2015 and expects to be out of baseball this year recovering from elbow surgery. “He just lets them talk, and I feel like at the right time, he just fills it in with the truth of the Lord.”

Citing a typical event from Griffin’s ministry, Edwards recalled how the chaplain met a former Ranger at a coffee shop within the past month after the young man was cut from the team and led him to Christ.

Although 2017 spring training has ended, Griffin said, his work with the Rangers will continue, as it does each year. He also is the team’s chaplain for extended spring training, rookie league, instructional league and fall league—all of which occur at the Arizona facility.

The 10 hours per week Griffin typically devotes to baseball chaplaincy during spring training reduce to between six and eight the rest of the year.

Extended spring training (for players deemed not ready for full-season competition) and rookie league (a 60-game summer league for newly drafted players) are among the most fruitful times for ministry, Griffin said. Players often have Sundays off, so Freedom Valley lets them borrow cars or bikes to attend church.

Last year, the congregation gave Bibles with their names engraved to each member of the Rangers’ rookie league team. Griffin was also given 15 minutes to tell the team why the church wanted them to have Bibles.

Although Griffin can tell many similar stories of ministry, the overall impact of his chaplaincy is impossible to quantify, he stressed.

“Texas’ organization is incredibly saturated with guys who love the Lord and want to see their team come to Christ. I just find it a great privilege to partner with them,” he said, noting Baseball Chapel facilitates similar ministry with all 30 MLB franchises.


We seek to connect God’s story and God’s people around the world. To learn more about God’s story, click here.

Send comments and feedback to Eric Black, our editor. For comments to be published, please specify “letter to the editor.” Maximum length for publication is 300 words.

More from Baptist Standard