BY Benjamin ClarkFebruary 8, 2026
15 hours ago
BY 
 | February 8, 2026
15 hours ago

Seahawks coaches put faith front and center on Super Bowl Sunday

Hours before the Seattle Seahawks take the field against the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX, the men leading the franchise aren't hiding what drives them. Offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak told Sports Spectrum in a Monday interview that he reminds his players and staff of a simple truth:

"Your identity is not in your job, our identity is in Christ."

Kubiak, 38, gave every member of the Seahawks a Bible for Christmas. Not a gift card. Not a pair of headphones. A Bible. When asked about the gesture, he didn't overthink it:

"You're trying to find Christmas gifts for guys every year to show them that you love them. What better gift than that?"

Head coach Mike Macdonald, also 38, echoed the sentiment in a separate interview, saying his faith "has really grown over the last couple years" and describing it as "what I lean on" and "where your strength comes from." He expressed hope that his players would continue to seek and grow in their faith.

This is the culture Seattle built — and it's heading to the biggest stage in American sports.

A Chaplain Who Walks the Walk

Jonathan Rainey, the Seahawks' chaplain, offered the most detailed picture of what spiritual life inside an NFL locker room actually looks like. Appearing on Sports Spectrum's podcast over the weekend, Rainey described himself as a biblical counselor, marriage counselor, premarital counselor, and something more elemental:

"A walking pastor to meet their needs."

The Christian Post reported that, throughout the season, Rainey conducted chapel messages covering the life, teachings, and miracles of Jesus. He fasted. He prayed. He showed up — not as a corporate wellness consultant with a cross on his lanyard, but as a man with a mission:

"My job is to wash your feet, to teach you … to point you to Jesus."

There's a practical dimension to this that outsiders rarely consider. NFL players don't get to attend Sunday services. The game is on Sunday. Rainey addressed this directly:

"These guys do not get to go to church because we play on Sunday. The team becomes their church."

That line deserves to sit with you for a moment. The institution most associated with American spectacle — the NFL on Sunday — requires the men at its center to sacrifice the very day set aside for worship. Rainey's response wasn't to lament it. It was to build something in its place.

Faith as Foundation, Not PR

What stands out about the Seahawks' public professions isn't their novelty — Christian faith has deep roots in professional football going back decades. What stands out is the unapologetic clarity.

Kubiak didn't frame his faith as a "personal journey" or a "mindfulness practice." He called himself a "child of God" and said outright:

"Football is something that I do, but trying to be a good father and be a faithful husband is way more important than any of that."

Macdonald described a recent moment of gratitude, recognizing that "God has put you in the position to lead these people." His guiding principle isn't scheme versatility or analytics. It's simpler than that:

"That's your guiding light every day."

In a culture that celebrates every form of identity expression imaginable — except the one that built Western civilization — these men chose Super Bowl week to say what they believe and why. No apology tour. No preemptive disclaimer about respecting all viewpoints. Just conviction.

The Culture That Secular America Doesn't Want to See

Rainey described the faith of the Seahawks' locker room as "rich," "deep," "diverse," "beautiful," "growing," and "vibrant." He said the spiritual engagement doesn't end when the season does — Bible studies and discipleship continue year-round through Zoom calls. Security staff and athletic trainers participate alongside players.

"Once we do our Zoom studies and Zoom discipleship … it's 24/7, it doesn't end."

This is what authentic community looks like. Not a DEI seminar. Not a mandatory sensitivity training module. Men choosing — voluntarily — to study scripture, share their struggles and victories, and hold each other accountable. Rainey put it plainly:

"It brings great joy and satisfaction that the Gospel has taken deep root in their heart."

The son of former NFL coach Gary Kubiak, Klint credited coaching mentors throughout his career with encouraging him to get into Bible studies and read the Word daily. The weight of an NFL career — the scrutiny, the instability, the relentless pressure — found its counterbalance not in therapy apps or breathing exercises but in scripture. As Kubiak put it, about anchoring his identity in faith rather than his job title:

"It took a really heavy load off."

Eyes on Sunday

Rainey's final chapel message before Super Bowl LX will focus on "pressing in and trusting Christ." He told the podcast audience that "your healing is found in a person" — and that person is Jesus Christ, whom he called "our true north" and "our North Star."

He also offered a request that had nothing to do with touchdowns or turnovers:

"Pray for these men because we know when we take a stand for Christ, Satan is going to attack."

The Seahawks may win or lose on Sunday. Trophies tarnish. Rings end up in display cases. But what Kubiak, Macdonald, and Rainey have described is something the scoreboard can't measure — a locker room where men are pointed toward something greater than the game they play.

In a league that markets itself on everything from gambling to celebrity, Seattle's coaching staff just told the world what actually matters to them. The world will decide whether to listen.

Written by: Benjamin Clark
Benjamin Clark delivers clear, concise reporting on today’s biggest political stories.

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