‘A Jesus revolution’: Bible study group bringing Michigan State football together
EAST LANSING — It caught some by surprise at July’s Big Ten media days when Michigan State wide receiver Nick Marsh sat at the podium and described his reasons for taking less money than he could have made elsewhere to come back to the Spartans.
There he was, this 18-year-old star football player — speaking in Las Vegas, no less — playing a position that begets money and fame and privilege immeasurable.
Instead, Marsh put the focus on his deep connection to God.
“All money is not good money,” Marsh said. “So I’m building something here at Michigan State, a foundation, a brotherhood, a family. And I think that’s more important than money. I think family and God is more important than materialistic things.”
Family and God have been two of the big themes of Michigan State’s offseason, at least among a large contingent who participate in a bible study group hosted by some members of the team. The effect has brought teammates together at a key time for the program during an age when the influx of money into the sport has challenged the role of faith in athletics.
“I think that there’s been a Jesus revolution on this team,” defensive lineman Grady Kelly said back in April. “I think that there’s guys that are not only claiming to follow Jesus and to be Christians, but guys that are willfully and lovingly submitting their lives to him.”
Faith and football have long been connected, whether that be in the form of day-to-day prayers and worship or more publicized expressions of faith. Tim Tebow, the two-time national championship-winning quarterback and 2007 Heisman winner at Florida, was one of the most outwardly expressive of his faith. His prayer kneel celebration became a viral trend, and his eye black writing of John 3:16 led to millions of Google searches for the verse when he completed a 2012 NFL game in which he threw for 316 yards and 31.6 yards per completion.
The current crop of Michigan State players grew up watching Tebow, not only how he played football but also how he represented his faith.
“He’s supposed to be this first-round, All-American, amazing player. He’s preaching now, you know what I’m saying,” defensive lineman Quindarius Dunnigan said. “Football is just a platform. It’s a gift from God. And at the end of the day, if that’s not what he wants you to do, he’ll let you know. And you just gotta find peace with that.”
For now, the Spartans’ own platform is still football. Saturday’s first scrimmage of fall camp is a big step toward embarking on the second season of the Jonathan Smith era, attempting to build off a 5-7 debut in East Lansing. The 2025 season begins Aug. 29 at home against Western Michigan.
The Spartans’ bible studies are held at players’ houses, most led by Dunnigan, Kelly and linebacker Jordan Hall. The study sessions are part of the larger Athletes in Action sports ministry, which has been active on campus for decades. At their study sessions, players discuss their faith and how it applies to their lives well beyond the football field. The sessions aren’t mandatory (they can’t be at a public institution), but they are well attended.
“Really, we just host it,” Hall said. “It’d be at my house or Grady’s house or Q’s house, but we’re just having conversations and letting the Holy Spirit kind of flow through those rooms that we’re having.”
Added linebacker Darius Snow: “We have a lot of guys on the team that are very faithful, very religious. And I know that everybody has their own beliefs, but I’m a Christian man, and it’s beautiful to see people diving into that.”
Faith has long been prominent with the Michigan State football team. Individually, players have expressed their faith openly, including quarterback Kirk Cousins. Back when Mark Dantonio coached the team, he sometimes handed his kickers prayer cards to motivate them, like he did when Matt Coghlin kicked a winning field goal in an upset of No. 7 Penn State in 2017. This summer, recently graduated running back Nate Carter released a book about his faith. And players have long been involved in Athletes in Action, which hosts Tuesday night meetings at the Skandalaris Football Center.
Faith has a freeing effect for Michigan State’s players, who escape the day-to-day emotional whims of their football careers through their religious beliefs.
“I think that the biggest thing about Jesus in sports is when we have our identity in the world, we ride these ebbs and flows of performance,” Kelly said. “Everything’s performance-oriented. So when I do good, I’m on top of the world. When I do bad, I hate myself and I’m shameful and guilty, and that affects performance, too. So when you put your identity in Christ, your value as a person — no matter your performance — is unwavering, it’s unchanging, because he’s constant.”
To Michigan State’s religious players, they see their abilities on the football field as gifts from God that enable them to spread the gospel. The bigger the platform they build, the greater their opportunity to do so.
“I think as Christians, we’re called to be disciples and make people aware of the gift of Christ,” Hall said. “And given the platform that college football gives us players, it would be a disservice to not use that platform to spread the gospel to somebody who might not ever hear the gospel.”