Taking Flight

Fall 2013_Spreads (dragged) 2Jason Avant is used to dodging defenders as a receiver for the Philadelphia Eagles. But before he made it to the NFL he had to literally dodge bullets.

Twice he was cornered by rival gangs as a youngster growing up in Chicago. And the house he lived in was shot up numerous times. His mother left him as a toddler and his dad was in and out of prison. But the former Gangster Disciple is now a disciple of Christ and has developed into one of the Eagles’ steadiest receivers.

“My dad tried his best to keep me, but he really couldn’t so he gave me to his mother, my grandmother,” says Avant, who caught 53 passes for 648 yards last season, the most receptions and second-most yards in his seven-year NFL career since being drafted out of the University of Michigan in 2005. “My grandmother was a praying, Bible-believing, strong Christian woman from Mississippi that moved to Chicago.

“She would make me go to church every Sunday from 9 (a.m.) to about 9 (p.m.). The Lord used to really convict me when I was a little boy. The messages used to hit my heart that you have to surrender all to Jesus. And I always used to answer the Spirit by saying, ‘I’m not ready yet.’ And the Spirit would always give me an answer back, ‘You may not have time.’”

Avant’s grandmother was a fail-safe for the family. Anywhere from 12 to 14 people lived in the house. His aunt and grandmother were Christians, but the other “90 percent of the house were hell-raisers,” Avant admits. His cousins sold drugs out of the house and his aunts and uncles did drugs from crack cocaine to marijuana.

“It was a gang house—the Gangster Disciples from the south side,” says Avant. “Even though my grandmother took me to church all the time when I was a little kid, in sixth grade I was selling drugs because of the influence and I thought it was cool. We didn’t have much money, so it was a way to make income.”

By the time Avant reached the seventh and eighth grades he was going to school drunk and on marijuana. But there was one difference in his life—a praying grandmother.

Says Avant, “She would always pray for me, ‘Lord, let his life be different. Lord, let him never go astray. Lord, help him to surrender to you. Let him be different.’”

And soon, a change came. The house in Chicago was raided twice and before the state could confiscate the house with a third raid, Avant’s grandmother sold the house and the family dispersed.

He moved to a new neighborhood and got away from his cousins, drugs and gangs. He got involved in basketball. But each time his dad tried to get involved in Jason’s life, his dad would end up in jail.

By his sophomore year, Avant was playing basketball at Carver High School on the south side of Chicago.

“My basketball coach, who was also the football coach, said, ‘Jason, you know you can’t play basketball for me unless you play football.’ I had never played football,” says the 6-foot, 212-pound receiver, who was recruited to play basketball for UCLA, TCU and Illinois. “He said, ‘No, really you can’t play basketball for me unless you play football. I need some football players.’ Nobody wanted to come out.

“They put me at middle linebacker. They put the fullback on me 10 straight times. I was going to quit. My grandmother and my dad called and said give it another try. In basketball I would struggle, and football was just really natural.”

As a junior he was moved to receiver and became the number one player in the state of Illinois. And with that came scholarship offers.

Fresh Start

Avant decided to attend Michigan, where he became a two-time Bilentnikoff Award candidate as the nation’s top receiver. During his senior season, he led the Big 10 in receptions (82) and was second in receiving yards (1,007). He finished his career at Michigan third in all-time receptions.

But something was still missing.

“So just like the rest of my life because of my grandma’s prayers no matter where I would be—if I was on a bus or walking down the street—a missionary would always find me,” says Avant. “Anybody that was doing street evangelism would always find me. People would drive 20 miles just to take me to church.

“So first year at Michigan I get roomed with a pastor’s son…He said he was going to church. I said, ‘Man, I’m going to go with you.’”

The pair started going to church for a couple of months. Then on May 4, 2003, Avant made a life-changing decision.

“The preacher was preaching—I don’t even remember the sermon—but the Lord was dealing with me like when I was a little kid,” Avant says. “He began to replay in my mind all the times my house was shot up. He began to replay all the times I was in there about to get arrested and how He made a way for me. All the times I should have been killed in the streets because I was doing foolish things.

“With tears in my eyes, I finally said, ‘Yes. Lord, I surrender my life to You. I know I’m not supposed to be here.’ I gave my life to Christ.”

Avant was baptized in water and came up with a new mind. He said that every thought he had went through a filter for Jesus Christ. As a result, he almost quit football, but his pastor in college said that the Lord could use him.

Over the next two years he dug deeper into God’s Word and gained strength.

“I began to learn how to work the Word and knowing what God said and how it applied to my life,” comments Avant. “I did that for two to three years in college. And the Lord showed me He was going to use me to bring people to Christ. And over the years I’ve seen teammates changed—college teammates, unsaved people baptized with the Holy Spirit. Even here (in Philadelphia).”

Flying High

Avant was drafted in the fourth round in 2006, and his reception total has increased in each of his seven years in the NFL, including 53 in 2012. Entering the 2013 season, he was averaging 12.5 yards per catch after piling up 3,199 yards on 259 catches and 10 touchdowns.

His steady play earned him a five-year contract extension in 2010.

All of his first seven seasons came under Coach Andy Reid. Chip Kelly took over the reins this season, and Avant is expected to be a major player in the Eagles new offense. In his slot position, he takes a lot of hits coming across the middle, but 75 of his 87 career third-down catches are for first downs.

“I’m just trying to be the best I can,” admits Avant. “I recognize that he (Kelly) likes different things. It’s a whole different offense. Play as hard as you can, focus as hard as you can.”

Brian Dawkins, the former Eagles standout, is a role model for Avant. “He’s done a lot for me as far as how a true professional does things and also his boldness for Christ. You couldn’t even mike him up. It was all about Jesus. His boldness for sharing Christ was helpful to me.”

Over time, Avant has become a role model to younger players and kids. In 2010, he was voted the Ed Block Courage Award by his teammates for the adversity he overcame as a young person. He also hosts a Christ First Football Camp every year, alternating between Chicago and Camden, N.J.

Grounded

Though having success in the NFL can lead to inflated egos, Avant has remained humble.

“I’ve caught some game-winners in college and one in the pros and I’ve missed a couple,” says Avant when commenting on individual highlights. “I think the more highlights I have are when guys call me and say that they got it right. Or I see their family structure change and their wife and children are surrendered to Christ. I think that’s more valuable to me than a play on the football field.”

Avant is keenly aware that it takes each member of the team to achieve a team goal and what he has to do to be a part of that success.

“A team goal is a team goal,” Avant says. “It takes all guys. A lot of times it just takes mercy from God. Right things happen at the right time and you win the Super Bowl or something like that.

“What I can do personally is maximize my ability. I’m just trying to maximize my potential.”

Avant hasn’t forgotten where he came from and he realizes his role goes beyond the NFL.

“I’m not supposed to be here (in the NFL), but it was God’s mercy and God’s grace. And I’m very careful when I say it because I know that my purpose here is not just football. It is for somebody to leave the example of Christ for these men.”

By Jeff Smith

This story was published in the Vol. 27, No. 4 issues of Sports Spectrum. Jeff Smith is a freelance writer who lives in New Jersey.