I’m sorry. This blog will be about sports. You have been warned.
Take a moment to remember a time when you worked so
physically hard that afterwards you were so worn out that you were dripping
sweat, sucking air, and could barely move. What was the activity that caused
this reaction? What was the reason behind throwing your body into such
self-destruction? Say your answer out loud to yourself.
I used to run track and cross country in high school, and
continued to play basketball recreationally in college. However, since college,
I’ve lost most, if not, all of my physical endurance. I’m still active, but for
much shorter periods of time. I guess that’s somewhat to be expected with age.
This past February, wanting to do something different, I went out for a run. I
went to a park that had about a two mile loop bordering the edges. I could
barely “run” a couple minutes before being out of breath and stopping to walk. Thoughts
of “Well, I guess running’s not for me” ran through my head, and at a
much more convincing pace than I was I might add. The more I forced myself to
run, the more I could see the progress. I’ve been able to play with Max longer,
able to do more work, able to play more 1v1 basketball games at the church.
This past month has been an amazing month for viewing sports
for me. First off, the Milwaukee Bucks. Wow! Regardless of your own team
allegiances, this was huge for the city, local small businesses, the franchise,
and in my opinion, the NBA. One thought that crossed my mind was that it was 50
years since there first championship. 50 years! That’s ten years longer than
the Israelites wandered the desert before making it to the promised land. If
that victory can arouse an entire city to celebrate something as trivial as
being the best in the world at a child’s game, imagine the joy and jubilation
from the anticipation and eventual coming of the Messiah for God’s people back
in the day! I’ve dwelled on the word “hope” a lot in regards to the Bucks.
“Calm down Andrew, it’s just a team.” No, YOU calm down! Just kidding. In my
life, I’ve gotten used to the Bucks being just good enough to get kicked out of
the first round of the playoffs each year. Them winning a championship in my
lifetime, especially them being a small-market team where any all-stars tend to
leave Milwaukee to join bigger teams with bigger money, seems unlikely, seemed
improbable. What I love about this team is just how hard they play…on every
possession. I understand why Giannis takes so long at the free throw line, to
gain just a few more seconds of rest.
I might get some flack for this, but I have enjoy watching the
CrossFit Games way more than the Olympic Games this year. I’ve never done CrossFit, never
plan on doing CrossFit, but I have a tremendous respect for the athletes that
do it on a professional level. If you’re unfamiliar, the point of the CrossFit
Games is to crown the fittest man/woman in the world, not the strongest, the
fittest. Athletes from all around basically compete in exercising. Sounds
silly, but when you watch an athlete just absolutely crush weightlifting just
as easily as handstand walking, jump roping, swimming, biking, running, you
tend to wonder what they can’t do. They compete in about three or four
workouts/competitions each day and gain points based on their results. Each
event ends the same way, athletes race to cross the finish line and then lay
flat on their backs gasping for air, hands on heads, trying to recover as
quickly as possible before the next competition. Why? Why do this to yourself?
In many interviews, these athletes will talk about the desire to push the
limits of what humans are capable of.
This year's CrossFit Games winner |
1. 1. Breaking
2. 2. Broken
3. 3. Healing
4. 4. Healed
5. 5. Strengthened
6. 6. Strength to heal others
I feel many are still in stages 1-3 of this pandemic. The difference between this pandemic and a successful athlete is that one of them happened to us unexpectedly and the other was a taken-on struggle. Both hurts will produce strength. One reaps mourning; the other, glory.
Are you letting life happen to you or are you making life happen? In what ways has God equipped you in your life to help strengthen others? Who do you have the capacity to encourage, love, and acknowledge today? Spread the love. Do you yourself feel empty, alone, broken, in need of encouragement, love, and acknowledgement? Tell God about it, ask him for healing. It will not fall on deaf ears.
Romans 5:13 says, “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.”
Thanks for reading! I promise there will be a more update-like blog next month.