All eyes are focused on Paris for the Opening Ceremonies of
the 2024 Summer Games next Friday, July 26.
The best athletes of the world will
compete to the limit of their talent and determination. Simone Biles, the most decorated gymnast in
history, will again compete for the gold in women’s gymnastics. LeBron James, 39, competed in his first
Olympics 20 years ago. He will return to
lead the U.S. in its search for another gold.
The Olympic Games date back to 776 BC and were expanded in
the first century by Augustus Caesar, the Emperor of record at Jesus’
birth. Writing to Greeks in the first
century, the Apostle Paul drew on Olympic metaphors to help them understand how
to live the Christian life: “Do you not know that
those who run in a race all run, but only one receives the prize? Run in
such a way that you may win.” (1 Corinthians 9:24).
Christianity is not a spectator
religion. We all must run! Our churches
are arranged so that most of us appear to be spectators watching a few
performers on the stage. The truth is that we all must compete in the race every
day. Sunday services are more like team meetings in the locker room, or a pep
rally before the big game, preparing us for the main event that starts on
Monday.
The Academy Award winning movie “Chariots
of Fire” was based on the 1924 Olympic competition between Eric Liddell and
Harold Abrahams, the two fastest men of their day. Abrahams had never lost a race until Eric
Liddell beat him in the 100-meter dash by a single step. Mortified by the loss, he later sat in the
empty stands with his fiancé. She kept
trying to encourage him, but he finally snapped at her, “You don’t understand. If I can’t win, I won’t run.” Stunned, she paused for a moment then
responded with typical feminine insight. “If you don’t run,” she said, “you
can’t win!” That is the Apostle’s point.
If we don’t run, we can’t win. We
must all live out our faith in Christ in such a way that we “run to win!”
This requires discipline. Paul
continues, “Everyone who competes in the games
exercises self-control in all things. They then do it to receive a
perishable wreath, but we an imperishable.(1 Cor. 9:25). The athletes we are
watching in Paris must exercise great discipline in diet and training. Only by
imposing discipline upon their bodies can they compete for the gold.
Too many Christians think that once they accept
Christ by faith and receive the assurance of heaven that they can live however
they wish. They are like someone who has been accepted to the Olympics and prepares
for their event by eating Blue Bell ice cream and watching others practice.
They might be at the Olympics, but they won’t win. The Apostle concludes, “I discipline my body and make it my slave, so that, after I
have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified.” (1 Cor. 9:27).
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