Friday, December 6, 2013

White Knuckles & Blinders







Physical fitness has exploded in the interest of our culture today. People are running more 5K’s then they can make up silly names for and people are becoming more concerned with physical health.

I think that one of the main ideas that makes athletic training appealing is the idea that your performance and progress often depends on your own motivation and drive to change and transform your body.

“Get off the couch and do something!”

“You can do it!”

[Enter inspirational athlete quote here]

The point is that physical fitness, by placing such an emphasis on our motivation and drive, gives us a sense of control in regards to whether we progress or not.

And we like that.


“Therefore since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight and sin which clings so closely and let us run the race with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God” - Hebrews 12:1-2

This verse identifies with Turkey Trotter’s and Ironman’s alike because races and endurance are something they use and train for.

But there is a serious disconnect from our version of running a race and the race that is mentioned here and it stems from our own perception athletic training and what the focus is.

“Rise and GRIND”

Our version of running a race includes a lot of things.

The first step is to get up, dust off your Nike’s and be ready to commit to whatever new fitness craze you Googled or your best friend pinned on Pinterest, go out and get some healthy food and, for the men especially, go and get one of those obnoxious bottles of protein supplements.

You’re ready to change YOU.

This includes a lot of work.

White Knuckles

Our view of training for a race translates into our spiritual lives by letting us tell ourselves that we can “white-knuckle” or manhandle our way to salvation and holiness.


We misuse this verse’s meaning to motivate, by using the motivation it brings to somehow train harder, as if that how we run the race.

The verse isn’t:
           
“Therefore let us run the race with exhaustion and guilt, only using practical methods and neglecting our savior because we got this!”


Am I saying that using practical steps to combat sin and having accountability is bad?
No.
Am I saying that believers need to lay back and let sin remain in their life?
No.

What I am saying is that practical steps only go so far.

A website filter isn’t going to save you.
The friends you tell your struggles to cannot offer salvation.
A rehab meeting isn’t going to justify you before God.

The Holy Spirit has to come into you heart, and completely WRECK SHOP.

Jesus Christ is the only source of power and redemption and if you are walking with all of the practical steps, your Nike’s laced up, and you try on your own power to change yourself, you’re rejecting the Gospel and you will run yourself to exhaustion.

It starts with the HEART.

Blinders

Run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to JESUS, the founder and perfecter of our faith…”

It’s not about the training. It never was.

It’s not about our work. It never was meant to be.

If we run our spiritual race with our heads down and our blinders on, then we are exhausting ourselves in vain because with Jesus, its like we started the race at the finish line.

The point isn’t to “run hard and do more”.

To think so is to devalue God’s sovereign plan of sending his son, Jesus, by not fully acknowledging what his sacrifice on the cross really meant.



This is why so many people are spiritually stuck. They are so focused on having the "right Nike’s" and drinking enough "Gatorade" that they don’t realize that if they would just pursue the finish line, they would actually run the race.






















Photo cred. - http://clouddragon.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/























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