Lasting Legacy: Spiritual Discipline
I Corinthians 9:24-27
A great deal of attention is given to athletes. This has always been true throughout history. Today they are given high salaries, they advertise every product you can think of, and people wear clothing with their names or numbers on them.
But even though many idolize them, they may not witness the hard work and hours of practice it took to get them to the position they are in.
In 1989 Lenny Krayzelburg immigrated to the United States from the Soviet Union. His family arrived when Lenny was 14. He had to commute to swim practice by walking or by bus almost an hour each way. He usually didn’t get home until 9:30 each night.
Marla Runyan, a runner, is legally blind. She learned to run hurdles by counting the steps between them.
Dave Scott worked 55 hours a week as a swimming instructor. He would swim 7000 yards a day; lift weights for an hour or two and ran 30 – 35 miles a week. He was five-time iron man winner.
We don’t know if the apostle Paul had been an athlete in his younger years. But it would appear from his writings that he was a fan of sports as he uses a great deal of imagery from this area of life.
In Paul’s letter to the Corinthians in chapter 9, he comments on two areas:
1. The nature of the prize we pursue in life.
2. The nature of the disciplined training that is necessary to obtain it.
Paul states the fact that in a race only one person can win the prize. Realizing that, we also understand the fact that no one remembers who came in second in most cases.
In 1997 the Denver Broncos won the Super Bowl. However, they were known as “losersâ€