I ran my first marathon years ago. I call it my first, because that sounds better than calling it my last. But both are true.
At mile 26 in the run, I learned something I had never known before: a marathon is not 26 miles. Don’t believe it when people tell you that. It’s a bald-faced lie.
As I stammered past the 26th mile marker, there was no finish line! I discovered—to my surprise—a marathon is 26.2 miles.
I learned some valuable lessons from that decimal point—as well as from all the running I did to get ready for that crazy race.
The summer Olympics prove that we prefer a good sprint to a marathon. (Notice I didn’t say, “a good marathon”?)
The stadium will get far more attention. Here’s why:
We prefer the sprint. I’ve discovered the same is true in life. We want to run our lives like a sprint. Here’s why:
True, our busy lives may look and feel like a sprint, but life is a marathon.
Remember, it’s not 26 miles. It’s 26 POINT TWO miles. If you set limits to faithfulness in your life, you’ll never finish the race.
The marathon of life isn’t even 26.2 miles. It’s always .2 miles more. The race never ends.
This was huge. Especially during training, I felt tempted either to quit or to take a shortcut.
Think about the marathon of life:
As we run, we have to recognize the lie that says the answer to our struggles comes by quitting the race. Faithfulness seems too hard. But it’s essential for the race (1 Corinthians 9:24-27).
A new race only means a new struggle, not no struggle. It will probably mean even more struggle, because we start another marathon with the mindset that we can always quit the race if it gets too tough.
In the movie, Chariots of Fire, the runner Harold Abrahams lost his first race. He sat pouting in the bleachers and said to his girlfriend: “If I can’t win, I won’t run!” His girlfriend replied: “If you don’t run, you can’t win.”
Are you weary and tired of what faithfulness requires? Feel like quitting? Take a deep drink from Isaiah 40, read in this scene from Chariots of Fire.
The finish line is not in this life. We don’t break the tape until our hearts stop beating. That was the Apostle Paul’s view (2 Timothy 4:7).
Until then, we keep running.
Tell me what you think: What keeps you running when you feel like quitting? I’d love to know. To leave a comment, just click here.