Our
friend and colleague, Stuart Weir of Verité Sport in the United Kingdom, does
a tremendous job of integrating scripture with sport in his writing. One
example is below. I highly recommend Stuart’s web site, the various
publications he has done and made available as free downloads, and his weekly
devotional thoughts to which you may subscribe.
As
working for the Lord
Whatever you do, work at it with all your
heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters. Colossians 3:23
Some people describe this as having “an
audience of one”, the idea that our focus as we compete is to be on God. We are
not running (playing) for ourselves as much as for Jesus.
If you take your sport seriously, inevitably
a great deal of your identity as a person is in your sport – why else would you
put so many hours into training?
But don’t misunderstand Paul here. He is not
saying that sport (or whatever you do) is unimportant – and only “religious”
things matter. Quite the contrary!
Paul is saying that whatever you do (and for
you that probably involves training and competition), you are to do it for the
Lord. Did you get that, because you are a Christian, sport – competition and
training – are more important, not less.
Did you think you just had to train enough to
satisfy the coach? Wrong! You are training not just for yourself or for the
coach but for Jesus!
I find the way the South African swimmer
Penny Heyns puts it very helpful: 'I love the sense of satisfaction that I get
when I've done a swimming workout or race, and know that I gave my whole being
and heart to God in every moment of the swim. It's the best worship I can offer
him.'
So get out there and “work at it with all
your heart” for Jesus.
Stuart Weir
Verité Sport
www.veritesport.org
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