Then this morning, my mom sent me this article. It's my dad's February newsletter to his congregation. As some of you might know, my parents are about to embark on a new journey... one of retirement... whatever that means to these two adventurous souls. They sold their home in December & have been living with friends until their beloved church could find someone to replace him. In January, their church family called a new pastor. A young man, to whom Pastor Dan will pass the baton to in March.
I'm enclosing the article here because it is what I couldn't put words to myself...
FROM THE PASTOR’S MESSY DESK
“For I am already being poured out like a drink offering, and the time has come for my departure. I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the Faith. Now there is in store for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award me on that day – and not only me, but also all who have longed for His appearing.” 2 Timothy 4:6-8
Last fall my daughter Lisa and I began to train for a half marathon to run together. Our plan was to meet on race day in Naples, Florida on January 18, 2015. Believe me, running a race in Florida in January was not a mistake. What a great excuse to get out of the cold and into the warmth.
But half marathons are not something you just show up for in spite of the temps. You have to build miles into your legs over a period of time. We both started our 12 week training programs which involve running different distances at different paces 5 days per week. One day each week we added another mile until we were running up to 12 miles in one training session. So when we ran the race, it was something close to what we had done before. The race was really the culmination of the long journey.
I’m glad to say both Lisa and I put in the necessary work. Running in the fall and winter around here is not ideal, but my training was nothing compared to what Lisa had to go through training in MinneSNOWta. She had to wear special grippers on her shoes to run in the snow each day. She’s insane. I hear it runs in the family. I’m so proud of her with her running mascara and runny nose.
Race day came. We lined up with some 2,000 other contestants for this great event at the starting line at 7:00 a.m. The temps were perfect and the course was beautiful, running through some of the most beautiful neighborhoods in all of Florida. Actually the course was so beautiful it was distracting from some of the challenge of the race. Lisa and I also chose to run the race together, side by side, to share the experience. “Remember when we sweated like draft horses and agonized together for 13.1 grueling miles in the hot Florida sun?” “Sure. You know, you looked awful!” “Yeah, and do you know you smelled like an ole tennis shoe?”
I’m so glad we did this together, although one of us could have left the other in the dust (at least that’s what he thinks). Also, as a surprise, some of Lisa’s friends from Minnesota showed up to cheer her and me on. They would pop up at different places in the race with banners and cheers. What a great surprise and encouragement to have best friends share in your accomplishment. Some of them actually had tears of joy and love in their eyes. And it wasn’t just the girls. By the way, Linda and Josh were sipping on coffee and eating pastry in a coffee shop while this was going on. Slackers!
Interesting: Some runners started the race fast, and don’t ask me how, they finished fast, in record time. They must have found a great short cut. Some though, stared fast and ended slow. Some started fast and didn’t even finish. One guy even died just short of the finish line. Thank God they revived him. Some of us started slow and finished. We finished! We ran the whole race without stopping. As each of us finished, we finished to applause and congratulations. Don and Helen Skelton even came to cheer us through the finish line where we received a prize. We laughed and smiled and wore our medals proudly as the phone cameras flashed. Facebook here we come! We are now legends in our own minds. But does all this mean Lisa and I are finished with races? Certainly not. There are more races for us to run, till we breathe our last breath.
But isn’t all this really a parable on the Christian life? First of all we sign up for the race. We then learn about running the race from the training manual and other race contestants. We adopt a good training regimen. We consistently ran, day in and day out, week after week, year after year. We have special game days, special days to perform special services. We have friends to cheer us on and we have friends that we cheer on along the way. We don’t run the race alone, we run alongside fellow contestants. Some, more than others, choose to enjoy the beauty of God’s creation along the way. Some finish their race before others. Each person’s race is different. Each person’s race is unique to themselves. But when we all cross that finish line, we finish to the applause of that great crowd of witnesses and then we receive a reward from the Master of the race, who knows a little about running and finishing races. “Well done, good and faithful servant (runner).”
Thank you for running this race with me over these last 14 years. It was a great and memorable run. One I will never forget. I will never forget you. If I don’t see you sooner, I’ll catch up to you at the finish line and the great celebration to follow (the Marriage Supper of the Lamb). But here’s the deal! Let each of us finish our race well. Let’s not break stride and let’s not quit. Remember we have been created to RUN, so RUN!
In Jesus’ love, PD
In Jesus’ love, PD
“The reason we race isn't so much to beat each other... but to be with each other... there was some kind of connection between the capacity to love and the capacity to love *running*. The engineering was certainly the same: both depended on loosening your grip on your own desires, putting aside what you wanted and appreciating what you've got, being patient and forgiving and... undemanding...maybe we shouldn't be surprised that getting better at one could make you better at the other.”
-Christopher McDougall, Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen
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