Whatever your event, finish well. |
Hebrews
12: 1-2a: 1Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a
great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin
that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out
for us. 2aLet us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of
our faith (an alternative fuel source if ever there was one).
In
track and field, a bell-lap is the last lap of a race during which a bell is
rung to signify the start of the final lap. Bell-laps are typically used on
longer races on oval tracks, 1500 meters or 1 mile and longer. Gun-lap is another
term and method and is defined by my friend Webster as, “the final lap of a race in track signaled by
the firing of a gun as the leader begins the lap.” In auto racing, a white flag
is waved at each racer as they cross the start/finish line for their final lap.
At Golden Gate Porsche Club driver education weekends, the track Starter (or
the preferred King God Flag Guy) points at each driver with the index finger
and then down to the track as they enter the last lap of their run.
Using
some crude math and a 1-Mile race in my analogy, I am in the Gun Lap. My
parents passed away just shy of 90-years old, I’m just shy of 70 which is
.77777 percent of their ages which puts me in lap four of a four-lap race. The
gun has sounded, the bell has wrung, and the King God Flag Guy has pointed to
me and the track letting me know I need to finish strong. The whisperings of
the Holy Spirit confirm it.
If
life is a marathon, and mine has been anything but a sprint, I have either come
through the wall or am about to. ‘The Wall’ in long distance running is a point
where the body’s glycogen stores have been depleted and the body no longer has
the fuel to continue running. One source puts the wall at about 18.64 miles and
another simply says, ‘around the 20-mile mark’. Using my .77777 percent figure,
I would be at 20.3574 miles in my marathon. There are days I slog through and
others are over before I’ve done a lick. I need to find an alternative fuel
source if I want to finish my marathon well.
Years
ago, maybe a lifetime gone by, my dad gave me a copy of the book, Finishing
Well by Bob Buford. The men’s group Dad met with in Grants Pass, Oregon was
going through the book and he wanted me to keep pace with them. If I was there
on a Thursday during a visit, I would go with him. Good men all around the
table. I’ve regretted not keeping pace and engaging with him through this study
and have begun reading it on my own to get myself back in the race.
What
do I mean when I say, “finish well”? Ken Blanchard, Coauthor of The Servant
Leader and The One Minute Manager, wrote the forward to Buford’s
book. In his forward, he talks about asking people, “Would you like the world
to be a better place for your having been here?” “What’s your plan?” Goodness
yes. As a Christian, oh God yes but what does this mean? I imagine that a large
portion of finishing well is finding and doing the Will of the Father. On
September 6, 2022, I published a post entitled Off the Bench. That was
the start of me finding my answer to what finishing well means.
Oval Track Layout |
There is a problem with all my math and analogies – I don’t know and can’t know where I am is this last lap. Look at the diagram above. Have I just entered the Clubhouse Turn? Am I coming out at the ¾ Pole? Am I cruising the backstretch, diving into the Far Turn, or making my last sprint down the Homestretch? How do I know if I have even one stride left?
James
4: 13-15: 13Now Listen, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we
will go to this or that city, spend a year there, carry on business and make money.”
14Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your
life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. 15Intead,
you ought to say, “if it is the Lord’s will, we will live and do this or that.”
My first step in finishing well is to
determine to do so. This is followed closely by figuring out what it will look
like for me. Have I hit the wall? If so, I must find the supernatural source of
energy to replace everything I’ve exhausted. I must fix my eyes on Jesus who is
not only the author and perfector of my faith but is the tape at the finish
line. To finish well I need to exhaust everything that is me, there is no need for
it once the finish line is crossed.
One
of the greatest depictions of finishing well is a scene from Chariots of Fire.
Eric Liddell, played by Ian Charleson, is running “to the Glory of God” and has
trained for the 100-meter sprint but must withdraw because of the race is being
held on a Sunday, the Lord’s Day. He was given a spot in the 400-meter race, a
much longer race by far and demands pacing. In the Clubhouse Turn he is knocked
to the ground but gets up to finish and win the race. Upon hitting the tape, he
collapses and eventually must be carried off the field by friends. This is
finishing well. If you’ve a mind to, catch the YouTube clip from the link
below.
Get
up and finish the race from Chariots of Fire : get up and finish the race.avi - YouTube
Can
I get up when knocked down and how then can I truly finish well? By doing my
very best to make every stride glorify God, take every breath in the knowledge
that Jesus has authored the finish.
Go
now, train for your race, practice finishing well each day.
In
His grip,
jerry