“We Will Finish This Together”
The
day of the race arrives at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. Derek Redman and his
father vow that no matter what happens he will finish the race. As race time
approaches for the semifinal 400 heat, Derek’s father heads up to his seat at
the top of Olympic Stadium to cheer on his son.
The stadium is packed with 65,000 fans, bracing themselves for one of
sport's greatest and most exciting spectacles.
The race begins and Derek breaks
from the pack and quickly seizes the lead. "Keep it up, keep it up," Derek’s
father says to himself while watching his son run the race. Down the
backstretch, only 175 meters away from finishing, Derek is a shoo-in to make
the finals. Suddenly, Derek slows down and begins hopping on one leg then
eventually falls to the track. He had
torn his hamstring. As he lays on the track, clutching his right hamstring, a
medical personnel unit runs toward him. "Oh,
no," Derek’s dad says to himself. His face pales and as he sees his son in
trouble, he races down from the top row of the stands, sidestepping people, and
bumping into others. There was nothing or no one getting in his way of reaching
to his son.
While
on the track, tears begin to pour down Derek’s face and he tells himself that
his dream is over—he is too wounded to continue. But as medical crews arrive with a stretcher,
Derek remembers the vow he made between him and his father. So he rose up tells
them, "No, there's no way I'm getting on that stretcher. I'm going to
finish my race." Then, in a moment
that will live forever in the minds of millions, Derek lifts himself to his
feet, ever so slowly, and starts hobbling down the track.
The other runners
have finished the race and suddenly, everyone realizes that Derek isn’t dropping
out of the race by hobbling off to the side of the track. Instead, he is
actually continuing on one leg. He's going to attempt to hobble his way to the
finish line. Derek limps onward one
painful step at a time, each one a little slower and more painful than the one
before. Derek starts to wonder if he can
make it much further; his face twisted with pain and tears. Suddenly, Derek’s dad gets to the bottom of
the stands, leaps over the railing, avoids a security guard, and runs out to
his son, with two security people chasing after him. "That's my son out
there," he yells back to security, "and I’ve got to help him."
Finally,
with Derek facing defeat and painfully limping along the track, his dad reaches
him at the final curve, about 120 meters from the finish, and wraps his arm
around his waist. "I'm here, son, “he
says softly, hugging his boy. “You don’t have to do this.” But Derek replied with, “Yes, I do.” So Derek’s father holds him tighter and says,
"Well then, we will finish this together." Derek puts his arms around his father's
shoulders and sobs.
Together, arm in arm, father and son, with 65,000 people
cheering, clapping and crying; they were finishing the race, just as they vowed
they would. A couple steps from the finish line and with the crowd in an
absolute frenzy, Derek’s dad releases the grip he has on his son, so Derek
could cross the finish line by himself. Then he throws his arms around Derek
again, both crying, and his dad says, "I'm the proudest father
alive". "I'm prouder of you
than I would have been if you had won the gold medal. It took a lot of guts for
you to do what you did."
Every
day we have struggles—we get knocked down, injured, and feel defeated and
wonder where God (our daddy) is. But
these troubles are not going away because the enemy will constantly be chasing
you. He wants you to give up; quit when
it becomes too much to bear. You have to
remember that the troubles may not go away, but you do have help. I am reminded of Apostle Paul. The devil was a “thorn” in Paul’s flesh that
was constantly stirring up the people in the town that Paul visited when he shared
the gospel. He was persecuted, beaten, imprisoned,
and hated. He cried out to God three
times for Him to stop the torture he was going through. Paul just wanted God to take it all away; but
God’s response was not to take it away, but that His grace was enough and that
when Paul was weak, His strength would be made perfect.
God didn’t need to take
anything away. Paul just needed to tap
into the source of God’s grace (peace, healing, comfort, strength and all other
blessings) that was already available to him.
God’s grace was enough to help carry Paul to the finish line and His
grace is enough to carry you to the finish line as well. But God can only show up and demonstrate His
power in our times of weakness when we come to a point where we can’t take
another stop alone and therefore we allow Him to take over.
Once
Paul learned this, he quit complaining and crying out to God for what was
already available to him. Instead, he
rejoiced when he suffered because he knew God was then able to show up and show
out. God was able to do the impossible. For example, when Paul was shackled in chains
and beaten he couldn’t continue alone but yet he never gave up. He worshiped and praised God and that’s when
God suddenly showed up--an earthquake happened and God’s grace appeared. Paul’s chains were broken and the prison cells
were opened. He was able to free himself
from an impossible situation. God’s
strength was made perfect in Paul’s weakness.
Paul
had a “thorn in his flesh” (troubles from the devil)…what thorns do you have
today? It is inevitable that while on
your race to your finish line, troubles will come your way. The devil is going to constantly throw
obstacles in your way to get you to trip and fall. But how are you going to respond? Are you going to lay there and complain? Will you get up and try to struggle in your
own efforts and strength, therefore causing you more pain? Or will you let God (your heavenly father)
come lift you up in His grace and carry you on His shoulders high above your
storm clouds?
God
sees you hurting. He sees every tear you
shed and watches as you desperately try to crawl or limp to your finish line;
all the while hoping you will use Him for strength. You may think you can fight your battles
alone, but only when you realize in your weakness that you cannot be dependent
on your own efforts can God step in and bring you to safety. But as long as you lay there or struggle in
your own abilities, your heavenly father can only watch you struggle with tears
in His own eyes, just hoping you will allow Him to release His power.
So reach out to Him for that is when His
peace, strength, healing and comfort will abound. You will still experience pain and heartache
as you get closer to the finish line, but together, with the world watching,
you will rise above and finish the race God has promised you to finish; and as
you cross that finish line, God will be the proudest daddy alive because you
defeated the enemy and never gave up.
Remember, you can and will rise above anything and everything the devil
throws at you because nothing can keep you down, for you are more than a
conqueror in Christ Jesus. Greater is He
that lives in you, then he (the devil) that lives in the world.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZlXWp6vFdE----watch this video and try not to cry! It demonstrates how our heavenly daddy can carry us when we feel like we can't take another step forward
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZlXWp6vFdE----watch this video and try not to cry! It demonstrates how our heavenly daddy can carry us when we feel like we can't take another step forward
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