Summary: Exposition of 1 Corinthians 9 regarding do you run to win? Are you in the Christian life to spectate? Is your Christian life just flailing along in laziness, flabbiness, outta shape, and without clear purpose?

Text: 1 Cor 9:23-27, Title: Olympic Glory, Date/Place: NRBC, 5/15/11, AM

Opening illustration: Tell a story or two about Camp Jubilee, maybe Erika and the suit of armor, and some others, but finish with the story of Aaron climbing the mountain with his prosthetics.

Background to passage: On the heels of his two chapter discussion on the willing limitation of Christian freedom for the sake of other disciples and unbelievers, Paul gives us a wonderful illustration that compels us to consider sporting events and our Christian lives. This illustration here relates to the laying down of the “right” to eat in temples and doing everything for the sake of the gospel, but it is so applicable to the entirety of the Christian’s walk with Christ.

Main thought: Do you run to win? Are you in the Christian life to spectate? Is your Christian life just flailing along in laziness, flabbiness, outta shape, and without clear purpose?

A. How do we do it? (v. 25-27)

1. How do we do it? How do we run to obtain the prize of the high-calling of Jesus Christ? If you are truly saved, you want to run like that, you want to be insatiably thirsty for Him to the point that it throws your whole life into a single-minded passion to live for Him, worship Him, serve Him, love Him, right? Wish I could give you a silver-bullet that would allow you to enjoy a comfortable lifestyle in the lap of the flowery beds of ease, while others fought to win the prize and sail through bloody seas. But as Piper says, “No, how could you ever want such a thing?” Because we are Americans, and human beings. Paul’s solution is this: beat your body into submission. Hoist the sails of discipline in your life by faith to catch the mighty wind of the Spirit of God as He transforms you into the image of Christ. He instructs them by example to exercise Spirit-fueled (Gal 5:22) self-control and restraint, giving the body a black eye continually and making your body a servant of your spirit rather than the other way around.

2. 2 Tim 2:2, 4:7, Heb 12:1, Col 3:5, 1:29, Matt 11:12, Rom 6:11-13, 8:29, 12:2, Philip 3:8, 9:43,

3. Illustration: “The serious athlete doesn’t ask about how to just get by in his training. He asks about what will bring about maximum performance. So the mature Christian asks, what will make me most useful for the kingdom? What will stir up my zeal for God most? What will intensify my earnestness in prayer? What will trigger more hunger for God’s word? What will strengthen my longing to love? What will fan the flames of my passion for holiness?” –Piper, “Essentially my life revolves around skating when I’m competing,” he said. “So everything I eat, everything that I do, everything revolves around my recovery…Training for an Olympic Games is very difficult. Some athletes are able to really balance their lives and they can do a lot of separate things, but for me I was very intently focused on what I was doing at the time and I wouldn’t allow myself to really do anything else.” –Apollo Ohno, “Following Jesus simply means learning from him to arrange my life around activites that enable me to live in the fruit of the Spirit. Spiritual disciplines are to life, what practice is to the game.” –Ortberg, “Adopting a training paradigm requires structuring our lives around the means that will keep the vision of the good and sovereign God before us and the intention to conform our lives to this reality.” –Ogden,

4. We must seize the areas in our lives of excess and waste, and curb them. Put to death by the Spirit the deeds of the body (Rom 8:13). We must say to our bodies, “no, you do NOT have to have _____.” We are a generation that lives as servants of our feelings, which are fickle and untrustworthy. Have to watch what I eat because of my acid reflux. We must fast, pray, memorize, read, serve, etc. We must practice the spiritual disciplines that we know of. And when we fall down, we get back up. And when we fall again, know that His grace is waiting there for you, and you go again! And you get some accountability if that is what you need to overcome. Get some brothers and sisters in the Lord that will help give you the broken face that you need to make your body serve you. It is work! It is hard (if you are dealing with the real messiness in your life). It is hard to be the person being held accountable, and hard to be the person holding another. But if they truly are fighting to win, they want it, welcome it. No pain, no gain applies here! But with a twist, ever pain you experience will be rewarded by a greater pleasure. You will never be eternally sorry when you suffer, sacrifice, or refrain for Jesus! And it’s long-term! You fight and you fight and you fight, till you can’t fight no more, and you fight some more. And by faith you will have the victory or die trying, but that death will be sweet, and it will provide a wonderful testimony of the genuineness of your faith, and the fact that when you passed from life to death, you did not meet your Judge, but your Treasure and the Lover of your soul! And your passing was not really from life to death, but from death to life! So let us go forth outside the camp and suffer for Him and with Him, cutting off the hands, gouging out the eyes by the Spirit and the Word, and let our lives reflect His beauty and glory so that the whole world may know Him. So with this passion, we can cut off our internet if need be; get up 30 minutes early, if need be; stop watching NCIS and numbing our brains, if need be; come to church on Sunday night if need be; give with fresh commitment; put down chocolate if need be (Edwards monitored his diet, rest, everything); do whatever it takes to let our bodies serve us, and advance Christ’s cause in the world, and win the prize, that imperishable inheritance. We have to get fired up enough to drive a stake into the ground of our lives, and say “this far and no farther.” The world is tired of mediocre, lackluster, status quo, no difference Christianity, and frankly, Jesus is too! But you can do it with His help! It is He who works in you in the form of the Spirit to accomplish His good pleasure and conform you into the image of Christ. This is as much about trust as it is about effort!

B. Helpful Suggestions:

1. Pray for God to increase your “want to’s” and your faith – First step, w/o it, nothing will happen

i. Discipline is not simply a willpower exercise, but spiritual and supernatural, by faith

ii. The discipline actually feeds the power

2. Constantly remind yourself of the goal, and of the power to achieve it

i. Not discipline itself, but Christ. Not achievement or pride, but Christ. Not notches, but Christ

ii. Obtain the prize

iii. Glorify the Father

iv. Conformity to Christ in holiness, love, fellowship with Father, Spirit sensitivity

v. Power to achieve it is the gospel and the Holy Spirit working in you

3. Find something to cut out to make room for the discipline, prioritize – What’s most important?

i. Cutting out coaching baseball this year, budgeting – gas prices

4. One thing at a time

i. Start small, Andy Davis had memorized 22 NT books when I was in seminary

ii. BTW, I have his strategy plan for memorization

5. Tie strings on your finger – anything to make it easier (but ease is not goal)

i. This is a good place for technology

ii. Also a good place for accountability

6. Use small blocks of time not normally used

i. Commute time, deer stand time, break time – gadgets made to do this

7. Fight failure with forgiveness, grace, confidence – bruised reed and smoldering flax

i. Accountability is more encouragement than condemnation, takes time to establish this!

ii. This doesn’t mean there is no place for hardness, high expectation, and rebuke

A. Closing illustration: The man suddenly stopped smiling. He looked me straight in the eye, & with a forcefulness that burned right into my soul, he told me something that left me a different person. He told me, “Don’t hope, friend… decide!”

B. This disciplining of yourself is the key to the advancement of many of our lives. We are busy, stressed, broke, but we still find time to eat (most days). We work hard at our jobs, at family, but expend little agony on Christ and the kingdom. And unless we are willing to train with the intensity of athletes, we will not grow, and definitely not at the rate that we should. Effort does not guarantee growth, but growth will not happen without it.

C. Some of us need to call things that are unimportant unimportant. Some of us need to call time wasters time wasters. Some of us need to quit making excuses. Some of us need to break free from the bondage to sleep, food, feelings, guilt, and/or hobbies of little kingdom value (not that all are). Come put them down now. Come lay down your life afresh now. Come follow Christ on the Calvary Road of Love. It will cost you, but you won’t regret it in the end.