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Finishing a Race Different Than the One You Started

Last post 08-27-2007, 11:24 PM by Andrew Dawson. 2 replies.
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  •  07-26-2006, 8:10 AM 82

    Finishing a Race Different Than the One You Started

    The audio should be up shortly, but here's the text:

     

    FINISHING A RACE DIFFERENT THAN THE ONE YOU STARTED

     

              What an honor and privilege it is to be invited back to my old home.  The New Wilmington Missionary Conference and Westminster College – not to mention Lawrence County is really my true home.  I was born 10 miles south of here in New Castle … I grew up coming to this conference.  After we moved to Michigan I kept coming back to this conference in high school.  I was awakened to a relationship with Jesus Christ here at this conference.  I can still remember sermons delivered from this very pulpit from the likes of Bruce Thielman, Bill Jackson, Joanna Adams, Bob Kelly, Keith Brown, Ed Fairman, Don Patchel … the list goes on.  I loved this conference so much I decided to go to college here.  I met my wife Amanda here – and we’ll be married 25 years in a few months.  I met professors here who changed and shaped my life.  I was given the chance to grow in my faith.  I was called to the ministry while on this campus.  The ground upon which you walk this week … the sawdust that crumbles between your toes … this is holy ground for me … and I hope in some way through what happens this weeks … and what is already happening – I hope that this ground becomes holy ground for you too. 

     

              I come from Liberty Corner, New Jersey.  Now I would be willing to bet that very few of you have ever been to … or even heard of Liberty Corner, New Jersey.  Liberty Corner is a pretty small town.  It is so small that the church – and there is only one church in Liberty Corner – the church has more members than the town has residents.  And yet Liberty Corner is famous for many things.  It is the home of the world famous Quienanst quintuplets – born back in 1970.  It is the home of the United States Golf Association – visited by all the famous golfers.  Liberty Corner served as a scene in a Jimmy Stewart movie and a prize goes to the person who can come up with which Jimmy Stewart movie has a Liberty Corner scene in it.  And finally, Liberty Corner is home to the nation’s oldest nudist colony.  I’ve applied to be the chaplain three times … but have gotten turned down each time. 

     

              When Don Dawson emailed me and asked me to come back and speak here at what we used to call the Institute Hour … I was very excited.  And then he told me that I would have to follow the weekend speaker …and that the weekend speaker was going to be Tony Campolo.  Now following Tony Campolo as a speaker is what they call oratorical suicide.  Following Tony Campolo is like following Abraham Lincoln after the Gettysburg Address or Martin Luther King after the I Have a Dream speech.  Tony’s one of my heroes … so I am humbled just to follow him.  So we will do the best we can.

     

              It’s hard not to do well though when you have such a wonderful theme verse to work with – this great verse from Habakkuk 1:5 (Habakkuk … that’s quite a name … don’t hear too many people these days naming their children Habakkuk) – but he has some pretty incredible things to say including this verse:  “Look at the nations and watch – and be utterly amazed.  For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe, even if you were told.”  Now these words are about 2500 years old … and they are addressed to a very different group of people … but God’s word is an amazing word … because it speaks just as much today as it spoke back then.  “I am going to do something amazing in your days that you would not believe, even if you were told.”  We are going to talk this week about what God might be up to in your days … and in your life.  God didn’t stop working in people’s lives 2500 years ago – he’s working in people’s lives today.  That’s what this week is about really … you are going to hear about what God is doing throughout all the nations … and you are going to see how God is working in amazing ways … in your days.  And not just in your days … but in your life.  God is working in your life right now.  It’s why you’re here.  It’s why I came here a long time ago …it’s why I am back … because God is working in my life and he is working in your life.  God is up to something.

     

              So we’ve got some scriptures we want to look at today – the first from Matthew chapter 5, the second from Luke 19 and the third from Hebrews 12.

     

    Mark Trotter tells the story of a Georgene Johnson who lived outside of Cleveland, Ohio.  Georgene had turned 42 years old and wasn’t happy about it.  So she decided she didn’t want to look like a 42 year old and got it into her mind to take up running.  So she started running; first a little bit and then a little bit more.  She got up to 2 miles a day and then 3 miles and then 4 miles.  And she started feeling better about herself and less and less like a 42 year old.  Then she decided to give herself a little challenge and enter herself into a race.  She thought she might begin with a 10K , a 10-kilometer race, which is about 6 miles.  The race was being held somewhere in Cleveland so she got there on the morning of the race.  Lots of folks were milling around.  She heard on the speaker the announcement for the runners to assemble at the starting line.  Georgene took her place at the starting line.  The gun went off and Georgene, with this mass of runners, was off and running her first race. 

     

              She had seen the outline of the course before the race and knew that it was one of the courses that basically had the runners go out about 3 miles and then come back the remaining 3 miles.  But Georgene noticed when they got to mile 4 they had not yet turned back and it didn’t appear that they were going to.  They were running a different course than what she thought.    But when they got to mile 7 Georgene knew that something was up.  So she moved over close to another runner and asked, huffing and puffing, what happened to the finish line?  “What finish line?” the fellow runner responded, “you’re in the Cleveland Marathon!  You’ve got 19 more miles to go!”  (Turns out her 10K race was scheduled a half hour after the start of the marathon.) 

     

              So Georgene Johnson asked herself, “Should I stop or should I go on?  No harm in going on I suppose.  Let’s just see how far I can go.  It’s not the race I trained for.  It’s not the race I entered.  But it is the race I’m in.”   So she continued to run.  And she ran.  And she ran.  And she ran.  And she finished.  “How could you finish this race for which you did not train?”  the newspapers asked.   Georgene said she started by taking it one mile at a time  and then a half-mile at a time  and then a quarter-mile at a time  and then a few yards at a time  and then by the end … one step at a time.

     

    She finished a race different than the one she started.  This morning I want to talk with you about finishing a race different, maybe, than the one you started.

     

    I don’t know where you are right now in your life.  Each of us has been on the track for a certain amount of time.  Some of us got started a good while ago … and have been around the track maybe more than we care to admit.  Others have been on the track for a while … and you feel like you’ve got a good bit more to go.  And there are some of you who got put on the track not so long ago … and you feel like you are just getting started.  But wherever you are in your life … you probably have it in your mind that you are in a certain race … you have a certain way to go. 

     

    You know the world will tell you that once you’ve been entered into a race … you don’t have a whole lot of choice of joining another race.  Geneticists will tell you that you got programmed a long time ago … you’re DNA got set and you are who you are and there is not much you can do about it.  Psychologists will tell you that you are largely a collection of your experiences and your family rearing and that each of us carries around with us a certain amount of “baggage”.  Sociologists will tell you that you are the product of your environment and that you can take the person out of the neighborhood or the community … but you can’t take the neighborhood or the community out of the person.  Parents will tell you that you are in a certain type of race … they may already have mapped out for you where you are going … what college you’re going to … what profession you will take up.  Others will tell you that because of your age you are likely set in your ways.  That there is no changing you now.   Now that you are X amount of years old … why there is just no teaching an old dog new tricks.

     

    You see the world wants to peg you.  The world wants to get you to fit into some type of mold.  The world wants to enter you into a certain race … and then tell you that the race you started is the race you have to finish. 

     

    I was teaching confirmation class a few years ago and one of my students asked if he could come and see me which he did.  And he told me that he was thinking about becoming a pastor and that he would like to learn more.  So we talked.  He went home.  A couple days later I got a call from his mother.  “We’ll have none of that,” she said.  “None of what?” I asked.  “I would very much appreciate you not talking to our boy about being a pastor.”  She made it sound like I was asking him to become an axe murderer.  “I don’t understand,” I said.  “You’re right,” she said, “you don’t understand.  You see, his father and I already know what he’s going to be … he’s going to be an engineer.   So don’t go messing up his mind.”   He was in the race … and there was no other race for him to run. 

     

    So I want to know something … no matter where you are … not matter what race you’re in … is it still possible for you to finish a race different than the one you started?

     

    You see one of the things I love about the Bible is that the Bible is filled with story after story about people who start one race and finish a different race.  People whose lives have a before and an after.  Sometimes lots of befores and lots of afters.  People who thought life had to be one thing … but then they find out through the voice and calling of God that life really can be another thing.  Abraham started one race and finished another.  Moses started one race and finished another.  Ruth started one race and finished another.  Esther started one race and finished another.  Paul started one race and finished another.  God always has another chapter for you up his sleeve.

     

    So alongside the Sea of Galilee walks this rabbi named Jesus – now he’s got no business walking alongside the Sea of Galilee – because he is living in a world where everybody is pegged.  You were who you were.  You were Roman or non-Roman.  You were Jew or you were Gentile.  You were religious or you were non-religious.  You were a Pharisee or you were a Sadducee.  You followed the law or you didn’t follow the law.  You got put into a race … and the world was pretty much committed to keeping you in that race.  So Jesus is supposed to be back at the synagogue … staying religious … but he’s out there alongside the Sea and he bumps into some fishermen.  And they’ve been pegged too.  They are lower class fishermen who are not religious.  They are just trying to make a living.  They are just trying to finish the race that they started a long time ago.  But Jesus walks up to them and says, “Follow me, and I’ll make you fish for people.   Follow me and I’ll have you finish a race different than the one you started.” 

     

    “No, no, Jesus … we’re fishermen … we’re non-religious … we don’t keep the law … we don’t race with your type … we smell … we’ve been pegged.”  “Oh,” Jesus says, “you’ve been pegged.  Well let me unpeg you.  Let me invite you to finish a race different than the one you started.  Let me invite you to fish not for fish … but to fish for people.”  Now when Jesus talks about fishing for people … that’s just his code word for love.  “Let me invite you into a life where your mission is to get people loved.  To get people loved.” 

     

    Jesus walks through Jericho and he sees Zacchaeus up in a sycamore tree.  And he tells Zacchaeus to come down from the tree … and he invites himself over to Zacchaeus’ house … because, you see, Zacchaeus has been pegged.  He’s a tax collector and there were no more pegged people than tax collectors.  Everybody hated tax collectors … they took your money.  But Jesus invites himself over to Zacchaeus’ house and he says … Zacchaeus … I want to invite you to finish a race different than the one you started.  You’ve been cheating people out of their money.  You’ve been taking more than what is due.  And they got you pegged, Zacchaeus.  Now’s the time to come unpegged.  Now’s the time to start giving people money not taking it.  Now’s the time to get people loved.  So Zacchaeus starts giving his money away.  He starts running a different race.

     

    You see God always has another chapter for you up his sleeve.  There is no peg from which you cannot be unpegged.  There is no point in your life from which you cannot turn and start over. 

     

              Did you ever hear of Gordon Wilson?  Gordon Wilson was pegged.  He was Irish and he was a Methodist and he lived in Belfast.  And that meant he was pegged.  He was pegged a Protestant and that made him an enemy of Catholics.  So like a good pegged Protestant Gordon took his 20 year old daughter Marie to a Protestant celebration outside of Belfast to honor the war dead on Veteran’s Day.  In the middle of that celebration the IRA set off a bomb that buried Gordon and his daughter under five feet of broken concrete.  The two of them survived the initial blast and could hear and see each other under the rubble.  Marie grabbed her daddy’s hand and said, “Daddy, I love you very much.”  They were her last words.  She slipped into unconsciousness and died in the hospital a few hours later. 

     

              When they pulled the sheet over his precious daughter’s face this good Methodist father had to decide something.    He had to decide whether he was going to stay a pegged Protestant.  Was he going to just finish the race that he started?  And in that moment that Jewish rabbi Jesus came and invited himself into that hospital room and asked him if he wouldn’t finish a race different than the one he started. 

     

              So when he stepped out of the hospital and in front of the microphones -- when the world expected to hear anger and insults and names -- Gordon Wilson said, “I have lost my daughter, but I bear no grudge.  Bitter talk is not going to bring Marie Wilson back to life.  I shall pray, tonight and every night, that God will forgive those who killed her.”  The spirit of Christ, Gordon would tell you, had unpegged him. 

     

              It was from this point that Gordon Wilson began running a different race.  Because it was on that day that this grieving dad began leading a crusade for Protestant-Catholic reconciliation.  He wrote a book about his daughter, spoke out against violence, and constantly repeated the phrase, “Love is the bottom line.”  He met with the IRA, forgave them for what they did, and asked them to lay down their arms.  The Republic of Ireland made him a senator.  When he died suddenly in 1995 of a heart attack the Irish Republic, Northern Ireland and Great Britain honored this man who finished a race different than the one he had started.

     

              So our theme verse says that “I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe … even if you were told.”  Is that possible?  Did you come here to this conference with it all figured out?  If God were calling you to a different race than the one you started … would it matter?  Would you listen? 

     

              I love that cartoon where one guy is talking to the other guy and he says, “I think I missed my calling in life.”  “What’s your calling?” asked the other.  “I have no idea,” he says .. “I just hate to think I was born to do what I’m doing now.”  Were you born to do what you are doing now?  Maybe you are … but than again maybe not. 

     

              1968 Olympics in Mexico City – the Olympic marathon.  The gold medalist, silver medalist, bronze medalist all pass the finish line … and then all the rest of the runners over the next few minutes.  The crowd got up to leave.  Little did they know that there was still one more runner out there running the marathon who had yet to enter the stadium.  Ten minutes goes by.  Twenty … thirty .. forty … fifty … finally an hour goes by and the last place finisher, John Stephen Akhwari from Tanzania enters the stadium and runs his final lap … to the applause of just a few.  Afterward a reporter asks Akhwari why when he was so far behind didn’t he just retire from the race.  The runner seemed confused by the question and then finally said, “My country did not send me to Mexico City to just start the race.  They sent me to finish.”

     

              You know God didn’t just send you into this world to start the race … he sent you into the world to finish the race … and not just to finish … but to finish the race he’s got for you.  “For we are,” writes the Hebrews writer, “we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses … let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us …”   

     

              George Ritchie, a psychiatrist, who wrote the book Return from Tomorrow, tells of interviewing survivors of Nazi concentration camps not long after their liberation and how he came across a former inmate known as “Wild Bill”.  He appeared strong and healthy and full of life, so Ritchie assumed that this was a man who had been in the camp only a month or so before its liberation.  But then he learned that “Wild Bill” had been in the camp for six years.  Not only that, he had been put on the most difficult of all the work details.  He averaged 15 hours of work a day, seven days a week.  All this on the same starvation diet as the rest of them.  How did he survive so well, Ritchie asked.  “Wild Bill” told his story:

     

              “We lived,” said he, “in the Jewish section of Warsaw, my wife, our two daughters, and our three little boys.  When the Germans reached our street they lined everyone up against a wall and opened up with machine guns.  I begged to be allowed to die with my family, but because I spoke German they put me in a work group. 

              “I had to decide right there and then,” he continued, “whether to let myself hate the soldiers who had done this.  It was an easy decision, really.  I was a lawyer.  In my practice I had seen what hate could do to people’s minds and bodies.  Hate had just killed the six people who mattered most to me in the world.   I decided then that I would spend the rest of my life – whether it was a few days or many years – loving every person I came in contact with.” 

     

              It’s called finishing a different race than the one you started.  

     

              I don’t know what’s going on in your life right now.  I don’t know how many times you’ve been around the track.  I don’t know what race you’re running.  I don’t know what pegs you’ve been pegged with.   But friends, life is not about the race you’ve started … it’s about the race you’ve finished.  And this week the rabbi named Jesus has invited himself into your life and he wants to know is it possible that he could put you on another track?  Is it possible that you’re being called not to fish for fish … but to fish for people?    Is it possible for you to be the instrument by which other people will get loved? 

     

              “For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe, even if you were told.”

  •  08-27-2007, 7:52 AM 2475 in reply to 82

    Re: Finishing a Race Different Than the One You Started

    Hello Andrew,

    I was hoping ypu coulld help me. I'm trying to track down any of Bruce Thielman's sermons or addresses to NWMC. Thanks,

    Ginny Drew 

    Filed under:
  •  08-27-2007, 11:24 PM 2476 in reply to 2475

    Re: Finishing a Race Different Than the One You Started

    Hi Ginny,

    Unfortunately, I've been unable to track down any sermons or addresses online.  I've found a handful of quotes and/or anecdotes which I'll link to at the end, but nothing that fits what you're looking for.  I spoke with my father and he suggested emailing 1rst Presbyterian Church of Pittsburgh.  They may have some archives.  I'm sorry I can't be of more help, but please let us know if you find more than I did.

    Andrew

    Bruce Thielman online citations:

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