This was an interesting passage to read right
after the Olympics concluded: “His delight is not in the strength of the horse,
nor His pleasure in the legs of a man, but the Lord takes pleasure in those who
fear Him, in those who hope in His steadfast love” (Psalm 147:10-11 ESV).
I was reminded of the quote from Olympian and
missionary Eric Liddell, “God made me fast. And when I run, I feel His
pleasure.” That quote has always made me slightly uneasy, I think because it is
so easy to take out of the context of Eric’s life. It wasn’t just because he
ran fast that he felt God’s pleasure. It was the fact that his running was used
as a tool to give glory to God. Eric took a stand against running on the Lord’s
Day, and thereby glorified God. He used the spotlight of the Olympics to share
his testimony so that God would be glorified. God didn’t “find pleasure in the
legs of a man” just because he ran fast, but because Eric feared God and
trusted in His steadfast love.
Maya DiRado took a little heat from some
Christians when she said, “I don’t think God really cares about my swimming
very much.” But she clarified, “This is not my end purpose, to make the Olympic
team. My God is powerful and in control, but I don’t think He cares whether I
win. It’s interesting theology you can get into when it’s a God of victory in
your sport.” She got her priorities right. It’s not about what you can do but
about where you place your trust. As a side note, as I watched the Olympics, I
found myself praying that God would honor the athletes who honored Him.
During the closing ceremony broadcast there was
a lot of talk about athletes who were “the greatest of all time,” though
apparently no recognition by the commentators that time keeps marching on and
records fall every year. No matter how good an athlete is, their time in the
spotlight will come to an end.
The fact is that the vast majority of us will
never be in the national or international spotlight for anything we do in this
life. But as the psalmist reminds us, that doesn’t matter to God in the
slightest. His delight is in people who love Him and serve Him with whatever
gifts and abilities they may have. We may never run, walk, talk, write, or
create anything particularly noteworthy, but we can glorify God with our
bodies, minds, and spirits by loving Him and loving others. As Paul pointed out
in the opening of 1 Corinthians 13, we can exercise all kinds of gifts and
abilities, but if it is done without God’s love it is meaningless.
Ultimately, those gold, silver, and bronze
medals will disappear. Names will be forgotten. Records will be broken. But God
will remember those who have exercised hope in His steadfast love. He will
honor those who have honored Him.
“Henceforth
there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the
righteous judge, will award to me on that Day, and not only to me but also to all
who have loved His appearing” (2 Timothy 4:8).