Part 3 – Boxing

The sport of boxing has emerged as a good form of exercise, even for the silver set.  While visiting my mother in June, I chatted over breakfast with a couple who are fellow residents.  They told me they were headed to a group boxing class specially designed tor folks with Parkinsons.  I agreed that the punching and quick footwork would be good for the mind and body, but they clarified that this boxing is done sitting in a chair!  The participants ‘fight’ a volunteer opponent but the sport is obviously modified.  Nevertheless, the gentleman was pumped up by his opportunity to box.

Another girlfriend of mine takes a kickboxing class at our gym. She says kickboxing is a rigorous class, leaving her huffing and feeling the stretch and pumps afterward!  I think I’ll skip that class and stick to the easy elliptical for now.  How surprising to me that Rocky’s famed sport worked its way to fighting the effects of aging!

The phrase “Your Arm’s Too Short to Box with God” wanders in my mind.  It is not from Scripture:  it is the name of a 70’s Broadway musical based on the Gospel of Matthew.  There is however a Biblical reference to the reach of God’s arm.  Isaiah 59 v 1 says, “Surely the arm of the Lord is not too short to save.”  The statement seems inquisitive, as if someone is having doubts and wondering if God can come through for him.   The Isaiah passage then unfolds a list of numerous grievous wrongs happening at the time.  Although the verse promises that God’s arm is never too short or too weak to knock the breath out of any obstacle we face (“nor His ear too dull to hear”), He may choose not to engage when He has been disregarded, or His ways disobeyed.

The other day, I stopped by our gym to suspend our membership.  We have been out of town frequently and we have had a lot going on when home.  Rather than lose our ‘senior’ gym privileges, I put our membership on hold with hopes of getting back to workouts next month.  God is in control.  Gloves on, He’s in the ring for me!

Here’s a similar song of encouragement I heard at church a couple of weeks ago.  The Lord Will Provide

Part 2

In part 1 of Gym Wonderings, I shared my observations as a new gym member, part of the silver set who exercise against aging.  I noted with amusement the people-types at the gym.  The physically fit gym regulars are known as gym rats.  I try to get to the gym often, so I do not lose my membership, but my level of working out does not fall into the gym rat category.

I have noticed a gym employee who also does not fit the usual gym rat stereotype.  She wears loose t-shirts and jogging pants rather than spandex athletic wear.  Her body type is not the muscular, toned variety of most of the staff, but she is cheerful and confident in the uber fitness environment where she works.  I admire her courage, her confidence to be who she is, though she stands out from her lean and lithe coworkers.  I will add here that I understand there are many body types; not every figure is built to be lanky and trim.  In fact, I’m sure she exercises regularly and has a healthy heart rate.

Honestly, not everyone at the gym should be in good body shape.  Exercisers like me are there working out to become more fit.  Our muscles need strengthening, we need to build stamina, and we want to firm up flab.  We go to the gym as we are …  in our not-so-haute workout attire!

There’s a spiritual parallel here.  Many people think they will return to God once they clean up their act.  They feel they must do better before they exercise any spiritual muscle.  But like going to the gym, you don’t get spiritually fit first.  Nothing we do fixes us spiritually.  Instead, the Bible tells us to release ourselves to God, then the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ will do its transforming work.  “Wash me [God], and I shall be whiter than snow,” declared David the Psalmist (Psalm 51 v 7). And Jesus said, “I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance.”  (Luke 5 v 32) Just like you can’t put on a trendy Under Armour outfit and call yourself fit, you can’t put on a Christian face and think you are saved.  God’s power works in us from the inside out. Take courage, as the front desk gal at the gym does, and show up at a good workout place (a personal Bible study, or a church community group, or a worship service at a Bible believing church would be good starters for you).  I would love to hear your story and how things are going!

Full credit to Coastal Fitness where we work out.

Part 1

Last fall, my husband and I joined a local gym.  Thanks to an advantage of our health insurance, we, the Silver Set, get free membership!  It’s a great deal and we are blessed to have a very nice facility close to our home.

This is a new experience for me.  I was not a high school athlete, so I did not work out in a gym, except for the required P.E. classes.  In my adult life, I’ve taken various exercise classes, but it is a first for me to frequent the gym for personal workouts.

A few things immediately stood out to me.  I noticed the types of folks at the gym and the types of workout outfits they wear.  Many gym goers are younger than me, with buff bodies, seemingly very fit.  They flaunt well-defined muscles in spandex-tight workout clothes.  I now recognize gym regulars, the body builders, and the staff trainers.  While that crowd is miles ahead of me in fitness, I’ve found them to be friendly and respectful.

I’ve noticed another set of gym types.  They are older and less fit.  They work out in outfits from their drawer: maybe stretchy pants and a t-shirt but I saw one guy in denim jeans, with a leather belt and flannel shirt.  Bless his heart, at least he was exercising!  I am more aligned with this group: working out on a basic level, dressed in something less than Under Armour.

So, what am I wondering, you’re wondering?  Does the Bible say much about fitness?  Yes, fitness is addressed in Scripture.  New Testament events took place in Greco-Roman times, when body building and sports competition were popular, and there are Scripture references to both.  The Apostle Paul told young Pastor Timothy to train for a godly life because “physical exercise has some value, but spiritual exercise is valuable in every way” (1 Timothy 4 v 8).   In Hebrews, believers are encouraged to “run with endurance the race that is set before us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith.”  (Hebrews 12 v 1)

As summer approaches, I will continue my gym visits and not neglect to train spiritually as well.  Of course, I love that the Hebrews quote above calls Jesus our Author!  I encourage you to exercise the habit of reading His Word regularly. “How to Read the Bible” on my Pages tab provides ideas for Bible reading.  I also added a new quote on the Testimonial page.

If you subscribe to my blog via email, thank you.  Posts are best viewed at “A Writer’s Daughter”

Wonderings from Gym Workouts

Last fall, my husband and I joined a local gym.  Thanks to an advantage of our health insurance, we, the Silver Set, get free membership!  It’s a great deal and we are blessed to have a very nice facility close to our home.

This is a new experience for me.  I was not a high school athlete, so I did not work out in a gym, except for the required P.E. classes.  In my adult life, I’ve taken various exercise classes, but it is a first for me to frequent the gym for personal workouts.

A few things immediately stood out to me.  I noticed the types of folks at the gym and the types of workout outfits they wear.  Many gym goers are younger than me, with buff bodies, seemingly very fit.  They flaunt well-defined muscles in spandex-tight workout clothes.  I now recognize gym regulars, the body builders, and the staff trainers.  While that crowd is miles ahead of me in fitness, I’ve found them to be friendly and respectful.

I’ve noticed another set of gym types.  They are older and less fit.  They work out in outfits from their drawer: maybe stretchy pants and a t-shirt but I saw one guy in denim jeans, with a leather belt and flannel shirt.  Bless his heart, at least he was exercising!  I am more aligned with this group: working out on a basic level, dressed in something less than Under Armour.

So, what am I wondering, you’re wondering?  Does the Bible say much about fitness?  Yes, fitness is addressed in Scripture.  New Testament events took place in Greco-Roman times, when body building and sports competition were popular, and there are Scripture references to both.  The Apostle Paul told young Pastor Timothy to train for a godly life because “physical exercise has some value, but spiritual exercise is valuable in every way” (1 Timothy 4 v 8).   In Hebrews, believers are encouraged to “run with endurance the race that is set before us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith.”  (Hebrews 12 v 1)

As summer approaches, I will continue my gym visits and not neglect to train spiritually as well.  Of course, I love that the Hebrews quote above calls Jesus our Author!  I encourage you to exercise the habit of reading His Word regularly. “How to Read the Bible” on my Pages tab provides ideas for Bible reading.  I also added a new quote on the Testimonial page.

If you subscribe to my blog via email, thank you.  Posts are best viewed at “A Writer’s Daughter”

Full credit to Coastal Fitness where we work out.

Football Season and Extra Yard for Teachers

I like football season. I barely understand the way the game is played, and I don’t closely follow any team, but I enjoy the rhythm of the season. Fall Saturdays feature the college games with traditions like Homecoming and tailgate parties. The sportscasters and programming of pro football games feel familiar to me also. We’ve had fun attending college football games, especially at our kids’ schools, and have made it to a few professional games. Football has been momentous for my husband and me. We officially met at my college Homecoming game and we became engaged after attending a Navy football game in Annapolis.

On the right, my son and I chat at a pre-game cookout back in his college days. GO FLAMES!

Extra Yard for Teachers (EYFT) is an initiative leveraging the college football program to honor teachers and inspire people to become educators. EYFT just finished an 8-day blitz of events, but each week of the collegiate football season, players share about a special teacher who inspired them. As a teacher, I appreciate higher education athletics recognizing the formative contributions of educators.

I came across a remarkable football story reading a waiting room magazine. Rob Mendez is a young man without arms and legs, the result of a rare congenital condition. From a young age he loved football and passionately learned all he could about the game, dreaming of becoming a coach. Understandably, securing a coaching position proved challenging given his extreme physical limitations. Mendez said this:

“Two years ago, I rolled out of a church service dejected, out of work, wondering if I’d ever get a chance to become a head football coach. I remember finding a quiet spot near a bush and just asking God to give me a sign that I wasn’t wasting my life, that there was a place for me in football. A few days later, I got the phone call for the interview at Prospect. And now all this has happened.” (ESPN, July 2019, p. 60)

Mendez got a JV Head Coach job, coached an 8-2 winning season and was awarded ESPY’s “Jimmy V Award for Perseverance.”

Mendez’s turning point followed his participation in a worship service. He shares how he felt very down but it seems that time spent in church strengthened him to plead to God regarding his dreams and despair. It wasn’t long after that his coaching opportunity came along.

 

Rob Mendez coaches a JV football team in Saratoga, CA.

Church has a way of doing that. Joining worship, leaving the concerns of life at the door, experiencing fellowship, being lifted in song, and hearing the Bible preached, result in change and produce healing. Many people think they can experience God without going to church. You can experience God on your own, but church is God’s vehicle for fully encountering Him and Christian community.   Corporate worship uniquely offers connection with other believers and a focused time learning through Scripture. Psalm 73: 16-17 describes frustration thwarted by joining others in the place of God: “it was oppressive to me until I entered the sanctuary of God.” God’s design is for us to “flourish” as we enter “in the house of the Lord … the courts of our God” (Psalm 92:13). The New Testament restates it clearly: “Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing” (Hebrews 10:25). Leave your excuses at home and go to church next Sunday.