Several years ago, I read about the world's longest foot
race. It's called the Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race, held between the
months of June and August every year. According to a Reuters report, "The longest foot race in the world is 3,100
miles, long enough to stretch from New York
to Los Angeles. Those who run it choose a different route: they circle one city block in Queens -- for two months straight.
"The athletes lap their block more than 5,000 times.
They wear out 12 pairs of shoes.
They run more than two marathons daily. In the heat
and rain of a New York summer, they stop for virtually nothing except to sleep between midnight and 6 a.m."
You can read more about this race here:
http://en.wikipedia.orglwiki/Self-Transcendence
3100 Mile Race
I find it incredible that anybody can
run that far for that long. But perhaps
what I find even more incredible is that it is done by running the same half-mile stretch over and over and over.
If the running didn't kill me, the monotony would!
But I thought of
what a great picture that is of life. We often talk about how the Christian life is a
"race" (I Cor. 9:24; 2 Tim. 4:7; Heb. 12:1). And it is a long, long race. But I don't know how
often we have considered that the difficulty in the
race is not only in its length, but also in
its monotony. So much of what we do is repetitive and "mundane."
A Christian mother
works hard to demonstrate her faith in taking care of her husband and children. But,
every day seems just like the day before, diapers to be changed,
clothes to be washed, dirty dishes to
be cleaned, a house to be vacuumed and swept. The same thing
over and over and over.
A Christian father works hard to
demonstrate his faith by providing for his
family and living out his faith in the workplace. But every day seems just like
the day before -- fighting the
traffic to and from work, working on an assembly line doing the same job
repetitively day after day, dealing with
hard-to-please customers. The same thing over and over and over.
One of the
difficulties in living life (and the Christian life in particular) is in hanging in there through those difficult
times when it seems that you're running
across the same ground over and over. Be assured, though -- if you can survive the monotony and continue to
run, the finish line lies ahead. Continue to plod on. And keep this promise in your heart: "Always give yourselves fully to the work of
the Lord, because you know that your
labor in the Lord is not in vain." (I Cor. 15:58) Eric