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DEVOTIONALS

Writer's pictureMelisa Rehm


Spiritual Training Cycle: Foundation (wk. 6/13)

 

I grew up in a household with three older brothers. If one wasn’t picking on me trying to make me scream, they were wrestling knocking holes in the walls or arguing with each other. I don’t recall our house ever really being quiet until I was the only sibling still left at home. I remember my mom singing out loud when the house was chaos “silence is golden; golden.”

 

For some silence is golden. For others silence can be crippling. Silence can be both of those, but what does our perception of silence teach us? 

 

First, let’s start with how we define silence. Silence is a deep focus on God by turning off the world around us.

 

Depending on where or the time-of-day silence teaches me different things.

 

When I’m on a walk by myself and I don’t turn on music, I notice and appreciate the world around me more. I talk to God and thank Him for the beauty He has created. The breeze on a cool day, the warmth of the sun when it’s hot, the breath in my lungs and a body that can do the things I love. The silence in this moment is an opportunity to worship God and His creation.

 

However, when I’m lying in bed and can’t sleep in the middle of the night with no noise and distraction from the outside world, the silence reveals a range of thoughts, emotions, and memories. Sometimes it’s too much. It’s in those moments that I intentionally repeat scripture memory verses or pray to draw myself away from the fears, doubts, and irrationally dreamt up scenarios that creep in at 1am. This silence teaches me that I need God. I need His word. I need His peace. I need His stillness so I can truly rest my mind, my soul, and my body. After about 5-10 minutes of repeating scripture or praying I usually drift right back to sleep.

 

A friend once told me she thinks those restless nights where we can’t go back to sleep until we start praying or talking to God, that He’s usually the one who woke us up as an invitation to talk to Him distraction-free. It makes me think of when a child wakes up in the middle of the night and crawls into bed with their parents because they can’t go back to sleep on their own. They were up stirring, probably scared, and once they feel the love, safety, and presence of their parents sleeping right beside them, they immediately fall back asleep. I like to think that God longs to be that for us as well. 

 

One of the reasons I loved racing triathlons and road races was the hours of silence in training and racing. There’d be times I’d ride or run and think of nothing at all. It was easy to talk to God during those times because it’s not a very technical movement. You ride and run in a straight line, apply the brakes every so often, dodge a few people while you’re passing them and that’s it.

 

In CrossFit, good gosh. The thoughts never stop. Over the years I’ve learned to quiet most of the chatter in my mind and focus on one phrase for the movements I need help with. In competitions, I’ll repeat scripture verses in my mind “I can do all things through Christ” or simply “all things; all things” “Be strong and courageous and do the work” or just “do the work” over and over. But specifically in the technical movements, when you could tell yourself 100 different cues, I focus on just one. “Hips”, “big leg drive”, “push up on the bar”, etc. and I repeat it over and over. I don’t play golf, but I’d imagine it’s similar. The technique and cues to get that perfect swing are probably endless when maybe you just need one word to cue your body into hitting the ball where it needs to go. 

 

To get our focus where it needs to go, we also need just one word: God. 

 

As I was preparing this devotional The Sound of Silence by Simon & Garfunkel came to mind and naturally, I had to listen to it. This line in particular spoke to me: “And the people bowed and prayed to the neon god they made...”

 

There are invitations all around us to have a deep focus on God, but we’ve gotten so used to it not being an option. Instead, we bow and pray to a neon god we’ve made. Outdoor walks have turned into an opportunity to listen to the newest podcast episode. Folding laundry has become the opportunity to catch up on trash tv, not being able to sleep in the middle of the night is an invitation to pick up our phone and scroll Instagram.

 

The Lord is good to those who wait for Him,
To the person who seeks Him. 
It is good that he waits silently
For the salvation of the Lord.
-Lamentations 3:25-26

 

In a world that monetizes our distractions and lack of silence we must be extremely intentional to carve out the time to seek it. How can we ask God to move in our lives or lead us when we don’t allow for the stillness and silence to feel His guidance?

 

I’ve heard people say “God doesn’t speak in a loud voice. He whispers.” He wants us to lean in and get close to Him, to shut off the noises around us so we can hear the whisper.

 

Questions for Reflection:

Where in your day can you build intentional blocks of silence?

 

Does silence make you uncomfortable? If so, why?

 

Have you ever felt the presence of God when you’ve been intentionally still and silent?

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Writer's pictureTrey Steele

Updated: Jun 18, 2024



Spiritual Training Cycle: Foundation (wk. 5/13)

 

In July of 2013, a few months into my new journey of faith, I was given a challenge by my pastor – find a life verse. A life verse is a passage of Scripture intended to encourage and support you. But being new to faith, I had no idea where to start. I mean, the Bible, obviously, but do I just turn to Genesis and start reading?

 

Perplexed by the challenge, I set my assignment to the side and fixed my eyes instead on something that was also new to me – the CrossFit Games. Elite athletes from around the world took center stage to compete for the title of, “Fittest on Earth.” And one guy was dominating the scene. His name was Rich Froning. Rich had a knack for winning and a propensity for competing shirtless, which would end up working to my advantage. As he pushed a heavy barbell overhead, I noticed a tattoo on his right lat – Galatians 6:14.

 

“Wait a second,” I thought. “That’s a Bible verse.” I grabbed my Bible, fumbled around, and finally found it.

 

May I never boast except in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me and I to the world.

 

The tears streamed down my face as I locked in my first life verse. I was inspired.

 

Scripture changes our lives. And my first real experience with that would come via Galatians 6:14. At that time, my identity, my boast, if you will, was found in my work and my accomplishments: CrossFit gym owner, fit athlete, coach, plus the performance accolades I had gathered along the way. But God had a different plan for me. He wanted my identity to be found in Him. And Galatians 6:14 would become the catalyst for it all. As I became inspired to go deeper in my faith journey, I would realize that Scripture is the foundation of spiritual fitness.

 

The Bible inspires us because the Bible is the inspired Word of God. Over the course of about 1500 years, the Spirit of God inspired approximately 40 writers to create what we know as the Bible. That’s incredible! And at just the right time, God’s Word will inspire you.

 

God’s Word inspires during difficulty

There will be moments in your spiritual fitness journey where you’ll wonder if it’s worth it. Some obstacles you face will seem insurmountable. Let God’s Word inspire you to keep going. Breakthrough is oftentimes on the other side of break down. When the difficulty comes and hope seems lost, get a fresh word from God and keep moving!

 

God’s Word inspires dreams

That amazing imagination you have is no accident. But rather than using it to figure out how to get rich or exact revenge, let God’s Word use your imagination to inspire a dream. A dream to help the needy. A dream to restore a relationship. A dream to step into something new. Scripture has inspired some incredible dreams that the world thought were crazy – until they came to fruition. God has a great plan for you so open your mind to His reality for your life.

 

God’s Word inspires desires

If you want to change what you do, you must change what you think. That’s where the real transformation happens. And God’s Word can do that. As I read Galatians 6:14 day after day, my measures of success in life changed. I cared less about myself and more about others. I valued relationships over achievements. And I placed God at the center of everything I did. My boast was no longer in me. My boast was in Jesus.

 

Questions for Reflection:

What has God’s Word inspired you to do in the past?

 

What is God’s Word inspiring you to do right now?

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Writer's pictureMelisa Rehm


Spiritual Training Cycle: Foundation (wk. 4/13)

 

I’m assuming you are reading this because you are on a spiritual fitness journey or perhaps you came across this page by accident and don’t know what that even means. If you are new here let me remind you that spiritual fitness is the development and consistent practice of exercises that connect you to God. Much like becoming physically fit, the more consistent your effort, the more healthy habits you develop along the way, the more fit you become.

 

Scripture is the foundation of spiritual fitness just as movement is the foundation of physical fitness. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but muscles don’t come in a pill or an injection and there really is no quick and easy way to truly become fit. Fitness takes intentional movement daily whether that be in the form of a group fitness class, lifting weights, cycling, swimming, running or just simply going for a walk. To become spiritually fit you need intentional and consistent time in God’s word, a daily bread if you will. 

 

Most people start their fitness journeys in a quest to simply look better. They see fitness magazine cover models and want to look like them or actors on screen with chiseled abs and want to follow whatever workout routine they’re doing. The drive to look better motivates us to start. And then over time we realize it’s not enough to just move your body, you also have to be mindful about what you put into your body with the sole motivation still being to look good or better than you do right now.


However, most people who have been into fitness longer than 5-10 years have discovered that the motivation to just look good begins to transform beyond that. We also appreciate feeling good and that almost becomes more important. Looking good in addition to being able to sleep better, breathe easier, having more energy to run around with your kids or pets – truly becoming physically fit encompasses what’s going on externally and internally together.

 

You can skip the movement piece altogether and just go on a diet and sure you’ll probably look good, but that doesn’t mean you are physically fit. You can go to church and that’s great but the act of going to church doesn’t mean you know Jesus. To be fit you need movement. To truly know Jesus, you need Scripture. In John 5:36-47 the Jews are questioning Jesus because He was breaking the Sabbath (performing miracles), calling God His own father, and making Himself equal to God (v. 18). They were seeking the truth through various laws and scriptures but when it came to fully knowing Jesus, they fell short.

 

“You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; it is these that testify about Me; and you are unwilling to come to Me so that you may have life.” (John 5:39-40).

 

I can imagine Jesus’s frustration when speaking to these men; like how many times do I have to tell you I am who I say I am? How many other people need to testify about me before you fully believe? It’s like when people ask me how to lose fat, get more muscle, and how to get in shape. How many more times or how many different ways do I need to tell you to eat more protein, lift weights that challenge you, move your body, and prioritize sleep?? The formula really is quite simple yet we make it so complicated.

 

The formula to knowing Jesus? Scripture. The more time you spend in God’s Word, the more you begin to know about Him. His ways, His truths, His victories, His track record and every single time they point us to Jesus. We no longer just want to “be good” for Jesus. Rather the Scriptures and our relationship with Jesus changes our hearts so that we consistently choose to do good. It becomes second nature much like working out. The longer you’ve been in the fitness game the more you realize how much you need it. Fitness becomes second nature; your body doesn’t feel the same when you choose to neglect it. Just as our hearts don’t feel the same when we choose to neglect Jesus and His God-breathed Word that He has given to us in the Bible.

 

Deciding to read the Bible is very intimidating much like stepping into a gym. I get it. It took me nearly forty years to finally decide I would get up early every morning to read the entire Bible in a year. But guess what happened along the way? I started looking forward to my quiet time with God, reading His Word. The days I skipped my Bible time didn’t flow quite as well as the days I started with it. I began to develop a deeper understanding and trust in all areas of my life for God and His plan for me.

 

How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. How do you start to truly know Scripture by reading the Bible? One page at a time.

 

God’s Word is transformative, it frames our worldview of how we live our lives with intention, it meets us where we are, and it points us to Jesus. Get to know Him; start today.

 

Questions for Reflection:

Where can you build time into your day to spend reading and studying Scripture?

 

What’s the difference between being good and choosing to do good? Which do you relate to in your faith journey?

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