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Fr. Joseph Chamblain, O.S.M. Pastor

 

10/8/2023 Fr. Joseph Chamblain, OSM
WHAT RUNNERS TEACH THE REST OF US

Psychologists often talk about extrinsic motivation and intrinsic motivation. Examples of extrinsic motivation are seeking money, power, prestige, as well as instances where we are simply required to do something by our parents, our boss, or some other entity. When it comes to the sport of running, though, our motivation is mostly intrinsic, and our accountability is mostly to ourselves. No one runs the Chicago Marathon for the money or the publicity, unless they are already a celebrity or already one of the top runners in the world. Getting your name in tiny print in theChicago Tribune the next morning is not exactly a publicity bonanza. In the sport of running there are no team practices or scrimmages for which we have to appear. Runners do not appear on stage like performers, whose failure to practice or rehearse will be obvious to the audience. The runner’s motivation is mostly internal. While those who complete the marathon do receive a completion medal, it is not really in the same category as a World Series ring, a Super Bowl ring, or an Oscar, or Emmy, or Grammy.

That is why many people over the years have spotted a connection between running and the spiritual life. Since running is probably the world’s oldest sport, it is not surprising that the author of the Letter to the Hebrews would use running as a metaphor for the spiritual life: “Let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith” (Hebrews 12:2). The discipline required to train for a marathon is the same discipline required for growing in prayer and service to others. Running is an ascetic practice. In both running and praying we must discipline ourselves against the lure of comfort and convenience.

Halie Scott, a committed Christian and runner, wrote about how she got started running in an article in Christianity Today. She was with a group of friends visiting Yosemite National Park. They stopped for a sandwich at one of the food vendors in the park, and she realized that she had left her water bottle in the car She literally trudged back 100 years or so to retrieve her water bottle, as if the effort involved was an unconscionable burden. “On the way back to the group, I became really disgusted with myself. How did I become a person too lazy to walk the length of a football field?’ She realized that she had become equally lazy with Bible reading and other religious activities, getting around to them only when she felt like it. In the months and years that followed, she learned to use the self-discipline she develop for  running to develop a deeper relationship with God.

Nick Ripatrazone describes the “runner’s high” that some runners achieve as an opportunity to enter into prayer itself. “When I am fully present to my body, I can experience the absence of myself and enter into communion with God. Sometimes I offer silent prayers, while other days I simply listen to what God wants me to hear.  . . . When I fall away from running or from praying, I feel out of sorts and lazy; alien to my best self . . . . When something becomes habit, it becomes part of our soul and skin. I run to run faster; I pray to pray better.”

There is something else that we churchgoers can learn from runners. Running builds community, and community is integral to the marathon itself. Runners exerting themselves to make it another mile give one another the inspiration they need to run another mile. Up and down the Marathon Route are aid stations to help the wounded and supply water. And then there are cheering crowds lining the course, which in the Book of Hebrews are compared to the communion of saints who urge us on to the finish line. The Marathon also builds community in another way. Those who started the Marathon back in the 1970’s designed the course as a vehicle for introducing people to the diverse neighborhoods that make up Chicago. And perhaps in the present era, when so many things divide us and our city is struggling to welcome the endless busloads of migrants arriving at our doorstep, a reminder that we are one community is more important than ever. Crowds will be cheering for the same reason in all parts of town. Running really does build community. And that’s what church should be about too.

                                                                              Fr. Joe

PS. As many of you know, I had COVID a few weeks ago. I followed my doctor’s guidelines for isolating and masking. But we know that we can sometimes have COVID before we realize it and we are not 100% sure how long we are contagious afterwards. So if I exposed anyone either by accident or personal carelessness, I apologize. COVID is the gift that no one wants to receive!

 

          

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This list includes the last thirteen months of messages.
Click on a date to see the message.

   
4/28/2024   OUR COMMON VOCATION
4/21/2024   LIFE THROUGH DARKENED GLASSES
3/31/2024   HOW TO AVOID CELEBRATING EASTER
4/7/2024   A SEASON OF CELEBRATION
4/14/2024   A WORLD OF PLASTIC
3/17/2024   APPROACHING THE CITY OF DESTINY
3/24/2024   A WEEK OF PROCESSIONS
3/3/2024   YES THERE IS GOOD NEWS
3/10/2024   MAKING THE HEADLINES
2/4/2024   WHY YOUR SUPPORT MATTERS
2/18/2024   NOT JUST THE SAME OLD STUFF
2/25/2024   WHAT WE NEED RIGHT NOW
2/11/2024   THE ORIGINAL SOFT ENTRY POINT
12/31/2023   WELCOMING, ACCOMPANYING, SENDING
1/7/2024   DOING A LITTLE DIGGING
1/14/2024   THAT ALL MAY BE ONE
1/21/2024   CATCHING UP ON THIS AND THAT
1/28/2024   WHAT'S REALLY BEHIND DRY JANUARY
12/24/2023   IT HAPPENED THAT WAY FOR A REASON
12/17/2023   HUMAN LIFE IS AT STAKE
12/10/2023   ARE WE ASKING TOO MUCH OF OURSELVES?
12/3/2023   WHY DO WE WAIT?
11/19/2023   IS IT REALLY THANKSGIVING?
11/26/2023   THAT MEETING IN ROME
11/5/2023   PRAYING FOR THE DEAD
11/12/2023   DIGGING INTO THE LEFTOVERS
10/22/2023   SERVING THE GODS OF LOVE
10/29/2023   TURN LOOSE THE SPOOKS
10/15/2023   THE JOURNEY BEFORE US
10/8/2023   WHAT RUNNERS TEACH THE REST OF US
9/24/2023   LEARN A LESSON FROM THE SAINTS
10/1/2023   WHAT NEXT, MOTHER EARTH?
9/10/2023   SCARS FROM THE PANDEMIC
9/17/2023   THE FAITH FORMATION OF CHILDREN
8/20/2023   HOW DO WE NEED TO CHANGE?
8/27/2023   CARE FOR CREATION
9/3/2023   HOPE FILLED SIGNS IN CHANGING TIMES
8/13/2023   OUR IMMIGRANT PAST AND OUR PARISH FEAST DAY
8/6/2023   DOES MY PRESENCE MAKE A DIFFERENCE?
7/30/2023   TEACH US HOW TO PRAY
7/16/2023   GRADING ON THE CURVE
7/23/2023   A MEASURE OF SUCCESS
7/2/2023   THE SYNOD ON SYNODALITY
7/9/2023   A CHURCH BURNS IN ST. LOUIS
6/25/2023   MOVING ACROSS THE RIVER
6/11/2023   BRINGING BACK THE CUP
6/18/2023   IS LIFE EVER ORDINARY?
6/4/2023   IT'S NOT FOR EVEYONE
5/28/2023   UNWRAPPING OUR GIFTS
5/21/2023   HOW CHURCHES GROW
5/14/2023   A NEW LOOK FOR THE CHURCH
5/7/2023   OPENING OUR EYES
4/23/2023   WE BEGAN ON EASTER
4/30/2023   THE INSIDE STORY
4/16/2023   FINDING A NEW WAY
4/2/2023   GETTING BACK TO BASICS
4/9/2023   ENCOUNTERING THE RISEN LORD