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endurance

Cheerful Perseverance

by TerryLema June 18, 2022

On September 6, 1995, Cal Ripkin, Jr., Orioles Hall of Famer, broke Lou Gehrig’s all-time consecutive game streak of 2,130 games.  I remember watching that game, hearing the standing ovation that just would not stop, watching Ripkin shoved out of the dugout to take a lap around the field in the middle of the game just to get the game going again.  Before he was finished, Ripkin would stretch that streak to 2,632 games.  2,632 consecutive games!  He is baseball’s all-time iron man.

If there is a word that describes Ripkin it might be perseverance.  Perseverance in our English dictionary means a steady persistence in a course of action, a purpose, a state, etc., especially in spite of difficulties, obstacles, or disappointments.  I’m sure Ripkin had all those, he may not even have wanted to play baseball some days.  But he persisted.  It was his ethic to be there and do his job.

Heb 12:1 says, “let us run with perseverance [endurance] the race marked out for us.” The Greek word is hupomone (hoop-om-on-ay’).  It adds something to our English definition of perseverance.  It means cheerful (or hopeful) endurance.

Hopeful endurance.  Why hopeful?  Because of the following verse in Hebrews 12:  “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the source [author] and perfecter of our faith.”  [HCSB]

Our perseverance is cheerful and hopeful because what we see in front of us is not the acclaim of men, not a statistic in a record book, or even the garnering of Hall of Fame votes.  It is Jesus, out in front of us, leading us in the race, urging us on to a perfection of faith.  We fix our eyes on the One who died for us, who endured the cross with joy because of us.  Because of Him, we can certainly persevere in our race, full of hope and cheerfulness.

 

June 18, 2022 0 comment
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One More Time

by TerryLema February 13, 2022

I enjoy sports. I enjoy most all sports so when the Olympics roll around, I usually watch. I like the summer games best but also enjoy the winter ones which are going on now. I like the backstories almost more than the actual events.

Recently snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis won the first gold medal for the USA at the Beijing Winter Olympics. I watched her race, and it was great, but Lindsey’s backstory is even greater.  Her snowboard cross win and her personal first Olympic gold medal came at the age of 36 years, in her fifth Olympic appearance.

Lindsey first appeared in the 2006 Winter games, and despite a brutal fall, claimed a silver medal. Following that auspicious start, she came in fifth in 2010, seventh in 2014, and fourth in 2018.

“It doesn’t define you,” she said when asked what message she’d send to younger racers about mistakes of the past. “Especially if you’ve made it to this stage, you’re a winner. And look at what you’ve learned from the experience and take that with you later in life.”

Mistakes do not define you.  Failures do not define you. Jesus defines you. So run like a winner because you are!

Hebrews 12:1: Therefore, since we also have such a large cloud of witnesses surrounding us, let us lay aside every weight and the sin that so easily ensnares us. Let us run with endurance [perseverance] the race that lies before us, keeping our eyes on Jesus, the source and perfecter of our faith. [HCSB]

February 13, 2022 0 comment
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Waiting!

by TerryLema January 8, 2021

“Therefore, since we also have such a large cloud of witnesses surrounding us, let us lay aside every weight and the sin that so easily ensnares us. Let us run with endurance the race that lies before us.” [Hebrews 12:1 HCSB]

If there is a “let us” phrase in Hebrews that describes the past year (2020), it just might be this one … “let us run with endurance….”

Endurance.  The word is “hupomone” and means a cheerful or hopeful fortitude or constancy. It also carries the idea of waiting.

Endurance might also be the word in Hebrews that best describes the year in front of us (2021), especially that “waiting” part.  We are waiting to see if things are going to get better, stay the same, or get worse. We are waiting for politicians on both sides to get their acts together. We are waiting to see if the vaccine works. We are waiting to see how badly small businesses have been affected by the shut-down. We are waiting … and probably not as cheerfully as we might.

Waiting is a part of life.  It is something about which we often have no choice. We wait in lines, on freeways, in offices. We wait for good things to happen, such as the birth of a child. We wait and watch as not-so-good things happen.

It is not the waiting that determines our maturity – it is how we wait that will determine if we grow in spiritual maturity or if we allow the flesh to rule.

We must learn to wait with cheerful and hopeful endurance, fortitude, commitment. If we do that, we will “go on to maturity!”

 

January 8, 2021 0 comment
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Pastor Terry Lema

Pastor Terry Lema has been married for 53 years, and has 3 children and 3 grandsons. Terry graduated from Trinity Bible College, and and recently retired as Lead Pastor at The Way Church in Middleton, Idaho.

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