Romans 12:1-8 · Living Sacrifices
The True Olympians
Romans 12:1-8
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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What image are you going to take away from the Beijing 2008 Olympics?

Is it Michael Phelps with his history-breaking breastplate of gold medals draped across his chest?

Is it the first-ever gold/silver finish in women’s gymnastics?

Is it the pictures of athletes who, unlike me and you with our bellies and bulges and barnacles, represent the peak of human perfectibility?

Is it being part of the largest electronic crowd ever watching a sporting event, the USA vs. China basketball game?

Is it the snapshots of the vastness of the city of Beijing itself?

Is it close calls, gut-wrenching defeats, stunning victories, or surprising winners?

All these stand out, then fade back, into the haze of the entire Olympic experience. Have you enjoyed it as much as I have?

Maybe there is one more thing that will remain as a constant running through these Olympic memories: the haze. The pollution pall that settles over the city of Beijing was a constant concern for all the athletes and visitors gathered there. Olympic athletes were given black designer “pollution masks” to wear whenever they were outside. Instead of the ordinary white surgical mask-type protectors worn by average citizens, the masks provided for the Olympic athletes were unique: black, and sleek, and, can I say it, “fashionable.” I predict that in the future they may become something of a fashion statement, a trendy accessory, not unlike designer sunglasses (we forget that sunglasses began as a light pollution protector for the eyes).

If I asked you this morning this question “What is the one thing that is required of an Olympic athlete?” you would all give me the same answer: disciplined determination. To become an Olympic athlete it takes absolute commitment, a focused and fused fixation upon one single goal.

Athletes work nonstop for years. They work through pulled muscles. They were through spiking fevers. There is no weather too hot or cold to stop practice. Like parenthood, there are no “days off,” ever. Through a grueling stair-step of competitions designed to allow only the best to finally triumph, athletes from 204 nations strive to make their country’s Olympic team.

But we all know this . . . and more than any of us the athletes themselves all know this . . . . . that in the end there will only be three medalists. And there will only be one gold medal winner.

What am I saying? Even in Olympic caliber competition, the majority of competitors know they have no chance. They are part of their country’s team, yes. They are the best in their nation. But they know they will never be “in the running” for a medal. Most of them will be eliminated on the first round. They know there will never be a medal for them.

Remember the Jamaican bobsled team?

Here is what is so amazing to me, and maybe the most lasting image of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Even though they know they will never win a medal, yet each of these unknown athletes works with the same single-minded determination, experiences the same pains, makes the same sacrifices of time and money and even family. In fact, the more obscure the sport, the competitors, or the country, the more likely that even greater sacrifices were necessary in order to make that Olympic dream come true.

So: How do these athletes do it?
So: Why do they do it?
So: What keeps these competitors going?

Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard once offered this synopsis of spirituality: “To be a saint is to will one thing.”

But Professor Kierkegaard: It is one thing to train and “will one thing” when you stand a chance of winning. Professor Kierkegaard: It is quite another thing to train just as hard, to “will one thing” just as fiercely, when you know you will not be the best, when you know you will never stand a chance of winning a medal or even going beyond the first round.

There is a top tier of 10 or 11 countries that end up with 10 to 60 medals each US, China, Australia, France, Russia, South Korea, Germany, Japan, Britain, Italy, Ukraine. Then there is a second tier of 10 countries that get 5 to 10 medals each. Then about 30 nations get 1 or 2 medals. But that leaves the vast majority of nations who participate in the Olympics who never get any medals at all. I shall never forget watching the 2006 Winter Olympics and rooting for Iceland, who ended up with not one medal in the entire Winter competition. In fact, Iceland has never ever won even one medal in any Winter Olympics.

What keeps these competitors from Iceland and other no-medal nations going? What keeps them coming to the Olympics?

It is this intense personal commitment, this superior drive to “will one thing,” that enables those “second tier” athletes, those “third rate” and “last place” teams to give it their all, every day, 24/7/365, for years.

These competitors may not ever earn a medal, but every one of them is a “winner.” For this is really what it means to be an Olympian: to “will one thing.”

In order to “will one thing” successfully, everything outside that goal must blur. Everything in life must become a hazy backdrop against which this one thing is focused. In order to “will one thing,” you must become a total dedicated being.

Today’s epistle reading from Romans 12 is one of the most familiar passages in all of Paul’s writings. It is also amazingly serendipitous for this last week of the Olympics. Here is the place where Paul focuses most intently on the physical body, and what we are to do with it and make of it.

In this text he admonishes the Christians at Rome to “present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship” (12:1). Virtually every commentator on this passage distills Paul’s thoughts down to one word: dedication. Paul is calling Jesus’ followers to rethink their physical bodies as dedicated beings to be lifted up as an offering to God.

It used to be animals that were “presented” on the altar as an “acceptable” worship offering to God. Paul is now saying that each one of us needs to “present” our physical bodies as dedicated beings offered in praise and worship to God. God is not in the business of dead sacrifices. God is in the business of living sacrifices . . . people who dedicate their entire beings to serving God by bettering humanity and building a better world.

We have stacks of gardening catalogs around our house. Instead of ordering from them, my wife dog-ears the pages of things she finds interesting. Flagging the page is her substitute for a real check-out. I confess: sometimes I sneak a peak at what she finds interesting. One garden decoration she flagged recently was a big old rock. Etched in calligraphy upon this rock is this declaration: “Nothing is written in stone.”

The gospel reading for today, Matthew 16:13-20, takes that sentiment to task. There IS something written in stone. The church of Jesus Christ is written in stone. And the stone is called the Rock of Ages. And on that Rock is written this: “For God so Loved THE WORLD.” (John 3:16)

I love that #1 Olympics commercial from VISA: “GO World!”

[Let’s here you all say that together: “Go World! Go World!”]

If you are a disciple of Jesus this morning, if you are a Christ follower, then you are called to present your bodies as dedicated beings. Like the Olympic athletes, like Michael Phelps, you are called to “will one thing:” you are to be the Body of Christ for this world. We are to dedicate our bodies to showing the world how much God loves it.

Like each Olympian athlete who represents their country and wants to do their best for their country, we represent God. We are God’s ambassadors. As I look out on you this morning, I don’t see very many of you who have written best-selling books. I don’t see many of you who will get your names in the halls and walls of fame. But I do see you out there, you unknowns who don’t get your names in lights, who are just as devoted, work just as hard, and pray without unceasing without the glory and the medals.

You are the real saints.
You are the real stars.
You are the real Olympians.

You are all “Olympians” because you are the arms and legs, ears and eyes of the greatest Olympian who ever lived.

Is your focus this morning as “one-thinged” and “single-minded” as those Olympians? Is your passion to succeed as great as that of the Canaanite woman?

The Barack Obama campaign has introduced a new word into our vocabulary. Young, exuberant, enthusiastic Obama supporters are referred to as “passionistas.” In contrasted to “fashionistas,” whose identities are defined wholly by exterior attachments, frivolous and fleeting finery, passionistas are driven from commitments within.

Disciples of Jesus should be the best “passisonistas” on the planet. We ought to be showing both the Obama and McCain campaigns what “passionistas” are really like. What other people can declare that they exist because of “passion”—the Passion of the Christ? It is this driving, internal passion of love that enables sinners to become “saints”—-to “will one thing.”

I don’t know about you, but the Olympics has been a good antidote to the pessimism and despair of the other pop phenomenon of 2008, “The Dark Knight,” with its portrait of a world awash in decay and the lust for destruction. Alfred the butler (Michael Caine) says to Batman in “The Dark Knight” as they struggle to understand the psychology of The Joker: “Some men just want to watch the world burn.” Christians are passionista people who want to set the world on fire . . . but with love and life for all.

A son asked his father, “Dad, will you take part in a marathon with me?” The father had a heart condition. But he couldn’t say no to his son, so they both worked it so that they could participate in a marathon.

Father and son went on to join other marathons, the father always saying “Yes” to his son's request of going through the race together.

One day, the son asked his father, “Dad, let's join the Ironman together.” To which, his father said “Yes” too.

For those who don't know, Ironman is the toughest triathlon ever. The race encompasses three endurance events of a 2.4 mile (3.86 kilometer) ocean swim, followed by a 112 mile (180.2 kilometer) bike ride, and ending with a 26.2 mile (42.195 kilometer) marathon along the coast of the Big Island.

Father and son went on to complete the race together. View this race on YouTube, entitled My Redeemer Lives: Team Hoyt.

http://www.godtube.com/view_video.php?viewkey=8cf08faca5dd9ea45513

After you’ve set up the video-clip, and shown it to your people, I guarantee you there will not be a dry eye in the house.

Close the sermon with this comment or something like it:

The father you just saw on the screen did indeed have a “heart condition,” but not the one the media reported. The “heart condition” of this father was his whole-hearted commitment to “will one thing:” to show his love for his son.

Do YOU have a “heart condition” this morning? Do you have a “dedicated” body? Are you living a “dedicated” life wholly given over to God’s mission in the world?

Then you’re the True Olympian!

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet