Winning
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Narrated by:
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By:
Summary
Guided Question
How can discipline, focus, and a pursuit of divine glory help a Christian run the race of life successfully, avoiding disqualification and achieving spiritual victory?
Summary
In this sermon, Dr. Robert Lewis uses the imagery of ancient Greek athletics to illustrate the Christian life as a race requiring discipline, direction, and a thirst for divine glory. Drawing from 1 Corinthians 9:24-27, Paul’s words about athletes competing for a prize are applied to spiritual growth. Dr. Lewis emphasizes that spiritual victory is exclusive, requires intentional training and direction, and hinges on aiming to please God rather than oneself. Without a clear objective, a Christian risks falling into distraction, indulgence, or disqualification. The sermon challenges listeners to cultivate personal discipline, align their aims with God’s purposes, and pursue spiritual “gold medals” by exercising their gifts for His glory.
Outline
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Introduction: The Athlete’s Example
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Story of Theogenes, Greek Olympic champion
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Greeks’ obsession with athletics mirrors the seriousness of spiritual pursuit
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Athletic imagery sets the stage for understanding spiritual discipline
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Exclusiveness of Victory and Truth
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1 Corinthians 9:24: Only one receives the prize
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Truth is exclusive: Jesus is the only way to God (John 14:6)
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Effort and sincerity alone do not guarantee spiritual success
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Training and Discipline (Verses 25-27)
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Athletes endure rigorous training; Christians must exercise self-control
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Discipline complements the Holy Spirit in the believer’s life
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Personal discipline involves denying worldly pleasures for God’s glory
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Direction and Purpose in the Race (Verse 26)
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Run with a clear aim: not flailing or aimless
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Importance of knowing spiritual gifts and God’s calling
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Misguided aims (comfort, happiness) lead to ineffective spiritual effort
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The Danger of Disqualification (Verse 27)
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Lack of discipline and focus can render a Christian “useless” in service
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Paul’s warning about being disqualified is a call to vigilance
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Spiritual failure is not only dramatic but can be subtle (indifference, misplaced priorities)
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Thirst for Divine Glory
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Motivation should be God’s commendation, not human approval
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Faith, discipline, and direction together ensure fruitful Christian living
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Scripture references highlight the pursuit of God’s pleasure as the ultimate aim (2 Corinthians 5:9; Philippians 3:8-10; Hebrews 12:1-2)
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Key Takeaways:
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Spiritual victory requires focused effort and cannot rely solely on sincerity or human commendation.
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Discipline is essential for growth and complements the work of the Holy Spirit.
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Knowing one’s spiritual aim and gifts ensures purposeful living and avoids becoming a religious “fanatic” or disqualified servant.
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True Christian motivation is a thirst for divine glory, not comfort, happiness, or human approval.
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Maintaining clarity of aim allows a believer to run with endurance and remain faithful in service to God.
Scripture References:
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1 Corinthians 9:24-27 – Paul’s athletic analogy for spiritual discipline
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John 14:6 – Jesus as the exclusive way to God
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Proverbs 15:32 – Discipline as a reflection of self-respect
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2 Corinthians 5:9 – Ambition to please God
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Philippians 3:8-10 – Counting all else as loss to know Christ
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Hebrews 11:6 – Faith is required to please God
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Hebrews 12:1-2 – Running the race with endurance, fixing eyes on Jesus
Recorded 12/13/81