"I am after Love that last, not
more religion. I want you to know God not go to more prayer
meetings."
Hosea 6:6
Hosea 6:6 in
the Bible had me asking myself, "did I know God enough to recognize His work in
my life?" You see, I had no doubt that God lives and works, but I was wondering if
He had time to live and work in me. After finding out I could not father a
child through natural means, I started asking God for a supernatural
intervention.
I started
running in 2011; the turmoil in my life had caused me to gain a lot of weight
and not only did running help me start to lose the weight, but it became therapy
for me. It started out with me running around my block, one time around and
then another and then another. I still had a lot of questions and I felt like I
needed the answers before I could move on. Regrettably, I felt there was no one
in my world that could relate and could be a sounding board. I have come to
refer to this feeling as "The Quiet Sadness."
It is the
feeling of sadness you carry not really knowing that it is in fact sadness. It
is the frustration and doubt in your spirit even when your intellect is trying
to rightly convince you of the truth you know. It is the most curious of
feelings and emotions and it can consume you unless you begin to do something
to refocus.
Running became
my time to refocus and talk with God. It became a time for me to listen for Him (see my very 1st blog Runners High). I will admit, sometimes I do wish God would speak louder. I don't think my
wife actually knew how therapeutic running became in my life. All I can say is
that I did not want to burden her more. Our home was going into foreclosure,
the bank kept preventing us from short selling and we still had not fully
recovered economically to make needed repairs on our roof. Our home was broken
into and not only did we have to deal with the loss of things but also the loss
of security.
It seemed
like with every new stress and strain, my runs got longer and longer. I started
to run the Rickenbacker Causeway. I'd get there before sunrise and time it so
that just as I got to the summit of the bridge I would see the sun coming up
over the horizon. Every time I ran, my thoughts, my conversations with God
would go deeper.
My request
before God, for Him to supernaturally heal me, make me well and whole so I
could become a father, had yet to be answered by the close of the 2011. So as
2012 started, I was inspired to have one of the longest conversations with God I had up until that point. On January 7th I had my wife drop me off at the southern most
point of South Beach and I began to run.
The first three miles took me through great moments in my city. Beautiful moments filled with beautiful architecture, beautiful people and beautiful weather, yet Quiet Sadness was still with me... almost chasing me. As I began mile four my sadness turned to anger. At first I thought my anger was towards God. "How could He be doing this to me?", I asked. Then my anger shifted. As I crossed into mile 8, I ran and I realized I was angry at me. I was upset at myself for being scared to trust God, for the fear that I had allowed to consume my thoughts and for the lie that had become my shadow: that I was less than a man, broken.
Each mile a new moment with God, a new revelation into me, a cutting away of the quiet sadness. 14 miles run a little less than 1 to get home and I was done. I was tired of the quiet sadness between me and God. I reached out to God, He listened to me, and I felt Him. By the end of my run, my feet hurt, my legs hurt and I was tired, but I had never felt so at peace.
I could stop running... I was ready to see all the doctors I needed to see and do what ever it took to become a father. I was determined to have a "Go Plan" for 2012.
This was not the last time the quiet sadness would come into my life, but when it does, I know what to do...
The first three miles took me through great moments in my city. Beautiful moments filled with beautiful architecture, beautiful people and beautiful weather, yet Quiet Sadness was still with me... almost chasing me. As I began mile four my sadness turned to anger. At first I thought my anger was towards God. "How could He be doing this to me?", I asked. Then my anger shifted. As I crossed into mile 8, I ran and I realized I was angry at me. I was upset at myself for being scared to trust God, for the fear that I had allowed to consume my thoughts and for the lie that had become my shadow: that I was less than a man, broken.
Each mile a new moment with God, a new revelation into me, a cutting away of the quiet sadness. 14 miles run a little less than 1 to get home and I was done. I was tired of the quiet sadness between me and God. I reached out to God, He listened to me, and I felt Him. By the end of my run, my feet hurt, my legs hurt and I was tired, but I had never felt so at peace.
I could stop running... I was ready to see all the doctors I needed to see and do what ever it took to become a father. I was determined to have a "Go Plan" for 2012.
This was not the last time the quiet sadness would come into my life, but when it does, I know what to do...