Tomorrow the Opening
Ceremony for the 2012 Olympic Games will begin (at 6:30 p.m. CST). The best athletes in the entire world will
compete on the highest level representing their countries and going for the
gold.
Several of my friends are
there competing, specifically Amanda Furrer, Sarah Scherer (who happens to be
related to Charles Spurgeon) and Jonathan Hall, among others who will be
reppin’ the USA in shooting.
I cannot tell you how happy
I am for these amazing shooters and people who have overcome so much to be
where they are right now- in London just about 24 hours away from the Opening
Ceremony! They have each worked so hard and I am ridiculously proud of them and
can’t wait to wake up in the middle of the night to watch them compete.
However, if I let it, it hurts my heart.
Because I’m not there.
You see, this was going to
be my Olympics. I even told someone that in an interview when I was 13 years
old. (You can read the article here… please don’t judge my picture or my
perfectly-parted-down-the-middle hair… wow.)
From the time I first
realized shooting was an Olympic event, I was going to win the gold. It was my
dream forever. The hours of training, the traveling for national competitions,
the expensive equipment, the elite camps, were all stepping-stones for my way
to the World’s Stage where I would compete and win gold.
At least that’s how it was
perfectly planned in my selfish, me-centered head.
But God.
…had other plans.
Better
plans.
“Many are the plans in the mind of a man,
but it is the purpose of the LORD that will stand.” (Proverbs 19:21 ESV)
He knows my dreams and my
heart’s deepest desire and He isn’t a God who will see that and then give me
the exact opposite because He’s cruel. Absolutely not. He doesn’t promise to
give me what Sophie thinks is best,
He promises to give me His best. And
I’m living it out.
God has allowed me to
experience Him in ways that I never imagined through a job that I love, discipling
a group of girls I adore and learning from some of the greatest people I know,
all of whom are following hard after God.
So, back to what I said
earlier: if I let it, the realization
that I’m not there hurts my heart.
Emphasis on “if I let it.”
It’s a choice, just like everything else in life. And I choose to be
ridiculously happy for my friends competing in the Games and with where God has
me right now, knowing it’s for my good and His glory and preparing me for a
future only He can see.
I will watch the Opening
Ceremonies tomorrow night and cry as the athletes walk in and then I’ll proceed
to cry during every medal ceremony. They won’t be tears of selfishness but
tears of victory; victory with the ones winning the medals and victory with the
One who created my heart and has fulfilled it to the uttermost.
“In this you rejoice, though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold [Olympic gold] that perishes though it is tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ.”(1 Peter 1:6-7 ESV)
2 comments:
Great blog Sophie. I'm so proud of you!! And so thankful for the work of the Father in you.
Thanks, second dad. Your comment made me tear up a little. I'm proud of you too.
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