At the end of May, I was EXHAUSTED…. There were a lot of things. And in that desire to lay down and sleep for 6 weeks, I felt a Holy Spirit nudge to look back at a series I wrote in 2014 around the Os Guinness book, The Call.
It wasn’t easy, but I took the time everyday to get up early- get in a workout, and then sit down with the Lord. I would read the Call, read my devotion from 2014 and then pray through how it hit me both the same and differently… In some ways I miss that guy from years ago but I’m also better in so many ways due to the sands of time and God’s mercy and grace.
One of the themes that has quietly followed me throughout this re-reading of The Call is the question of finishing well.
Looking at me, it would be VERY hard to believe that I have actually run two marathons- the Music City (Nashville 2011) and the Magic City (Mercedes 2015)
You learn a LOT about yourself training and running those. And there is really no way to prepare for the battle that begins around mile 20- everything says stop, but you know that ain't going to happen!
The older I get, the more I think about endings.
I know it probably seems a little strange that I coach football, write poetry, and write song lyrics. I get it. Stranger still, many of my poems, blog posts, and songs have come after seasons of "spinning" emotionally.
Turning 20? No problem.
Turning 30? I was good.
Turning 40? No issue.
Turning 50? No sweat.
But when I turned 60...I had a full-fledged panic attack.
Looking back, I think it forced me to wrestle with questions I had managed to avoid for years. Thankfully, God met me there. He slowly walked me through some incredible passages of Scripture and eventually led me to write a Sunday School curriculum called Hang On...Hope Is on the Way.
The series is scattered between 2024 and 2025- here is the First one- A New Series on Hope
I'm not morbid about growing older anymore. In many ways, I'm actually grateful for what God taught me through that season.
I've now lived long enough to watch people I admired reach the latter chapters of life.
Some became gentler. Some became harder.
Some finished with remarkable grace and humility.
Others slowly drifted into bitterness, disappointment, or self-absorption.
Watching that has caused me to ask a different question.
Not simply,
"What do I want to accomplish?"
But rather,
"Who do I want to become?"
And perhaps other questions:
"What direction is my life actually moving?"
"What am I intentionally going to do in this last era of my life to leave behind Biblical faith, hope, and love?"
"If someone compared who I am today with who I was ten years ago, would they say I am becoming more like Christ...or less?"
The writer of Hebrews reminds us that many of the great heroes of the faith died without seeing the fulfillment of the promises they had been given. They finished well, not because they completed every task, but because they remained faithful to the One who had called them.
That changes the definition of success.
Paul understood this near the end of his life:
"I have fought the good fight. I have finished the race. I have kept the faith."
That truth has become increasingly encouraging to me over the years.
Because many of the things I once hoped to accomplish will probably never happen.
And strangely enough... I've become okay with that.
These days my prayers sound more like this:
Lord, help me keep the faith.
Help me love my family well.
Help me finish with gratitude rather than regret.
Help me become more like Christ than I was yesterday.
That seems like enough.
One of the hymns that has stayed with me for years is Frederick William Faber's Workman of God. Every time I read the final stanza, I find myself wanting to keep going just a little longer. I've included it at the end of this post.
As I think about this June Tune-Up coming to an end, I realize it has never really been about writing better mission statements or setting better goals.
It has been about reorienting my heart.
The older I get, the less interested I become in leaving behind accomplishments.
I hope to leave behind faith.
If one day my grandchildren ask what their grandfather believed, I hope the answer isn't found primarily in these devotionals or in the music I've recorded.
I hope they discover it in the way I lived.
And if, by God's grace, I can keep walking faithfully until He calls me home, then I suspect the words Paul wrote will matter far more than anything anyone else could ever say about me:
"I have kept the faith."
Workman of God
Frederick William Faber (1814–1863)
Workman of God! O lose not heart,
But learn what God is like;
And in the darkest battlefield
Thou shalt know where to strike.
For God is other than we think;
His ways are far above
The heights of reason, and are reached
Only by childlike love.
He hides Himself so wondrously,
As though there were no God;
He is least seen when all the powers
Of ill are most abroad.
Thrice blest is he to whom is giv'n
The instinct that can tell
That God is on the field, when He
Is most invisible.
Blest too is he who can divine
Where real right doth lie,
And dares to take the side that seems
Wrong to man's blindfold eye.
Then learn to scorn the praise of men,
And learn to lose with God;
For Jesus won the world through shame,
And beckons thee His road.
God's glory is a wondrous thing,
Most strange in all its ways;
And, of all things on earth, least like
What men agree to praise.
Muse on His justice, downcast soul,
Muse, and take better heart;
Back with thine angel to the field,
And bravely do thy part.
For right is right, since God is God;
And right the day must win;
To doubt would be disloyalty,
To falter would be sin.




