1 Corinthians 9:24–27 Matthew 7:24-27
Running to Win: Discipline and Perseverance
Three weeks ago we examined, in 1 Corinthians 8, Paul’s approach to the question of theological precision that had manifested itself in the church of God in Corinth as an attitude of moral superiority that harmed other brothers and sisters in their community. Those who were not quite as assured in their new identity in Jesus were being spiritually wounded by those who considered themselves mature.
If you remember, Paul’s solution to this dilemma was a self-sacrificial love that always seeks to build up others…a love that would even deny certain legitimate rights of believers if exercising that right would harm another believer…in their case eating meat that had been offered to idols.
Then the following week, in chapter 9:1-18, we saw that Paul speaks about things that at first seems like an interruption. Whereas in the former chapters, Paul is addressing issues in the church of God in Corinth, here he suddenly begins to speak about his own apostleship, financial support for ministers of the Gospel, and his own personal rights.
But in conclusion we saw that in these two passages, Paul is making a statement about two very different approaches to the Christian life. One which is self-centred and the other which is other-person-centred. We also noted that it is important to grasp that the self-centred person may be perfectly right…and consequently they justify their actions even though the upholding of their rights damages or destroys other believers.
But in stark contrast, Paul deliberately chooses to live an other-person-centred life by forfeiting his legitimate rights for the sake of others.
And then last week, we saw Paul move on from a surrender of perceived rights for the sake of loving others to a spiritual flexibility for the sake of serving others. “Though I am free from all,” he said, “I have made myself a servant to all” an attitude he summarises later in his statement: “I have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save some.”
We saw that Paul refuses to allow his personal preferences, his freedoms, customs, or his rights to become barriers that prevent others from hearing the Gospel…or indeed that prevent others from holding non-essential views that may differ from his own. And I said that this requires immense humility. It requires the death of pride. It requires the surrender of entitlement. It requires patience with people who are weaker, slower, less informed, or culturally different. It requires an ability to hold inessential or peripheral theological positions loosely.
And at the centre of it all stands love…a Christ-like love that is able to focus entirely upon the good of others.
Now, this week, Paul shifts his imagery once again, moving from slavery and servanthood to athletics and competition.
The Corinthians would have immediately understood the imagery. The famous Isthmian Games, second only to the Olympic Games in prestige throughout the Greek world, were held every two years near Corinth. Athletes trained rigorously between these two years, often denying themselves pleasures, comforts, and distractions in pursuit of victory.
And Paul now seizes upon this familiar cultural image to make a point.
“Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one receives the prize? So run as that one who yearns to obtain it.” Now, I have paraphrased the statement in this way lest you may think that Paul is suggesting that only one Christian will be saved. Rather he is trying to emphasize the wholehearted commitment required for each one running the race of faith.
Athletes do not compete casually. They compete intentionally. They compete with discipline. They compete with singular focus.
The Christian life likewise requires endurance, perseverance, and determination.
Paul continues: “Everyone who competes in the games exercises self-control in all things.” Now, this word translated here as “self-control” implies rigorous discipline. Athletes submitted their whole lives… their schedules, their desires, and their habits to the demands of training because above all else they wanted to receive the victor’s wreath (or crown)…a wreath Paul says is perishable purposefully contrasting that image with the wreath believers receive which is imperishable.
The victor’s wreath in the ancient games was typically made from pine, celery, or laurel. It symbolized honour and public recognition, but it eventually withered. Paul compares this temporary reward with the eternal reward of faithful perseverance in Jesus demonstrating that while the world pursues a glory that fades, the Christian pursues what endures forever.
Paul therefore applies the image personally: “So I do not run aimlessly. I do not box as one beating the air.” In other words, his life and his ministry is not directionless…both his life and ministry possesses purpose. His words and actions are governed by eternal priorities.
At this point, Paul delivers the climactic statement: “But I discipline my body and keep it under control, lest after preaching to others I myself should be disqualified.”
This statement has often troubled readers. What does Paul mean by disqualified? Does he mean that salvation depends upon flawless perfection? Is he saying that it is possible that Jesus may abandon us if we fail to perform?
No, in my humble opinion, I believe Paul is warning the Corinthians and us against presumption. The Corinthians believed themselves spiritually secure because they possessed knowledge, gifts, experiences, and confidence. Yet Paul insists that genuine spirituality perseveres in disciplined faithfulness.
The word “disqualified” comes from the world of athletic contests and testing. It refers to one who fails the test or is rejected after examination…but that did not necessarily imply finality. Just a wake-up call, if you will.
Here Paul recognizes something profoundly important: No Christian is above the need for vigilance. Not even the best among us are beyond temptation. No believer is immune to spiritual disaster if they become careless, arrogant, or self-indulgent.
This warning for vigilance prepares us for chapter 10 where Paul will point to Israel in the wilderness as an example of people who possessed extraordinary spiritual privileges and yet nevertheless fell into idolatry and judgment and failed to obtain the promise or the prize.
Paul’s Gospel concern throughout these chapters is therefore consistent: Do not presume upon theological precision…you may be right, you may be wrong, but, as Paul will tell us later in chapter 13, theology divorced from other-person-centred love is merely discordant noise. Do not use your perceived freedom carelessly as you do not want to wound a weaker believer for whom Jesus died. Do not mistake knowledge for maturity as maturity is able to humbly descend the lofty ladder should love for the less fortunate demand it.
And because of this Gospel concern, Paul says that the Christian life requires endurance and endurance requires discipline…not legalism…not self-elevation. But disciplined devotion flowing from the humble mind of Jesus.
Paul’s entire argument throughout chapters 8–9 therefore reaches its climax here. The Corinthians wanted spirituality detached from unity in community, but Paul teaches that authentic spirituality always involves self-denial for the sake of others…because that’s exactly what Jesus did.
The Corinthians wanted to exercise their freedom without restraint, but Paul teaches that Christian freedom is disciplined and tempered by love.
While the Corinthians pursue status and recognition, Paul pursues faithfulness regardless of personal consequence. While the Corinthians celebrate triumph, Paul celebrates surrender and servanthood.
So where does this leave us?
Paul is not calling us to admire spiritual discipline in theory, nor to respect spiritual athletes from a distance while remaining spiritually untrained ourselves. He is calling us to examine the shape of our own discipleship…our own walk with the Lord…the manner in which we run our own race.
Because the question these two chapters press upon us is not simply do you understand the Gospel or are you theologically precise, but rather are you ordering your life so that you will faithfully mirror the person of Jesus even ten, twenty, thirty years from now? These chapters do not so much address the correctness of your convictions, but rather whether you are becoming more like Jesus in how you hold them, use them, and apply them.
You see, it is possible to be doctrinally accurate like the Scribes, Pharisees, and Sadducees, and yet be spiritually careless and arrogant and harmful. It is possible to win arguments and yet to lose people whom Jesus died for. It is possible to exercise freedom and still wound the very people Jesus seeks to gather to himself. Paul will not let us confuse knowledge with maturity.
So we must ask more searching questions.
What is forming and shaping you as a believer?
Where have you become undisciplined because you assume grace will cover what you refuse to surrender?
Where has comfort and self-confidence replaced training, and entitlement replaced obedient servanthood?
And perhaps most piercing of all: what is currently shaping your pace in the race…the humble call of the Gospel, or your own puffed-up claim to be right? Are you running at all, or have you stepped out onto the sidelines?
Paul’s warning is not meant to produce fear, but vigilance. Not anxiety, but seriousness. The danger is not that Jesus is unwilling to keep us, but that we become careless about being kept.
So the call today is simple, but it is not easy.
Run as an athlete who is determined to win…not for applause, not for comparison, not for identity…but for faithfulness. Lay aside what slows you down or trips you up…or indeed what trips up others. Refuse what dulls your love. And refuse to assume that yesterday’s discipline is enough for today’s battle.
Because the Christian life is not merely a moment of decision; it is a lifelong race of devotion. And those who endure are those who have learned, quietly and repeatedly, to say no to themselves so that they may say a deeper yes to the love of God demonstrated through the cross.
And when love governs that discipline…love for God and love for others…and other-person-centred-love…then even the hardest restraints become joyful obedience, and the race itself becomes worship.
Shall we pray?
© Johannes W H van der Bijl 2026





