| Daily Devotion Racquetball GraceBy Pam MorrisonGuest Writer
 
 
		    CBN.com 
		        “We are hard pressed on every side, but not  crushed; perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not abandoned; struck  down, but not destroyed..”		    2 Corinthians 4:8-9  God sent me racquetball at  one of the hard points in my life.  While in a very difficult  ministry setting, feeling bruised and opposed at many turns, a friend asked me  to play racquetball. “Racquetball? I’m not some kid who can take up a new sport  just like that,” I thought. “I’m drained  of energy by these constant battles." I  also remembered my father’s trophy winning tennis playing and my own less than  adequate performance in that game. I resisted her and resisted her and then one  day, nervously, I went to the court. It took me a while to get  the hang of the game. My friend had  played in tournaments – she even knew how to play “cutthroat” (three people running around in the small,  enclosed court – now who would do that in their right mind?) She can serve the ball like nobody’s  business, make the ball ricochet wildly off of several walls, slam it off the  back wall all the way to the front even when the ball is just barely off the  floor and almost out of play. Some days, I bristled inside  – “She's playing too rough – she knows I’m new at this. Does she have to serve that hard?” Other days, I would think,  “I don’t want to do this any more. It’s  too hard for me. I don’t think I’ll ever  be any good.” After all, I was already  weary and discouraged. Why feel it also  in this arena? But…I kept going. I remember the day when I began to be able to slam the ball  off the back wall up to the front or when the ball would bounce near the back  court and come flying off the back wall – how I got the hang of running  forward, waiting, and hitting the ball forward. There had been a time when I would have hung back with no sense of the forward  angle or momentum of the ball. I recall when my friend  quoted her pastor, also a racquetball player as saying, “You control the ball,  don’t let the ball control you.”
 As I said, I was in a difficult  time. I began to see the parallel  between the game and my role as a pastor.  “As you are learning not to give up on this court, so I am teaching you  not to give up in the work I have given you,“ I felt the Lord say.
 Now, I did not take this to  mean that He would never move me on. What I took it to mean is that while there, I should persevere in being  Christ-like, loving, forgiving, trusting God, knowing He is good despite the  roughness of the “game.” I took it to  mean that I should turn the other cheek, pray for those who were harsh, and  remain firm about the truth, without being spiteful or arrogant myself. “Control the ball, don’t let  it control you” became “Don’t be distracted by circumstances.  Keep on being Mine and reflecting Me by My  help – more than ever.  That’s how you  “win” and how you win others to Me.” As a side lesson, it also became  clear about what it means to work in your area of giftedness. This less than adequate tennis player had  become a very comfortable racquetball player.  If you are blocked in one area of work or ministry, don’t be discouraged. It may be that you will shine in time – or perhaps  in a new location. It may mean that your  giftedness is in another arena and will be revealed by God in the future. But most of all, never,  never, never give up. God loves you, has  a place for you, and wants you to persevere when the sport is rough so that you  gain strength and courage. As I write of  relatively light difficulties in ministry, however, we know there are many  engaged in ministry struggles that do involve, as Hebrews says, “the shedding  of blood.” (Hebrews 12:4) These are the  real battles that must be endured and may we remember and aid these brothers  and sisters around the world in every way that we can. (Hebrews 13:3) Lord, grant those in ministry, who may be feeling extreme  pressure or defeat, a fresh wave of encouragement and hope. In Jesus’ Name, AmenCan God change your life? God has made it possible for you to know Him and experience an amazing change in your own life. 
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 Rev. Pam Morrison is a pastor and freelance writer who lives in Kansas.  She has served five churches, from rural to mega-church. Her husband is  a grant-writing consultant and teacher. They have two children, one  married, and the other a graduate student in Indiana. Send Rev. Pam Morrison your comments 
	
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