Isometric Spirituality

By Jamie Wiechman, Breathe Life Ministries

Over the last three months, I have felt the Lordโ€™s invitation to slow down and push less. I feel like this down time was supposed to be free space for me, but it never really felt like that. It felt like extreme effort and discipline.

That brings to mind an old memory from high school sports: isometric exercises. A quick search provides a basic definition: isometric exercises involve โ€œthe static contraction of a muscle without any visible movement in the angle of the joint.โ€

In other words, itโ€™s a ton of effort, but with no action or movement as evidence of the work.

Maybe that would explain why Iโ€™m so tired even though, from my perspective, I havenโ€™t been doing much of anything.

I asked Google, โ€œWhat is the benefit of an isometric exercise?โ€

One result: โ€œIsometric exercises are proven to help build muscle, strength, balance and range of motion. Other isometric exercise benefits include stress reduction, improved mental health, and injury avoidance.โ€

Another result: โ€œYou can get great muscle activation from simply holding a static position. Theyโ€™re called isometric exercises, and theyโ€™re great for improving your strength, flexibility, balance, and mental fortitude, too!โ€

Do you mean to tell me that during this time, when I thought I was sidelined, benched, โ€œtaking a break,โ€ Iโ€™ve actually been exercising?

Keeping still when you long to move is no small feat. (Imagine a wall squat.) It takes discipline; and it is hard work. No wonder my legs have been shaking!

As my physical therapist mentioned at my appointment last week, โ€œWeโ€™re working endurance, so when you get tired, you donโ€™t compensate.โ€

I sense a nod from Jesus. Weโ€™re working endurance.

As a sprinter and a HIIT trainer, Iโ€™m a big fan of hitting it hard and moving on. This endurance work is for the birds!

Endurance is a biblical word, though, isnโ€™t it? I Google, โ€œendurance Bible.โ€

Ah, I should have known. Itโ€™s from Romans 5:

Suffering. I would have never told you that this slowness Iโ€™ve been living is suffering. Most people I know are crazy busy and pulled in a million directions and exhaustedโ€”not to mention the people I know are dealing with horrible life situations and hardships.

And Iโ€™m exhausted from being still.

To be fair, even I donโ€™t think Iโ€™ve been living any real version of โ€œsuffering.โ€ Even so, I am struggling.

Is it possible that โ€œsufferingโ€ is a broader term than Iโ€™ve been led to believe?

Hey Google, what is the definition of suffering?

โ€œItโ€™s the state of undergoing pain, distress, or hardship.โ€

Hmmโ€ฆ maybe any form of self-discipline can be a type of suffering. That means suffering is not something to be avoided at all costs. If we are supposed to skip suffering, why would we ever try to make ourselves do something hard?

Sure, I donโ€™t want to walk myself into a trauma situation; but maybe I would deny myself a present pleasure for the sake of a mid-term gain. Could that count as suffering, too?

  • Donโ€™t eat a snack right now, because dinner is almost ready.
    (Suffer my hunger.)
  • Donโ€™t scream at my child, even though Iโ€™m justifiably angry.
    (Suffer my anger.)
  • Go to the gym when Iโ€™d rather sit on the couch.
    (Suffer my discomfort.)

โ€œSuffering produces endurance.โ€ I can be hungry a little longer. I can be angry and not lose it. I can do something good for myself instead of taking the path of least resistance. I can make an effort to delay giving in to what feels easiest.

โ€œEndurance produces character.โ€ Ah, character. We love being around people who have character. They are people who can control themselves, who are trustworthy, and who donโ€™t run all over people with their whims and desires. They are pleasant human beings who put people at ease.

But who wants to do the work of becoming a person of character? Ugh. That requires enduring, which also requires pain. In other words, the work of becoming a person of character requires intentionally staying in a place of hardship, even though we want it to stop more than anything in the world.

โ€œEndurance produces character, and character produces hope.โ€ When weโ€™re not tossed around or pulled by every whim or desire, weโ€™ve developed some character. Once we have this character (less driven by our passions), we have the beginnings of what it takes for hope to begin to form. But itโ€™s work.

In my PT appointments, weโ€™ve been working on stability. Basically, I use one leg to balance on an unstable surface while catching and throwing a ball. Stability is not found by sitting in an easy chair. Stability is found by throwing instability at you until you gain the strength to stand in it.

In the process of building stability, you fall a lot. (Trust me; I know.) Yet even as I struggle, and fail, and fall, I can tell that Iโ€™m gaining strength. Occasionally, I hold a stable posture a little longer before I fall.

โ€œCharacter produces hope, and hope doesnโ€™t put us to shame, because Godโ€™s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.โ€

My PT coach keeps telling me what a good job Iโ€™m doing. I usually must take his word for it, because itโ€™s not obvious to me. But there are moments when I catch a glimpse of the progress Iโ€™m making, and I suspect the struggle wonโ€™t all be for nothing.

Similarly, there are moments in my current life struggles when I catch a glimpse of the loving-kindness of the Lord in the difficult process Iโ€™m in. I see the gift of the discipline and the time and the effortโ€”even the value of exposing my weaknesses, where it mostly looked (and felt) like I was failing.

I see the face of Jesus, who is not disappointed in my shaky legs, my desire to quit the exercise, my frustration, or even my complaint in the process. My friend knows itโ€™s a challenge.

Jesus also knows what this struggle will yield: hope and love and an outpouring of the Holy Spirit. (See Romans 5:5). I want these things.

Jesus patiently endures this difficulty right alongside me. Struggle is not the only thing he has for me. You donโ€™t spend your entire life in the gym; and I wonโ€™t always be stuck in spiritual isometrics. Eventually, there are races to be run and events to compete in. (Thank goodness!)

This discomfort, pain, struggle, hardship, annoyance, suffering is temporaryโ€”absolutely! No matter how long itโ€™s been happening, it must at some point come to an end. And the way I have been strengthened by the unique aspects of the current challenge will serve me well.

Dear Father,
will you please give me strength,
courage, and the help I need
to endure the current hardship
until you make a way out of it.

Thank you that you love me
and are proud to call me your own,
no matter how ugly this process looks.

Thank you that Iโ€™m getting stronger,
whether thatโ€™s obvious to me or not.
Thank you that there will be a day
when I see more clearly
and am able to celebrate.

Until then, I give you my best effort at trust,
because I know you are good.
Please help my friends who are also enduring.
In the name of Jesus. Amen.


This blog was also posted at https://breathelifetoday.com/2023/12/14/isometric-spirituality. Breathe Life Ministries is a friend and partner of Next Step Press.

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