Marathoners to go the distance for those at the end of the road
By Steve Rees, Special to ASSIST News Service
LOS ANGELES, CA (ANS – September 6, 2016)
– One of the world’s fastest marathon runners and a pastor who has
defied his doctor’s prediction that he would never run 26.2 miles --
both men from California -- will join elite athletes in Antarctica next
January for a competition that's as tough to wrap your mind around as it
is to complete.
Ryan
Hall, the American record holder in half marathons (59:43) and who has
run the marathon faster than any American in history (2:04:58), and
up-and-coming runner Pastor Matthew Barnett of the Los Angeles Dream
Center are official contenders in the 2017 World Marathon Challenge,
during which competitors run seven marathons (26.2 miles each) within
seven days on all seven continents.
For
those challenged by math, reason or logic, that's running 183.4 miles
over seven days in Antarctica, South America, North America, Europe,
Africa, Asia and Australia.
Jet
lag between race venues, lack of sleep, extreme hot and cold
temperatures, and fatigue will test runners' spiritual, emotional and
physical strength.
“I'm
going to run as fast as I can for the first 100 yards just to say that I
outran Ryan Hall, who is one of the greatest runners of all time,” says
Barnett, 42, laughing at himself not Hall.
There’s
nothing lighthearted about either man’s motivation to participate in
the contest of a lifetime: It’s all about the 900 people who call the
Dream Center home or receive its life-giving ministry, say both men, who
are competing in the WMC to raise awareness and money.
Pastor
Tommy Barnett of Phoenix First Assembly of God co-founded the Dream
Center with son Matthew in 1994 after purchasing the Queen of Angels
Hospital, a Los Angeles landmark, for $3.9 million. It has thrown a
spiritual and physical lifeline to people on skid row since 1996.
At
a time when the Dream Center is facing its biggest financial challenges
-- it has grown 30 percent over 18 months -- Barnett is preparing to
confront the most rigorous athletic competition of his life, so that
homeless, addicted, and sex-trafficked people in Los Angeles continue to
get a second chance.
In
the lead-up to the WMC, Barnett is preaching a series called
#FACEYOURSELF, encouraging Dream Center residents to stick to their
goals of staying clean and sober, getting a GED, and completing a
Bible-based discipleship program.
#FACEYOURSELF
is also an online video designed to increase awareness of and financial
support for the Dream Center. It has garnered the attention of major
television networks and cable programs like Sports Center because of the
WMC’s incredible demands on the male and female athletes who compete.
“I'm telling everybody who is facing seemingly impossible situations to face those things head on,” Barnett says.
“People
who are in our rehab program are coming up to me saying, 'Pastor, I'm
not going back to my addiction. I'm going to finish the program. If you
can do this (the WMC), I can finish my program,’” Barnett says.
For
Hall, the WMC represents a second chance to run “God's way” free of
caffeine addiction and legalism -- religiously training and eating too
much or too little -- factors which led the two-time Olympian to tell
stunned sponsors, coaches and other professional runners he was leaving
the sport this year.
Physically,
Barnett and Hall are increasing endurance and strength by adding miles
to their daily and weekly training regiments for the WMC but, just as
important, each is listening to the Holy Spirit in response to prayer
about his spirit, soul and body.
Hall,
a solid Christian and close friend of Barnett, bowed out of the 2016
Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, retiring from professional running in
January -- as part of a deeper quest for God.
Barnett,
who directs the Dream Center's multiple outreaches to the down and out
and serves as pastor at nearby Angelus Temple, has finished four major
runs – two full- and two half-marathons – since blood clots almost
completely blocked both of his lungs in 2012.
Though
not a runner at the time, Barnett was struck by his cardiologist's
tongue-in-cheek proclamation, “It looks like you'll never run a marathon
in your lifetime.”
“When
he said that, at the time, I had never run a marathon but something
about those words -- that something couldn't be done -- stirred me on
the inside.
“I said, ‘You know when I get healthy from this, I'm going to run a marathon.’”
During
eight months of intense rehabilitation, really “learning to breathe
again,” Barnett incrementally increased his walks around the block to
one-quarter mile jogs and later three-minute runs before running the Los
Angeles Marathon in 2013.
Hall
and Barnett became immediate friends three years ago after the Los
Angeles pastor -- who was getting deeper into the sport -- contacted the
great long distance runner at his home in Redding, California, where
wife Sara and their four adopted Ethiopian daughters call Bethel Church
their spiritual base.
Frustrated
by professional running and very much into weight training at the time,
Hall spoke at the Dream Center in 2015 about the joys and -- mostly --
agonies of running.
In
June of this year in training for the biggest competition of his life,
Barnett sent Hall a text message about the WMC, unsure of his friend's
response to running-related events.
“I’ll
never forget getting the text from Pastor Matthew as I’m sitting in the
weight room between exercises,” says Hall, recalling a mixture of
disdain and delight at the prospect of running again.
“Something
about it captured me the same way I felt as a 13-year-old boy when I
first ran around Big Bear Lake with my dad,” says Hall, recalling the
15-mile jog when he sacrificed ambitions to play Major League Baseball,
embracing God’s call to run in high school and at Stanford University.
“It
was kind of a similar experience when I got Pastor Matthew's text.
Something that just kind of grabbed me about it, and I could feel God on
it.
“So
I was like man that's amazing what Pastor Matthew is doing and the
cause he's doing it for. I'd just love to be a part of that, and also
just get to hang out with Pastor Matthew for a whole week.
“I texted him back and said, ‘Okay, if you're looking for company, I'd like to join you.’”
“At
that moment in time it felt kind of weird sending that text because I
still hated running,” says Hall, 33, who is now putting on more miles in
preparation for the WMC than he did training for events as a
professional athlete.
In
August, Hall spoke a second time at the Dream Center, citing Jesus’
words about the narrow gate (Matthew 7:23-24) in a #FACEYOURSELF
message.
Both
athletes are still texting encouraging messages as each trains --
Barnett around the Rose Bowl in Pasadena and Hall in Redding – for the
WMC.
Sponsors,
runners and media are lining up with promises of support and advice –
most of which is useful – but Barnett and Hall say they're tuned into
the Holy Spirit more than the voices of coaches or trainers. Barnett no
longer runs with a headset, instead communing with God.
He is, however, seriously embracing one nugget of counsel from an experienced WMC winner.
Becca Pizzi, who won the women's WMC title this year, says Barnett needs to adjust to running tired.
“That's
the whole key to this thing,” says Pizzi, who set a new record for
females in 2016 with the fastest time frame – six days, 18 hours and 38
minutes. “Learning to run with tired legs and fatigue is key.”
Barnett thinks he's getting close to the point Pizzi describes.
“It’s
already tough. I mean the miles are getting hard,” says Barnett who, at
age 42, is running 70 to 100 miles per week combined with strength
training and has dropped about 33 pounds. “I feel like I'm always tight,
always a little sore.
“When
I start to feel it, I say how can I do this seven times, on seven
continents, in seven days, in seven different climates,” he says.
Hall and other runners who are part of a club at the Dream Center encourage Barnett when he or other members have doubts.
“It
feels more possible now than it did when I started because I've been
training but there are times when there's a great sense of fear.
“My
fear is not fatigue or pain; it’s an injury so dramatic that I can’t
push through. That's something I'm praying against,” says Barnett, whose
wife Caroline and daughter Mia will run a marathon and half-marathon,
respectively, during one of the seven days.
Hall, featured in Sports Illustrated and Runners World
magazines, says his competition in the WMC doesn't signal a return to
professional running or another Olympic-bid, but it does give him a
second chance at doing a major event with the Holy Spirit as his coach.
“The ways things ended didn’t quite feel right to me,” says Hall.
He
says going through the narrow gate as described by Jesus has led him to
the promised land after four years of running around the wilderness.
“I'm
not saying like I'm making a comeback -- or that I'm going to run the
Olympics one day or anything like that -- I'm saying I want to do things
right. Wherever God wants to take me, I want to go there,” he says.
Hall's
wife, Sara, is an elite runner who will accompany her husband with
daughters Hana, Mia, Jasmine and Lily, ages 16 to five, respectively.
Sara
Hall is the 2012 U.S. National Cross Country Champion and gold medalist
at the Pan-American Games. She has represented the U.S. at three World
Indoor Track and Field Championships and a World Cross Country
Championship.
The
Halls hope someday to return to Ethiopia, the native home of their
adopted daughters, as missionaries sent from Bethel. They founded the
Hall Steps Foundation in 2008 in partnership with World Vision and other
relief organizations, digging water wells in Zambia and building a
clinic in Kenya. One of foundation's primary missions is providing
family-based care for children.
For information about supporting the Dream Center or the Halls, visit dreamcenter.org, #FACEYOURSELF, and thestepsfoundation.org.
Photo
captions: 1) Ryan and Sara Hall at the finish line. 2) Matthew Barnett
preaching. 3) LA Dream Center. 3) Ryan Hall speaking at Dream Center. 4)
Ryan and Sarah Hall. 5) Steve Rees.
About
the writer: Steve Rees is a freelance Christian journalist who loves
the church and writes about how it engages the culture and works toward
fulfilling the Great Commission. He lives in Longmont, Colo. and attends
Resurrection Fellowship, a nondenominational, missions-driven church
that honors all the gifts of the Holy Spirit and the five-fold ministry
offices. The church is in Loveland, Colo. Rees formerly worked as a
newspaper reporter and was among the first journalists who wrote about
Promise Keepers before it spread nationwide from Boulder, Colo. He can
be contacted by e-mail at steverees@peoplepc.com.
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