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As a preacher, I felt a bit awkward walking into Calgaryâs Victoria Park CrossFit gym that morning. Not because of my profession but because of my paunch.
From a spiritual perspective I was feeling quite fit.
Months earlier a CrossFit athlete from our church asked if Iâd be willing to preach a sermon on this new fitness craze heâd discovered.
I thoughtâwhy not? If all truth is Godâs truth (which I believe deeply), then surely all CrossFit truth is Godâs CrossFit truth as well.
At the time, I didnât know about all of the controversies; how founder Greg Glassman so litigiously protects his brand, how their high intensity program has been known to push some participants into rhabdomyolysis (where muscle cells explode leading to kidney failure), and howâlike in many gymsâthe whole testosterone-fueled macho-thing can sometimes get a bit out of hand.
While The New York Times has interpreted CrossFitâs desire to prepare its athletes for the âunknowableâ as some kind of warped preparation for Armageddon, I see its goal more charitably. Life is filled with unknowns. Any activity that helps prepare us for those unknowns, either physically or psychologically, can be good. Even the risk and extreme physical exertion that CrossFit is so often castigated for can be good. How else do you become a more capable person apart from pushing yourself, even if it hurts? And who of us hasnât grown through past painful experiences?
Perhaps this is why CrossFit has attracted so many souls; people inherently know that in order to find more life youâve got to give something up.
Is that what all of these athletes are trying to do? I was about to find out.
Stepping into the gym, I sat down with a group waiting for the 11 a.m. class and started to ask them what they loved about CrossFit.
They responded like people whoâd just found religion, describing their workout experience as the most deeply communal, high intensity, whole-bodied fitness program theyâve ever been a part of.
When I asked them to go deeper, they started to sound like mystics. One man described it as a âsupernatural feeling.â Another said it was âalmost like meditation.â A woman found meaning in the experience of âcommunal suffering.â
The owner and lead coach unpacked the experience further and described how unknown challenges initially create nervousness and confusion, causing athletes to come out too quickly. Once they slow down, they look for efficiencies, correct sloppiness, and tighten up their technique until they find equilibrium. Then theyâre in the zone! The whole time theyâre learning and reading their bodies and finding the perfect pace.
CrossFit is designed to elicit this kind of adaptive experience. Each day the workout changes, forcing athletes to learn, adapt, and then master the challenge at hand. Challenges are often based on the kinds of activities that human beings have performed for millenniaâlifting, jumping, throwing, climbing and runningâgeneralized, practical, and diverse programming that enables a fitness that fits with life.
Watching CrossFit athletes that day, I was struck by how their modus operandi was very much like mine as a spiritual leader and pastor, only they seemed to be doing it better. Their community was strong, real, and filled with encouragement and openness; I saw a 15-year-old young woman tossing a medicine ball back and forth with a 62-year-old man. At the end of the workout there was applause and high-fives all around. These people really cared for each other . . . often in the most trying physiological circumstances.
A 2015 Harvard Divinity School report entitled âHow We Gatherâ talks about how millennials who have left the church are now finding community in alternate settings âlike CrossFit.
The report makes this challenge: âAs more and more of life happens in the CrossFit box (gym), a growing question will be about the potential for CrossFit to deepen its role in bringing meaning to its membersâ lives. What would it look like for CrossFit to focus on heart and soul as well as body?â
Based on what I witnessed, it already doesâonly less explicitly than the church.
When I preached my sermon on CrossFit the following Sunday, I talked about how whenever people gather to build each other up (in whatever form) and individuals flourish, we can thank God for that.
Wherever there is a place that spots you, and pushes you to the edge of yourself, and creates room for you to become more; then surely an ever-supportive God is present and worshiped.
Wherever the miraculous nature of the human body is celebrated and rightly stewardedâall those leg muscles working in concert, tendons, bones, and menisci in the knee supporting huge lifting, lunging loadsâGod is honored.
Whenever we engage in anything that makes us more fit for life (arguably the ultimate goal of most world faiths) weâre in sync with what God wants for humanity.
While CrossFit isnât the church, a lot of what God made the church for is present there. As I spoke to a few of the athletes about some of those spiritual connections, some seemed genuinely intrigued. As I named the sacred in something they deeply valued, I felt as though I was honoring them . . . seeing them with Godâs eyes.
And that CrossFit gym, for just a moment, felt holy.
© 2017 Religion News Service, used by permission.
About the Author
John Van Sloten is a Calgary-based CRC pastor, teacher and writer. His latest book is Every Job a Parable; What Walmart Greeters, Nurses and Astronauts tell us about God (Navpress USA, Hodder & Stoughton UK).