Spring 2026

Daily Devotional: Friday, March 27 – Keep The Faith

“I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith.” — 2 Timothy 4:7

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As soon as Jack Hughes hit the back of the net with a golden goal, the gloves and helmets went flying as the U.S. players jubilantly celebrated together. His overtime goal against Canada in the 2026 Olympics gave the U.S. its first men’s hockey gold medal in 46 years.

Just days earlier, the U.S. women had a celebration of their own — another gold-medal win over Canada. It was the first time both the U.S. men’s and women’s hockey teams won Olympic gold in the same year.

Moments like these invite a certain kind of reflection. Not just on the skill it takes to win at that level, but on what it means to pursue something with everything you have, and what happens when you finally get it.

The apostle Paul wrote to Timothy: “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith” (2 Timothy 4:7).

Paul’s words aren’t about a podium or a medal ceremony. They’re about endurance, faithfulness and a life poured out in pursuit of something that lasts longer than a moment.

Still, there’s a connection worth noticing.

For both U.S. hockey teams, this kind of victory didn’t materialize overnight. It was built in early mornings and tough practices where no one was watching. It took resilience and often unglamorous sacrifices to get there.

As fans, we watch the games and revel in the big moments, but it’s those crucial parts we don’t always see that often decide the outcome. And it’s the part that most closely mirrors a life of faith.

Following Christ is rarely defined by the visible moments; it’s shaped in the unseen ones. The daily decisions to trust when clarity is lacking. The quiet obedience when no one is watching. The willingness to keep going when the outcome feels uncertain.

Paul doesn’t say, “I won.” He says, “I kept the faith.” That’s a different metric entirely. It reframes how we think about success — not as a result we achieve, but as a posture we maintain.

The reality is, not everyone gets a gold-medal moment. Even at the Olympics, only a few stand at the top of the podium. But everyone is invited into the kind of life Paul describes — a life marked by perseverance and anchored in faith.

And unlike a medal, that kind of reward doesn’t fade.

The celebrations in 2026 will eventually give way to the next season, the next challenge or the next pursuit. That’s the nature of sports. Even the highest highs don’t last forever.

But faithfulness does.

So whether you find yourself in a season of breakthrough or one that feels more like training than triumph, the call remains the same: Keep going. Keep trusting. Keep the faith. Because in the end, the goal isn’t just to win. It’s to finish well.

— Cole Claybourn

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