I was raised Catholic. Ironically, I have very little guilt left in me about skipping church these days. I guess my parents did a poor job of raising me in their chosen religion. However, they did instill in me a fantastic amount of faith, which I find far more important, and for that, I thank them. Now, this is not a scathing review of religion (and living in Utah would provide me with ample ammunition for such a discourse) but rather a review of personal faith gained by reaching out to a higher power in a different way.
Having gone on a weekly basis to church growing up, with Sunday school afterward, and weekday classes to further my relationship with God, I have spent many hours sitting in a pew or with those who wished to inform me about what God wanted for me. Going to college and grad school, where Sunday mornings became the one day where I could actually sleep in, signaled the beginning of the end of my regular attendance to church. Running 52 Marathons in 2006 on weekends only was the death knell. However, I now consider myself far more faithful with at least as strong an understanding of a higher power than anyone who can quote a passage from Deuteronomy, let alone spell it. Running brought me this.
I have seen the sunrise over the Rocky Mountains and watched its rays set a grassy field a blaze in color in a flat Iowa landscape. I have felt a personal connection with the ground I run on, whether it was a broken-glass strewn street or the crushed gravel of the Black Hill of South Dakota. I have experienced unrivaled compassion and friendship from other runners in the middle of thousands on a race course. I have felt the warmth glow of friendship from a single runner handing me a sip of water from their bottle on a sultry and sticky hot day on the gulf coast.
Miles after miles have been put on my legs with Muslims, Jews, Christians, Buddhists, atheists, Sikhs, and every other religious sect, lapsed (like myself) or not. Their personal bests and preference of individual lubrication choices meant more to me then who they prayed to at night.
Does running teach religious tolerance? I’m not about to go that far. However, I do know running and experiencing the world first-hand has opened my eyes far more than dressing up in my Sunday best and confining myself inside for an hour a week, going through the motions and wondering exactly how that one person over their can even think about taking communion after what they were doing the night before.