Where Theology Meets Training
I’m Andy Mage.
Pastor. Hybrid athlete. 42 years old and training for a sub-1:30 half marathon.
I've led worship, worked in digital churches, run marathons, and owned a gym, but the conviction underneath all of it has never changed:
Formation doesn't stop when you lace up your shoes.
This is not a fitness blog with Bible verses sprinkled in. It's not a devotional with a running metaphor at the end. It's what happens when you stop treating the body and the soul as separate projects and start asking what discipline actually forms in a man.
Theology applied to training. Training illuminated by theology. No compartments.
Before You Can Lead, You Have to Run
The long run before the hard meeting wasn't avoidance. It was preparation. Here's what the monastic tradition understands about solitude that most leaders miss.
Love, Hate, and Hunger: The Theology of Nutrition
Most of us come to food with a framework that's either moralized or purely mechanical. I had both running simultaneously. Scripture offers a third way: a theology of the body, and from that, everything about how we eat follows.
Selah: The Spiritual Discipline Hiding in Your Cooldown
You set a timer. You sit in front of the fan. You breathe. What happens in those three minutes after a run is more than recovery. It's one of the oldest spiritual disciplines in Scripture.
The Theology of PRs: Why the Number Doesn't Satisfy
I hit my PR goals—315lb squat and 45-min 10K—and felt nothing. Solomon had it all too. Here's what PRs reveal about what we worship and what actually lasts.
The Theology of Injury: What My Knee Taught Me About Limits
My knee has been a thorn for years. Paul had one too. God didn't remove it—He showed up in the weakness. What injury teaches about limits and grace.
Trust the Plan: What My Worst Half Marathon Taught Me About Faith
I had no training plan, no race strategy, and no idea what I was doing. I hit the wall at mile 8 and walked most of the back half. God's training plan works the same way: the process has a logic, even when Week 3 feels pointless.
The Theology of Rest Days: What Your Apple Watch Won't Tell You
I hadn't taken a real rest day in over a year. My rings were closed, my data looked good, and I was quietly falling apart. God built rest into creation before anything broke. Here's what He knew that my watch doesn't.