Last year our youngest decided that he wanted to play baseball. So in the early spring he and his dad went and signed up…committing our evenings and Saturdays to being at the ballpark. Player evaluations were held and teams were selected and we received a call from a coach telling us that child number 5 was to be on his team.
Our boy didn’t know anyone on his team because he went to a different school than his teammates…but that didn’t matter…the boys welcomed him with open arms and new friendships were made. The team’s colors were orange and black and so my laundry began to be dotted with very dirty orange and black baseball socks and baseball pants and baseball practice shirts.
Since child number 5 had never played baseball on a team before, new equipment had to be purchased…and lots of sunscreen and bug spray for the player and the family members who would occupy the stands.
Practices began and our boy began to work on his baseball skills. He worked hard. He would have 2-3 evening practices during the week and practice for 3-4 hours on Saturdays. THEN he would come home from practices and ask his mom or dad or brothers or sister if any of us would throw a ball with him or help him with his hitting…and we did. On several Sunday afternoons our entire family would be out in the front yard with baseball gloves, throwing pop flies and grounders.
And when mom or dad or brothers or sister didn’t have the time or energy or desire to practice with little brother, he practiced anyway with his pitchback or just throwing balls high in the air and catching them. He was committed to this new sport…his whole heart was in it. He worked and worked and worked throughout the spring…at practices and at home…and all of that hard work began to show results on the field. By the end of the regular season, child number 5 was a much improved baseball player. His coaches lobbied hard for him to be selected to our town’s all-star team and selected he was…all because of his hard work…all because his heart was totally in it.
I am still proud of our son’s diligence and hard work and commitment and courage to do something he had never done before and give it everything he had. It inspires me.
Commitment like that, whole-hearted devotion like that is great. It’s admirable, even if it’s only for a season. But what about long-term whole-hearted devotion, isn’t that even more admirable and impressive?
The last couple of days, as I continue to read through the book of Joshua in the Bible, I’ve been reading about a man name Caleb. Caleb was a contemporary of Joshua…I think they were probably friends. The two of them were among the 12 spies that Moses sent to scout out the land that God had promised to Israel. Caleb and Joshua came back from their reconnaissance mission encouraged by what they saw in the new land. Sure there were enemies, but God had said that He would take care of those. They were ready to gather the troops at Moses’ command and conquer the land.
But the other 10 spies didn’t see things the same way. They saw the giants in the land and their hearts melted with fear and they convinced the rest of the Israelite people that they should be afraid also. Result: they spent the next 40 years wandering in the desert under God’s discipline until the next generation was raised up to go in and conquer the land. Only Joshua and Caleb would get to be a part of the Israelites that would eventually claim God’s promised victory.
In chapter 14 of Joshua, Caleb comes to Joshua and reminds Joshua of God’s promised inheritance that was to go to him, because he had followed the LORD his God wholeheartedly.
Caleb’s heart had been in everything he did for God…the spying out of the land, the waiting 40 years to receive his promised inheritance, the fighting to take the promised land from enemies. That’s a lifetime of whole-hearted devotion…that’s commitment…that’s incredible.
Caleb was 85-years-old when he received the reward of God’s promise to him…WOW! Now that’s impressive! 45+ years of whole-hearted devotion…his heart was definitely in it!
At the end of my life, and I may not make it to 85, will there be anything that others can look at and say, “She was whole-heartedly devoted to that.” Is my heart fully committed to loving God and loving others, to serving Him with an obedient heart? That’s what really matters. That’s what mattered to Caleb.
Is my heart in it?




