At the end of 1 Corinthians 9, Paul urges believers to "run the race so as to win." He directs this challenge to the Corinthian church—a congregation far more interested in satisfying their appetites than in loving their brothers. To correct their perspective, Paul draws on an image they knew well: the Isthmian Games held right in their own city. Just as athletes embraced sacrifice and strict discipline to compete, so those who truly belong to Christ will demonstrate the spiritual discipline necessary to run the Christian race. Paul's implication is unmistakable: those who are genuinely running will show the marks of runners—self‑control, perseverance, and a willingness to deny the flesh. Those who lack such discipline reveal that they are not truly in the race at all. To drive the point home, Paul uses himself as the example. He disciplines his body and brings it under control because he refuses to become a contradiction—a preacher whose life invalidates his message. He fears being "disqualified" (adokimos), a word he uses elsewhere to describe what is false, counterfeit, or not proven genuine. In other words, Paul is calling us to examine ourselves. The motivation to run—and the evidence that flows from that motivation—reveals whether our salvation is real. True believers run with discipline. Those who do not run at all show they were never runners to begin with.