Money: Lessons from Folly (Guest Speaker)

Introduction:

1 Kings 3:5,9 - At Gibeon the Lord appeared to Solomon during the night in a dream, and God said, “Ask for whatever you want me to give you."...9 So give your servant a discerning heart to govern your people and to distinguish between right and wrong. For who is able to govern this great people of yours?"

Lessons from Folly (Prov 6:1):

  1. Always be a Giver .

Proverbs 11:24-25 - One person gives freely, yet gains even more; another withholds unduly, but comes to poverty. A generous person will prosper; whoever refreshes others will be refreshed.

Malachi 3:8-10 - "Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food in my house. Test me in this," says the Lord Almighty, "and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that there will not be room enough to store it."

  1. Live the life that God is calling you to live.

    Proverbs 12:9 - Better to be a nobody and yet have a servant than pretend to be somebody and have no food

    Proverbs 11:28 - Those who trust in their riches will fall, but the righteous will thrive like a green leaf.

  2. Debt is Dumb .

    Proverbs 17:18 - One who has no sense shakes hands in pledge and puts up security for a neighbor.

    Proverbs 22:7 - The rich rule over the poor, and the borrower is slave to the lender.

    Ephesians 6:6 - Obey them not only to win their favor when their eye is on you, but as slaves of Christ, doing the will of God from your heart.

    Matthew 6:24 - No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money

    Proverbs 21:30 - In the house of the wise are stores of choice food and oil, but a foolish man devours all he has.

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
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  • 00:47-00:51

    Pastor Jeff has been speaking through Proverbs on a variety of topics, right?

    00:52-00:59

    On adultery, on wisdom, on gluttony, on being lazy, or a Biblical word for lazy is being a sluggard, right?

    01:00-01:03

    And so, today I'm going to continue on that journey.

    01:04-01:09

    And Proverbs is primarily written by King Solomon.

    01:09-01:12

    I think that that's a fairly well-known fact.

    01:12-01:18

    And it was written to instruct young men so that they can remain true to God.

    01:18-01:25

    And one thing that I think is really cool is the actual prologue to Proverbs, verses 1 through 7.

    01:26-02:05

    And it reads like this, "The Proverbs of Solomon, son of David, king of Israel, for gaining wisdom and instruction, for understanding words of insight, for receiving instruction in prudent behavior, doing what is right and just and fair, for giving prudence to those who are simple, knowledge and discretion to the young, let the wise listen and add to their learning, and let the discerning get guidance, for understanding proverbs and parables, the sayings and riddles of the wise, the fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge.

    02:06-02:27

    and my favorite, but fools despise wisdom and instruction." And so, what's really interesting about this, if you know and you've studied the Old Testament and you've read Kings and you know about Solomon, we know from the Scripture that all of his wisdom came directly from God.

    02:28-02:40

    So 1 Kings 3.5 - I'm not sure if we have that up this morning, but "At Gibeon the Lord appeared to Solomon during the night in a dream, God said, "Ask for whatever you want me to give you." How cool is that?

    02:40-02:43

    That's the ultimate genie in a bottle thing that we all wish for, right?

    02:44-03:08

    That God would appear to us and say, "Hey, ask me for whatever you want, "and I'll give it to you." Solomon, who must have already been wise, says, "Give your servant a discerning heart "to govern your people and distinguish "between right and wrong, for who is able "to govern this great people of yours?" Man, Solomon was in his early 20's when he became king.

    03:09-03:16

    I don't know about you when you were in your early 20's, but there's no way in heck that that's what I'm asking God for.

    03:17-03:17

    There's just no way.

    03:18-03:28

    So how amazing, right, is that already, that he had that mindset, that attitude, that his heart was already in the right place to make such a request to God.

    03:29-03:32

    And Proverbs covers every subject imaginable.

    03:33-03:34

    You've heard a lot of them.

    03:34-03:40

    They're very simple and very powerful short statements of truth.

    03:41-03:43

    It's today's equivalent of Twitter.

    03:44-03:45

    Right?

    03:45-03:48

    It's these little tweets that Solomon was putting out there.

    03:49-03:50

    Solomon's just tweeting his thoughts.

    03:51-03:56

    He had 3,000 proverbs that at least are attributed to him.

    03:57-04:03

    And could you imagine being like one of Solomon's scribes, probably constantly rolling their eyes.

    04:03-04:13

    Solomon has a shower thought and he goes, "Hey, here's a good one, write this down." They're just, "Okay. All right, Solomon, I got you, I got you." But he's coming out with this wisdom stuff.

    04:16-04:18

    Twitter gets people in trouble, am I right?

    04:19-04:20

    So, we see this every day.

    04:20-04:26

    We see it with our own leader in our nation, that oftentimes he gets in trouble for Twitter.

    04:27-04:29

    Famous people use Twitter all the time.

    04:29-04:37

    they think that their fame allows them to make sure that all of us want to hear what they think about something, right?

    04:38-04:40

    And usually it just causes an uproar.

    04:40-04:46

    I'm sure there's probably a new, it's probably an actual word or term now in Webster's Twitter Wars, right?

    04:47-04:49

    We see that all the time.

    04:49-04:55

    So what would happen today to King Solomon if he tweeted 21 .9?

    04:56-04:58

    You familiar with verse 21.9 in Proverbs?

    04:59-05:07

    "Better to live on the corner of a roof "than share a house with a quarrelsome wife." Ouch, right?

    05:07-05:09

    Could you imagine if he tweets that today?

    05:11-05:12

    He would be in so much trouble.

    05:12-05:14

    He'd be called a misogynist, right?

    05:14-05:17

    Immediately there would be all kinds of uproar.

    05:18-05:19

    PETA would be upset.

    05:19-05:19

    Why?

    05:19-05:21

    Just 'cause PETA's always upset.

    05:22-05:26

    You know, AOC would make her own video now complaining.

    05:27-05:35

    The roofer union would just absolutely go after King Solomon and ask for his impeachment.

    05:36-05:36

    Right?

    05:38-05:41

    Probably better that Twitter wasn't around back then.

    05:42-05:48

    So this morning I'm going to be talking about what King Solomon had to say about being in debt.

    05:48-05:51

    I know it's not a sexy topic.

    05:53-05:56

    Honestly, it's one that, in my opinion, churches don't talk enough about.

    05:57-06:12

    One thing I love about Pastor Jeff and what I love about Harvest Bible Chapel is just the expository preaching, verse by verse through the scripture, 'cause when you do that, it is impossible to avoid the stuff that is really, really, really important in our lives.

    06:12-06:21

    It's easy to go out and create a sermon series that's flowery and nice and fills the seats, but at the end of the day, we need to preach the word of God.

    06:21-06:23

    And so I'm blessed to bring this to you this morning.

    06:23-06:26

    And so you may be thinking, well, what the heck are you doing up here?

    06:26-06:27

    Why are you here?

    06:27-06:29

    And that's a great, great question.

    06:29-06:33

    And I'll answer that question because I've been just about as stupid with money as you can be.

    06:35-06:40

    And the title of this is Lessons from Folly.

    06:41-06:43

    And I got that from Proverbs 6.1.

    06:43-06:45

    It's warnings against folly.

    06:45-06:46

    Don't be foolish.

    06:48-06:49

    Don't be foolish.

    06:49-06:53

    If you have the message version of the Bible, it's a little different, it's a little stronger.

    06:55-06:58

    But I was very foolish with my finances.

    06:59-07:16

    So, way back, my wife and I are fairly newly married, and we've got two little boys in the house, and we decided, we decided, I decided that we were going to be real estate moguls, and pulled equity out of my house, and started buying out-of-state rental properties.

    07:16-07:19

    We lived in Southern California at the time, sight unseen.

    07:21-07:23

    I'm going to go more into that a little bit later.

    07:24-07:29

    But what ended up happening is we accumulated a lot of property.

    07:29-07:35

    We accumulated 11 properties at 11 mortgages I was paying, one that I was living in and 10 rental.

    07:37-07:42

    I started that in 2004, we purchased our last home in June of 2006.

    07:44-07:59

    If you were around in 2006, maybe not in Pittsburgh, but the rest of the country and definitely in Southern California, there was this thing called the mortgage meltdown, and the real estate market absolutely imploded.

    08:01-08:04

    So I had quit my job to get into real estate full-time.

    08:05-08:10

    Stacy was homeschooling our boys, and we're at home staring at each other with 11 mortgages to pay and no money coming in.

    08:12-08:13

    It was brutal.

    08:14-08:15

    It was absolutely brutal.

    08:18-08:22

    So God blessed me with an amazing wife, and she stuck around.

    08:25-08:25

    Thank goodness for that.

    08:27-08:28

    We fought our way through.

    08:29-08:55

    I'm going to share some of that with you as we go on, but being through that and understanding what it is to be in debt, understanding what it is to feel absolutely hopeless, understanding that everything that you could possibly feel in that situation, and the struggles that you go through, and how it interferes with your relationships, I absolutely know what that feels like.

    08:55-08:58

    So I want to be able to come in and speak to you about that today.

    09:00-09:02

    We learn when we do stupid stuff.

    09:02-09:04

    I definitely learned when I do stupid stuff.

    09:04-09:12

    The thing that came to me just the other day was my mom when I was young, we'd have dinner at the table every day.

    09:12-09:18

    My mom would put down some pot, bowl, casserole or something and she'd say, "Careful, it's hot." What did I do?

    09:19-09:21

    Always touch it, right?

    09:21-09:21

    Pow!

    09:22-09:22

    Burn myself.

    09:24-09:26

    So I thought, that's dumb.

    09:26-09:28

    You learn not to touch hot things.

    09:29-09:43

    But then I was laughing because when we go out to eat, to this day, and usually if it's at a Mexican restaurant, the server will come and they'll be holding my plate with a four inch pad and they say, "Hey, careful, this is hot." And they put it down.

    09:43-09:44

    I always touch the plate.

    09:45-09:46

    I always touch the plate.

    09:46-09:47

    So I still haven't learned to this point.

    09:47-09:51

    So some lessons we learn quickly, some lessons maybe not so quickly.

    09:52-10:02

    But the first lesson that I learned during this whole part going through this is that you need to always be a giver.

    10:03-10:04

    Always be a giver.

    10:05-10:10

    Proverbs 11, 24 says, "One person gives freely, yet gains even more.

    10:12-10:15

    Another withholds unduly, but comes to poverty.

    10:16-10:18

    A generous person will prosper.

    10:19-10:22

    Whoever refreshes others will be refreshed.

    10:24-10:30

    So during the time when things were going well, and when I say things are going well, we were going well.

    10:31-10:38

    Technically, you could say if you were to add up all of our assets, we were a millionaire in Southern California, living the dream.

    10:38-10:44

    We had worked our way up to a gated community with an awesome swimming pool.

    10:44-10:48

    And we would open it up to everyone to come hang out at our house any time we wanted, even if we weren't home.

    10:48-10:50

    We just said, just let yourself in, enjoy the pool.

    10:51-10:52

    And we were just kind of living the dream.

    10:53-10:54

    But we never gave.

    10:54-10:55

    We weren't tithers.

    10:56-10:57

    We weren't tithers.

    10:58-11:08

    We would do whatever was minimally required of us at church, or whatever we thought that the church was kind of spending on us, we would kind of give that back.

    11:09-11:12

    Kind of like, OK, we're going to make sure that we're whole with the church.

    11:14-11:14

    But we weren't givers.

    11:15-11:23

    So we deliberately withheld from God, and just as these verses foretell, we ended up in a financial mess.

    11:24-11:31

    And so, no matter where you are today financially, no matter where you are, you need to be a giver.

    11:32-11:39

    See, in the middle of our mess, when everything imploded, we walked up to our house one day, and there's a note on it that said we didn't live there anymore.

    11:40-11:46

    We were in the middle of a disaster, but we had already started our journey back, and we had started tithing.

    11:48-11:51

    And from the moment we started giving, everything changed in our life.

    11:54-11:55

    We started working our way out of the mess.

    11:55-11:57

    For the first time, we had a plan.

    11:57-12:00

    For the first time, we felt like we could see the blessings of God.

    12:02-12:04

    And it didn't make any sense.

    12:04-12:05

    It doesn't make sense.

    12:06-12:17

    Right? If I don't have anything, yet I'm giving fully my tithe the Lord and to my church every Sunday, how is it that I can end up with more?

    12:18-12:24

    Then I think that what we ended up understanding very clearly is that we're not the provider.

    12:26-12:28

    Stacy went back to work, got a full-time job.

    12:28-12:33

    I stayed home and homeschooled the boys and continued to work from home.

    12:34-12:38

    But she was the main breadwinner of the household, still is today.

    12:39-12:44

    And what we learn in that whole process is that Stacy's not the provider.

    12:46-12:48

    Chevron Corporation is not the provider.

    12:50-12:55

    The economy, up or down, isn't the provider or the blame.

    12:57-12:59

    What the minimum wage is, is not going to provide.

    13:01-13:02

    Overtime is not the provider.

    13:03-13:04

    The government is not the provider.

    13:05-13:07

    God is the provider.

    13:08-13:10

    Absolutely. 100%.

    13:11-13:21

    And when you come to understand this, and when you come to realize that 90% - mathematically, I get this doesn't make sense - 90% is greater than 100%.

    13:23-13:26

    God challenges us with this very thing.

    13:27-13:34

    Malachi 3.10 "Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food in my house.

    13:34-13:53

    Test me in this, says the Lord Almighty, and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that there will not be enough room to store it." You know, there's no promise here that the blessings you receive from giving, from tithing, are going to be financial.

    13:53-13:55

    For me, yes, some of them were.

    13:55-13:56

    Absolutely.

    13:56-13:58

    We had money show up that we couldn't explain.

    13:59-14:01

    You know, things just started happening.

    14:01-14:09

    And I always tell the story that I felt like God was saying, "Hey, listen, I'm kind of being a fool right now.

    14:10-14:12

    I have all these blessings for you, but I can't give it to you.

    14:12-14:13

    You're just going to waste them.

    14:14-14:17

    So you get your act together, and I'll give these to you.

    14:17-14:23

    And as soon as we started behaving, as soon as we started trusting in God, then these blessings started showing up in our lives.

    14:24-14:27

    So yes, there was some financial blessing that we received, absolutely.

    14:28-14:30

    But the majority of those blessings were not financial.

    14:31-14:36

    Man, the majority of those blessings or things that are priceless.

    14:37-14:42

    That Stacey and I, you know, when you get in a situation like that, it's so easy to fight.

    14:43-14:44

    But we fought.

    14:45-14:46

    It wasn't against each other.

    14:47-14:50

    We fought with each other to get out.

    14:51-14:53

    We fought together to get out.

    14:53-14:55

    We had an incredible bond.

    14:55-14:56

    It strengthened our marriage.

    14:56-14:58

    It didn't divide our marriage.

    14:58-15:08

    Our family, you know, you get a household full of kids and you show them a certain lifestyle, and then all of a sudden it goes away and you start having new rules.

    15:09-15:13

    It's hard. Honestly, it's not fair for the kids and most kids rebel.

    15:13-15:16

    If you have teenagers and you're in that situation, that's a tough place to be.

    15:16-15:20

    I get it. Kids get upset and honestly, they probably have every right to.

    15:20-15:23

    That's uncool of us to do that to them.

    15:23-15:26

    But man, our kids were awesome throughout the whole process.

    15:28-15:31

    Then just the piece that we had amidst our storm.

    15:32-15:59

    walking up to a house and realizing that it's been foreclosed, you don't live here anymore, and we were like, "Eh, that stinks." "All right, let's move on." "God has a plan." And that's how we handled that. And then the diligence, the diligence to fight and claw and do everything possible to make sure that not only were we going to get out of this, but there's no way in heck I'm allowing my family to suffer anymore from this day forward. We're going to work our way out.

    16:00-16:01

    And that's what we did.

    16:04-16:24

    So, another thing is, as important as the offering is, as important as tithing is, I think the church as a whole doesn't do a good enough job at making sure we understand that giving is an act of worship.

    16:25-16:27

    And let me explain to you exactly what I mean.

    16:29-16:33

    How many times, or how easy is it to just pretend that that offering isn't coming around?

    16:34-16:38

    And the reason that it's easy to pretend it's not coming around is because it's halftime at the church.

    16:41-16:43

    What do we do at halftime, right?

    16:43-16:54

    If you're at Heinz Field today and it's halftime, you're gonna go to a concession stand, you're gonna get a beverage of choice, you're gonna go to Primanti Brothers, you're gonna work your way back to your seat.

    16:56-17:02

    But halftime at church, we get up, we worship, we sing and praise to the Lord, and then here comes halftime.

    17:02-17:27

    Halftime is we're gonna have announcements, we're gonna show a video, oh by the way, that thing's coming around, and it's easy just to mentally in our mind go to the concession stand and conveniently forget that that's the time that we are supposed to really, really do some introspective, be so grateful for what God has given to us, and trust Him then with what He has given us and say thank you.

    17:29-17:31

    You know, it's hard and we don't get it.

    17:32-17:39

    And I think that part of the reason we don't get it is we don't put the right emphasis on what a tithe is, what the offering is.

    17:40-17:42

    God doesn't need our money.

    17:43-17:45

    God created everything from nothing.

    17:46-17:48

    And if He needed money, He could print it.

    17:48-17:50

    It's not an issue, right?

    17:51-17:53

    The church doesn't need our money.

    17:54-17:56

    I know Jeff is freaking out right now.

    17:57-17:59

    The church doesn't need our money.

    17:59-18:00

    You see statements every month.

    18:00-18:01

    We've got a lot of money coming through here.

    18:03-18:04

    You need to give.

    18:04-18:05

    I need to give.

    18:06-18:09

    Because we need to make that offering.

    18:11-18:12

    It's about us.

    18:14-18:16

    It's about us trusting in God.

    18:16-18:20

    It is in order for us to be Christ-like, You have to be givers.

    18:21-18:32

    And the act of worship, the act of trusting in the Lord and saying, "Okay, Lord, I believe that 90 is greater than 100, and I am giving this to You." That is what grows us.

    18:33-18:39

    And as a result, what happens in this church when we become givers is unbelievably phenomenal.

    18:40-18:42

    And that's how the church is blessed.

    18:44-18:51

    The second lesson that I learned back when I went through this mess is to live the life that God is calling you to live.

    18:53-18:54

    We see it all day, right?

    18:55-19:02

    Facebook, Instagram, and you see everybody's living this amazing online, look-at-me life.

    19:03-19:07

    And we really like to kind of boast and brag about all the cool things that we do.

    19:08-19:10

    And we live in that social media world today.

    19:10-19:10

    I get it.

    19:12-19:26

    But I've seen so many people, and I was one of them, live their life in an outwardly fashion to please others at the expense of your own family.

    19:29-19:44

    Wow, that's rough. Why do we do that? Why do we do that? Contentment has to be the absolute first and foremost for us. We need to be content with where we are with who we are and most importantly with whose we are.

    19:46-20:26

    Proverbs 12.9 reads, "Better to be nobody and to have a servant than pretend to be somebody and have no food." So I was thinking about that and just this morning I made an adjustment and I thought, you know that's great and a lot of these, you know, Proverbs and parables and we hear them all the time, they're, you know, it was written at a time when and everyone could understand what they said because the culture was very, you know, it was all about agriculture and people understood these things and people understood really what it was like to have a servant back in these times and they certainly understood what it was like to be a servant.

    20:27-20:34

    And it's not the kind of slavery that you and I think of when we think of slavery and the horrific things that happened here in the United States.

    20:34-20:39

    There was servanthood that had to happen where you just had to go work for somebody.

    20:40-20:42

    Right, we're all servants to our job in a sense.

    20:42-20:45

    You show up and you have to keep working in order to pay things off.

    20:46-20:57

    And so sometimes you had to do that for a farmer or a land owner, et cetera, so that you could earn something, so that you could pay something, so that you could, you know, able to court their daughter.

    20:57-21:03

    I mean, there's all kinds of things in the Scripture where people became servants to do these kinds of things.

    21:03-21:05

    And I thought, what would this look like today?

    21:06-21:10

    If I could tweet out a Solomon proverb today, what would that tweet look like?

    21:12-21:14

    Here's what I came up with, I had a couple of them.

    21:15-21:23

    Better to drive a used pay for a car and put money away for retirement than to drive a payment and retire broke.

    21:26-21:33

    Better to live in a humble home and have money for your kids college than in a castle with kids who have student loan debt.

    21:35-21:36

    That's what that's saying to us.

    21:38-21:56

    You know, I think about my personal testimony and I realized, at the time that all this stuff was going on, Stacy and I were part of a church plant, a young church, and we were, you know, just like we started here at Harvest, we were meeting in elementary school, set up, tear down each and every Sunday, and I was an elder at that church.

    21:57-22:05

    We were so involved and 100% in on our faith, on everything that we were doing.

    22:06-22:14

    Christ was the absolute center of our marriage, of our parenting, our prayer life, with the exception of one area.

    22:15-22:17

    And when it came to finances, I was like, "Hey God, I got this.

    22:18-22:23

    "I don't need you here, I'm good." And that's exactly where I dropped the ball.

    22:26-22:29

    And so, who was I trying to please?

    22:31-22:33

    I had everything in the wrong place.

    22:34-22:40

    There's a picture up here that was taken back in 2005.

    22:41-22:47

    Stacy and I bought this house for $227,000 in Chino Hills, California back in 1999.

    22:47-22:52

    We sold it for $589,000 in 2005.

    22:54-22:59

    Why? Because that's what appreciation and real estate was doing in California right before it imploded on.

    23:00-23:02

    Look at those two little boys.

    23:03-23:06

    The smallest one is sitting here today, the bigger one is in college.

    23:08-23:12

    So that was the beginning of the end for us.

    23:13-23:15

    That was the beginning of our downward spiral.

    23:17-23:20

    I haven't done the math on the difference between those numbers because it makes me sick.

    23:22-23:27

    But instead of trusting in God, we decided to trust in our wealth.

    23:28-23:35

    It was right about this time, maybe a little before that, I would say maybe a year or so before that.

    23:35-23:40

    Christian, who's the oldest in that photo, was about three years old.

    23:41-23:47

    I remember he had found three pennies, and he was so excited.

    23:47-23:54

    If you have little kids or have had little kids, and you just remember you give a kid like a couple of coins, and they just think it's the coolest thing in the world.

    23:55-23:59

    He had found three pennies, and he was so excited and he put them in his pocket.

    24:00-24:16

    And so we get to worship and I get to church and I'm getting ready to grab him out of the car seat and lift him up and put him down so he could walk and unload the family and all the stuff that you guys do today, but our stuff wasn't nearly as cool as the stuff you parents have today.

    24:16-24:21

    So I'm grabbing him and he's not grabbing onto me because he's quickly reaching into his pocket.

    24:22-24:28

    And I'm like, "Christian, what are you doing?" And so I put him down and then he digs I'm just waiting for him to take my hand so I can get going.

    24:28-24:29

    We got to go.

    24:29-24:30

    We're always rushing a little bit late.

    24:32-24:35

    And he hands me this, and he says, Daddy, will you hold my monies?

    24:36-24:37

    Three pennies.

    24:38-24:40

    And I thought, oh, that's so sweet.

    24:41-24:41

    How cool is that?

    24:42-24:47

    You know, he didn't trust in his ability to not lose his money.

    24:48-24:53

    And he wanted his father to hold his money for him.

    24:54-24:55

    And we need to do the same.

    24:56-25:05

    And today when I think about that story, and as I was preparing, that accounting of that entered my mind, and it did two things.

    25:05-25:07

    It made me smile immediately, because I just thought how cute.

    25:08-25:09

    My little son, I remember that.

    25:10-25:14

    And then it absolutely pierced my soul at the same time.

    25:15-25:23

    Because he trusted me with his pennies, and yet I was there at the same time, where I literally had the thought when he handed it to me, I thought, wow, that preacher's right there.

    25:24-25:24

    That's awesome.

    25:26-25:27

    I didn't get it.

    25:28-25:32

    He's trusting me with pennies and I'm not trusting God with my dollars.

    25:34-25:35

    Proverbs 11, 28.

    25:36-25:43

    "Those who trust in their riches will fall, "but the righteous will thrive like a green leaf." And we fell.

    25:46-25:47

    Debt is dumb.

    25:48-25:51

    Flat out, debt is dumb.

    25:53-26:12

    Proverbs 17, 18, "One who has no sense shakes hands in pledge and puts up security for a neighbor." If you're familiar with the Message version of the Bible, the Message version of the Bible is in absolute plain language, plain English, and it literally translates that to being stupid.

    26:13-26:14

    It says that this is stupid.

    26:16-26:17

    And we don't use that word.

    26:17-26:18

    That used to be the S word in our house.

    26:18-26:19

    We don't do that.

    26:19-26:21

    no thank you word in the Gennetti house.

    26:24-26:27

    You may be thinking, "Well, really, everyone has debt, right?

    26:27-26:30

    I mean, why does God really care if we have debt?

    26:31-26:39

    What's the big deal? I mean, do we even know someone who doesn't have debt?" If you do, they're probably a little weird. Am I right?

    26:40-26:44

    Like in the world we live in, when we finance everything, everyone's owing on everything.

    26:46-26:55

    But God cares because there's such a spiritual truth that's found in Proverbs 22.7.

    26:56-27:02

    The rich rule over the poor and the borrower is slave to the lender.

    27:04-27:11

    If you think about it, we all understand how this feels.

    27:13-27:22

    If you have to make a payment to anyone for anything, absolutely know what this feels like.

    27:24-27:28

    You know what it's like to be enslaved to whoever that is that you're making payments to.

    27:30-27:34

    Financial stress destroys every relationship we have.

    27:36-27:39

    It's the number one cause of divorce.

    27:40-27:42

    You know what's the worst part about that?

    27:42-27:53

    A couple who cannot get together financially and they struggle and they fight and they argue and they split up and now all we do is multiply because guess what?

    27:53-28:00

    Now I've got two broke households that are miserable and that perpetuates.

    28:00-28:04

    Kids get caught up in that mess and we all learn from our parents.

    28:04-28:11

    I learned how to handle money from my broke parents and I decided that I was going to change my family tree and stop that immediately.

    28:14-28:25

    Number one reason that students drop out of college isn't because it's hard or they can't make it or because of the workload or grades, it's because of student loan debt and the stress that that puts on them.

    28:27-28:29

    Here's the worst part about that.

    28:29-28:32

    The day you drop out, guess what starts coming?

    28:33-28:39

    Your payments. It's the absolute worst time to have to start paying things back.

    28:39-28:42

    If you graduate, you get a bit of a grace period.

    28:42-28:46

    But when you stop and quit, come right after you.

    28:48-28:56

    So I'm going to double down and I'm going to say that to dance with debt is dancing with disaster.

    28:57-29:00

    It's not the server telling you your plate is hot.

    29:01-29:09

    It's God telling you, "This plate is hot, don't touch it." That's no way for any of us to live.

    29:10-29:12

    Chris Hogan is a personal finance expert.

    29:13-29:19

    My wife showed me a Prager University video that he was on and it was amazing.

    29:20-29:22

    There were so many things on there that I would love to share with you this morning.

    29:22-29:33

    There's just not enough time, but the one thing that caught my eye was one in three people in America today could not cover a $2,000 emergency if they had to pay it in cash.

    29:36-29:38

    We live in the greatest country in the world.

    29:40-29:48

    We could go out right now, each and every one of us, if we were willing to go work our tails off and make $2,000 today somehow, someway.

    29:49-29:54

    Whether it's selling stuff that we're not using and stuck in our closet, we could figure out a way to do it.

    29:55-30:00

    Yet, one in three, 33 percent can't cover $2,000?

    30:03-30:05

    Something's wrong. That's sad.

    30:07-30:09

    I want to give you some encouragement this morning.

    30:09-30:15

    If you're losing sleep at night because you're worried about finances, I've been there, I get it.

    30:17-30:30

    If there's too much month at the end of your money and it's keeping you up, it's stressing you out, maybe you're living in a way that you're not even fully insured.

    30:30-30:32

    you're driving your car and hoping that nothing happens.

    30:33-30:36

    You're hoping nothing happens to your house because you're not insured properly.

    30:37-30:44

    Or worse yet, maybe you don't have life insurance, and your family is just literally hanging out there on the edge.

    30:45-30:54

    You know what makes me more sad than anything is when there's a tragedy that happens, someone's house burns down, someone passes away, and then there's a GoFundMe account for whoever was left behind.

    30:56-30:57

    No reason for that.

    30:58-30:59

    There's none.

    31:01-31:07

    For so many years, Stacy and I stuck our head in the sand when it came to the things that we weren't doing right.

    31:08-31:10

    I promise you that's the wrong way to go.

    31:11-31:14

    Because eventually the light switch comes on, you can't hide anymore.

    31:17-31:19

    Maybe you have no idea how your kid's going to go to college.

    31:19-31:22

    Maybe you don't have a penny in savings or anything in your retirement account.

    31:24-31:33

    I hear commercials where people quote that, Forget what the number is, but there's so many people today who think they're going to die with debt.

    31:34-31:39

    They're going to have to work until the day they die to pay off the debt or they just don't have money to retire.

    31:39-31:41

    I thought every bit of that too.

    31:41-31:45

    In a few weeks, Stacy and I are going to be teaching another round of Financial Peace University.

    31:45-31:49

    So if that's you, I want you to think about whether that might be the right class for you to attend.

    31:51-31:52

    It's easy to tune out.

    31:53-31:58

    Every time that we talk about this kind of thing and we talk about debt, and I know that it's uncomfortable and I get it.

    32:00-32:05

    There might be some people in this room actually who are really good with their finances, and so it's easy to tune that out.

    32:06-32:11

    But here's one thing that really came to me and it was powerful.

    32:12-32:23

    Because Stacy and I have done a complete 180, and we definitely have been honoring God in our finances long enough to the point where we have been very blessed.

    32:24-32:55

    And so for me to come up here and tell you that we went from a place that was absolutely horrific To a place where we feel honored and blessed To come through it and I told you that I wanted to change our family tree and we've done that Both my boys know if they ever borrow money from anyone. I'm gonna kill them So it's easy to tune out about financial stuff and I get it But I want you to think about this for a second.

    32:58-32:59

    Rich rule over the poor, I get that.

    33:00-33:05

    That clearly was written with a financial mindset.

    33:06-33:20

    But I want you to focus on the second part of that verse and it says, "The borrower is slave to the lender." You know that's true no matter what type of debt you owe.

    33:22-33:24

    Have you ever owed someone an apology?

    33:26-33:32

    How did that feel, knowing that you weren't willing to pay that back?

    33:32-33:34

    How did that make you feel?

    33:36-33:38

    Have you ever owed someone a favor?

    33:40-33:46

    Have you ever owed someone an explanation or a response?

    33:47-33:50

    Email, text, phone call.

    33:51-33:53

    There's some calls that I get we don't want to make.

    33:53-33:54

    I understand that.

    33:56-33:58

    Maybe you owe someone a thank you.

    33:59-34:00

    A debt of gratitude.

    34:03-34:13

    Have you ever borrowed something from someone and you just feel really uneasy until you can get it back in their hands either because it has value or if you ever borrowed someone's car.

    34:13-34:14

    How terrifying is that?

    34:16-34:17

    Why do we feel that way?

    34:18-34:31

    Regardless of what it is that you owe somebody else, money, some kind of emotion, or something else of value, it changes the relationship.

    34:32-34:35

    You are no longer neighbors or friends or even family.

    34:35-34:37

    You are master and servant.

    34:38-34:42

    At that very moment, we'll drive a wedge between the two of you.

    34:43-34:45

    You can't stop it.

    34:45-34:46

    It's unavoidable.

    34:47-34:48

    It's in the Scripture.

    34:48-34:50

    It is a spiritual truth.

    34:52-34:59

    And you're not going to be able to interact in a normal way until you are able to make whole with that individual.

    35:01-35:11

    And even then, sometimes, depending how that went, if it took too long, if it was awkward, The relationship is never the same.

    35:11-35:15

    And when that's family, that's really, really sad.

    35:17-35:23

    And that's why so many times we just avoid contact with people that we owe something to.

    35:25-35:28

    You have grandkids who don't talk to their grandparents for years.

    35:31-35:34

    All of us have some kind of personal or relational debt.

    35:36-35:44

    Even if you're a kid in this room today, teenager in this room today, you know that you have debt, emotional debt.

    35:45-35:49

    If you're a young adult in this room today, you have emotional debt.

    35:49-35:52

    If you're a parent of young ones, you have emotional debt. Let me tell you what I'm talking about.

    35:53-36:00

    If you, yesterday, Stacy and I were at an event and someone referred to us as post midlife.

    36:01-36:34

    Yeah, I thought, "Oh, it's a bit rough." If there's anyone else post-midlife in here like me, you have kids, or you, you know, maybe you come to the realization, if you're a teenager here today, what happens is you get into your early 20s and you start adulting for real, maybe get out on your own, and then you realize, "Wow, you know what? My parents had to put up with a lot of stuff for me." And you pick up the phone and you make that call, and you say, "You know what? Mom and Dad, I know that wasn't easy.

    36:36-36:42

    And then what happens is you find your spouse and you get married and you have kids, and then you think, "This is a disaster.

    36:43-36:49

    This is insane. I'm not sleeping. It's a nightmare." If you're the Howells, you're definitely not sleeping. They've got like nine kids over there.

    36:50-36:54

    I mean, get a hobby. So it's just one of those things, you know.

    36:54-37:05

    And so you call your parents and you say, "Mom, Dad, how did you do this without iPads?" iPads, right? How did you do this without YouTube? There's no internet. I don't understand.

    37:05-39:19

    This is hard. Thank you. Thank you for what you've done. Sometimes you don't even know, we don't even know what we owe to others. But when you have that and you owe something, a servant. And it's crazy. And if you're not a believer today and you're here, man I am so impressed by your faith. Because to believe that there is no God, to believe that what we see and read in the Scriptures isn't true, takes a lot more faith than I have. Proverbs 22 7 is so powerfully true in any sense. No matter what you owe to someone it absolutely cuts you to the core and that's why we cannot enter into that relationship of servant and master. And why is this so troubling to us? Why does this cut us no matter what? I don't care if you have the hardcore believer, someone who's sold out for Jesus Christ, or someone who's has no Someone who's an atheist, I promise you they feel the same things we feel when it comes to this. And why is that true? Because it conflicts with our true calling. We're all called to be servants, but we're supposed to be servants for Christ. Ephesians 6.6 Paul writes, and he's writing to slaves and he's talking to them about being obedient to their master and he says, "Obey them not only to win favor when their eye is on you, but as slaves of Christ, doing the will of God from your heart. Over and over Romans 1.1, Colossians 3.24, 1 Peter 2.16, it's very clear Paul's telling us we are supposed to be servants for Christ Jesus. And the second that we substitute Jesus for MasterCard, or Ford Motor Company, or Sally Mae, or your neighbor, or a family member, we stop focusing on who God created us to be.

    39:21-39:24

    And we start serving a new master.

    39:26-39:30

    That's exactly what Jesus was talking about in the Sermon on the Mount, Matthew 6.24.

    39:30-39:32

    No one can serve two masters.

    39:32-39:38

    Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will "You will be devoted to one and despise the other.

    39:38-39:44

    "You cannot serve both God and money." And this verse gets so turned around.

    39:44-39:47

    You can take anything in scripture and make it the way you want.

    39:49-39:52

    This verse is often used to argue that it's evil to have wealth.

    39:54-39:56

    And I want to tell you, there's nothing further from the truth.

    39:59-40:01

    Ironically, I think God wants us to have wealth.

    40:04-40:06

    Is it a stumbling block for us?

    40:06-40:08

    Absolutely, for the reasons I just outlined.

    40:09-40:10

    Because our heart's not in the right place.

    40:11-40:19

    But for His people, for the people who are sold out believers in Jesus Christ, who are servants for Jesus Christ, absolutely God wants you to have wealth.

    40:21-40:25

    Because it's an amazing tool, and it will further the Kingdom of God.

    40:26-40:29

    Proverbs 21.30, I'm wrapping up with this this morning.

    40:30-40:36

    "In the house of the wise are stores "of choice food and oil, The foolish man devours all he has.

    40:38-40:39

    Man was I foolish.

    40:41-40:42

    Man was I foolish.

    40:43-40:44

    Money came in, money came out.

    40:45-40:46

    We live paycheck to paycheck.

    40:46-40:52

    My wife read something today that cracked us up this morning and it said, "Oh, I no longer live paycheck to paycheck.

    40:52-40:53

    I'm sophisticated.

    40:53-41:38

    Now I live direct deposit to direct deposit." Whether you have money or don't have money has nothing to do with your relationship Jesus. Having your heart in the right place has everything to do with your relationship with Jesus. So let's think about this for a minute. Even though we're a smaller group today, in this room right here right now, if every single one of us in this room were a hundred percent debt-free, you owe nothing to anyone? How many of God's people from this room alone could we feed? How many of God's people could we clothe?

    41:41-42:21

    How many of God's people could we send? Think of all the, you know, we got four guys in Thailand right now. How many people could we send all over the globe to do God's work? What do you think God could do with the loaves and fishes that come out of this room alone and multiply them and multiply them and multiply them all for the glory of God. You know many of us have heard over time and over the years I've heard this a thousand times well there's good debt and there's bad debt and I'm here to say that's absolutely false. I think we just confirmed that there is no good debt.

    42:23-42:37

    In all the debt that we have, whether it's emotional, whether it's personal, whether it's financial, we made a choice and we entered into that debt knowingly and willingly.

    42:40-42:41

    But there are two types of debt.

    42:43-42:45

    There's one debt that we can't repay.

    42:47-42:53

    No matter what we do, no matter how hard you work, There's no way to repay it, and that's the debt of our sin.

    42:56-42:58

    Jesus canceled that debt for us.

    42:59-43:03

    On the cross, he took our sin, past, present, and future.

    43:03-43:05

    And we just sang about that in the last song that we sang.

    43:07-43:11

    And that cuts me every time to think about, my debt put Jesus on the cross.

    43:11-43:13

    My sin put Jesus on the cross.

    43:15-43:17

    And yet, he canceled that debt for us.

    43:19-43:21

    and it is absolutely mind-blowing.

    43:21-43:22

    There's nothing we can do to pay it back.

    43:24-43:29

    We can, however, live our lives as servants to Christ Jesus.

    43:31-43:33

    Working for Him in everything that we do.

    43:34-43:41

    Living for Him in a way that brings glory to God the Father, so that at the end of the day, we'll be servants.

    43:41-43:43

    We're going to be servants one way or another.

    43:44-43:47

    Let it be servants to Christ Jesus.

    43:49-43:52

    to have no one and put no thing before Him.

    43:53-43:54

    Please pray with me.

    43:55-44:00

    Father God, thank You for the opportunity to come and share this morning.

    44:01-44:11

    I just pray, Lord, for everyone in this room today that Your Word would take root.

    44:12-44:20

    I pray, Father God, that we all examine ourselves as it relates to the death that we owe.

    44:21-44:24

    If there are relationships that need to be mended, let us mend those relationships.

    44:26-44:35

    If there are ways that we can improve the way that we honor You with what You have entrusted us, Father God, I ask that we would seek help and do that.

    44:37-44:42

    But first and foremost, Lord, I pray for each and every one of us that we would live out our servanthood to You.

    44:43-44:49

    That we would honor You in all that we do, our words and our actions and our deeds would bring glory to You.

    44:51-44:57

    So often, we hear the word "small church." Oh, we're a small church.

    44:57-44:59

    There is no small church.

    45:00-45:03

    We serve an awesome, amazing God.

    45:04-45:09

    And with a small group of believers, we can do incredible things through You.

    45:10-45:12

    Thank You, Father God, for Your provision.

    45:12-45:14

    Thank You, Father God, for Your wisdom.

    45:15-45:17

    In Jesus' name we pray, Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Proverbs 6:1
(If you like, review any other Proverbs on money we covered on Sunday!)

  1. Have you ever known of a relationship strained or destroyed due to unpaid financial or emotional debt? If so what happened and how could it have been prevented?

  2. Have you ever found yourself trying to keep up with the Jones'? What were you doing and how did you stop?

  3. 1 in 3 Americans cannot cover a $2,000 emergency in cash. When you read that, how does that make you feel?

  4. Read Proverbs 21:30 then respond with how that Scripture speaks to you.

  5. The world says that there is 'good' debt and bad debt. the Bible says all debt is to be avoided. Who is right? Why do we continually try to justify the world's view?

BREAKOUT
Pray for one another. Are you struggling with money? Get an accountability partner - now - from your group on your spending. Pray about and dedicate to joining the upcoming Financial Peace University class.

Gluttony: The Forgotten Sin

Introduction:

Proverbs 23:20-21 - Be not among drunkards or among gluttonous eaters of meat, for the drunkard and the glutton will come to poverty, and slumber will clothe them with rags.

Gluttony is Not Wise (Prov 23:20-21):

  1. Gluttony shows lack of Self-Control .

    Proverbs 23:20 - Be not among drunkards or among gluttonous eaters of meat...

  1. Gluttony leads to Bondage .

    1 Cor 6:12 - "All things are lawful for me," but not all things are helpful. "All things are lawful for me," but I will not be dominated by anything.

  2. Gluttony is a Destructive lifestyle.

    Proverbs 23:21 - for the drunkard and the glutton will come to poverty, and slumber will clothe them with rags

How Do I Conquer Gluttony?

  1. Repent .
  2. Refuse .
  3. Replace .
  4. Rely .

    1 Cor 10:31 - So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
Hint:
Highlight blanks above for answers!

  • 00:43-00:45

    Open up your Bibles to Proverbs 23.

    00:46-00:50

    This past year we went through the book of Revelation, verse by verse.

    00:51-00:56

    And I've got to tell you, the series was really good for me.

    00:56-01:03

    Spending that time just looking at the hope that God has in store for His people.

    01:03-01:11

    The series was good for me because when I look outside of the Bible and just look at what's happening in the world today, there's very little that gives me hope.

    01:12-01:24

    For example, last week, maybe you heard this, last week a woman named Michelle Lesko from Arizona set a world record for eating mayonnaise.

    01:25-01:35

    She ate 86.35 ounces, or the equivalent of three and a half jars in three minutes.

    01:36-01:55

    And maybe it's the pastor in me, maybe it's the armchair psychologist, sociologist, I I see that video and I just have a lot of questions like for that woman that Michelle I Think how did that become her life's goal? You know, was that something in high school?

    01:55-02:01

    Like she shows up at career day and she's like, yeah Can somebody tell me who I need to talk to about?

    02:02-02:09

    How did that become her goal? And then I thought well, maybe it was suggested by a friend. Okay, Michelle You know what you're really good at?

    02:10-02:12

    Eating condiments in gross quantities.

    02:12-02:14

    You should go for the mayonnaise record.

    02:14-02:18

    You know, church, we love to eat.

    02:19-02:25

    Hopefully not that, but we are a food-obsessed culture.

    02:25-02:28

    We don't eat to live.

    02:29-02:30

    We, what?

    02:31-02:31

    We live to eat.

    02:32-02:33

    Just turn on your TV.

    02:33-02:36

    Do you know how many shows there are about food?

    02:36-02:42

    Chopped, Cake Boss, Top Chef, Iron Chef, Bizarre Foods, Man vs. Food.

    02:42-02:47

    I stopped typing at that point. There was just list after list after list after list after list.

    02:47-02:52

    There's a food network. Who is watching that?

    02:53-03:06

    Now, listen, I understand if you're like a culinary student/expert, if you're like a Jessica Wolsky or Kristen Ord, where you're like, "That's like my jam, and I went to school for this, and this is a hobby of mine.

    03:06-03:07

    I get that.

    03:08-03:13

    But who's the average person just sitting down like, you know what I feel like doing for the next hour?

    03:14-03:15

    I'm going to watch somebody build a cake.

    03:18-03:19

    We're so food obsessed.

    03:20-03:28

    And in our culture, this obsession with food sort of makes us oblivious to even the concept of gluttony.

    03:28-03:30

    What is gluttony?

    03:30-03:31

    Look at Proverbs 23.

    03:32-03:34

    We're just going to look at two verses today.

    03:34-03:35

    Our main focus.

    03:35-03:37

    Proverbs 23. Verse 20.

    03:37-03:42

    It says, "Be not among drunkards or among gluttonous eaters of meat.

    03:43-03:54

    For the drunkard and the glutton will come to poverty, and slumber will clothe them with rags." In the church, we don't usually need sold on the sin of drunkenness.

    03:55-04:00

    I don't usually have to convince people that drunkenness is a bad idea.

    04:01-04:08

    But you have to see in these verses, excessive drinking has a food counterpart.

    04:08-04:16

    And that's why in your Bible, the times that drunkenness and gluttony are mentioned, they are mentioned together.

    04:17-04:19

    Too much drink or too much food.

    04:19-04:21

    Both sides of the same coin.

    04:21-04:24

    Today we're going to talk about gluttony.

    04:24-04:25

    I'm going to give you a generic definition.

    04:26-04:29

    It's the inordinate desire to consume more food than we require.

    04:30-04:32

    Why is the deeper issue?

    04:32-04:34

    Why would we do that?

    04:34-04:35

    Why do we do that?

    04:35-04:43

    The truth is, church, overeating, gluttony is by far the easiest sin for us to justify.

    04:43-04:46

    I'm going to talk with you briefly about my struggle.

    04:47-04:50

    And talking about my struggle, maybe you can relate.

    04:51-04:55

    I looked up my body mass index.

    04:57-04:58

    Do you know what the results were for me?

    04:59-05:01

    I'm considered morbidly obese.

    05:01-05:06

    It's like, "Jeff, you're not only fat, you're like fat to death." Morbidly obese.

    05:07-05:13

    And the truth is, I can make an excuse to overeat in just about any situation.

    05:13-05:15

    Now when I say that, I'm not proud of that.

    05:15-05:16

    Like, "Hey, guess what I can do?

    05:17-05:24

    Guess what my spiritual gift is?" I'm not proud of that, but I'm saying I can make an excuse when I'm celebrating, right?

    05:25-05:27

    When I'm celebrating, you know, birthday.

    05:27-05:35

    What do we celebrate with our birthday? We use cake. Wedding, cake, Columbus Day.

    05:36-05:40

    I should have a cake. I mean I wouldn't want somebody to think I'm unpatriotic.

    05:41-05:55

    But when I'm celebrating it's just, you know, I can justify, "Oh, we're having a good day, so I better stuff as much food in my head as I can." Anybody else? When I'm stressed, I overeat. When I'm nervous, I overeat.

    05:55-05:58

    Worst for me is when I'm depressed.

    05:58-05:59

    It happens a lot.

    05:59-06:01

    But when I'm depressed, I justify it.

    06:02-06:04

    "This will make me feel good." I overeat.

    06:04-06:11

    And we make these excuses, but again, part of the justification in our minds, I think it helps us to give it a cute nickname, right?

    06:12-06:19

    Like, I don't just sit out and say, "You know what? I'm really depressed, so I'm going to be a glutton today!" We don't call it that, do we?

    06:19-06:20

    We have the cute little nickname.

    06:21-06:21

    It's comfort food.

    06:22-06:22

    It's comfort food.

    06:23-06:57

    "Oh, my little counselor in the ice cream carton to comfort me. You know, I need encouragement on my walk and no one encourages me like that sleeve of Oreos. It's comfort food. Or the Doritos. When I'm depressed, the little bag you get at Sheetz isn't going to do it. I need the family-sized bag of Doritos because I'm like, "Family-sized? Well, I have a family. That must be the size for me." And it's always I've never heard that.

    06:57-06:59

    Never heard that, like, "Dev, I've hit rock bottom, man.

    06:59-07:02

    I ate like three pounds of Brussels sprouts today.

    07:03-07:07

    I'm thinking about seeing a counselor." Well, we want to walk wisely, right?

    07:07-07:09

    You with me on the walking wisely thing?

    07:10-07:12

    I appreciate you laughing at my expense there.

    07:12-07:16

    Not a very comfortable thing to talk about, but it's something we have to talk about.

    07:16-07:23

    Proverbs 23, verse 20, "Don't be among them." Don't be among the drunkards and the gluttons.

    07:23-07:31

    That doesn't mean don't be in proximity of them, as much as he's talking about participation with them.

    07:32-07:32

    Why?

    07:32-07:40

    Verse 21, he says, "For the drunkard and the glutton will come to poverty, and slumber will clothe them with rags." That lifestyle leads nowhere good.

    07:40-07:46

    Before we talk about this, listen, I need to clarify what I am not saying, and you gotta hear this.

    07:46-07:52

    And if the person sitting beside you has kind of checked out and not paying attention, you elbow them hard, okay?

    07:52-07:55

    Like in the armory, not like in the face, but like elbow them.

    07:56-07:57

    You need to hear this.

    07:58-08:02

    I am not saying today that enjoying food is sinful.

    08:03-08:04

    I am not saying that.

    08:05-08:19

    1 Corinthians 8.8 says, "Food will not commend us to God." Romans 14.17, "For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit." I'm not saying enjoying food is sinful.

    08:19-08:21

    God gave it to us to enjoy.

    08:22-08:29

    But also, you've got to hear this, this message is not about fat shaming at all.

    08:29-08:32

    Because gluttony is not about body size.

    08:32-08:38

    There are many factors that go into body size, like genetics and hormones and a lot of things.

    08:38-08:40

    You can be a skinny glutton.

    08:40-08:42

    We're talking about the heart issue, okay?

    08:42-08:45

    This isn't about body size issue, this is about heart issue.

    08:45-08:46

    So that's what I'm not saying.

    08:47-08:52

    And you're like, "Well, I didn't come here today to hear what you're not saying." So what are you saying about gluttony, Pastor Jeff?

    08:52-08:53

    Well, let's look at what the Bible says.

    08:54-08:56

    On your outline, if you're taking notes, jot these things down.

    08:56-09:02

    First of all, our outline is, "Gluttony is not wise." Gluttony is not wise. Why?

    09:02-09:05

    Number one, gluttony shows lack of self-control.

    09:05-09:07

    Gluttony shows lack of self-control.

    09:07-09:26

    "Be not among drunkards or among gluttonous eaters of meat." Again, Proverbs is sort of from the perspective of Dad talking to his son, saying, "Son, these are people you don't hang out with." And it's not about the food and the drink, it's about you can't hang out with people that have no control over themselves.

    09:26-09:28

    Don't hang out with people like that.

    09:28-09:32

    Gluttony, specifically today, it shows lack of self-control.

    09:32-09:38

    Like its liquid counterpart, drunkenness, gluttony is just showing no restraint.

    09:39-09:39

    No restraint.

    09:40-09:56

    You know, if a guy sits down at a bar and drinks himself drunk several times a week, we would go to that guy and say, "Man, you got a problem." But if a guy eats way more than he needs to several times a week, we sort of applaud that.

    09:57-10:07

    Like, "Wow, wow, you're really good at eating." And my question is, why does no self-control get a pass when it comes to eating?

    10:07-10:08

    Why does it get a pass?

    10:10-10:12

    Why do we sort of celebrate that?

    10:12-10:22

    "Hey, guess how many pierogies I ate? I don't care. But why do we celebrate that?" You're like, "Oh, come on. Overeating doesn't hurt anyone, Pastor Jeff.

    10:22-10:23

    You see, that's the difference here.

    10:24-10:32

    Drunkenness, that can hurt people, but gluttony can't hurt people." Okay, number two on your outline. Gluttony leads to bondage.

    10:33-10:35

    I want to jump to 1 Corinthians 6.12.

    10:36-10:38

    Paul says, "All things are lawful for me, but not all things are helpful.

    10:39-10:41

    All things are lawful for me." Look at this last phrase.

    10:42-10:46

    Paul says, "I will not be dominated by anything." Do you know what the context is of that passage?

    10:46-10:47

    Food and drink.

    10:48-10:57

    "I am not going to let anything enslave me, dominate me." And gluttony ultimately is a craving that conquers you.

    10:57-11:09

    And this week as I was studying this topic, I read so many stories online, blogs and articles, and so many stories online of people who were honest with this struggle.

    11:09-11:14

    I read so many stories of people who said, "I swear, I'm going to stop gorging myself.

    11:14-11:16

    I'm going to stop eating like this.

    11:16-11:19

    I'm done. I'm done stuffing my face.

    11:19-11:26

    I swear, I'm not going to eat like this anymore." And they all said, "But you know what? I just quit the dog." And a lot of it felt very familiar.

    11:27-11:28

    It's bondage. It's bondage.

    11:29-11:34

    You know, the church traditionally has been so hard on smoking and drinking.

    11:35-11:37

    Like, why are you so hard on smoking and drinking?

    11:37-11:41

    Well, two reasons. It's unhealthy and it's addictive. And that's true.

    11:42-11:46

    But can't the same be said for gluttony? It's unhealthy and it's addictive.

    11:46-11:50

    So for the person that says, "Well, gluttony doesn't hurt anyone, Pastor Jeff," it absolutely does.

    11:50-11:59

    I looked up some stats. You know, at least 30 million people in the United States, people of all ages, genders, suffer from some sort of eating disorder.

    11:59-12:03

    30 million people in the United States suffer from an eating disorder.

    12:03-12:08

    And every 62 minutes at least one person dies as a direct result from an eating disorder.

    12:09-12:11

    And this last one really caught my attention.

    12:11-12:15

    Eating disorders have the highest mortality rate of any mental illness.

    12:15-12:15

    Think about that.

    12:15-12:17

    Well, it's not hurting anybody, Pastor Jeff.

    12:18-12:19

    Well, that's not what the statistics say.

    12:20-12:21

    Bondage. It's bondage.

    12:21-12:26

    I can't stop. I'm literally eating myself to death.

    12:26-12:28

    And do you know what gluttony ultimately is?

    12:28-12:33

    It's like committing suicide in very slow motion.

    12:33-12:37

    Instead of all at once, we sort of stretch the suicide out over years.

    12:37-12:42

    We're slowly killing ourselves by the way that we're eating.

    12:42-12:45

    So, gluttony shows lack of self-control. Gluttony leads to bondage.

    12:46-12:52

    And thirdly, I'm sure you saw this, it's pretty obvious in the text, gluttony is a destructive lifestyle.

    12:52-12:55

    Look at Proverbs 23, again, 21.

    12:55-13:03

    It says, "For the drunkard and the glutton will come to poverty, and slumber will clothe them with rags." I'm not even talking about the whole physical health ramifications.

    13:04-13:06

    You can talk to a doctor about that.

    13:06-13:10

    Proverbs addresses the spiritual ruin that leads to financial ruin.

    13:10-13:13

    And the key focus here is lifestyle.

    13:13-13:24

    Just as we saw last week that laziness leads to ruin, living a life of constant overindulging - drunkenness, gluttony - that lifestyle will ultimately lead to ruin.

    13:24-13:26

    It's a lifestyle issue that we're talking about here.

    13:27-13:38

    It's a lifestyle of no moderation, no balance, no thought of when is it appropriate to eat or drink, no thought of how much is appropriate to eat or drink.

    13:38-13:42

    It's just unrestrained consumption.

    13:42-13:48

    You see, a life lived without self-control in any area is ultimately going to be destructive.

    13:49-13:51

    A life lived without self-control in any area.

    13:51-13:55

    Sexually? You live sexually, out of control, no restraint?

    13:56-13:57

    How's that going to work out for you?

    13:58-14:03

    Financially? You live financially, unrestrained, out of control, I spend what I want?

    14:03-14:05

    How does that typically work out for people, Stacey?

    14:05-14:06

    Not good.

    14:06-14:08

    The same is said about drinking and eating here.

    14:08-14:14

    Living an unrestrained lifestyle, it's not wise because it's destructive.

    14:14-14:18

    The question is, "How do I conquer gluttony?" How do I conquer it?

    14:19-14:31

    "Alright, Pastor Jeff, I'm a little convicted right now." "Maybe I do have some issues here. How do I conquer it?" I love the simplicity of Proverbs here.

    14:32-14:40

    He doesn't give you the "12 steps in breaking the cycle of gluttony." Again, this is told like a dad talking to his son.

    14:40-14:45

    This is actually ultimately our heavenly Father giving us advice, and His advice is pretty simple.

    14:46-14:53

    He's like, "Hey, hey, you see people that live completely unrestrained, uncontrolled lifestyles, just don't hang out with those people." Why?

    14:53-14:57

    Because you act like the people that you hang out with.

    14:57-14:59

    That's just the universal truth.

    14:59-15:03

    I want you right now in your head, I want you to think of your closest circle of friends.

    15:03-15:10

    If they're a bunch of pursuing Christ, wanting to know God deeper, wanting to understand His Word, that tells me a lot about you.

    15:10-15:15

    If your closest circle of friends are a bunch of knuckleheads, you're probably a knucklehead.

    15:15-15:19

    I say that with all the love I can muster. You're a knucklehead and you're loved.

    15:19-15:40

    And you might say, "Well, you know, Pastor Jeff, I see what you're saying and I certainly agree with this. Absolutely this is true, but Pastor Jeff, my gluttony is not really caused by being with a group of friends who live an unrestrained lifestyle. That's not really the root cause in my situation, at least at this stage in my life. So how do I conquer gluttony?

    15:40-15:42

    I'm going to give you four words.

    15:42-15:43

    I'll begin with R.E.

    15:44-15:44

    Alright?

    15:45-15:46

    How do I conquer gluttony?

    15:46-15:47

    The first one, letter A, repent.

    15:48-15:48

    Repent.

    15:49-15:52

    We've talked about this so many times in the past, and I need to remind you, what is repentance?

    15:52-15:55

    Repentance literally means to change your mind.

    15:55-15:57

    You need to start agreeing with God.

    15:57-15:59

    You need to renew your mind.

    15:59-16:02

    In other words, you need to see your sin for what it is.

    16:03-16:08

    Instead of gluttony being something to be proud of, you need to say, "God, here's what you say about it.

    16:08-16:17

    You say, "I shouldn't hang around somebody that's like that, so how can I be participating in it myself?" Gluttony is ultimately a form of idolatry.

    16:17-16:23

    You're seeking delight and satisfaction in food that you should seek in Christ.

    16:24-16:32

    And before you go, "Wow, I think you really overreached there, Pastor Jeff." I think that was a pretty obnoxious statement.

    16:32-16:35

    I want you to think about this. Just think about this.

    16:35-16:38

    I want you to imagine a rough day that you've had.

    16:38-16:43

    Maybe a rough day at home with the kids, rough day at work, whatever you end up doing with your time.

    16:43-16:59

    You've had this horrible day, you've had so much stress, there's been so much pressure put on you, and you've just been under so much anxiety, and you finally get home, and you still feel like you didn't leave work at work, you just still feel this tension.

    17:00-17:06

    And let me ask you, in that moment, are you more likely to pray for an hour or to eat for an hour?

    17:07-17:12

    To paraphrase C.S. Lewis, he says, "We're not talking simply about too much food.

    17:12-17:14

    We're talking about too much attention to food.

    17:15-17:21

    We're allowing food to be something it was never intended to be." Jesus said the Holy Spirit is a comforter. The Holy Spirit is a counselor.

    17:21-17:25

    But nothing else can happen until you humble yourself and agree with God on this.

    17:25-17:28

    So you know what? You're right. I've made it into something it's not.

    17:28-17:30

    You need to repent. Secondly, you need to refuse.

    17:31-17:33

    Refuse what? Refuse food for a while.

    17:33-17:38

    In other words, I would encourage you to fast as a response to your gluttony.

    17:38-17:45

    If you're hearing this and the Spirit's convicting you right now, and you're like, "Man, I do have a serious problem. What do I do?" I encourage you to fast.

    17:46-17:53

    Physical appetites have a way of displaying my ability to control myself, or my inability to control myself.

    17:53-17:55

    And while gluttony... Hear this.

    17:56-18:03

    Gluttony is using food in a way that distracts us from spiritual appetites.

    18:03-18:10

    Fasting is refusing food so that it doesn't distract us from spiritual appetites.

    18:10-18:14

    Fasting is a way of saying, "Hey, hey, hey, I control my appetites, not vice versa.

    18:14-18:20

    I'm not a dog. I don't live dictated by my appetites.

    18:20-18:27

    My focus is on my hunger for Christ, and I'm not going to fill that hunger with lesser things.

    18:27-18:30

    If you want to know more about fasting, we had a whole sermon on that this year.

    18:30-18:32

    April 28th, it's on the website.

    18:33-18:35

    It's easy to find, just search for it, HarvestPittsburghNorth.org.

    18:35-18:39

    Fasting is your number one weapon if this is an area in which you are struggling.

    18:39-18:44

    So repent, refuse food for a season, and I would say replace.

    18:44-18:47

    And this goes right with fasting, replace.

    18:47-18:55

    You know, the Bible doesn't simply say, "Just say no to sin." That's not really the way the Bible presents repentance.

    18:55-18:58

    It's not saying no to sin, it's saying yes to something else.

    18:58-19:03

    The Bible talks about putting off sin, but at the same time, you're putting on something that glorifies God.

    19:03-19:10

    You know, the Bible has so many analogies regarding the Lord, and our relationship with the Lord, and our delight in the Lord.

    19:10-19:18

    So many analogies the Bible uses that has that food, taste, flavor terminology.

    19:19-19:32

    such as Psalm 34, 8, that says, "Taste and see that the Lord is good." 1 Peter 2, 2 tells us to "desire the sincere spiritual milk of the word." John 6, 35, Jesus says, "He's the bread of life.

    19:32-19:36

    If we come to Him, we will not hunger." And there are so many others.

    19:36-19:50

    John Piper said, "The implication is that if we give ourselves to being satisfied with spiritual bread, wine, milk, then the physical hunger will lose its supreme power." As I shared with you, that's my own struggle.

    19:50-19:51

    Blotting is often an escape.

    19:51-19:53

    It just is.

    19:53-19:54

    That's just for me, for a lot of people.

    19:54-19:54

    It's an escape.

    19:55-19:56

    Life is disappointing.

    19:56-19:58

    My relationships aren't in a good place.

    19:59-20:00

    I'm kind of bored at work lately.

    20:01-20:02

    But you know who never lets me down?

    20:03-20:03

    Food.

    20:04-20:06

    It always tastes good, available.

    20:07-20:28

    We need to discipline ourselves to find satisfaction in other things, such as the Word of God, or pouring into your family, or small group fellowship, as Dr. Rupp talked about earlier, or involved in work in the church, or projects in the home, or whatever, but to find satisfaction in something other than gorging yourself.

    20:29-20:32

    Replace. No to gluttony, but yes to better things.

    20:33-20:35

    And then finally, rely.

    20:35-20:37

    Rely. Rely on the Holy Spirit.

    20:37-20:41

    Because if you've heard every word I've said to this point, check out now, then the whole sermon is a fail.

    20:41-20:43

    Because this is most important.

    20:43-20:51

    You can't leave here like Aya the tiger, like, "That's right! From now on, I control it!" Like, you're going to fail.

    20:51-20:54

    You can't muster up self-control.

    20:54-20:58

    Because the Bible says self-control is a fruit of the Spirit, right?

    20:58-20:58

    Galatians 5.

    20:59-21:05

    Fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.

    21:05-21:07

    That's something that the Lord gives you.

    21:07-21:08

    Understand that.

    21:08-21:15

    Self-control is something that by faith, God gives you the ability to control yourself.

    21:16-21:19

    God has to enable you. He has to.

    21:19-21:29

    He gives you self-control, so cry out to Him for self-control to be manifest supernaturally by the power of the Holy Spirit in your daily living.

    21:29-21:36

    Hey look, we live in America, and you can't control all of the incredible food options that are out there.

    21:36-21:39

    But you can control every bite that goes in your mouth.

    21:39-21:48

    1 Corinthians 10.31 says, So, whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.

    21:49-21:51

    So does your eating glorify God?

    21:51-21:52

    Let's pray.

    21:52-21:54

    Father in heaven, we thank You for Your grace.

    21:55-21:58

    We thank You for Your Word, even when it's uncomfortable.

    21:59-22:04

    Father, this is a very uncomfortable thing for me to share because of my own struggles in this area.

    22:04-22:07

    We thank You, God, that You're God of healing, You're God of grace.

    22:08-22:14

    And these admonitions from your Word aren't because you want to stifle our joy, it's because you want to maximize.

    22:15-22:21

    Father, you know that that hamburger and that pizza, that's not going to satisfy us the way that you do.

    22:22-22:25

    Father, I pray that you would, by your Spirit, give us self-control.

    22:26-22:28

    Alert us and make us mindful.

    22:28-22:35

    Everything we do is to be a reflection of our relationship with you, empowered by your Spirit working powerfully within us.

    22:35-22:43

    everything that we do is about being citizens of Your kingdom, including when we sit down to eat. Father, I pray today's a new day for some people.

    22:44-22:54

    Self-control by Your Spirit. We cry out for it, Father. We thank You ahead of time for the victories that You're going to win in this area for people. Glorify Your name, Father, we pray in Jesus' name. Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Proverbs 23:20-21
(If you like, review any other Proverbs on gluttony we covered on Sunday!)

  1. What was your biggest take-away from this passage / message?

  2. How would you define gluttony? Why is it often ignored in the church? Do you think it should be addressed? Why or why not?

  3. When are YOU most tempted / prone to overeat?

  4. Why is gluttony / overeating addictive? How can fasting help someone overcome gluttony?

BREAKOUT
Pray for one another. Are you struggling with this sin? Get an accountability partner - now - from your group and keep after each other.

Laziness: Destroying Yourself By Doing Nothing

Introduction:

Proverbs 26:13 - The sluggard says, "There is a lion in the road! There is a lion on the streets!"

The Tragedy of Laziness (Prov 6:6-11):

  1. Laziness is Self-Deceptive .

    Proverbs 26:16 - The sluggard is wiser in his own eyes than seven men who can answer sensibly.

    Proverbs 20:4 - The sluggard does not plow in the autumn; he will seek at harvest and have nothing.

  1. Laziness is Self-Destructive .

    Proverbs 21:25-26 - The desire of the sluggard kills him, for his hands refuse to labor. All day long he craves and craves, but the righteous gives and does not hold back.

    Proverbs 19:24 - The sluggard buries his hand in the dish and will not even bring it back to his mouth.

  2. Laziness must be Rebuked .

    Proverbs 6:6 - Go to the ant, O sluggard; consider her ways, and mbe wise.

Lessons from an Ant:

  1. Hard work doesn't require constant Supervision . (Prov 6:7)
  2. Hard work doesn't Pocrastinate . (Prov 6:8a)
  3. Hard work is the means to Provide . (Prov 6:8b)

    1 Timothy 5:8 - But if anyone does not provide for his relatives, and especially for members of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.

How do I stop being lazy?

  1. Confess it to God.
  2. Take it one Shift at a time.

    Colossians 3:23-24 - Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward.

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
Hint:
Highlight blanks above for answers!

  • 00:47-00:49

    All right, let's turn to God's Word together now.

    00:50-00:52

    Let's go to Proverbs 6.

    00:55-00:56

    Proverbs 6.

    00:58-01:03

    If you don't have a Bible, you can use one in the back of the chairs.

    01:06-01:11

    And if you don't have a Bible, you can totally keep that one, and you can consider that a gift from this church.

    01:14-01:16

    Proverbs 6.

    01:18-01:25

    This sermon, I've got to tell you, this sermon I've never in 23 years or whatever, I've never preached a sermon like this.

    01:26-01:28

    This was the sermon that was picked by the people.

    01:29-01:34

    On our private Facebook page, I gave three choices of sermons from Proverbs.

    01:34-01:41

    And by the way, if you're not on our private Facebook page, just send a request for a link to it, and we can get you there.

    01:41-01:44

    But it's not a public thing, it's just in-house.

    01:44-01:49

    but I put a survey up there for you to pick the sermon, and this is the one that you picked.

    01:50-01:51

    It's called laziness.

    01:53-01:57

    Destroying yourself by doing nothing.

    01:58-02:09

    So, what is the craziest excuse you've ever heard from someone trying to get out of work?

    02:11-02:15

    Well, if you're into this kind of thing, There's lists online, and I read through several of these lists.

    02:16-02:17

    And I have a few of them I wanted to share.

    02:18-02:21

    These were actual excuses that were offered by people.

    02:22-02:23

    Like, here's why I can't work.

    02:23-02:24

    Here's why I can't come into work.

    02:25-02:25

    Ready?

    02:25-02:32

    The first one is, my 12-year-old daughter stole my car, and I had no other way to get to work.

    02:32-02:37

    I didn't want to report the theft to police for fear my daughter would get a criminal record.

    02:38-02:41

    That was an actual excuse somebody gave for not going to work.

    02:42-02:47

    Secondly, my sobriety device wouldn't allow me to start my car.

    02:50-02:54

    That device also indicates when you shouldn't go to work, probably.

    02:55-02:56

    I love this next one.

    02:57-02:59

    I forgot I was hired for the job.

    03:00-03:02

    Now look, I have memory problems.

    03:03-03:08

    But I don't think it can get any worse than saying, I just completely forgot that I was hired for the job.

    03:09-03:20

    Next, how about, "A deer bit me during hunting season." Now, I've never hunted, so I can't speak from firsthand experience, but don't you take a gun into the woods with you?

    03:21-03:24

    Like, how did the deer get that close to bite you?

    03:25-03:28

    But somebody actually offered that as an excuse.

    03:28-03:29

    Boy, I can't go to work.

    03:31-03:40

    Next one is, "I ate too much at a party I needed a day off to digest, like a python swallowing a deer.

    03:42-03:44

    Like, I just need to go digest somewhere.

    03:47-03:48

    This next one.

    03:49-03:51

    I forgot I was getting married today.

    03:52-03:53

    So I stand corrected.

    03:53-03:58

    Memory problems can get worse than forgetting that you got the job.

    03:59-04:00

    I forgot I was getting married today.

    04:01-04:02

    That guy was on his way to work.

    04:02-04:32

    I'm sure, I was like, "Am I forgetting something?" And then the last one here, that I'm going to share, says, "An escaped buffalo from a game reserve kept charging at me every time I tried to go to my car from my house." Now that one, I chose that one last because that's actually the closest to the one that's actually in the Bible.

    04:32-04:35

    And that's in Proverbs 26.13.

    04:37-04:42

    The sluggard - that's a lazy person - says, "There's a lion in the road!

    04:42-04:48

    There's a lion on the streets!" And the point of that proverb is just like all of these other excuses.

    04:48-04:50

    "I can't go to work, man!

    04:50-04:51

    I can't go to work!

    04:51-04:52

    Do you know what's happening out in the street?

    04:53-04:55

    There's like a lion running around eating people!

    04:55-05:12

    I can't go to work today, man!" And the point with the proverb with all these excuses, is we get so creative when it comes to making up excuses why we can't work.

    05:13-05:14

    That's the whole point.

    05:15-05:19

    So creative and absurd.

    05:20-05:24

    But today, we are going to talk about laziness.

    05:26-05:32

    My wife, by education and experience, Erin has been a social worker.

    05:33-05:37

    And Erin has done a lot of in-home counseling for people.

    05:38-05:44

    And she told me one time about a mother of three little ones, three babies, who was just really, really struggling.

    05:44-05:49

    And Erin would go in and just counsel, help people get their lives on track, right?

    05:49-05:51

    So Erin worked with this lady.

    05:51-05:52

    Erin got her a job.

    05:52-05:54

    Erin got her a really good job.

    05:54-05:58

    And she also had it taken care of so that the lady had childcare.

    05:58-05:59

    Not an issue.

    05:59-06:01

    We'll take the kids to child care here.

    06:02-06:03

    It's gonna be covered.

    06:03-06:04

    You're gonna go to work.

    06:04-06:05

    You're gonna get a job.

    06:06-06:08

    And we're gonna get your life on track.

    06:10-06:15

    And Aaron said, when this particular woman got her first paycheck from her job, she immediately quit.

    06:17-06:19

    She said, I'm quitting that job.

    06:19-06:21

    And Aaron says, why are you quitting that job?

    06:22-06:25

    And the lady said, because I make more from government handouts just sitting at home.

    06:27-06:29

    And you see, it's not uncommon.

    06:31-06:34

    Our government rewards laziness.

    06:36-06:37

    Now, please hear me.

    06:38-06:42

    I am not talking about people who are unable to work.

    06:42-06:43

    I'm not talking about that.

    06:44-06:47

    We should be helping people who are unable to work.

    06:47-06:49

    I'm not talking about that.

    06:50-07:03

    I'm talking about people who can work, but refuse to work, and make up some ridiculous, lion-in-the-street excuse so that the government sends them your tax dollars.

    07:04-07:05

    That's what I'm talking about.

    07:07-07:08

    People who can work but won't work.

    07:10-07:10

    Man, it's epidemic.

    07:12-07:17

    Talk to anyone who is in a position to hire people to work, right?

    07:18-07:25

    It is getting harder and harder to employ people who will actually work, right, Ryan Stroop?

    07:25-07:26

    I see you shaking your head.

    07:26-07:29

    He employs people to work for him, and we've had this conversation.

    07:29-07:38

    But Ryan said it's harder and harder to hire people who actually get this, show up, and do the job they were hired to do.

    07:39-07:46

    Somebody who will put down the phone, get off the internet, and actually invest themselves in their job.

    07:48-07:56

    By the way, I'm going to remind you at this point that God ordained work before the fall.

    07:57-08:06

    Because there's always a couple people sitting here listening to this like, "Oh, you know what, Pastor Jeff? Work is a part of the curse." You know, like back in Genesis 3, like, "Work is a part of the curse.

    08:06-08:09

    That's why I don't work." And that is so not true.

    08:10-08:11

    Work is actually a blessing.

    08:12-08:17

    Now, God said work would be harder after the fall, yes.

    08:17-08:23

    But man was always meant to work in the very beginning.

    08:25-08:27

    And there is nothing new under the sun.

    08:29-08:32

    Proverbs says so much about our tendency to be late.

    08:33-08:38

    I'll be honest with you, I knew going into this when you voted for the sermon, and this one won by a landslide.

    08:38-08:43

    I knew before I was going to the Scripture to study, like Proverbs says a lot.

    08:44-08:58

    I've got to tell you, I way underestimated Proverbs actually says about laziness. I was like, "Wow!" So we're not going to be exhaustive today, but we're going to cover what Proverbs says about the...

    08:59-09:15

    sometimes it's called the sluggard, or the slothful, or the lazy. What do we call All these people today, slacker, freeloader, whatever.

    09:16-09:21

    Let's talk about, on your outline, if you're taking notes, and I always encourage that, let's talk about the tragedy of laziness.

    09:22-09:24

    Number one, laziness is self-deception.

    09:25-09:26

    Jot this down.

    09:26-09:29

    Laziness, you absolutely have to start here.

    09:30-09:32

    Laziness is self-deception.

    09:36-09:37

    We absolutely have to start here.

    09:37-09:39

    Let's go to Proverbs 26.16.

    09:39-09:46

    Like I said, instead of flipping around, you can just mark these passages and look them up later, but we're going to spend time in Proverbs 6 here in just a few minutes, I promise.

    09:47-09:50

    But just to sort of set the table for us, laziness is self-deceptive.

    09:51-09:52

    It's self-deceptive.

    09:52-10:07

    "The sluggard is wiser in his own eyes than seven men who can answer sensibly." Now, church, the tragedy of any sin, Any sin, the tragedy of any sin is self-deception.

    10:08-10:16

    It is so hard to convince someone that they have a problem when they believe that they're smarter than everyone else.

    10:17-10:22

    And it seems that that is especially true about lazy people, right?

    10:23-10:26

    It's like, "This guy thinks he's so smart.

    10:26-10:29

    He's like, 'You line up seven other guys.

    10:29-10:34

    I'm smarter than all of them.'" I was thinking about that this week.

    10:35-10:35

    Why is that?

    10:36-10:42

    Why is the lazy person in particular, why is he like extra self-deceived?

    10:44-10:49

    I think, I think it's this, I think it's because learning requires learning.

    10:51-10:56

    So it's easier to just say, "I know enough, I don't need to learn anything.

    10:58-11:04

    "I am quite clever on my own." and that is some serious, tragic self-deception.

    11:06-11:07

    Talk about self-deception, here's another one.

    11:07-11:09

    Look at Proverbs 24. Self-deception.

    11:10-11:18

    "The sluggard does not plow in the autumn." Look at this. "He will seek and harvest and have nothing." Do you see how self-deceived that is?

    11:18-11:19

    Look at the second part of that.

    11:19-11:21

    "He will seek and harvest and have nothing." Do you see the picture?

    11:22-11:30

    He's like walking through his garden, and he's like, "Why don't I have anything to harvest?" It just doesn't make any sense.

    11:30-11:32

    I thought I was going to come out here in Harvard.

    11:32-11:34

    Why doesn't he have anything?

    11:34-11:36

    Because he didn't plow in the autumn.

    11:36-11:38

    Do you see how self-deceived that is?

    11:40-11:42

    I mean, that's how it is with lazy people.

    11:43-11:45

    Everyone else can see his problem.

    11:48-11:54

    But for a lazy person, they're just completely unable to connect the dots.

    11:54-11:55

    That's true of every lazy person.

    11:56-12:00

    They're just like, I just don't understand why I'm struggling so much, Pastor Jeff.

    12:00-12:02

    I don't understand why my life is so hard.

    12:02-12:04

    Why is everything so much harder for me?

    12:04-12:05

    Why am I struggling so much?

    12:06-12:07

    It's because you're lazy.

    12:10-12:18

    And before we start pointing fingers, as always when we encounter God's Word, the first person we need to evaluate is who.

    12:19-12:21

    Right? True or false?

    12:22-12:31

    Before we start pointing fingers, you need to look at yourself, and I need to look at myself Am I lazy?

    12:33-12:33

    Am I lazy?

    12:35-12:43

    And right now, somebody's still self-deceived, is holding their arms and sitting back in their seat, going, "Not me.

    12:44-12:46

    Not me because I have a job.

    12:47-12:51

    I'm just going to sit back and listen to Pastor Jeff light up all them lazy people.

    12:51-13:03

    But I know he's not talking to me because I have a job." Well, having a job doesn't mean automatically off the hook because I would ask you, are you lazy at work?

    13:05-13:20

    How much time at work, when you're at work, when you're at your place of employment, how much time do you spend on social media, or shopping online, or texting, or watching TV, or movies?

    13:20-13:34

    How much time? When you're at work, What would you say is the percentage of time that you're there, that is actually given to the job that you were hired?

    13:35-13:36

    What would you say is the percentage?

    13:37-13:50

    Just imagine that somebody is hired to go with you to work and they just stand there with a stopwatch, and when you're doing your job, they're timing that, and when you're not doing your job, they're timing that.

    13:50-13:53

    What percentage do you think would come out from that?

    13:55-14:06

    Right now I can see by the looks on some faces here, you're like, "Oh, he is talking to me." Because we all have that tendency.

    14:09-14:11

    So don't think just because you have a job, you're off the hook.

    14:12-14:18

    And I would ask this church, can we just stop and acknowledge this truth from God's Word that laziness is self-deceptive?

    14:19-14:24

    Because as soon as you think it's not, and self-deceived.

    14:25-14:26

    Can we just bow our heads for a second?

    14:28-14:29

    And here's all I want us to do.

    14:29-14:32

    I just want us to acknowledge this truth before the Lord.

    14:34-14:49

    Bow our heads, and I just want to pray for all of us to say, "God, You say that a sluggard is wise in his own eyes, so God, we ask You as a church to please reveal any laziness in me.

    14:52-14:54

    Father, it's so easy for us to be self-deceived.

    14:54-14:55

    We become like Pharisees.

    14:55-15:02

    We point our fingers at everybody else, and everybody else has a problem, and everybody else is lazy, and everybody else is...

    15:03-15:05

    God, let us not be self-deceived.

    15:06-15:08

    I pray, Father, that Your truth would enlighten us today.

    15:11-15:13

    If you agree with this prayer, would you just say, "Amen"?

    15:14-15:15

    Amen.

    15:15-15:17

    Laziness is self-deceptive.

    15:17-15:20

    Secondly, laziness is self-destructive.

    15:22-15:24

    Laziness is self-destructive.

    15:25-15:30

    Look at Proverbs 21, verses 25 and 26.

    15:31-15:37

    It says, "The desire of the sluggard..." Do you see this? "Kills him.

    15:39-15:41

    For his hands refuse to labor.

    15:41-15:54

    All day long he craves and craves, "The righteous gives and does not hold back." Something I like to do with proverbs like this, with the parallelism in some of the wording, I like to read them backwards.

    15:55-15:56

    And I was doing that with this one.

    15:56-15:58

    The righteous gives and does not hold back.

    15:58-15:59

    That's like a whole nother sermon.

    16:00-16:01

    We're talking about the lazy guy today.

    16:01-16:04

    It says, first of all, he craves and craves, he covets.

    16:05-16:07

    This lazy person, he covets, he's always wanting.

    16:09-16:10

    Why doesn't he have it?

    16:12-16:16

    And it's because - back up a step - it's because he refuses to work.

    16:19-16:21

    And what's that doing to him?

    16:21-16:22

    Back up one more step.

    16:23-16:24

    It's killing.

    16:25-16:27

    He's being killed by his own desire not to work.

    16:29-16:30

    It's tragic.

    16:33-16:38

    To sum this up, the question is, when you're lazy, when you're lazy, who are you hurting?

    16:39-16:40

    Answer me. Who are you hurting when you're lazy?

    16:42-16:43

    Say it again. Who are you hurting when you're lazy?

    16:44-16:45

    Yes, you're hurting yourself.

    16:46-16:49

    When I'm lazy, I'm not hurting anybody else.

    16:51-16:55

    And you can say, yeah, you're hurting the people that you work with, your drag and them down.

    16:55-17:00

    That's true, but first and foremost, God's Word points out that my laziness, it kills me.

    17:02-17:19

    Being in ministry, I've seen it hundreds of times over the last couple of decades People investing more energy running around the churches for a handout than the energy that they would invest actually working a job.

    17:19-17:20

    I've seen it over and over.

    17:22-17:23

    Some people just make the circuit.

    17:23-17:24

    They have a list of churches.

    17:24-17:28

    I'm just going to go and ask the church for help.

    17:28-17:32

    And look, I am all for helping people get to a better place.

    17:32-17:34

    You can talk to my wife, Erin.

    17:34-17:38

    How many times over the past couple of decades have we helped people who have come to us?

    17:39-17:44

    "Look, we're going to help you get to a better place." I am all for that, and we still do that.

    17:44-17:47

    This church still does that to this day, helping people get to a better place.

    17:47-17:52

    All that said, a handout to a lazy person does not help.

    17:53-17:54

    It only enables it.

    17:56-18:00

    The hard part is, their stories always sound so tragic.

    18:01-18:03

    "They're going to turn off my gas.

    18:03-18:04

    They're going to turn off my electricity.

    18:05-18:06

    They're going to evict me.

    18:06-18:08

    I have no food for my kids.

    18:08-18:14

    These people are literally watching their lives crumble around them because they refuse to work.

    18:16-18:22

    So the self-destruction of laziness, it's worse than the financial stuff.

    18:24-18:29

    It's self-destruction of self.

    18:30-18:34

    Now hear this, because this is so...

    18:34-18:36

    If the lights are coming on here, you've got to hear this.

    18:39-18:47

    Laziness is self-destructive, but the worst part is it's self-destruction of self.

    18:48-18:55

    In other words, yes, laziness ruins you externally, but even worse, it ruins you internally.

    18:56-19:04

    In other words, the lazier you are, the lazier you will become.

    19:06-19:08

    Like, well, how bad can it get?

    19:09-19:11

    Look at Proverbs 19.24.

    19:12-19:18

    "As the sluggard buries his hand in the dish and will not even bring it back to his mouth." This is how bad laziness can get.

    19:18-19:23

    My laziness so dominates my life, I've hit such a point of apathy.

    19:24-19:29

    I can't even be motivated to meet my own needs.

    19:32-19:33

    Have you seen that in a lazy person?

    19:35-19:36

    Just completely apathetic.

    19:37-19:39

    Like, dude, you realize you're killing yourself.

    19:39-19:42

    You realize your laziness is destroying everything.

    19:42-19:46

    It's just like, yeah, well, I'm gonna...

    19:46-19:53

    And there's always some lame excuse or some line in the street or some job that's going to be coming in a month or two or whatever, whatever.

    19:55-19:57

    But the destruction is more than financial.

    19:58-20:06

    It's self-destruction of self because there's a sense of accomplishment and contentment and a job well done that is never gained by laziness.

    20:08-20:26

    If you've ever worked a long day, if you've ever worked a hard day, if you've ever done a project where you're like, "I'm working at this and I'm gonna finish it "no matter how long it takes," you know what it's like to lay your head on the pillow at the end of the night and say, "Oh, what a long day, but I'm so glad I got that done." You know what I'm talking about.

    20:28-20:30

    A lazy person never gets that.

    20:32-20:41

    So laziness is self-deceptive, and laziness is self-destructive, and that all leads us to laziness must be rebuked.

    20:42-20:43

    It must be rebuked.

    20:46-20:51

    Proverbs 6, verse 6, is where we're going to look.

    20:51-20:56

    See, at this point in Proverbs, all these Proverbs we looked at, honestly, these Proverbs are just FYI.

    20:57-21:03

    This is the writer of Scripture looking at people and situations going, "Yeah, that's how it is. That's how it is. FYI.

    21:04-21:13

    Here's what I've seen. Here's what it looks like. Here's what laziness is." But this passage we're going to look at goes from observations about laziness to instruction.

    21:13-21:16

    This is instruction for a lazy person here.

    21:16-21:18

    That's why I want to spend time here. Make sense?

    21:18-21:23

    The slugger needs to be rebuked.

    21:25-21:27

    "I'm struggling with laziness, Pastor Jeff.

    21:27-21:30

    Will you sort of coddle me into a work ethic?" No.

    21:32-21:33

    Because the Bible's so clear on that.

    21:33-21:40

    1 Thessalonians 5.14 says, "Admonish the idle." And that's what we see here.

    21:42-21:49

    Look at Proverbs 6.6. It says, "Go to the aunt, O sluggard.

    21:50-21:57

    "Consider her ways and be wise." This is humorous.

    21:58-22:05

    God's greatest creation, which is man, needs to take a lesson from a bug.

    22:08-22:10

    That's a pretty hard rebuke, you see?

    22:11-22:12

    That's what's happening in this passage.

    22:13-22:24

    He's pointing at an ant, and he's like, "Hey, hey, aren't you supposed to be smarter than this?" acting like it, aren't you supposed to be more rightly motivated than this?

    22:25-22:31

    You need to get out your notebook and take notes on what this thing is doing because it can teach you something.

    22:34-22:36

    We're just calling this part lessons from an ant.

    22:38-22:39

    Lessons from an ant, here they are.

    22:40-22:46

    You're like, "Man, some of this laziness talk is stinging." Well, let us all take a lesson from an ant.

    22:46-22:54

    And the first one, letter A, is "Hard work doesn't require constant supervision." The first lesson we learn from an ant, look at verse 7.

    22:55-23:03

    It says, "Without having any chief, officer, or ruler..." Stop right there.

    23:04-23:06

    And there are some people that criticize the Bible.

    23:06-23:07

    I call them knuckleheads.

    23:07-23:14

    They're like, "Well, you know, there's really hierarchies of different kinds of ants, huh?" Like, congratulations, you completely missed the point of this entire passage.

    23:14-23:16

    Here's the point of this passage.

    23:16-23:19

    The point is, hard work doesn't require constant supervision.

    23:20-23:29

    In other words, what he's saying is, the ant works hard without the foreman ant breathing down his little ant neck all the time.

    23:29-23:31

    "Why aren't you working? Why aren't you working?

    23:31-23:35

    Come on! What do I pay you for?" The ant doesn't have that happening.

    23:36-23:39

    He's smart enough and he works hard enough that he doesn't need that.

    23:40-23:41

    That's the point of this.

    23:42-23:45

    Hard work doesn't require constant supervision.

    23:45-23:50

    He doesn't need motivated by some external force.

    23:51-23:53

    He doesn't need constant direction.

    23:54-23:56

    He doesn't need constant accountability.

    23:57-23:59

    He says you can learn a lot from an aunt that way.

    24:02-24:04

    You know, I asked you earlier, are you a hard worker?

    24:04-24:06

    Are you a hard worker? Are you lazy?

    24:09-24:11

    What about when the boss is gone?

    24:13-24:14

    That's the point.

    24:15-24:17

    Do you only work hard when you know that you're being watched?

    24:17-24:28

    When the boss is in, "Yeah, I'm a machine." But when the boss is gone, it's like, "Woohoo! We're partying at work because the boss is gone!" Is that what they told you when they hired you?

    24:31-24:32

    You're allowed to party when the boss is in.

    24:34-24:35

    Probably not.

    24:37-24:38

    Are you a hard worker?

    24:39-24:42

    Or do you only work hard when you're being watched?

    24:44-24:49

    First lesson we can examine for ourselves from the end.

    24:52-25:00

    I have this deadline that requires me to present something, but when that's not the case, I spend half my day on YouTube.

    25:03-25:05

    He says, you can learn something from the end.

    25:05-25:06

    They don't require constant supervision.

    25:07-25:11

    Secondly, letter B, hard work doesn't procrastinate.

    25:12-25:13

    Hard work doesn't procrastinate.

    25:14-25:21

    The first part of verse 8, it says, "She prepares her bread in summer." She prepares her bread in summer.

    25:22-25:23

    She's not procrastinating.

    25:23-25:38

    She's not like, "It's summer, and summer's about our little aunt vacations and our little aunt graduation parties and all the other aunts are getting married, and it's too nice out, and I'm a young aunt, I should enjoy this time in the summer as a young aunt.

    25:38-25:39

    She's not like that.

    25:40-25:44

    She goes, hey, if I'm gonna have food for the fall, when do I need to be working on it?

    25:45-25:46

    I need to be working on it in the summer.

    25:47-25:48

    That's not the most convenient time to work.

    25:48-25:51

    She's like, it doesn't matter if it's convenient or not.

    25:51-25:54

    I can't just keep putting it off.

    25:54-25:56

    I can't keep procrastinating.

    25:57-26:00

    When it's time to work, the aunt works.

    26:02-26:03

    Same for you.

    26:05-26:08

    When you're at work, you should work.

    26:10-26:20

    And if your job is not going to an office, if your job is a homemaker, when you are at your job, you should be working hard at your job too.

    26:21-26:22

    Not procrastinating.

    26:24-26:28

    Letter C, hard work is the means to provide.

    26:29-26:30

    Look at the second part of verse 8.

    26:32-26:41

    It says, not only she prepares her bread in summer, it says, "and gathers her food in harvest." Meaning hard work is the means to provide.

    26:42-26:45

    Yes, it's true, God is a provider. Yes.

    26:45-26:48

    But He doesn't just magically fill your cupboard with oreos.

    26:49-26:55

    The way God normally provides for His people is work.

    26:57-26:59

    That's how God has chosen to provide for you.

    27:00-27:08

    Work is not just to occupy your time, to keep you out of trouble, to give you a place to wear your new shoes.

    27:08-27:13

    The reason God ordained work is because work is the means of provision.

    27:14-27:15

    That's the way God designed it.

    27:17-27:30

    1 Timothy 5:8 says, "If anyone does not provide for his relatives and especially for members of his household, He has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.

    27:31-27:32

    I want to talk to husbands for a second.

    27:33-27:47

    If you're a husband and you have a wife, and/or children, husbands, it is your God-given responsibility to provide for your wife and for kids if you have kids.

    27:48-27:49

    That is your responsibility.

    27:49-28:02

    Husbands, if you're in a financial train wreck, if you're not paying your bills, that your wife or your kids don't have the things that they need - husbands - that's on you.

    28:02-28:07

    And every couple that I've married and done premarital counseling with, well, I'll tell you, I've said this to them.

    28:08-28:18

    If I find out that you're in a tight place financially, I said I'm not going after the wife, I'm going after the husband, because the Bible says it is your job to provide for the people in your household.

    28:20-28:21

    Failure to provide.

    28:23-28:26

    "Oh, you're going to provide for the people in your own household." Look at this last phrase here.

    28:28-28:30

    In God's opinion, it says you've denied the faith.

    28:32-28:38

    You call yourself a follower of Christ and you can't even provide for the people in your house?

    28:39-28:42

    This last phrase, I'm sorry, it just cracks me up.

    28:42-28:44

    God says you're worse than an unbeliever.

    28:45-28:47

    God's like, "Here's my hierarchy.

    28:47-29:02

    There's like pagans, and worse than pagans, I guess, are the heathens, and then somewhere down here are the people who say they're Christians and even go to church, but they refuse to provide for their own household.

    29:02-29:04

    He says you're worse than an unbeliever, in my opinion.

    29:06-29:07

    That's serious business.

    29:09-29:19

    So if you're a man and you're having a hard time making ends meet financially, I would say get a job.

    29:20-29:24

    "Well, I have a job." Do you have any other advice? Yeah, get another job.

    29:26-29:31

    Go to Financial Peace University that's coming up and get some real counseling.

    29:31-29:32

    Whatever it takes.

    29:33-29:36

    You do whatever it takes to provide for your family.

    29:37-29:39

    Look at verse 10 back here in Proverbs 6.

    29:41-29:42

    I'm sorry, verse 9.

    29:44-29:45

    We have the lesson from the ant.

    29:46-29:50

    He says, "How long will you lie there, O sluggard?

    29:52-30:06

    When will you arise from your sleep?" And then verse 10, "A little sleep, a little slumber, a little holding of the hands to rest." Stop right there for a second.

    30:06-30:07

    What are lazy people known to do?

    30:09-30:10

    They're known to sleep, right?

    30:12-30:15

    It's just sort of like the dominant characteristic.

    30:15-30:18

    Have you ever wondered why lazy people are always wanting to sleep?

    30:19-30:21

    Lazy people are always wanting to rest?

    30:21-30:29

    It's like, "Dude, you didn't even do anything. Why are you so tired?" Because of what we saw earlier.

    30:29-30:32

    The lazier you are, the more lazy you become.

    30:33-30:39

    And somehow you just get more and more and more and more tired, even though you're doing less and less and less.

    30:42-30:44

    And here's the deception, verse 10.

    30:46-30:51

    "Just a little more sleep. I just need a little more sleep." Snooze, right?

    30:51-30:56

    "I take my naps nine minutes at a time." Snooze, snooze, snooze, snooze.

    30:57-30:59

    "Dude, you've been sleeping for 13 hours.

    30:59-31:01

    Just a little more rest.

    31:01-31:05

    Just a little, just a little, just a little." Did you see that? Like three times.

    31:05-31:09

    "Just a little, just a little, just a little." That's the self-deception.

    31:09-31:18

    "It's just a little." Why are you in my case, man? I just need a little rest." The danger is not little.

    31:19-31:35

    Verse 11 says, "Poverty will come upon you like a robber, and want like an armed man." Suddenly, you're in big trouble, and that's how it goes.

    31:36-31:44

    See, for the lazy person, it's not like they're going about their lazy person business, And one day they're like, "Uh-oh, things are starting to look shaky.

    31:44-31:51

    Better turn this ship around before trouble comes." He says, "That's not how it happens." And I've seen this over and over.

    31:52-31:54

    It's a sudden, inescapable danger.

    31:56-32:09

    Like, all of a sudden, it's like, "What the heck just happened to me?" He says it's like all of a sudden, an armed man sticks a gun in your face and says, "Give me everything you have." It's this sudden, inescapable danger.

    32:11-32:15

    You're like, "Well, how does that happen?" It can happen a lot of ways.

    32:17-32:21

    Like for example, I'll give you a couple of examples here.

    32:22-32:24

    You can get fired from your job for being lazy.

    32:25-32:26

    You're just busted.

    32:27-32:35

    Your boss is like, "Hey, I've seen you've done nothing over the last three weeks and we're not paying you for that." You're fired for being lazy.

    32:35-32:39

    Or maybe cuts have to be made at work.

    32:39-32:47

    And since you aren't contributing enough to merit keeping you-- your name is first on the chopping block.

    32:47-32:56

    But the point is suddenly, instantly, there's no paycheck, there's no income, there's no job, and the lazy person is utterly astounded.

    32:56-32:57

    How could this have happened to me?

    33:00-33:04

    If you're lazy, because you can work, but you won't work.

    33:06-33:08

    You don't have a job to be fired from.

    33:09-33:15

    You're like, yeah, I don't have a job, but I've been kind of coasting by along well enough so far.

    33:16-33:17

    Write this down.

    33:18-33:20

    This will catch up to you.

    33:21-33:26

    Well, maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but it is going to catch up to you.

    33:27-33:31

    and suddenly you're going to find yourself in a horrible position.

    33:32-33:38

    And you got there by doing nothing.

    33:40-33:42

    Laziness is one of the hardest sins to do.

    33:43-33:45

    It's self-deceptive.

    33:46-33:49

    It gets worse the more you give into it.

    33:50-33:54

    And it ultimately leads to apathy, as we've seen.

    33:55-34:02

    This is a frustrating sermon for me because, you know, it's such a hard sin to overcome.

    34:03-34:15

    I can teach, and you can teach somebody skill, you can teach somebody technique, you can teach somebody how to carry out a job detail, but something you cannot teach someone is drive.

    34:16-34:17

    You can't teach somebody drive.

    34:19-34:20

    And this was my struggle this week.

    34:20-34:25

    This is why, I'm just going to be honest with you, I was hoping you weren't going to pick this sermon on that online poll.

    34:25-34:27

    I was hoping you were gonna pick one of the other two.

    34:28-34:28

    And here's why.

    34:29-34:35

    I'm like, I'm gonna have to stand in front of those people and say, okay, here's how you overcome laziness.

    34:36-34:39

    And I'm like, wow, how do you?

    34:41-34:43

    Because a lazy person doesn't feel like overcoming.

    34:46-34:49

    So how do I stop being lazy?

    34:51-34:54

    I have two pieces of advice for you that I am sure of.

    34:55-34:58

    The first one is this. How do I stop being lazy?

    34:58-35:04

    The first thing you have to do without question, nothing else happens until this happens, confess it to God.

    35:05-35:19

    You have to get past your own stinking self-deception and say, "Yes, I'm lazy. I have been as sluggard as the Bible would define me." But you have to confess this to God.

    35:19-35:22

    And church, remember, you can't save yourself.

    35:22-35:27

    You can't do enough good to earn your way into heaven.

    35:27-35:30

    That's through the blood of Jesus Christ.

    35:31-35:36

    Jesus provided salvation and your way into heaven through His work.

    35:36-35:39

    You can't earn your way into heaven.

    35:39-35:45

    You can't save yourself, and at the same time, you can't change yourself.

    35:47-35:49

    You need to ask God to change you.

    35:49-35:52

    And you need to confess this to God.

    35:52-35:57

    And biblically the word "confess" it literally means "say the same." You're just agreeing with God.

    35:59-35:59

    You're saying, "You know what, God?

    35:59-36:02

    Here's what you said about sluggards, and I realize now that I am one.

    36:03-36:11

    Here's what you've said about laziness, and yeah, I see it. I see it." It's agreeing with God.

    36:11-36:15

    Be honest with God and tell Him that you need Him to change you.

    36:15-36:16

    You've got to get there.

    36:16-36:24

    You're going to say, "God, I can't fix this!" And God, if I'm being completely honest with you, I don't want to fix it, because I'm lazy!

    36:25-36:29

    But God, You can change me. God, You can fix me.

    36:32-36:36

    It's a hard issue. Laziness is a hard issue.

    36:37-36:39

    You put your comfort over everything else.

    36:41-36:43

    Only God can change your heart. So confess it to God.

    36:45-36:49

    Letter B, little letter B, how do I stop being lazy?

    36:50-36:53

    This is absolutely true.

    36:53-36:54

    I would say take it one shift at a time.

    36:56-37:00

    Meaning, obviously, after you do the first part, don't like skip to letter B.

    37:00-37:01

    I'm gonna skip that part.

    37:01-37:02

    I'm not gonna get it.

    37:02-37:02

    I'm not gonna get a second.

    37:03-37:04

    You can't, all right?

    37:04-37:05

    Or it's not gonna work.

    37:06-37:07

    'Cause this is a God thing.

    37:08-37:14

    But after you've done the business with God, I would say, letter B, take it one shift at a time.

    37:14-37:16

    don't leave here saying, "Oh, you know what?

    37:16-37:21

    From now on, I'm going to stop being lazy." It doesn't work that way.

    37:21-37:22

    You need to get specific.

    37:22-37:32

    You need to say, "At work today, at work today, just today, I'm just thinking about today, I have to accomplish these things today.

    37:32-37:45

    And today, God help me, by your strength, by your grace, I'm going to go after just the things today that you want me to get accomplished today at work." One shift at a time.

    37:47-37:48

    Because that's how habits happen, right?

    37:50-37:52

    Making changes one step at a time.

    37:53-37:55

    But it has to be empowered by God.

    37:57-38:23

    Colossians 3, verses 23 and 24 says, "Whatever you do, work heartily, ask for the Lord, and not for men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward." "Whoever your boss is..." "Pastor Jim, I hear what you're saying, but my boss is a jerk." Well, if you're a born-again believer in Christ, ultimately, your boss is Jesus Christ.

    38:23-38:26

    Whatever your human boss is like is irrelevant.

    38:27-38:32

    Because you're doing your job as if Jesus Christ were your immediate supervisor.

    38:34-38:39

    So born-again believer in Christ, more than anyone, you should be known for being a hard worker.

    38:40-38:45

    Your boss should consider himself blessed to have you working for him.

    38:46-38:57

    Your co-workers should all know you as the person who shows up, works hard, and keeps a great attitude, and makes work a better place just by you being.

    38:59-39:00

    The alternative.

    39:01-39:03

    The alternative is destroying yourself.

    39:05-39:06

    How can you do that?

    39:08-39:09

    By doing nothing.

    39:10-39:11

    Let's pray.

    39:12-39:29

    Father in heaven, I feel like we've barely scratched the surface on everything Your Word says about laziness, but God, I pray that as Your Spirit is at work with Your Word, I pray this is enough that You would give a spiritual kick in the pants to those of us who need to repent of some laziness.

    39:32-39:34

    This is a serious thing to you.

    39:35-39:37

    Because you've created us to represent you.

    39:38-39:40

    A God who is productive.

    39:41-39:42

    A God who takes initiative.

    39:43-39:45

    A God who...

    39:45-39:47

    Your Word says you finish what you begin.

    39:49-39:51

    Father, you've called us to reflect Your character.

    39:53-40:00

    So I pray, God, for Your Holy Spirit and Your Word to take root in any person here, especially the self-deceived.

    40:03-40:04

    Father, might You grant us repentance.

    40:07-40:13

    We see work for what it is, and we glorify You with the way that we carry it out.

    40:15-40:16

    Father, we thank You for Your grace.

    40:18-40:23

    We thank You for Your wisdom, and we thank You for the power of the Holy Spirit who makes all of these things possible.

    40:24-40:35

    And I thank You ahead of time all of the workplaces that are going to be radically changed by you this week as a result of what your Word has to say here.

    40:37-40:39

    We praise you in Jesus' name, Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Proverbs 6:6-11
(If you like, review any other Proverbs on laziness we covered on Sunday!)

  1. What was your big “take-away” from this passage / message?

  2. On a scale of 1-10 (1 = “comatose lazy”, 10 = “workhorse of the year”): How would your boss rate your work habits? How would you rate yourself?

  3. What advice would you give someone who confesses to you that they struggle with laziness?

  4. Why do you think laziness results in MORE and WORSE laziness?

  5. How specifically can a sluggard come to poverty (Prov 6:11)?

BREAKOUT
Confession time: in what area of your life are you most lazy? Pray for one another that the Lord would change your heart.

Stop Grabbing Random Dogs!

Introduction:

Proverbs 26:17 - Whoever meddles in a quarrel not his own is like one taking a passing dog by the ears.

Four Reasons I Will Not Be a "Meddler":

  1. It's Foolish .

    Proverbs 18:6 - A fool's lips walk into a fight, and his mouth invites a beating.

  2. It's Hateful .

    Proverbs 10:12 - Hatred stirs up strife, but love covers all offenses.

  1. It's Dishonorable .

    Proverbs 20:3 - It is an honor for a man to keep aloof from strife, but every fool will be quarreling.

    Luke 12:13-14 - Someone in the crowd said to him (Jesus), "Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me.” But he (Jesus) said to him, “Man, who made me a judge or arbitrator over you?"

  2. The Lord Hates it!

    Proverbs 6:16-19

    1 Peter 4:15 - But let none of you suffer as a murderer or a thief or an evildoer or as a meddler.

Why do I want to get involved?

What do I hope to accomplish?

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
Hint:
Highlight blanks above for answers!

  • 00:43-00:47

    Open up your Bibles with me please to Proverbs 1.6.

    00:48-00:49

    Why are you turning there?

    00:49-00:55

    You know, I've been in pastoral ministry over 20 years, and there have been times I've had young pastors ask me for some advice.

    00:55-01:08

    "What's the best piece of advice you can give somebody starting out?" And here it is, "Get a dog." "Well, that doesn't sound very spiritual." Look, look, look, these young pastors, they know pray, they know read the Bible, they know all that, okay?

    01:08-01:12

    They know that. I'm assuming they know that if they're starting out in ministry.

    01:12-01:23

    But I said, "The best advice I can give you is get a dog." And they always say, "Well, why is that the best advice?" And I said, "Because there are going to be days that that dog's going to be the only thing in the world that's happy to see you." It's true.

    01:23-01:25

    And look, I love dogs.

    01:25-01:26

    I love dogs.

    01:26-01:29

    And we have a picture of our dogs up here.

    01:29-01:31

    That's Gordy on the left.

    01:32-01:35

    He's over 10, which in Boxer -- they're both Boxers.

    01:35-01:38

    And in Boxer years, when you're over 10, you're basically living on borrowed time.

    01:38-01:42

    and he's like if Clint Eastwood was a dog.

    01:42-01:43

    That's Gordy.

    01:43-01:47

    And the one on the right, that's Lou.

    01:47-01:48

    He's only about a year old now.

    01:49-01:53

    And they are, I just love them.

    01:53-01:57

    And one of the things I love about them, like I said, some of these are the only things that are happy to see you.

    01:58-02:10

    That's one of the things I just love about dogs is you don't really have to try with dogs because the best I can figure out is anytime I leave the house, I'm assuming what happens is Erin sits down with the dogs.

    02:10-02:16

    When I leave, Erin sits down with the dogs, and she says, boys, your father just left, and he's dead.

    02:17-02:20

    He's never coming back, and you're never going to see him again.

    02:20-02:24

    Because that's the only thing that explains the reaction I get when I do come home.

    02:25-02:27

    Because when I walk in the door, they're like, he's alive!

    02:28-02:29

    He's alive!

    02:29-02:34

    And they're shaking their rear ends, and they're just going to get toys, and they're bringing me toys.

    02:34-02:41

    And this can be if I'm gone for the day at work, and it can be, dog people, can you back me up on this?

    02:41-03:03

    If I go to the end of the driveway and get the mail, and I'm gone for 40 seconds, I come back in with the mail, and they're like, "He's alive, he's alive!" I'm like, "Guys, guys, guys, I wasn't even gone a minute." Well, Proverbs today uses a dog as an illustration in a slightly different way, but it gives us a very valuable life lesson.

    03:03-03:05

    Look at Proverbs 26.17.

    03:05-03:21

    It says, "Whoever meddles in a quarrel not his own is like one who takes a passing dog by the ears." Now, when this proverb was written, it didn't have in mind your little precious with the sweater and the bedazzled collar.

    03:21-03:29

    This would have had in view a wild, dangerous dog, the kind that roamed the northern mountain jungle regions of Thailand.

    03:29-03:30

    I told you about that, Justin, didn't I?

    03:31-03:34

    Oh, you already bought your plane ticket, right?

    03:34-03:37

    Okay, yeah, there's wild dogs in Thailand.

    03:38-03:45

    Those are the kind of dogs that were in view when this proverb was written, but I don't recommend grabbing any dog by the ears.

    03:46-03:49

    But today we're going to talk about minding your own business.

    03:50-03:50

    You see a fight?

    03:51-03:53

    You see an argument break out?

    03:53-03:54

    Stay out of it.

    03:54-03:55

    Now look at your Bible.

    03:56-03:57

    This is very specific here.

    03:57-03:59

    It says whoever meddles.

    03:59-04:01

    Medals is the key word.

    04:02-04:02

    Okay?

    04:02-04:10

    Now listen, you've got to make sure you catch this, because if you tune out, you're going to start making up all these arguments in your head through the rest of the sermon. I don't want you to do that.

    04:11-04:12

    Because medals is the key word.

    04:12-04:16

    It's the same word used in chapter 20 and verse 2.

    04:16-04:22

    And in that proverb, there's a warning against provoking the king to anger.

    04:23-04:31

    And here, that same word is used for someone who is sinfully provoked to interfere in something that is not their business.

    04:32-04:36

    It's adopting someone else's offense as their own.

    04:36-04:42

    In other words, this is so important, church, it's about the motive for getting involved.

    04:42-04:45

    It's about the motive for getting involved.

    04:45-04:50

    So as we look at this proverb today, he is not talking about being a peacemaker.

    04:51-04:52

    He's not talking about that.

    04:52-04:57

    You know, if there's a problem at church or at home or at work, and you step in to try to make peace.

    04:58-04:59

    He's not addressing that, okay?

    05:00-05:06

    Actually, in the Bible, the book of Philemon is all about Paul being a peacemaker between two Christian brothers.

    05:06-05:08

    He's not talking about that here.

    05:08-05:13

    He's also not talking about sticking up for somebody who's being abused, okay?

    05:14-05:22

    If you see somebody being abused, you should intervene, you should get involved, you should do what you can to protect the person that is being abused.

    05:23-05:24

    He's not talking about that here.

    05:25-05:28

    This is about the motive of being sinfully provoked.

    05:29-05:36

    You see a quarrel, you see an argument, you see a debate, and it's not your business, but you have to insert yourself into it.

    05:37-05:43

    It's walking by, and you see a fire, and you decide you're going to stop and you're going to throw a little gasoline on the fire.

    05:44-05:47

    That's what he's talking about. It's meddling. It's meddling.

    05:48-05:51

    You see an argument at the workplace, in the break room.

    05:52-05:54

    Your co-workers are in a heated debate about something.

    05:55-06:00

    Just like, "Oh, this is good. I've got to get involved in this." And you stick your nose in. That's what he's talking about.

    06:01-06:07

    You're walking the aisles at Target, and you hear two people in a heated discussion about something.

    06:07-06:15

    You're like, "Well, I can't pass this up because I know something about this topic." And you've got to stick your nose in. That's what he's talking about.

    06:15-06:23

    Or church. You're leaving church and you hear a couple of brothers or sisters here having a heated debate about something.

    06:23-06:29

    Like, "I gotta stop and stick my nose in and get involved in the debate." What's it like when you do that?

    06:29-06:35

    Well, he tells us it's like taking a passing dog by the ears.

    06:35-06:38

    So what happens when you see a dog walk by?

    06:39-06:41

    The dog's minding its own business, but you're not.

    06:41-06:46

    and you just reach down and you grab the dog by the ears and give it a yank and a shake.

    06:46-06:48

    What do you think's gonna happen? Tell me.

    06:48-06:49

    You're gonna get bit, right?

    06:50-06:53

    If you see a dog walk by and you grab his ears, you give him a little shake.

    06:55-06:57

    It's an unprovoked attack.

    06:57-07:00

    And it's absolutely senseless.

    07:00-07:02

    Why would you do that?

    07:02-07:04

    I mean, why in the world would you do that?

    07:04-07:05

    That's the point of this proverb.

    07:06-07:07

    There's some humor there.

    07:08-07:14

    Like, what kind of an idiot sees a dog walking by and just grabs the dog by the ears.

    07:14-07:23

    "Who does that?" And Solomon says, "I'll tell you who does that." The same kind of idiot that sees an argument between two people, "I'd better stick my nose in this." It's senseless.

    07:24-07:25

    Nothing good comes from that.

    07:25-07:26

    You deserve to get bitten.

    07:27-07:31

    Nothing good comes from inserting yourself into a fight that's not your business.

    07:32-07:35

    Not only nothing good comes from it, but you can end up getting hurt yourself.

    07:36-07:38

    You're like, "That's right. That's right.

    07:38-07:44

    Preach it, Pastor Jeff." Well, hang on, because in our day, it's easier than ever to stick your nose in other people's business.

    07:45-07:46

    It's called social media.

    07:46-07:49

    And there's even a name for it.

    07:49-07:52

    Now, I don't know if this name is still a trendy thing.

    07:53-07:54

    Justin, maybe you can back me up on this.

    07:55-07:57

    Trolling, the kids still use the word trolling.

    07:57-07:59

    Totally, it's totally rad.

    07:59-08:02

    Samuel, the kids still use the word trolling.

    08:03-08:04

    Yes, okay, you've got a second.

    08:05-08:09

    All right, if you don't know what trolling is, Justin and Samuel back me up on this.

    08:09-08:25

    If you know what trolling is, trolling is when you get online, you get on Facebook and you see a thread, a discussion about something, an argument, a debate, a discussion, and you butt in with a comment for the sole purpose of getting a reaction out of people, that's trolling.

    08:26-08:32

    Like I'm going to say something that I know is going to tick people off, that's trolling.

    08:32-08:35

    Get on Facebook and look at the comments on a news story.

    08:35-08:38

    I do this sometimes for this very reason.

    08:38-08:41

    I'll get a notification like WPXI is reporting on this.

    08:42-08:44

    And I get on the news story just to read the comments.

    08:45-08:52

    Because when you go through the comments, you always see this parade of people coming through the comments ready to just grab the dog by the ears.

    08:53-08:57

    And it's just so easy to get caught up in it and to join the fight.

    08:57-09:00

    I mean, you get online and you see a discussion on vaccinations and autism.

    09:01-09:03

    Oh, I got to comment on this.

    09:03-09:08

    or you see a video about an interaction between a policeman and a citizen.

    09:08-09:10

    Like, I got to comment on this.

    09:10-09:16

    There's an article about Republicans or Democrats, diet and fitness, breastfeeding, whatever it is.

    09:17-09:21

    I got an opinion and I got to get in this fight because they need to be set straight.

    09:22-09:29

    And we don't even recognize that we're grabbing the dog by the ears because with social media, you think that everything's your business, right?

    09:29-09:30

    It's all my business.

    09:31-09:37

    everything from correcting somebody's grammar and spelling to fueling racism.

    09:37-09:39

    It's so easy to become the keyboard warrior.

    09:40-09:45

    You just jump in, you type your little comment, you take swings, grabbing the dog by the ears.

    09:46-09:47

    Why do we do that?

    09:47-09:51

    I mean, it's obvious that so many people do that, but the question is why?

    09:52-09:57

    And I get to be honest with you, that was a question that I really struggled with.

    09:57-10:00

    Like, why in the world do we do this?

    10:00-10:02

    What keeps us from minding our own business?

    10:03-10:06

    Why do we feel the need to insert ourselves?

    10:06-10:09

    Why do we feel the need to provoke someone to further anger?

    10:10-10:14

    I think for some people, they think it's their job to set people straight, right?

    10:15-10:18

    Like they see the thread and they're like, these people are obviously all fools.

    10:19-10:20

    I'm going to tell them what's up.

    10:21-10:22

    It's my job to set them straight.

    10:23-10:24

    I think some people just want attention.

    10:24-10:26

    I'll show them how much I know.

    10:26-10:33

    Oh, I bet this comment is really gonna tick a lot of people off and get a lot of likes and responses or whatever.

    10:33-10:37

    I think for some people it's just lack of impulse control, right?

    10:37-10:44

    You see the comment, you don't stop and think, "Should I get involved?" It's just like, boom, like not even like stopping to think about it.

    10:44-10:45

    I'm just going to jump in there.

    10:46-10:48

    Don't think, just react.

    10:48-10:49

    I don't know.

    10:49-10:50

    I don't know.

    10:50-10:53

    But some people seem to live for this.

    10:54-10:55

    Some people seem to live for this.

    10:55-11:03

    They seem to be on social media like 20 hours a day just looking for these ways they can grab dogs by the ears.

    11:03-11:09

    And I'm just like, "Don't you have anything better to do?" Like, is all the laundry done at your house? Are all the dishes done?

    11:09-11:17

    Like, what kind of time do you have on your hands that you're just looking for dogs on Facebook to grab by the ears?

    11:18-11:26

    Right now, you're kind of nudging the person besides you, and you're like, "Pagans, am I right?" I mean, those pagans, they sure know how to get online and act like pagans!

    11:26-11:28

    Pagans gotta... Pagan, right?!

    11:28-11:38

    Well, actually, according to one Barna poll that I read this week, do you know that Christians fight more online than non-Christians do?

    11:38-11:40

    Shame on 'em! Shame on us!

    11:40-11:44

    Well, since we saw it's a motive issue, remember the Hebrew word?

    11:44-11:45

    He's not talking about being a peacemaker.

    11:46-11:49

    He's talking about somebody that's provoked to provoke.

    11:49-11:51

    Let's look at four reasons to mind your own business.

    11:52-11:57

    to not go looking for a fight, to not be a meddler.

    11:57-12:01

    So in your outline, four reasons I will not be a meddler.

    12:01-12:03

    Number one, it's foolish.

    12:03-12:04

    It's foolish.

    12:05-12:13

    Proverbs 18.6 says, "A fool's lips walk into a fight, and his mouth invites a beating." It's just foolish.

    12:13-12:14

    It's senseless.

    12:14-12:18

    It's as senseless as grabbing a dog by the ears.

    12:18-12:21

    And only a fool walks into a fight.

    12:21-12:29

    But it takes a very special brand of fool, a very special kind of fool, to walk into a fight that's not even his.

    12:29-12:34

    It's foolish. It's not only foolish, number two, jot this down, it's hateful.

    12:34-12:37

    Okay? It's hateful. Not only foolish, it's hateful.

    12:38-12:47

    Proverbs 10.12 says, "Hatred stirs up strife, but love covers all offenses." And last week, we saw wisdom is overlooking offenses, right?

    12:47-12:53

    We saw Proverbs 19.11, "A man's discretion makes him slow to anger, but it is His glory to overlook an offense.

    12:54-13:05

    So wisdom overlooks offenses, but this is sort of the other side of the coin, because while love covers or overlooks offenses, it's hatred that's looking to stir up strife.

    13:05-13:16

    And a heart that wants to jump in and inflame a quarrel, especially when it's not your business, is motivated by hate, according to the one who knows your heart.

    13:16-13:26

    Okay, so if you do that, if you're constantly looking to troll, if you're constantly sticking your nose in other people's business, you aren't loving people.

    13:26-13:30

    You just aren't loving people when you want to escalate a fight that they're in.

    13:31-13:31

    It's hateful.

    13:32-13:34

    Number three, jot this down, it's dishonorable.

    13:35-13:45

    Look at Proverbs 20.3, it says, "It is an honor for a man to keep aloof from strife, but every fool will be quarreling." See the contrast.

    13:45-13:49

    Fools are anxious to jump into a quarrel, but an honorable person, he just stays away.

    13:50-13:58

    He says, "It's not my circus. Those aren't my monkeys. I'm staying away from it." He knows it's honorable to stay out of it. Why is it honorable to stay out of it?

    13:58-14:01

    I want you to just think about something, a few things here.

    14:02-14:07

    First of all, the honorable person says, "You know what? Maybe I don't have all the facts.

    14:07-14:11

    When I jump in and I'm going to set people straight, maybe I don't have all the facts.

    14:11-14:19

    Maybe I'm not the world's expert on whatever political, medical, social issue this is.

    14:19-14:23

    Maybe I'm not the ultimate authority in this issue.

    14:23-14:25

    Maybe I don't have all the facts.

    14:25-14:26

    So I'm just going to stay out of it.

    14:26-14:30

    Or maybe I don't know the back story that's prompting these people to fight.

    14:30-14:31

    The honorable person says, "You know what?

    14:31-14:39

    Even if I jump in and even if I prove my point, and even if I show everybody that I'm right, what did I really gain?

    14:39-14:41

    What did I gain from that?

    14:41-14:44

    It's an honor for a man to keep a loof from strife.

    14:44-14:49

    And the honorable person also knows, not only is it honorable to stay out of it, he knows that harm comes from jumping in.

    14:49-14:56

    Remember we saw the proverb, "You grab the dog by the ears, you're going to get bit." You get hurt when you get involved in a quarrel, not sure of it.

    14:56-14:59

    And you're like, "Well, how in the world can you get hurt?" I'm going to give you a few ways you can get hurt.

    14:59-15:01

    Number one, you can hurt your reputation.

    15:01-15:02

    You can hurt your reputation, right?

    15:03-15:07

    People are going to start seeing you as a contentious person.

    15:07-15:08

    Is that how you want to be known?

    15:10-15:12

    Don't invite him, he's contentious.

    15:12-15:16

    Doesn't matter what you say, doesn't matter what anybody's talking about, he's going to jump in.

    15:17-15:19

    How else can harm come from jumping in?

    15:19-15:21

    I can ruin my future opportunity to witness.

    15:22-15:29

    Right? You jump in, you fan the flame, you irritate people, you tick some people off, and then you want to tell them about Jesus, and they don't want to hear from you.

    15:29-15:32

    You've ruined your opportunity, Mr. Contentious or Miss Contentious.

    15:32-15:34

    You might even get punched in the nose.

    15:35-15:50

    Lots of ways you can get hurt when you get involved in a quarrel, not your own, But did you know? Did you know that even Jesus Christ, God in the flesh, while He was walking on the earth, refused to get involved in a quarrel between two other people?

    15:50-15:52

    Did you know that? Look at Luke chapter 12.

    15:53-16:03

    It says, "Someone in the crowd said to Him, said to Jesus, 'Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me!'" At least that's how I hear the tone of voice in that. Like whiny.

    16:03-16:19

    "Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me!" Like, here's Jesus, He's teaching people about the Kingdom of God, He's telling people how they can be saved, how they can have the eternal home in heaven, and obviously recognizing Jesus as a wise person.

    16:19-16:22

    Like, "Hey, you're wise and you have authority.

    16:22-16:28

    Tell my brother not to be such a hog with Dad's stuff, right?" But look at Jesus' response.

    16:29-16:36

    "But Jesus said to him, 'Man, who made me a judge or arbitrator over you?'" Jesus didn't come to be an arbitrator, He came to be a Savior.

    16:37-16:40

    Do you know Him as that? Do you know Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior?

    16:40-16:43

    That's the bigger issue today than grabbing dogs by the ears.

    16:44-16:51

    You can know Him today if you don't. He didn't come to be an arbitrator, but Jesus, can you settle this dispute?

    16:51-16:54

    And basically Jesus said, "Hey, hey, not my business.

    16:54-17:26

    That is not my business." And He just kept walking. So I would suggest to you, if that was how Jesus Christ, when a passing dog came right up to to him, Jesus, the only person in history who absolutely, 100%, could and would have given a righteous verdict. Basically, just say, "That is not my business." That's how Jesus responded. Why would we think we should respond any differently? So it's foolish, it's hateful, it's dishonorable. And number four, lastly, the Lord hates it.

    17:26-17:33

    The Lord hates it when we are meddlers. We don't often do this, but I want you to I'm going to turn back to Proverbs 6.

    17:33-17:34

    You've got to see this.

    17:34-17:36

    Proverbs 6.

    17:36-17:37

    Look at verse 16.

    17:38-17:45

    It says, "There are six things that the Lord hates, seven that are an abomination to Him." That's just a figure of speech in the Hebrew.

    17:45-17:47

    He gives a list of seven things here.

    17:47-17:49

    These are things that the Lord hates.

    17:50-18:02

    "Hotty eyes, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood, a heart that devises wicked plans, feet that make haste to run to evil, A false witness who breathes out lies.

    18:03-18:03

    Look at the last one.

    18:04-18:08

    One who sows discord among brothers.

    18:09-18:11

    Sowing discord is on the list of things that God hates.

    18:12-18:14

    And that's exactly what a meddler does.

    18:14-18:16

    Because remember we talked about the motive.

    18:16-18:19

    A meddler's endgame is stirring the pot.

    18:20-18:21

    It's causing strife.

    18:21-18:22

    It's sowing discord.

    18:23-18:26

    The Lord hates it to the point that He calls it an abomination.

    18:26-18:31

    I really honestly could have started the sermon, started the list with this.

    18:31-18:34

    Like, "Hey, don't do it because the Lord hates it." And I could have just stopped there.

    18:34-18:37

    But the Lord hates it when people sow discord.

    18:37-18:45

    You know, in 1 Peter, Peter talks about the blessing of suffering for doing good, and he admonishes us not to suffer for doing wrong.

    18:46-18:48

    Look at 1 Peter 4.15.

    18:48-18:55

    He says, "But let none of you suffer as a murderer or a thief or an evildoer or as a..." What's it say, church?

    18:56-19:00

    What's it say? A meddler. Do you see that list, church?

    19:00-19:10

    The Lord, the Holy Spirit, through Peter, lumps being a meddler in with being a murderer, or a thief, or an evildoer.

    19:11-19:14

    You know what that tells me? That tells me this whole thing about meddling?

    19:14-19:17

    That tells me that this isn't some lesser sin.

    19:17-19:22

    That you're like, "What was the sermon about today?" "Oh, it wasn't about anything really important. Pastor Jeff just told me to mind my own business.

    19:23-19:27

    It's not that big of a deal." This tells me that this is a serious deal to God.

    19:27-19:34

    When we meddle in things that aren't our business, and sow discord, and stir up hatred, it's serious business.

    19:35-20:25

    So, when you stumble across a heated debate in person, at work, in church, online, and you're just so tempted to put your two cents in, wisdom says, "Stop, don't grab that dog by the ears." At this point in the message, if you're like, you know, Pastor Jeff, I'm still like sincerely struggling because sometimes I just don't know whether I should get involved. Sometimes, I'm going to be honest with you, Pastor Jeff, I have a hard time discerning whether I'm wanting to be a peacemaker or whether I'm going to be a troublemaker. I want to help you out with that. I'm going to give you these three questions. Just jot these down. When you're tempted to get involved and you're not sure what your motives are, these questions will help you get to your motives. First question is, "Why do I want to get involved. That's the first question. Why do I want to get involved? Ask yourself.

    20:25-20:53

    What's your endgame here? Why do you want to get involved? The second question, along the same lines, what do I hope to accomplish? Am I being a peacemaker or troublemaker? Well, what do you hope to accomplish here? The third question is this, am I motivated by love? Am I motivated by love? Is that what's driving me to make the comment here? Am I being motivated by love? Or if I'm just looking to stir the pot, the Bible says that's being motivated by hatred. Get your is by asking yourself those three questions.

    20:54-21:00

    Jesus said, "Blessed are the peacemakers," Matthew 5, 9, because they will be called sons of God.

    21:00-21:16

    And these peacemakers are those who truly seek to live out Romans 12, 18, that says, "If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all." In other words, stop grabbing random dogs, all right?

    21:16-21:17

    Let's pray.

    21:17-21:20

    Father in heaven, this is serious business to you.

    21:20-21:35

    When we get involved in things that aren't our business, when we cause more problems, when we're looking to provoke fights and get people even more angry and fired up than they are, you call it meddling and you tell us how much you hate when we sow discord, Father.

    21:35-21:49

    You know, in our day, as we're so connected with social media, as we're so connected with involvement in workplaces and church, it's just so easy to come across so many more arguments and debates and discussions.

    21:49-21:52

    and it's just so easy for us to be tempted to jump in.

    21:53-21:56

    Father, help us to recognize when that temptation is sinful meddling.

    21:57-22:02

    Help us to see it for what it is, Father, as a big vicious dog that's walking by and minding its own business.

    22:03-22:07

    And let Your Word caution us to the danger of reaching out and grabbing that thing by the ear.

    22:07-22:12

    Father, those of us who are named as Your people, let us, in the pattern of our Lord, be peacemakers.

    22:13-22:17

    As much as it depends on us, Father, help us to be at peace with all men.

    22:17-22:20

    Give us wisdom, we pray in Jesus' name, Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Proverbs 26:17
See also Proverbs 18:6, Prov 10:12, Prov 20:3, Prov 6:16-19, Luke 12:13-14, 1 Peter 4:15

  1. What was your big “take-away” from the passage / message?

  2. What do you think motivates someone to “meddle” in something that is not their business?

  3. This Proverb specifically indicates that meddling can bring harm back on yourself. In what ways can you get “hurt” by meddling?

  4. How do you know when you SHOULD get involved in an argument between two others?

  5. How does meddling reveal a “hate-filled” heart (Proverbs 10:12)? Why does God hate “sowing discord”, ranking it up there with murder and theft? See Proverbs 6:19, 1 Peter 4:15.

BREAKOUT
Pray for one another to walk wisely by avoiding strife.

Walk Wisely: I'm Offended! Now What?

Introduction:

Proverbs 19:11 - Good sense makes one slow to anger, and it is his glory to overlook an offense.

What is NOT "overlooking"?

  1. Getting Even
  2. Holding a Grudge
  3. Slander

How Do I Overlook an Offense? When You Are "Triggered", Ask Yourself:

  1. Is there some Truth here? Then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    Proverbs 27:6 - Faithful are the wounds of a friend...

    Luke 11:37 - While Jesus was speaking, a Pharisee asked him to dine with him, so he went in and reclined at table.

  2. Is there a chance I Misunderstood what was said? Then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    1 Corinthians 13:7 - Love... believes all things...

  3. Am I making a big deal out of a Minor issue? Then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    Philippians 4:5 - Let your reasonableness be known to everyone.

  4. Is this a Lost person just acting like a Lost lost person? Then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    Luke 23:34 - Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.

  5. Do I Love the offender? Then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    Proverbs 10:12 - ...love covers all offenses.

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
Hint:
Highlight blanks above for answers!

  • 00:47-00:51

    Open up your Bibles with me, please, to Proverbs 19.

    00:54-01:05

    In a day of so much division in our country, there is something that we can all agree on.

    01:07-01:09

    We are all offended.

    01:12-01:14

    It's ingrained in us, true or false.

    01:15-01:23

    Now watch closely because anything at all that's said, anything that's said, there's got to be a way that that can offend me.

    01:24-01:26

    There just has to be a way that that can offend me.

    01:27-01:29

    And you see it in the public outcry.

    01:31-01:42

    You know, I remember years ago, there was this public outcry against that old TV show, "The Dukes of Hazard," because the Confederate flag was on top of the car.

    01:43-01:45

    So we had to pull the show from TV.

    01:46-01:52

    And it can be sports teams' names, it can be statues in the park, it can be tweets by comedians.

    01:52-01:58

    I read this past week that certain Muslims are offended by Peppa Pig.

    01:59-02:01

    Do you know what Peppa Pig is?

    02:02-02:04

    It's a cartoon for babies.

    02:07-02:17

    Also, I heard recently that, um, Next big wave of offense here is they are remaking Disney's The Little Mermaid.

    02:17-02:20

    Have you heard about this? Okay, get ready to be offended.

    02:21-02:25

    They're remaking The Little Mermaid and they're casting an African-American girl to play The Mermaid.

    02:28-02:36

    And people were like offended by that. Like what? You realize this is fiction, right?

    02:38-02:40

    We're talking about a fish.

    02:42-02:46

    There's the public things I could go on and on, but I'm not, because we're going to get to God's Word here in a second.

    02:47-02:54

    Then there's all the personal things that I've heard people take great offense over.

    02:55-03:04

    Things like, "They had cake in the break room, and they invited us to go back, but they didn't personally invite me, and I was offended." What?

    03:05-03:10

    I heard of a guy who was offended because another man never asked him to go golfing.

    03:13-03:16

    I didn't appreciate her comment about my outfit.

    03:18-03:25

    I can't believe the guy at work told me, "Don't be so sensitive." Can you believe somebody would have the audacity to tell me not to be so sensitive?

    03:28-03:37

    I also read this week, did you know the phrase "man up" is now considered offensive? Did you know that?

    03:38-03:39

    You're not allowed to say that anymore.

    03:39-03:42

    Hey, hey, hey, man up. That's offensive.

    03:43-03:44

    That's offensive.

    03:45-03:52

    Like, Pastor Jeff, I don't know why you're telling us this, because surely the church people don't get offended.

    03:54-03:57

    Especially in the church, we get offended, right?

    03:59-04:03

    Just wait a couple months for Christmas time.

    04:05-04:08

    You know, think of some of the offenses of past years.

    04:08-04:16

    Remember, what was it, a couple of years ago, everybody was offended because of the color of the cups that Starbucks was using, do you remember that?

    04:16-04:18

    Everybody was all offended by that.

    04:18-04:44

    And then every year you're gonna get the list of stores or sent to your email address, it's going to boycott these stores, don't shop at these stores, because these stores say "Happy Holidays," they don't say "Merry Christmas." And right now I'm sure I've said something already, just in the introduction of the sermon, we're not even in the sermon yet, I'm sure I've said something in the introduction that has offended you.

    04:48-04:53

    And social media has given us all a platform, right?

    04:53-04:54

    Fight for your rights!

    04:55-04:58

    Let the world know that we are offended.

    04:59-05:05

    So today, we are going to talk about how to deal with offenses.

    05:07-05:08

    You're like, "Oh yeah, yeah, I know.

    05:09-05:10

    I know, I know, I know.

    05:10-05:11

    I know this sermon, Pastor.

    05:12-05:15

    You forgive people, you make restitution where it's necessary.

    05:16-05:23

    You go to the Matthew 18 process, you go to the person, take another person with you, you get the church involved, if they still don't listen to you...

    05:23-05:26

    Look, all of that is true. Absolutely all of that is true.

    05:27-05:31

    But today, that is not the particular truth that we're going to be focusing on.

    05:33-05:49

    Today we're going to see something else the Bible prescribes, that if you diligently make this a practice, It will change your life for the better in a profound way.

    05:51-06:10

    And that's Proverbs 19.11 that says, "Good sense makes one slow to anger, and it is His glory to overlook an offense." Let's break it down.

    06:12-06:15

    Good sense. Some Bibles say a man's discretion.

    06:16-06:17

    That means the best choice.

    06:18-06:23

    The best possible choice you can make is to be slow to anger. Why?

    06:25-06:27

    Because that reflects the character of God.

    06:28-06:31

    That's a fruit of the Holy Spirit. It's patience, right?

    06:34-06:37

    And it is His glory, meaning man's glory.

    06:38-06:43

    It's a sign of maturity. It's a sign of grace. It's a sign of Christ-likeness.

    06:45-06:53

    To overlook, ignore, not notice an offense.

    06:54-06:56

    That's the breakdown, now let's say it in reverse.

    06:57-07:11

    If you look at the verse backwards, it's spiritually mature to overlook an offense, which you can do when you're slow to anger, and that choice comes from someone who uses good sense.

    07:12-07:15

    We could state the verse in opposite terms.

    07:16-07:33

    Let's say, "It's stupid to fly off the handle, and it's a disgrace to hold on to an offense." "Oh, okay, this sermon is about not getting angry." Well, that's where it starts.

    07:34-07:39

    But today, I want us to just focus on one word.

    07:39-07:39

    All right?

    07:40-07:53

    We're just going to focus on one word today, and the word is "overlook." It's choosing...

    07:53-08:01

    Now, this is going to sound so radical in America in 2019, but it's choosing to ignore an offense.

    08:02-08:04

    It's in one ear and out the other.

    08:05-08:08

    It's... I'm just not going to let that affect me.

    08:09-08:16

    By the way, as we talk about overlooking today, we're going to start off by saying this is not overlooking.

    08:16-08:18

    What is not overlooking?

    08:19-08:22

    Um, jot these things down.

    08:22-08:23

    What is not overlooking?

    08:23-08:24

    First of all, getting even.

    08:26-08:33

    Obviously, that's... you're not overlooking an offense if you're thinking about or actively planning on getting even with the person that offended you.

    08:33-08:37

    That is not overlooking, is it? Absolutely not.

    08:37-08:38

    That's not overlooking.

    08:38-08:39

    What else is not overlooking?

    08:40-08:42

    Letter B is holding a grudge.

    08:42-08:45

    Some people think, "If I overlook the person, that's overlooking the offense.

    08:46-08:53

    I'm just going to ignore them, I'm just going to avoid them, I'm just not going to talk to them anymore." And that's not what the Bible tells you to do.

    08:53-08:56

    It's not overlooking the person, it's overlooking the offense.

    08:56-08:57

    So that's not overlooking.

    08:57-09:01

    and let her see slander, that's not overlooking.

    09:01-09:10

    Like, I'm not gonna address it with the person, but I'm gonna tell everybody else about it, I'm gonna tell them how it was wrong, I'm gonna tell everybody how wrong that person is.

    09:11-09:14

    Those things are not overlooking.

    09:15-09:17

    I want you to listen to me closely.

    09:21-09:25

    Sometimes, sometimes it is right to be offended.

    09:27-09:33

    And it is right to deal with that in a biblical, God-honoring way.

    09:35-09:43

    Maybe a sin was committed, maybe someone's being abused, maybe there's been a real injustice, or the rights of the unborn.

    09:44-09:48

    I would just say, if it offends God, it should offend us. Amen?

    09:49-10:00

    But if we're honest, if we're honest, Very few things that offend us fall into the category of making a federal case about.

    10:03-10:07

    So what I want us to look at today for a few minutes is how do I overlook an offense.

    10:10-11:10

    Okay, someone says something to you that immediately, in the flesh, you want to react because you feel offended or someone someone does something to you that you view as insensitive and you feel offended listen there is nothing wrong with feeling offended there is nothing wrong with that because feelings are just feelings. I'm not invalidating your feelings. You can't help how you feel, but you do choose how you deal with it. So how do I overlook an offense? So when you are triggered... Justin, is it... did the kids still say triggered? Is that still a thing?

    11:12-11:14

    I'm on point with that one? Okay.

    11:15-11:23

    Justin's my go-to for the HIP terminology because a lot of times, when I finally catch a buzzword, it's been out of circulation for seven years.

    11:24-11:28

    So how do I overlook an offense?

    11:29-11:34

    When you are triggered, just ask yourself these questions.

    11:34-11:41

    These terminates would be great to stick in your Bible, or take to your bathroom mirror, or something.

    11:43-11:46

    Ask yourself these questions. Number one, is there some truth here?

    11:47-11:48

    Is there some truth here?

    11:49-11:54

    If so, then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    11:54-12:03

    Proverbs 27.6 says, "Faithful are the wounds of a friend." Meaning a true friend is sometimes going to tell you things that you don't want to hear.

    12:04-12:08

    A true friend is going to tell you things that might offend you, but you need to hear them.

    12:08-12:11

    And it's the faithful friend that does that.

    12:12-12:23

    But step one, maybe most important, when you're tempted to react to an offense, the first step is to be objective.

    12:23-12:38

    The comment that offended me, you need to ask yourself, "Is there some truth behind the comment?" My former church, we ran a week-long day camp.

    12:39-12:42

    It was for the whole community, any kid in the community.

    12:42-12:45

    It was a free week at camp. We would rent buses.

    12:45-12:49

    And any kid at all, we would bus them up to camp and back every day.

    12:50-12:55

    And we'd do a VBS, and we would provide lunch for them, and games, and prizes.

    12:55-12:59

    And I spent a lot of time organizing that.

    12:59-13:03

    Usually worked for day camp. We had day camp usually in July.

    13:03-13:06

    and I started working on it in February every year.

    13:06-13:16

    A lot of time and effort and energy went into all of the coordination and volunteer training and getting word out in the neighborhoods.

    13:19-13:39

    But one year, shortly after day camp, a mother - we were at some other outreach down at a park, and a mother that was at the head of child at day camp, sort of reflecting in a week, she said, you know, it could have been a lot better organized.

    13:42-13:46

    And I made a very snarky reply.

    13:47-13:50

    And I said, well, we're all entitled to our opinion.

    13:51-13:51

    Now, that was wrong.

    13:54-13:56

    But I got to tell you, I was offended.

    13:58-14:01

    I said that because you know what I wanted to say.

    14:02-14:08

    I wanted to say, do you have any idea how much time and effort I put into organizing this?

    14:08-14:10

    You weren't part of that process.

    14:10-14:17

    You just show up and let your kid reap the benefit and you criticize.

    14:19-14:20

    my attitude was wrong.

    14:23-14:32

    Because despite all of my efforts, the question with day camp that I had to ask myself was this, was it perfect?

    14:34-14:34

    No.

    14:35-14:39

    I had to step back and look at it objectively and say, okay, wait a second, wait, wait, wait.

    14:41-14:47

    If this is one mother's perspective, then I need to look at it from her point of view.

    14:48-14:53

    It could have been better organized, and I should not have reacted so offended.

    14:54-14:57

    I was wrong to react in the way that I did.

    15:00-15:03

    But hear me, church, I thought a lot this week.

    15:03-15:05

    Why do we get so offended? Why are we so quick to be offended?

    15:08-15:10

    And I think this is a big reason why.

    15:10-15:29

    "Listen, we have a way of letting our emotions make us ignore the truth." In other words, we throw up the "I'm offended" flag, and that allows us to ignore the truth when it's something that we don't want to hear.

    15:31-15:32

    You know that happened in Jesus' day.

    15:33-15:50

    Just jot this reference down. I'm going to give you a quick paraphrase you can look this up later. Luke 11.37, "Jesus was dining with the Pharisees, and they were astonished that he didn't wash before dinner, and he rightly rebuked them." And he said, "You guys only care about the outside.

    15:50-15:52

    You only care about the external appearances.

    15:52-16:05

    You neglect the internal, which is the priority." And then in verse 45, it says, "One of the lawyers said, 'Teacher, in saying these things, you insult us also.'" In other words, what were they saying to Jesus?

    16:07-16:14

    "I'm offended! I'm offended that you said that!" And then Jesus issued an apology.

    16:16-16:29

    He got on Twitter and he said, "If my comments offended anyone, I... no." No, in fact, that is not what Jesus said.

    16:30-16:36

    Jesus replied, "Woe to you also." He doubled down on it!

    16:37-16:42

    He said, "You burden people with burdens you yourselves don't bear." And here's the point.

    16:42-16:50

    Jesus is saying, "You're so quick to point out that you're offended, so you don't have to objectively look at the truth behind the statement.

    16:53-16:56

    I'm offended!" It's just a way of not examining the truth.

    16:58-16:59

    But can you be objective?

    16:59-17:02

    Can you step outside of your feelings for a minute?

    17:03-17:08

    And take an honest, objective view of the statement that was made that bothered you.

    17:10-17:13

    And you're like, "Well, Pastor Jeff, what if it's not really a matter of truth?

    17:14-17:19

    What if it is just simply a matter of opinion?" Well, then that's even easier to overlook!

    17:20-17:23

    And you don't have to be emotionally snarky about it!

    17:24-17:29

    You can say, "You know what? People have opinions, and mine's different." And that's okay.

    17:32-17:33

    So is there some truth?

    17:34-17:37

    Then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    17:38-17:42

    Number two, is there a chance I misunderstood what was said?

    17:44-17:46

    Then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    17:47-18:00

    1 Corinthians 13.7 says, "Love believes all things." That doesn't mean every doctrine, true or false, love just says, "Oh, we believe everything." It's talking about believing the best about a person.

    18:02-18:18

    So when someone says something that maybe was offensive, maybe it was offensive, and you're like, "I'm not sure how he meant that," we often default to the side of being offended.

    18:19-18:22

    Why don't we try the benefit of the doubt instead?

    18:23-18:32

    Why don't we say, "Maybe he was having a bad day when he said that." Maybe it came out wrong. Maybe he didn't mean it the way I understood it.

    18:32-18:34

    Is there a chance I misunderstood what was said?

    18:36-18:39

    Yeah? Okay, then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    18:40-18:46

    Number three, am I making a big deal out of a minor issue?

    18:49-18:50

    Then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    18:52-19:02

    Philippians 4-5 says, "Let your reasonableness be known to everyone." Let your reasonableness be known to everyone.

    19:03-19:12

    That thing that offended you, that statement that somebody made that offended you, how big of a deal is it? Is it really worth it? Is it going to matter in a week?

    19:13-19:18

    So much of what we get offended over just isn't worth being offended over.

    19:21-19:24

    I just run down a simple checklist in my mind right now.

    19:25-19:29

    These days, did you deliberately insult my lord, my wife, or my kids?

    19:29-19:32

    No? Okay. Then I'm going to overlook the offense.

    19:33-19:36

    Am I making a big deal out of a minor issue?

    19:37-19:39

    I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    19:42-19:46

    Number four, is this a lost person just acting like a lost person?

    19:48-19:52

    If so, then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    19:53-20:19

    Luke 23, 34, "As Jesus was being crucified, you remember He cried out, 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.'" Now, yes, the people who were crucifying Jesus, they knew what they were doing, but Jesus pointed out they didn't really understand the depth of the crime that they were committing against the Lord of the universe.

    20:19-20:22

    They couldn't understand fully.

    20:25-20:26

    Because they were lost.

    20:29-20:34

    And I want to ask you, church, are you offended by a hurtful comment that was made by a lost person?

    20:36-20:50

    Because I'm about to give you some profound truth, and if you're wondering what I do all week, It's digging out such spiritual gold nuggets out of the minds, and here it is.

    20:51-20:54

    Lost people act like lost people.

    20:56-20:58

    Why does that always shock us?

    21:00-21:06

    I mentioned previously how we get offended with retail stores during the holidays.

    21:08-21:10

    I just want to remind you something again.

    21:10-21:12

    and these are profound truths I'm laying out here.

    21:12-21:14

    I hope you can take another one here.

    21:14-21:15

    But Starbucks isn't church.

    21:19-21:19

    Right?

    21:22-21:23

    Target isn't church.

    21:25-21:25

    Right?

    21:27-21:28

    Here's the thing.

    21:29-21:44

    If I come into Harvard's Bible Chapel, and we fail to mention the name of Jesus name of Jesus Christ here. That is a real problem.

    21:47-22:01

    But when we go to Target, and they fail to rightly glorify the name of our Lord, honestly, that's just kind of expected. Right?

    22:02-22:05

    Lost people act like lost people. You've got to consider the source.

    22:09-22:11

    Number five, do I love the offender?

    22:12-22:13

    Do I love the offender?

    22:15-22:17

    Then I'm just going to overlook the offense.

    22:18-22:36

    Proverbs 10:12 says, "Love covers all offenses." Every single offense, whether it's real, or whether it's perceived, I have a choice to make.

    22:38-22:40

    My choice is this, who am I going to love?

    22:43-22:47

    Am I going to love me and my rights?

    22:48-22:54

    Am I going to love me and am I going to make my feelings a hill to die on?

    22:56-23:06

    Or, am I going to love the offender enough to overlook the offense?

    23:08-23:10

    Love covers all offenses.

    23:12-23:17

    Like, "Yeah, Pastor Jeff, I hear all this stuff you're saying, but listen, what about when I'm really offended?

    23:17-23:19

    What about when it's not just a misunderstanding?

    23:20-23:24

    Someone sought to deliberately and personally offend me.

    23:25-23:27

    How can I just overlook that?

    23:29-23:35

    The answer is, it's grace. It's grace.

    23:37-23:42

    We forgive others as God has forgiven us, right?

    23:43-23:44

    Ephesians 4.32.

    23:46-23:54

    Only true motivation to forgive is to remember how much you've been forgiven.

    23:57-24:08

    This topic is addressed in a book called "Forgiven People Forgive," available at fine Christian book retail stores online, or you can just come up and take that one.

    24:10-24:11

    That's a sermon for another day.

    24:14-24:15

    That's your motivation for forgiveness.

    24:17-24:19

    How much have I been forgiven?

    24:21-24:24

    Jesus Christ was rightly offended by my sin.

    24:25-24:29

    And the glorious thing about Christ is He didn't just overlook them.

    24:31-24:34

    He didn't just overlook them.

    24:34-24:43

    He died for our offenses so He could take our sin away to make them a non-issue.

    24:46-24:52

    I promise you, you are going to be tempted to be offended this week.

    24:54-24:59

    So, do you need to go the Matthew 18 route? Then do it.

    25:02-25:09

    But more often than not, you'll find that you can go the Proverbs 19.11 route.

    25:10-25:18

    It says, "Good sense makes one slow to anger, and it is His glory to overlook offense." Let's pray.

    25:19-25:24

    Father in heaven, thank You for the truths of Your Word.

    25:27-25:31

    Father, I pray for this fellowship here.

    25:34-25:39

    Because where two or more are gathered, somebody's going to be offended by something at some point.

    25:41-25:45

    Father, you know we're not trying to offend.

    25:47-25:48

    It just happens.

    25:49-25:56

    There's misunderstandings and we say things we don't mean.

    25:59-26:05

    Father, I pray for this fellowship that we would be a people who embrace Proverbs 19.11.

    26:07-26:19

    That we don't feel the need to take a battle to every little thing that maybe offended us, even if rightly offended us.

    26:19-26:29

    Father, teach us what it means that it is our glory to overlook it.

    26:32-26:41

    Father, teach us what it means to reflect the character of yourself, to be slow to anger.

    26:44-26:46

    Give us the wisdom to make that happen.

    26:48-27:15

    Father, we thank You for taking away our offenses through the ministry of Jesus Christ, and using that very work also as the ultimate example as to why we should be people who are quick to forgive.

    27:18-27:20

    We praise You in Jesus' name, Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Proverbs 19:11

  1. What was your big “take-away” from this passage / message?

  2. Why do you think people seem so anxious to be offended today?
    On a scale of 1-10, how easily offended are you? (1 = nothing offends me, 10 = everything offends me)

  3. When is it okay to be offended? How do you know when it is appropriate to be offended?

  4. How does being “slow to anger” help you overlook offenses?

  5. How does the forgiveness of Christ motivate you to overlook offenses?

    Bonus: What was the craziest thing you’ve ever heard someone be offended over?

BREAKOUT
Pray for one another to grow in being slow to anger and quick to overlook offenses. What kind of a church would HBC be if we all lived by Proverbs 19:11?