"Good Enough" Isn't Enough.

Introduction:

See: Judges 17:6, 21:25 | Judges 1:1 | Joshua 24:16 | Judges 3:7 | Judges 2:1-2

Three Consequences of Partial Obedience (Judges 1-3):

  1. Your life gets Harder (Judges 2:3).

    Exodus 23:33 - They shall not dwell in your land, lest they make you sin against me; for if you serve their gods, it will surely be a snare to you.

2020-AUG-Judges -DoWhatsRight_1400sq_sm.jpg
  1. Your spirit gets Miserable (Judges 2:4-5).

    Psalm 51:12 - Restore to me the joy of your salvation...

    Ephesians 4:30 - do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God

  2. Your children get Apathetic . (Judges 2:7-10)

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

  • 00:43-00:44

    The book of Judges.

    00:47-00:59

    We're starting a new series today called, "Do What's Right." And today's message is really an introduction to the whole series.

    01:00-01:01

    Sort of laying the foundation.

    01:02-01:09

    And it's called, "Good Enough Isn't Enough." So I'd like you to bow your heads with me please.

    01:10-01:19

    Pray for me to be faithful to God's Word, and I will pray for you to open up to receive God's Word.

    01:24-01:32

    When all of God's people said, "Amen." For those of you who were here in July, how about those guest speakers, huh?

    01:38-01:42

    surprised to see me back. Yeah, yeah, they weren't bad.

    01:44-02:08

    They're like, "Well, what did you do all month?" Well, I followed the news, and if you're like me, maybe you have been following the headlines, and I want to ask you this morning if you happen to see these headlines. "Morbidly obese Peace world leader fatally stabbed and left in bathroom stall.

    02:08-02:09

    Did you see that one?

    02:11-02:12

    How about this one?

    02:13-02:16

    Military cutbacks reduce national army to 300.

    02:18-02:19

    Did you see that one?

    02:20-02:21

    How about this headline?

    02:22-02:25

    Soldier returns home, kills daughter.

    02:28-02:29

    This one really caught my attention.

    02:31-02:33

    and destroys worship center.

    02:34-02:36

    More than 3,000 dead.

    02:36-02:37

    Did you see those headlines?

    02:38-02:44

    Maybe you didn't see them, because they would have been published in Israel around 1200 B.C.

    02:45-02:49

    Because these are all things that happen in the book of Judges.

    02:52-02:57

    Judges is violent and shocking.

    02:58-03:10

    I was just talking to Mark Ord this morning. I remember the first time as a young Christian reading the book of Judges thinking, "I can't believe this stuff is in the Bible." Like, really? Yeah.

    03:11-03:14

    It's a period of Israel's history, a dark period.

    03:16-03:23

    It's characterized by a statement that's made twice in Judges, that a Christian read at the end of that video.

    03:25-03:27

    It says, "In those days there was no king in Israel.

    03:28-03:32

    Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.

    03:34-03:36

    Notice that statement, it doesn't say everyone did what was right.

    03:39-03:43

    It says everyone did what was right in his own eyes.

    03:44-03:47

    Meaning, listen, I do what I think is best.

    03:48-03:52

    No one tells me what to do, not even God tells me what to do.

    03:53-03:55

    I do what I think is right.

    03:56-03:59

    And they were days of spiritual anarchy.

    04:01-04:02

    Just like today.

    04:05-04:14

    The book of Judges gives us examples of people, yes, very flawed people, but people who served God in such a time.

    04:14-04:24

    And it teaches us, very flawed people, how we can serve Jesus Christ in a day of complete spiritual anarchy.

    04:26-04:35

    So to get us all caught up to speed on where the book of Judges falls in Jewish history, this is about the shortest summary I can give you.

    04:35-04:38

    Remember, Moses led Israel out of Egypt.

    04:40-04:46

    But it was Joshua that led the Israelites into the Promised Land to begin the conquest.

    04:47-04:50

    And that takes us to Judges 1.1.

    04:50-04:52

    If you'll look at that with me, please.

    04:52-05:11

    It says, "After the death of Joshua, the people of Israel inquired of the Lord, 'Who shall go up first for us against the Canaanites to fight against them?'" You see, God promised Abraham and Abraham's offspring this piece of land.

    05:11-05:13

    It was already occupied.

    05:14-05:19

    So Joshua began the conquest of driving the people out.

    05:19-05:24

    And here we have a major shift between the book of Joshua and the book of Judges.

    05:24-05:25

    And here's the shift.

    05:25-05:32

    In Joshua, you have trust in God, you have obedience to God, you have victory in the Lord, and then you go to Judges.

    05:34-05:36

    And you have the opposite of all of that.

    05:36-05:39

    You have unbelief, you have disobedience, you have defeat.

    05:40-05:44

    And really, two verses sort of encapsulate this whole thing.

    05:46-06:15

    As we approach the book of Judges, Actually, you go back to Joshua 24.16, in Joshua's day, the people answered, "Far be it from us that we should forsake the Lord to serve other gods." And then you fast forward a couple of years and turn a couple of pages in your Bible, and you get to Judges 3.7 that says, "And the people of Israel did what was evil in the sight of the Lord." They forgot the Lord their God and served the Baals and the Asherah - those were idols.

    06:19-06:22

    And we have to ask ourselves, how did they get to that point?

    06:25-06:29

    How could they so quickly forget the Lord?

    06:30-06:41

    And it's real easy to look at the pages of this book and say, "How did they do that?" But really, what we need to ask ourselves How do we get to that point?

    06:44-06:47

    Because the truth is, we're all guilty of this from time to time.

    06:48-07:01

    "Oh, you know, we come to Christ and we're baptized, and we are ready to die for Jesus Christ!" And then the next thing you know, we're allowing other things to take priority in our lives.

    07:03-07:04

    And that's called idolatry.

    07:06-07:07

    Jump over to Judges 2.

    07:10-07:11

    Look at verse 1.

    07:12-07:21

    It says, "Now the angel of the Lord went up from Gilgal to Boshem." I just want to pause here.

    07:22-07:30

    When you see the angel of the Lord in the Old Testament in passages like this, this is a pre-incarnate appearance of Jesus Christ.

    07:32-07:41

    There are different times in the Old Testament Jesus actually showed up before the incarnation, and I believe this is one of those times.

    07:42-07:54

    So Jesus shows up, says He went up from Gilgal to Boshem, and He said, "I brought you up from Egypt." See, that's why I think this is God speaking.

    07:54-08:02

    He says, "I brought you up from Egypt, and brought you into the land that I swore to give to your fathers.

    08:03-08:07

    I said, "I will never break my covenant with you.

    08:09-08:13

    And you shall make no covenant with the inhabitants of this land.

    08:15-08:17

    You shall break down their altars.

    08:21-08:22

    But you have not obeyed my voice.

    08:24-08:29

    What is this you have done?" What's the problem?

    08:30-08:42

    What happened in chapter 1 that caused God to personally show up in chapter 2 saying, "What are you guys doing?" Well, here's the thing.

    08:42-08:47

    And I encourage you to read this, but we're not going to actually read all three chapters here together this morning.

    08:48-08:57

    I encourage you to go back and read this, but when you read Judges 1, it might seem on the surface like it's just a bunch of boring lists.

    09:00-09:08

    But really, Judges 1 shows us the problem that plagued Israel throughout her Old Testament history.

    09:10-09:15

    And it shows us a problem that plagues our own lives.

    09:17-09:18

    We're going to play a game here.

    09:19-09:21

    See if you can spot the pattern. Are you ready?

    09:22-09:24

    We're going back to chapter 1, look at verse 27.

    09:24-09:26

    I'm just going to fly through some of these verses.

    09:27-09:29

    And I want you to see if you notice a pattern. Are you ready?

    09:29-09:41

    Judges 1.27, talking about tribes of Israel and some of the actions that they were not involved in.

    09:41-09:41

    You ready?

    09:42-10:21

    Verse 27, "Manasseh did not drive out the inhabitants of Beth-she-an." Verse 28, "Did not drive them out completely." Verse 29, "Ephraim did not drive out the Canaanites." 1 Thirty, Zebulun, "did not drive out the inhabitants of Kitron." 1 Thirty-one, Asher, "did not drive out the inhabitants of Akko." 1 Thirty-two, "they did not drive them out." 1 Thirty-three, Naphtali, "did not drive out the inhabitants of Beth-shemesh." See a pattern? Did you catch it?

    10:22-10:23

    Pretty obvious, wasn't it?

    10:23-10:35

    It's almost like the Lord was trying to really drive home a point by saying they did not drive them out.

    10:38-10:40

    Over and over and over.

    10:40-10:43

    They didn't drive them out. They didn't drive them out. They didn't drive them out.

    10:43-10:44

    And this is the point.

    10:46-10:50

    Israel was to go in and drive them all out completely.

    10:51-10:56

    100% get rid of them, give them their eviction papers, they are gone.

    10:59-11:01

    The problem is they compromised.

    11:03-11:07

    The problem is Israel was partially obedient.

    11:09-11:11

    I'm going to give the benefit of the doubt here.

    11:13-11:17

    I don't think Israel set out to deliberately disobey.

    11:18-11:28

    I don't think that they were folding their arms and saying, "You know what? I know what God said, but we're not going to do it." I don't think that was the attitude that was behind this.

    11:28-11:51

    I think what happened, Joshua led the conquest and so much ground was gained, I think that Israel got to a point that they sort of looked around and went, "That's good enough. I mean, it's not perfect, but it's good enough, right?" And that's the danger that you and I face in our walks with Jesus Christ.

    11:54-11:55

    It's compromise.

    11:58-12:03

    Just like Israel, I don't think there's anybody sitting in this room or watching this at home.

    12:05-12:18

    I don't think there's anybody that's tuned into this ministry that would say, "I know what God says, but I'm not going to do it." But I do think there are a lot of us that settle for good enough.

    12:21-12:26

    Now listen, before we go on, I want to remind you, you are not saved by your performance, okay?

    12:26-12:31

    We're not talking, for those of you that are true, born-again believers in Jesus Christ.

    12:31-12:33

    Your salvation is not on the line.

    12:34-12:40

    You see, your salvation is based on the performance of Jesus Christ, not your performance.

    12:41-12:47

    And there is nothing, if you're a born-again believer of Jesus Christ, there is nothing that can take that from you.

    12:47-12:54

    You are saved by grace, believing that Jesus Christ died for your sins, that He rose to give you eternal life.

    12:54-12:55

    Are we clear on that?

    12:57-13:08

    But at the same time, Christ calls those who would follow Him to radical obedience.

    13:09-13:10

    True or false?

    13:12-13:30

    The Bible says things like, "Take up your cross daily." "Bear fruit in keeping with repentance." "Use your spiritual gifts for the edification of the church." "Deny yourself." "Bless people, even your enemies." The Bible calls us to radical, full-heart obedience.

    13:30-13:35

    And I have to ask myself, and you need to ask yourself, "Is this what marks my life?

    13:36-13:41

    Or have I settled for..." It's good enough. It's good enough.

    13:45-13:46

    This is the sermon this morning.

    13:47-13:48

    Partial obedience is not good enough.

    13:52-13:54

    Think about it in other realms.

    13:54-13:56

    I would suggest you lesser realms.

    13:56-13:57

    What about school?

    13:58-14:15

    If your teacher says you have a report due, and it's the due date, "Hey, do you have that report due?" "Well, I did some of it." teacher going to say? Well that's good enough. That's good enough. You did some of it. Is your teacher gonna say that?

    14:18-14:36

    Or what if, parents, what if you told your kids, hey I want you to mow the grass, okay? I want you to mow the grass so we don't get snakes. And you come home and you're like, hey, hey son, did you mow the grass? And your son's like, I mowed some of it. Parents, are you happy with that?

    14:38-14:40

    No, good enough isn't enough.

    14:40-14:41

    Right?

    14:41-14:42

    Or what about at work?

    14:42-14:44

    I know we have some nurses here.

    14:45-15:03

    How would that work at your work, at your hospital, if your supervisor says, "Hey, how are your patients?" And you said, "I checked on most of them." Carrie, would that fly?

    15:03-15:05

    Like, "Most of them, that's good.

    15:05-15:06

    That's good.

    15:07-15:09

    No, that wouldn't fly.

    15:11-15:18

    Or what if, what if you went to Eaton Park and you got one of them breakfast smiles.

    15:18-15:20

    You ever have one of them breakfast smiles at Eaton Park?

    15:21-15:22

    You know what I'm talking about?

    15:22-15:31

    And what if that breakfast smile came out and it was, it was just a, it's just a nasty, gooey puddle in the middle of the plate.

    15:31-15:32

    And you're like, what is this?

    15:32-15:34

    And they're like, those are your eggs.

    15:35-15:44

    And you're like, "Why didn't you cook them?" And they said, "Well, we partially cooked them." Would you say, "Oh, my mistake.

    15:44-15:45

    That's good enough." Would you say that?

    15:46-15:47

    No.

    15:47-15:48

    So do you see my point?

    15:48-15:50

    In all these other realms, good enough isn't enough.

    15:51-16:07

    But somehow when we talk about our walk with Christ, it's like, "Well, it's good enough, so it's going to be good enough for God." Like Israel, we allow these little strongholds to remain in our lives.

    16:07-16:12

    These areas where we know we're not obedient, but we've learned to excuse them.

    16:12-16:13

    "Hey, we're Christians.

    16:14-16:14

    I'm saved.

    16:15-16:21

    I'm going to heaven." So this little area where I've compromised, it's not a big deal.

    16:23-16:27

    I mean, it's not like it's going to cost me my salvation.

    16:27-16:30

    So it's okay if I sin.

    16:33-16:37

    And when you say that, yes, it's true, it's not going to cost you your salvation if you're saved.

    16:38-16:39

    That is absolutely true.

    16:39-16:41

    But when you say that, do you know who you're like?

    16:42-16:43

    You're like Israel right here.

    16:44-16:47

    They're in the promised land and they're like, "We have arrived.

    16:48-16:48

    We've arrived.

    16:49-16:49

    You know what that means?

    16:50-16:53

    That means the battle is over, son." And guess what?

    16:55-16:56

    It's not over.

    16:59-17:04

    I just want to show you from the text today, I want you to jot some things down.

    17:04-17:05

    Three consequences of partial obedience.

    17:07-17:11

    If you're only partly obeying the Lord, you have some area that you're not submitting to the Lord.

    17:12-17:19

    You're not allowing Jesus Christ to be Lord of your life in this little pocket of unconquered land in your life.

    17:19-17:26

    Well, again, yeah, it might not cost you your salvation, but there are consequences for that.

    17:26-17:27

    You'll see them right from the text.

    17:27-17:28

    Number one, jot this down.

    17:29-17:29

    Your life gets harder.

    17:31-17:32

    Your life gets harder.

    17:33-17:35

    Look at verse 3, picking up.

    17:36-17:38

    Remember the angel of the Lord, Jesus Christ shows up.

    17:38-17:40

    He goes, "You've not obeyed My voice.

    17:40-17:41

    What is this you have done?

    17:42-17:45

    Why didn't you do what I told you to do?" We're going to talk more about that in a second.

    17:46-17:46

    Look at verse 3.

    17:47-17:53

    He says, "So now I say, I will not drive them out before you.

    17:55-18:04

    But they shall become thorns in your sides, and their gods shall be a snare to you." Do you see that?

    18:04-18:16

    He goes, "Because you only partially obeyed, I'm here to tell you that your life is about to get a lot harder." Yes, you're still going to live in the land, but things are going to get hard.

    18:19-18:22

    Basically, you see the Lord was saying, "You know what? Have it your way.

    18:24-18:25

    You wouldn't drive them out.

    18:25-18:30

    I told you to drive them out, and you wouldn't drive them out, so I'm not going to drive them out either.

    18:32-18:34

    And there are going to be thorns in your sides.

    18:34-18:49

    There are going to be snares." And this sounds very familiar, because even way back in Moses' day, go way back to Exodus 23, this was the warning given to Israel before they even stepped foot in the Promised Land.

    18:49-18:59

    This was the charge to drive out these wicked pagan people that were squatting in God's land here.

    19:02-19:06

    Israel was told, "They shall not dwell in your land." Why not?

    19:08-19:10

    "Lest they make you sin against Me.

    19:12-19:25

    For if you serve their gods, will surely be a snare to you." You see, what God told Israel, "I'm going to give you this land, you're going to move in, and here's what you need to do, medically speaking.

    19:25-19:41

    You need to remove the cancer." So Israel gets in the land, and their response is, "You know what? We're actually okay with a little cancer." And the Lord shows up and reminds them that good enough isn't enough.

    19:44-19:52

    "Yeah, Pastor Jeff, it's probably a tall order for this wandering band of Jewish people to just walk in and conquer these people that are established.

    19:52-19:56

    Did you really expect Israel to do that?" No, absolutely, I did not expect Israel to do that.

    19:58-20:02

    I expected God to do it, though, because He promised to give them the victory.

    20:03-20:04

    Right?

    20:04-20:11

    God never gives you a command that's impossible to fulfill.

    20:11-20:12

    He doesn't do that.

    20:14-20:21

    Every time God gives a command, understand church, behind that command is His power to fulfill the command.

    20:22-20:24

    He supplies the power.

    20:25-20:28

    Where God guides, He provides.

    20:28-20:31

    And God had promised Israel, "I'm going to win the battle.

    20:31-20:40

    I'm going to go with you, and I'm going to conquer these enemies." But they compromised.

    20:41-20:42

    Good enough. Partial obedience.

    20:44-20:52

    And God shows up and He says, "Okay, if that's the way you want it, things are about to get harder.

    20:58-21:09

    Sin makes life hard." I'm not going to spend a lot of time on this, because for those of you that are really going to be honest, I mean really going to be honest, I don't have to sell anybody on this.

    21:09-21:11

    Sin makes your life hard.

    21:12-21:17

    Ask the addict if his life was easier or harder before the addiction.

    21:19-21:26

    Ask the man who was caught in an affair, if his life was easier or harder when he was faithful to his marriage.

    21:28-21:50

    Ask the woman who refuses to forgive someone who wronged her, If her life was easier or harder when she wasn't harboring bitterness, how many of your hardships can be directly tied into the sin that you've allowed to remain in your life?

    21:54-21:56

    For some of you, you know, you don't have any money.

    21:58-21:59

    Maybe it's because you waste it.

    22:01-22:04

    Maybe it's because you don't honor God with it first.

    22:04-22:12

    And you're wondering, "Why don't I have any money?" Because it's an area of your life that you haven't allowed Jesus Christ to be Lord of.

    22:14-22:16

    And it's making your life hard.

    22:21-22:24

    Or men, maybe there's no intimacy in your marriage because of pornography.

    22:25-22:31

    Like, "Why am I just... My wife and I, we had this thing back when we got married, And it just sort of fizzled out.

    22:31-22:34

    Well, maybe that's directly tied to your sin.

    22:37-22:45

    Maybe your work performance has tanked because every time you show up for work, you're strung out or you're hung over.

    22:47-22:49

    Sin makes life hard.

    22:51-22:55

    And yes, we are promised spiritual victory in Christ.

    22:57-23:00

    We're promised victory over all of our sin.

    23:00-23:24

    And I have to ask myself, and you need to ask yourself, "Hey, am I living in victory?" Would I look at my life right now and say, "This is the victorious life, the abundant life that Christ promised through His Spirit." Or am I living in defeat because I've allowed this thing to remain that's been a snare to me?

    23:26-23:28

    Three consequences of partial obedience.

    23:28-23:30

    Number one, your life gets harder.

    23:31-23:33

    Again, not much I have to sell us on that.

    23:35-23:39

    Number two, jot this down, your spirit gets miserable.

    23:40-23:42

    Your spirit gets miserable.

    23:42-23:44

    Look at verses 4 and 5.

    23:46-23:51

    So the Lord shows up, makes His announcement, like, "Hey, you know what? You want to drive me out? I'm not going to either.

    23:51-23:56

    Things are about to get really tough for you." Verses 4 and 5 give the response. Look at this.

    23:57-24:10

    "And as soon as the angel of the Lord spoke these words to all the people of Israel, the people lifted up their voices and wept." They got it. They understood.

    24:12-24:14

    We messed up.

    24:16-24:29

    Verse 5, "And they called the name of that place Boshem." That name means "weeper." "Crying." And they sacrifice there to the Lord.

    24:31-24:34

    So not only does your life get harder, your spirit gets miserable.

    24:37-24:40

    And this just flows right from the first point.

    24:43-24:46

    There's just no joy in partial obedience. There's just not.

    24:47-24:51

    And the road of partial obedience leads to bosom.

    24:54-25:00

    There's just no joy in a half-hearted commitment to Jesus Christ.

    25:01-25:12

    And I've already told you a couple of times, "Yes, it's true that you cannot lose your salvation, but understand, with sin, there is something that you can lose.

    25:12-25:15

    Not your salvation, but you can lose the joy of your salvation.

    25:15-25:16

    Did you know that?

    25:17-25:30

    That's why David said in Psalm 51, verse 12, he says, "Restore to me the joy of your salvation." That yeah, you might be saved, you might be heading to heaven, but you feel miserable the entire way. Why?

    25:30-25:32

    Because you lost the joy of your salvation.

    25:33-25:41

    And David wrote that psalm in response to consequences of sin in his own life.

    25:42-25:43

    He goes, "I get it.

    25:43-25:45

    There was an area of my life where I compromised.

    25:47-25:48

    And I am miserable!

    25:49-25:52

    I know I'm going to heaven, but I feel miserable!

    25:54-25:56

    Is there anybody here that can relate to that?

    25:58-26:04

    Because you see, you might think the most miserable person in the world is someone who doesn't know Jesus Christ.

    26:05-26:08

    Some pagan friend out there, you're like, "Well, he doesn't know the Lord.

    26:09-26:11

    He must be miserable." Guess what? He's not.

    26:11-26:13

    I'll tell you who the most miserable person in the world is.

    26:14-26:19

    The most miserable person in the world is a believer who's compromised along the way.

    26:20-26:27

    A true follower of Jesus Christ who somehow has not fully committed to Jesus Christ in some area.

    26:27-26:30

    That is the most miserable person you're going to meet. Why?

    26:34-26:38

    Because the Bible says sin grieves the Spirit of God. Did you know that?

    26:39-26:54

    Ephesians 4:30 says, "Do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God." That sick feeling you experience when you sin, Christian, that's way more than just some sort of guilt or shame.

    26:54-26:56

    It's way more than that.

    26:56-27:15

    That restlessness, that discontent, that discouragement, that "in the pit of my soul" feeling that I have when I sin, I'm just like, "You know what I'm talking about?" Like, spiritually sick. "You know what I'm talking about?" Any other Christian in here besides me ever sin?

    27:15-27:24

    "You know what I'm talking about?" "Okay, thank you. You don't leave me up here." Going home today like, "Oh man, I'm the only one that's ever sinned in that church.

    27:24-27:31

    And they made me the pastor." That sick feeling in your soul.

    27:35-27:39

    That's the Holy Spirit grieving at your choices.

    27:40-27:46

    Because your actions aren't lining up with the person that He's called and empowered you to be.

    27:48-27:51

    And your life turns into Judges 2.5.

    27:53-27:59

    You may be worshipping, but you're also weeping.

    28:00-28:01

    You're miserable.

    28:04-28:06

    Three consequences of partial obedience.

    28:06-28:07

    Your life gets harder, your spirit gets miserable.

    28:07-28:12

    Number three, your children get apathetic.

    28:13-28:14

    Your children get apathetic.

    28:15-28:16

    Let's jump down to verse 7.

    28:17-28:27

    It says, "And the people served the Lord all the days of Joshua, and all the days of the elders who outlived Joshua, who had seen all the great work that the Lord had done for Israel.

    28:28-28:55

    And Joshua the son of Nun, the servant of the Lord, died at the age of 110 years." Verse 9, "And they buried him within the boundaries of his inheritance in Timnath-hariz, in the hill country of Ephraim, north of the mountain of Gash." I think that's how you pronounce that.

    28:55-28:58

    In verse 10, look at this.

    28:58-29:02

    "And all that generation also were gathered to their fathers.

    29:05-29:20

    And there arose another generation after them who did not know the Lord, or the work that He had done for Israel." This is a huge consequence of partial obedience is your children get apathetic.

    29:20-29:24

    See, in this verse here in verse 10, to meet the next generation.

    29:28-29:29

    And suddenly everything's different.

    29:31-29:31

    Everything changes.

    29:33-29:34

    Like how bad did it get?

    29:34-29:36

    Look at verse 11, the very next verse.

    29:36-29:43

    Look at it. It says, "And the people of Israel did what was evil in the sight of the Lord and served the Baals." What?

    29:49-29:50

    What in the world just happened?

    29:52-30:00

    Did he went from Joshua, be strong and courageous and conquer to...

    30:01-30:02

    Let's worship the veils.

    30:08-30:09

    What happened?

    30:12-30:29

    The next generation up often has this tendency to accept the status quo, and to lose the vision of the first generation.

    30:32-30:35

    I heard a preacher one time call that the second generation syndrome.

    30:39-30:46

    And it's where the parents' urgency becomes the children's apathy.

    30:46-30:47

    Do you know what I'm talking about?

    30:47-31:06

    This Joshua's generation was on fire, "We're going to conquer, grab your weapons boys, we're going to take this land." And the next generation up was just like, "Hmm." and dad were awfully fired up about that, but that was kind of their thing, I guess.

    31:09-31:30

    And they were apathetic. And I have to wonder, what happened? Where was the leadership gap here? Did they not disciple people to be leaders in the next generation? I just think it's so many questions about how this happened in one generation. But it happens. I'm going I'm going to be honest with you, church.

    31:30-31:34

    Do you know who I think is the biggest danger to this church right here?

    31:35-31:41

    The biggest danger to keep this church from thriving and staying on mission and leading people to Jesus Christ?

    31:41-31:43

    Do you know who I think the biggest danger is?

    31:44-31:47

    Like the worldly people, right? No.

    31:48-31:50

    The church can withstand them.

    31:52-31:54

    Gates of hell, that's nothing for the church.

    31:54-31:59

    Do you know who concerns me most about keeping this church on mission?

    32:00-32:01

    They're up in the nursery right now.

    32:02-32:04

    They're up in our Harvest Kids ministry right now.

    32:04-32:06

    Those are the people that concern me.

    32:09-32:10

    The Cade Millers.

    32:11-32:12

    The Evan Millers.

    32:13-32:15

    The children in this church.

    32:18-32:20

    Those are the ones that concern me the most.

    32:21-32:23

    Because I know the parents, right?

    32:23-32:37

    And I think of some of you parents who have been with us for so long, like the Thompsons, and worked so hard storming the gates of hell, delivering the life-saving message of Jesus Christ, and have children.

    32:40-32:45

    Just being honest, guys, we have children that are prime candidates to catch the second generation syndrome.

    32:46-32:48

    How? Well, verse 10 tells us.

    32:49-32:56

    It says, "They did not know the Lord or the work that He had done for Israel." Now, that doesn't mean they were ignorant.

    32:57-33:00

    That they're like, "I've never heard of the Red Sea.

    33:00-33:01

    I've never heard of manna.

    33:02-33:03

    I've never heard of water from a rock.

    33:03-33:07

    I've never heard of any of these things." That's not what that means at all.

    33:09-33:14

    It means they knew about God, but they didn't know God.

    33:18-33:19

    And because of that, they became complacent.

    33:20-33:20

    We've heard it all before.

    33:21-33:22

    We've heard it all before.

    33:23-33:28

    Oh gosh, dad's telling us the story of the Red Sea again.

    33:30-33:31

    We've heard this before.

    33:32-33:34

    You know what the Bible calls that?

    33:35-33:35

    Lukewarmness.

    33:36-33:41

    It's apathy about biblical truths that we've heard from our Sunday school teachers our whole lives.

    33:43-33:44

    Yeah, yeah, yeah, we know, we've heard.

    33:44-33:46

    Yeah, Jesus died on the cross, rose from the dead.

    33:47-33:59

    And we treat this, eternal, awesome work of God like it's some common thing.

    34:01-34:15

    And that's why, church, please hear me, that's why the second generation can be easily tempted to sit back and enjoy all of the blessings of the church that Jesus built through you.

    34:16-34:17

    Through you!

    34:20-34:24

    And the next generation up can become blessing-centered instead of Christ-centered.

    34:28-34:32

    You're like, "Well, where's the hope?" We're going to close with that.

    34:34-34:36

    Because God has a strategy against apathy.

    34:37-34:38

    God wasn't taken unawares.

    34:39-34:42

    You realize God's never in heaven pacing, like, "Oh no, now what am I going to do?

    34:42-34:47

    They didn't listen. Plan B." God never is taken unawares.

    34:47-34:49

    Like, here's His plan. Look at chapter 3.

    34:49-35:03

    It says, in the first four verses, "Now these are the nations that the Lord left..." Look at this, "...to test Israel by them." That is, all in Israel who had not experienced all the wars in Canaan.

    35:05-35:10

    It was only in order that the generations of the people of Israel might know war.

    35:10-35:13

    To teach war to those who had not known it before.

    35:14-35:15

    These are the nations.

    35:16-35:26

    The five lords of the Philistines and all the Canaanites and the Sidonians and the Hivites who lived on Mount Lebanon from Mount Bel-Herman as far as Lebo-Hamath.

    35:27-35:39

    Verse 4, "They were for the testing of Israel to know whether Israel would obey the commandments of the Lord, which he commanded their fathers by the hand of Moses." So here's God's strategy.

    35:41-35:44

    He says, "Okay, you're not going to remove the enemy completely.

    35:44-35:46

    I'm not going to either.

    35:46-35:49

    What I'm going to do is I'm going to use them.

    35:49-35:52

    I mean, why not? They're right there. I'll use them.

    35:54-35:59

    You're like, "Wait, wait, wait. Hang on. Back up a second. Back up a second." That's God's strategy?

    36:01-36:07

    How in the world is that any kind of strategy to prevent the second generation syndrome?

    36:11-36:23

    When you got saved, those of you that are true believers, when you got saved, why didn't God just remove the sin nature from your flesh?

    36:23-36:24

    Have you ever wondered that?

    36:27-36:33

    My Christian walk would be a whole lot easier if I didn't live in this sinful flesh and have these temptations.

    36:33-36:35

    You know what I'm talking about? It would be a whole lot easier.

    36:35-36:41

    So, could God remove my sin nature? Is that possible?

    36:42-36:44

    Absolutely! God can do anything.

    36:44-36:49

    So the question is, why didn't He eliminate my sin nature?

    36:49-36:51

    Why didn't He eliminate my weaknesses?

    36:55-37:10

    I'll be honest with you, for years, as a very young Christian and a young pastor, I went to the prayer room on my face, asking God to remove temptation.

    37:11-37:16

    Asking God to remove sin nature from me.

    37:16-37:18

    For years I prayed that.

    37:19-37:51

    You know, one day, same prayer room, I'm on my face praying, "God, just take this sin nature from me." And in his still small voice, he reminded me, he said, "That's not how I work." He says, "I don't remove the sin nature. What I do is, I give you my Holy Spirit." You see, the Lord uses difficulty to teach us and to teach our kids how to wage spiritual war.

    37:54-38:02

    You see, God doesn't say, "Now that you're saved, expect peace for the rest of your life." He says, "Now that you're saved, what does Ephesians 6 say?

    38:02-38:05

    Put on the armor of God." Why would I need armor?

    38:06-38:07

    Because you're going to war!

    38:07-38:08

    There's a battle!

    38:10-38:12

    And that's what God did with Israel here.

    38:12-38:15

    Said, "Hey, we're going to teach some kids how to fight.

    38:15-38:16

    That's why we're going to keep them.

    38:16-38:17

    I'm going to use them.

    38:17-38:18

    You wouldn't get rid of them, I'm not.

    38:18-38:19

    We're going to use them.

    38:19-38:21

    They're going to learn how to fight." And God says the same thing to us.

    38:21-38:28

    That sin nature is going to stay, and you're going to learn how to walk by the Spirit and not fulfill the lust of the flesh.

    38:29-38:37

    You're going to learn what it means to trust Me every step of the way.

    38:39-38:43

    Otherwise, you know what my Christian walk would be?

    38:44-38:55

    It would be like, "Hey, you know what? Back in 1995, I trusted Jesus Christ." Like, "Well, how's that gone today?" It doesn't matter, because I don't need Him today like I did in 1995.

    38:55-38:56

    No, you know what?

    38:57-39:05

    I am more aware of my need for Jesus Christ's power in my life today than I was however many years ago that was when I came to Him.

    39:08-39:11

    We learn to trust Him with every step.

    39:12-39:23

    Because church, when the enemy looks unstoppable, when the mountain looks too high and that path looks too long and our resources are completely gone.

    39:24-39:26

    All of a sudden, do you know what we have?

    39:27-39:28

    A teachable spirit.

    39:30-39:38

    We have a hand that reaches up and says, "God, you know what? I need you." And church, we can't stand still.

    39:40-39:42

    Like Israel, there's still enemies to be faced.

    39:43-39:53

    There's still ground to be gained, and if the battle is going to continue until the Lord returns, you had better recruit and train your kids.

    39:56-39:57

    Do what's right.

    39:59-40:03

    And it starts by doing it 100%.

    40:04-40:06

    Not partially.

    40:06-40:12

    Not, "I did it mostly!" This is war.

    40:14-40:18

    And in war, good enough isn't enough.

    40:19-40:20

    Let's pray.

    40:21-40:35

    Father in heaven, Your Word tells us that You've given us these accounts in Your Word to serve as examples for us, to teach us some things.

    40:38-40:41

    Father, if we're honest, this hits pretty close to home today.

    40:43-40:46

    Because Father, we are so much like Israel.

    40:48-40:56

    God, we confess to You that we allow areas of unconquered land in our own hearts.

    40:59-41:02

    We face the same consequences that Israel faced.

    41:05-41:08

    Father, right now we want to thank You for the victory of Jesus Christ.

    41:09-41:14

    We do thank You, Father, that our salvation is based on what He did, not on what we do.

    41:15-41:26

    But at the same time, Father, we cry out that we would experience His power in a renewed and fresh way.

    41:27-41:32

    And Father, that has to start with You making us aware of our need for His power.

    41:34-41:50

    And I pray, Father, if nothing else happened today, I pray that that's something Your Word accomplished was it awakens the need for each of Your true people here and watching and listening.

    41:50-41:59

    I pray, Father, that this awakens us again and afresh to the need that we have for daily reliance on Your Spirit.

    42:02-42:11

    That yes, you have promised to conquer the enemies, but somehow you use us as part of that whole process.

    42:13-42:19

    On a way that we can choose to obey and go with you, or a way that we can choose to sit back and say that's good enough.

    42:23-42:24

    Grab us today, Father.

    42:25-42:26

    Grant us repentance.

    42:27-42:28

    Glorify Your name.

    42:29-42:33

    Father, just now we're going to stand and lift our voices up in worship.

    42:34-42:42

    Let us celebrate the victory of Christ, the victory He won in the past, and the victory that He is going to give us today.

    42:43-42:44

    We praise You in Jesus' name.

    42:45-42:45

    Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Judges 2:1-5

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

  2. Describe in your own words how Israel sinned. Why was this such a big deal to the Lord (Judges 2:1-3)?

  3. Read Ephesians 4:30. How do you grieve the Holy Spirit? How do you know you have? How can you stop grieving the Spirit? How do you know you have?

  4. What is the “second generation syndrome”? How does that happen? How can we prevent that with our kids (and the kids at HBC)?

Breakout
Pray for one another. In what area(s) have you been “partially obedient”?

Who Will You Choose?

Introduction:

We Choose Barabbas Because (Matthew 27:15-23):

  1. We are too Self-centered (Matt 27:17-18).
  2. We are too willing to Listen to others (Matt 27:19-20).
  3. We are too eager to Worship idols .

    John 19:15 - "They cried out, Away with him, away with him, crucify him! Pilate said to them, Shall I crucify your King? The chief priests answered, We have no king but Caesar."

How Do We Stop Choosing Barabbas?

Jeremiah 29:13 - "You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart."

2020-JUL-Stroupe_1400sq_sm.jpg

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

  • 00:00-00:01

    All right.

    00:02-00:03

    Thanks for that introduction, Andrew.

    00:03-00:04

    Appreciate that, bud.

    00:05-00:14

    Before we get started, I just want to pull the curtain back a little bit as to what goes in to the four of us getting up here during July.

    00:14-00:24

    So we start back in January, and once a month we get together and we meet, and we try to -- Jeff shows us how to break down a passage, how to figure out what it's talking about.

    00:24-00:25

    We do outlines.

    00:25-01:03

    We go through different things every week, and then we rehearse, and then finally in we get up and do this. So I've been working on this passage for six months since January, okay? And I feel like God's really been taking me through different paths through this message, really trying to narrow it down to present it to you and give God's Word to you accurately. For six months that's been going on. And then Darren, big Darren, that sings up here, sitting in his living room one day, God reveals the same thing that took six months to reveal to me, revealed to him in five minutes.

    01:04-01:05

    And he put it on Facebook.

    01:08-01:12

    So I just took Darren's post and printed it out, and that's what we're going to talk about today.

    01:15-01:17

    All right, are you guys ready to hear what God revealed to me?

    01:18-01:19

    All right, let's pray before we do that.

    01:20-01:22

    Father, I thank you for this day.

    01:22-01:24

    I thank you for this opportunity to be here.

    01:25-01:26

    God, I'm humbled.

    01:29-01:31

    Father, give me the words to say.

    01:32-01:34

    Let them not be my words, but your words.

    01:36-01:39

    God, please help this to touch each and every person here as it has touched me.

    01:41-01:43

    In Jesus' name we pray. Amen.

    01:46-01:53

    So early on in Sarah and I's marriage, we had decided that we got to a point where we wanted to buy a new car.

    01:54-01:56

    It knew to us it was going to be used.

    01:56-01:57

    We couldn't afford a new car.

    01:59-02:01

    But we had our checklist of things we wanted.

    02:02-02:10

    You know, the main three things we wanted was low miles, fully loaded, and in the right price.

    02:11-02:12

    And we had a couple other things.

    02:12-02:16

    But to be honest, what we wanted was a car that everybody would turn their heads and look at.

    02:17-02:21

    When we pulled into church on Sundays, we wanted everybody to go, wow, look at that.

    02:21-02:22

    Because that's why you go to church.

    02:23-02:24

    (audience laughing)

    02:26-02:27

    Amen, right?

    02:30-02:30

    So we were all excited.

    02:30-02:33

    I think we'd been married maybe a year or two at the time.

    02:34-02:36

    So we're looking online, we would go to dealerships, whatnot.

    02:38-02:47

    So this one time we came upon an ad and it was if God had taken our prayers to him 'cause we'd asked him to give us that perfect flashy car.

    02:48-02:51

    And it was as if he had dropped it in our laps.

    02:52-02:57

    And we're looking one night on a very reputable website where no scams ever happen, Craigslist.

    03:01-03:11

    So this car comes up, two years old, very low miles, fully loaded for $3,000.

    03:13-03:14

    Boom, deal of a lifetime.

    03:14-03:16

    And they were willing to ship for free.

    03:18-03:18

    It's perfect.

    03:19-03:26

    It was if God perfectly made that ad for us or some 12-year-old with Photoshop in his mom's basement.

    03:29-03:30

    But that was our car.

    03:30-03:31

    We wanted it.

    03:31-03:37

    And everybody around us is going, "Guys, you do know this is completely fake, right?" "No, no, no.

    03:37-03:38

    This is the car for us.

    03:39-03:40

    This is the car we want.

    03:41-03:41

    This is ours.

    03:42-03:47

    God made it for us." And everybody's going, "Guys, pay attention.

    03:47-03:53

    This is not real." We had convinced ourselves that everybody just didn't want us to have a deal of a lifetime.

    03:54-03:56

    They were jealous of this awesome car we were going to get.

    03:59-04:03

    I'm not going to lie, we came embarrassingly close to pulling the trigger on that.

    04:05-04:06

    Luckily for us, we didn't.

    04:08-04:14

    But deep down inside, Sarah and I knew that choice was wrong, but we wanted to do it anyway.

    04:14-04:16

    We intentionally were making the wrong choice.

    04:17-04:17

    Why?

    04:17-04:44

    remember what we wanted to do, probably because we were stubborn and we wanted to prove that at 22 years old we knew what we were doing. But we'll do that, right? We'll do that in a lot of areas in our life. We'll intentionally make the wrong choice, even when we know it's wrong. We'll do it anyway. Why? It's for always a myriad of reasons. But we'll do it. If you're honest with me, there's been a time in your life that you've done that.

    04:47-04:52

    The passage we're going to go over today is about a choice that was made almost 2,000 years ago.

    04:53-04:58

    And the people that made that choice intentionally made the wrong choice.

    05:00-05:07

    And even though that was made all those years ago, we're still making that same choice today.

    05:10-05:11

    So let's look at this.

    05:12-05:15

    We're in Matthew 27, verses 15 through 23.

    05:16-05:23

    And just to set the scene for a little bit, we're kind of stepping right into the middle of the road where Jesus is going to the cross.

    05:24-05:32

    He's been arrested, people have questioned Him, and we're picking it up right where Pilate is talking to the crowd.

    05:33-05:38

    And at this time, this is the Roman Empire that we all learned about in the history books.

    05:38-05:43

    They had conquered a lot of the world, and in that, Israel was under that.

    05:43-05:55

    And so the Israel leaders, the Jewish leaders, the elders, the spiritual leaders of the Jews, they had a very corrupt relationship with the government, or with the Roman government.

    05:56-06:02

    So there was all kinds of behind locked doors deals going on and things like that.

    06:03-06:06

    But it's important that you understand that as we go through this.

    06:06-06:08

    So let's pick it up in verse 15.

    06:09-06:29

    "Now at the feast, the governor was custom to release for the crowd any one prisoner whom they wanted. And they had this notorious prisoner called Barabbas. Let's just pause right there for one second. So this guy Barabbas, the best way I can describe this guy is a terrorist.

    06:29-06:48

    He's an anarchist. We all know what that's like right now. We see that going on in our own country. But he's a terrorist. That's not something I really have to explain to a lot of people. He's a bad guy and both sides needed this guy removed. Both the Jewish people and the Roman people. He caused problems across the board.

    06:51-07:07

    So that's who Barabbas is. Let's pick it up in 17. So when they gathered Pilate said to them, "Whom do you want me to release for you? Barabbas or Jesus who is called Christ, for he knew it was out of envy that they had delivered him up.

    07:08-07:25

    Besides, while Pilate was sitting on his judgment seat, his wife sent word to him, "Have nothing to do with this righteous man, for I have suffered much because of him today in a dream." Now the chief priests and elders persuaded the crowd to ask for Barabbas and destroy Jesus.

    07:26-07:31

    The governor again said to them, "Which of these two do you want me to release to you?

    07:31-07:45

    And they said, "Barabbas." Pilate said to them, "Then what shall I do with Jesus, who is Christ?" And they all said, "Let him be crucified." And he said, "Why?

    07:45-07:50

    What evil has he done?" But they shouted all the more, almost a riot type.

    07:51-08:01

    "Let him be crucified." Church, there's a lot of heavy content in this passage.

    08:02-08:08

    But I want to focus on the choice that was made by the crowd and the Jewish leaders.

    08:11-08:17

    And as I was studying this, I tried to put myself in the shoes of different characters in this passage.

    08:17-08:20

    And one that I kept kind of focusing on was Pilate.

    08:21-08:23

    Pilate's this arrogant guy.

    08:24-08:25

    He thought he was big stuff.

    08:25-08:28

    And if you asked him, he would have told you he was big stuff.

    08:31-08:33

    And he needed a win.

    08:33-08:38

    Because if we read earlier, he had done some pretty bad stuff to the Jewish people, and he needed this win.

    08:39-08:40

    So this kind of fell into his lap.

    08:41-08:43

    Here's this guy Barabbas that was already arrested.

    08:43-08:46

    He was going to destroy Barabbas one way or the other.

    08:47-08:51

    But then he had this guy Jesus that the Jewish leadership didn't really like.

    08:53-08:55

    but he was going to give them a prisoner.

    08:56-09:06

    And I kind of picture him almost coming out, you know, thinking the crowd's cheering for him, and really not, you know, and kind of throwing up like, "Hey, you guys want me to release a prisoner?

    09:06-09:14

    Here's this guy that none of us like." Or you can have Jesus that you guys just don't like as a person.

    09:14-09:15

    He hasn't done anything, you just don't like him.

    09:16-09:18

    And I kind of picture him almost turning his back and walking away.

    09:19-09:26

    And when they said Barabbas, him almost stopping in his tracks and being like, "What'd you just say to me? Barabbas?

    09:28-10:03

    Do you...terrorist Barabbas? You want him?" But Jesus hasn't done anything. He even says that. He says, "Why? What evil has he done?" And they ignored it and just said, "Crucify him. Give us Jesus." And we see later, not to be a spoiler alert, but he gave them Jesus and washed his hands and said, "Whatever, I don't want to be a part of this." But I want to focus on the choice that they made.

    10:04-10:06

    They chose Barabbas over Jesus.

    10:08-10:24

    And when I've read this before, I've always kind of sat there and go, "How in the world did they pick Barabbas?" this terrorist, this evil person that had murdered people, that was so disruptive in everything.

    10:25-10:28

    How did they choose for rabbits?

    10:32-10:38

    And they were supposed to, they just didn't like Jesus, and they should have known who he was as the spiritual leaders.

    10:38-10:43

    They should have known that prophecy was being fulfilled, and they didn't care.

    10:43-10:47

    They wanted him out of their life because they didn't like what he was saying.

    10:47-10:49

    He was calling them out for their hypocrisy.

    10:49-10:51

    He didn't, they did not like that.

    10:56-11:00

    And the scripture tells us three reasons that they chose Barabbas.

    11:01-11:07

    And those church are the same three reasons that we continue to choose Barabbas.

    11:08-11:10

    You might say, Ryan, we don't, we're not choosing Barabbas.

    11:11-11:12

    That happened 2000 years ago.

    11:12-11:19

    Now here's the thing, and this is what God revealed to me, and when he revealed this to me, this entire passage changed.

    11:20-11:23

    'Cause Barabbas represents sin.

    11:25-11:36

    And when you see Barabbas that way, if you would look into your own life, you see that we choose sin every day over Jesus.

    11:38-11:40

    So yes, we choose Barabbas.

    11:40-11:49

    We continually choose Barabbas for the exact same reasons the Jews did.

    11:51-11:53

    So let's look at those three reasons.

    11:54-11:59

    We're going to look at those, and at the end, I'm going to offer a solution how to stop choosing Barabbas.

    12:01-12:02

    Let's go to verse 18.

    12:05-12:10

    We choose Barabbas because we are too self-centered.

    12:12-12:15

    In verse 18, actually, let's back up to 17.

    12:16-12:29

    "So when they gathered, Pilate said to them, 'Whom do you want me to release to you, Barabbas or Jesus who is called Christ?' For he knew it was out of envy that they had delivered him up." Be honest with me again.

    12:30-12:35

    Have you ever made a choice because of jealousy, because of envy, because of self-centeredness.

    12:37-12:42

    We live in this world that focuses on me, me, me, me.

    12:43-12:45

    Social media is all about me.

    12:46-12:51

    We put our family photos up on Facebook, you know, white shirt, khaki shorts, look at us on the beach.

    12:54-12:57

    I know my family and I went to the beach twice, but we didn't dress like that.

    13:00-13:02

    And there's nothing wrong with putting pictures on Facebook.

    13:02-13:03

    That's not what I'm saying.

    13:03-13:06

    But you get my point, everything's focused on me.

    13:08-13:15

    And when it's not focused on me, I get jealous and I'll do everything to get myself back at the center of focus.

    13:16-13:17

    We do that at work.

    13:17-13:19

    Why is that guy getting a promotion and I'm not?

    13:20-13:22

    I work so much harder than that person.

    13:22-13:26

    I'm so much better at my job and they got a promotion and I didn't.

    13:26-13:32

    Or I don't get treated fair enough, so I'm gonna leave and go to another job where the grass is greener.

    13:33-13:36

    and I never take time to focus on what Jesus wants me to do.

    13:37-13:38

    We'll do that in our own marriages.

    13:39-13:43

    Husbands, we'll look at other wives and go, why doesn't my wife treat me like that?

    13:46-13:47

    Wives will do the same thing.

    13:49-13:52

    That wife's husband treats her like a princess.

    13:52-13:54

    Why doesn't my husband treat me that way?

    13:55-13:56

    So you know what?

    13:56-13:59

    I'm gonna get out of this marriage and I'm gonna go find a new one.

    14:02-14:07

    Why am I going through this hard time and my fellow Christian is not going through this hard time?

    14:09-14:12

    I'll remove myself from that and I'll get mine.

    14:13-14:14

    So my life is better.

    14:16-14:21

    And we do that so many times because it's all about me.

    14:23-14:32

    And I would rather listen and try to dictate the score and dictate what I'm gonna do rather than listen to Jesus and follow his path.

    14:35-14:44

    Church, if we would follow Jesus' path that he has laid out for us, the blessing on the other side of that is gonna be so much greater than anything we can imagine.

    14:48-14:50

    But no, we wanna dictate what happens.

    14:53-14:58

    And maybe Jesus has you in that difficult position because he's trying to show you something.

    15:00-15:08

    He has you going through that difficult relationship because of the blessing he has on the other side that you won't get if you don't follow his path.

    15:09-15:10

    His blessings are always better.

    15:12-15:20

    But envy, jealousy, and self-centeredness stop those blessings from happening and they destroy our relationship with Jesus.

    15:23-15:24

    Let's go back to the text.

    15:27-15:34

    Point number two, we choose Barabbas because we are too willing to listen to others.

    15:37-15:40

    Verse 19 and 20 are going to show us two examples of this.

    15:42-16:08

    Verse 19, "Besides, while he was sitting on his judgment seat, his wife sent word to him, 'Have nothing to do with this righteous man, for I have suffered much because of him today in a dream.'" Then in verse 20, "Now the chief priests and elders persuaded the crowd to ask for Barabbas and destroy Jesus." Husbands, wives, we look at verse 19.

    16:08-16:11

    We see Pilate's wife putting peer pressure on him.

    16:13-16:15

    Have you ever done that? Husbands?

    16:16-16:18

    Ever made a decision because your wife wanted it?

    16:20-16:22

    Don't send me emails about that.

    16:25-16:26

    Why? Our husbands, have we ever done that?

    16:27-16:29

    Or wives, have you ever done that?

    16:29-16:34

    Made a decision just because your husband wanted it and never took time to listen to what God had you to say.

    16:35-16:40

    Peer pressure is not something I have to explain in great lengths.

    16:41-16:45

    We see peer pressure from the first day of grade school to the day we go in the grave.

    16:46-16:48

    There is peer pressure all of us.

    16:49-16:52

    And we see that in 19 and 20.

    16:52-16:56

    We see it happening in the home, and then we see it happening in public settings.

    17:00-17:03

    Peer pressure right now is happening so much in our country.

    17:04-17:11

    Every day, the media is telling, "Believe this or you're this." No, no, no, believe this or you're this.

    17:11-17:14

    If you don't believe this, that automatically makes you this.

    17:16-17:19

    And if you don't, well, then I just hate you.

    17:19-17:21

    I want nothing to do with you.

    17:23-17:25

    You can't have this unless you admit to this.

    17:26-17:28

    Peer pressure is everywhere.

    17:31-17:33

    And oftentimes we'll go along with it.

    17:33-17:33

    Why?

    17:34-17:43

    Because we're more afraid of our fellow human beings than we are of being out of perfect harmony with Jesus Christ.

    17:45-17:50

    Our relationship with Jesus should be so strong and so good, it doesn't matter what people are telling us.

    17:54-18:05

    That we should just go, "Listen, whatever you do to me, I don't care because it's far less than me being out of perfect harmony with my Lord and Savior." You might say, "You don't understand.

    18:06-18:11

    I get it at home, I get it at work, I get it everywhere you go." I may not understand, but Jesus does.

    18:12-18:24

    And he proved it as he was standing there in this crowd, is going, "Change what you say or we're going to murder you." We see that in the previous chapter.

    18:25-18:32

    And God just stood there and said, "I will not, because my father is telling me I must do this.

    18:33-18:38

    And what you're telling me to do is a direct violation to what my father wants me to do.

    18:38-18:39

    And I cannot do that.

    18:41-18:42

    I cannot go against my father.

    18:45-18:46

    And he did.

    18:47-18:51

    He stood there and eventually was murdered for us.

    18:55-19:03

    But oftentimes, oftentimes we're so afraid of our human race, we're more afraid of our human race than disappointing God.

    19:04-19:07

    And we'll choose to go with peer pressure because it's easy.

    19:09-19:10

    And that's so shameful.

    19:13-19:14

    So shameful for us.

    19:18-19:19

    Let's go to the third point.

    19:21-19:25

    And for this, I'm actually going to jump over to John 19.15.

    19:27-19:31

    And John's telling the exact same story that Matthew's telling us.

    19:32-19:40

    But the way that John worded it is so applicable for this third point that I wanted to use it.

    19:41-19:44

    So John 19, 15, it's gonna be on the screen.

    19:46-19:53

    They cried out, the crowd, they cried out, away with him, away with him, crucify him.

    19:55-19:58

    Pilate said to them, shall I crucify your king?

    20:00-20:05

    And the chief priest answered, we have no king but Caesar.

    20:07-20:16

    Wow. Church, understand what they're saying. The Jewish people hated Caesar.

    20:16-20:30

    They hated him. And they said, "I'd rather put Caesar in front of Jesus." My sworn enemy, the person I hate, I will put in front of Jesus.

    20:31-20:34

    In church, that is idolatry.

    20:37-20:45

    Anything that you put in front of Jesus that is more of a priority in your life than Jesus, that's an idol.

    20:46-20:53

    So my third point, we follow or we choose Barabbas because we are too eager to worship idols.

    20:54-21:08

    And oftentimes when we think of idols, we think of these little golden statues or a Buddha type, or we think addiction or greed, substance abuse, pornography.

    21:11-21:17

    But let me tell you a story about an idol that I had in my life and to be honest I didn't really even know I had it.

    21:20-21:33

    So we have, Sarah and I have three children. We have our oldest child is a girl, our youngest child is a girl and right in the middle is my poor son. He's five, he's six years old now.

    21:36-22:13

    Full of life, full of energy. But when, his name's Milo. When Milo was three years old, I'm sorry, three months old, he went into the hospital with a respiratory virus. No, it wasn't coronavirus. It was RSV. And we had actually gone through this a year before with my oldest daughter. She had it. She was in the hospital for a few days and she was released. Everything was fine. But with Milo, he went in and we expected to be in there for a few days. Three weeks later, we still weren't out of the hospital.

    22:16-22:20

    And it was a roller coaster of emotions going through that.

    22:20-22:22

    Some of you experienced that with us when it went through.

    22:23-22:24

    I know Jeff was there, Murph, you were there.

    22:27-22:30

    And there was times where it was, "Hey, you might go home tomorrow.

    22:31-22:32

    Hey, Milo might never leave the hospital.

    22:33-22:34

    Hey, we got it figured out.

    22:34-22:42

    We have no idea what's going on." And just this roller coaster of never knowing what was going to happen to my son, my boy.

    22:44-23:06

    And I remember one day, in one of the just lowest points that we were, going to work the one day, working on a job site, and I had, I remember having my sunglasses on and just tears flowing down my face, just crying out to God, going, "God, don't take my son from me.

    23:07-23:41

    I don't care what else you do, don't take my son from me." And in this moment of just deep, deep prayer, and just blocking all the noise out, I remember hearing a voice going, "Ryan, that's not your son, that's mine." And having to break down and say, "Father, if you take my boy, I'm okay with it, and I'll praise you." I had turned Milo into an idol.

    23:42-23:53

    You may say, "Ryan, that's just you being a dad, loving your kid." No, because what I told God was, "God, I'll follow you anywhere, but not to my son's grave.

    23:55-23:57

    You can do anything to me.

    23:58-23:59

    I will do anything for you.

    24:00-24:08

    Don't you take my family." My family became more important to me than anything else.

    24:10-24:18

    And here's the truth, my wife of 13 years, my beautiful kids, they haven't done for me, but my Lord and Savior did.

    24:19-24:20

    Not even close.

    24:24-24:25

    My family was my idol.

    24:26-24:31

    And until I got them behind Jesus Christ, my relationship wasn't going to go any further.

    24:33-24:42

    We were always going to be limited because Sarah, Zoe, Milo, and Avery were more important to me than Jesus Christ.

    24:44-24:52

    An idol is anything that is your number one priority over Jesus Christ.

    24:53-25:06

    And you have to get to the point where either A, you have to remove that idol completely from your life, or in my case, I can't remove my family, but I have to reprioritize where they are in my life.

    25:10-25:15

    Because Jesus will not thrive in my life if he's not the most important person to me.

    25:19-25:28

    But oftentimes, we as Christians are more willing to put anything in front of Jesus, including Barabbas.

    25:30-25:35

    And I know these three points have been a lot of bam, bam, bam.

    25:35-25:36

    We're bad people.

    25:38-25:40

    You know, we're too self-centered.

    25:41-25:42

    We fall to peer pressure.

    25:42-25:44

    We have idols in our lives.

    25:45-25:48

    But before we close, I want to offer you a solution.

    25:49-25:53

    How do we stop choosing Barabbas?

    25:55-25:58

    Or that answer is found in Jeremiah 29, 13.

    26:01-26:14

    Jesus is talking and he says, "You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.

    26:16-26:19

    Come at me with everything you have.

    26:20-26:24

    Make me the number one priority in your life.

    26:25-26:27

    Get in the gospel.

    26:27-26:28

    Search for me.

    26:28-26:29

    Find me.

    26:29-26:30

    He's not hiding.

    26:31-26:34

    All he's doing is come after me with everything you have.

    26:34-26:37

    If you don't go to church here, that's okay.

    26:37-26:49

    Understand that for the past year, we have been going through a study in the gospel of John that is entitled "Knowing Jesus." Not with your head, with your heart.

    26:52-26:58

    the heart for Jesus, that He is everything to us.

    26:58-27:01

    And my relationship with Jesus is the most important thing.

    27:04-27:08

    But what we want to do oftentimes as Christians is we want to do two things with Jesus.

    27:08-27:15

    Either we make Him this unattainable, mythical, magical creature that's unapproachable, and we can never go to it, so why even try?

    27:16-27:17

    Why even try?

    27:19-27:24

    Or we make him this grandfatherly type thing, sitting in a rocking chair.

    27:24-27:26

    He's, you know, "Oh, shucks," kind of person.

    27:27-27:34

    By the way, if I hear one more person say, "The big man upstairs," I'm going to open hand slap him.

    27:36-27:38

    There needs to be respect for Jesus, for God.

    27:39-27:41

    He's not this grandfatherly person.

    27:41-27:43

    He's not this mythical, magical creature.

    27:44-27:59

    He's our Father that sent His Son and put Him in the hands people he created to be tortured and mutilated for us so that we could spend eternity with God.

    27:59-28:10

    Because if that doesn't happen, the second we step into holiness, if Jesus' death hadn't made us holy, when we step into heaven, we're destroyed because God can't be around holiness.

    28:11-28:15

    And the only way that happens is Jesus Christ coming to this earth and dying.

    28:17-28:20

    And God was willing to do what I wasn't willing to do.

    28:21-28:23

    And he went to his son's grave.

    28:24-28:29

    He watched his son get mutilated by the very clay that he made.

    28:32-28:56

    And he said, "Here, do what you will with him, because it's the only way you're going to get to me." If we truly, truly know who God is and have a real relationship with God, it becomes increasingly more difficult to choose anything but Jesus.

    28:56-29:01

    So when the two choices are put in front of us, we have Jesus or Barabbas, it's just, "Bam, get out of here.

    29:01-29:07

    I don't need Barabbas because I'm automatically going to choose Jesus because I've put my self-centeredness aside.

    29:08-29:12

    I'm done listening to peer pressure and Jesus is number one in my life.

    29:16-29:21

    But until we get to that point, we will continue to choose Barabbas.

    29:22-29:24

    We will continue to choose sin.

    29:28-29:37

    When we became children of God, we were given the ability, through Jesus Christ, to say no to sin.

    29:40-29:43

    We just have to not choose Barabbas and choose Jesus.

    29:46-29:54

    So church, leaving here today, who will you choose from now on?

    29:56-29:57

    Jesus or Barabbas?

    29:59-29:59

    Let's pray.

    30:02-30:04

    Father, I thank You for this day.

    30:05-30:08

    Thank you for this opportunity to stand up here today.

    30:11-30:13

    And Father, I wanna pray for two people.

    30:15-30:31

    Number one, I wanna pray for the people that may not even know you as their Lord and Savior, who have no idea what it's like to choose Jesus for the first time, who have been choosing Barabbas every time.

    30:33-30:40

    Father, I beg you, please do not let them leave here today without getting that taken care of.

    30:43-30:54

    Secondly, Father, I wanna pray for my fellow Christians and God, I am the number one culprit of this, of choosing Barabbas over you.

    30:55-31:01

    Father, I pray that from this day going forward, we choose Jesus.

    31:02-31:04

    both as individuals and as a church.

    31:06-31:09

    I thank you, Father, for your grace.

    31:13-31:18

    Father, please bless this church, and bless our weeks going forward.

    31:19-31:21

    In Jesus' name we pray, Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Matthew 27:15-23

  1. What was your big takeaway from this week’s sermon?

  2. As Christians we know that God's plan is better for us and we will be fully blessed if we follow his path. Why do we continue to follow our own self ambitions and try to solve “bad” situations ourselves?

  3. Read Matthew 26:59-66. We see that Jesus did not crumble under the most severe form of peer pressure, why is it so important that we know God's Word and stand for what is right in our current culture? How can we use God's Word to resist peer pressure?

  4. Typically we think of idols as addictions or greed, but an idol is anything in your life that takes Jesus from being your first priority? How can you recognize an idol in your life? What is something you have allowed to take priority over your walk with Christ? How can you remove or realign those priorities?

Breakout
Pray for each other to work on their relationship with Jesus. Be honest about your walk. Share the areas you’re good and share your areas of weakness.

Submitting to the Seasons

Introduction:

How Should I Handle the Changing Seasons of My Life? (Eccl 3:1-15)

  1. I should Wisely adapt to Change and Not resist it . (Eccl 3:1-8)
  2. I should Trust in God's timing and Not force my own . (Eccl 3:9-15)

    A.W. Tozer - "It is doubtful whether God can bless a man greatly until He has hurt him deeply."

David Gibson - "Living well in God’s world means recognizing that when it comes to our lives, we are not mini-gods, and this is His creation, not ours. We have all the pieces of our life given to us, and things come and go and seasons change, and it is only God who knows exactly where everything is meant to go, in which order, at what time, and why.”

Taylor Brown is a CONTROL FREAK!

Taylor Brown is still a CONTROL FREAK!

Click image for video

Click image for video

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

  • 00:00-00:31

    My name is Taylor Brown, I'm the youth pastor of a North Park church, but before I worked at North Park, I was actually an intern here for around a year or so. I was able to preach and get some of my first ministry experience here, so Harvest has a big part of my heart. I'm really glad to be here with you this morning. I've preached at Harvest at two middle schools and at the place down the road with the Camelot. This is my first time ever preaching here, so I'm really excited to be with you this morning in this space. So for the next minute or so, I want you to step into the mindset of a seven to 10 year old.

    00:31-00:37

    If you have a child that age, try to think and process how they see the world around them.

    00:37-00:39

    Are we ready for this mental exercise?

    00:40-00:51

    Now imagine that your parents are leaving you at home by yourself for an entire week because they're going on a trip and they don't want to bring you with them because they actually want it to be a vacation.

    00:51-00:53

    I think all the parents can kind of relate to that, right?

    00:53-00:58

    I know this is a really ridiculous, made up scenario, but please just play along with me.

    00:58-01:04

    So for 168 hours, you get to decide what you do and what you eat.

    01:04-01:08

    Let me ask you, what would you eat over the course of this week?

    01:08-01:15

    Would you carefully meal plan to make sure you hit all the major food groups and eat the right combination of fruits and vegetables?

    01:15-01:16

    Not at all.

    01:16-01:19

    You would eat all the junk food in your house.

    01:19-01:21

    You would eat Oreos by the sleeve.

    01:21-01:23

    You'd be eating whipped cream out of the can.

    01:23-01:26

    You'd be shoving candy down your throats, right?

    01:26-01:34

    Okay, someone's like, "I really want that to be the true scenario this week." Now imagine what you would actually do over the course of this week.

    01:34-01:40

    Would you try to get ahead of your studies during the summer, do all your chores on time, and make your bed every morning?

    01:40-01:48

    No, you'd be watching TV all day, playing video games, staying up until all hours of the night until you finally crashed after a massive sugar high.

    01:48-01:52

    Last question, how would you feel at the end of this week?

    01:52-01:54

    Would you feel well-rested and healthy?

    01:55-02:04

    No, you would have a massive stomach aches, you'd be so tired, because kids don't understand that moderation is important.

    02:04-02:08

    Left on their own, kids will only choose what's fun.

    02:09-02:13

    They won't choose to eat that which tastes the best to them.

    02:13-02:19

    They wouldn't understand these activities in mass quantities are very, very destructive.

    02:20-03:19

    Children who live this kind of lifestyle would be very unhealthy, very sleep deprived, and be very self-centered. In a much greater way, if we weren't in complete control of our lives, we would only pick relaxation, comfort, we would only choose fun. We would completely steer clear of hard work, pain, and trials. And by doing so, we would become spiritual lightweights who missed out on all the joys, all the blessings that come with depending upon the Lord. We become very self-centered people who only care about our wants, our needs, our desires. Thankfully, we are not in charge and we serve a sovereign and all-wise God who is in control of every single aspect of our lives. This morning we're going to focus our attention on Ecclesiastes chapter 3 verses 1 through 15 and learn that there is beauty, purpose, and meaning behind every single season of life that we must walk through.

    03:19-03:30

    This is a very timely passage of scripture to read because we find ourselves in a very difficult season right now in this world and in this country specifically.

    03:31-03:39

    It seems like new issues, new difficulties keep popping up every single week and we don't know what's going to happen next.

    03:40-04:08

    you've lost a job, maybe you're facing an illness, maybe you're really stressed out about the direction that our country is taking, it's really easy to give ourselves over to discouragement and hopelessness during this season that we find ourselves in, this coronavirus season. But God wants each and every one of us to trust in Him and believe that He always does what is right, that He He knows exactly what he is doing.

    04:08-04:17

    So I hope and pray that all of us, myself included, will walk away from this sermon with a greater sense of trust and dependence in our God.

    04:17-04:22

    So if you have your Bibles, please turn to Ecclesiastes chapter 3, verses 1 through 15.

    04:23-04:32

    And the question I want each of us to answer this morning is, "How should I handle the changing seasons of my life?" How should I handle the changing seasons of my life?

    04:32-04:37

    Number one, I should wisely adapt to change and not resist it.

    04:37-04:40

    I should wisely adapt to change and not resist it.

    04:41-04:47

    The first eight verses of the third chapter of Ecclesiastes are popular with Christians and non-Christians alike.

    04:48-04:53

    Even unbelievers will have this section of scripture read at their funerals.

    04:53-05:00

    King Solomon, the author of Ecclesiastes, taps into something very close to everyone's heart.

    05:01-05:34

    really important realities of life that I want us to read about together in verses 1 through 8. Solomon writes, "For everything there is a season and a time for every matter under heaven, a time to be born, a time to die, a time to plant, a time to pluck up what is planted, a time to kill, and a time to heal, a time to break down, the time to build up, a time to weep and a time to gather stones together.

    05:34-05:38

    A time to embrace and a time to refrain from embracing.

    05:38-05:39

    A time to seek and a time to lose.

    05:40-05:42

    A time to keep and a time to cast away.

    05:42-05:45

    A time to tear and a time to sew.

    05:45-05:48

    A time to keep silence and a time to speak.

    05:49-05:51

    A time to love and a time to hate.

    05:52-05:55

    A time fo war and a time for peace.

    05:56-06:02

    Throughout all of Ecclesiastes, these verses stand out as uniquely poetic and beautiful.

    06:03-06:12

    As I was studying for this message, I realized that these eight verses are made up of 28 different phrases, which can be broken down to 14 different pairs.

    06:12-06:16

    This list includes multiples of seven.

    06:17-06:19

    Now you'd be thinking, "Taylor, why does that matter?

    06:19-06:24

    "Why are you giving us a math lesson right now?" Well, the number seven is very important throughout all of scripture.

    06:25-06:29

    The number seven symbolizes completion or perfection.

    06:30-06:38

    So by using multiples of seven, Solomon is trying to show us this list includes all the things that we can go through in this life.

    06:38-06:44

    One writer puts it this way, this list includes the totality of all things that are contained within any human life.

    06:44-06:48

    This is a complete summary of the seasons of life.

    06:49-07:00

    It touches upon birth and death, planting, sowing, tearing down, building up, crying, laughing, war, peace, love, hate.

    07:00-07:05

    Everything that you can possibly go through in this life is accounted for on this list.

    07:06-07:13

    By reading this, Solomon wants to take a big step back and see our lives from the big picture perspective.

    07:13-07:20

    He wants us to expect massive changes, massive surprises, and even difficulties and suffering.

    07:21-07:23

    Raise your hand if you hate change.

    07:23-07:25

    You love it when things stay the same.

    07:26-07:26

    Not that many of you.

    07:27-07:28

    Who likes when things change?

    07:29-07:31

    I'll never understand you people, but I'm glad that you exist.

    07:32-07:37

    I absolutely hate change and I resist it whenever it comes into my life.

    07:37-07:39

    Case in point, I absolutely hate surprises.

    07:40-07:42

    If you want to ruin my birthday, throw me a surprise party.

    07:43-07:44

    I hate that.

    07:44-07:48

    If I walk into a surprise party, I'm just going to walk right out because I don't want to be there.

    07:48-07:50

    I want to know if the party is going to happen.

    07:51-07:58

    Unfortunately for me, and those of you who don't like change as well, change is inevitable and we have to deal with it.

    07:58-08:00

    We cannot fight against it.

    08:01-08:10

    In these eight verses, Psalm is calling us to submit to the seasons of life and adapt to the changes, adapt to the situations that come into our lives.

    08:11-08:11

    And this isn't easy.

    08:12-08:15

    This takes great wisdom, discernment, and patience.

    08:16-08:22

    When you enter into a season of suffering, into a season of pain, how are you going to handle that?

    08:23-08:24

    Are you going to grumble?

    08:25-08:26

    Are you going to be negative?

    08:26-08:27

    Are you going to complain?

    08:28-08:30

    Or are you going to choose the trust in the Lord?

    08:31-08:36

    We have to recognize that God brings these trials into our lives for a very particular reason.

    08:36-08:44

    Even the season we find ourselves in right now, God didn't just allow it, He brought it into our lives because He is sovereignly in control of everything.

    08:45-08:50

    we go through these situations God wants us to get better and not grow bitter.

    08:51-10:47

    Instead of asking God why is this happening, let's start to ask God what do you want me to learn through this trial? Let me tell you from experience the why question will just drive you insane and stir up doubts and fears in your heart and your mind while the what question will help you to make progress in your relationship with the Lord and become more like Christ. On the other hand, when you experience a season of tremendous blessing and abundance, don't just congratulate yourself. Pat yourself on the back and forget to thank God for his blessings. Don't forget to thank God for his goodness. When something you work really hard for falls apart, don't just refuse to ever try again. Learn from your mistake, learn from your failure and move on. When a loved one passes away or a close friend betrays you, don't just shut down completely and hold everyone else at an arm's length. Mourn this loss and ask God for his help so you can move forward and learn to live with this pain. You can't always control what happens to you, but you can always control how you respond to what happens to you. Did we catch that? You can't always control what happens to you, but you can always control how you respond to what happens to you. Will you respond with hope and wisdom or you respond with foolishness and despair? All right, secondly, how should I handle the changing seasons of my life? I should trust in God's timing and not force my own. I should trust in God's timing and not force my own. Let's move forward and read verses 9 through 15. "What gain has the worker from his toil? I a man to be busy with. He has made everything beautiful in its time. I want that verse to really stick with you. Let's read it again. He has made everything beautiful in its time.

    10:47-11:31

    Also he has put eternity in a man's heart, yet so he cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end. I perceive that there is nothing better for them than to be joyful and to do good as long as they live. Also that everyone should eat and drink can take pleasure in all of his toil, that is God's gift to man. I perceive that whatever God does endures forever. Nothing can be added to it nor anything taken from it. God has done it so that people fear before him. That which is already has been, that which is to be already has been, and God seeks what has been driven away. So in addition to hating change and surprises, I will admit that I am definitely a control freak.

    11:32-11:34

    Raise your hand if you're a control freak like me.

    11:35-11:39

    You're not very go with the flow type of person, you have to be in control of everything that's going on in your life.

    11:39-11:41

    Who's more of like a relaxed, easygoing person?

    11:41-11:43

    You don't really worry that much about the future.

    11:44-11:48

    Now I really wish that I was more like you and less like myself in that way.

    11:49-11:51

    You know, the control freak has this mentality.

    11:51-11:53

    If you want to get something done right, you have to.

    11:54-11:57

    And that's how I always feel in different ways in my life.

    11:58-12:04

    And case in point, I absolutely hated group projects in high school and college.

    12:04-12:06

    Who else hated group projects?

    12:06-12:07

    'Cause you know why?

    12:07-12:12

    I was the one in the group who cared the most about the projects, so I did most of the work.

    12:12-12:20

    Now some of you were like me, the neurotic people who did everything, and some of you were the slackers who took advantage of people like me.

    12:20-12:30

    In the spring of 2013, I was a senior at Geneva College and I was on the cusp of graduating and I made the unwise decision of saving one of the hardest classes for last.

    12:31-12:32

    Now there's a class called political science.

    12:33-12:40

    This is a class at Geneva that's known for its senseless busy work, its difficulty, and a lot of people push it off until the last moment.

    12:41-12:44

    And our final assignment was a group project.

    12:44-12:49

    I heard those words come out of my professor's mouth and I just like died a little bit inside.

    12:50-12:53

    And he assigned the groups at random, which is even worse.

    12:54-12:59

    Now let me ask you, do you think I was given the hardest working members of this class.

    12:59-12:59

    What do you think?

    13:00-13:04

    I was given the biggest slackers, didn't seem to care if they passed or failed.

    13:05-13:08

    And so I was the one who elected myself to be the leader of this project.

    13:08-13:10

    I was texting people, emailing them.

    13:10-13:12

    After a week, no responses.

    13:13-13:14

    No one responded to me.

    13:14-13:16

    I was getting so angry.

    13:16-13:19

    I was like, there's no way these people are gonna drag me down with them.

    13:19-13:23

    I'm not gonna fail this assignment and mess up my final semester at college.

    13:23-13:24

    So you know what I did?

    13:24-14:04

    Geneva is small enough that I was able to find out where they lived. I tracked them down. I went to their apartments and their dorms. I made them carry out their end of the deal. In one case, I actually looked over a guy's shoulder as he was typing out the assignment to make sure that he was actually doing it. And then you're wondering why is there a picture of this? My friends and I have a Facebook page, a private Facebook page called Four Years at Geneva where we post pictures and videos from our time there. My one friend followed me to document this. He took pictures of me leaning over this guy's shoulder and trying to show him how he was doing the assignment wrong. That was the next picture. There's me lecturing.

    14:04-14:32

    Apparently I was lecturing him for a long time. I don't really know. But my stalking paid off and we got an A minus on the assignment. So it kind of worked out in the end. Who thinks I went too far in stalking these people? Some of you are like, wow, I really judge this guy a lot. I don't know about this. Who thinks I was perfectly justified in what I did? All Regardless of what you think about my stocking story, we can all admit that I am a control freak who has a hard time letting things go.

    14:32-14:34

    We all can struggle with this at times, can't we?

    14:35-14:39

    We can all struggle with letting go of the control that we think we have.

    14:40-14:45

    But the older I get, the more I realize how much of my life is completely out of my control.

    14:46-14:48

    And this realization shouldn't terrify me.

    14:48-14:49

    It shouldn't terrify you.

    14:51-14:59

    it should fill us with peace, comfort, and hope because we know the track record and the character of the God that we serve.

    15:00-15:03

    All of us have certain plans for our futures.

    15:03-15:07

    We all have certain timetables for when we want our dreams to become a reality.

    15:08-15:17

    But Solomon bursts our bubble in verse 11 when he tells us that God has put eternity in a man's heart yet so that he cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end.

    15:18-15:26

    In other words, we have a deep-rooted desire as human beings to intimately know the future and completely understand God's plans.

    15:27-15:31

    But unfortunately, God is far beyond our limited minds.

    15:31-15:39

    He is beyond our full comprehension and there are going to be things about His ways that will never make sense to you in this life.

    15:39-15:43

    As Solomon tells in this passage, we were made to live forever.

    15:43-15:47

    And one day, we will see the Lord face to face in heaven.

    15:47-15:49

    His plans will make sense.

    15:50-15:52

    What he did in our lives will begin to come into focus.

    15:53-16:00

    Until that day, we have to be content to have some of our biggest questions about God and this life go unanswered.

    16:01-16:02

    Are we willing to accept that?

    16:03-16:05

    Are you willing to accept that?

    16:05-17:38

    Even though you can't look into a crystal ball and see your future, you can know that your God's planned out exactly what your future looks like. Your future is a firm and fixed plan that God has and nothing and no one can stand in his way, not even you. You know, sadly, we often think that we know better than God does. Sometimes I try to give God advice when I'm praying. You ever do that? I try to tell him what to do, how to do it, and when it needs done. To be clear, it's a good thing to pray for specific things and pray for specific outcomes, but it becomes a huge massive problem when you hold God to these plans and get angry at him. When he doesn't follow your exact timetables. God isn't your employee who you can boss around and tell him what to do. He is your employer. He is your boss. He is the one who is in charge. He is the one who knows what is best for you. What's that song? Some of God's greatest gifts are unanswered prayers. I can definitely look that and say that is very, very true. Now this is a illustration that's not going to hit Pastor Jeff very well, but hopefully you all like it. Who is a fan of the Lord of the Rings movies or the books? Now Jeff passed out during the first movie several times, so he's not going to really get what I'm talking about. Now who's never read a single one of those books or watched any of those movies? All right, so some of you haven't. For those of you who haven't read these books or watched some movies, it's basically a fantasy setting and there's these little creatures called hobbits. They're like little dwarfs in this area of this country called Middle Earth.

    17:39-17:56

    And the beginning of the first movie, a wizard named Gandalf comes to town, and Frodo, a hobbit, he sees him, he runs to the wagon, and he says to Gandalf, "You are late." And Gandalf looks at Frodo in the face and he says, "A wizard is never late, Frodo Baggins, nor is he early.

    17:56-18:02

    He arrives precisely when he means to." You know, a lot of times we say the same thing to God.

    18:03-18:03

    God, where are you?

    18:04-18:09

    God, don't you care about what I'm going through? I need you to show up right now.

    18:09-18:13

    And God's trying to give us the same exact message that Gandalf gave to Frodo.

    18:13-18:19

    I am never late, nor am I early. I arrive precisely when I mean to.

    18:20-18:23

    Regardless of how you feel, God never forgets about you.

    18:23-18:28

    God never delays. He knows exactly what He is doing. He knows what is best for you.

    18:28-18:31

    And that's why He doesn't always give you what you want.

    18:32-18:35

    That's why he brings trials and hard times into your life.

    18:36-18:40

    These hard times are evidence that God loves you, not that he hates you.

    18:41-18:49

    God brings these times into your life to smooth out your sinful and rough edges and mold you into the image of Jesus Christ.

    18:49-18:59

    As you read the Bible, it becomes very clear that every single godly man and woman used by God to do great things had to go through immense pain.

    18:59-19:10

    The famous theologian A.W. Tozer once wrote this, "It is doubtful whether God can bless a man greatly until he has hurt him deeply." That really changes our perspective, doesn't it?

    19:10-19:13

    I in no way want to trivialize your pain this morning.

    19:14-19:18

    I in no way want to minimize the grief that you may be feeling right now.

    19:19-19:25

    Walking through the valleys of life is never an easy journey and there are gonna be days where you feel like giving up.

    19:26-20:00

    There are gonna be days where you feel like life is random and chaotic, but I want you to know this morning that God never, ever wastes your pain. Ever. The road to sanctification, becoming more like Christ, is paved with suffering, but its destination is eternal life. The road of worldliness is paved with comfort and relaxation, but its destination is everlasting destruction. So I want you to answer these questions honestly morning. Do I believe that my God's perfect plans are better than my own?

    20:01-20:54

    And secondly, do I trust in the Lord or do I trust in myself? Do I trust in the Lord or do I trust in myself? Trusting in the Lord isn't a one-time decision you make at your conversion when you bow the knee to Jesus as your Lord and Savior. It is a difficult decision that needs to be made multiple times a day. There is no harder decision than choosing to trust rather than doubt. Choosing to have hope rather than giving in to hopelessness. Our view of God is often blocked by our insecurities, our fears, and our doubts, but true faith is keeping your eyes fixed on Jesus when you suffer and go through pain. True faith is believing that God is good, that God is in control when you're walking through the valley of the shadow of death and you cannot see what lies ahead.

    20:54-21:00

    True faith is trusting in God even when it seems like he doesn't know what he's doing.

    21:00-21:03

    Even when it seems like he's not in control of your situation.

    21:04-21:10

    True faith is believing that God will make something truly beautiful out of everything in this life.

    21:10-21:17

    You know this life is really similar to standing really close to a massive painting at the Carnegie Museum of Art.

    21:18-21:23

    If you've ever been there, just try to imagine yourself standing in front of this massive, massive painting.

    21:24-21:30

    And you're at one end, and you see these beautiful combinations of yellow, blue, red, and green.

    21:31-21:34

    And this part of the painting fills you with a lot of enjoyment and excitement.

    21:34-21:39

    As you move down, you come across these seemingly random splotches of brown and grey.

    21:39-21:42

    And this section just seems kind of random and pointless to you.

    21:42-21:48

    And you continue to move on and there's one part of the paint that's just pure darkness.

    21:48-21:53

    It looks like the painter just threw a bucket of black paint against the canvas for no reason.

    21:54-22:00

    As you back up, you are blown away by the scope and the beauty of this masterpiece.

    22:00-22:05

    Those sections that seem just random and pointless add depth and nuance to the painting.

    22:06-22:11

    Those sections of black make the other colorful parts just pop that much more.

    22:11-22:14

    You know, one day we're going to see our lives like that.

    22:14-22:19

    One day we're going to see our lives from an eternal perspective and everything will change.

    22:20-22:23

    We'll see that trial we went through that seemed to have no meaning.

    22:23-22:26

    We'll finally understand that's why God did that.

    22:26-22:28

    That's why he led me through that.

    22:28-22:34

    You'll see all the people that you were able to bless by being Christ-like through that experience.

    22:34-22:38

    All the threads of your life will come together and finally make sense.

    22:39-23:28

    realize that God was in control all along. Our lives were not chaotic. Our lives are the work of a divine painter. I'm gonna close our time this morning with a quote that really comforts my soul. "Living well in God's world means recognizing that when it comes to our lives we are not many gods and this is his creation not ours. We have all the pieces of our life given to us and things come and go and seasons change and it's only God knows exactly where everything is meant to go, in which order, at what time, and why. So instead of doubting the Lord's goodness and stressing out about what might happen in the future, let us trust this masterful artist and believe that he will make something truly beautiful out of whatever we're going through right now, no matter how ugly and dark it may seem. Let's pray.

    23:30-24:07

    Sovereign God, we thank you for who you are. We ask for forgiveness for the ways we fail you. We thank you that even though we fail you, you love us and the grace of Christ upholds us. We thank you that when you see us, you see the perfection of your Son, you see the holiness of Jesus. Lord, fill in where we have weaknesses. Help us where we are inadequate, Lord. Help us to keep our eyes fixed on your Son and believe that you know exactly what you're doing. Lord, Lord, there are those in this room who are really struggling right now and feel like they have no idea what to do next.

    24:07-24:11

    Lord, come alongside them this morning and comfort them and speak to their hearts.

    24:12-24:19

    And for those of us who are about to go into a trial and don't even know it, please prepare us and get us ready to trust in you.

    24:20-24:21

    In Jesus' name, amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Ecclesiastes 3:1-15

  1. Why should it encourage us to know that the Lord is sovereign and in complete control of every single aspect of our lives?

  2. Why does the Lord bring trials and difficult seasons into our lives? How is the presence of suffering in our lives the proof of God's love for us?

  3. Discuss examples from the Bible where God used pain and suffering to prepare His servants for ministry. Share a time when the Lord used a painful trial to help you become more like Christ and bless others.

  4. What does it look like to trust in the Lord and not yourself? How can you strengthen your dependence upon God over the upcoming week?

  5. How can we as believers make the most of this current quarantine? How is the Lord calling you to grow and bless others?

Breakout
Pray for the strengthening of those suffering during this uncertain “lock-down/quarantine” season.

Jesus In The Clutch

Introduction:

How Do I Know Jesus Will Come Through In The Clutch?

  1. Because He's My authority . (1 Pet 5:6)
  2. Because He Cares . (1 Pet 5:7)
  3. Because He's Stronger than my opponent . (1 Pet 5:8-9)

    Genesis 49:8-10 - "Judah is a lion's cub; from the prey, my son, you have gone up. He stooped down; he crouched as a lion and as a lioness; who dares rouse him? The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor the ruler's staff from between his feet, until tribute comes to him; and to him shall be the obedience of the peoples."

2020-JUL-Koll_1400sq_sm.jpg

Revelation 5:5 - And one of the elders said to me, "Weep no more; behold the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has conquered, so that he can open the scrolls and its seven seals."

Revelation 20:10 - "and the devil who had deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and sulfur where the beast and the false prophet were, and they will be tormented day and night forever and ever."

  1. Because He Always sees it through . (1 Pet 5:10-11)

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

  • 00:00-00:06

    Well, good morning. I'm very, very thankful to be up here in front of you all and to have this opportunity.

    00:07-00:11

    Before I start, let me just start with a word of prayer, and then we'll get going this morning.

    00:14-00:20

    Heavenly Father, thank you for what you've been doing in my life, God, to lead me up to this moment.

    00:20-00:23

    God, I thank you that you have led me through this message.

    00:23-00:31

    Lord, I thank you for another opportunity to gather together here today as a church and to hear your word, hear your truth.

    00:32-00:34

    God, I pray that we would hear these things from your word.

    00:36-00:43

    We would apply it directly to our lives and that we would grow closer to you and stronger in our walk with you as well.

    00:44-00:47

    I lift all of these things up in Jesus's name, amen.

    00:50-00:52

    So open up your Bibles with me please to 1 Peter.

    00:53-00:54

    Be in chapter five.

    00:55-00:58

    We'll be going through verses six through 11.

    01:01-01:10

    And a few months ago, my wife, Lexi, and I, we went for a walk, or actually a run, before coming here to church on a Sunday morning.

    01:12-01:16

    Already a weird day, unusual day, because I was up any earlier than I had to be on a weekend.

    01:16-01:17

    Never happens.

    01:18-01:24

    So we came back from this run, and we realized that there was a puddle on the kitchen floor.

    01:25-01:26

    Okay, that's weird.

    01:26-01:27

    It was underneath the dishwasher.

    01:28-01:34

    Maybe it wasn't all that weird because we had had a leak underneath our sink for the last couple of days.

    01:36-01:48

    So we let our landlord, who just happens to be my father-in-law, Joe, he's here today, we let him know the issue and he was set to bring a plumber out in the next coming days, maybe even that next day.

    01:49-01:55

    We thought, you know what, why don't we just shut the water off to the dishwasher so we don't have a puddle every day.

    01:55-02:29

    Okay, so here I go underneath our sink having absolutely no idea what I was doing. Here I come, this is my plumber stance by the way, I get underneath here, open up the door, find a little lever, go to pull it, gives a little bit of resistance, but then it turns. Get up, I don't know what I was really expecting in this moment but thought, "You know what? That can't be it. It's too easy. It's the first lever I saw.

    02:29-02:33

    I pulled it and nothing happened." So there must be another one underneath there, right?

    02:34-02:46

    I go again back underneath the sink. There's a second lever. Looks just like the first one, only it's further back this time. I go to pull that one and it gives a lot of resistance.

    02:48-03:13

    But I think to myself, "Well, it's got to be it. I mean, this is the lever." So I pull on it more, pull on it more, and pull on it more, and then all of a sudden, bang. My hands just drop straight to the ground, and there is a gigantic hole behind our sink, and water is rushing out of it like a waterfall. I mean, straight fire hose.

    03:15-03:20

    And the sound of this water coming out of the wall still haunts me to this day.

    03:22-03:26

    So it's a complete disaster and I'm now in scramble mode.

    03:26-03:29

    First thing I do is I call up my father-in-law, "Where are you?

    03:29-03:30

    Help!

    03:31-03:37

    How do I shut the water off?" And my next question was, "Where are you?

    03:37-03:40

    Can you please help me?" He was 25 minutes away.

    03:41-03:46

    It was gonna be a long shot. He's trying to just talk me through how to shut the water off. I'm running downstairs.

    03:47-04:03

    I'm checking in the garage. Meanwhile, Lexi's upstairs and having no clue what else to do is just underneath the sink with a bucket and just pouring it back into the sink because we've got nothing else left to do. We are on the deck of the Titanic.

    04:05-04:21

    And I remember at one point opening up the garage because that was a potential place where I could shut the water off and looking up at the ceiling and just seeing the water through the ceiling, into the garage, onto our car.

    04:22-04:28

    And in that moment, just thinking, "Oh my gosh, I'm flooding our house.

    04:29-04:36

    I am going to flood our house." So this went on for what felt like five hours, but it was really only a couple of minutes.

    04:37-04:49

    And then finally, at the last minute, right before the water that was all over the kitchen went into the living room, to our hardwood floors, possibly ruining them and warping them forever.

    04:50-04:55

    I went back to a knob that I tried to turn before and just turned it harder.

    04:55-04:57

    And eventually that shut the water off.

    04:57-05:00

    But at the very, very last minute.

    05:02-05:06

    So young and naive I was just those long months ago.

    05:09-05:13

    And if you don't know, Andrew did say in the introduction, I work in sports talk radio.

    05:13-05:17

    So in my mind, a lot of things go back to sports analogies.

    05:17-05:19

    That's just how my mind has been wired.

    05:20-05:26

    And in sports, we like to call this moment of triumph, this moment of victory, coming through in the clutch.

    05:27-05:29

    Just sounds cooler, basically.

    05:30-05:37

    And these moments of triumph and victory in the last seconds are easily recognizable, and they separate some athletes.

    05:38-05:43

    It's like when Ben Roethlisberger threw that touchdown pass in the corner of the end zone to San Antonio Homes and the Super Bowl.

    05:45-05:46

    That was coming up in the clutch.

    05:47-05:56

    When Sidney Crosby scored the golden goal in the Olympics in overtime to defeat Team USA, that's coming through in the clutch.

    05:57-06:02

    It defines these legends, these sports heroes, if you will, as loosely as you can use that term.

    06:04-06:05

    The moments that people remember.

    06:07-06:16

    And I learned some valuable lessons that day with the water put too much pressure on an older skinny plastic pipe and always know how to shut your water off.

    06:18-06:36

    But my shutting off the water is of course far from that glorious moment and was more God giving me grace in that moment. And in saying that I can't help but to think that Jesus Christ is that legend. He's that figure for all of us brothers and sisters in the faith.

    06:37-07:11

    He's capable of coming through in those moments when you feel lost, feel desperate, feel confused, scared like I was with that water. Or in the moments when you've been fighting through something, a sin in your life that you're trying to overcome, a financial hardship, or just any difficult decision that you've had to make that you've been wrestling with, You just need some clarification. Just need some direction. That extra push to get you through it and on to the other side. To get victory over that thing.

    07:13-08:25

    And that's when you can rely on Jesus Christ. That's when He shows you His power and shows He is worthy of all your trust and can come through in the clutch for you. And you may hear that and you think, "Well, that's, I mean, He made up Jesus in the clutch, really awesome, sports, whatever, but how do I know that this is true? How can I know that when I've exhausted myself and my abilities and things are at their worst that Jesus will lead me through? Let's go to his word, as we should all the time in these scenarios and as we should daily as Christians, and let's see for ourselves why we can have that confidence, why that's not just a cute saying. Turn in your Bibles with me please if you haven't to 1st Peter chapter 5 starting in verse 6. This is Peter writing from what he refers to as Babylon which is most likely Rome and he's addressing this to Christians scattered all over including Asia Minor which is now modern day Turkey and he's writing this to encourage them as they are still under Roman control and they're suffering much persecution. So let's read.

    08:28-08:57

    "Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God so that at the proper time he may exalt you, casting all your anxieties on him because he cares for you. Be sober-minded, be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a firm in your faith, knowing the same kinds of suffering are being experienced by your brotherhood throughout the world.

    08:58-09:09

    And after you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace, who has called you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish you.

    09:10-09:13

    To him be the dominion forever and ever. Amen.

    09:15-09:21

    So how do I know Jesus will come through in the clutch? Well, number one on your outlines, because he's my authority.

    09:23-10:15

    Let's go back to verse 6 here real quickly. It says, "Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God so that the proper time he may exalt you." I love that this passage starts out this way. Why? Because it establishes right away that if you don't get your own pride out of the way, if you don't humble yourself before your Lord and Savior under his mighty hand. If you think you know better and you can do a better job and you know the right moves to make than the one who created you and created everything around you, who knows all your faults, all your weaknesses, who understands the situation that you're going through and on a deeper level than you could even possibly comprehend, then you'll fail. Every time.

    10:17-10:34

    Holding on to your pride will ruin you. And if you want more assurance on that, you can look no further than the verse before this statement in verse 5 in 1 Peter, where it says, "Likewise, you who are younger, be subject to the elders.

    10:34-10:55

    Clove yourselves, all of you, with humility toward one another, for God opposes the proud, but gives grace to the humble." So not only does our pride ruin us, but did you see what else is is added on there, the little cherry on top of your hottie sundae, that God is actually opposed to the proud.

    10:56-11:00

    He's on the other side of you whenever you're too prideful.

    11:01-11:02

    He hates that.

    11:03-11:05

    This brings it to a whole other level.

    11:07-11:14

    This is taking the field, and God Almighty, big, giant God, is on the other side.

    11:15-11:18

    He's looking to go against all your best efforts.

    11:20-11:23

    This is like following a GPS in an area that you've never been before.

    11:25-11:28

    And you're driving along, and all of a sudden, you start to feel pretty confident in yourself.

    11:29-11:30

    Say, hey, that tree looks familiar.

    11:31-11:33

    I think I know where I am right now.

    11:34-11:37

    So all of a sudden, you decide not to follow that GPS anymore.

    11:38-11:42

    And you start to go down roads that maybe the GPS didn't tell you to go down.

    11:44-11:56

    And now somehow every turn that you take, every shortcut that you take, every right turn that you think you're making along the way is somehow leading you farther away from your destination.

    11:57-12:00

    And it just keeps getting worse and worse and worse.

    12:01-12:05

    And you're driving yourself even further away from your goal, from your victory.

    12:06-12:09

    And ultimately in this case, from God.

    12:10-12:11

    It's working against you now.

    12:14-12:19

    So before you can go any further in asking for Jesus to come through for you, it has to start here.

    12:21-12:22

    It has to start with humility.

    12:24-12:27

    With being willing to admit that you don't know the best way out.

    12:28-12:29

    Or the best way forward.

    12:31-12:34

    Be humble so that God can lift you up in due time.

    12:35-12:40

    Be humble so that God can offer you His grace, as it says in verse 6.

    12:40-12:45

    And that word grace being something that is given to us that we don't deserve.

    12:47-12:50

    Stop trying to do it all on your own and in your own strength.

    12:51-12:51

    It's silliness.

    12:54-12:57

    And I've been there before, recently, like this week recently.

    12:58-12:59

    I know what that's like.

    13:01-13:02

    Know that God is your authority.

    13:04-13:08

    We've been called to obey His authority and humbly serve Him with our lives.

    13:09-13:15

    And it's a lot easier to know and accept that God is your authority when number two is also true on your outlines.

    13:16-13:20

    Which is that I know Jesus will come through in the clutch because He cares.

    13:22-13:23

    Let's look at verse 7.

    13:25-13:32

    It says, "Casting all your anxieties on Him because He cares for you." Our God is not socially distant.

    13:34-13:39

    He didn't just create us, maybe with a mask on, and just walk away.

    13:40-13:41

    That's not what our God did.

    13:42-13:58

    He didn't just place us in the world on this broken earth to just kind of fend for ourselves and figure out the many trials and tribulations of this life and say, "Hey, even through your struggles you just got to find a way to come back to me." No, that's not how it works.

    13:59-14:00

    He's in our every day.

    14:01-14:02

    He knows our emotions.

    14:04-14:14

    What makes us happy, what makes us excited, what makes us angry, what frustrates us to no end, and what we really need to satisfy our souls.

    14:15-14:19

    And as mentioned in verse 7 here, what makes us anxious as well.

    14:21-14:25

    Like whenever we've run out of options and we just kind of throw our hands up and we say, "You know what?

    14:26-14:26

    That's it.

    14:26-14:27

    I've got no other answers left.

    14:28-14:33

    All I can do is just look up." Have you ever been there before?

    14:34-14:35

    That feeling?

    14:37-14:38

    Cast your anxieties on him.

    14:40-14:40

    Why?

    14:41-14:42

    Because he cares.

    14:44-14:50

    Every year my wife Lexi and I go on a trip to the Dominican Republic, except for this year of course because it was canceled.

    14:51-14:57

    And every year we get to see a great example of how caring makes a difference.

    14:57-15:04

    The local leaders there are pouring into the kids that we run the basketball and volleyball camp with.

    15:05-15:11

    And they're taking time out of their every day to pour into those kids and to meet their needs, every one of their needs.

    15:12-15:23

    Physical needs by feeding them meals, their emotional needs by just sitting down and having a conversation with them about what's going on in their lives, what's going on at home.

    15:25-15:30

    those coaches can relate to them very well because they've been through some of the same things.

    15:32-15:43

    And also meet their spiritual needs by having Bible studies with them, by going through Scripture before we start every day at camp. And they show to them that they care about them.

    15:44-15:51

    Here I am investing my time and my energy to you in meeting those needs personally for you.

    15:53-16:00

    And it all comes together, it all means that much more to these kids when somebody shows they care.

    16:01-16:06

    That they aren't just a number. And that's what God is telling us here through Peter.

    16:08-16:39

    And what a statement that is, really, if you think about it. I mean, here God says, "I already know what is making you anxious. I know it. And I love you, and I care for you, and I'm big enough to handle it. So bring it on. Cast all your anxieties, cast all your fears, all your sins, all your failures, everything. Lay it on me, and I can handle it.

    16:41-16:47

    I can lead you through it. I'm inviting you to pass over all your baggage onto me.

    16:49-16:53

    Don't leave anything on the table, because I'll know if you do.

    16:54-17:07

    Bring it all to me so that I can lift you up, so I can come through for you in your most desperate moments. So please come to me in humility, because I care for you.

    17:10-17:50

    So now knowing that God is my authority and that he cares for me, here's another truth of why Jesus will come through in the clutch of my life. And it's number three, because he is stronger than my opponent. Let's look at verse eight. It says, "Be sober-minded, be watchful. Your adversary, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour." Now, this is certainly a bit of a change here with the message. Now, all of a sudden, Peter is warning us to stay focused, To stay alert, to stay aware of the things that we're saying, the people that we are spending time with, how we're acting, who we're surrounding ourselves with.

    17:52-17:52

    Why does he say that?

    17:54-17:56

    Well, it's because we have an enemy.

    17:57-18:03

    And our enemy is described here as prowling around like a roaring lion, looking for someone to devour.

    18:04-18:05

    That's the adversary.

    18:07-18:08

    And do you get that image?

    18:09-18:18

    I think of just a lion hunched down, maybe in some tall grass somewhere, straight out of like a National Geographic show.

    18:19-18:20

    It's like licking its lips.

    18:20-18:31

    It's looking toward the horizon at a young or injured wildebeest, ready to just pounce on it the minute that the herd turns its back, the minute that it can get it alone.

    18:34-18:41

    And I think that's the picture that's being painted here, that our enemy, Satan, is always prowling around.

    18:43-18:46

    He's always waiting to just pick us off the minute we turn away from God.

    18:47-18:54

    The minute we isolate ourselves, and the minute we're easy to pick off, turn our back on God.

    18:56-19:00

    So hold that thought and hold that image in your head for just a couple minutes.

    19:01-19:06

    You've probably heard many times that Jesus is characterized as a lion in Scripture.

    19:07-19:11

    He's the lion of what? Judah. The tribe of Judah.

    19:12-19:13

    One of the twelve tribes of Israel.

    19:15-19:24

    And the idea of a lion being attached to this tribe goes back to Genesis 49, when Jacob is delivering parting words to each of his twelve sons.

    19:26-19:37

    And when he got to Judah, his fourth, he said in Genesis 49, starting in verse 8, "Judah is a lion's cub. From the prey, my son, you have gone up.

    19:38-19:43

    He stooped down, he crouched as a lion, and as a lioness, who dares rouse him?

    19:45-19:52

    The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor the ruler's staff from between his feet, until tribute comes to him.

    19:53-20:04

    And to him shall be the obedience of the peoples." So here the lion has the imagery of being majestic, of being kingly in nature.

    20:04-20:07

    Like who dares rouse up this lion?

    20:07-20:09

    Who would dare to do something like that?

    20:10-20:14

    And that's significant because this is the tribe that's full of great kings.

    20:16-20:25

    From King David, King Solomon, And ultimately, of course, the King of Kings, the King of Heaven and Earth, King Jesus, comes through this line.

    20:27-20:31

    And the scepter there in Genesis 49 is the staff that kings often have in pictures that you might see.

    20:32-20:42

    It's that symbol of authority, and it says it shall never depart from Judah, meaning Jesus reigns as King and will forever.

    20:44-20:49

    So based off of that, we know for sure that Jesus is a lion.

    20:51-20:58

    Now let's go back to verse 8 in 1 Peter, and let's read this carefully and look at the distinction.

    21:00-21:12

    It says, "Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion." It doesn't say your enemy prowls around as a roaring lion, like he already is.

    21:14-21:16

    but just that he wants to act like one.

    21:17-21:18

    He wants to devour you.

    21:19-21:24

    He wants to control you, to try to be your king, and make you think that he is one.

    21:26-21:26

    But he's not.

    21:28-21:30

    He merely tries to act like one.

    21:31-21:33

    There is a huge difference there.

    21:35-21:47

    And I can't talk lions and kings without getting into one of my favorite movies of all time, One that I requested to watch multiple times per day as reports from my parents as a child.

    21:49-21:49

    Aladdin.

    21:49-21:50

    No, The Lion King.

    21:52-21:55

    Here in The Lion King, we have Mufasa and we have Scar, right?

    21:56-21:59

    Where Mufasa is clearly a real king.

    22:00-22:04

    Where under his rule, the pride is going well, everything's relatively peaceful.

    22:04-22:06

    Clearly he's what's best for the kingdom.

    22:08-22:09

    And then there's Scar.

    22:10-22:11

    Satan, if you will.

    22:12-22:17

    just trying to come in there and mess everything up, to ruin things.

    22:18-22:27

    He even kills his own brother Mufasa and then tells Mufasa's son that it was his fault, making him run away forever so that he can have the kingdom.

    22:29-22:36

    And he takes over the land and he drives it right into misery and despair because of all of his evil intentions, because that's what he wanted to do from the very beginning.

    22:38-22:47

    Scar wasn't a real lion. He wasn't a real king. He just prowled around looking to devour as if he was one.

    22:49-22:58

    He was a fake. And spoiler alert, if you haven't seen the movie that came out in 1993, I believe, he was ultimately defeated.

    23:00-24:05

    And guess what? So Satan has also. We know that for a fact. We can find that answer in God's Word as well. We've seen it twice going back to our study in Revelation that Pastor Jeff led us through. First in Revelation 5.5 where coming on to the scene is one that can only read the scrolls and break the seven seals and take his throne. The only one that can do that. 5.5 says, "And one of the elders said to me, 'Weep no more. Behold, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has conquered so that he can open the scrolls and its seven seals.'" And then in Revelation chapter 20, when Satan is thrown into the lake of fire to be tormented forever. And the devil who had deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and sulfur where the beast and the false prophet were.

    24:06-24:12

    They will be tormented day and night forever and ever." There's the victory.

    24:14-24:31

    That's the lion. Point being here, God is stronger than my opponent. God's already won. That mountain in front of you that seems impossible to climb, that that stronghold, that enemy you've been dealing with, doesn't stand a chance.

    24:33-24:36

    There's nothing or no one he can't.

    24:38-24:45

    So we're called to resist Satan, the fake, knowing that we have the power and the Holy Spirit to do so.

    24:46-24:50

    And we do so knowing that we're also not alone, as verse 8 tells us.

    24:51-25:18

    That our brothers and sisters sitting here next to us today, and sisters across the street at Northway, our brothers and sisters in the rest of the Pittsburgh area and the United States, and certainly our brothers and sisters across the world who suffer much persecution for their faith know exactly what we're talking about here. They go through the same temptations and the same sufferings that we've gone through ourselves.

    25:20-25:28

    And that leads me to the fourth reason why I know that Jesus can come through in the clutch in my life and in your life.

    25:30-25:33

    And number four is because He always sees it through.

    25:34-25:36

    Let's look at verses 10 and 11.

    25:39-26:17

    "And after you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace, who has called you to His eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish you. To him be the glory forever and ever. Amen. And if I can go back to a sports analogy just for a second, I know. But in 2017, a game that maybe some of us would like to not remember, especially if you're a Steelers fan, maybe a game you would like to remember if you're Taylor Halland, but the New England Patriots played the Atlanta Falcons in the Super Bowl.

    26:19-26:23

    And the first half was just a disaster for New England.

    26:24-26:26

    21-3 they were down at halftime.

    26:26-26:29

    Eventually they got down 28-3 in that game.

    26:29-26:30

    Everything was falling apart.

    26:31-26:34

    New England's defense looked like they were clueless.

    26:35-26:37

    Even the great Tom Brady threw an interception for a touchdown.

    26:39-26:42

    But then if you're a sports fan, you know how the rest of the story goes.

    26:44-27:18

    that New England ended up coming back and they were racing the biggest deficit in Super Bowl history and winning that game in overtime 34 to 28. But I can't help but to think that our suffering can be like that sometimes, right? We go back to that first half, we're the Patriots and our life is just running us over. Just beating us into submission and blowing right past us without us having much to say about it at all. Just being left confused and broken. We feel helpless.

    27:20-27:52

    And whether we're feeling the weight of that directly as a result of our faith, or we're just struggling to keep our faith through this difficult time, it feels like we're fighting insurmountable odds. But in verse 10 it says that after we've suffered a little while, similar to what he was talking about in verse 9 just before this, after you've done so, He will restore you and make you strong, firm, and steadfast. God isn't just in it for the short term, for the first half.

    27:53-27:57

    As Christians, we know we are to share in the sufferings of Christ. We're promised that.

    27:59-28:08

    We're promised to have hardships if we truly live for Jesus. That people will oppose us, They'll persecute us. They'll attack us sometimes.

    28:09-28:12

    Just as they did to Jesus Himself whenever He was walking the earth.

    28:14-28:22

    And if people can do that to the Son of God, God in human form, then they can certainly do it to you while you're here.

    28:23-28:23

    We should expect that.

    28:26-28:27

    But we can't be discouraged by it.

    28:29-28:48

    1st Hen tells us that after we've suffered for the cause of God and for building up His kingdom while He's here on earth, That's when God will strengthen us and truly restore us and make us strong because we're serving him. And so let's take a step back for a moment and let's think about this.

    28:49-28:55

    Let's think about what person we know that can exemplify this the most.

    28:57-29:03

    Who suffered for a little while, greatly actually, and then rose to victory.

    29:05-29:54

    It's Jesus Christ on the cross. The ultimate example of coming through in the clutch, is it not? Jesus comes to this earth knowing what many men did not know yet, and that their real problem was not with the Roman rule or with humans that were persecuting them, but their real enemy was their sin. That was the real problem at hand, and he came to take it and to conquer it. He preached God's Word to his followers. He showed his people the way. He went against many social norms of the time, only to get captured, tortured, and hung on a cross, humiliated in front of everyone.

    29:58-30:07

    But he was supposed to be the Messiah. He was supposed to be the Savior of all mankind and he gets crucified after he professed himself that he was God.

    30:09-30:09

    That's it?

    30:10-30:11

    Really?

    30:11-30:55

    All hope lost? Of course not. In the greatest and most important comeback story of all time, the greatest example of coming through in the clutch, right when it looks like Jesus has been defeated, he couldn't be contained by the tomb. He took over our sins upon himself because he knew no sin himself, and he buried them forever. The stone rolls away and our Savior and Lord overcomes death and sin to bring us victory over our sin, if we believe in Him, and open the gates of heaven for his people to dwell with him forever.

    30:57-31:16

    That's the Lion of Judah. That's the eternal glory in Christ, and that's why we can say in verse 11, "To Him be the power forever and ever. Amen." That's the truth. So Jesus plays the long game.

    31:17-33:02

    We know that because we're free from the bondage of sin because of his work on that cross. And no matter how bad things get, doesn't matter if you feel unreachable or unworthy, Jesus can come through for you in your darkest moments because he's your authority, because he cares for you, because he's stronger than your opponent and your situation no matter what it is. Nothing is too big for Him. And because He's in it for the long haul, He's not going anywhere. And He deserves honor and glory with how you live your life daily and how we live our lives every single day. And to close, I'd like to read from Psalm 139. And you don't have to turn there. In fact, if you would, I'd like you to just close your eyes. And I want you to put everything else you might be thinking about away, and where your mind may have wandered throughout this message. Maybe it's lunch after this or whatever. And I want you to just take in these words from David in Psalm 139. And I hope this is a great encouragement for you as you go about your battles, go about your week, even go about the rest of your today. No matter what you're facing, and maybe it's just an opportunity to rest in His presence in these really strange times in our country.

    33:04-33:11

    Psalm 139 starting in verse 7 says, "Where shall I go from your spirit?

    33:14-33:20

    Or where shall I flee from your presence? If I ascend to heaven, you are there.

    33:21-33:24

    If I make my bed and shield, you are there.

    33:26-34:02

    If I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even there your hand shall lead me, and your right hand shall hold me. If I say, 'Surely the darkness shall cover me, and the light about me be night,' even the darkness is not dark to you. The night is bright as the day, for darkness is as light with you. Do you believe that?

    34:04-34:24

    Do you believe that no matter where you go, no matter what you experience, even if you've never experienced it before, and we know that a lot of us have been in that place over the last few months or so, that there isn't a place or a moment when God isn't with you.

    34:26-34:34

    And through 1 Peter chapter 5, we know His power. We know that we can have confidence in Him.

    34:36-34:46

    I'm gonna pray to close us and then we can all sing a song together that was inspired by Psalm 139 as the worship team makes its way up.

    34:49-34:53

    Father God, I thank you for just the truth in your Word.

    34:55-35:00

    I thank you that we can have confidence in you to come through in the moments where we don't have any answers left.

    35:03-35:08

    And I thank you that you are big enough to handle anything that we're going through, that it's not a secret to you, God.

    35:09-35:11

    That you are our authority.

    35:12-35:13

    We can stand firm in that.

    35:15-35:19

    Help us to humble ourselves so that we can seek the help of You.

    35:21-35:31

    And I thank You, Lord, that You care for us, that You're in our every day, You know our thoughts, our emotions, everything that's going on with us on a deeper level than we can even understand ourselves.

    35:34-35:50

    And I thank You that You are stronger and that You prove that through Your Word, that We can go from the beginning of the book to the end of the book, being Your Word, the Bible, and know that You ultimately win.

    35:52-35:57

    God, I thank You that You don't just play in the first half.

    35:59-36:06

    You aren't going to just sit around and give up, that You always see it through, that You're there until the very end.

    36:08-36:21

    I thank you for these truths and I pray that each one of us can take those and apply it to our lives and have confidence and we wouldn't have fear with anything that we are facing in our lives.

    36:22-36:27

    Thank you Lord for your power, your strength and the truth that you reveal to us in your word.

    36:29-36:31

    In Jesus' name I pray, amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read 1 Peter 5:6-11

  1. Are there anxieties in your life that you keep from God? Is there a reason you do that?

  2. What does your adversary “seeking someone to devour” look like in your life?

  3. How would you describe being “firm in your faith” mentioned in 1 Peter 5:9?

  4. What are some ways that we can humble ourselves daily so that God may exalt us?

  5. Is there a time that God came through in the clutch for you?

Breakout
Pray for each other’s anxieties that may be keeping you from your faith in God.

Lifecycle of Redemption

Introduction:

Lifecycle of Redemption (Psalm 107:10-22):

  1. Recognizing our need for it is as hard as we make it (Ps 107:10-12 | Ps 107:17-18)

    How do we recognize our need for redemption?

    1. How are things working out for you now?
    2. Are you trying to do it on your own?
    3. Is there some nagging sin you're dealing with?
    4. How's your walk?
2020-JUL-Wolski_1400sq_sm.jpg
  1. But being redeemed is practically free as we make it (Ps 107:13,19)

    How do we cry out to the Lord?

    1. In humility
    2. In reverence
    3. Psalm 145:19 - "He fulfills the desire of those who fear him; he also hears their cry and saves them"

    4. In faith
    5. Submissively
    6. Psalm 66:18 - "If I had cherished iniquity in my heart, the Lord would have not listened"

  2. And fulfills our needs abundantly (Ps 107:14,16,20)

    Psalm 50:15 - "and call upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver you, and you shall glorify me."

    Revelation 4:11 - "Worthy are you, our Lord and God, to receive glory and honor and power, for you created all things, and by your will they existed and were created."

    How do we respond to being redeemed?

    1. Thanks and gratitude (Ps 107:15,21,22a)
    2. Sharing what he's done for you (Ps 107:22b)

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

  • 00:00-00:03

    We'll be in Psalm 107 today and we'll be in verses 10 through 22.

    00:04-00:08

    While you're turning there, I'd like to share some life updates with the congregation.

    00:09-00:11

    You might know that I'm a father of two young kids.

    00:11-00:16

    I have a daughter Lydia who's five now and Silas is around two and a half.

    00:16-00:20

    And with them getting older, they're able to learn and take in a lot of stuff now.

    00:21-00:25

    They're ripe for that age where you can mold them, you can define their behaviors.

    00:25-00:30

    My wife Jessica and I will often read to them bedtime stories from a children's Bible.

    00:30-00:36

    We want to teach them about God, his character, his son Jesus, and what he did for us on the cross.

    00:37-00:40

    We want to do that in a way that they can understand that.

    00:40-00:45

    We want it to be with a message that's true, but simplified for them.

    00:45-00:52

    I think there's a lot of families that maybe raise their children on a similar Bible, but it's one where there's a lot of illustrations and pictures.

    00:54-01:55

    pictures in it are drawn idealistically, right? Everyone's clean, everyone's happy, and the thing that I get a kick out of with this is there are situations in the Bible where you know that you would be terrified or things are just going crazy and everyone's still drawn oddly calm. Like they illustrate Daniel just hanging out with the lions, even the lions they have smiles on their faces, and Lazarus being raised from the dead he just appears from the side of the building like, "Hey y'all, you know, I've been dead four days, whatever." And I get it, my kids are young, but when you read the Bible cover to cover, you find and discover that it's wrong, right? There's life and death situations, war, pain, struggle, it's all there. After all, not only is this God's word, but it's also an historical book too. So today we're going to be looking at some passages that are on that raw, true life side, when there are extreme lows and extreme highs.

    01:56-02:01

    Our passages today, we're going to be starting at the extreme lows and moving our way up to the highs.

    02:01-02:08

    Now, if you've ever watched a comic book movie in the past, you know, last decade, they follow a similar pattern, right?

    02:08-02:25

    They might not start at that low, but there always comes a point in the story where things are at their bleakest. Then somehow, through humbling themselves, through willpower or friendship, They overcome and win, they end on this high note, right?

    02:25-02:30

    That transformation, that shift from low to high, that usually comes through redemption.

    02:31-02:33

    There's stories about redeeming themselves.

    02:34-02:36

    That's the focus of our passages today.

    02:36-02:40

    We're going to be talking about redemption and our need for it.

    02:40-02:44

    But before we get diving into the scripture, I want to talk about that word, redemption.

    02:46-02:49

    It's one of those biblical terminologies that often gets secularized.

    02:50-02:52

    So we need a little bit of clarity here.

    02:53-02:58

    When I hear the word redemption or redeeming, two things come immediately to my mind.

    02:59-03:01

    A Bob Marley song and Chuck E. Cheese.

    03:02-03:05

    You might be wondering what both of those have to do with one another.

    03:05-03:08

    They don't, but maybe you can find a connection yourself.

    03:09-03:13

    The reason I think of Bob Marley is because he has a song called Redemption Song.

    03:13-03:17

    My dad used to play his albums in the car and around the house, so it's a bit of nostalgia.

    03:18-03:24

    But there's one part in the song where he sings, I'm not gonna sing, but he sings redemption songs, redemption songs.

    03:25-03:29

    So I looked up the lyrics 'cause I wanted to understand what does redemption mean to Bob Marley?

    03:30-03:34

    Well, I found that he was writing about freeing yourself from mental slavery.

    03:35-03:41

    And I don't wanna get into his beliefs, but I do wanna make the point of correlating the words freedom with redemption.

    03:42-03:44

    So let's hold that on in the back of our minds.

    03:45-03:47

    So now, what about Chuck E. Cheese?

    03:47-03:52

    Well, I think of it because we all know that nobody goes there to see the guy dressed up as a mouse.

    03:53-03:55

    We go there for the prize counter.

    03:55-04:04

    For all those outside the loop or living in a different country, Chuck E. Cheese is a family entertainment center where they have food games and corondolace ball pits.

    04:06-04:11

    A big part of their operation is a chain of exchanges or redemptions, right?

    04:12-04:16

    You buy tokens to play games, to earn tickets, to redeem them for prizes.

    04:17-04:29

    They had like little rubber snakes and bugs and candy for like five to ten tickets each and always something ridiculous like a 50cc dirt bike for 500,000 tickets that's been there since '97.

    04:29-04:30

    Nobody's going to get that.

    04:32-04:39

    Again, it's a bit of nostalgia here, but their whole business was centered around exchanges of this and that to get or redeem for something.

    04:39-04:44

    So we have these two concepts that make up redemption, freedom, exchanges.

    04:45-05:02

    we can also glean a few more general concepts. To buy back, to free, to repair, restore. Biblical redemption has similar parallels. There's this idea of purchasing or exchanging something for freedom, but it's not between men.

    05:03-05:22

    Biblical redemption is between us and God, and the thing we're being freed from is our sin. See, after the fall, the cycle of needing redemption and ultimate began ultimately have the goal of getting us back to the state that God originally intended us to be in fellowship with.

    05:23-05:32

    So God is buying us back from that socially distant state to live in eternity with our Creator in a restored or redeemed state, free from sin.

    05:33-05:34

    So how does that work?

    05:35-05:37

    How do we go about getting redeemed?

    05:37-05:40

    What is this life cycle of redemption?

    05:41-05:45

    Let's go to God's word and pick up Psalm 107 and read verses 10 through 22.

    05:46-05:51

    Here we're going to read two stories of redemption, the first being in verses 10 through 16.

    05:51-05:52

    We'll start there.

    05:53-05:58

    Some sat in darkness and in the shadow of death, prisoners in affliction and in irons.

    05:58-06:03

    They had rebelled against the words of God and spurned the counsel of the Most High.

    06:03-06:05

    So he bowed their hearts down with hard labor.

    06:06-06:08

    They fell with none to help.

    06:08-06:12

    Then they cried to the Lord in their trouble, and He delivered them from their distress.

    06:12-06:16

    He brought them out of the darkness and the shadow of death, and burst their bonds apart.

    06:17-06:22

    Let them thank the Lord for His steadfast love, for His wondrous works to the children of man.

    06:23-06:27

    For He shatters the doors of bronze, and cuts in two the bars of iron.

    06:28-06:32

    We'll continue on with our second redemption story, verses 17 through 22.

    06:33-06:38

    Some were fools through their sinful ways, and because of their iniquities suffered affliction.

    06:39-06:42

    They loathed any kind of food, and they drew near to the gates of death.

    06:43-06:46

    Then they cried to the Lord in their trouble, and He delivered them from their distress.

    06:47-06:50

    He sent out His Word and healed them, and delivered them from their destruction.

    06:51-06:56

    Let them thank the Lord for His steadfast love, for His wondrous works to the children of man.

    06:56-07:01

    And let them offer sacrifices of thanksgiving, and tell of His deeds in songs of joy.

    07:02-07:06

    My immediate reaction when reading this was, it's pretty dark and bleak, right?

    07:06-07:09

    Each story starts out extremely hopeless.

    07:10-07:14

    Both start with a situation of extreme affliction, the lobes.

    07:15-07:16

    The first story, there's imprisonment.

    07:17-07:19

    The second, sickness to the point of death.

    07:20-07:21

    How did they get there?

    07:21-07:24

    Well, scripture doesn't say exactly, right?

    07:24-07:29

    Whether they were taken by force for imprisonment, or maybe they didn't go to the doctor and that's why they're sick.

    07:29-07:34

    But we clearly see that they waited until their needs were extreme.

    07:34-07:38

    And that brings us to the first point on your outline, our need for redemption.

    07:39-07:43

    Number one, recognizing our need for redemption is as hard as we make it.

    07:44-07:47

    This is verses 10 through 12, 17 through 18.

    07:48-07:51

    So people are pretty good at messing up and making things harder than they need to be.

    07:52-07:56

    You see in both stories, the cause of their affliction, it's sin.

    07:57-08:01

    The first, it's sinful rebellion against God and His Word and spurring His counsel.

    08:01-08:04

    And the second, it's foolish ways and iniquities.

    08:05-08:07

    I think we can agree that the cause and effect are evident.

    08:08-08:11

    If you do something sinful and wrong, there's bound to be some consequences.

    08:12-08:15

    One difference between these two stories, though, is verse 12.

    08:16-08:16

    Read it again.

    08:16-08:20

    It mentions that God Himself brought about their affliction.

    08:21-08:32

    And I don't think I'm reading this wrong when I'm extrapolating from it, but it clearly states, "He bowed their hearts with hard labor." A.K.A., God himself was directly responsible for their affliction.

    08:33-08:37

    See, in the second one, it's just like, they sinned and they got sick, right?

    08:37-08:43

    Maybe they were neglecting their health or they were drinking themselves silly, but does it matter, right?

    08:43-08:49

    Between these two stories, does it matter that God intervened in the first one to bring about their affliction and not in the second one?

    08:50-08:50

    No.

    08:51-08:53

    After all, it's not God who started their troubles, right?

    08:54-09:11

    I mean, when I read these two stories, these situations, they seem almost parental in nature, right? They remind me of how I discipline -- well, and Jessica -- discipline our kids, right? There's some times when you have to step in immediately and you have to put that foot down, right?

    09:11-09:13

    You don't talk back to me and disrespect me that way.

    09:15-09:20

    Other times, you just have to provide warnings and let the kids kind of destroy themselves.

    09:21-09:24

    off of mommy's exercise ball. You're gonna slip and fall.

    09:24-09:37

    Five minutes later, "Ahh!" and I'm consoling my child, probably Lydia. I'm just rolling my eyes and just thinking to myself, "You know, I told you so." That's what I see God is doing here.

    09:38-09:52

    They reveal their iniquities. And I'll go out on a limb here, but practically all examples of my life, when things are going rough, I can trace it back to similar behaviors, lack of relationship with God, thinking I can do it on my own.

    09:53-10:09

    And I don't think I'm alone here. After all, how often is it driven into our heads as Americans, right, that you can be and do whatever you want? We live in a country that affords us every opportunity available, so don't let anybody stop you from doing what you want to do.

    10:10-10:16

    That gung-ho, can-do attitude often leaves little room for God and plenty of vacancy for sin.

    10:17-10:34

    So we're slogging through, aiming for a prize or some end goal along the way, or just rebelling against God, committing iniquities. So what do you expect to happen? And as things unravel and your situation gets worse, when do you expect it to change? I mean, how do you expect it to change?

    10:35-10:40

    That's why the first point I say, recognizing our need for redemption is as hard as we make it.

    10:41-10:50

    Depending on how stubborn or bullish you are, coming to the end of yourself and understanding You need God's redemption can come quickly or it can take a fair bit of time.

    10:51-11:02

    See, I relate to both of these examples because it took them a while to recognize their need for redemption. After all, they ended up in those extreme lows, in prison, on the verge of death.

    11:03-11:47

    See, I tend to do that myself. I rely upon myself to keep, I just keep digging that hole downwards, right? My work is one area where I struggle the most with this. See, I work with a team of people, technology, we obviously all have our specialties, but every one of us gets seen as like a subject matter expert in a given area. So, you know, I'll help people out. People often come to me to help them out with some certain problems, but some days it just turns into constant distractions, right? I can't get my work done, so I then get behind and it just snowballs throughout the entire week. I spend more time working, so I'm tired and it gets hard to separate that work stress from home. So then it just builds, builds, builds.

    11:48-12:01

    The whole time I feel like, "No, if I can just do this, if I can finish this, get this done, then it never goes according to plan." So I'm not physically in prison. I feel overwhelmed and imprisoned by my own futile efforts, sickened by them.

    12:02-12:12

    Like I said, some of you might recognize your need for redemption quickly. A need to get out of your situation and that you need God's help with that. But coming to that recognition is key.

    12:13-12:19

    So on your outline, our sub-point under number one, how do we recognize our need for redemption?

    12:21-12:26

    Coming to this recognition requires taking some stock in your situation, right?

    12:27-12:28

    And we're gonna ask ourselves some questions.

    12:29-12:34

    Not all of these are gonna apply, but here's some questions we can ask ourselves to gauge where we're at.

    12:35-12:38

    So letter A, how are things working out for you right now?

    12:39-12:40

    Are things going well?

    12:40-12:43

    Or would you say something's out of control?

    12:44-12:46

    My guess is if you're asking this question to yourself, then it's the latter.

    12:47-12:51

    Understanding that something, understanding there's something wrong is important.

    12:52-12:56

    It's not, it's a distinction that there's something bigger to this than just a mishap or an unfortunate event.

    12:57-13:00

    Letter B, are you trying to do it on your own?

    13:01-13:03

    Where are you placing your trust and strength from?

    13:04-13:05

    From yourself or from God?

    13:06-13:07

    From his word, from his people?

    13:08-13:09

    We're not meant to do life alone.

    13:10-13:13

    Is there anyone aware of your situation and are folks able to pray for you?

    13:14-13:16

    You're not as strong as you think.

    13:17-13:17

    Letter C.

    13:18-13:20

    Is there some nagging sin you're dealing with?

    13:21-13:22

    Sin is a major catalyst for trials.

    13:23-13:26

    Both verses 11 and 17 explicitly mention this.

    13:27-13:28

    It was the cause of their affliction.

    13:30-13:36

    So is there anything you're doing or continuing to do that is feeding into your situation?

    13:37-13:40

    Finally, letter D, how's your walk?

    13:41-13:42

    Are you fellowshipping with God and other Christians?

    13:43-13:49

    Asking God to show you through this, reading his word, understanding his character, and pursuing what he instructs us as Christians to do?

    13:50-13:57

    Now this isn't a comprehensive list by any means, but the idea is to get to a point where you recognize your need for redemption.

    13:58-14:06

    I mean, you can continue to beat your head against the wall or dig your hole, but once Once you're ready to turn it over to God and ask for his redemption, what do you do?

    14:07-14:09

    How much is it going to cost you?

    14:10-14:17

    Well, there's good news because the next point in your outline, number two, but being redeemed is practically free.

    14:18-14:20

    Verses 13 and 19.

    14:21-14:25

    One thing you might notice is that verses 13 and 19 are the exact same.

    14:26-14:31

    Then they cried out to the Lord in their trouble and he delivered them from their distress.

    14:32-14:45

    Now, I don't see anything before that that says that they recognized they were being sinful so they went to the soup kitchen, they said "Five Our Fathers," they donated to charity and then they promised God, "I'm never going to do that again." No, it's simple.

    14:46-14:48

    What did they do to get redeemed?

    14:49-14:50

    They cried out to the Lord.

    14:51-14:53

    Now what does that mean to cry out?

    14:53-14:55

    Is it like weeping and sobbing?

    14:56-14:56

    I don't know, maybe.

    14:57-14:58

    I mean, that could be part of it.

    14:59-15:04

    emotional outpouring of feeling of distress and helplessness, but it's beyond that.

    15:04-15:08

    There's a pleading, a desperation, a reliance upon God.

    15:08-15:15

    You've recognized your need for God's deliverance and have come to the end of yourself, so you're turning it all over to Him.

    15:16-15:18

    Come to the cost question, right?

    15:19-15:21

    What did they pay with in our stories?

    15:22-15:23

    Again, nothing.

    15:24-15:26

    No works, deeds, or negotiation with the Lord.

    15:26-15:31

    And I think there's a lot of time where people can get caught up with this concept, right?

    15:31-15:38

    They try to penalize themselves or think that there's something that they need to do to earn God's mercy and grace for their eventual redemption.

    15:39-15:43

    But if you think that's the case, then I have bad news for you.

    15:44-15:47

    Like it or not, there is nothing you can do to earn God's redemption.

    15:49-15:53

    We all fall short of the glory of God, but more on that later.

    15:54-15:56

    They cry, God responds.

    15:57-16:01

    So after we recognize our need for redemption, how do we ask for it?

    16:02-16:08

    Well, we're told in these verses, right, after all they repeat themselves, it's got to be pretty important, we cry out to the Lord.

    16:10-16:11

    Okay, so what does that mean?

    16:12-16:14

    How do we cry out to the Lord?

    16:14-16:19

    Well, I'm glad you also asked that rhetorical question because it's the next sub-point on our outline.

    16:20-16:23

    Letter number two, how do we cry out to the Lord?

    16:24-16:26

    Letter A, inhumility.

    16:27-16:31

    At this point, I'd hope you understand you need God's help, right?

    16:31-16:38

    You can't go begrudgingly to the Lord like, "Fine, please help me, I guess." That's not how it works.

    16:38-16:40

    Your heart needs to be ready for Him.

    16:41-16:45

    All throughout the Bible, when people cry out to the Lord in humility, He responds.

    16:46-16:48

    Letter B, in reverence.

    16:49-16:50

    Reverence is the fear of the Lord.

    16:51-16:54

    It's when you understand his power, his holiness, and you have a healthy respect for that.

    16:55-16:57

    God listens to the reverend.

    16:58-17:00

    Psalm 145, 19 tells us so.

    17:01-17:04

    It reads, "He fulfills the desire of those who fear him.

    17:05-17:11

    "He also hears their cry and saves them." In letter C, in faith.

    17:12-17:16

    Do you believe in God's ability to help you or is this just a last ditch effort?

    17:17-17:19

    It's one of those, "All we can do is pray" type of deals.

    17:20-17:21

    We love that here at Harvest, right?

    17:22-17:25

    You're asking the Lord who created the heavens and the earth to help you.

    17:26-17:27

    Our God is not small.

    17:28-17:32

    But maybe you think your problem is one that God doesn't want to deal with, right?

    17:32-17:34

    He doesn't want to hear about it and he's not concerned with it.

    17:35-17:37

    The scripture would tell us otherwise, right?

    17:38-17:40

    He hears the cries of the affliction.

    17:40-17:42

    He knows the number of hairs on our head.

    17:42-17:45

    He knows us intimately, what troubles us and what we need.

    17:46-17:50

    So there's no separation or categories of affliction when it comes to God.

    17:51-17:54

    It's like, he'll deal with this first, but you've been prioritized behind my gates.

    17:55-17:59

    No, have faith in God's power to help you, and he will.

    18:00-18:03

    Finally, D, how do we cry out to the Lord?

    18:04-18:05

    Submissively.

    18:06-18:08

    So turning over yourself and your situation to God is crucial.

    18:09-18:10

    There's no more room for you.

    18:11-18:12

    Time for you to let God work.

    18:13-18:17

    This includes addressing some of those questions that we asked ourselves prior.

    18:18-18:19

    So you're not walking with the Lord?

    18:20-18:20

    Get on it.

    18:21-18:22

    Sinning? Cut it out.

    18:23-18:27

    Psalm 66, 18 gives us a perfect picture of why we submit when crying out to the Lord.

    18:28-18:30

    Or rather, what would happen if you don't submit?

    18:30-18:39

    It reads, "If I had cherished iniquity in my heart, the Lord would have not listened." We can't get much clearer than that.

    18:40-18:41

    Lay it all at the foot of the cross.

    18:43-18:47

    So should we go Old Testament on this and bring out the sackcloth and ashes?

    18:49-18:53

    I mean, I guess if you're inclined to, but the heart of a cry out to the Lord is your heart.

    18:54-19:03

    You can cry out silently in prayer or aloud from your rooftop, but again, the important factor is what is driving that cry and your heart and intentions behind it.

    19:04-19:09

    I suppose that's why our point number two was saying that redemption is practically free.

    19:10-19:19

    We aren't paying with money or good deeds, but we are paying with ourselves, giving up our pride, our sin, our time, all that for his redemption.

    19:20-19:22

    Really, that's all I could see would be the only cost here.

    19:23-19:28

    Now, one other thing I wanna bring up is that there is no mention of timing here.

    19:29-19:34

    When it comes to the imprisonment, how long did it take for them to be delivered?

    19:35-19:35

    Well, it doesn't say.

    19:36-19:51

    And for the sick, was it a supernatural healing, something instantaneous, Or did God work through what we would consider to be typical methods of letting our bodily functions rebuild and recover, taking a few weeks or maybe even a couple of months?

    19:52-19:53

    I don't know, it doesn't say.

    19:54-19:58

    The one thing that we can be sure of is that God responded and delivered them from their distress.

    19:59-20:02

    He heard their cries and it did not fall on deaf ears.

    20:02-20:08

    And I know personally, it can be hard to wait for God's deliverance, especially when we're in this hyperactive, instant gratification world.

    20:09-20:12

    But if you're looking for God where He's working, you'll find it.

    20:13-20:23

    If you come back to my work situation example, I find that often when I'm overwhelmed and I've come to the end of myself and I'm asking God for His redemption, it happens.

    20:24-20:26

    It's subtle, but it does happen.

    20:27-20:34

    For instance, there's been many times where I've been on a project or something and people know like, "Hey, Mike, you need help.

    20:35-20:36

    You seem like you got a lot on your plate.

    20:37-20:40

    And you know, it's simple, right?

    20:40-20:43

    But I get redeemed from those issues.

    20:45-20:51

    Or I have meetings that are blocking up my calendar and, you know, people just push them or cancel them.

    20:52-20:54

    So I have more time to do what I need to do.

    20:55-21:02

    And I'm sure I could chalk that up to happenstance or just luck, but for that to happen over and over again when I really need it, come on.

    21:03-21:03

    I know my God.

    21:04-21:07

    He raised his son from the dead so he can push a meeting or two.

    21:08-21:14

    So maybe you're in a situation where redemption is a small need or rather it's very large, a big need.

    21:15-21:25

    But the one thing that we can be sure of, and this is the final point for today, number three is that God's redemption fulfills our needs abundantly.

    21:25-21:29

    Or rather if we're continuing the sentence, and fulfills our needs abundantly.

    21:30-21:32

    This is verses 14, 16.

    21:33-21:41

    So coming to these verses, I mean, these are the most exciting verses in the scripture, the most promising ones here, right?

    21:41-21:44

    It's the result of being redeemed, right?

    21:44-21:50

    And these people, prison, close to death, they submit to God, they cry out to Him, they're in trouble.

    21:50-21:51

    And what do they get?

    21:52-21:52

    A little redemption.

    21:54-22:00

    No, no, you know, like the imprisoned got an extra meal and it says that they got some extra basketball court time.

    22:01-22:06

    sick they got some Tylenol to help their headaches. No, that's not what I'm reading here, right?

    22:07-22:19

    God fills their knees in total. He delivers them. Imprisoned. Freed. Iron bars cut in half. Bonds bursted apart. The sick healed and freed from their destruction.

    22:20-22:25

    You know, when I read this, it's hard not to get amped, like God's coming in like a superhero to save the day.

    22:25-22:27

    But God's not a superhero.

    22:28-22:33

    And what I mean by that is that after redemption, he requires glory.

    22:34-22:37

    See, our comic book heroes we read about, typically they hide in the shadows.

    22:37-22:40

    They stop at a speeding train and then off, off and away.

    22:40-22:43

    They don't linger. They're oh so humble.

    22:43-22:44

    They just want to serve the people of Gotham.

    22:45-22:46

    Not God.

    22:47-22:49

    He demands and deserves glory, and rightfully so.

    22:51-22:54

    And for those on the fence who think I'm making this up, there's a perfect verse that addresses this.

    22:54-23:22

    Psalm 50 15 it reads, "And call upon me in the day of trouble, I will deliver you and you shall glorify me." In fact that verse kind of sums up the entirety of our scripture today, right? Crying out in trouble, getting redeemed, and now glorify God. I don't know that might seem a bit prideful, right? Selfish, right? Demanding glory? Well maybe to us as people.

    23:23-23:29

    I mean I know if somebody asked me to them, my initial response would be, "Who are you?" Right?

    23:29-23:33

    "Who are you that I need to glorify you?" Let's flip that question back on God.

    23:34-23:48

    Imagine us asking God, "Who are you?" How about the I Am, our Father who created everything by speaking it into existence, who lives outside of time and space, who cares so much about us that he sent his Son to die on the cross for our sins?

    23:49-23:57

    Now, this is kind of getting into another sermon, but what it boils down to is that God is really the only one who deserves any glory.

    23:58-24:01

    Revelation 411 sums this up kind of nicely.

    24:01-24:23

    This is where we're at the throne room, and you have the 24 elders surrounding the Lord, and they say, "Worthy are you, our Lord and God, "to receive glory and honor and power, "for you created all things, "and by your will they existed and were created." Just reading this, who or what else can compare to our Lord?

    24:23-24:29

    Now, when it comes to giving God the glory after redemption, I feel like I fall short of this many, many times.

    24:29-24:31

    I don't give him the glory that he deserves.

    24:32-24:37

    It's easy for us to go through a situation and then just move on to the next thing, right?

    24:38-24:44

    Probably more a result of our hyperactive culture, but it's not the appropriate response.

    24:45-24:53

    So on your outline, the last bit of writing today and the sub-point under number three, How do we respond to being redeemed?

    24:54-24:58

    Now unlike the last set of lists, these actually come from the text today.

    24:59-25:02

    So you might have noticed there were a few verses I didn't address.

    25:02-25:03

    Well, they'll be addressed here.

    25:04-25:06

    So letter A, how do we respond to being redeemed?

    25:07-25:08

    With thanks and gratitude.

    25:09-25:15

    This is verses 15, 21, the first half of verse 22, which I will call 22A.

    25:17-25:19

    So in verses 15 and 21, we have repetition.

    25:19-25:30

    Again, the same verse, "Let us give thanks to the Lord for his steadfast love, for his wondrous works to the children of men." Upon being redeemed, there's a lot to be thankful for, right?

    25:31-25:38

    Not just because you were delivered from your situation, but the fact is that God will redeem you over and over again.

    25:38-25:43

    And we know this because in the scripture, it calls His love steadfast, right?

    25:43-25:44

    It's not a changing love.

    25:45-25:46

    It's not a conditional love.

    25:46-25:47

    No, it's fixed.

    25:48-25:50

    We can always come to God for redemption.

    25:51-25:55

    If he's redeemed you 10 times in the past, he's gonna redeem you 100 times in the future.

    25:56-26:00

    Verse 22a adds a little bit more onto our response, right?

    26:00-26:10

    And I labeled it as gratitude, but the delineation I wanted to make here was that thankfulness was more verbal, whereas gratitude is more an action, right?

    26:11-26:16

    The first half mentions in 22, let them offer sacrifices of thanksgiving.

    26:17-26:20

    So what is that exactly, a sacrifice of thanksgiving?

    26:21-26:27

    Well, in the Old Testament, it was usually an animal sacrifice, but it was given voluntarily, right?

    26:27-26:31

    And it was shared amongst the Lord, his priests, and the worshippers.

    26:32-26:40

    Now, today we don't have a system of animal sacrifices because Christ fulfilled that in full with his death on the cross and subsequent resurrection.

    26:41-26:46

    But the idea of a voluntary sacrificial offering still stands.

    26:47-26:48

    So how's that done today?

    26:48-26:54

    Well, you know, it could be through volunteering, could be through missions work, ministry work, giving back financially.

    26:55-27:06

    Point is, we should be giving back to God, not out of obligation, because we have Thanksgiving in our heart for what he's done for us, and that calls us to an action.

    27:07-27:14

    So the next way that we need to respond to being redeemed is letter B, by sharing what he's done for you.

    27:15-27:16

    And this is the second half of verse 22.

    27:18-27:26

    Second half of verse 22 reads, "And tell of his deeds and songs of joy." So here we're called to share what he's done for us with others.

    27:27-27:32

    You know, I say that because talking about songs and songs are meant to be sang out aloud among other people.

    27:32-27:34

    I think our worship leader, Darren, would agree.

    27:34-27:36

    That's the point of a song.

    27:37-27:39

    And during this time when it was written, that's what folks would do.

    27:40-27:45

    During feasts and celebrations, they'd write songs of praise and it would get sang for all to hear.

    27:45-27:48

    Now, I myself am not a songwriter.

    27:48-27:51

    My singing voice is not my spiritual gift.

    27:51-27:52

    Let's just put it that way.

    27:54-28:02

    But I think the important takeaway here is the idea of praising and sharing what he's done for you in your own private way, right?

    28:04-28:06

    Or not even private, I mean, just in your own way.

    28:06-28:09

    For instance, praying in small groups.

    28:10-28:15

    I know it's easy in prayer time to immediately launch into your requests and your needs.

    28:17-28:30

    But interestingly enough, I don't know if anybody else has noticed this in their small group, is that during this whole Corona spat, there's been a lot of folks praising and sharing God's deliverance, His redemption, what He's done for them in these trying times.

    28:32-28:39

    Now, maybe you can write a song or sing one that's already written, but again, the idea is share what He's done for you.

    28:40-28:53

    It's an encouragement for others it glorifies God. So there we have it. Our need for redemption is as hard as we make it, but being redeemed is practically free and fulfills our needs abundantly.

    28:54-29:13

    This is the life cycle of redemption. But before we go, I would make a good "As Seen on TV" spokesman if I didn't say, "But wait, there's more." Because this whole time we've been talking about situational redemption, right? Getting into trouble, crying out to God, being redeemed, and our response to it.

    29:14-29:40

    That's gonna happen over and over and over again. It's almost very Old Testament in a sense, right? Where constant animal sacrifices were done for redeeming for the sins of the people. And honestly that's just the nature of our flesh and the characteristics of living in a fallen world. We're gonna go through situational redemption weekly, perhaps daily. And unfortunately that's where a religions stop there too.

    29:41-29:53

    They teach that you have to get right with God and if you want to go to heaven, you're caught in sin or you're unredeemed from it, well straight to hell with you or purgatory or limbo or wherever you want to call it.

    29:54-30:18

    But that's not true. See earlier I said that there's nothing you can do to earn God's redemption and I'm sticking to that because there is nothing that we can offer God that doesn't already have. He spoke the world into existence. He But interestingly enough, there's actually something additional God offers to us that fulfills our needs more than a one-time situational redemption.

    30:19-30:25

    Or rather, it's someone He offered, His Son Jesus Christ, the eternal Redeemer.

    30:26-30:29

    You might be asking yourself, "It gets better?" Yeah, a whole lot better.

    30:30-30:37

    Because placing your trust in Jesus Christ as your Redeemer means there's no more what-ifs or uncertainty of your eternal state.

    30:38-30:48

    And unlike our fight against flesh and sin and the need for situational redemption almost daily, Christ paid for us once with his blood and death for all.

    30:49-30:52

    There's no need to be redeemed by him over and over and over again.

    30:53-31:00

    Reading this passage over, we can see that same archetype or pattern between our need for redemption and our need for Christ.

    31:01-31:05

    The same affliction, outcry, and deliverance, but this time with eternal meanings.

    31:05-31:10

    And these same sermon points apply directly to trusting Christ as our Redeemer.

    31:11-31:22

    So if you listen to this message, and each time I mention our need for redemption or God's deliverance, I want you to replace it with the words "Jesus Christ" with His Son.

    31:23-31:26

    That's what's so wonderful about the Bible and God's Word.

    31:27-31:29

    Old Testament or New, it all points to Jesus.

    31:30-31:32

    So what did we learn today?

    31:33-31:34

    Well, let's substitute some words.

    31:35-31:37

    We learned about our need for Christ.

    31:39-31:47

    Recognizing our need for Him is as hard as we make it, but being redeemed by Him is practically free and He fulfills our needs abundantly.

    31:48-31:48

    Let's pray.

    31:50-31:52

    Heavenly Father, we thank You for this day.

    31:52-31:58

    We thank You for Your Son, Jesus, for redemption through His blood, His death and resurrection.

    32:00-32:01

    We know that we screw up daily.

    32:01-32:05

    We often have to ask for forgiveness and ask for your redemption, Lord.

    32:06-32:11

    And that's going to continue on all the time until we are in eternity with your Son.

    32:12-32:17

    But we have that promise of being in eternity once we trust in your Son, Jesus Christ.

    32:17-32:20

    So we are extremely thankful for that.

    32:21-32:27

    Extremely thankful that you've given us a way out of this grind, out of this fallen world.

    32:29-32:52

    thank you God that you provided a way. Thank you for being able to bring your word today. Thank you for this congregation Lord and we will now end in praise, glorifying you, singing as a response to our redemption through your Son Jesus Christ. We ask this all in your Son Jesus's name.

    32:53-32:53

    Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Psalms 107:10-22

  1. What prevents us from asking for redemption?

  2. Why is redemption practically free and not scot-free?

  3. How do we cry out to the Lord and why is it important to do it “properly”?

  4. Why should we give God glory after being redeemed?

  5. What is the appropriate response to being redeemed?
    What’re your favorite ways to go about doing those responses?

Breakout
Share with one another a time you went through a ‘Lifecycle of Redemption’.