Why Jesus? Love Right.

Introduction:

Three Things Jesus-Followers Should Be Known For (Hebrews 13:1-6)

  1. Compassion : We look for people to Love . (Heb 13:1-3)

    Five Reasons to Not Show Compassion:

    1. Maybe it's their own fault.
    2. Maybe they should suffer to teach them a lesson.
    3. Maybe they won't appreciate my help. (I've helped before and got burned!)
    4. Maybe they'll waste what I give them.
    5. Maybe I got my own problems to deal with.

    One Reason to Show Compassion:

    1. Jesus
  2. Covenant : We believe Marriage is a great thing. (Heb 13:4)
  3. Contentment : We have all we Need . (Heb 13:5-6)

    Ecclesiastes 5:19 - Everyone also to whom God has given wealth and possessions and power to enjoy them, and to accept his lot and rejoice in his toil—this is the gift of God.

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

  • 00:49-00:53

    Open up your Bibles with me, please, to Hebrews chapter 13.

    00:55-00:57

    And while you're turning, let's just pause for a moment.

    00:57-01:03

    And I would ask you pray for me to be faithful to communicate God's word.

    01:03-01:18

    And I will pray for you to have a heart open to receive it and to not just hear Bible things, but to actually hear the voice of Jesus through his word.

    01:18-01:19

    Let's pray.

    01:22-01:32

    Father, I pray that we would just have hearts that are just soil rich to receive the Word.

    01:36-01:39

    And that something supernatural would happen here.

    01:42-01:53

    Through the proclamation of your Word, through your Holy Spirit taking that Word and applying it, All glory and praise and honor and power be unto your name.

    01:53-01:56

    We pray in Jesus' name, amen.

    01:58-02:00

    Hebrews chapter 13, are you there?

    02:01-02:08

    A couple of years ago, my family, we bought a product from a company called Unmask.

    02:09-02:15

    And Unmask, especially during this peak pandemic time, they make masks for people like us.

    02:15-02:16

    And this is mine.

    02:16-02:22

    I'm not gonna put it on now because I get this microphone on, but anybody else have an unmask?

    02:23-02:23

    Anybody else?

    02:24-02:24

    Okay, a few of you do.

    02:25-02:34

    Okay, well, you know, much of the pandemic paranoia has waned.

    02:38-02:40

    So I actually had to go looking for this.

    02:40-02:47

    It was in a winter coat pocket, but I still get emails from the Unmask company.

    02:48-02:50

    And this is the email that I got this past week.

    02:52-02:55

    We get the, okay, Unmask.

    02:57-03:02

    Now you see their little mission statement, purpose statement beside Unmask?

    03:02-03:10

    If you can't see it, it says, Unmask, elevating your drink and barware to the next level.

    03:15-03:17

    Let that sink in for a minute.

    03:18-03:23

    Unmask, elevating your drink and barware to the next level.

    03:23-03:28

    And then you see headline, we're selling yogis.

    03:30-03:36

    And I get these emails and every time I get them, I just think, man, that's weird.

    03:38-03:39

    I mean, think about it.

    03:40-03:51

    Imagine that you're an employee for the Unmask company and you meet somebody and they say to you, where do you work?

    03:52-03:54

    And you say, I work for Unmask.

    03:55-03:57

    And they say, what do you do there?

    03:59-04:01

    And you say, we make coffee cups.

    04:06-04:06

    What?

    04:08-04:10

    Somewhere they got off mission.

    04:11-04:13

    And listen, this is very important.

    04:13-04:15

    They started doing one thing.

    04:17-04:23

    And now what they do has nothing to do with why they started.

    04:24-04:25

    Are you tracking with me?

    04:27-04:34

    At some point, the people at Unmask realized that the thing that they do is no longer relevant.

    04:39-04:41

    Does that sound like churches today?

    04:43-04:50

    But there are a lot of churches that are saying, you know, the thing that we started out doing doesn't really seem relevant anymore.

    04:51-04:59

    And by the way, yeah, eventually Unmask was, they were, it was from day one, they had to have known they were gonna be irrelevant someday.

    05:00-05:04

    But you realize the church of Jesus Christ is never going to be irrelevant.

    05:05-05:12

    We're never gonna say, "Hey, you know what guys, "we're closing down, people stop sinning." Never gonna happen.

    05:16-05:20

    But the unmasked people figured their original thing was no longer relevant.

    05:20-05:25

    And like I said, every time I get those emails, I just think, man, that sounds like churches.

    05:29-05:35

    That we have this gospel that saves people from their sin.

    05:35-05:40

    We have this gospel that transforms people and churches are just like, I got an idea.

    05:41-05:43

    Let's do rock concerts and pep talks.

    05:44-05:46

    Like, why?

    05:49-05:58

    It's just so easy for churches to get off mission and become known for something that was never originally intended.

    06:04-06:07

    And I have to ask you, church, what are we known for?

    06:09-06:11

    And I don't just mean like the church in general.

    06:11-06:12

    I mean this church.

    06:13-06:14

    What are we known for?

    06:20-06:22

    I can tell you what we should be known for.

    06:23-06:25

    We should be known for being different from the world.

    06:27-06:27

    We should be.

    06:28-06:30

    Because we belong to a different kingdom.

    06:33-06:35

    We have different values.

    06:36-06:39

    We don't look at life the way the world looks at life.

    06:40-06:43

    We are called, church, we are called to be different.

    06:47-06:59

    I had a guy tell me one time, he said, "You know this guy that I've been working with "for the last five years, "he just found out I was a Christian." And he said, "Wow, I'm really surprised.

    06:59-07:03

    "I didn't know you were a Christian." And I'm like, "That's really not good."

    07:05-07:05

    (congregation laughing)

    07:05-07:14

    You worked with a guy for five years and you had not the whiff of Jesus Christ on you at all, that he was shocked when he found out.

    07:15-07:19

    Maybe you shouldn't tell that story, right?

    07:19-07:30

    People that have been transformed by Jesus should be obvious and churches, we get to this last stretch in Hebrews, that's where he starts us off.

    07:30-07:33

    Here's three things that you should be known for, church.

    07:33-07:35

    And when I say you, I mean church collectively.

    07:36-07:38

    These are things we should be known for.

    07:38-07:43

    And I mean, as a household, this is what your household should be known for.

    07:43-07:46

    And as an individual, this is what you should be known for.

    07:47-07:52

    So this message is like a check your rep kind of message, right?

    07:52-07:57

    Here's three things Jesus followers should be known for from this passage.

    07:57-07:58

    Number one, write this down.

    07:59-08:00

    We should be known for this.

    08:01-08:05

    And if we're not, we better do a serious self-check.

    08:06-08:07

    Number one is compassion.

    08:08-08:09

    We look for people to love.

    08:10-08:11

    Look at verse one.

    08:11-08:22

    It says, "Let brotherly love continue." Okay, brotherly love, that's Philadelphia, that's affection.

    08:23-08:27

    And it's important I remind you that love is not a feeling.

    08:29-08:30

    Love is a principle.

    08:32-08:33

    Love is self-sacrifice.

    08:34-08:36

    Love isn't a feeling, right?

    08:36-08:38

    'Cause feelings, they come and go, right?

    08:39-08:43

    Some days I really like something, some days I really dislike something.

    08:43-08:46

    Feelings come and go, but love is a principle.

    08:47-08:47

    It's a choice.

    08:48-08:51

    I am choosing to put you ahead of myself.

    08:51-08:52

    That's what love is.

    08:54-08:58

    And it's obvious here, he's talking to believers because he uses the word continue.

    08:58-09:00

    Let brotherly love continue.

    09:01-09:02

    He's saying it's already there.

    09:02-09:04

    You already have brotherly love.

    09:04-09:09

    He's like, "Hey, keep it up, keep it up." You're like, "Okay, great, on who?" Well, I'm glad you asked.

    09:09-09:10

    Look at verse two.

    09:11-09:13

    Here's the first call to compassion.

    09:14-09:29

    He says, "Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares." The first call to compassion is hospitality to strangers.

    09:30-09:37

    And yes, yes, yes, we show hospitality to fellow believers, absolutely, for sure, but that's not what's in view here.

    09:37-09:42

    Specifically, he's talking about showing hospitality to strangers.

    09:42-09:43

    He's saying don't neglect that.

    09:44-09:49

    In other words, be intentional about showing love, showing hospitality to strangers.

    09:55-09:56

    What does that look like?

    09:56-10:08

    Well, you know, in the first century, you know, there were a lot of people traveling, missionaries, a lot of persecution, Jews being driven out when they come to faith in Christ and people needed places to stay.

    10:08-10:13

    You're like, well, how does that, how does the whole hospitality thing translate in our day?

    10:13-10:14

    Well, a lot of ways, actually.

    10:16-10:18

    You know, this church has a hospitality ministry.

    10:20-10:24

    We wanna make sure that everybody who comes through these doors feels welcomed and loved.

    10:25-10:26

    You should be part of that.

    10:27-10:32

    Everybody in this church is part of the hospitality ministry, right?

    10:34-10:41

    Some of you get this, even outside of the church, through things like foster care and adoption.

    10:41-10:46

    Those are ways that you can show extreme hospitality.

    10:47-10:55

    Whatever, whatever opportunity the Lord brings your way to show hospitality to strangers, the Hebrew writer says, don't neglect that.

    10:56-10:57

    Okay, don't neglect that.

    11:00-11:04

    But honestly, church, you know what our biggest obstacle with the whole hospitality thing is?

    11:04-11:05

    You know what the biggest obstacle is?

    11:09-11:10

    It's not that we don't want to.

    11:11-11:13

    It's not that we hate strangers or anything like that.

    11:14-11:16

    I think our biggest problem is busyness.

    11:19-11:26

    In our culture, we have packed our schedules so tight that there's no room for hospitality.

    11:29-11:34

    You couldn't welcome anyone into your home because when would you do it?

    11:36-11:46

    Everything from work to nine weeks of vacation, to camping, hobbies, sports.

    11:47-11:47

    Oh, that's the big one.

    11:49-11:55

    Some of y'all have elementary school kids that have a tighter sports schedule than Pittsburgh Pirates do.

    11:57-11:59

    They're like, "Man, Pastor Jeff, that's harsh." Listen to me.

    12:00-12:02

    I'm involved in all these things except camping.

    12:02-12:02

    I think camping's dumb.

    12:03-12:04

    But all these other things I do.

    12:06-12:07

    Do these other things.

    12:07-12:09

    I coach my son's hockey team.

    12:10-12:14

    So I'm not saying these things are bad and I'm not saying you shouldn't do them.

    12:14-12:15

    You absolutely should.

    12:15-12:17

    Here's what I am saying.

    12:18-12:26

    These things are great until they dictate your schedule to the point that you become a slave to your calendar.

    12:26-12:27

    That's the problem.

    12:29-12:36

    So yes, do these things, but church, and this isn't a new problem, but we suffocate ourselves.

    12:41-12:47

    It's not wise, and it doesn't give us opportunity to show any kind of hospitality.

    12:50-12:57

    We should be known, church, for compassion that results in real hospitality, even to strangers.

    12:57-12:59

    I love his reasoning here.

    12:59-13:02

    This is one of the most curious verses in the Bible, isn't it?

    13:03-13:05

    His reason, why should we show hospitality?

    13:05-13:07

    Why, why should I do that?

    13:07-13:14

    He says, "For thereby some have entertained angels unawares." Like, what?

    13:15-13:16

    I'm entertaining angels?

    13:18-13:23

    Well, to his Jewish audience, they would have known exactly right off the bat what he was talking about, right?

    13:24-13:30

    Abraham, Genesis 18, the Lord and two angels showed up and Abraham showed them hospitality.

    13:30-13:32

    You can check that story out later.

    13:34-13:39

    They just, they looked like men, but it was actually the Lord and two angels.

    13:44-13:59

    You know, back in high school, my wife and I went to the same high school and we had this gym teacher that was legendary.

    14:00-14:06

    Now that some of you know the legend that is Mr. Melsimenko, right Jay?

    14:09-14:15

    That's right, this guy was the most terrifying person I've ever met.

    14:16-14:18

    He was, he was just, he was scary.

    14:18-14:24

    He was like in the Canadian football league, once upon a time, he was like Canada's meanest man.

    14:24-14:26

    Look him up, he was terrifying.

    14:27-14:31

    Well, I'm hearing this story secondhand.

    14:31-14:33

    I wasn't there, but my wife was, okay?

    14:33-14:36

    She was a mackerel baby back at the time, right?

    14:36-14:36

    That's her maiden name.

    14:37-14:47

    So, but she told me one time in study hall, there was this new kid that came to the school and Samanka was the study hall, what do you call it?

    14:48-14:50

    Teachers, coaches, monitor, thank you.

    14:52-14:57

    But this kid comes in and plops down and just puts his head down on the desk and starts going to sleep.

    14:58-15:15

    And Mr. Simanko is reading his paper and he looks down over his paper and he says, "Hey, wake up, we're not sleeping here, "find something to do." And again, the kid, it was his first day, didn't know anybody, just got his stuff, right?

    15:15-15:24

    And the kid said, "I don't have anything to do, "it's my first day." So Simanko gets back to reading the paper, the kid puts his head back down and Simanko's like, "What did I tell you?

    15:24-15:38

    "We're not sleeping here." And the kid's like, "It's my first day, I don't have anything to do." Well, I'm not sure what happened next, but I know how the story ends.

    15:39-15:49

    As Samanka walked up to the kid, and Aaron can give you the details, she was there, I wasn't, but Samanka walked up to this kid and there was some kind of exchange between the kid and the gym teacher.

    15:50-15:58

    And the next thing you know, Mr. Samanka was holding the kid by his ankle upside down, a high school kid.

    15:59-16:05

    And he said, "Macaravy, go get the principal." So Aaron had to go get the principal.

    16:05-16:08

    And they never saw that kid after that, did they?

    16:09-16:16

    She says, "No." You're like, "Why are you telling us this horrible story?" Here's why.

    16:17-16:19

    You just never know who you're dealing with.

    16:22-16:23

    And that's what the Hebrew writer here is saying.

    16:26-16:29

    Obviously, he's not saying the angel is going to grab you and hold you upside down.

    16:30-16:32

    But I think you see the principles the same, right?

    16:33-16:35

    Sometimes you just don't know who you're dealing with.

    16:36-16:41

    And we show hospitality to strangers because we don't know the people that God is going to put in our lives.

    16:41-16:49

    We don't know the effect that that's going to have on them and the effect that that's going to have on other people and the effect that that's going to have in the kingdom of God.

    16:49-16:53

    We have no idea who we're dealing with sometimes.

    16:55-16:57

    So we show hospitality.

    16:59-17:03

    So get to know people, invite them into your home, invite them to your church, invite them to your small group.

    17:07-17:10

    Small groups are great opportunities to show hospitality, by the way.

    17:10-17:11

    Great opportunity.

    17:12-17:20

    Bringing people into your homes, sharing food together, laughing, swapping gym coach stories, and it's a great opportunity.

    17:20-17:23

    Getting into God's word, praying, great opportunity.

    17:25-17:27

    Church, your love for strangers reflects your love for God.

    17:28-17:31

    So more than anybody, we should be known for hospitality, right?

    17:32-17:35

    The second call for compassion is to remember the oppressed.

    17:35-17:36

    Look at verse three.

    17:37-17:51

    He says, "Remember those who are in prison, as though in prison with them, "And those who are mistreated, "since you also are in the body." Prison, what's he talking about?

    17:51-18:01

    Again, in these days of intense persecution, a lot of Jewish Christians were in jail because of their faith.

    18:03-18:12

    And I think that that's specifically what he's talking about, clarifying by calling the mistreated people that were abused and oppressed.

    18:14-18:22

    His reasoning here to remember these oppressed people, he says, "You also are in the body." What's he saying?

    18:22-18:25

    He goes, "Hey, you're a physical body too, right?

    18:27-18:29

    Like you're flesh and blood like them, right?

    18:30-18:39

    You know, the pain that they're going through, you could go through that same pain, right?" Like what he's saying is like, how would you feel or what would you want people to do?

    18:39-18:44

    Like if you were the one in prison, Like, how would you want people to care for you?

    18:45-18:46

    You're a human body too, right?

    18:51-18:52

    Do you even care?

    18:53-18:54

    Really?

    18:55-18:57

    Some of you are like, no, I don't really care.

    18:59-19:01

    I'll just be honest with you, Jeff, I don't really care.

    19:02-19:04

    Well, then I got a sermon for you.

    19:05-19:06

    Here we go.

    19:06-19:08

    Five reasons to not show compassion.

    19:09-19:11

    This is for the people that don't care and don't wanna care.

    19:12-19:14

    All right, for the rest of you, just tune out for a second.

    19:15-19:17

    I'm gonna give you five reasons to not show compassion.

    19:17-19:18

    I'm gonna go through these quickly.

    19:21-19:24

    Here's why you shouldn't show compassion, okay?

    19:25-19:27

    Letter A, maybe it's their own fault.

    19:28-19:30

    Whatever they're going through, maybe it's their own fault.

    19:31-19:32

    So why should I give a rip?

    19:33-19:34

    They brought it on themselves.

    19:36-19:36

    Not my problem.

    19:38-19:39

    Why should I care, right?

    19:40-19:41

    Can I get an amen on that?

    19:42-19:42

    No?

    19:43-19:44

    All right, how about this one?

    19:44-19:45

    It goes right with it.

    19:45-19:48

    Letter B, maybe they should suffer to teach them a lesson.

    19:49-19:51

    Come on, somebody's gotta give me an amen on that one.

    19:52-19:53

    You know what?

    19:53-19:54

    Let them suffer, who cares?

    19:55-19:56

    Why show compassion?

    19:57-20:00

    Okay, if they got themselves into the mess, let them hurt a while.

    20:01-20:02

    Maybe they'll learn better next time.

    20:05-20:07

    Letter C, maybe they won't appreciate my help.

    20:10-20:12

    going with that is I've helped before and got burned, right?

    20:13-20:18

    I've helped people before and they're like, oh, I need your help so bad.

    20:19-20:31

    And then I help them and I spend time and money and they're just like, they're like Nancy going down in the baptistry, like, you know, deuces, stay fresh cheese bags.

    20:31-20:33

    I'm out of here, you'll never see me again.

    20:33-20:37

    And like, why should I help people if they're not gonna appreciate it?

    20:38-20:39

    Is anybody gonna amen this?

    20:43-20:45

    Letter D, five reasons to not show compassion.

    20:45-20:47

    Letter D, maybe they'll waste what I give them.

    20:48-20:50

    Oh, come on, somebody, somebody amen that.

    20:52-20:52

    Okay.

    20:55-20:58

    That was underwhelming, but I appreciate the effort.

    20:59-21:00

    Maybe they'll waste what I give them.

    21:01-21:12

    Right, what if I gave them money, and they just go, and they go spend it on, They go spend it on booze and scratchy lotteries.

    21:12-21:15

    And what if they just waste it?

    21:19-21:22

    Letter E, maybe I got my own problems to deal with.

    21:26-21:29

    Come on, I got a full plate.

    21:31-21:33

    I don't have time for other people's problems.

    21:34-21:36

    Those are five reasons to not show compassion.

    21:37-21:43

    And I suppose you could justify yourself that way.

    21:45-21:46

    But here's the real sermon.

    21:46-21:48

    Here's the real sermon, one reason to show compassion.

    21:48-21:49

    You ready for this?

    21:49-21:50

    One reason to show compassion.

    21:51-21:53

    Here it is, letter A, Jesus.

    21:55-21:57

    This is why we show compassion, church.

    21:58-21:59

    There you go.

    22:00-22:02

    Come on, this is why we show compassion, church.

    22:02-22:03

    Come on.

    22:03-22:04

    Amen.

    22:05-22:06

    It's because of Jesus.

    22:08-22:21

    Now, you know, when Jesus saved you, when he showed compassion for you, when he died for you, when he suffered on the cross for you, all those reasons to not show compassion, I guarantee you, he could have said those about you.

    22:22-22:23

    And he could have said them about me.

    22:25-22:28

    Jesus could have looked at me and said, "Jeff's problems are his own fault.

    22:29-22:36

    "Maybe Jeff should suffer for what he's done." Jesus could have said, Jeff's not always going to appreciate my help the way that I think he should.

    22:36-22:37

    He would have been right about that.

    22:38-22:42

    Jesus could have said, maybe I'll waste what he does for me or gives me.

    22:44-22:47

    Jesus certainly has a bigger fish to fry than me.

    22:47-22:53

    But Jesus didn't use any of those lame excuses to not show compassion and church.

    22:53-22:56

    Neither should we.

    22:58-23:02

    How can you understand everything that Jesus has done for us?

    23:03-23:06

    and not have compassion on others who are hurting.

    23:08-23:15

    You just can't turn your heads in the needy, in your church, in your neighborhood, in your workplace.

    23:15-23:21

    Look, this year in small groups, we are getting back into community outreach.

    23:22-23:32

    And I know COVID and all that pandemic nonsense that kept us going, doing the things that we used to do.

    23:36-23:41

    I really shut down our outreach for a while, but we're getting back into it harder than ever.

    23:42-23:50

    So get out there, find people and show them that we're known for having the compassion of Jesus.

    23:50-23:50

    All right?

    23:52-23:54

    Three things we should be known for.

    23:55-23:56

    Number two is covenant.

    23:58-23:59

    Number two is covenant.

    23:59-24:01

    We believe marriage is a great thing.

    24:04-24:05

    Look at verse four.

    24:07-24:14

    He says, "Let marriage be held in honor among all." Marriage should be held in honor among all.

    24:14-24:17

    Marriage is sacred to God, okay?

    24:18-24:18

    He created it.

    24:20-24:20

    It's his idea.

    24:21-24:23

    And where did Jesus do his first miracle?

    24:24-24:24

    Anybody know?

    24:25-24:26

    At a wedding, right?

    24:27-24:34

    And the Holy Spirit uses marriage as the picture of the relationship between Jesus and the church.

    24:35-24:36

    Ephesians 5.

    24:39-24:40

    Marriage should be held in honor.

    24:40-24:49

    And I love this, it says, "Among all." That means even if your marriage isn't in a great place right now, you should still honor marriage.

    24:49-24:56

    Even if you had a bad marriage in the past, you should honor marriage.

    24:57-25:02

    Even if you're an unmarried person, you're like, well, how does an unmarried person honor marriage?

    25:02-25:04

    Well, Paul did it, he wasn't married.

    25:04-25:05

    Look at the stuff he wrote about marriage.

    25:06-25:09

    This should be a place where we honor marriage.

    25:10-25:12

    Marriage is not honored when it's redefined.

    25:14-25:19

    Marriage is not honored when a couple lives together like a married couple without getting married.

    25:20-25:24

    Marriage isn't honored when a husband and wife are neglecting each other.

    25:27-25:33

    On the way to work this week, I was listening to the sports radio and it was kind of like an in-between segment thing.

    25:33-25:41

    They were talking about calling, using the phone, getting dates and stuff when you were young, what that was like as a kid.

    25:41-25:50

    I know some of you don't understand the phone used to be attached with a cord to the wall and if the phone rang, you had no idea who it was.

    25:50-25:52

    and we lived like absolute barbarians.

    25:54-25:59

    But they were talking about that kind of stuff and the conversation sort of evolved into marriage.

    25:59-26:23

    And the one guy said, "Well, so-and-so has some advice about marriage." And the other guy who he was speaking about said, "Yeah, here's my marriage advice, don't do it." I'm like, well, that's the way the world views marriage.

    26:24-26:27

    It's this huge mistake.

    26:28-26:39

    It's this thing that you get into and then you regret it and then you lose half your stuff and it just results in so much bitterness and just don't do it.

    26:39-26:40

    It's not worth it.

    26:44-26:46

    And I would say, hey, not at this church.

    26:47-26:49

    This church should be known as a place that honors marriage.

    26:51-27:00

    Look, going on in verse four, he says, "And let the marriage bed be undefiled." The marriage bed undefiled.

    27:04-27:05

    What's he saying?

    27:06-27:10

    Husbands and wives, go for it.

    27:12-27:13

    Go for what?

    27:13-27:14

    You know what?

    27:15-27:19

    God gave you this incredible gift, husbands and wives.

    27:19-27:21

    God gave you this gift.

    27:21-27:22

    Use it.

    27:23-27:25

    Use it as much as you want.

    27:26-27:27

    Use it as much as you can.

    27:28-27:31

    Enjoy the heck out of each other.

    27:33-27:36

    Just keep the gift in the marriage bed, right?

    27:37-27:38

    That's what honors God.

    27:42-27:43

    He goes on.

    27:43-27:55

    He says, "For God will judge the sexually immoral "and the adulterous." God will judge.

    27:56-28:00

    Unbelievers, for sure, facing the judgment of God.

    28:01-28:11

    Society, facing God's judgment regarding perversion and sexuality.

    28:11-28:13

    We're living in God's judgment right now.

    28:18-28:21

    Consequences, God has built them right in.

    28:24-28:26

    Yeah, maybe it won't be lightning and plagues, right?

    28:27-28:39

    Maybe you won't commit adultery and get struck by locust lightning or whatever, but I would suggest to you that there's worse things that come through sexual immorality.

    28:40-28:41

    Things like marriage collapse.

    28:43-28:49

    Things like kids who are devastated and never get over that.

    28:50-28:51

    Some of you know what I'm talking about.

    28:51-29:01

    I talk to people as adults, as grown adults, people older than me that are still devastated by their parents' divorce when they were teenagers.

    29:06-29:10

    venereal disease, financial issues, suicide.

    29:13-29:14

    Keep the marriage bed undefiled.

    29:16-29:20

    God gave this awesome gift and he said, "Here's the place you use it, right?

    29:22-29:27

    Use it there and only there." And I know, I know, I know it's 2023.

    29:28-29:31

    And right now there are people who are like, I hear what you're saying, Jeff.

    29:31-29:34

    You're saying only sex and marriage, that's so square.

    29:35-29:37

    And I'm like, first of all, nobody says square anymore.

    29:39-29:41

    I think Huey Lewis and the news were the last people to say that.

    29:45-29:47

    Like why only sex and marriage?

    29:47-29:48

    I mean, isn't that old fashioned?

    29:48-29:49

    Why is that?

    29:49-29:50

    Why, why?

    29:50-29:51

    I'm gonna tell you why.

    29:53-29:54

    It's because marriage is a covenant.

    29:58-30:04

    And intimacy belongs to those in the covenant.

    30:06-30:08

    Forget about sexuality for a second.

    30:09-30:11

    Let's talk about our covenant with God.

    30:12-30:20

    God established this covenant through Jesus Christ that we enter through faith in Christ.

    30:21-30:26

    And when we enter covenant with God, how intimate is the relationship between God and man?

    30:27-30:31

    God comes and lives inside, right?

    30:32-30:34

    That's the ultimate form of intimacy.

    30:34-30:41

    God says, "I'm not some distant God that's far away." He's gonna live inside of us.

    30:42-30:44

    There's no closer relationship.

    30:44-30:54

    And in the same way, when a man and woman are in the covenant of marriage, the Bible says the two shall become one flesh.

    30:54-31:00

    The physical form of intimacy takes place on the marriage bed.

    31:03-31:09

    There is no closer physical intimacy than this.

    31:10-31:16

    And that's why it's only for people that are in the covenant of marriage.

    31:18-31:20

    You understand what I'm saying?

    31:21-31:23

    Any further questions, ask your mom, okay?

    31:25-31:26

    But this is the point.

    31:29-31:31

    It's not square, it's not old-fashioned.

    31:32-31:35

    It's using God's gift the way he intended it to be used.

    31:36-31:39

    And when that's done, it's awesome.

    31:39-31:42

    And when it's not done, it's destructive.

    31:44-31:46

    So Jesus is always faithful to his bride.

    31:47-31:51

    The church, his bride must respond by being faithful to only him.

    31:52-31:55

    And that's the dynamic to be emulated in a marriage.

    31:58-32:14

    So, despite all of the goofiness that the world is pitching about marriage and sexuality, we, we must be known as people who honor biblical marriage.

    32:15-32:16

    Right?

    32:17-32:20

    So three things we must be known for, Jesus followers.

    32:20-32:23

    One is compassion, two is covenant.

    32:23-32:25

    The third thing is contentment.

    32:27-32:29

    Contentment, we have all we need.

    32:33-32:41

    Look at verse five, it says, "Keep your life free from love of money." Free from love of money.

    32:45-32:50

    One of the most misquoted verses in the Bible, people say, "Money's the root of all evil." Is that true?

    32:55-32:58

    The love of money is the root of all kinds of evil.

    32:59-33:02

    Money, listen, money in and of itself is not evil, but people think that.

    33:03-33:05

    Money in and of itself is not evil.

    33:06-33:10

    I have proof of that because I have some money.

    33:12-33:18

    My wallet has never tried to kill me when I'm sleeping because it's not evil.

    33:19-33:23

    My debit card has never slandered me because it's not evil.

    33:25-33:26

    Money itself is not evil.

    33:26-33:28

    Money's just a tool.

    33:31-33:31

    It's the love of money.

    33:32-33:35

    Money, and listen, it's money in any amount, by the way.

    33:35-33:43

    We live in a day that if you have a lot of money, you're a horrible person, which isn't true.

    33:43-33:45

    Money in and of itself is not evil.

    33:48-33:49

    It's loving money.

    33:49-33:55

    That is what God says to avoid, because when you love money, you never have enough.

    33:55-34:01

    Look, he goes on in verse five, he says, and be content with what you have.

    34:03-34:05

    We, church, should be known for being content people.

    34:06-34:10

    We should be a people that say, I have all I need.

    34:11-34:11

    Can you say that?

    34:12-34:13

    I'm gonna give you a run at it.

    34:14-34:15

    I'll give you a second, I'm gonna prepare you.

    34:19-34:23

    But I want you to say that, I have all that I need.

    34:23-34:24

    Say that.

    34:25-34:26

    I have all that I need.

    34:27-34:28

    Do you believe that?

    34:30-34:31

    I have all that I need.

    34:35-34:40

    I'm so happy, I'm so thankful with what I have.

    34:42-34:45

    Like, you're like, man, that's so hard to do.

    34:45-34:46

    How do I do that?

    34:48-34:58

    If you can understand this one thing, you're not going to struggle with contentment and covetousness and greed.

    34:59-35:06

    If you can understand this one principle, the principle is this, God is the one who gives you what you have.

    35:08-35:11

    We studied this in Ecclesiastes last year, remember that?

    35:11-35:14

    Ecclesiastes 5.19, I'm sure you all remember this.

    35:14-35:16

    I'm just gonna give us a refresher.

    35:16-35:29

    It says, "Everyone also to whom God has given wealth "and possessions and power to enjoy them "and to accept his lot and rejoice in his toil, "this is the gift of God." So where does our stuff come from?

    35:30-35:31

    It comes from God.

    35:31-35:33

    The principles throughout, right?

    35:33-35:37

    Deuteronomy 8, 18, 1 Chronicles 29, 12, Hosea 2, 8.

    35:37-35:41

    Everything you have has been given to you by God.

    35:42-35:48

    And if you can understand and accept that, You will be a content person just walking through life.

    35:48-35:52

    Everything I have, everything I need, God's just gonna give me.

    35:53-35:54

    I'm not worried about it.

    35:54-35:55

    I'm not looking for more.

    35:55-35:58

    I'm not crying because I don't have what somebody else has.

    35:58-36:01

    God's just gonna give me everything that I need.

    36:01-36:03

    So I'm not, I'm content.

    36:03-36:04

    I'm happy.

    36:06-36:07

    Are you there?

    36:11-36:22

    You know, the Old Testament under Moses, when he led the Israelites out of Egypt, you know, to the promised land, we talked about that a lot through Hebrews.

    36:23-36:28

    But on that trip, God provided Israel the most perfect food ever.

    36:28-36:29

    It was called manna.

    36:31-36:33

    If you know the story, where was the manna?

    36:34-36:36

    They didn't go to sheets for it.

    36:37-36:38

    Where was it?

    36:39-36:40

    It was just on the ground.

    36:41-36:43

    God provided the perfect food to every morning.

    36:43-36:50

    All you had to do was roll out of your tent and your food was on the ground.

    36:51-36:53

    And it was perfect in every way.

    36:53-36:57

    And we have biblical evidence that speaks to how perfect it was.

    36:57-36:58

    We'll talk about that another time.

    36:58-37:03

    But just know that it was a perfect food that God's just like, here you go.

    37:04-37:05

    I'll feed you.

    37:06-37:07

    It's right there.

    37:07-37:08

    You can't get any closer.

    37:09-37:10

    You're standing on some.

    37:10-37:14

    "Get up." Was Israel content?

    37:17-37:18

    Was Israel content?

    37:19-37:27

    No, in fact, they wanted to go back to Egypt, and one of their reasons was the food there.

    37:29-37:30

    You remember that?

    37:30-37:35

    They're like, "Do you remember back in Egypt, "there were like the pots of flesh?" Like, that's really gross.

    37:35-37:36

    They just mean there's meat.

    37:36-37:37

    It's a gross way to put it.

    37:38-37:41

    And they were like, "We had the cucumbers and the leeks." And I'm like, "I call baloney.

    37:41-37:52

    Nobody's ever gotten excited about a leek." But they were like, "Oh, we just wish we were back in Egypt." And Numbers chapter 11, they actually said this.

    37:53-38:00

    They said, "All we have is this manna to look at." Wrap your brain around that statement for a second.

    38:01-38:05

    God's like, "Here you go, perfect food every day.

    38:06-38:11

    Just bend over and pick it up." life to all we have is this stupid man it'll look at.

    38:14-38:15

    Excuse me?

    38:15-38:16

    What, what?

    38:19-38:19

    Winers.

    38:22-38:24

    It's like a bunch of toddlers, right?

    38:27-38:31

    But church, listen, when you're not content, you sound exactly like them.

    38:34-38:40

    When you're not content with what God has given you, you are just like Israel.

    38:41-38:45

    What you're saying, you might not be using these words, but this is what you're saying.

    38:45-38:46

    Like, this is it, God?

    38:47-38:48

    This is all you're gonna give me?

    38:49-38:50

    I want more.

    38:51-38:52

    I want different.

    38:55-38:59

    Oh, this is a sermon for another time, but some of you know how that story ends.

    39:01-39:03

    God gave them meat, by the way.

    39:03-39:17

    God's like, "Oh, you want meat." God says, "I'll give you meat until it comes out of your noses." And the Bible says that while they were eating the quail that God provided while the meat was between their teeth before it was consumed, God struck them dead.

    39:22-39:32

    And I don't think the Bible explicitly says, but I imagine after that event, everybody else in Israel that wasn't struck dead was like, "You know what I'm hungry for?

    39:34-39:34

    "Mana.

    39:36-39:38

    "Mana is my favorite thing ever.

    39:39-39:40

    "I love mana.

    39:41-39:48

    "Send me a mana sandwich with a side of mana soup "and a tall, cold glass of mana." Right?

    39:50-39:51

    We should be known for being content.

    39:52-39:53

    We have all that we need.

    39:54-39:57

    Here's a couple of markers of content people.

    40:02-40:05

    Content people, first of all, don't judge what other people have.

    40:07-40:08

    That's a mark of content people.

    40:09-40:12

    Content people don't judge what other people have.

    40:15-40:17

    Did you see that car he was driving?

    40:18-40:19

    How much does he make?

    40:21-40:24

    Did you see that purse that she was carrying?

    40:25-40:26

    What's a bougie purse company?

    40:27-40:29

    Shout one out, I don't know.

    40:30-40:32

    Gucci, Louis Vuitton, okay.

    40:34-40:37

    Did you see that Louis Vuitton purse that she was carrying?

    40:42-40:44

    Here's what content people say.

    40:44-40:45

    Okay, God gave that to them.

    40:47-40:50

    I drive the car that I have and I carry my Walmart purse.

    40:51-40:52

    Well, I mean, I don't.

    40:53-40:53

    (audience laughing)

    40:55-40:56

    I don't carry the Walmart purse.

    40:59-41:01

    But that's what content people say.

    41:02-41:06

    Like, okay, so he drives that kind of car, good for him.

    41:07-41:08

    I hope it's awesome.

    41:10-41:14

    So she has a Louis Gucci purse or whatever, so she's good for her.

    41:15-41:17

    I hope she has a closet full of them.

    41:18-41:20

    I hope she loves that purse so much.

    41:21-41:30

    Not like in an idolatry way, But I hope that she loves it in the Lord or whatever.

    41:32-41:36

    Several months ago, I was at a funeral home for a visitation.

    41:37-41:42

    And when I was walking out, there was a lady in the lobby just by herself.

    41:45-42:00

    And we got chatting and she's like, "How do you know the deceased?" And I said, "Well, I'm a pastor and I've known the family and da, da, da." She goes, "Oh, you're a pastor." She said, right out of the gate, she goes, "What do you think about how much money Joel Osteen makes?"

    42:01-42:02

    (congregation laughing)

    42:06-42:15

    And I gotta be honest with you, church, I am genuinely surprised at how many times over the course of my ministry, I've been asked my opinion on Joel Osteen's salary.

    42:19-42:23

    And I told her, I said, What Joel Osteen makes isn't my business.

    42:23-42:27

    Like, why should I care what Joel Osteen makes?

    42:28-42:30

    Do I look like Mrs. Osteen?

    42:31-42:32

    What's her name?

    42:33-42:33

    Veronica or whatever?

    42:34-42:35

    Victoria.

    42:35-42:37

    Do I look like Victoria Osteen?

    42:37-42:38

    And be careful how you answer that.

    42:39-42:41

    But why should I care what he makes?

    42:43-42:47

    I don't give to support his organization.

    42:50-42:58

    And listen, I say this with all the love I can muster, you gotta grab hold of this.

    42:58-43:00

    Look, what God gives somebody else is not your business.

    43:01-43:03

    It is not your business.

    43:05-43:12

    Your business, according to the Bible, is to be content with what you have.

    43:13-43:14

    Do you see that?

    43:17-43:19

    Here's another marker of contentment.

    43:20-43:21

    We're wrapping up, I promise.

    43:21-43:26

    I didn't preach for like five weeks, so I've had all this building up.

    43:28-43:28

    Here's another one.

    43:29-43:33

    Content people aren't afraid of not having what they need.

    43:35-43:37

    That's another marker of contentment.

    43:37-43:40

    You don't have the anxiety of lacking.

    43:41-43:42

    That's another marker of contentment.

    43:45-43:46

    How does that work?

    43:46-43:52

    It's because content people have learned that contentment It doesn't come from having stuff.

    43:54-43:56

    Contentment comes from having Jesus.

    43:59-44:00

    Look at verse 5.

    44:03-44:05

    Again, he says, "Be content with what you have.

    44:05-44:07

    Why should I do that?" Here's the reason, look.

    44:07-44:17

    "For He has said, 'I will never leave you nor forsake you.'" God said that.

    44:18-44:19

    Oh, he's not finished.

    44:19-44:24

    He says, "So we, we can confidently say, "the Lord is my helper.

    44:25-44:26

    "I will not fear.

    44:26-44:33

    "What can man do to me?" He's quoting Joshua 1.5.

    44:35-44:37

    Actually, Jesus said something very similar.

    44:39-44:40

    Right, Great Commission, I'm with you always.

    44:41-44:43

    Right, he's quoting Psalm 118, verse six.

    44:45-44:49

    But this, he will never leave you in the original language, that was the strongest negative.

    44:51-44:55

    Okay, so he will never leave you is sort of an understatement in translation.

    44:55-45:04

    What it's saying is, God is saying, I will never, ever, under any circumstances abandon you.

    45:05-45:06

    I would never do that.

    45:11-45:14

    He says, so we're not going to fear, right?

    45:14-45:15

    You see that?

    45:15-45:17

    He says, "I will not fear," verse six.

    45:18-45:19

    Like, what, fear what?

    45:21-45:23

    Fear lacking, fear being without.

    45:24-45:30

    In chapter 10, verse 34, these people were being plundered for their faith, right?

    45:31-45:37

    They were being robbed because they belonged to Jesus.

    45:39-45:47

    And he says, "And our response should just simply be this, "that's okay, that's okay." because the Lord is my helper.

    45:49-45:56

    My God has $6 trillion just in the cup holder of his Lamborghini.

    45:59-46:01

    So if I have Jesus, I have everything.

    46:03-46:08

    And I don't have anything to worry about because he promised that he'd never forsake me.

    46:09-46:11

    You see, church, that's where contentment comes from.

    46:13-46:21

    Contentment comes from real faith that says, "I believe that God is always with me.

    46:22-46:38

    And I believe that he's going to give me everything that I need." Our worship team would make their way back to the platform here.

    46:39-46:45

    You know, I think it was several months ago, maybe up to a year now, in a meeting.

    46:48-46:54

    Regarding hospitality, we were meeting with Mackenzie Blasco, and she has a question that, I was like, wow, I wasn't expecting that.

    46:54-47:00

    But she said, she asked me this, she says, "How close is this church to your original vision?" You remember asking that, Mackenzie?

    47:01-47:14

    She's, "How close is this church to your original vision?" And I said, "This is exactly what I wanted to see." This church isn't perfect.

    47:16-47:17

    That's certainly not what I meant.

    47:20-47:21

    But this church is real.

    47:22-47:24

    And this church is sincere.

    47:25-47:36

    And this church is actively seeking to grow in our individual family and collective walks with Jesus Christ by his grace.

    47:39-47:41

    You know, I've thought about Mackenzie's question often.

    47:45-47:49

    What if I asked you, what kind of church do you want?

    47:51-47:55

    We could get one of the handheld mics and walk around and get everyone's opinion.

    47:55-47:58

    I imagine we'd probably get dozens of different types of answers.

    47:59-48:00

    What kind of church do you want?

    48:00-48:02

    But I guess we're asking the wrong question.

    48:04-48:07

    I think the right question is, what kind of church does Jesus want?

    48:09-48:10

    Isn't that a better question?

    48:11-48:12

    Can I get an amen on that?

    48:13-48:13

    Okay, that was better.

    48:14-48:16

    What kind of church does Jesus want?

    48:18-48:19

    Well, he tells us right here.

    48:21-48:26

    "We should be a church known for compassion." We're looking for people to love.

    48:27-48:29

    We're a church that's about covenant.

    48:29-48:37

    Our covenant with God through Jesus Christ, the covenant, the new covenant, through the blood of Jesus, but also the covenant of marriage.

    48:37-48:41

    We believe, and this, when you come in here, we think marriage is a great thing here.

    48:43-48:45

    The last thing we should be known for is contentment.

    48:46-48:49

    We're just people, we walk around satisfied.

    48:50-48:53

    Like, I have everything that I need.

    48:55-48:56

    God's going to make sure of that.

    48:58-48:59

    You bow with me in prayer.

    49:00-49:13

    Father in heaven, in a day of consumerism and competition and marketing and all that stuff.

    49:13-49:17

    It's easy for the church to think, what do I need to do to compete?

    49:17-49:19

    What do I need to do to be flashy?

    49:23-49:25

    What do I, what kind of gimmick do I need?

    49:28-49:32

    But the reality is, Father, you haven't called us to gimmicks you've called us to faithfulness.

    49:33-49:36

    And your word tells us right here kind of reputation we should have.

    49:37-49:38

    So Father, I wanna pray for this church.

    49:43-49:50

    Because it's only the decisions we make in our walks and for our homes, that's gonna determine the kind of people we are when we come together here.

    49:54-49:58

    Father, warm our hearts towards compassion.

    50:02-50:06

    Father, let us repent of any negative attitudes or words that we've had towards marriage.

    50:08-50:15

    Father, let us be people who are truly satisfied, not because of the stuff we have, but because of the God that we have.

    50:16-50:32

    I just pray, Father, that we are so focused on being the kind of people that you have called us to be, and that you give us the opportunity to just get out into our community and let them see the difference that Jesus Christ makes.

    50:37-50:43

    Father, we do pray for the members of this church, the people of this church to grow.

    50:43-51:04

    We pray for this church itself to grow, but Father, only in a way that honors you, only in a way that's empowered by you, only in a way that people can look at us and say, God must be in their midst.

    51:05-51:07

    Show up powerfully, Father.

    51:10-51:13

    Not for our reputation, ultimately it's for yours.

    51:14-51:17

    We pray in Jesus' name, amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Hebrews 13:1-6

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

  2. What do you think HBC is known for?

  3. What are some practical ways that you can show hospitality to strangers?

  4. How would you answer this question: why is sex only for married people (Heb 13:4)?

  5. In what areas do you struggle with contentment (Heb 13:5)?

Breakout
Pray for one another, and pray for HBC to be a church known for compassion, covenant, and contentment.

Questions from the Congregation - Part 18

Note: The time signatures [00:00] below indicate the start of a question if you'd like to skip to a particular one of interest in the audio file.

Ice-Breakers:

  1. [01:08] - Q: What is your favorite color?
    A: Gray (Jeff), Royal/Navy Blue (Taylor)

  2. [02:19] - Q: What is your favorite book of the Bible and why?
    A: OT - Ecclesiastes / NT - Romans (Taylor), OT - Ecclesiastes / NT - Revelation (Jeff), James (Matt)

  3. [04:40] - Q: What Christian book has made an impact on you that you would recommend to others?
    A: See TBD - TBD

    The Bible:

  4. [06:35] - Q: Does God still speak to us today?
    A: See Hebrews 1:1-2 - Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things, through whom also he created the world.

  5. [10:06] - Q: Do you guys know anything about why certain books were included and others weren’t, such as other books found in Dead Sea scrolls? And what about books mentioned in Bible such as Enoch?

    A: TBD

    Old Testament:

  6. [12:22] - Q: Who was the third person on earth?
    A: Cain

  7. [12:45] - Q: If Cain killed Abel, who did Cain marry? How did humanity continue?
    A: His sister

  8. [14:05] - Q: Genesis 5:4 - The days of Adam after he fathered Seth were 800 years; and he had other sons and daughters. Thus all the days that Adam lived were 930 years, and he died. Who or what are the Nephilim?
    A: See TBD

  9. [18:25] - Q: What is your stance on Psalm 83? Is it a war, a lament? If you believe it to be a war, is it a past war or yet future?
    A: See TBD - TBD

    New Testament:

  10. [19:55] - Q: In Matthew 7:13-14 Jesus talks about narrow & wide gates, one that leads to destruction & one that leads to life. He indicates that there will be few who find the narrow gate that leads to eternal life. Is Jesus revealing in these verses that proportionally speaking that most people born throughout the ages will go to hell compared to those that truly come to salvation through Jesus?
    A: See TBD - TBD

  11. [24:25] - Q: The Bible says “Judge not, that you be not judged” (Matt 7:1), but there are other places like I Cor 2:15 where God says “but he who is spiritual judges all things, yet he himself is rightly judged by no one”. Can you explain the seeming contradiction between these two verses?
    A: See TBD - TBD

  12. [28:28] - Q: Can you discuss the Bema seat? I know it is a judgment for believers (good and not so good) that will take place post rapture for how we spent our lives on earth, but since God forgives our sins past, present, and future and wipes them from his memory once we confess our salvation in Him, why do we stand in judgment for things we did that are not so good?

    Or is it just situations where we could have shared the gospel or helped someone and didn't do anything that will be called out and judged?
    A: See 1 Corinthians 3:10-15 - According to the grace of God given to me, like a skilled master builder I laid a foundation, and someone else is building upon it. Let each one take care how he builds upon it. For no one can lay a foundation other than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ. Now if anyone builds on the foundation with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw— each one’s work will become manifest, for the Day will disclose it, because it will be revealed by fire, and the fire will test what sort of work each one has done. If the work that anyone has built on the foundation survives, he will receive a reward. If anyone’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire.
    2 Corinthians 5:10 - For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each one may receive what is due for what he has done in the body, whether good or evil.

    Potluck:

  13. [31:05] - Q: With as flawed, hypocritical, & inconsistent as we are as believers, why would God choose to limit Himself in such a way to effectively share the truth of His message to the lost world?
    A: See - TBD

  14. [33:40] - Q: What does the Bible say about the use of Western Medicine example anti depressants, pain killers, medical marijuana, etc.?
    A: See Proverbs 31:6 - Give strong drink to the one who is perishing, and wine to those in bitter distress...

  15. [35:15] - Q: Is drinking alcohol, using tobacco/ marijuana, or gambling all sins? Should a born again believer stop these activities?
    A: See TBD - TBD

  16. [On the Blog] - Q: Why does God allow trials in my life to test my faith, if in His sovereignty He already knows how I’ll respond (positively or negatively)?
    A: See 1 Peter 1:6-9 - In this you rejoice, though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that perishes though it is tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ. Though you have not seen him, you love him. Though you do not now see him, you believe in him and rejoice with joy that is inexpressible and filled with glory, obtaining the outcome of your faith, the salvation of your souls.

  17. [On the Blog] - Q: Can you explain what Jesus means in Luke 14:26-27 where He says we can not be His disciples unless we hate our fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, children? This seems totally contradictory to His message for us to love one another as He has loved us.
    A: See Matthew 10:37 - Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me, and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me.


    Any question that was missed due to time constraints during the service Pastor Jeff will address the answer
    on the blog.

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK

  • Jeff:

    00:01-00:03

    All right, so Q&A day.

    Jeff:

    00:04-00:04

    Ground rules, right?

    Jeff:

    00:05-00:10

    The ground rules are we can only answer the question that we think you're asking, right?

    Jeff:

    00:11-00:18

    So if you submitted the question and we answer, you're like, "That's not what I meant at all." We're taking our best stab at what we think you're asking.

    Jeff:

    00:18-00:23

    We're gonna give the shortest possible answer because really every one of these things could be a sermon series.

    Jeff:

    00:24-00:30

    And whatever we don't get to today, Pastor Taylor will put on our blog on our website, right?

    Taylor:

    00:30-00:31

    I suppose so.

    Jeff:

    00:33-00:35

    I did it for the first 11 years.

    Taylor:

    00:35-00:36

    I'll happily do it, I'll happily do it.

    Jeff:

    00:36-00:40

    I did it for the first 11 years of the church, you can take the next 11 years, right?

    Jeff:

    00:40-00:41

    Isn't that how it works?

    Taylor:

    00:41-00:41

    Sounds good to me.

    Jeff:

    00:41-00:43

    Okay, all right.

    Jeff:

    00:44-00:46

    So, are we gonna set the timer too?

    Jeff:

    00:47-00:51

    All right, so, keep us honest here.

    Jeff:

    00:54-00:56

    All right, what do we got, Fulzi?

    Jeff:

    00:56-00:59

    Let's get going. I gave you my notes, so I'm totally trusting you.

    Matt:

    00:59-01:01

    Yeah, I do. So you want me to start with the icebreakers, correct?

    Jeff:

    01:01-01:04

    Oh, yeah. Let's start with the icebreakers. Let's go through those pretty quick.

    Matt:

    01:04-01:06

    All right. Let's get really deep here to start.

    Matt:

    01:08-01:10

    What is your favorite color?

    Taylor:

    01:10-01:12

    I don't know if I can answer that one. That's pretty deep.

    Jeff:

    01:12-01:13

    That is pretty deep.

    Taylor:

    01:13-01:15

    I guess gray is my favorite color.

    Matt:

    01:16-01:17

    Gray?

    Taylor:

    01:17-01:18

    Gray. Yeah.

    Taylor:

    01:19-01:21

    What kind of answer is that?

    Taylor:

    01:21-01:23

    It works well. Living in Pittsburgh, it's gray most of the time.

    Taylor:

    01:25-01:28

    If I look at most of the colors I wear, I guess it'd be gray.

    Matt:

    01:28-01:29

    Yeah, that's fair.

    Matt:

    01:31-01:32

    Better answer than gray.

    Jeff:

    01:33-01:35

    You're not gonna believe this.

    Jeff:

    01:35-01:36

    Erin, what's my favorite color?

    Taylor:

    01:40-01:42

    That's why you hired me.

    Jeff:

    01:42-01:43

    It's true. It's true.

    Jeff:

    01:44-01:45

    Gray is my favorite color too.

    Jeff:

    01:46-01:47

    What's your favorite color?

    Matt:

    01:47-01:48

    Why? Why gray?

    Jeff:

    01:49-01:50

    I just like gray.

    Taylor:

    01:51-01:51

    It looks good with everything.

    Jeff:

    01:52-01:52

    Yeah.

    Matt:

    01:53-01:53

    Yeah.

    Jeff:

    01:53-01:54

    What about you, Cole?

    Matt:

    01:54-01:58

    I think mine's blue, like, you know, dark blue, royal blue.

    Jeff:

    01:58-01:59

    Goes good with gray.

    Matt:

    01:59-02:01

    Goes good with gray, I guess, yeah.

    Taylor:

    02:01-02:03

    Who else has their favorite color as gray?

    Taylor:

    02:05-02:07

    All right, Laura's awesome.

    Jeff:

    02:09-02:09

    Laura is my twin sister.

    Taylor:

    02:09-02:10

    McKenzie, okay.

    Taylor:

    02:11-02:12

    The four of us are pretty great people.

    Matt:

    02:14-02:17

    All right, next question, if we can recover from that.

    Matt:

    02:18-02:22

    Your favorite book of the Bible and why?

    Taylor:

    02:22-02:24

    I'm gonna cheat here a little bit.

    Taylor:

    02:25-02:26

    Say Old Testament, New Testament.

    Taylor:

    02:26-02:27

    That's really hard to do.

    Jeff:

    02:27-02:28

    Oh my goodness, okay.

    Taylor:

    02:28-02:29

    You can cheat too.

    Taylor:

    02:30-02:30

    All right.

    Taylor:

    02:30-02:30

    To both of you can.

    Taylor:

    02:31-02:33

    I would say Ecclesiastes is my favorite book of the Old Testament.

    Taylor:

    02:33-02:36

    People think it's depressing and like, ugh, but it's really awesome.

    Taylor:

    02:37-02:38

    We did a sermon series on it last year.

    Taylor:

    02:39-02:43

    It really shows you how meaningless life is apart from God.

    Taylor:

    02:43-02:47

    How everything God has given us is a good gift if used for him and his glory.

    Taylor:

    02:47-02:50

    So I think it's an awesome book of the Bible that not enough people really give enough attention to.

    Taylor:

    02:51-02:53

    And the obvious answer for New Testament is Romans.

    Taylor:

    02:53-02:55

    I mean, it's really hard to beat Romans 5 through 8.

    Taylor:

    02:55-02:57

    I think it's like my favorite section of the Bible.

    Taylor:

    02:59-03:04

    All right, since we're doing Old Testament, we can, we still have, don't tell me it's red, I don't like red.

    Taylor:

    03:05-03:06

    They turned you off when you said gray.

    Taylor:

    03:06-03:07

    Yeah.

    Jeff:

    03:11-03:12

    All right, I'll just, oh, thank you.

    Matt:

    03:13-03:14

    We'll just use it, do this then.

    Matt:

    03:14-03:15

    It is red, that's not good.

    Jeff:

    03:16-03:17

    Yeah, that's not, red's not good, right?

    Jeff:

    03:17-03:17

    No.

    Jeff:

    03:18-03:19

    Okay, red is not my favorite color.

    Jeff:

    03:20-03:21

    The Old Testament, you know what?

    Jeff:

    03:22-03:24

    Ecclesiastes. I love Ecclesiastes.

    Jeff:

    03:24-03:25

    I've taught through it many times.

    Jeff:

    03:25-03:30

    And I think Ecclesiastes has an amazing way of just putting life into perspective.

    Jeff:

    03:30-03:32

    New Testament is Revelation.

    Jeff:

    03:32-03:41

    I think Revelation is the most powerful, majestic, to me, just awe-inspiring book in the Bible.

    Jeff:

    03:41-03:43

    I mean, it's all God's Word, yes, absolutely.

    Jeff:

    03:43-03:49

    I absolutely am just, I love Revelation.

    Jeff:

    03:49-03:50

    What about you, Matt?

    Matt:

    03:51-03:54

    I'll just stick to one, since I'm not as scholarly as you guys.

    Matt:

    03:55-04:04

    James, I really appreciate the book of James because it's, well, it's short, which is a bonus, but I think it's very direct, it's very practical.

    Matt:

    04:05-04:19

    I mean, it starts with, "Count it all joy, brothers, "whenever you face many trials," you know, many kinds because it produces steadfastness That I think just sets the tone for the whole rest of the book where it's like, "All right, sometimes life stinks.

    Matt:

    04:19-04:30

    We go through hard stuff, but here's how we live in light of Christ and as a follower of Christ." So, that's where we get quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to become angry.

    Matt:

    04:31-04:35

    So, there's a lot of really practical stuff in there that I appreciate about James.

    Matt:

    04:36-04:40

    All right, the last icebreaker is a Christian book.

    Matt:

    04:40-04:44

    your favorite Christian book that's made an impact on you or that you would recommend to others?

    Jeff:

    04:47-04:48

    Go ahead, Taylor.

    Jeff:

    04:48-04:49

    I gotta take this thing off.

    Jeff:

    04:50-04:51

    It's not working, I just feel stupid.

    04:52-04:53

    (laughing)

    Taylor:

    04:53-05:03

    I think if I had to only recommend one, the one that impacted me the most in college when I was really growing in my relation with the Lord and feeling called to ministry is The Holiness of God by R.C. Sproul.

    Taylor:

    05:03-05:06

    If you haven't read that book, I would encourage all of you to go out and buy it.

    Taylor:

    05:06-05:12

    I actually have an extra copy in my office if you want it and you're actually gonna read it, come see me after service and I'll give it to you.

    Taylor:

    05:12-05:15

    It's a book that really shows that God is so different than us.

    Taylor:

    05:15-05:21

    He is holy, he is beyond us, and the fact that he chooses to love us and save us is astounding.

    Taylor:

    05:22-05:24

    So that's a book I think everyone should read.

    Taylor:

    05:25-05:28

    You know, the one, I can't remember the name of it because I gave it away.

    Jeff:

    05:29-05:33

    Dan and Elisha, what was that book on prayer, Praying the Word of God, what was that called?

    Jeff:

    05:35-05:36

    Was it called Praying the Word of

    Taylor:

    05:36-05:36

    God?

    Taylor:

    05:37-05:37

    I think it's Praying the Bible.

    05:40-05:41

    >> Well,

    Jeff:

    05:41-05:44

    whatever it was, it had a huge impact on me.

    Jeff:

    05:44-05:45

    Not the title.

    Jeff:

    05:47-05:48

    It's what's on the inside that counts.

    Taylor:

    05:49-05:51

    >> If you're meant to read it, you'll find it somehow.

    05:54-05:54

    >>

    Jeff:

    05:54-05:55

    So what about you, Matt?

    Matt:

    05:56-05:59

    >> Yeah, I think "Wild at Heart" is one that comes to mind for me.

    Matt:

    05:59-06:01

    I can't remember who wrote that.

    Matt:

    06:01-06:02

    I always want to call him Brad Eldridge.

    Matt:

    06:02-06:04

    >> John Eldridge?

    Matt:

    06:04-06:08

    A former failed Pirates prospect, and that's not actually who wrote the book.

    Matt:

    06:09-06:11

    Right, he's with the Yankees now.

    Matt:

    06:11-06:22

    Yeah. But yeah, that one was really good as far as just, it's geared towards men, but just who God created us to be. So that was really impactful for me.

    Matt:

    06:23-06:24

    Alright, are you ready to get into this?

    Jeff:

    06:24-06:26

    Yes, we are. Go for it.

    Matt:

    06:26-06:32

    Alright, the first one is a simple question, but I think it's a big picture question.

    Matt:

    06:33-06:36

    And that is, does God still speak to us today?

    Jeff:

    06:39-06:40

    Absolutely, He does.

    Jeff:

    06:40-06:41

    He speaks through His Word, right?

    Jeff:

    06:42-06:43

    Hebrews 1.

    Jeff:

    06:44-06:46

    We went through this a while back.

    Jeff:

    06:46-06:47

    Do we have that on the screen?

    Jeff:

    06:47-06:48

    Like I said, I gave you my notes.

    Jeff:

    06:50-06:51

    Yeah, there it is.

    Jeff:

    06:52-06:53

    Hebrews 1.

    Jeff:

    06:53-06:56

    "Long ago, many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets.

    Jeff:

    06:56-07:06

    But in these last days, He's spoken to us by His Son, whom He appointed the heir of all things, whom also He created the world. I believe that God speaks through His Word.

    Jeff:

    07:06-07:12

    So every day, every single time you sit down and read God's Word, God is speaking to you.

    Jeff:

    07:12-07:21

    That's how He has chosen to reveal Himself. It's through the wisdom of His Word and through the power of His Spirit within, that's how He speaks. Taylor?

    Taylor:

    07:22-07:24

    Yeah, there's two different types of revelation, right?

    Taylor:

    07:24-07:29

    There's general revelation, which is God revealing Himself in nature through His creation.

    Taylor:

    07:30-07:38

    The book of Psalms says, "The heavens declare the glory of God, the skies above proclaim His handiwork," that knowledge is being spoken to us day after day after day.

    Taylor:

    07:39-07:50

    And Romans chapter 1 says, "This creation, this general revelation, leaves us without excuse to believe that God doesn't exist and to believe that we're called to live our lives in a certain way." We're all without excuse in that way.

    Taylor:

    07:50-07:56

    But there is special revelation, which is, like Jeff said, God speaking to us through His Son and through His Word.

    Taylor:

    07:56-08:00

    Because you know what? As much as we love a beautiful sunset, You can't look at a sunset and come to Christ.

    Taylor:

    08:02-08:03

    A tree won't tell you the gospel.

    Taylor:

    08:04-08:07

    You have to be told who Jesus is and what He has done through His Word.

    08:08-08:08

    What

    Matt:

    08:08-08:12

    are your guys' thoughts on an audible voice of God?

    Matt:

    08:12-08:19

    Because I've heard people have said that they actually heard the voice of God or they heard a voice that they thought was God that was speaking to them.

    Matt:

    08:20-08:21

    Is that a thing?

    Jeff:

    08:23-08:25

    I haven't experienced

    Matt:

    08:25-08:25

    it.

    Jeff:

    08:26-08:28

    I can't affirm or deny what somebody said their experience was, right?

    Jeff:

    08:29-08:32

    All I can affirm is what God said in His Word.

    Jeff:

    08:32-08:40

    Do I believe that God has spoken to me through His still, small voice in ways that I couldn't fully articulate?

    Jeff:

    08:40-08:41

    Absolutely.

    Jeff:

    08:41-08:48

    But to say that God speaks audibly, like I said, that's an experiential thing.

    Jeff:

    08:49-08:59

    I can't say, "No, He didn't." I, like I said, he's, he speaks to me, but like I said, it's not through words.

    Jeff:

    08:59-09:00

    He doesn't write it on the clouds.

    Jeff:

    09:00-09:07

    He doesn't leave me voicemails on the phone or anything, but somehow his spirit very clearly communicates.

    Jeff:

    09:07-09:10

    And it's, you know, it's ultimately through his word.

    Taylor:

    09:12-09:15

    I think some people can use it as a trump card to do whatever they want.

    Taylor:

    09:15-09:15

    Oh yeah.

    Jeff:

    09:16-09:16

    I know

    Taylor:

    09:16-09:19

    Jeff, you've shared before, someone said, you know, God told me to leave my spouse.

    Taylor:

    09:20-09:20

    No, he didn't.

    Jeff:

    09:20-09:21

    No, he didn't.

    Taylor:

    09:21-09:23

    because the Lord already told you to not do that.

    09:25-09:25

    So...

    Jeff:

    09:25-09:34

    Or I had a woman tell me one time, she said, "The Holy Spirit said you're supposed to come "to my house by yourself." Like, he did not say that.

    Taylor:

    09:37-09:41

    And the audible voice thing, I preached on this a couple of weeks ago, but Peter was there for the transfiguration.

    Taylor:

    09:41-09:43

    He hears God the Father speak out of heaven.

    Taylor:

    09:43-09:45

    Awesome, awesome experience.

    Taylor:

    09:45-09:46

    But what does he say in his first epistle?

    Taylor:

    09:47-09:52

    He says that we have something better and more sure, the Word of God, the prophetic Word.

    Jeff:

    09:53-09:53

    Right on.

    Matt:

    09:55-09:56

    All right, let's move on.

    Jeff:

    09:56-09:57

    We better speed these up, we're not working everybody.

    Jeff:

    09:57-09:58

    I know, sorry.

    Jeff:

    09:58-09:59

    No, that's okay, we're

    Taylor:

    09:59-10:01

    just like two in, we're almost out of time.

    Taylor:

    10:01-10:03

    I'll just be blogging a lot this week.

    Matt:

    10:04-10:05

    Yeah, you'll be-- - Get blogging.

    Matt:

    10:06-10:11

    All right, do you guys know anything about why certain books were included and others weren't?

    Matt:

    10:12-10:14

    Such as other books found in the Dead Sea Scrolls?

    Matt:

    10:15-10:17

    And what about books mentioned in the Bible, such as Enoch?

    Jeff:

    10:18-10:19

    Go ahead, Taylor.

    Jeff:

    10:20-10:22

    This sounds like a good one for you.

    Taylor:

    10:23-10:28

    An important thing to realize is that nobody decides what books are in the Bible.

    Taylor:

    10:28-10:35

    We recognize which books are authoritative. And this process of recognizing which books are authoritative is called canonization.

    Taylor:

    10:35-10:56

    So in the New Testament canon we have 27 books. In the Old Testament canon we have 39 books. And people will say, "Well what about the Apocrypha?" You know, in the Roman Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Churches there's extra books that people have in your Bible, things like Enoch, 1st and 2nd Maccabees, Tobit, and even this weird additions to Daniel where he fights like a dragon slash lizard type of thing.

    Taylor:

    10:56-10:58

    It's really, really strange.

    Taylor:

    10:58-11:03

    And once you read it, you're like, yeah, I get why this wasn't in the Bible, 'cause this doesn't make sense whatsoever.

    Taylor:

    11:03-11:08

    But books like 1st Maccabees make it clear that they're not divinely inspired like the rest of scripture.

    Taylor:

    11:09-11:12

    They say the prophets have been silent for a long time.

    Taylor:

    11:12-11:15

    Other books have clear errors historically.

    Taylor:

    11:15-11:20

    Some have clear theological errors that contradict the Old and New Testament.

    Taylor:

    11:20-11:25

    Also, there's a lot of fake gospels written in the second century AD, like the Gospel of Thomas.

    Taylor:

    11:26-11:29

    It's really weird stuff. Jesus curses people.

    Taylor:

    11:29-11:36

    He curses a kid's parents to go blind. He makes these pigeons out of clay and makes them come to life.

    Taylor:

    11:36-11:38

    It's really, really strange stuff.

    Taylor:

    11:39-11:44

    And they were never widely accepted by the church a long time ago.

    Jeff:

    11:44-11:46

    Didn't he have like a synagogue teacher scold him?

    Jeff:

    11:46-11:48

    And he was like, "Bam, you're blind."

    Taylor:

    11:48-11:50

    He loved to make people blind in that gospel for some reason.

    Taylor:

    11:50-11:51

    He loved to do that. - It's

    Jeff:

    11:51-11:52

    just goofy stuff, yeah.

    Taylor:

    11:53-11:58

    But when it came to the New Testament, the early church had three marks, three qualities for recognized books.

    Taylor:

    11:58-11:59

    One is apostolic authority.

    Taylor:

    12:00-12:03

    It was written by an apostle or someone closely tied to an apostle.

    Taylor:

    12:04-12:08

    Second, it had church-wide acceptance that people recognize, yes, this is the word of God.

    Taylor:

    12:08-12:10

    And then finally, it has correct doctrine.

    Taylor:

    12:10-12:14

    It didn't have anything that contradicted the Old or New Testament books.

    Matt:

    12:16-12:17

    Sufficient for you?

    Jeff:

    12:18-12:19

    Yeah, that works.

    Matt:

    12:19-12:21

    All right, we'll move on then.

    Matt:

    12:22-12:23

    Who was the third person on earth?

    Jeff:

    12:24-12:24

    Oh, I got this one.

    Matt:

    12:26-12:26

    Cain.

    Jeff:

    12:28-12:30

    Cain, and we studied him in Hebrews 11.

    Jeff:

    12:30-12:31

    He murdered his brother.

    Jeff:

    12:31-12:33

    And do you know why he murdered his brother?

    Jeff:

    12:34-12:34

    Because he was able.

    12:36-12:36

    (audience laughing)

    Matt:

    12:41-12:43

    Did I get the trombones or the, all right.

    Matt:

    12:43-12:44

    Moving right along.

    Matt:

    12:45-12:49

    All right, so if Cain killed Abel, who did Cain marry?

    Matt:

    12:50-12:51

    How did humanity continue?

    Jeff:

    12:52-12:55

    Well, he had to have married his sister.

    Jeff:

    12:55-13:01

    The Bible tells us that Adam and Eve had other sons and daughters.

    Jeff:

    13:02-13:07

    And the Bible also says that Eve is the mother of all the living.

    Jeff:

    13:07-13:12

    You know, some people think that God created Adam and Eve, but then he created other people, other places.

    Jeff:

    13:12-13:17

    But the problem with that is the Bible says sin is passed down ultimately from Adam and Eve.

    Jeff:

    13:18-13:24

    And so did God create other people who weren't part of the fall, part of the curse?

    Jeff:

    13:25-13:26

    You just don't see that biblically.

    Jeff:

    13:26-13:27

    Eve is the mother of all the living.

    Jeff:

    13:28-13:31

    So he would have had to marry his sister.

    Jeff:

    13:31-13:42

    And I know in our day that sounds very gross, but you were prohibited from marrying close relatives not until the Mosaic Law.

    Jeff:

    13:43-13:55

    So up until then, people were marrying close relatives because you didn't have some of the genetics problems that we have as a result of things decaying because of sin.

    Jeff:

    13:55-13:59

    But that's a whole nother story, but that's not what that's asking.

    Jeff:

    14:00-14:01

    It's asking who did he marry?

    Jeff:

    14:01-14:03

    He had to have married his sister.

    Matt:

    14:04-14:13

    I was gonna ask you about that as far as genetics of how that all worked, because certainly not working the same way now.

    Matt:

    14:13-14:13

    Right,

    Jeff:

    14:13-14:26

    yeah, Adam and Eve would have been, they were created without the mark of sin on them at first, right, so they wouldn't have had the mutations and some of the genetic problems that we have today, right?

    Jeff:

    14:27-14:42

    So, you know, when, like when somebody has a chromosomal problem and they have a child with somebody who maybe doesn't have that problem in their chromosomes, it like overshadows the weak one, right?

    Jeff:

    14:42-14:50

    But the problem is when relatives marry, and they have that same chromosome, it doesn't cancel out, right?

    Jeff:

    14:50-14:54

    So that birth defect is often manifest that way.

    Jeff:

    14:54-15:00

    So there's much more likely to be birth defects and things like that when close relatives marry.

    Matt:

    15:02-15:05

    And the other question I had just real quickly as a follow-up to that.

    Matt:

    15:05-15:14

    I mean, we always, when we read that part, and we look at how long people lived, what is up with that?

    Matt:

    15:15-15:18

    800 years, 930 years, is there a reason for that?

    Jeff:

    15:20-15:20

    I have a theory on

    Taylor:

    15:20-15:21

    that.

    Taylor:

    15:21-15:21

    Taylor, go ahead.

    Taylor:

    15:22-15:25

    I think your theory is probably the same as mine, so you should go ahead, yeah.

    Taylor:

    15:25-15:27

    We talked about this before, so I think it is-- - Water canopy?

    Jeff:

    15:28-15:41

    Okay, well, I believe that before Noah's flood, the earth would have had a water canopy around it and increased atmospheric pressure, which results in better health conditions, right?

    Jeff:

    15:42-15:48

    Like athletes that use a hyperbaric chamber, you know, there's so many health benefits that come from that.

    Jeff:

    15:48-15:54

    I believe the whole earth was under that condition pre-flood, which accounts for the long, long years.

    Jeff:

    15:54-15:56

    'Cause you see a drop off after the flood.

    Jeff:

    15:56-15:59

    You see it start to whittle down.

    Jeff:

    15:59-16:00

    Yeah, definitely

    Taylor:

    16:00-16:03

    had something to do with the flood because life expectancy goes way down after that.

    Matt:

    16:05-16:06

    Interesting, all right.

    Matt:

    16:07-16:10

    Who or what are the nephilim?

    Jeff:

    16:12-16:13

    I don't know, rock monsters?

    Taylor:

    16:15-16:18

    Yeah, according to the Russell Crowe Noah movie, nephilim are just rock monsters.

    Taylor:

    16:19-16:25

    I walked out of that movie years ago very disappointed and someone comes up to me in the theater and says, oh, did you see Noah?

    Taylor:

    16:26-16:27

    And I said, yep, I did.

    Taylor:

    16:28-16:29

    He said, what'd you think of it?

    Taylor:

    16:30-16:35

    I said, "Well, it was 'Transformers' meets the Bible." And they said, "Cool!" and they ran in.

    Taylor:

    16:35-16:37

    And I was like, "That's not what I meant." It wasn't a good thing.

    16:38-16:38

    (laughs)

    Jeff:

    16:38-16:40

    Yeah, you're like, "Not in the good way."

    Taylor:

    16:40-16:41

    Yeah, not, no, that wasn't a cool thing.

    Jeff:

    16:42-16:45

    So go ahead, why don't you kick that off and then I have some things.

    Jeff:

    16:46-16:46

    There's

    Taylor:

    16:46-16:47

    a lot of debate about who the Nephilim are.

    Taylor:

    16:47-16:49

    We're not really exactly sure who they are.

    Taylor:

    16:50-16:56

    They're first talked about in Genesis 6, 4 as the wickedness of the earth as described before the flood.

    Taylor:

    16:56-17:02

    Nephilim in Hebrew means fallen ones, but many Bible translations translate this as giants.

    Taylor:

    17:03-17:12

    And the only time we ever see this is Numbers 13, 33, as the spies are spying out the promised land, and they see giants and they're scared of them, and they don't want to try to conquer them.

    Taylor:

    17:13-17:16

    So we're not exactly sure who they are, but we do know that they're mighty men, as they're described.

    Taylor:

    17:17-17:20

    They fall on people physically, and they're really intimidating warriors.

    Jeff:

    17:21-17:27

    Right, and another theory is based on New Testament, what are the New Testament verses I have written down there?

    Taylor:

    17:28-17:28

    New Testament

    Matt:

    17:28-17:33

    verses 1 Peter 3 and 19, and 2 Peter 2.4?

    17:34-17:34

    Yeah,

    Jeff:

    17:34-17:45

    if you look those up, kind of compare them to the Genesis 6 account, it seems that there were demons that somehow inhabited men trying to procreate with human women.

    Jeff:

    17:46-17:57

    And it was such a grievous sin, obviously it was one of the things that led to the worldwide flood, but also it resulted in demons incarcerated into a prison called the Abyss.

    Jeff:

    17:58-18:01

    If you read about Luke 8.31, it's all through Revelation.

    Jeff:

    18:02-18:07

    It was such a horrible crime that God imprisoned those demons that tried to do that.

    Jeff:

    18:07-18:21

    So some people believe, and I kind of lean in this direction based on what Peter says in 1 and 2 Peter, that this was a demonic revolt that God put the kibosh on.

    Matt:

    18:25-18:28

    So what is your stance on Psalm 83?

    Matt:

    18:29-18:31

    Is it a war, a lament?

    Matt:

    18:31-18:36

    If you believe it to be a war, is it a past war or a yet future war?

    18:37-18:38

    You

    Jeff:

    18:38-18:39

    know, we were talking about that this week.

    Jeff:

    18:39-18:46

    I could not think of, and you couldn't either at the time, maybe you did since, I couldn't think of any eschatology in the Psalms.

    Jeff:

    18:47-18:58

    There's a lot in the Psalms about the first advent of Christ, but is there anything in the Psalms, Rich, can you think of anything in the Psalms that deals with eschatology, second advent, Armageddon.

    Jeff:

    18:58-18:59

    I couldn't think of anything and neither could

    Taylor:

    18:59-19:00

    Pastor Taylor, so.

    Taylor:

    19:01-19:11

    Like you said, it's very heavy on Christ's first coming of how he died, his garments being divided, all these other different things that predicts crucifixion before he's even invented, but it doesn't really speak to his second coming.

    Taylor:

    19:11-19:14

    Now, big parts of the Old Testament do, but the Psalms--

    Jeff:

    19:14-19:17

    Yeah, the Psalms really don't that I could think of.

    Jeff:

    19:17-19:21

    Somebody's probably Googling that right now, but I'm just saying off the top of my head and Taylor's.

    Jeff:

    19:21-19:22

    I would

    19:22-19:22

    say

    Taylor:

    19:22-19:26

    that it does, but nothing that I can say myself.

    Jeff:

    19:26-19:28

    And some scholars think...

    Jeff:

    19:28-19:29

    What do I have written down there, Matt?

    Jeff:

    19:29-19:31

    Is it 2 Chronicles 20?

    Jeff:

    19:31-19:31

    20,

    Matt:

    19:31-19:31

    yep.

    Jeff:

    19:32-19:36

    Okay, the events from Psalm 83 are from 2 Chronicles 20.

    Jeff:

    19:37-19:47

    And some people sort of take all of those enemies listed just as sort of general representatives of the enemies of Israel kind of thing put to poetry.

    Jeff:

    19:48-19:52

    So, I don't believe it's eschatological in nature, personally.

    Matt:

    19:54-20:01

    Alright, so in Matthew 7, 13 and 14, Jesus talks about narrow and wide gates.

    Matt:

    20:02-20:05

    One that leads to destruction and one that leads to life.

    Matt:

    20:05-20:10

    He indicates that there will be few who find the narrow gate that leads to eternal life.

    Matt:

    20:11-20:21

    Is Jesus revealing in these verses that, proportionately speaking, people born throughout the ages will go to hell compared to those that truly come to salvation through Jesus.

    Taylor:

    20:22-20:22

    Yes.

    Taylor:

    20:24-20:26

    Yeah, it seems to be exactly what he's saying.

    Taylor:

    20:26-20:36

    He says, "The gate is wide and the way is easy "that leads to destruction, "and those who enter by it are many, "for the gate is narrow and the way is hard "that leads to life and those who find it are few."

    Jeff:

    20:36-20:38

    You know what, let's be honest.

    Jeff:

    20:38-20:41

    It's a hard thing to think about and talk about, and it's emotionally charged.

    Jeff:

    20:42-21:15

    I remember September 11, all the emails and some of the images going around about all the thousands of people that went to heaven that day. And it's a hard thing to think about, but probably not, right? Jesus talked about that, what is it, Luke 13? That, you know, we want to think, well, these were people who died innocently and they were good people so they went to heaven, but that's not what the Bible says.

    Jeff:

    21:16-21:18

    The Bible says men love darkness because their deeds are evil.

    Jeff:

    21:19-21:22

    And that's what keeps people from wanting to come to God.

    Jeff:

    21:22-21:25

    We prefer sin over Jesus.

    Jeff:

    21:25-21:28

    And that is the condition of all of us.

    Jeff:

    21:28-21:33

    And it's according to Jesus, the few that repent from that.

    Taylor:

    21:35-21:40

    And Christianity is still by numbers considered the number one religion with 2.4 billion people.

    Taylor:

    21:40-21:43

    Islam is quickly catching up with 1.9 billion people.

    Taylor:

    21:43-21:46

    But out of those 2.4 billion people, are all of them saved?

    Taylor:

    21:47-21:51

    Now, I can't see into the human heart or judge who's saved or who's not.

    Taylor:

    21:51-21:52

    It's not my job.

    Taylor:

    21:52-21:58

    But I don't think that the 2.4 billion people in the world who claim to be Christians necessarily mean that they are Christians.

    Taylor:

    21:58-21:58

    No, and

    Jeff:

    21:58-22:00

    according to Jesus, absolutely not.

    Jeff:

    22:00-22:01

    There's wheat and tares, right?

    Jeff:

    22:01-22:04

    They look like it, but we won't know until the end.

    Jeff:

    22:04-22:14

    So, yeah, from Jesus, I'm not judging anybody's heart either, but from Jesus' own assessment, there are going to be people that look the part that hear "Depart from me, I never knew

    22:14-22:16

    you." Like

    Taylor:

    22:16-22:25

    I talked about in my sermon last week about how we don't talk about hell because we hate people, we talk about hell because we care about people and we want them to come to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ.

    Jeff:

    22:25-22:26

    Right, absolutely.

    22:26-22:26

    What

    Matt:

    22:26-22:42

    would you say to people that would say, "Well, if God is such a loving God, then why would He allow for, as we're saying, pretty much more than half of all people that have ever lived to not spend eternity with them.

    Jeff:

    22:42-22:44

    Oh, I have something ready for that.

    Jeff:

    22:44-22:47

    I say, oh, God's love is not in question here.

    Jeff:

    22:48-22:49

    What did God do?

    Jeff:

    22:49-23:01

    God took the form of man, came and lived among us 33 years, and was rejected, insulted, mocked, spit on, publicly humiliated and executed in the most painful possible way.

    Jeff:

    23:01-23:01

    Why?

    Jeff:

    23:02-23:04

    So that our sins could be forgiven.

    Jeff:

    23:04-23:06

    God's love is not in question here.

    Jeff:

    23:06-23:10

    You know, God's love, You can take that off the table.

    Jeff:

    23:10-23:11

    How can a loving God...

    Jeff:

    23:11-23:16

    God has demonstrated, Romans 5, He has demonstrated His love.

    Jeff:

    23:17-23:20

    The question really is, why would you reject a God like that?

    Jeff:

    23:21-23:25

    "Who spared not His own Son, but gave Him up for us all." That's the issue.

    Jeff:

    23:27-23:29

    And then I follow up with something like this.

    Jeff:

    23:29-23:38

    If you live your whole life, you don't want anything to do with God's truth, God's people, worship, You don't want anything to do with that.

    Jeff:

    23:38-23:40

    Do you know the worst place in the world you can end up?

    Jeff:

    23:41-23:41

    It's heaven.

    Jeff:

    23:43-23:43

    Because what is heaven?

    Jeff:

    23:43-23:45

    God's truth, worship, God's people.

    Jeff:

    23:46-23:52

    You mean you spent your whole life wanting nothing to do with that, but all of a sudden you die, and that's what I want to do for eternity.

    Jeff:

    23:52-23:52

    No.

    Jeff:

    23:53-24:06

    You've lived your life saying, "I don't want anything to do with this." So God puts you in a place, apart from Him, apart from His people, apart from, you know, worshiping before the throne of the Lamb.

    Jeff:

    24:06-24:10

    He puts you in a place, a part, He's given you exactly what you want.

    Jeff:

    24:11-24:14

    So, you know, God's love isn't in question here.

    Jeff:

    24:14-24:15

    That's what I tell people.

    Jeff:

    24:17-24:20

    Don't you dare turn that back on Him like, "God's not loving, ah,

    24:20-24:22

    no." Might

    Matt:

    24:22-24:23

    be the best answer yet.

    Matt:

    24:25-24:32

    Alright, the Bible says, "Judge not that you be not judged." It's in Matthew 7, verse 1.

    Matt:

    24:33-24:46

    But there are other places like 1 Corinthians 2.15 where God says, "But he who is spiritual judges all things, yet he himself is rightly judged by no one." Can you explain the seeming contradiction between these two verses?

    Taylor:

    24:48-24:51

    I would say there's a big difference between judging someone's heart and judging someone's behavior.

    Taylor:

    24:52-25:02

    Like I said earlier, I can't see into someone's heart and say what their motives are, but I can see by their behavior, their words, their reactions, that there is something going on there that I'm concerned about.

    Taylor:

    25:03-25:12

    And even in 1 Corinthians, Paul is just blown away the Corinthian church hasn't kicked the guy out of the church who is having a sexual relationship with his mother-in-law.

    Taylor:

    25:12-25:13

    He's like, what are you doing here?

    Taylor:

    25:14-25:17

    And he says this to them, for what have I to do with judging outsiders?

    Taylor:

    25:17-25:20

    He's talking about non-Christians, people not in the church.

    Taylor:

    25:20-25:20

    That's not my job.

    Taylor:

    25:21-25:25

    Is it not those inside the church whom you are to judge?

    Taylor:

    25:25-25:29

    God judges those outside, purge the evil person from among you.

    Taylor:

    25:30-25:36

    He's saying this person needs to be cast out of the church so that they will repent and be restored in the future.

    Jeff:

    25:37-25:40

    And we are commanded to judge actions, right?

    Jeff:

    25:40-25:41

    Judgment begins in the house of God.

    Jeff:

    25:42-25:44

    You talked about the trump card, God told me.

    Jeff:

    25:45-25:47

    That's another trump card in the church, is don't judge me.

    Jeff:

    25:48-25:49

    It's like, hey, you know what?

    Jeff:

    25:49-25:56

    You're married, you shouldn't be like flirting and dating with other women, like, well, don't judge me.

    Jeff:

    25:56-26:02

    Like, we're not judging you, but we are commanded to judge action, right?

    Jeff:

    26:02-26:03

    We're not judging your heart.

    Jeff:

    26:03-26:05

    We're not saying, "You're a terrible person.

    Jeff:

    26:05-26:06

    You're a lustful person.

    Jeff:

    26:07-26:19

    You're a hell-bound person." What we're saying is, "What you are doing is wrong." But again, people get that so messed up in the church, that you're not even allowed to point out a wrong action, because that's judging.

    Jeff:

    26:19-26:22

    And that is complete nonsense.

    Jeff:

    26:23-26:27

    So we're just supposed to walk around affirming everything that everybody does.

    Jeff:

    26:27-26:28

    That is not biblical.

    Jeff:

    26:29-26:34

    We love you, we want God's best for you, but it is our job to say what you are doing is wrong.

    Matt:

    26:36-26:39

    And there's a process of how you keep people accountable, right?

    Matt:

    26:39-26:42

    I mean, is it Titus where it's found?

    Matt:

    26:42-26:49

    I don't know if there's other places where it's found as well, where there's steps that a church will take to keep people accountable.

    Jeff:

    26:49-26:54

    Right. And like Taylor mentioned in 1 Corinthians 5, Paul goes, "Kick him out of the church.

    Jeff:

    26:55-27:04

    Grab him by the seat of the pants and the scruff of the neck and throw him right through the stained glass." Somebody that is living in flagrant, unrepentant sin, he says, "Hand him over to Satan.

    Jeff:

    27:04-27:13

    Get him out of the church." And with, "Oh, that sounds so harsh." He says, "No, get him out." We're not judging the person, and apparently in 2 Corinthians it looks like the dude was restored.

    Jeff:

    27:14-27:17

    But he says, "You can't have that." He was judging the guy's action.

    Jeff:

    27:17-27:22

    A guy that does something like that flagrant, unrepentant sin is not welcome in church.

    Jeff:

    27:23-27:36

    And there have been a handful of times over the course of my ministry where we've had to do that and it is heart-wrenching and painful, but there have been times that we're like, hey, you are not welcome to come here until you repent of this sin.

    Jeff:

    27:37-27:41

    So that's not judging the person, that's judging the action, right?

    Jeff:

    27:42-27:43

    We are commanded to do that.

    Taylor:

    27:44-27:52

    In Galatians 6, 1, Paul says this, "Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, "You who are spiritual should restore him "in a spirit of gentleness.

    Taylor:

    27:53-27:59

    "Also keep watching yourself, lest you too be tempted." That Greek word for restore is like setting a broken bone.

    Taylor:

    27:59-28:07

    You're helping that person heal, grow, and develop by pointing out their spiritual injury and helping them to heal.

    Taylor:

    28:07-28:11

    It's not loving to see that and be like, ah, that's too weird to say something, I feel judgmental.

    Taylor:

    28:11-28:14

    No, help them, call that out in a loving and gentle way.

    Taylor:

    28:14-28:19

    Keeping watching yourself, you're making sure you're not like ignoring the log - Oh, absolutely.

    Taylor:

    28:19-28:22

    By picking out the speck in your brother's eye.

    Taylor:

    28:22-28:23

    Yeah, absolutely.

    Matt:

    28:24-28:25

    How we doing on time, we good?

    Taylor:

    28:26-28:26

    Yeah, we're good.

    Matt:

    28:26-28:26

    All right.

    Matt:

    28:28-28:29

    Can you discuss the Bemis Seat?

    Matt:

    28:30-28:37

    I know it is a judgment for believers, good and not so good, that will take place post-rapture for how we spent our lives on earth.

    Matt:

    28:37-28:57

    But since God forgives our sins, past, present, and future, and wipes them from His memory once we confess our salvation in Him, why do we stand in judgment for things we did so good or is it just situations where we could have shared the gospel or help someone and didn't do anything that'll be called out and judged

    28:57-29:00

    and

    Jeff:

    29:00-29:03

    that's we could spend a lot of time on this one you have

    Matt:

    29:03-29:04

    notes on here so

    29:04-29:05

    do

    Jeff:

    29:05-29:06

    I have those right here

    29:06-29:07

    a

    Matt:

    29:07-29:08

    good bit of them

    Jeff:

    29:08-29:09

    did I write that

    29:09-29:09

    I

    Matt:

    29:09-29:11

    don't know somebody did no wasn't me

    Jeff:

    29:11-29:18

    um yeah there's different levels thanks Matt there's different levels of hell, we know that.

    Jeff:

    29:18-29:20

    The more you know and the more you reject, the worse hell is for you.

    Jeff:

    29:21-29:22

    There's different levels of heaven too.

    Jeff:

    29:23-29:28

    And we are judged by Christ for rewards in heaven.

    Jeff:

    29:28-29:52

    And some people get more rewards and some get less, but the Bible is clear that there is a reward handed out based on what was done truly motivated by glorifying Christ and what was done, you know, empowered by Christ versus what was done like in the flesh, selfish motive, you know, there's no reward for that stuff.

    Jeff:

    29:52-29:58

    The rewards come from what is truly done like for and because of and empowered by Jesus.

    Jeff:

    29:58-29:58

    Taylor?

    Jeff:

    29:59-29:59

    Yeah, the

    Taylor:

    29:59-30:09

    Greek word bima, where we get the bima seed from, it speaks to like a Roman courtroom or the elevated platform at the Olympics where you receive your crowns, you receive your rewards.

    Taylor:

    30:10-30:14

    And so it has nothing to do with our sin because that was fully taken upon Christ on the cross.

    Taylor:

    30:14-30:15

    A sin was judged on the

    Jeff:

    30:15-30:16

    cross.

    Jeff:

    30:16-30:16

    Right, all of

    Taylor:

    30:16-30:19

    God's wrath for our sins has been poured out upon his son and taken care of.

    Taylor:

    30:20-30:21

    This is just for rewards.

    Taylor:

    30:21-30:24

    And this calls us to live our lives seriously.

    Taylor:

    30:25-30:30

    The Bible calls us not to set our minds upon the things of this world, but to set our treasures in heaven.

    Taylor:

    30:30-30:32

    Now people ask, what are these rewards?

    Taylor:

    30:32-30:33

    We don't know.

    Taylor:

    30:33-30:38

    The Bible doesn't say, but I do know they're gonna be awesome because God never gives bad stuff.

    Taylor:

    30:38-30:39

    He only gives good gifts.

    Taylor:

    30:40-30:41

    So they're worth living for.

    Taylor:

    30:42-30:42

    Amen.

    Matt:

    30:43-30:48

    So judgment day for us shouldn't be something that we fear.

    Matt:

    30:48-30:48

    No,

    Jeff:

    30:49-30:53

    no, this isn't a fear-based, punishment-based, not at all.

    Jeff:

    30:54-31:00

    It's evaluating the works that we had done as believers and rewards given out proportionally,

    Matt:

    31:01-31:01

    right?

    Matt:

    31:04-31:17

    All right, with this flawed, hypocritical, and inconsistent as we are as believers, Why would God choose to limit Himself in such a way to effectively share the truth of His message to the lost world?

    Jeff:

    31:17-31:19

    I've said many times I have no idea.

    Jeff:

    31:20-31:26

    To me it sounds like, I don't mean this irreverently at all, but to me it sounds like a bad business strategy.

    Jeff:

    31:27-31:37

    You know, God using pieces of garbage like me to preach His eternal awesome holy word, like, I don't get it.

    Jeff:

    31:37-31:54

    But I would say I'm thankful for the privilege of partnering with Him, but why He would choose to use people, the only possible thing I could think of is to demonstrate the power of transforming lives through His Holy Spirit.

    Jeff:

    31:55-31:56

    Putting that on display, right?

    Jeff:

    31:56-32:04

    What is it in Ephesians talking about how God is demonstrating the glory of the Gospel through people?

    Taylor:

    32:06-32:09

    God just loves to use his people for his purposes.

    Taylor:

    32:10-32:12

    He loves to have his children work alongside him.

    Taylor:

    32:12-32:15

    And the example I give for this is back in third grade, my dad came for a career day.

    Taylor:

    32:16-32:20

    He was an orthopedic salesman, and he brought in his scrubs, his beeper, these different instruments.

    Taylor:

    32:20-32:22

    He brought some for me, too.

    Taylor:

    32:22-32:26

    He even brought my own beeper for me to wear to help him explain to the class what he did.

    Taylor:

    32:26-32:27

    Now, did my dad need me to do that?

    Jeff:

    32:27-32:29

    You might need to explain what a beeper is.

    Jeff:

    32:30-32:30

    (laughing)

    Jeff:

    32:32-32:32

    I'm just kidding.

    Jeff:

    32:34-32:34

    Go look it up.

    Jeff:

    32:34-32:34

    He'll

    Taylor:

    32:34-32:35

    blog about beepers.

    Taylor:

    32:35-32:36

    Yeah, go look it up.

    Taylor:

    32:37-32:41

    But anyway, it was a joy to work alongside my dad that day, even though he didn't need me to.

    Taylor:

    32:41-32:42

    In the same way, God doesn't need us.

    Taylor:

    32:42-32:47

    God could save whoever he wants without us, but he chooses to use us.

    Taylor:

    32:47-32:55

    And this is all throughout scripture, the disciples, Paul, Israel, all these different, God used these people for his purposes, for his glory.

    Taylor:

    32:56-32:57

    That's just his MO.

    Jeff:

    32:57-32:57

    Yeah.

    Taylor:

    32:59-32:59

    What a privilege,

    Jeff:

    33:00-33:00

    right?

    Jeff:

    33:00-33:01

    To be able to partner with God.

    Jeff:

    33:01-33:04

    He doesn't, you're right, Taylor, he doesn't need us.

    Jeff:

    33:05-33:08

    We're just so thankful as His children to be able to like, wow, really?

    Jeff:

    33:08-33:09

    You want to save people?

    Jeff:

    33:09-33:11

    And you want to use us to be part of that?

    Matt:

    33:13-33:28

    Yeah, I felt that hypocritical is good word in that question, because even times like at Arrow and teaching, it's like, I'll say something and immediately feel that conviction because I'm like, wow, that's something that I don't do well or whatever.

    Matt:

    33:28-33:34

    You know, I can feel very hypocritical at times because I know that I come up short on a lot of these things.

    Matt:

    33:34-33:39

    We do all right. We got four more. I think we can power through You better be quick. All right here. We go

    Jeff:

    33:39-33:41

    like 30 seconds per

    Matt:

    33:42-33:46

    What does the Bible say about the use of Western medicine example what being?

    Matt:

    33:47-33:49

    antidepressants painkillers medical marijuana

    Jeff:

    33:50-34:04

    What's the what's the verse I have up there's it's Proverbs 31 yeah there it is Proverbs 31 says give a strong drink to the one who's perishing and wine to those in bitter distress Well anybody comes to me for counseling the first thing I tell them to do is go see a doctor to get a checkup I'm not a doctor.

    Jeff:

    34:04-34:06

    I don't prescribe medications.

    Jeff:

    34:07-34:10

    I can't recommend them or tell people not to take them.

    Jeff:

    34:11-34:12

    But here's what I will say.

    Jeff:

    34:12-34:14

    Obviously, these things are abused.

    Jeff:

    34:15-34:19

    The Bible even says the one who's perishing, the one who's in pain, should be given strong drink.

    Jeff:

    34:20-34:21

    Why? To numb the pain.

    Jeff:

    34:21-34:25

    So these things have an appropriate place and usage.

    Jeff:

    34:26-34:29

    The problem is people abuse and misuse them.

    Jeff:

    34:29-34:32

    So in the right place?

    Jeff:

    34:33-34:34

    Yeah, absolutely.

    Taylor:

    34:37-34:39

    Yeah, I totally agree with what Jeff said also.

    Taylor:

    34:39-34:43

    Like half the New Testament was written by a doctor, Luke.

    Taylor:

    34:43-34:46

    So obviously that's something that is beneficial and is needed.

    Taylor:

    34:46-34:46

    Right.

    Jeff:

    34:47-34:49

    Yeah, people has like antidepressants and stuff like that.

    Jeff:

    34:50-34:56

    You know, there are people that have real, like whether it's a chemical imbalance or issues that require that, absolutely.

    Jeff:

    34:57-34:59

    But there's a lot of people that take that stuff that don't actually need it.

    Jeff:

    35:02-35:04

    So that's a sermon for another time.

    Jeff:

    35:04-35:12

    But obviously some people need medicine and need to take medicine, but we have strong biblical instruction for that.

    Matt:

    35:13-35:24

    And along the same lines, as far as some people abusing these things, is drinking alcohol, using tobacco, marijuana, or gambling all sins?

    Matt:

    35:25-35:27

    Should a born again believer stop these activities?

    Jeff:

    35:31-35:32

    We have 30 seconds left.

    Matt:

    35:34-35:36

    We should have put this to the front of the list.

    Jeff:

    35:37-35:44

    If I just sit here and go, well, that's a good question, Matt.

    Jeff:

    35:44-35:45

    Ding, ding, ding.

    Jeff:

    35:45-35:47

    You got 16 seconds.

    Taylor:

    35:47-35:49

    Let me read 1 Corinthians 6, 12.

    Taylor:

    35:49-35:52

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

    Taylor:

    35:53-36:01

    "All things are lawful for me, "but I will not be dominated by anything." So the things on this list, Can you be dominated by any of them?

    Taylor:

    36:02-36:02

    For sure.

    Taylor:

    36:02-36:06

    We all know people who, a Pac-Man, don't leave me alone.

    Taylor:

    36:06-36:07

    Jeff's Pac-Man music's coming on.

    Taylor:

    36:08-36:10

    There's people who are enslaved to certain things.

    Taylor:

    36:11-36:13

    Alcohol, gambling, smoking.

    Taylor:

    36:13-36:13

    Right.

    Taylor:

    36:15-36:15

    They're not beneficial.

    Taylor:

    36:16-36:16

    Right.

    Taylor:

    36:16-36:22

    Now, we have to be careful about that because the Bible says, know whether you can't smoke, that you can't drink.

    Taylor:

    36:22-36:29

    You have to be careful about those kind of things and live to your, convict your own personal conviction, but also recognize these things can lead to major issues in your life.

    Jeff:

    36:30-36:31

    Yeah, that was something Pastor Bob had taught me.

    Jeff:

    36:32-36:41

    The 1 Corinthians 6, 8, 10 principle was it's 6, 12, 8, 12 and 13, 10, 31, something like that.

    Jeff:

    36:41-36:44

    But when there's a gray area, there's five questions you could ask.

    Jeff:

    36:45-36:46

    Is it permissible?

    Jeff:

    36:46-36:47

    Is it beneficial?

    Jeff:

    36:48-36:49

    Could it get me under its power?

    Jeff:

    36:49-36:51

    Could it cause a brother to stumble?

    Jeff:

    36:52-36:53

    And is it glorifying to God?

    Jeff:

    36:54-36:56

    And any of the gray areas, you just run them up the pole, right?

    Jeff:

    36:58-36:59

    Let's take smoking, for example.

    Jeff:

    37:00-37:01

    Is it permissible?

    Jeff:

    37:01-37:03

    Yeah, if you're over, was it 18?

    Jeff:

    37:03-37:04

    You're over 18?

    Jeff:

    37:05-37:06

    I'm asking Taylor like he smokes.

    Jeff:

    37:07-37:07

    Yeah, I know.

    Taylor:

    37:08-37:10

    I left my pack in the car, sorry, I don't have it.

    Jeff:

    37:11-37:12

    He probably doesn't know.

    Jeff:

    37:13-37:14

    Anybody, is it 18 to buy cigarettes?

    Jeff:

    37:15-37:17

    You're like, "We don't know, Pastor Jeff." Come on, somebody here knows.

    Jeff:

    37:20-37:21

    It's 21? - 21.

    Jeff:

    37:22-37:23

    I don't, okay, whatever.

    Jeff:

    37:24-37:25

    Is it permissible?

    Jeff:

    37:25-37:28

    Yeah, if you're over a certain age, You can buy cigarettes.

    Jeff:

    37:28-37:29

    Is it permissible?

    Jeff:

    37:30-37:32

    Okay, what about is it beneficial?

    Jeff:

    37:34-37:35

    Hmm.

    Jeff:

    37:36-37:37

    Now we see a problem.

    Jeff:

    37:37-37:38

    Is it beneficial?

    Jeff:

    37:38-37:40

    The third one is could it get me under its power?

    Jeff:

    37:42-37:44

    Is it possible to get addicted to cigarettes?

    Jeff:

    37:47-37:47

    Okay.

    Jeff:

    37:48-37:50

    The fourth one is could it cause a brother to stumble?

    Jeff:

    37:52-37:58

    And yeah, it could possibly, if somebody's trying to quit smoking and whatever.

    Jeff:

    37:58-38:01

    And then the last one is, is it glorifying to God, right?

    Jeff:

    38:01-38:02

    Can

    Taylor:

    38:02-38:08

    you light up saying, "God, this is for you." - I think the one that we have to also be careful about is.

    38:09-38:09

    (laughing)

    Jeff:

    38:12-38:12

    Imagine

    Matt:

    38:12-38:13

    somebody and like,

    Jeff:

    38:13-38:14

    yeah.

    Jeff:

    38:14-38:19

    There's somebody sitting here or watching this that smokes that's gonna do that every time.

    Jeff:

    38:19-38:21

    Like, "God, this one's for you."

    Taylor:

    38:21-38:26

    I think a big one too is the alcohol question because there's a lot of people who say, you can't be a Christian and drink alcohol.

    Taylor:

    38:27-38:29

    Show me one verse in the Bible that says that.

    Taylor:

    38:29-38:32

    Now there's a lot of verses that say about drunkenness being a big issue, of course.

    Taylor:

    38:33-38:37

    I remember the seminar I went to, we all had to sign that we wouldn't drink while we were in seminary.

    Taylor:

    38:37-38:40

    And I thought to myself, how do you have the power to do that?

    Taylor:

    38:40-38:41

    The Bible doesn't say that.

    Taylor:

    38:42-38:47

    So it's one of those things where we have to be careful not to get too legalistic and go the other direction.

    Jeff:

    38:47-38:48

    Absolutely, yeah.

    Jeff:

    38:48-38:56

    So it boils down to personal conviction and I think those five questions are questions you sort of have to ask and evaluate for yourself.

    Jeff:

    38:56-38:57

    I can't enforce that, right?

    Jeff:

    38:57-38:58

    That's where you get into legalism.

    Jeff:

    38:59-39:01

    If you come to this church, you're not allowed to drink alcohol.

    Jeff:

    39:01-39:05

    Like that's, you know, that's malarkey, Jack.

    Jeff:

    39:06-39:06

    (laughing)

    Jeff:

    39:09-39:10

    Sorry, that's legalism.

    Jeff:

    39:10-39:11

    You're having a lot of fun today.

    Jeff:

    39:11-39:12

    (laughing)

    Jeff:

    39:13-39:21

    Anyways, yeah, we want to avoid every, you know, legalism, trying to enforce rules that make you more spiritual, things like that.

    Jeff:

    39:22-39:31

    I think a matter of personal conviction like that, you have to really seek the Lord and do what you really believe He's calling you to do.

    Jeff:

    39:32-39:34

    In those gray areas, that is.

    Jeff:

    39:34-39:37

    Some things are just black and white, like should I have an affair?

    Jeff:

    39:39-39:40

    No, obviously not, right?

    Jeff:

    39:40-39:49

    The Bible's clear about the covenant of marriage, but when it comes to cigarettes or scratchy lotteries or whatever, Taylor, that's their gray areas, right?

    Jeff:

    39:50-39:52

    So that is our time.

    Jeff:

    39:53-39:55

    How many did we have left?

    Matt:

    39:55-39:56

    We have two left.

    Jeff:

    39:56-39:57

    We have two left, all right.

    Jeff:

    39:57-39:57

    Two

    Matt:

    39:57-39:59

    just for Taylor and his blog.

    Jeff:

    39:59-39:59

    Pastor Taylor,

    Taylor:

    40:00-40:01

    you know, maybe we'll each take one.

    Matt:

    40:03-40:03

    Whenever you say.

    Taylor:

    40:03-40:03

    All right.

    40:04-40:05

    (audience laughing)

    Matt:

    40:05-40:06

    Taking on a lot of work.

    Taylor:

    40:08-40:09

    Hey, you're the one who wears the crown.

    Taylor:

    40:10-40:11

    Heavy as the head to wear the crown.

    Taylor:

    40:11-40:12

    Surprised it took you this long.

    Taylor:

    40:12-40:13

    That's true.

    Jeff:

    40:15-40:15

    What's that?

    Jeff:

    40:16-40:17

    Angle it like Jughead.

    Jeff:

    40:18-40:18

    (audience laughing)

    Jeff:

    40:20-40:28

    We want to thank everybody who submitted questions, and like I said, Pastor Taylor and I, we'll, maybe we'll each take one and blog the ones that we didn't get to.

    Jeff:

    40:29-40:34

    But would you please, Pastor Taylor, pray for us, and then we're going to have our closing announcements.

    Taylor:

    40:37-40:40

    Father, we thank you for who you are.

    Taylor:

    40:40-40:44

    We thank you for what you've done for us and what you continue to do for us, Lord.

    Taylor:

    40:45-40:49

    I pray that every single person in this room would submit themselves before your authority.

    Taylor:

    40:50-40:53

    we would submit ourselves before the authority of your word.

    Taylor:

    40:53-40:59

    We wouldn't trust in ourselves, our hearts, our own opinions, Lord, that we would trust in you and you alone.

    Taylor:

    41:01-41:09

    And Lord, I thank you for what you're able to accomplish today in this service, and I pray that we would take the rest of this week to honor, glorify, and live for you.

    Taylor:

    41:10-41:11

    In Jesus' name, amen.

    Jeff:

    41:12-41:12

    Amen.

Small Group Questions (Whole Group):

Review the questions submitted above. Discuss any of these that stuck out to you, or that maybe your group finds particularly interesting.

Breakout Questions:
Pray for one another!

Did God Really Say… Hell is Real?

Introduction:

The Truth About Hell (Luke 16:19-31):

  1. It is filled with people who Never Expected to be There . (Luke 16:19-23)

    Matthew 7:21-23

    John 6:29 - “This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent.”

  2. It is a place of Unimaginable Torment . (Luke 16:24-25)

    2 Thessalonians 1:9 - They will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction, away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of His might.

  3. It cannot be Escaped Once You are There . (Luke 16:26)
  4. It can be avoided by Submitting to the Word of God . (Luke 16:27-31)

    Romans 9:3 - For I could wish that I myself were accursed and cut off from Christ for the sake of my brothers, my kinsmen according to the flesh.

    Charles Spurgeon - “If sinners be damned, at least let them leap to Hell over our dead bodies. And if they perish, let them perish with our arms wrapped about their knees, imploring them to stay. If Hell must be filled, let it be filled in the teeth of our exertions, and let not one go unwarned and unprayed for.”

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

  • 01:28-01:32

    All right, you can turn your Bibles to Luke chapter 16 verses 19 through 31.

    01:32-01:35

    Luke 16 verses 19 through 31.

    01:36-01:44

    You know, I was thinking this past week, as human beings, we are experts at not dealing with things that make us feel uncomfortable.

    01:45-01:52

    This phenomenon begins at a young age when children close their eyes when they're told something that they don't wanna do and they don't wanna deal with you.

    01:52-01:56

    They close their eyes because they think that they're invisible if they do that.

    01:57-01:59

    It makes all the sense in the world, doesn't it?

    01:59-02:03

    If I cannot see you, that means that you can't see me.

    02:05-02:07

    I'm sure we have procrastinators in the room right now.

    02:07-02:13

    You have a big deadline hanging over your head at work or at home that you don't want to think about right now.

    02:14-02:17

    You're trying to wait to the last possible second to do it.

    02:18-02:24

    And some of you are very annoyed with me right now because you were doing a great job of not thinking about what you had to get done until right now.

    02:24-02:27

    I am so happy to be of service to you this morning.

    02:29-02:31

    Maybe you have a big issue with someone in your life.

    02:32-02:35

    You don't want to address it because it makes you feel uncomfortable.

    02:36-02:39

    And you're just stuffing it down, stuffing it down.

    02:40-02:58

    Many Americans live in massive debt and instead of dealing with this issue head on, they just dig a deeper and deeper and deeper hole because the stress of their situation makes them feel extremely uncomfortable, and they don't know if they can handle it.

    02:59-03:01

    You know, death is the greatest example of this.

    03:02-03:10

    We all know that death is slowly but surely approaching with each tick of the clock, but we still manage to not think about it too much.

    03:11-03:19

    We all know that death could strike at any time, but we still fool ourselves into believing that our time is unlimited.

    03:21-03:26

    Most people are afraid to think about death 'cause most people aren't sure of what happens after we die.

    03:26-03:28

    Do we just cease to exist?

    03:29-03:32

    Do the lights just turn off and stay off?

    03:33-03:37

    Do we become one with the universe, whatever that means?

    03:38-03:46

    Do we reincarnate as an animal or as another human being and just travel this endless merry-go-round of life on an endless loop?

    03:47-03:50

    Or is there actually an afterlife?

    03:52-03:56

    Do we go to one of two places, heaven or hell?

    03:58-04:05

    And the idea of heaven is appealing for obvious reasons, but hell just seems too horrible to be true.

    04:06-04:08

    For most people, the idea of hell is repulsive.

    04:09-04:14

    They do whatever they can to reject its existence and make it seem ridiculous.

    04:16-04:19

    Our society has lessened hell's seriousness in many ways.

    04:19-04:24

    We've turned it into a curse word that we yell when we're joking around or when we're surprised.

    04:25-04:29

    We even have the nerve to tell people to go to hell whenever we're annoyed with them.

    04:34-04:37

    In an attempt to lessen the impact of hell, we make it the butt of the joke.

    04:38-04:45

    Think of how many cartoons, movies, and comic strips you've seen that have a humorous depiction of hell.

    04:48-04:51

    Yeah, what does Satan usually look like in these depictions?

    04:51-04:52

    We all know, right?

    04:52-04:53

    What's he look like?

    04:55-04:57

    He has the skin tight red suit.

    04:57-04:59

    He has the pointy horns.

    04:59-05:00

    He has the pitchfork.

    05:01-05:09

    As a kid, I vividly remember watching the Satan's waiting episode of Looney Tunes with Sylvester Cat and Tweety Bird.

    05:10-05:21

    And Sylvester Cat keeps burning through his nine lives and keeps getting sent to hell over and over and over again where Satan is this red dog that won't stop laughing and yucking it up.

    05:23-05:29

    I've heard people joke around that they'd rather go to hell and have fun with their friends than go to heaven and be bored.

    05:31-05:36

    Satan loves to get us to laugh at things that are not funny on any level.

    05:37-05:45

    If we can laugh at something as serious as hell and use that word flippantly in a conversation, then it's not something serious that we have to deal with.

    05:45-05:49

    not something serious that we have to contend with and think about.

    05:50-05:56

    People are content just close their eyes to the reality of hell and pretend like it's a fantasy.

    05:58-06:01

    But denying its existence doesn't make it any less real.

    06:03-06:06

    This is the final message in our series called Did God Really Say?

    06:07-06:15

    Over the past month, we've been studying important doctrines and truths from scripture that our enemy constantly tries to undermine and attack.

    06:16-06:20

    We've answered questions like, did God really say that his word can be trusted?

    06:21-06:24

    Did God really say that every other religion is wrong?

    06:25-06:29

    Did God really say that he is in control of everything?

    06:30-06:34

    And this morning, we're gonna answer the hardest and most difficult question of them all.

    06:35-06:39

    Did God really say that hell is real?

    06:40-06:48

    And I'm gonna be brutally honest with you up front, this is going to be a hard message to preach, and it's going to be a hard message to hear.

    06:49-06:56

    This is a fun subject that I love to talk about, but it's an important topic that we cannot afford to ignore.

    06:56-06:58

    Too much is at stake.

    06:58-07:03

    Just sweep a discussion of hell under the rug and act like it's not there.

    07:04-07:10

    So before we unpack Luke chapter 16, verses 19 through 31, We're gonna go to the Lord in prayer.

    07:10-07:22

    And we're gonna ask for his help that we would take this message as serious as possible and not allow ourselves to be distracted from focusing on the reality of eternity.

    07:23-07:24

    Let's go to the Lord.

    07:27-07:31

    Father, as we just sang, you are holy, holy, holy.

    07:32-07:34

    You are righteous and you are just.

    07:34-07:41

    Lord, I pray that we would approach your word this morning with a sense of seriousness, with a sense of weight.

    07:43-07:52

    And while there's times in your word when we come across things that are hard, we come across things that we don't wanna read, but Lord, it's your truth, and we're called to submit to it anyway.

    07:54-08:02

    Lord, may you wound but then bind up, may you shatter us but then have your healing hands put us back together this morning.

    08:02-08:09

    We pray that you would watch over your word to perform it, that your word would accomplish the purpose for which you sent it out.

    08:09-08:11

    In Jesus' name, amen.

    08:13-08:22

    So I wanna read Luke chapter 16, verses 19 to 31 in its entirety so that we can be hit with the full force of what Jesus is saying.

    08:23-08:28

    And then we'll spend the rest of this message unpacking four essential truths about hell.

    08:29-08:43

    There was a rich man who was clothed in purple and fine linen who feasted sumptuously every day And at his gate was laid a poor man named Lazarus, covered in sores, who desired to be fed with what fell from the rich man's table.

    08:44-08:47

    Moreover, even the dogs came and licked his sores.

    08:48-08:52

    The poor man died and was carried by the angels to Abraham's side.

    08:52-09:03

    The rich man also died and was buried, and in Hades, in hell, being in torment, he lifted up his eyes and saw Abraham far off and Lazarus at his side.

    09:03-09:22

    And he called out, "Father Abraham, have mercy on me, "and send Lazarus to dip the end of his finger in water "and cool my tongue, for I am in anguish in this flame." But Abraham said, "Child, remember that you in your lifetime "received your good things, "and Lazarus and like men are bad things.

    09:23-09:54

    "But now he is comforted here, and you are in anguish." And besides all this, between us and you, a great chasm has been fixed "in order that those who would pass from here to you "may not be able, and none may cross from there to us." And Lazarus said, "Then I beg you, Father, "to send him to my father's house, "for I have five brothers, so that he may warn them, "lest they also come into this place of torment." But Abraham said, "They have Moses and the prophets.

    09:54-10:19

    "Let them hear them." And he said, "No, Father Abraham, "but if someone goes to them from the dead, "they will repent." Abraham said to him, "If they do not hear Moses and the prophets, "neither will they be convinced "that someone should rise from the dead." This somber passage and many others like it poke a massive hole in the argument that I've heard many people say over the years.

    10:20-10:21

    Jesus never talked about hell.

    10:22-10:26

    He was too loving and kind to talk about something so dark and horrible.

    10:27-10:31

    Actually, Jesus talks about hell more than anybody else in the entire Bible.

    10:32-10:36

    Jesus talked about hell twice as much as he talked about heaven.

    10:37-10:41

    Around 13% of his collected sayings were about hell and judgment.

    10:42-10:47

    So contrary to popular belief, Jesus never shied away from this controversial and difficult topic.

    10:49-10:55

    As we'll talk about later on, it's important to understand that it's not unloving for him to tackle this subject head on.

    10:56-11:03

    In fact, Jesus telling the hard truth about hell proves his love and his care for us.

    11:03-11:11

    Because if hell is real, then there is nothing more hateful and unloving than staying silent about it.

    11:13-11:18

    So in the verse that we just read, Jesus tells a story that would have absolutely shocked his listeners.

    11:19-11:23

    Bible scholars debate whether this is a parable or a real story.

    11:23-11:27

    It's given a lot of detail that's not common to parables.

    11:27-11:34

    Jesus doesn't say it's a parable explicitly in the text, and I don't wanna get into the nitty gritty of that debate because it really doesn't matter.

    11:36-11:40

    Either way, the same lessons and truths about hell are on full display.

    11:42-11:44

    So let's work our way through these four important truths.

    11:45-11:52

    The truth about hell, number one, it is filled with people who never expected to be there.

    11:53-11:56

    It is filled with people who never expected to be there.

    11:57-11:58

    (pages flipping)

    11:59-12:05

    So Jesus sets up the scene by comparing two men, the rich man and Lazarus.

    12:06-12:08

    Let's start with the rich man first.

    12:08-12:11

    He had a phenomenal wardrobe with high ticket clothing.

    12:12-12:23

    Jesus points out this man wore purple a lot, which may seem like a random detail, but that was the color of the royal and the wealthy back then because purple dye was so expensive.

    12:24-12:25

    He didn't just eat good food.

    12:25-12:29

    who were told that he feasted sumptuously every single day.

    12:29-12:33

    He went all out for every meal of the day with a massive spread.

    12:33-12:39

    I just picture a massive drumstick in one hand and a filled to the brim glass of wine in the other hand.

    12:40-12:44

    His house is obviously massive because he has his own gate.

    12:45-12:48

    So his house could have been on MTV Cribs Israel edition, I guess.

    12:49-12:51

    This guy lived the dream life.

    12:52-12:54

    In modern day terms, he rode in limos everywhere.

    12:55-13:01

    He flew on private jets while popping champagne, and he had newsworthy parties with celebrities.

    13:02-13:04

    He must have been envied by his neighbors.

    13:05-13:13

    Everyone thought that he was blessed by God, that he was highly favored by God because he had the very best of everything.

    13:15-13:20

    But on the opposite end of the social ladder is Lazarus, the man camped outside his gate.

    13:21-13:30

    His greatest desire in life is that he would get some of the table scraps that were left over from these massive parties in this house that he could never dream to enter.

    13:32-13:37

    On top of his food problems, Lazarus had horrible sores and ulcers covering his body.

    13:38-13:43

    And to add insult to injury, wild dogs would come up to him and lick his sores.

    13:44-13:45

    Isn't that a gross mental image?

    13:46-13:49

    And before you think, oh, those loving dogs were just trying to help him.

    13:50-13:55

    Back in those days, dogs were not lovable pets that people brought into their homes.

    13:55-13:59

    They were scavengers that people hated because they carried disease.

    14:00-14:02

    This isn't a loving picture.

    14:04-14:10

    Lazarus would have been viewed as the lowest of the low, only slightly above lepers.

    14:11-14:18

    In those days, a life of poverty and continued illness was often viewed as a divine act of punishment from God.

    14:19-14:24

    People would look at Lazarus and think, what did he do to deserve this fate?

    14:24-14:28

    Maybe his parents sinned and God cursed his entire family.

    14:31-14:37

    We aren't given any details about the interaction between these two men, but Lazarus lived outside of his house.

    14:38-14:40

    It's really hard to miss a beggar on your own front stoop.

    14:41-14:48

    We aren't told that Lazarus mistreated, I mean, the mister man mistreated Lazarus, or that he shook his fist at him to get off his lawn.

    14:49-15:00

    But we also aren't told any details about the rich man lifting a finger to help Lazarus, to do anything to help him in any way, shape, or form.

    15:01-15:06

    To the rich man, Lazarus was just a waste of space who couldn't do anything for him.

    15:07-15:11

    Lazarus deserved none of his attention, none of his time, and none of his care.

    15:13-15:17

    But the tables quickly turn and the roles are reversed in verse 22.

    15:18-15:21

    The poor man died and was carried by the angels to Abraham's side.

    15:21-15:23

    That's a picture of heaven.

    15:23-15:27

    The rich man also died and was buried in hell, in Hades.

    15:27-15:34

    Being in torment, he lifted up his eyes and saw Abraham far off and Lazarus at his side.

    15:35-15:39

    This plot twist would have blown Jesus' ears away.

    15:40-15:53

    The seemingly highly favored one ends up in the worst place imaginable while the dregs of society has a place of high honor in heaven alongside one of the greatest heroes of their faith, Abraham.

    15:54-15:55

    How is this possible?

    15:56-15:58

    How could this have happened?

    16:00-16:05

    Well, this story shows us that earthly success does not lead to eternal life.

    16:07-16:09

    And to be clear, I'm not saying that having money is bad.

    16:10-16:18

    I'm not saying that being successful is bad, but it is bad to think that because you're successful in this life, that means you're on good terms with God.

    16:19-16:26

    It's bad to think that your earthly status in any way affects your eternal status.

    16:29-16:43

    There are so many people in the Wexford and Cranberry area who have a massive house, nice cars, kids with straight A's, go on globe-trotting vacations, but their path is to eternal destruction.

    16:46-16:50

    Their lives look great on the outside, but on the inside, there is a spiritual emptiness.

    16:53-17:06

    Jesus says throughout the gospels that wealth and the desire for more and more and more stuff blinds us to our spiritual need, can blind us to our need for a savior.

    17:06-17:22

    It's easy to fall into the temptation "heaven on earth, and in the process, "you enslave yourself to an eternity in hell." These verses also show us that there are a lot of people in hell who are shocked that they are there.

    17:23-17:26

    They never expected to be here.

    17:27-17:31

    Even people who thought they were Christians and lived good lives.

    17:33-17:36

    Jesus talks about this in Matthew chapter seven, verses 21 through 23.

    17:38-17:44

    Jesus says, "Not everyone who says to me, "'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, "but the one who does the will of my Father "who is in heaven.

    17:45-17:51

    "On that day, many will say to me, "'Lord, Lord, do we not prophesy in your name "'and cast out demons in your name?

    17:51-17:57

    "'And do many of you buy works in your name?' "And I will declare to them, 'I never knew you.

    17:58-18:07

    "'Depart from me, you worker of lawlessness.'" That last sentence has to be one of the most chilling parts of the entire Bible.

    18:09-18:10

    You did all these impressive things.

    18:10-18:15

    You checked all the boxes off the Christian list, but I never knew you.

    18:16-18:20

    I never had a personal relationship with you.

    18:20-18:23

    You are a complete stranger to me.

    18:24-18:26

    Depart from me forever.

    18:29-18:30

    Please listen to me.

    18:30-18:37

    Trying to do good things to make God love you and work your way to heaven is futile.

    18:37-18:38

    It is a waste of time.

    18:39-18:43

    It is an exercise of self-deception and pride.

    18:43-18:48

    It only feeds your ego and makes you trust in yourself and not in the Lord Jesus Christ.

    18:50-18:52

    Maybe you're here this morning thinking, well, I'm going to heaven.

    18:52-18:54

    I do a lot of nice things for people.

    18:54-18:55

    I read my Bible every day.

    18:55-18:56

    I go to church every week.

    18:57-18:59

    Taylor, you don't know how much money I give to the church.

    18:59-19:02

    You don't know how much money I give the charities.

    19:02-19:04

    No, no, no.

    19:05-19:06

    None of those things matter.

    19:07-19:09

    None of those things will take you to heaven.

    19:10-19:15

    It's not a matter of what you do for Jesus, it's what Jesus has done for you.

    19:16-19:20

    Have you placed your faith and trust in him as your personal Lord and Savior?

    19:21-19:24

    Have you realized that you can do nothing to save yourself?

    19:24-19:27

    You can do nothing to forgive yourself.

    19:27-19:34

    All you can do is place your faith and trust in him fully and what he has done on your behalf on the cross.

    19:36-19:39

    Have you accepted this free gift of eternal life?

    19:39-19:44

    Are you pushing it away 'cause you feel like you need to do something to earn it?

    19:45-19:50

    Do you truly know Jesus or do you just know a lot of stuff about Jesus?

    19:51-19:54

    There's a big difference between those two things.

    19:56-20:04

    In John six, the crowds come to Jesus And they ask him, what good works must we be doing to please God?

    20:05-20:08

    What must we do to gain his approval?

    20:09-20:11

    Give us the chore list of good deeds and we'll do it.

    20:13-20:15

    I love Jesus' response.

    20:16-20:20

    This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent.

    20:21-20:22

    That's it.

    20:22-20:24

    It's that simple and clear cut.

    20:24-20:28

    Do you believe in Jesus or do you believe in yourself?

    20:30-20:34

    The second truth about hell, it is a place of unimaginable torment.

    20:37-20:40

    It is a place of unimaginable torment.

    20:43-20:49

    Let's continue on with verses 24 to 25 of Luke 16.

    20:52-21:09

    And he called out, "Father Abraham, have mercy on me "and send Lazarus to dip the end of his finger in water "to cool my tongue, for I am in anguish in this flame." But Abraham said, "Child, remember that in your lifetime, "you received your good things, "and Lazarus in like manner, bad things.

    21:10-21:21

    "And now he is comforted here, and you are in anguish." So the rich man looks far off, and he sees Lazarus with Abraham.

    21:22-21:24

    He's in anguish, and he's in torment.

    21:26-21:32

    Actually in the Greek, he's commanding Abraham to send Lazarus to help him.

    21:33-21:36

    Even in hell, the rich man thinks he's better than Lazarus.

    21:37-21:45

    He still thinks that Lazarus is beneath him and should serve him, even though he did nothing to help him in this life.

    21:47-21:52

    But Abraham breaks the bad news that there will be no relief now or any time in the future.

    21:53-22:10

    He says, "Remember that you in your lifetime "and received your good things, "and Lazarus and like men are bad things, "but now he is comforted here, and you are in anguish." In other words, the bad times for Lazarus have ended forever, but your bad times have just begun.

    22:12-22:19

    For many, this life is as good as it's ever going to get, but for the follower of Christ, this life is as bad as it ever will be.

    22:21-22:23

    Heaven is unbelievably awesome.

    22:23-22:33

    to never-ending joy, peace, and comfort in the loving presence of God, while hell is unspeakably awful.

    22:33-22:38

    It is filled with sadness, darkness, and eternal loneliness.

    22:40-22:48

    Those who rejected Christ and went their own way will experience the massive consequences of this continued and unrepentant decision.

    22:48-22:54

    They will experience the just and deserved wrath of God for their sin and rebellion.

    22:56-23:01

    But some try to lessen the horrors of hell by teaching something called annihilationism.

    23:03-23:04

    What's annihilationism?

    23:04-23:11

    This teaches that Satan, his demons, and unbelievers will not suffer forever and ever.

    23:11-23:15

    Instead, they will be disintegrated and just wiped off the map.

    23:16-23:19

    Their bodies, their souls, and their minds will just cease to be.

    23:20-23:26

    So in a sense, those who are sentenced to hell are sentenced to non-existence.

    23:28-23:32

    The only problem with this teaching is the teachings of the Bible.

    23:34-23:37

    Listen to how Paul describes the experience of hell for those who reject Christ.

    23:38-23:47

    They will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might.

    23:49-23:57

    John says this in Revelation 14, 11, and the smoke of their torment goes up forever and ever.

    23:59-24:07

    Jesus says that hell is the place where the worm does not die and the fire is not quenched, for everyone will be salted with fire.

    24:09-24:11

    These verses are painful to read.

    24:11-24:14

    They're not easy to talk about, but we can't skip them.

    24:15-24:17

    We can't shy away from dealing with them.

    24:18-24:24

    May we never lessen the horrors of hell to make ourselves feel better and make other people feel better.

    24:24-24:27

    We lessen the glory of the gospel.

    24:28-24:31

    We make hell seem less bad than it actually is.

    24:33-24:43

    This would be like telling someone, they need an immediate surgery without first explaining to them the life-threatening illness they have ravaging their body.

    24:45-24:47

    What would urge this patient to sign off on this procedure?

    24:48-24:52

    What would urge them to take care of this right now?

    24:54-25:00

    The surgery would just seem totally pointless and unnecessary if you didn't tell them what they need saved from.

    25:01-25:10

    In an even greater way, you cannot tell someone they need a savior without first telling them what they need saved from.

    25:12-25:22

    The good news of the gospel isn't truly good "bad news of hell." The third truth about hell, it cannot be escaped once you are there.

    25:23-25:25

    It cannot be escaped once you are there.

    25:30-25:42

    In verse 26, Abraham continues to deliver bad news and further explain to Lazarus why, well, further explain to the rich man why Lazarus can't commute over to hell and give him any relief.

    25:42-25:55

    He says to the rich man, Besides all this, between us and you, a great chasm has been fixed, in order that those who would pass from here to you may not be able, and none may cross from there to us.

    25:56-26:01

    There is a cosmic gulf between heaven and hell that cannot be crossed.

    26:03-26:09

    There is no door, there is no boat, there is no shuttle that takes you from one place to the other.

    26:10-26:13

    Neither heaven or hell will have visiting hours.

    26:13-26:24

    the inhabitants of hell will be completely blocked off from the people of God in heaven, and the people of God in heaven will be completely blocked off from the inhabitants of hell.

    26:24-26:28

    There are no exceptions to this fixed rule.

    26:29-26:33

    Once a person is in hell, they're there for the long run.

    26:34-26:41

    You know, back when I was in college, a best-selling book called Love Wins came out by a now former pastor named Rob Bell.

    26:42-26:46

    Don't even bother to look it up because all of his stuff is just heretical nonsense.

    26:47-26:51

    And Oprah loves him, so that should tell you all you need to know about his theology.

    26:53-27:00

    But the main assertion of this book is that God is way too good, God is way too loving to let people suffer in hell forever.

    27:02-27:08

    In the end, God's love will win out and everyone in hell will receive a second chance and enter into heaven.

    27:10-27:21

    Simply put, this life is kind of like a board game of monopoly and trouble where a child loses badly but their overly lenient parent lets them go back to the beginning and start all over again because they feel bad.

    27:22-27:26

    But does that line up with what Jesus is talking about in this passage?

    27:27-27:30

    Does this line up with what New Testament tells us?

    27:31-27:32

    Not one bit.

    27:33-27:41

    If this teaching from love wins is true and we all get another chance in eternity, What's the point of trusting in Jesus for salvation in this life?

    27:42-27:46

    What's the point, where's the urgency of telling other people about the gospel?

    27:47-27:57

    Why would we urge each other in the church to deny our sinful selves and pursue holiness if we all just end up in the same place eventually no matter what we do?

    27:59-28:02

    The story that Jesus tells us makes it so clear.

    28:02-28:04

    There are no second chances.

    28:04-28:07

    There are no do-overs after this life.

    28:08-28:12

    The chasm between heaven and hell cannot be crossed.

    28:14-28:25

    But again, false teachers like Rob Bell will rail against the clear teachings of scripture and ask how could a loving God possibly send people to hell forever?

    28:26-28:29

    And I want to tell you that's the wrong question to ask.

    28:29-28:36

    The right question is why would a just, holy, and righteous God allow anyone into heaven?

    28:37-28:40

    Why would God choose to save any of us?

    28:41-28:44

    We don't deserve it at all.

    28:46-28:49

    So often we say, "I don't deserve this, "I don't deserve that.

    28:49-28:50

    "You know what I deserve?

    28:50-28:51

    "I deserve hell.

    28:51-28:53

    "That is what I deserve.

    28:54-29:12

    "Everything else is the grace of God to me." This awesome God willingly sent his one and only son to suffer and die upon a cross, to absorb the wrath reserved for those who place their faith and trust in Him.

    29:12-29:19

    Jesus willingly sacrificed His place in heaven for 33 years to come to this earth and become like one of us.

    29:19-29:28

    And on the cross, He was willingly separated from His Father for a time so that we wouldn't have to be separated from Him for all of eternity.

    29:30-29:35

    How could someone who claims to be a follower of Christ have the audacity to believe.

    29:36-29:39

    The doctrine of hell makes God seem unloving and uncaring.

    29:40-29:50

    How could the Lord be anything but gracious, loving, kind, and patient as he gives sinners chance after chance after chance after chance to repent in this life?

    29:52-29:58

    Every single day is a fresh opportunity to freely accept what is given in Christ.

    29:59-30:06

    Every single breath is an opportunity to confess Jesus Lord and repent of your sin.

    30:08-30:16

    When you have a high view of man and a low view of God, hell is extremely offensive and makes no sense whatsoever.

    30:17-30:24

    But when you have a low view of man and a high view of God, the necessity of divine judgment makes all the sense in the world.

    30:26-30:28

    God's judgment has to go somewhere.

    30:30-30:44

    "be upon you in hell forever, "or upon his son who stood in your place." Finally, fourth truth about hell, it can be avoided by submitting to the word of God.

    30:47-30:50

    It can be avoided by submitting to the word of God.

    30:52-30:58

    So the rich man moves beyond thinking about himself, and he moves to thinking about his living family.

    30:59-31:01

    read verses 27 through 28.

    31:01-31:15

    And the rich man said, "Then I beg you, Father, "to send him to my father's house, "for I have five brothers, so he may warn them, "lest they also come into the place of torment." So the rich man knows that Lazarus can't help him.

    31:15-31:19

    He knows that Lazarus can't exit heaven to come to hell and give him relief.

    31:19-31:25

    But he's hoping that Lazarus can leave heaven and go warn his brothers.

    31:27-31:30

    But Abraham's long line of bad news hasn't come to an end.

    31:30-31:34

    In verse 29 he says this, "The Abraham said, 'They have Moses and the prophets.

    31:34-31:39

    Let them hear them.'" What's he talking about here?

    31:40-31:41

    Moses and the prophets are long gone.

    31:41-31:45

    They're in heaven alongside Abraham and Lazarus.

    31:46-31:48

    But their writings live on in the Old Testament.

    31:49-32:00

    He's saying your brothers have access to scripture which plainly tells them that you need to by faith "Believe in the Lord and they will be saved." That's all they need.

    32:02-32:04

    But this answer isn't good enough for the rich man.

    32:05-32:13

    Verse 30 he says, "No, Father Abraham, "but if someone goes them from the dead, they will repent." In a way it's like he stomps his foot, that's not good enough.

    32:14-32:20

    I need you to send a miracle so that they will believe that you can shake the cobwebs off of them and they'll finally understand.

    32:23-32:26

    He doesn't have a very high view of the word of God.

    32:27-32:29

    But Abraham doesn't share this viewpoint.

    32:29-32:46

    He says, "If they do not hear Moses and the prophets, "neither will they be convinced "if someone should rise from the dead." Lazarus could pop out of the grave, juggling fire and swords or riding a unicycle, and these guys still wouldn't repent and believe.

    32:48-32:54

    Think of the countless men and women who saw Jesus do miraculous things, and they still didn't believe.

    32:54-33:02

    They saw him give sight to the blind, release those who were demon possessed, and literally bring the dead back to life, and they still resisted him.

    33:02-33:04

    They were still hard-hearted.

    33:06-33:14

    In order to be saved, a person must humble themselves before the word of God, which plainly lays out the path to eternal life.

    33:16-33:23

    You must recognize that your opinions and thoughts are wrong and God's authoritative word is right and true.

    33:24-33:28

    The word of God is sufficient to accomplish the work of God.

    33:30-33:38

    If someone repeatedly and unrepentantly rejects the word of God, either read or preached by a messenger, nothing will convince them.

    33:39-33:42

    Even a miracle from heaven will not move them.

    33:43-33:47

    Even the dead coming back to life will not stir their dead hearts.

    33:49-34:08

    You know, it was impossible for Lazarus to leave heaven and warn the rich man's brothers, but we as Christians have the opportunity, we have the pressing call to spread the word of God and the gospel of Jesus Christ to our neighborhoods, to our cities, to our country, and to the ends of the earth.

    34:08-34:12

    We get to tell people the great news that hell could be avoided.

    34:13-34:20

    We get to even tell the even greater news that God can adopt them into his family and they could spend forever with Him.

    34:21-34:23

    That is why we're still here.

    34:24-34:28

    That is why God didn't just beam us up to heaven when we came to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ.

    34:28-34:29

    We have work to do.

    34:31-34:37

    There are almost eight billion people on this planet, and the vast majority of them do not know Jesus.

    34:37-34:41

    And a massive chunk of them have never even heard of Jesus.

    34:44-34:50

    The Apostle Paul points to the importance, weight, and joy of our calling in Romans chapter 10.

    34:51-34:52

    Let's read, it'll be on the screen behind me.

    34:53-34:57

    For everyone who calls in the name of the Lord will be saved.

    34:58-35:10

    How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed, and how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard, and how are they to hear without someone preaching, and how are they to preach unless they are sent as it is written.

    35:11-35:24

    How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news, but they have all not obeyed the gospel, for Isaiah says, "Lord, who has believed "what he has heard from us?" So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of who?

    35:25-35:26

    The word of Christ.

    35:28-35:32

    What an amazing privilege and responsibility we have been entrusted with.

    35:32-35:42

    We get to share the word of Christ, and see God change lives, change families, change eternal destinies.

    35:42-35:47

    This is the most important mission of all.

    35:48-35:51

    But I don't know about you, I can get really distracted.

    35:52-35:59

    I can suffer from spiritual amnesia and forget who I am, and forget what God has called me to do.

    36:01-36:03

    We are ambassadors for Christ.

    36:04-36:06

    We represent him on this earth.

    36:06-36:13

    We forget that heaven is our ultimate home, The road to hell is packed and time is running out.

    36:15-36:23

    Church, we have to slip out of this amnesia and be awake and stay awake to these non-negotiable realities.

    36:24-36:28

    True followers of Christ should never be unmoved or unfazed by the reality of hell.

    36:28-36:41

    If you call yourself a Christian and you can listen to this message, you don't feel stirred up, you don't feel anything, you don't feel a call to spread the gospel or love people, please do some heart examination.

    36:42-36:46

    Please look at your own soul and ask yourself, do I know Jesus?

    36:46-36:48

    Do I truly love other people?

    36:50-36:55

    It should break our hearts that people are in hell right now and many more will go there in the future.

    36:57-37:05

    In Romans 9, one through five, Paul grieves over the truth that many of his fellow Jews are rejecting Christ and denying him.

    37:07-37:19

    He goes as far as to say this, "I could wish that I myself were accursed "and cut off from Christ for the sake of my brothers, "my kinsmen, according to the flesh." Do you realize what he's saying here?

    37:19-37:25

    Paul is saying, if it was possible, I would take their damnation upon myself and give them my salvation.

    37:25-37:30

    I would take their place in hell, and I would give them my place in heaven.

    37:32-37:34

    Imagine that kind of love.

    37:34-37:36

    Do you have that kind of love for people?

    37:36-37:40

    Do I have that kind of love for people?

    37:42-37:46

    May we follow the example of the Apostle Paul and not be apathetic.

    37:46-38:02

    The horrors of hell should motivate us to not stay silent about the gospel and let the fear of man hold us back from sharing the gospel with our unsafe family members, our friends, our neighbors, our coworkers, even those people we don't like very much in our lives.

    38:04-38:08

    Never forget that every single person you meet is not just flesh and bone.

    38:09-38:15

    Every single person you meet is an embodied soul that will live forever somewhere.

    38:17-38:24

    Charles Spurgeon once said something about the believer's response to hell that I haven't been able to forget since I heard it.

    38:25-38:29

    He said this, "If sinners be damned, "at least let them leap to hell over our dead bodies.

    38:30-38:34

    "And if they perish, let them perish, "their arms wrapped about their knees, He's imploring them to stay.

    38:35-38:42

    If hell must be filled, let it be filled in the teeth of our exertions, and let no one go unwarned and unprayed for.

    38:43-38:48

    Is there someone in your life right now who doesn't know Christ and they're going unwarned and unprayed for?

    38:51-38:54

    So let's wrap up this series by definitively answering our final question.

    38:55-38:58

    Did God really say that hell is real?

    39:00-39:00

    Yes.

    39:01-39:07

    No matter how hard people want to close their eyes close their eyes to this question, the answer is yes.

    39:07-39:12

    This truth is crystal clear from the mouth of Jesus and the rest of the New Testament.

    39:13-39:16

    Hell is filled with people who never expected to be there.

    39:17-39:21

    Hell is a place of eternal punishment and separation from the loving presence of God.

    39:22-39:35

    Hell is unescapable and devoid of second chances once you are there, but praise the Lord that hell can be avoided by submitting to the word of God, by repenting of our sin and turning to Jesus for forgiveness.

    39:36-39:44

    He experienced the full weight of hell upon the cross so that those who trust in him will experience the everlasting joys of heaven.

    39:45-40:00

    For those of you in this room who are distracting yourselves from eternal realities or falling back on the hope that you're a good person, I've been praying for you all week, I hope and pray the Lord will open up your heart to the truths of the gospel and you will finally believe.

    40:02-40:05

    Maybe there's someone in this room who feels like they're too far gone.

    40:05-40:08

    They've done too many bad things to be forgiven.

    40:10-40:14

    God is ready and willing to accept you with open arms this morning.

    40:16-40:35

    Jesus once said, "Whoever comes to me, "I will never cast out, I will never send away." And for the rest of us, who have friends and family members who are rejecting Christ, who want nothing to do with the Lord, please don't give up hope.

    40:36-40:37

    Please don't throw in the towel.

    40:37-40:43

    Keep praying, keep sharing, keep trusting in the Lord, keep modeling Jesus Christ.

    40:44-40:44

    Let's pray.

    40:47-40:55

    Oh Lord, we come before you and we thank you for your mercy and your grace.

    40:56-40:59

    Help us never think, oh, we're so much better than other people, Lord.

    40:59-41:01

    I can't believe those people would do that.

    41:01-41:05

    Lord, help us to realize, I'm only saved by grace and grace alone.

    41:06-41:09

    I am where I'm at because of God and him alone.

    41:10-41:16

    And Lord, we wouldn't point our fingers at other people, we'd wrap our arms around them and share with them the love of Jesus Christ.

    41:17-41:19

    No one is too far gone, Lord.

    41:19-41:20

    No one is too far away from you.

    41:20-41:24

    You can chase anyone down and wrap them up in your loving arms.

    41:26-41:33

    Lord, if there's someone in this room who doesn't know you, Lord, I'm praying they wouldn't be able to leave this room this morning without turning to Jesus Christ for eternal life.

    41:34-41:47

    And for the rest of us, Lord, let us walk out of this room with a sense of urgency, a sense of urgency to share this message, Lord, to be a good example, to shine the light of Christ everywhere we go, Lord.

    41:47-41:51

    Let us leave our spiritual amnesia here and never go back into that slumber.

    41:53-41:59

    Father God, let us live for your glory and for the proclamation of the good news of your son.

    41:59-42:01

    In Jesus' name, amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Luke 16:18-31

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

  2. Why is hell such a controversial and neglected doctrine? Why do many churches/Christians shy away from talking about it?

  3. How can we lovingly and graciously talk about the reality of hell with unbelievers in our lives as we share the gospel?

Breakout
Pray for one another.

Did God Really Say… He is in Control of Everything?

Introduction:

God Says That He Is... (Isaiah 45:5-12 & 46:8-11)

  1. The one and only LORD: I cannot overestimate His Sovereign Reach (Isaiah 45:5-7)

    1 John 1:5 - God is light and in Him there is no darkness at all.

    Genesis 45:8 - “So it was not you who sent me here, but God.”

    Genesis 50:20 - “As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept alive, as they are today.”

    Acts 2:23 - “this Jesus, delivered up according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God, you crucified and killed by the hands of lawless men.”

    Romans 8:28 - And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to His purpose.

  2. The one and only Creator: I cannot question His Actions . (Isaiah 45:8-12)
  3. The one and only Almighty: I cannot thwart His Purposes . (Isaiah 46:8-11)
    • Decretive will
    • Preceptive will

    Philippians 4:6-7 - Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

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

  • 01:29-01:32

    All right, let's turn our Bibles to Isaiah chapter 45.

    01:33-01:34

    Isaiah chapter 45.

    01:35-01:41

    As you turn there, I wanna tell you that I'm actually gonna be celebrating my ninth wedding anniversary in three days from now.

    01:42-01:43

    Thank you, thank you.

    01:45-01:52

    So my wife Kate and I got married on July 26, 2014, and here's a picture of our big day.

    01:54-01:56

    Now, two things come to mind when I look at this picture.

    01:57-01:59

    The first is, I wish I still looked like that.

    02:00-02:00

    (audience laughing)

    02:01-02:03

    That was too big of a laugh, come on.

    02:03-02:04

    (laughing)

    02:04-02:06

    A little bit of a chuckle would have been nice.

    02:06-02:10

    But also, how does my wife look even better at 31 than she did back when she was 22?

    02:11-02:14

    And I can say that because she's not in the room this morning, she's back with the nursery.

    02:15-02:19

    You know, July 26, 2014 was a fantastic day.

    02:20-02:26

    It was a day that I loved to relive in my mind, but leading up to it, there was some anxiety that comes with planning every single wedding.

    02:27-02:29

    You know, Kate and I wanted to get married outside.

    02:30-02:38

    We got married at a place called Shady Elms, which is really, has great, gorgeous locations for pictures, has a small barn and a pond as well.

    02:39-02:43

    But if we wanted to get married outside, we had to have plans in case it was going to rain.

    02:43-02:46

    We live in Pittsburgh, and you never ever know what's gonna happen.

    02:47-03:04

    And so if we wanted to get married outside, we had to decide, are we gonna buy or rent this $2,000 awning that they offered in case that it rained because the barn was so small that people would have to leave after the ceremony as they tore down for the reception for 30 to 40 minutes.

    03:04-03:09

    If it poured, people would just be standing out there in the rain for 30 minutes with no cover.

    03:10-03:11

    And this has seemed like a big, massive waste of money.

    03:11-03:14

    We're like, why did we decide two weeks ahead of time?

    03:14-03:16

    We couldn't wait till the day before.

    03:16-03:19

    And so I just kind of agonized over this decision because I'm a cheap person.

    03:19-03:20

    I'm like, this is such a waste of money.

    03:20-03:21

    I don't wanna do this.

    03:22-03:23

    I guess people can just stay outside in the rain if they want to.

    03:24-03:26

    But apparently that's not okay to do.

    03:27-03:30

    So for weeks, I would just look over the weather report.

    03:30-03:39

    I would pull up my phone like 20 times a day and just stare at my phone and Kate would just be like, "Are you looking at the weather again?" I'm like, "No, no, no, no, no, no, no, it wasn't." I would just agonize over this.

    03:39-03:48

    And eventually we decided, let's just risk it, let's not buy it, and thankfully the Lord honored that decision and it didn't pour until immediately after our wedding reception.

    03:50-03:53

    Let me ask you a question with a really obvious answer.

    03:53-04:02

    Did my obsessive worrying about the weather and my constant checking of the weather app do anything to affect the weather that day?

    04:04-04:04

    No.

    04:05-04:07

    I didn't make it a beautiful, sunny day.

    04:07-04:13

    I had 0% of an effect on the weather on July 26, 2014.

    04:13-04:24

    My hours of stressing out and staring at meteorology radars Weeks in advance was a complete and utter waste of time because I cannot control the weather in any way.

    04:25-04:32

    But for some reason, those moments, staring at that report and worrying gave me this false sense of control.

    04:33-04:38

    It gave me the sense that I can do something about it.

    04:40-04:46

    You know, as human beings, we are experts at tricking ourselves into believing that we have more control than we do.

    04:46-04:51

    We have some control, but not nearly as much as we would like.

    04:52-05:02

    We would like to believe that we're in complete and total control of our finances, of our futures, of our health, but that's not true at all.

    05:03-05:08

    The older I get, the more I realize how little control I actually have.

    05:09-05:16

    I can prepare myself as much as possible to be a dependable pastor, but things can still come out of nowhere that I wasn't expecting.

    05:17-05:25

    I can do my best to love my kids, disciple them, teach them the word of God, but I cannot force them to know and love Jesus.

    05:25-05:30

    I can't give them the faith to believe in Christ as much as I would like to.

    05:31-05:40

    I can wisely invest my money and save for years and years, but something unexpected can come out of nowhere.

    05:41-05:43

    I could be in a really bad position.

    05:44-05:46

    This lack of control can be scary.

    05:47-05:49

    This lack of control can be discouraging.

    05:50-05:52

    This seems like bad news, doesn't it?

    05:53-05:56

    But it's actually the greatest news imaginable.

    05:57-06:07

    Coming to grips with our lack of control should help us to realize how dependent upon God we really are, how much we truly need him.

    06:08-06:11

    We're in the middle of our latest series called Did God Really Say?

    06:12-06:20

    in which we are focusing on important doctrines and realities of scripture, that our enemy constantly tries to attack, that he constantly tries to undermine.

    06:20-06:29

    He whispers these questions of doubt in our ears so that we will doubt in the goodness and faithfulness of God.

    06:30-06:35

    We've already answered the questions, did God really say that his word can be trusted?

    06:35-06:39

    Did God really say that every other religion is wrong?

    06:40-06:50

    This morning, we're gonna look to Isaiah chapter 45 and 46 to answer the question, did God really say that he is in control of everything?

    06:51-06:54

    Did God really say that he is in control of everything?

    06:55-07:04

    Now, to be honest, at the front end, this sermon will require you to put on your thinking cap and really face some really difficult and complex truths of scripture.

    07:06-07:13

    It will cause you to realize how small you really are how big God really is.

    07:14-07:20

    I hope and pray that the Lord will use this text to blow up that teeny tiny box that we try to put him in.

    07:21-07:35

    That Isaiah's massive vision of a big God will comfort our troubled hearts, ease our many anxieties, and lead us to recognize how joyful it really is to depend on the Lord from one moment to the next.

    07:37-07:42

    So before diving into God's word, go to the Lord and ask for listening ears and an open heart.

    07:43-07:49

    Father, you call us in your word to be still and know that you are God.

    07:51-07:55

    Well, so often we're just frantically running around and we forget about you.

    07:56-08:01

    We forget who you are, we forget what you've done for us, we forget what you continue to do for us.

    08:02-08:05

    Lord, let us still ourselves before your word this morning.

    08:05-08:19

    we would just be impressed with your majesty, with your glory, with your awesomeness, Lord, that our problems, our issues, our struggles would shrink in comparison to how big you are.

    08:21-08:24

    Lord, help all of us this morning, in Jesus' name, amen.

    08:25-08:29

    So our outline for this morning, God is, number one, the one and only Lord.

    08:30-08:33

    I cannot overestimate his sovereign reach.

    08:34-08:38

    God is the one and only Lord, I cannot overestimate his sovereign reach.

    08:40-08:57

    Last week we studied Isaiah chapter 44, verses six through 20, and we learned that the prophet warned the kingdom of Judah that because of their rebellion, because of their worship of false idols, God's gonna send the Babylonians to invade, destroy Jerusalem, and take them back to Babylon in exile.

    08:58-09:13

    Following this word of judgment, Isaiah offers God's people a message of salvation and hope he gives them the great news that the Lord's not gonna forget them in Babylon, that he will bring them back from this captivity.

    09:14-09:23

    But he adds an extra detail at the end of chapter 44, at the beginning of chapter 45, that would rub a lot of the people of Judah the wrong way.

    09:23-09:33

    He says in order to accomplish this, he will raise up a pagan king named Cyrus to destroy the Babylonians and send them back to their homeland.

    09:34-09:35

    Why is it such a big deal?

    09:36-09:37

    Why would they care about this?

    09:39-09:45

    Well, because in their history, God would raise up an Israelite who believed in him to rescue his people from trouble.

    09:46-09:48

    People like Moses, Gideon, Samson.

    09:49-09:55

    Why would God raise up someone who doesn't even know him or believe in him to accomplish his purposes?

    09:55-09:58

    Why wouldn't God just keep this in the family?

    09:59-10:10

    We'll get into that question more at the second point, but it's really important to understand that a decent chunk of chapter 45 that we're about to read is directed at Cyrus, who hasn't even been born yet.

    10:11-10:17

    This prophecy about his life won't come to pass until almost 200 years later.

    10:19-10:26

    The Lord, I mean, Cyrus won't know the Lord, but the Lord certainly knows Cyrus, and he has planned out his entire life.

    10:27-10:37

    He will use this man to accomplish his purposes and show his people that he is in control of everything, down to the very last and smallest detail.

    10:38-10:43

    So let's read what God has to say about himself in verses five through seven of chapter 45.

    10:44-10:47

    I am the Lord and there is no other.

    10:47-10:49

    Besides me, there is no God.

    10:49-10:52

    I equip you, though you do not know me.

    10:52-10:53

    Again, he's talking to Cyrus.

    10:54-10:59

    That people may know from the rising of the sun and from the West, that there is none besides me.

    10:59-11:01

    I am the Lord and there is no other.

    11:01-11:04

    I form light and I create darkness.

    11:04-11:06

    I make well-being and create calamity.

    11:06-11:10

    I am the Lord who does all these things.

    11:11-11:17

    Most importantly, God reveals himself as the Lord in these verses.

    11:17-11:25

    As we learned last week, this is the personal name of God pronounced something like Yahweh in Hebrew, meaning I am.

    11:26-11:31

    And God communicates so much about himself through this personal name of I am.

    11:32-11:34

    He's saying I am the greatest and most important.

    11:34-11:36

    There is no one and nothing like me.

    11:37-11:38

    I depend on no one.

    11:39-11:41

    No one can tell me who I should be.

    11:41-11:42

    I am.

    11:42-11:44

    I am who I am.

    11:46-11:51

    This personal and powerful name of God shows us that he is sovereign.

    11:53-11:55

    Now what does that mean that God is sovereign?

    11:56-12:03

    This means that God is supreme over everything and everyone else and he is a complete control.

    12:03-12:06

    He has absolute authority over his creation.

    12:07-12:10

    He has absolute authority over what happened in the past.

    12:10-12:17

    He has absolute authority over what is happening in the present and he has absolute authority over what will happen in the future.

    12:19-12:21

    Nothing happens by luck.

    12:21-12:24

    Nothing happens by chance.

    12:25-12:26

    God is sovereign.

    12:26-12:28

    God is in control.

    12:30-12:31

    Look again to what he says in verse seven.

    12:32-12:34

    I form light and I create darkness.

    12:34-12:36

    I make well-being and create calamity.

    12:36-12:39

    I am the Lord who does all these things.

    12:40-12:49

    So according to God himself, he's not just in control of the good things that happen to us, he's in control of the bad things as well.

    12:50-12:53

    To be clear, God is not the author or source of evil.

    12:54-12:59

    As the Apostle John says in his epistle, God is light and in him there is no darkness at all.

    13:00-13:05

    God is not to blame for evil, but he still uses it for his divine purposes.

    13:06-13:11

    We see in scripture that even Satan and his demons are under the control of God.

    13:12-13:14

    Satan is like a dog on a leash.

    13:14-13:16

    He can't just run wild and unrestricted.

    13:17-13:20

    We see this most clearly in the book of Job.

    13:21-13:28

    Satan has to come to the Lord and ask for permission to bring hard times upon Job.

    13:28-13:35

    You know, people often act like there's this really close battle between Satan and God.

    13:35-13:36

    They're in this arm wrestling match.

    13:36-13:38

    We're not really sure as they come out on top.

    13:38-13:39

    It's really close.

    13:39-13:40

    We'll see what happens.

    13:41-13:49

    I'm pretty sure the one who has to ask for a permission slip from the divine principle of the universe is gonna lose big time.

    13:52-13:55

    God allowed Satan to take everything away from Job.

    13:58-14:00

    Satan did this to crush Job.

    14:01-14:06

    God did it to make him stronger and more dependent upon him.

    14:07-14:14

    There are many more examples of God's sovereignty over hard times, over suffering in Scripture.

    14:15-14:17

    There's a story of Joseph and his brothers.

    14:18-14:22

    He's sold into slavery by his own brothers.

    14:24-14:33

    He's thrown into a pit, like you know what, let's sell him into slavery, and he is taken to Egypt, where he is thrown in prison for a crime that he did not commit.

    14:34-14:48

    But Joseph gets the attention of Pharaoh because of his ability to interpret dreams, and he is made second in command of Egypt, and because of this, he's able to not just save Egypt, but his own family, his own homeland from this massive famine.

    14:50-14:54

    In a long story short, he's in a position where he can kill his brothers.

    14:54-14:57

    He can throw them into prison for the rest of their lives.

    14:59-15:00

    But that's not what he does.

    15:01-15:03

    Instead, he shows them great mercy and grace.

    15:04-15:05

    He has this to say to them.

    15:07-15:10

    So it was not you who sent me here, but God.

    15:11-15:16

    As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good.

    15:17-15:21

    To bring it about that many people should be kept alive as they are today.

    15:22-15:29

    So instead of being so focused on what they did, Joseph stepped back and had the big picture of what God was up to the entire time.

    15:31-15:40

    And the ultimate example of God using suffering and pain for his own purposes is the crucifixion of his one and only son.

    15:42-15:45

    During a sermon at Pentecost, Peter preached these words in Jerusalem.

    15:46-16:03

    "This Jesus delivered up according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God, you crucified and killed by the hands of lawless men." God the Father planned the crucifixion and sacrificial death of his own son.

    16:05-16:25

    Yet he accomplished this plan through the actions of men who acted according to their deepest and most sinful desires. God planned this horrific yet glorious event so that undeserving sinners like you and me could be forgiven. I can't imagine sending my son to do that for any of you.

    16:27-16:44

    But God the Father willingly did it. From all these examples and the rest of Scripture, we see two realities in the Bible that are true at the same exact God is sovereign over everything that happens, but we are still held responsible for our choices and our actions.

    16:44-16:46

    Our decisions matter.

    16:49-16:52

    Maybe you're feeling confused about how all this works out.

    16:52-16:54

    That's good because that means you're actually paying attention.

    16:56-17:02

    Because the relationship between God's sovereignty and our choices will never ever make sense to us.

    17:02-17:07

    Our brains are just too small and we can never fully comprehend something like this.

    17:08-17:16

    Expecting us to be able to fully understand God and all of his ways is like expecting my dog to be able to figure out how to do my taxes for me.

    17:16-17:17

    It's just impossible.

    17:17-17:20

    It's just never going to happen.

    17:21-17:30

    But as hard as it is to wrap our minds around, there is great comfort and hope in believing that God uses difficult things for his purposes.

    17:33-17:39

    You know, over the course of my years in ministry, I've heard people give those who are suffering this advice.

    17:40-17:43

    They'll say, you know, God had nothing to do with what's happening to you.

    17:44-17:47

    That's not part of God's plan for your life.

    17:49-17:55

    And I get the heart, I get the motivation behind that, but how scary and how discouraging is that?

    17:55-17:59

    'Cause if that's true, whose hands are you in when you're going through hard times?

    17:59-18:01

    You're in the hands of Satan only.

    18:02-18:05

    and he hates you and he wants nothing good for you.

    18:06-18:17

    But if you believe that God is sovereign, if you believe that he is in control, you know that he has you in his hands and everything that he does will be to bless you and not to break you.

    18:18-18:21

    Everything is for your ultimate good.

    18:23-18:27

    Then, only then can we truly believe the awesome words of Romans 8:28.

    18:27-18:35

    And we know that for those who love God, All things work together for good for those who are called according to his purpose.

    18:37-18:40

    All right, secondly, God is the one and only creator.

    18:40-18:43

    I cannot question his actions.

    18:44-18:45

    He is the one and only creator.

    18:45-18:47

    I cannot question his actions.

    18:49-18:51

    Let's read verse eight of chapter 45.

    18:52-18:56

    Shall row heavens from above and let the clouds rain down righteousness.

    18:56-19:01

    Let the earth open that salvation and righteousness may bear fruit.

    19:01-19:03

    Let the earth cause them both to sprout.

    19:04-19:06

    I the Lord have created it.

    19:07-19:13

    Once again, God is absolutely shattering the idea that he is cold and distant.

    19:13-19:16

    He doesn't really care what's going on with this planet.

    19:16-19:22

    He isn't leaning back in his heavenly lounge chair, the box of popcorn, and thinking, I wonder how this is all gonna turn out.

    19:23-19:25

    He is the creator of everything.

    19:26-19:30

    As you've already learned, He is leading His creation into a certain direction.

    19:31-19:37

    Even though there is darkness and brokenness all around us, God is still righteous and He is still at work.

    19:38-19:44

    God is bringing men and women to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ that bears the fruit of changed lives.

    19:46-19:53

    And looking forward in Scripture, we see that one day the curse of sin will be reversed and evil will be destroyed.

    19:54-19:58

    He's reminding us of where history is going, where his creation is going.

    19:58-20:06

    It's not a sob story with a sad ending, but a story of absolute triumph with the greatest ending imaginable.

    20:08-20:20

    So after providing his creator credentials in verse eight, God pronounces two words of woe or judgment against those who had questioned his right to do as he sees fit.

    20:22-20:23

    Let's read verses nine through 12.

    20:24-20:29

    Woe to him who strives with him, who formed him a pot among earthen pots.

    20:29-20:32

    Does the clay say to him who forms it, what are you making?

    20:32-20:33

    Or your work has no handles.

    20:34-20:36

    Woe to him who says to a father, what are you begetting?

    20:37-20:39

    Or to a woman, with what are you in labor?

    20:39-20:45

    Thus says the Lord, the Holy One of Israel, and the one who formed him, ask me of things to come.

    20:46-20:49

    Will you command me concerning my children and the work of my hands?

    20:49-20:51

    I made the earth and created man on it.

    20:51-20:57

    It was my hands that stretched out the heavens and I commanded all their hosts.

    20:59-21:09

    The Lord compares us questioning him or complaining against him to a piece of clay mouthing off to the potter who is forming it.

    21:09-21:15

    It's like a piece of clay telling the potter, oh, your work is terrible, it's messy, it's not very good.

    21:16-21:19

    I love the second metaphor he gives, I think it's hilarious.

    21:20-21:25

    he compares our questioning him to a baby telling his dad that he doesn't approve of how he was conceived.

    21:26-21:29

    Or to his mom, I'm not a big fan of coming into the world in such a messy way.

    21:31-21:35

    It's like, kid, be happy that you're here instead of complaining how you got here.

    21:37-21:42

    You know, my son is almost four years old, which means that he just began his career in talking back.

    21:43-21:45

    And he loves to have the final word.

    21:45-21:46

    He loves to tell me what to do.

    21:47-21:48

    He definitely thinks he knows better than I do.

    21:49-21:51

    He'll say, "Dada, don't do that.

    21:51-21:55

    "Dada, stop doing that." Or I'll just try to be silly and sing and dance them.

    21:55-22:00

    He'll go, "Stop, stop, stop." It sounds funny to you, but it's not funny when it's happening.

    22:02-22:02

    (audience laughing)

    22:03-22:06

    And my blood pressure just rises in these moments.

    22:07-22:11

    And I immediately shut down this type of talk when he tries to boss me around.

    22:11-22:14

    I'll say, "Buddy, you're not in charge.

    22:15-22:21

    "I'm the boss, not you." And that's exactly what God is saying in these verses.

    22:22-22:32

    To his grumbling people who aren't a big fan of Cyrus being used to save them someday, he's saying, you know what, you seem to be very confused, so let me set you straight.

    22:32-22:33

    I don't work for you.

    22:34-22:37

    I'm the creator and I'm gonna do whatever I'm gonna do.

    22:39-22:41

    God's way is the right way.

    22:42-22:45

    When we disagree with him, who's wrong?

    22:47-22:48

    Okay, come on, you guys say that louder.

    22:49-22:50

    'Cause some of us struggle with this.

    22:50-22:53

    Whenever we disagree with God, who's wrong?

    22:54-22:55

    We are.

    22:56-22:59

    Listen to what the Lord says later on in Isaiah 55.

    22:59-23:04

    For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord.

    23:04-23:12

    For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.

    23:14-23:20

    So right now you may be thinking, "Okay, Taylor, I just need to keep my mouth shut "whenever I'm at the end of my rope.

    23:20-23:29

    "Whenever I'm discouraged, I just need to plaster on "a big smile and just fake it until I make it "and act like everything's fine." That's not what I'm saying at all.

    23:31-23:39

    I know that many of you in this room are carrying massive weights that I cannot even begin to understand or imagine.

    23:40-23:49

    I know some of you kind of almost dragged yourself here this morning, and you're not sure if you can go one more day with how things are right now.

    23:51-23:54

    In this passage, God's not telling you to stay silent.

    23:55-23:57

    God's not telling you to suffer alone.

    23:58-24:05

    He wants you to cast your burdens upon him because he alone has strong enough shoulders to bear them.

    24:06-24:10

    One pastor I read this past week gave this helpful distinction.

    24:10-24:15

    We can groan to God, but not grumble against God.

    24:17-24:17

    Let me say that again.

    24:18-24:22

    We can groan to God, but not grumble against God.

    24:23-24:25

    Do you see the difference between those two things?

    24:26-24:29

    You can be honest with God about your struggles without complaining.

    24:29-24:36

    You can bring your frustrations to the Lord without blaming him or acting like he has done something wrong.

    24:36-24:42

    This type of groaning leads you towards God while grumbling leads you away from him.

    24:42-24:50

    This type of groaning is a opening of your arms to your heavenly father, while grumbling is a stiff arm of rejection.

    24:53-24:55

    But sadly, it's so easy to become bitter against the Lord.

    24:56-24:57

    It's so easy to become jaded.

    24:59-25:05

    You know, I've talked to a lot of people over the years who've told me something like, "Yeah, when I stand before God someday, "I'm gonna give him a piece of my mind.

    25:05-25:09

    "I'm gonna tell him some things he needs to hear." No, you're not.

    25:10-25:11

    That's a very bad plan.

    25:12-25:14

    You think you're gonna do that, but you won't.

    25:15-25:20

    In scripture, when people are before God or even one of his angels, they get as low as they can as fast as they can.

    25:21-25:26

    Any word of complaint that you would have would turn to dust in your mouth before God.

    25:27-25:30

    It's so tempting to think that we know better than God does.

    25:31-25:43

    It's so natural for us to question him, to question his timetables, We need to resist that urge with everything within us because it leads nowhere good.

    25:44-25:47

    If you feed that kind of attitude, you'll become bitter against the Lord.

    25:48-25:49

    You'll become bitter against His word.

    25:49-25:51

    You'll become bitter against His church.

    25:52-25:59

    Run to the Lord with your problems instead of pointing the finger of blame at Him because of your problems.

    26:01-26:04

    All right, finally, God is the one and only Almighty.

    26:05-26:06

    I cannot thwart His purposes.

    26:09-26:11

    God is the one and only almighty.

    26:12-26:14

    I cannot thwart his purposes.

    26:16-26:19

    So in Isaiah chapter 46, the Lord repeats a lot of what we've already talked about.

    26:19-26:21

    I'm the one and only, I am it.

    26:22-26:30

    And he goes back to what we talked about last week, the destructiveness of idolatry and worshiping anything or anyone else besides him.

    26:31-26:36

    And so he reemphasizes in this verse who he is and what he does.

    26:37-26:39

    Let's read verses eight through 11 of chapter 46.

    26:39-26:40

    Let's move a chapter over.

    26:41-26:42

    Isaiah 46, eight through 11.

    26:43-26:44

    Remember this and stand firm.

    26:44-26:46

    Recall it to mind, you transgressors.

    26:47-26:50

    Remember the former things of old, for I am God and there is no other.

    26:51-26:55

    I am God and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning.

    26:55-26:57

    And from ancient times, things not yet done.

    26:58-27:06

    Saying my counsel shall stand and I will accomplish all my purpose, calling a bird of prey from the east.

    27:07-27:08

    the man of my counsel from a far country.

    27:09-27:12

    I have spoken and I will bring it to pass.

    27:12-27:15

    I have purposed and I will do it.

    27:17-27:24

    The Lord not only reemphasizes his power, his control, his sovereignty, he goes a step forward.

    27:24-27:27

    He says no one and nothing can stand in my way.

    27:27-27:30

    No one can thwart my purposes.

    27:31-27:37

    We look again when he says in verses 10 through 11, "My counsel shall stand, "and I will accomplish all my purposes.

    27:38-27:48

    "Calling a bird of prey from east, "the man of my counsel from a far country." He's talking about Cyrus, who came out of the east from Persia to destroy Babylon and free God's people.

    27:49-27:51

    "I have spoken, and I will bring it to pass.

    27:51-27:56

    "I have purpose, and I will do it." There's a lot of shalls and wills in these verses.

    27:56-27:58

    There's no maybes or mights.

    27:59-28:36

    God's not crossing his fingers and saying, oh, I really wish that everything turned out way I wanted to, we'll see what happens. No, he's saying I've said that's going to happen and it's going to happen. We see this prophecy fulfilled many years later in the book of Ezra as Cyrus is stirred up by the Word of God to obey what was written about him years before. This proves that God's plans cannot be knocked off course. Now right now you may be thinking well Taylor I don't get how and how this can be true, there are people all over the world rejecting the Lord.

    28:36-28:40

    There are people all over the world resisting his will.

    28:41-28:42

    And that's a really good point.

    28:43-28:48

    And it brings to mind this reality in scripture that we see that there are two wills of God in the Bible.

    28:49-28:49

    Please stick with me here.

    28:50-28:55

    First, there is the decreative will of God, or to make it more simple, his will of decree.

    28:56-28:58

    This has been what we've been talking about the entire time.

    28:59-29:10

    When God says that something will happen, It's going to happen, whether it's something big like the election of a president, or something small like the roll of a dice, which scripture says God is in control of.

    29:11-29:19

    But there's also his preceptive will, which is how he instructs us to live in his word.

    29:19-29:23

    The Lord has revealed to us how life works best.

    29:24-29:29

    The commands of the Bible serve as boundaries for how we are to live our lives.

    29:31-29:35

    Unfortunately, many people resist and rebel against God's word.

    29:35-29:38

    They rebel against his preceptive will.

    29:39-29:43

    People choose to reject God's ways, not follow his word, even as believers.

    29:44-29:47

    We fail to obey God's preceptive will on a daily basis.

    29:48-29:53

    We lie, we envy, we boast, we fail to do what God's called us to do.

    29:53-29:57

    God's will of decree is like a freight train that cannot be derailed.

    29:59-30:06

    that his preceptive will is like a passenger train that we can either jump aboard or jump off and go our own way.

    30:07-30:09

    Again, you may be thinking, "Taylor, my brain is hurting.

    30:09-30:10

    "How does this all work?

    30:11-30:16

    "There seems to be some crossover between these two wills." Again, we're never gonna fully understand this in this life.

    30:16-30:17

    It's just beyond us.

    30:18-30:20

    We weren't created to understand everything.

    30:22-30:26

    But in light of those two wills of God, let me ask you a question.

    30:26-30:28

    Which do we often want to know more than the other?

    30:30-30:32

    We want to know God's decreed of will.

    30:32-30:34

    We want to know what's going to happen in the future.

    30:34-30:44

    We want God to give us a crystal ball of our futures to see what the next year looks like, what the next five years looks like, what the next 20 years look like.

    30:46-30:49

    We want to know this because we don't want to do the hard work of trusting in the Lord.

    30:50-30:55

    We don't want to do the hard work of leaning into Him and depending on Him.

    30:57-31:01

    You know, whenever I was a kid, I used to read those choose your own adventure books.

    31:01-31:03

    Anybody else ever read anything like that?

    31:03-31:07

    All the young people are like, "I have no idea what you're talking about." Reading? What is reading?

    31:09-31:15

    But choose your own adventure books give you several opportunities in the book to determine the outcome.

    31:15-31:23

    At certain points, you'll have the opportunity to make a decision like will you face the villain or will you turn tail and run?

    31:24-31:27

    Will you go in door A or will you go in door B?

    31:27-31:32

    And sometimes when you chose door B or door C, you would fall off a cliff and the book would be over.

    31:33-31:35

    It was like, oh, I guess I'm done.

    31:35-31:37

    And I would just agonize over these choices.

    31:37-31:40

    I would just worry about making the wrong decision.

    31:41-31:44

    And we often feel the same way about God's decree of will.

    31:45-31:56

    We anxiously try to figure out God's specific will for our futures, like, should I stay put where I am or move, should I change careers, should I have a new job, should I go to college, where should I go to college?

    31:57-31:59

    And again, these are important decisions.

    32:00-32:02

    These are things we should take seriously.

    32:02-32:06

    We should be responsible and prayerful when making these big life choices.

    32:08-32:19

    But we sometimes become overly preoccupied with these kind of decisions because we worry that we'll somehow be outside the creative will of God the wrong choice.

    32:21-32:29

    Like a choose your own adventure book, we'll just fall into the cliff, into the void, that'll be outside of God's reach and his control.

    32:29-32:33

    But as we've already learned, God's specific will for our lives will happen.

    32:34-32:40

    Some way and somehow, God's sovereign plans and our choices work together to form our futures.

    32:40-32:43

    We can never be outside the decree of the will of God.

    32:44-32:52

    But we can be outside the preceptive will of God not obeying his word, by going against our beliefs, by going against our convictions.

    32:52-32:55

    This should be our main focus and concern.

    32:57-33:01

    We shouldn't be worrying about tomorrow, we should be concerned about who is God calling me to be today?

    33:02-33:03

    What is he calling me to do today?

    33:04-33:05

    Am I following Jesus?

    33:05-33:07

    Am I loving other people?

    33:07-33:11

    Am I setting a good example for my family, for my friends, for my coworkers?

    33:11-33:14

    Am I fighting against my sin?

    33:15-33:26

    Instead of focusing and obsessing over what you can't control, focus on what you can control, which is your thoughts, your words, and your actions.

    33:27-33:34

    God wants us to become wise and discerning men and women of his word who can make important life decisions.

    33:35-33:38

    We need to look at our futures through the lens of God's word.

    33:39-33:44

    And this is amazing news that frees us from the bondage to worry and indecision.

    33:44-33:48

    It's like God has given us this fenced off yet wide open area of his word.

    33:48-33:53

    He's saying, stay within the boundaries of my word and make wise choices.

    33:55-34:04

    This kind of view will help you to not worry about what's gonna happen, but instead focus on what God is calling you to do right now.

    34:05-34:08

    So let me ask you, what are you stressed out about right now?

    34:09-34:12

    What situation or decision is making you feel sick?

    34:13-34:18

    keeping you up at night, or making you doubt in the goodness of your sovereign God.

    34:18-34:23

    Most, if not all of us, have worries and anxieties running laps in our minds.

    34:23-34:25

    I know I do right now.

    34:27-34:34

    But you have to realize that worrying is playing out a version of the future in your mind that God is not in control of.

    34:35-34:46

    At the heart of all our worry and anxiety is a deep-seated distrust in God, a belief that he's not really in control of our lives.

    34:48-34:52

    And this is really convicting for me because I really struggle with worry.

    34:53-34:56

    But worrying doesn't help, it always hurts.

    34:57-35:00

    It's one of the most dishonoring things we can do to God.

    35:01-35:06

    It damages our entire being and it drains the life out of people around us.

    35:06-35:16

    Worrying is one of the most useless things we can do as human beings because it contributes nothing to our lives, but it robs us of our joy, our contentment, and our peace.

    35:18-35:25

    You know, the verse I turn to more than any others when it comes to anxiety is Philippians 4, 6 and 7.

    35:26-35:32

    Paul says, "Do not be anxious about anything." I read that and I think, how is that possible?

    35:33-35:38

    But in everything, by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God.

    35:38-35:39

    And he tells us how this is possible.

    35:40-35:46

    and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your heart and your mind in Christ Jesus.

    35:47-36:01

    He's saying, pray to the Lord, ask for his help, ask that his perfect peace will be like a strong and intimidating bodyguard that stands at the door of your heart and keeps worry and anxiety from taking over.

    36:02-36:04

    You don't need to worry about what's gonna happen tomorrow.

    36:05-36:06

    God's in control of tomorrow.

    36:07-36:09

    You don't need to worry about what's gonna happen next year.

    36:09-36:11

    God's in control of next year.

    36:12-36:14

    What is God calling you to do today?

    36:15-36:18

    How is God calling you to change today?

    36:19-36:23

    So the bank can come forward as we evaluate our question for this morning one final time.

    36:24-36:28

    Did God really say that he is in control of everything?

    36:29-36:30

    The answer is yes.

    36:31-36:34

    Even though we don't often feel that to be true.

    36:35-36:41

    You know, I shared this illustration years and years ago and I was a guest preacher at Harvest, but it really just has been on my mind all week.

    36:41-36:49

    You know, this life is very similar to standing really close to a piece of art at a museum.

    36:50-36:54

    Imagine that you're like one or two inches away from the canvas and you kind of walk down the canvas.

    36:54-36:55

    That's what life is.

    36:56-37:02

    At one point you see awesome colors of yellow, of blue, and red, and you really like that part of the painting.

    37:03-37:08

    You keep going down the painting, you come across ugly splotches of brown and gray and orange.

    37:08-37:10

    You don't really like this part of the painting that much.

    37:10-37:12

    It kind of rubs you the wrong way.

    37:13-37:17

    And then you come across one of the part of this painting that's just black.

    37:18-37:19

    It's just darkness.

    37:20-37:24

    It's like someone has thrown a bucket of black paint against the canvas.

    37:25-37:29

    And this part of the painting kind of depresses you, and you really don't like it at all.

    37:31-37:39

    But then when you get to the end of the painting, you step back several steps, and you are blown away by the scope and beauty of this masterpiece.

    37:40-37:45

    Even those gross colors you weren't a big fan of add texture and nuance to the painting.

    37:45-37:52

    Those dark sections add shadow and depth to the piece that make it that much more awesome and beautiful.

    37:54-38:00

    One day, we'll step back from this life and see our lives from an eternal perspective.

    38:02-38:07

    The purpose of God's plans for our lives will come into focus and make sense.

    38:07-38:17

    Even the dark and painful seasons were used by God to bring himself glory, help others around us, and form us into the servants that he created us to be.

    38:17-38:24

    We'll finally see that he was in complete control and he knew exactly what he was doing the entire time.

    38:25-38:29

    Our lives were not pure chaos, but the work of a divine painter.

    38:31-38:45

    So instead of doubting the Lord's goodness and stressing out about our lives, let us trust that he is a masterful artist who will make something truly beautiful out of every single thing that we go through.

    38:46-38:46

    Let's pray.

    38:47-38:54

    Father, we come to you humbled and in awe of who you are.

    38:56-39:03

    Humbled and facing the fact that such a big and massive God stooped down to love people like us.

    39:03-39:16

    We thank you that the one who created the stars, the one who hung the sun, the one who created this world, cares about us, cares about our lives.

    39:16-39:18

    Lord, you care about our lives more than we ever could.

    39:19-39:26

    Lord, I pray that we would lean into you, that we would trust you, and that we would believe that you are in control.

    39:27-39:35

    Lord that the reality that we're not truly in control would be great news instead of bad news. In Jesus name, Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Isaiah 45:5-12 & 46:8-11

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

  2. What does it mean that God is sovereign? Why is this good news?

  3. What is the difference between groaning to God and grumbling against God? How do you see yourself grumbling and complaining in this current season of life?

  4. What are you anxious about right now? How can you fight against the temptation to worry about the future?

Breakout
Pray for one another.

Did God Really Say… Every Other Religion is Wrong?

Introduction:

God's Final Word on Religion (Isaiah 44:6-20):

  1. There is absolutely No One Like Him (Isaiah 44:6-8)
  2. Idolatry is absolutely Destructive . (Isaiah 44:9-20)
    1. Because it leads to Nothing But Shame (Isaiah 44:9-11)

      John 14:6 - “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”

    2. Because it is the Height of Self-Deception (Isaiah 44:12-20)

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

  • 01:28-01:37

    All right, as we get started this morning, I want you to take 30 seconds to turn to someone next to you and tell them about your worst restaurant experience.

    01:37-01:40

    And I'm gonna share my worst restaurant experience with you.

    01:40-01:42

    All right, go, I'm gonna time you.

    01:46-01:48

    All right, time's up, time's up.

    01:49-01:51

    If you have a really good one, you can share it with me before you leave later.

    01:52-02:00

    All right, so eight years ago, my family was at a restaurant in Cranberry that is now closed for, maybe it'll be evident in a few minutes why it is now closed.

    02:01-02:04

    But to be honest, our dining experience was awesome at first.

    02:05-02:15

    The waiter was friendly, the appetizers were great, we had no complaints with the main courses, but then things took a sharp turn in the wrong direction whenever dessert was served.

    02:15-02:23

    We ordered this massive slice of chocolate cake that was supposedly delicious and could feed two to three people, so I was really excited about it.

    02:23-02:27

    And it arrives and it looks even better than I imagined it in my mind.

    02:27-02:31

    You could tell it has the perfect your cake to frosting ratio.

    02:31-02:34

    You can tell it's not gonna be chewy or dry.

    02:34-02:37

    And my family always makes fun of me for diving into desserts first.

    02:37-02:39

    So I let them kind of take a few bites first.

    02:40-02:47

    And then I took a massive chunk, I put it in my mouth and I immediately know that something is wrong.

    02:48-02:54

    I can sense something solid that tastes strangely metallic in my mouth.

    02:54-02:59

    So I immediately pumped the brakes on my chewing and I pull out the foreign object.

    03:00-03:01

    Do you wanna know what it was?

    03:02-03:03

    We actually have a picture of what it was.

    03:05-03:07

    It was a tack in my cake.

    03:08-03:10

    You all sound as surprised as I was.

    03:11-03:17

    So we call the waiter over to show him this instrument of death, almost scraped its way down my throat.

    03:18-03:25

    And his response was, "Oh, well, we don't bake the cakes "here, we have them delivered from somewhere else." Oh, that changes everything.

    03:25-03:29

    Suddenly I feel so much better about almost eating this tack.

    03:30-03:36

    And if memory serves me correct, I don't think they even comp this our entire meal, which is surprising because I could have been hospitalized.

    03:36-03:39

    I could have sued them if I wanted to.

    03:41-03:44

    At this point in the message, you might be thinking, "Okay, Taylor, I'm so glad that you're okay.

    03:45-03:53

    "I'm so glad that your throat is intact "to share this story about the tack cake, "but what's the point?" Rich, there's that pun for you.

    03:53-03:54

    I don't know if anybody else got it.

    03:54-03:56

    I put that pun just there for you, Rich.

    03:57-04:05

    I was thinking this past week that the lives of Satan are very much like that slice of chocolate cake that I had years ago.

    04:06-04:18

    His lies look appealing on the outside, and they may even taste great for a short while, but eventually you will bite down on that sharp edge of consequence and wish that you had refused his service.

    04:19-04:26

    Buying into the deception of our enemy brings immediate pleasure, but it leads to destruction in the long run.

    04:27-04:29

    This is certainly true when it comes to religion.

    04:29-04:44

    For thousands of years, Satan has had a field day leading billions and billions of people astray to make up new religions, to worship false gods, and to worship themselves rather than the one who created them.

    04:45-04:51

    He serves up this delicious-looking slice of religious cake that is filled with a deadly poison.

    04:52-04:55

    And the only antidote is the gospel of Jesus Christ.

    04:57-05:00

    We're in the second week of our new series called, Did God Really Say?

    05:01-05:09

    In which we're unpacking the different important doctrines and scriptural realities that Satan constantly tries to attack and undermine.

    05:11-05:25

    As he did in the Garden of Eden, Satan slithers into our lives to whisper questions of doubt into our mind so that we will doubt in the goodness and the trustworthiness of God.

    05:26-05:31

    Last week, we answered the question, did God really say that his word can be trusted?

    05:32-05:40

    And this morning, we're gonna turn our attention to the question, did God really say that every other religion is wrong?

    05:40-05:44

    Did God really say there's only one way of salvation?

    05:44-05:49

    Did God really say there's only one way personal relationship with him?

    05:50-05:57

    This is a really important question because your eternal destiny hinges on how you answer this question.

    05:59-06:09

    So let's open our Bibles to Isaiah chapter 44, verses six through eight, so we can fix our eyes on how God himself answers this question.

    06:10-06:17

    Thus says the Lord, the King of Israel, and his Redeemer, the Lord of hosts, I am the first and I am the last.

    06:17-06:20

    Besides me there is no God who is like me.

    06:21-06:24

    Let him proclaim it, let him declare and set up before me.

    06:24-06:30

    Since I appointed an ancient people, let them declare what is to come and what will happen.

    06:31-06:32

    Fear not, nor be afraid.

    06:33-06:35

    Haven't I told you from old and declared it?

    06:35-06:37

    And you are my witnesses.

    06:38-06:39

    Is there a God besides me?

    06:40-06:43

    There is no rock, I know not any.

    06:44-06:48

    So our outline for this morning is God's final word on religion.

    06:49-06:52

    Number one, there is absolutely no one like him.

    06:53-06:55

    There is absolutely no one like him.

    06:59-07:09

    So before we unpack the verses we just read, I'm gonna quickly give you the background of Isaiah so that we can fully understand the impact of what the Lord says about himself.

    07:10-07:13

    At this point in history, Israel is divided up into two kingdoms.

    07:13-07:17

    There's Israel to the north and Judah to the south.

    07:18-07:20

    And God's people are rebelling against him.

    07:21-07:22

    They are rejecting his leadership.

    07:22-07:27

    They are worshiping the false gods of other nations, and God cannot let this stand.

    07:27-07:33

    So as a consequence, he has the Assyrians come and invade Israel and take them into captivity.

    07:35-07:41

    Isaiah then warns the people of Judah that something similar is going to happen to them in the future.

    07:41-07:43

    The Babylonians will invade.

    07:43-07:48

    They're gonna destroy the Jerusalem, destroy the temple, and take them back to Babylon.

    07:49-07:53

    There is no avoiding the season of consequence.

    07:53-07:54

    It's going to happen.

    07:56-08:08

    But Isaiah also encourages the people of Judah that they shouldn't lose hope because the Lord will redeem them from the pit that they threw themselves into, and he will rescue them from exile in the future.

    08:09-08:21

    They must trust that he will save them from the Babylonians because he is the only true and living God, while the Babylonian gods are dead and worthless idols who can do nothing.

    08:24-08:30

    So as we just read, the supremacy and might of God is on full display in these verses.

    08:30-08:34

    In verse six, he says, "He is the Lord," which is the personal name of God.

    08:34-08:38

    We just were singing about Yahweh, which means I am.

    08:38-08:41

    He says, "He is the king and ruler of Israel.

    08:41-08:43

    He is their only savior.

    08:43-08:46

    He says he is the Lord of hosts, the Lord of armies.

    08:48-08:51

    I love this name of God because God has no need of armies, does he?

    08:52-08:56

    God is all powerful and no army can stand against him.

    08:57-09:04

    Think of the most powerful army you could possibly imagine with an unlimited amount of helicopters, fighter jets, tanks, and nukes.

    09:05-09:12

    That army is like a small buzzing gnat before Almighty God that he could just flick away no effort at all.

    09:13-09:22

    But this all powerful God has legions and legions of angels at his command that no human force could possibly stand against.

    09:23-09:28

    He says, "I am the first and the last." In other words, I've always existed.

    09:28-09:32

    I was here to start everything off and I'll be here to shut everything down.

    09:34-09:47

    And he says, "Besides me, there is no God." Notice he doesn't say, "I'm at the top of the heap He says, "The best and brightest God, "I'm a great option in the religion brochure." No, he says, "I am it.

    09:48-09:58

    "Besides me, there is no God." But I love how he throws down the gauntlet in verse seven and offers any challengers to come to him.

    09:58-09:59

    He says, "Who is like me?

    09:59-10:00

    "Let him proclaim it.

    10:01-10:02

    "Let him declare it and set up before me.

    10:03-10:23

    "Since I appointed an ancient people, "let them declare what is to come and what will happen." So I'm not a wrestling fan by any stretch of the imagination, but this reminds me of the WWE when the heavyweight champion of the world is wearing that massive belt and he is challenging anyone to take him on if they dare.

    10:25-10:32

    It's like God is saying, hey, I'm the one and only, but if you wanna throw your God, if you wanna throw your religion into the ring with me, go ahead, I'm ready to go.

    10:34-10:38

    And we've seen people accept this kind of challenge throughout scripture.

    10:39-10:49

    way back in the book of Exodus, each of the 10 plagues were directed at a specific Egyptian God to show that they are powerless and can do nothing.

    10:51-10:58

    The 10 plagues were meant to embarrass the Egyptian people and show them that their gods are utter jokes.

    11:00-11:13

    In 1 Kings 18, there's an actual competition between the prophet Elijah and the 450 prophets of Baal to see whose God is actually real, to see whose God is dominance.

    11:13-11:14

    They actually have a competition.

    11:15-11:25

    Both sides set up an altar with bull, with a bull and a wood on it, and they were gonna call down fire from their God to see who is real.

    11:26-11:35

    So the prophets of Baal for hours are screaming at the top of their lungs, they're dancing around the altar, they're cutting themselves to show their dedication to Baal.

    11:36-11:36

    But guess what?

    11:37-11:39

    Nothing happens because Baal isn't real.

    11:40-11:52

    And take some time to read 1 Kings 18, 'cause one of the most funny, hilarious chapters in the Bible where Elijah's making fun of Baal, saying maybe he's going to the bathroom, maybe he's sleeping, maybe he can't hear you.

    11:53-11:55

    But then Elijah raises the stakes.

    11:56-12:01

    On his altar, he has four huge jars of water poured out upon the altar.

    12:02-12:06

    And he makes a huge trench to have water surrounding the altar.

    12:06-12:08

    He does this three times.

    12:09-12:16

    And he calls out to the Lord and a fire comes down and turns the altar to dust and quenches all the water.

    12:17-12:19

    God literally smokes the competition.

    12:21-12:28

    And then he has Elijah slaughter the 450 prophets of Baal to show that there is no one like him.

    12:29-12:33

    So you can accept this challenge, but you're going to lose this challenge.

    12:35-12:39

    The Lord follows up this challenge with a word of comfort in verse eight.

    12:40-12:46

    Fear not, nor be afraid, have I not told you from of old and declared it, and you are my witnesses.

    12:46-12:48

    Is there a God besides me?

    12:48-12:51

    There is no rock, I know not any.

    12:52-12:56

    Again, God is telling his people, don't be afraid of what's to come.

    12:57-13:06

    They don't have to despair, they don't have to be hopeless, because unlike the Babylonian gods, God knows the future.

    13:06-13:11

    He not only knows it, but he plans it out according to his sovereign purposes.

    13:11-13:16

    When God says that something will happen someday, it's going to happen.

    13:17-13:29

    God says, "You are my witnesses." God's people have been witnesses for centuries to his perfect track record of making promises and then keeping those promises.

    13:31-13:36

    Their ancestors witnessed God keep his promise to deliver them out of Egypt.

    13:37-13:43

    Their ancestors witnessed God keep the promise of giving the land of Canaan into their hand.

    13:44-13:55

    He has been a steady, unmoving, unshakable rock of security and provision, despite their repeated disobedience and stubbornness.

    13:56-14:04

    This reminder of God's continued faithfulness should motivate them to be obedient and faithful no matter what happens.

    14:05-14:10

    Their belief in God should dictate their response to what happens to them.

    14:12-14:24

    So I was thinking this past week, how often do I contradict my beliefs about God's power, His goodness, and His faithfulness with my words and my actions?

    14:25-14:28

    I believe that God is all powerful.

    14:29-14:33

    but sometimes I live as if he is extremely weak and can do nothing to help me.

    14:34-14:43

    I believe that God is my provider, but sometimes I live as if my heavenly father has abandoned me.

    14:44-14:52

    I believe that God is in control of my future, but sometimes I live as if what happens to me is a total roll of the dice.

    14:54-14:55

    Am I alone up here?

    14:55-14:58

    Does this happen to anybody else besides me?

    14:58-15:00

    It's like no hands up, that can't be possible.

    15:00-15:02

    I'm gonna assume your hands are gonna be raised in your hearts.

    15:04-15:13

    But how can we claim to believe in and belong to the one and only God of the universe and then live as if he doesn't even exist?

    15:14-15:21

    What are we communicating to unbelievers in our lives and the watching world around us when we live in this way?

    15:22-15:31

    When we act like everyone else acts, when we complain just like everyone else complains, What are we communicating when we live in defeat from one day to the next?

    15:31-15:37

    What are we communicating when we spend our time and money just like the rest of our society does?

    15:38-15:44

    Well, what we're communicating is that our God's not really different than any other God that people believe in.

    15:44-15:48

    And Christianity isn't truly transformative and life-changing.

    15:49-15:54

    In other words, we paint an inaccurate picture of God and his gospel.

    15:56-16:03

    Listen, we'll never be perfect this side of eternity, but we should be making progress by the grace of God.

    16:04-16:12

    We'll never be stress-free in this life, but slowly but surely over time, we should be growing and our faith in Him should be strengthened.

    16:14-16:32

    If you're struggling to live into this reality that God is the one and only rock, I want you to take some time today or this upcoming week to remember how you've been a witness personally to God's provision and care in your life.

    16:33-16:39

    Maybe he'll bring up a time in your mind where he came through for you miraculously when it came to your finances.

    16:40-16:46

    Maybe he'll bring to mind a time where he brought you through a dark season of depression and discouragement.

    16:46-16:55

    Maybe he'll remind you of a time when he used an extremely painful and confusing situation to grow you closer to him.

    16:56-17:05

    The greatest way to build up your confidence in God's future provision is to look back at his many examples of past provision.

    17:05-17:06

    I almost lost that one.

    17:08-17:13

    You and I are witnesses to the greatness and faithfulness of God.

    17:14-17:21

    As witnesses, it's not just our jobs to know what he has done but to live in light of what he has done.

    17:22-17:29

    It's not just our jobs to know what he continually does for us, but to point others to what he can do for them.

    17:30-17:32

    Our God is the one and only.

    17:34-17:37

    Our lives should reflect that we actually believe that.

    17:39-17:40

    All right, God's final word on religion.

    17:42-17:46

    Number two, idolatry is absolutely destructive.

    17:46-17:50

    Idolatry is absolutely destructive.

    17:54-18:00

    So Isaiah moves from the greatness and uniqueness of God to talk about the foolishness of idolatry.

    18:01-18:07

    In a nutshell, idolatry is the worship of anything or anyone besides God.

    18:07-18:16

    We were made to worship our creator, but because of sin, we redirect that worship to anything but our creator.

    18:17-18:22

    In a few minutes, we'll talk about how we as modern day people are guilty of idolatry.

    18:22-18:27

    But for a few minutes, I want us to travel back over 2000 years ago to Isaiah's day.

    18:29-18:33

    I want us to see what he saw and what he experienced.

    18:34-18:45

    It was so common to see idols and little statues of false gods, and even God's people would buy these idols and worship them as they were led astray by other nations.

    18:46-18:56

    God's people were called to stand apart and be like no one else, but instead they chose to blend in and be like everyone else.

    18:57-19:08

    Idol making was extremely lucrative back in those days, but Isaiah provides two reasons why it is foolish and destructive to create and worship idols.

    19:09-19:15

    So idolatry is absolutely destructive, letter A, because it leads to nothing but shame.

    19:15-19:18

    It leads to nothing but shame.

    19:19-19:20

    Let's read verses nine through 11.

    19:21-19:27

    All who fashion idols are nothing, and the things they delight in do not profit.

    19:28-19:32

    Their witnesses neither see nor know that they may be put to shame.

    19:33-19:36

    Who fashions a god or cast an idol that is profitable for nothing?

    19:37-19:41

    Behold, all his companions shall be put to shame, and the craftsmen are only human.

    19:42-19:44

    Let them all assemble, let them stand forth.

    19:45-19:49

    They shall be terrified, they shall be put to shame together.

    19:52-19:59

    So even though the makers of idols may profit in the short term, in the long run, they will not profit.

    20:00-20:05

    Their path leads to shame in this life and in eternity.

    20:06-20:12

    And not just shame for themselves, but for their friends who participate and all who worship the idols that they create.

    20:13-20:24

    Isaiah says that all of these men and women shall be terrified and put to shame when they stand before the God that they rejected and led others to reject as well.

    20:26-20:32

    You know, these sobering verses led me to think about the various founders of different religions throughout the years.

    20:33-20:42

    Men such as Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, who may or may not have actually existed, but is credited with founding Buddhism in 5th century BC.

    20:43-20:54

    And Muhammad, like Buddha, may or may not have actually existed, but his legacy lives on in Islam, which is the second largest world religion with 1.9 billion followers.

    20:55-20:59

    Think of how many people that is, 1.9 billion.

    21:01-21:13

    Joseph Smith, who created the Church of the Latter-day Saints when in 1827, he says that he stumbled across golden tablets that added further revelation to scripture.

    21:15-21:16

    And he wrote the Book of Mormon.

    21:17-21:29

    Or Charles Taze Russell, who founded the Jehovah's Witness movement in Pittsburgh in the 1870s and denied the truth that Jesus is God.

    21:31-21:36

    L. Ron Hubbard, who is a science fiction fantasy novelist, created his greatest fantasy.

    21:37-21:41

    I think it's funny whenever a fantasy novelist makes up a religion that people actually follow.

    21:41-21:47

    He created Scientology, which is a cult that has over 40,000 members today.

    21:49-21:50

    These men are not prophets.

    21:51-21:52

    These men are not moral leaders.

    21:52-21:53

    They are not great thinkers.

    21:53-21:57

    According to Isaiah, these men are idol makers and blind guides.

    21:58-22:04

    All who follow their examples and roadmaps will be led to eternal shame.

    22:07-22:11

    You know, every other year, my family goes to Hilton Head, South Carolina for vacation.

    22:11-22:15

    And back before we had a ton of kids running around, we were actually able to do fun things.

    22:15-22:19

    Like, it's not really a vacation, it's more like a trip, right?

    22:19-22:21

    It's a great trip, but it's a little bit different of a trip.

    22:22-22:30

    Dan Thompson once said something, he said, "When you're vacationing with kids, it's more like parenting in a different location." And I fully, 100% agree with that.

    22:30-22:35

    But about 10 years ago, we went on a guided kayak tour of salt marshes.

    22:36-22:39

    And my dad and I were towards the back of the group and we were having a great time.

    22:40-22:43

    But at one point we realized that we can't see anybody else and that we're alone.

    22:44-22:46

    And I'm like, I have no idea where we're going.

    22:46-22:48

    But my dad didn't share my lack of confidence.

    22:49-22:50

    He was like, I know where to go, follow me.

    22:50-22:52

    And I was like, all right, I guess I'll follow him.

    22:53-22:56

    For 10 or 15 minutes, everything seems to be going great.

    22:57-23:02

    And then all of a sudden I hear our tour guide yell from behind us, stop, stop, stop!

    23:03-23:05

    You're heading into an alligator den.

    23:05-23:06

    (congregation laughing)

    23:07-23:10

    I couldn't have stopped paddling faster.

    23:11-23:13

    And he comes up to me and says, "What are you doing here?

    23:13-23:16

    Why'd you go this way?" And I immediately threw my dad under the bus.

    23:16-23:19

    I'm like, he said he knew the right way to go, but obviously he didn't.

    23:22-23:26

    I learned the hard way that day, though not every channel in the marsh led to where we wanted it to go.

    23:27-23:32

    My dad's a great guy with a lot of great qualities, but he's not a salt marsh tour guy.

    23:33-23:37

    So I should have been more careful of who I chose to follow that day.

    23:38-23:44

    In a much greater way, you have to be so careful of who you choose to follow in this life.

    23:45-23:55

    There are so many false teachers who will tell you they know the way to peace, they know the way to eternal life, but their path leads straight into an alligator den.

    23:57-24:01

    We live in a time, we are told there are many different paths to God.

    24:02-24:06

    We're told that all the different religions are equally valid and can teach us something about God.

    24:06-24:12

    It doesn't even matter if they're true because they can all offer some kind of wisdom and enlightenment.

    24:13-24:16

    But according to Isaiah, this line of thinking is foolish.

    24:17-24:21

    All religions do not lead to the same destination of heaven.

    24:22-24:26

    God doesn't reveal himself in different ways in all the different religions.

    24:26-24:32

    God has revealed himself in his word and in the person and work of Jesus Christ.

    24:32-24:33

    That is it.

    24:35-24:39

    Jesus once said, "I am the way, the truth, the life.

    24:39-24:46

    "No one comes to the Father except through me." He doesn't leave much wiggle room for debate, does he?

    24:48-24:58

    The only way to be saved from your sins and spend eternity with the Lord in heaven is by grace through faith in Jesus Christ.

    24:59-25:01

    You must believe that he lived a perfect life.

    25:01-25:07

    He died a sacrificial death upon the cross and rose again in victory over the grave.

    25:07-25:13

    You must trust in him as your personal savior and submit to him as the Lord of your life.

    25:14-25:19

    Every other way leads to eternal shame and destruction.

    25:22-25:25

    Maybe you're here this morning, you're not sure what you believe.

    25:26-25:34

    You've been putting off dealing with matters of faith and eternity because frankly, it kind of freaks you out and it makes you feel uncomfortable.

    25:35-25:38

    Turn to Jesus today and be saved.

    25:39-25:43

    Don't wait another second because you'll know how many seconds you have left.

    25:45-25:54

    Maybe you're here this morning and you slide up and down the belief scale from atheism to agnosticism to a general hope that God exists.

    25:55-25:58

    Some days you don't wanna believe that God is real.

    25:58-26:01

    You don't wanna believe that there's more after this life.

    26:01-26:04

    And other days you do wanna believe that.

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    Turn to Jesus today and be saved.

    26:08-26:10

    The evidence for God is overwhelming.

    26:11-26:12

    It's all around us.

    26:12-26:16

    You were made to know and be known by your creator.

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    Others of you have been trusting in your own religion of good works and performance for years.

    26:25-26:27

    Maybe you've been going to church since you were young.

    26:29-26:30

    You're playing the church game.

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    You hope that you can be good enough to work your way to God and earn his approval.

    26:36-26:39

    Turn to Jesus and be saved.

    26:39-26:45

    Stop trying to earn what was already freely given through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.

    26:47-26:53

    So idolatry is absolutely destructive, letter B, because it is the height of self-deception.

    26:54-26:57

    because it is the height of self-deception.

    26:59-27:00

    This fan's really blowing my stuff around.

    27:04-27:11

    In verses 12 through 15, Isaiah walks us backward through the complex process of making an idol step by step.

    27:12-27:17

    To be clear, he isn't trying to give us tips or provide a YouTube tutorial for how to create an idol.

    27:17-27:23

    I don't want any of you showing up next week with an Indiana Jones looking idol saying, "Taylor, look, I followed Isaiah's instructions to the letter.

    27:24-27:25

    That's not what he's doing here.

    27:25-27:31

    He's providing the nitty gritty of making an idol to show us how ridiculous this process is.

    27:32-27:34

    So let's read verses 12 through 15.

    27:35-27:38

    The ironsmith takes a cutting tool and works it over the coals.

    27:38-27:41

    He fashions it with hammers and works it with a strong arm.

    27:42-27:43

    He becomes hungry and his strength fails.

    27:44-27:45

    He drinks no water and is faint.

    27:46-27:47

    The carpenter stretches a line.

    27:48-27:49

    He marks it out with a pencil.

    27:49-27:52

    He shapes it with planes and marks it with a compass.

    27:52-27:57

    He shapes it into the figure of a man with the beauty of a man to dwell in a house.

    27:58-28:05

    He cuts down cedars, or he chooses a cypress tree or an oak and lets it grow strong among the trees of the forest.

    28:06-28:08

    He plants a cedar and the rain nourishes it.

    28:08-28:10

    Then it becomes fuel for man.

    28:10-28:14

    He takes part of it and warms himself.

    28:15-28:17

    He kindles a fire and bakes bread.

    28:17-28:20

    Also, he makes a God and he worships it.

    28:20-28:24

    He makes it an idol and falls down before it.

    28:26-28:30

    So first of all, the carpenter has to decide what kind of wood he wants to make his God out of.

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    Does he want to make out of cypress, cedar, and oak?

    28:34-28:35

    I mean, this is a really big decision, right?

    28:35-28:37

    This is a really tough decision.

    28:37-28:40

    How do you know what your God wants to be made out of?

    28:41-28:46

    He then cuts down the desired tree and he shapes that wood into the likeness of a man.

    28:46-28:52

    And then finally, he rounds out this process by plating that wood with metal.

    28:53-28:56

    And at this point, you may be thinking, well, what does this really look like?

    28:57-28:59

    So I thought I'd bring a show and tell item for you.

    29:00-29:05

    The company that moved out of our new office space left behind a lot of really great stuff and some not so great stuff.

    29:06-29:11

    And one of these not so great things is this statue that I think looks a lot like an idol.

    29:12-29:19

    It's like a weird friendship idol with people doing like a huddle and there's even like a basin for sacrifices or maybe for a candle.

    29:19-29:20

    I have no idea what this is about.

    29:21-29:24

    I saw this and was like, I'm gonna use this for my sermon in a few weeks.

    29:25-29:31

    So imagine that Isaiah is talking about an idol that looks like this in this passage.

    29:31-29:40

    He put in all this work, all this time, all this care, and this is the end product, a hunk of wood and metal.

    29:41-29:43

    Unfortunately, this is a complete waste of time.

    29:43-29:47

    According to verses 16 through 20, look at what he says.

    29:47-29:50

    Half of it he burns in the fire, over the half he eats meat.

    29:51-29:52

    He roasts it and is satisfied.

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    Also he warms himself and says, aha, I am warm, I've seen the fire.

    29:57-30:02

    And the rest of it he makes into a God, his idol, and falls down to it and worships it.

    30:03-30:07

    He prays to it and says, deliver me, for you are my God.

    30:09-30:30

    They do not know, nor do they discern, for he has shut their eyes so that they cannot see, and their hearts that no one can understand, no one considers, nor is there knowledge or discernment to say, have that I burned in the fire, I also baked bread on its coals, I roasted meat and have eaten, and shall I make the rest of it an abomination?

    30:30-30:33

    Shall I fall down before a block of wood?

    30:34-30:44

    He feeds on ashes of the deluded heart, has led him astray, and he cannot deliver himself or say, is there not a lie in my right hand?

    30:44-30:49

    Do you see the humor that runs throughout these verses?

    30:49-30:58

    He is making fun of the fact that an idol maker would cut down a tree, have a block of wood that he forms into a God.

    31:00-31:05

    And then the rest of that tree he used, he throws it in the fire to cook up some food.

    31:07-31:19

    So you're telling me you're going to fall down and worship before an idol when the rest of the tree that it was made from was thrown into the fire.

    31:19-31:23

    And the idol couldn't even save the rest of itself from being burned to a crisp.

    31:24-31:28

    Is that really the God that you want to worship?

    31:29-31:33

    He says that makers and worshipers of idols are undiscerning.

    31:34-31:35

    They're deluded, they're blind.

    31:35-31:42

    They lack knowledge and self-awareness to see that they are falling hook, line, and sinker for an obvious lie.

    31:44-31:54

    According to Isaiah, believing that an idol of your own making will satisfy you is as foolish as thinking a mouthful of ashes will provide you any sense of nourishment.

    31:57-31:58

    So I know what some of you are thinking at this point.

    31:58-31:59

    Yeah, Isaiah, tell 'em.

    32:00-32:02

    I can't believe that people used to do that way back then.

    32:02-32:03

    Good thing we don't do that anymore.

    32:05-32:06

    You sure about that?

    32:08-32:22

    As 21st century Americans, we think that we're above idolatry because we don't have little statues in our closets that we bow down to or make sacrifices in front of, but we're just as guilty of idolatry.

    32:23-32:29

    Everyone reach into your purse or your pocket to pull out that hunk of plastic that you look at all day, every day.

    32:29-32:31

    Everyone do it, come on, you all have them.

    32:31-32:33

    Pull them out, lift them up.

    32:34-32:36

    You're all very slow today, let's go, let's go.

    32:37-32:40

    Let me ask you a question as you're, no, don't flash it in my eyes, Rich.

    32:42-32:46

    Let me ask you a question, do people worship this thing?

    32:47-32:52

    I can't think of a man-made object that people worship more today.

    32:53-32:55

    This is an idol for many of us.

    32:56-32:57

    You don't believe me?

    32:58-33:03

    Just look at that report you get at the end of the week telling you how much time you spend on your phone.

    33:04-33:05

    I don't know about you, I get that.

    33:05-33:07

    I'm like, it's even worse than last week.

    33:09-33:15

    And compare that to how much time you spend with the Lord in prayer and in his word.

    33:16-33:22

    How much time do you spend mindlessly scrolling through this device?

    33:24-33:32

    I've really noticed how often this thing just jumps out of my pocket and somehow gets on the dinner table or on the table during meetings.

    33:33-33:37

    Parents, we can get sucked into the smartphone wormhole at the end of the day.

    33:38-33:40

    It's that truly engaging with our kids.

    33:42-33:46

    So ask yourself, am I worshiping at the altar of the screen?

    33:46-33:51

    Am I bowing down to it with an overabundance of my time and my attention?

    33:54-33:55

    Let's move beyond smartphones.

    33:56-34:00

    As I said earlier, literally anything or anyone can be an idol in your life.

    34:01-34:03

    Your career can be an idol.

    34:03-34:07

    You center your entire life and identity around what you do.

    34:08-34:10

    Maybe you worship at the altar of food.

    34:11-34:16

    When you're stressed out, when you're frustrated, food is your first source of comfort.

    34:16-34:22

    Or maybe on the opposite end of the scale, you're overly obsessed with how you look and what you eat.

    34:23-34:24

    Listen, working out is great.

    34:25-34:26

    I should do way more of it.

    34:27-34:28

    Dieting is great.

    34:28-34:30

    Being healthy is great.

    34:30-34:33

    but this can be taken to an unhealthy extreme.

    34:35-34:37

    Maybe for you, it's money.

    34:38-34:49

    Whether you have a lot of it or a little of it, you can fool yourself into believing that having more and more will make you feel secure and satisfied, but it never actually does.

    34:51-34:53

    Others of you have made an idol out of relaxation.

    34:55-35:03

    Your life is summed up in the song, "Working for the Weekend." You live to ski, to fish, to shop, to golf, to travel.

    35:04-35:05

    None of these things are bad in and of themselves.

    35:05-35:11

    These are all good activities that we should enjoy, but they should never be the end goal of our week.

    35:12-35:23

    God gave us rest and relaxation so that we could recharge our batteries, so that we can have more energy to serve him and carry out the mission that he has entrusted to us.

    35:24-35:27

    Rest and relaxation were never meant to be the finish line.

    35:28-35:32

    They are pit stops that help us to reach the finish line.

    35:34-35:35

    Let's hit even closer to home.

    35:37-35:41

    For many of us, our families have become more important than God.

    35:43-35:48

    Yes, scripture calls us to care for our spouses, to sacrifice for them.

    35:49-35:53

    Yes, we're called in scripture to love our kids and provide for them.

    35:53-35:55

    But you know what the Bible never calls us to do?

    35:56-35:57

    To worship our family.

    35:58-36:00

    He never calls us to do that.

    36:01-36:05

    If you center your entire life around your kids, what's gonna happen when they move out someday?

    36:07-36:09

    You're gonna feel empty and directionless.

    36:11-36:16

    If you look to your spouse to give you what only God can provide, they're only gonna let you down continually.

    36:18-36:22

    All of these things, all of these people I've mentioned need to be put in their proper place.

    36:23-36:32

    If you do not prioritize the Lord and put him first, you will end up worshiping his good gifts to you instead of using these good gifts to worship him.

    36:33-36:38

    Good things can quickly and easily become God things to us.

    36:40-36:43

    You know, none of us can say with a straight face, I don't have any idols.

    36:43-36:47

    God's always number one in my life every single second of the day.

    36:48-36:50

    None of us can say that, myself included.

    36:52-37:01

    I don't know what your personal idols are, but I do know that all of us need to do the hard work of rearranging our priorities and goals on a daily basis.

    37:02-37:16

    The weeds of idolatry need to be pulled out of the soil of our hearts constantly and quickly before they grow larger and choke out our dedication to the one who is truly worthy of our worship.

    37:17-37:18

    This is hard work.

    37:19-37:23

    It's messy because it requires you to be brutally honest with yourself.

    37:24-37:29

    It also requires you to ask others to be brutally honest with what they see in you.

    37:30-37:40

    It's difficult because it requires you to care more about God and his glory, more than your comfort and your preferences.

    37:42-37:47

    So as we close, let's circle back to our major question for this morning.

    37:48-37:52

    Did God really say that every other religion is wrong?

    37:54-38:01

    No matter how our culture answers this question, God has definitively declared that there is no one like him.

    38:01-38:03

    He is the one and only.

    38:03-38:13

    He has definitively declared that every other religion is destructive act of idolatry that leads to nothing but shame and self-deception.

    38:15-38:22

    For everyone in this room who doesn't know Jesus, I once again wanna plead with you to turn to him today.

    38:22-38:30

    repent of your sins, turn to Christ, submit to him as the Lord of your life and your personal savior.

    38:30-38:36

    Don't leave this room this morning without making the most important decision of your life.

    38:37-38:47

    For the rest of us who are believers, I wanna remind you that it is not unloving to believe and to preach that every other religion is wrong.

    38:48-38:52

    We graciously share this hard truth 'cause we care about people.

    38:52-39:04

    We gently and lovingly share this hard truth 'cause we wanna protect people from biting down on Satan's tat cake of lies or heading into an alligator den of false teaching.

    39:06-39:12

    Let us hold fast to this biblical truth even though it's not popular, even though it's not fun to believe.

    39:13-39:16

    Let us stand firm that our God is the Lord.

    39:16-39:22

    He is our redeemer, He is our savior, He is the one and only, He is our rock of security.

    39:23-39:24

    Let's pray.

    39:26-39:30

    Father, we thank you for who you are and what you do in our lives.

    39:32-39:39

    We come to you and we admit that we so often worship other things and other people rather than you.

    39:42-39:50

    Lord, may we have our gaze redirected to you, have our eyes fixed on Jesus and all that he does.

    39:53-39:56

    Lord, if there's someone in this room who doesn't know you, Lord, open up their heart to the truth they may believe.

    39:59-40:00

    And for the rest of us, Lord, help us to follow you.

    40:03-40:06

    Help us to dedicate ourselves to becoming more like you.

    40:06-40:08

    In Jesus' name, amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read Isaiah 44:16-20

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

  2. What are some examples of living as if God doesn’t actually exist?

  3. Why is it so hard for people to accept that there is only one way to eternal life and a relationship with God?

  4. What is idolatry and why is it so destructive? Where do you see idolatry in your life and what can you do about it right now?

Breakout
Pray for one another.