Sunday, September 30, 2007

God @ Work - Why Work?

Today we’re beginning a new series on your work. “God @ Work.” In your lifetime you’re going to spend about 150,000 hours at work. That’s forty percent of your life. The odds are you’re not going to enjoy it. (radio - have a nice day - I cant I’m headed to work) A recent survey across America discovered that two thirds of American workers said, “I really don’t like my job.” In fact a lot of people flat out say, “I hate my job!” I don’t know if you know this or not but Monday morning between 5 a.m. and 9 a.m. is the number one time people commit suicide. It’s the most likely time people commit suicide in the world. Why? Because they can’t face another week at work.

Toby Keith has a song that goes like this, “Yeah, the big boss man he likes to crack that whip. I ain’t nothing but a number on his time card slip. I give him forty hours and a piece of my soul and he puts me at the bottom of his totem pole.
A lot of people feel like nobodies at work. Yet work dominates our lives. It defines our lives. It determines where we live, who we’re going to have as friends, what we do with our lives, how we spend our time. So today as we start this series I want to begin with this question: Why? Why work? Why go to work?

That’s not exactly a new question. It was asked over three thousand years ago by the wisest man who ever lived. His name was Solomon. In the book of Ecclesiastes he says this “What do people really get for all their hard work?” In other words what am I really getting? You spend your life working and laboring. What do you have to show for it? Especially here in America where the government will pay you for not working. If you can pick up welfare checks why not just stay in bed and cash the checks. Why? Why work?
You may say, “I work because I have bills to pay. I owe, I owe, so it’s off to work I go.” You say, “I'm working so I can retire.” Think about that idea. Isn’t it kind of dumb to spend your entire life doing something you don’t want to do so that at the end you don’t have to do it? Is that really the way I want to spend my life? There’s got to be a better reason than I’m just here to pay my bills or I just want to retire.

There is! In fact the Bible gives us six motivations for work. Two of them are financial and four of them are spiritual. Today we’re going to look at all six of those motivations.
We’re going to start with the lowest one, the least important and work our way up to the highest level of motivation. The first reason we work is the most
obvious one.

1. It’s out of necessity.

I work to meet my needs. That’s why I work. So it’s necessity. This is the most obvious. It’s the basic reason why we work. We work to stay alive. Proverbs 12:11 says “The one who stays on the job has food on the table.” Proverbs 16:26 “Appetite is an incentive to work.” I agree with that, how about you? Hunger makes you work all the harder.

This is just the basic level. It’s the survival level. It’s the lowest motivation for why it is that we work. The fact is today there’s a lot of people who don’t have any motivation to work. They don’t want to. They’re lazy. They expect other people to take care of them. They feel that the government should support them. Wherever there’s freedom there’s going to be freeloaders.

God has few things to say about that. but we’ll just look at 1 example.

The apostle Paul set a wonderful example for us. 2 Thessalonians 3:7-8 “We were not idle when we were with you. On the contrary we worked night and day laboring and toiling so that we would not be a burden to any of you.” No one could accuse Paul of being a freeloader. He wasn’t a parasite. He was self-sufficient. He was like the song, “He worked hard for his money.” He didn’t depend on handouts from other people. So the most basic motivation for work is out of necessity.

Let’s take a look at the next level.

2. The second level is Prosperity.
This is when I'm not working out of necessity, just because I want to stay alive. But I'm working out of prosperity and that is I want to succeed financially. This is a legitimate motivation for work. It’s just not the most important one. The second reason is prosperity. I want to make some money. I want to develop wealth.

You need to realize that God is not opposed to wealth. He’s not. Some of the wealthiest people in the Bible were the most godly people. Some of the heroes in the Bible were extremely wealthy. Abraham was a very wealthy man. Job was the wealthiest man in the world during his day. So was Solomon. Solomon was the wealthiest man in the world during his day. David was wealthy. Joseph of Arimathea was wealthy. Lydia was wealthy. So being wealthy and being close to God are not contradictory.

What God is interested in is how you get it (in other words do you get it honestly), how you spend it (do you spend it wisely), how you share it (do you share it generously) and He’s saying when you are getting wealth it’s ok as long as there’s certain perimeters. So God says as you become prosperous and that by the way, includes everyone in this room. Because by the world’s standard you are prosperous. The poorest person in America is wealthy to the rest of the world. If you have any change in your pocket you are wealthier than 95% of the people in the world. They don't walk around with money in their pocket.

Jesus talked a lot about wealth. Over half of the parables that Jesus told are actually about money. Jesus talked more about money than He did either heaven or hell. Some of those parables are actually about investments. Jesus praises the servants who get a good return on their investments. He said good job. You doubled your money, you tripled your money, you did a good job. So it was ok to make investments and triple investments. He says you’re a good servant. Well done.

The Bible is literally filled with advice and principles on both work and succeeding at work, succeeding in your business and making money and saving money and investing money. In fact there’s one particular book in the Bible that has a lot about money and about work. It’s called the book of Proverbs. Proverbs has tons of advice, literally tons of advice about work and about money. Here are a few…

Proverbs 21 “Steady plodding brings prosperity. Hasty speculation [that means the lottery] brings poverty.”

Proverbs 23 “Get the facts at any price.” A lot of people lose both their work and their money because they don't have the facts.

Proverbs 27 “Watch your business interest closely. Know the state of your flocks and herds.” That’s the principle of accounting. That’s a budget. A budget is telling your money where you want it to go rather than wondering where it went.

Proverbs 16:3 “Commit your work to the Lord and then it will succeed.” You want to be a success at work? The Bible says commit your work to the Lord.

“Lazy people want much but get little but those who work hard will prosper and be satisfied.” Proverbs 13:4
All of these verses are just a few examples of verses that are in Proverbs. Here’s my suggestion. This series, “God @ Work,” it’s going to be one month long. It just so happens that the book of Proverbs is 31 chapters long. So here’s what I want you to do, here’s your homework. I want you to read one chapter of Proverbs every day during the next month. While we go through this series on God’s purposes for your work I want you to read one chapter a day and you’ll get through the book of Proverbs by the end of the month. I want you to take a highlighter or a pen, get a modern translation of the Bible – New Living Translation, the Message paraphrase – and I want you to highlight each day the verses that speak to you about your work and your money. You’re going to be amazed about how much you learn in the next thirty-one days. Just highlight the verses that speak to you. “I could use this at work,” or “I could use this in managing my money.” Highlight it!

Proverbs 13:4 “Lazy people want much but get little. But those who work hard will prosper and be satisfied.” God wants you to prosper at work. And God wants you to be satisfied at work. I do too. I want you to be prosperous and I want you to be fulfilled. I'm going to give you a two-day seminar in about thirty seconds. There are five things God wants you to do with your prosperity. Five things God wants you to do with what He blesses you with. If you do these five things He will bless you with more. God is seeing if we are trustworthy.

1. Make money honestly. God says I'm not going to bless it if you’re out there ripping people off, selling an inferior product, you’re cheating people. Make money honestly.

2. The second thing He says if you want My blessing in your life, tithe it regularly. That means I give the first part of it back to God. Why do I give it back to God? I give the first ten percent back to God. Why? First I'm grateful for what He’s given me. If it wasn’t for Him I wouldn’t have anything. Second, it’s my priority in the present. You’re first. You get the first part. And third, it’s faith about the future. I trust You to bless me in the future.

So I make it honestly and I tithe it regularly.

3. Save it faithfully. The Bible has a lot to say about savings and investments. You will be amazed as you read through Proverbs what you learn about saving and investing your money.

4. Spend it wisely. That means you have to have some kind of budget. You’re not just doing impulse buying. So you have a plan. You spend it wisely.

5. Share it generously. God is watching to see how you do all five of these things to see, Can He trust you with more. Are you faithful with what you’ve got?
Proverbs 13:11
“Wealth from get rich quick schemes quickly disappears... [That means easy come, easy go. You make it quickly you can loose it real quickly. So He says it’s easy come, easy go. Wealth from get rich quick schemes quickly disappears.] …But wealth from hard work grows.” So this is the second motivation for work. First, necessity. I want to stay alive. I want to be able to eat. Second, for prosperity. That’s the motivation of wealth. There’s no problem with that. It’s just not the most important.

Now we’re going to move up to a little higher level of motivation for work.
The third reason for work is…

3. Identity

I work to express my God given shape. God has wired all of us uniquely to do something different on this planet. We’re all wired different so that everything can get done. Some are wired to be musicians. Some are great with numbers. We’re wired to be accountants. Some of us are great at taking complex things and making them simple. We’re wired to be teachers.

Here at FOCUS* we call this your shape. If you’ve been around for any length of time you’ve heard that term. Discovering your Design. These principles apply to work, Discovering your shape for work.

So what is shape? It’s actually an acrostic. Shape.

S – Spiritual gifts. Those are the things when you become a believer that God gives you, that He wants you to use in ministry and for Him.

H – Heart. What are you passionate about, what gets you up in the morning? What’s your drive?

A – Abilities. Your God given talents. The skills that you’ve developed over the years that you can share with others.

P – your Personality. You are unique. There is no one else like you. God wants to use your personality to effect other people’s lives for the good.

E – Experiences. All of us have experiences in our lives that we can use to help other people.

So how do you know if you’re working in your shape? There’s two questions that you can ask yourself, and you may want to write these down, to know if you’re working and where your working is going to fit your shape.

1. Are you successful at what you’re doing? That’s the first question to know if you’re working in your shape.

2. Are you satisfied in what you’re doing?

If you can answer yes to both of those questions – yes I m successful at what I'm doing and yes I am satisfied then there’s a really good chance that you’re in your shape at work.

Galatians 6:4 “Be sure to do what you should, for then you will enjoy the personal satisfaction of having done your work well, and you won’t need to compare yourself to anyone else.” Doing the work that you’re shaped for gives you dignity. There’s legitimate honor and pride in doing a job that’s well done. We’re all shaped different ways. We’re all shaped to serve God and we all have different shapes for work. There’s been studies and research done that’s proved that the happiest people in their jobs are doing something they believe is: one, worthwhile; two, meaningful to them, and three, it’s larger than they are.

One of the reasons that a lot of people hate their job and they’re miserable every Monday morning doesn’t have to do with their co-workers but it’s because they’re in a job that doesn’t fit their shape. They’re in a job for all the wrong reasons. They’re in it for the money because they want to the bigger house or they want the boat or the bigger boat. Or they want the second house.

Making money is almost the bottom of the barrel of motivation. The higher motivation is identity. Doing something that you love.

Some people think that the goal of life is just to do nothing. But Proverbs 12:27 says, “A lazy life is an empty life, but “early to rise” gets the job done.” The fact is that we get a lot of our identity from our work. After you meet someone for the first time and you introduce yourself what is typically the next question you ask? What do you do? What do you do for a living? It’s a great question because it gives us a good picture, a snapshot of who they are. It’s not the totality of who they are and where they work. But it does give us a glimpse, an insight into who this person might be.
The truth is there is honor and dignity that results from legitimate work. There is no work that is undignified…unless you’re going to be like a hit man or something else like that. We’re not talking about that. But legitimate work is not undignified.
Proverbs 12:14 says, “Well done work has its own reward.” The fact is that God has built in certain emotional rewards in each of us that only comes from work. The self respect and self esteem that we get from doing a job well done, the feeling of knowing the accomplishments we’ve done when we gave it our best shot.
I’ll never forget my first job.” - mowing lawns - It helped build self-respect and self-esteem in me. There is dignity in work itself.

The most important thing is this, find work that expresses you. Find work that expresses your shape. If you’re great at closing in business that’s your gift, then be a closer. If you’re great at teaching and you love it and that’s what gets you up in the morning. You can stay in there all day and teach, then be a teacher. If you’re great with numbers, then be an accountant. Be a stockbroker. Do what it is you’re shaped to do. Fulfilling your shape is far more important than making money. It’s the higher motivation.

The fourth reason for work is…

4. Maturity

What I mean by that is I work to develop my character. Work is a school for character development. God is far more interested in what you are than what you do. Think about it like this: you’re not taking your career to heaven but you are taking your character. God is more interested in what you are. We’re human beings not human doings. A lot of things you could do in life but what God’s more interested in is what you’re becoming while you do it. So the fourth purpose of work at a much higher level than simply necessity or prosperity is maturity. What is it doing to you? How is it changing you?

The number one way that God grows your character is through your family, through your marriage. Marriage is the school in learning to be unselfish. Have you figured that one out? You can’t stay selfish in a marriage and hold it together. You have to learn a thing called compromise and if you have kids you really have to learn compromise. You can’t just get your way all the time any more. Marriage, the goal isn’t just to make you happy. It’s to make you holy, which in the long run is going to make you happy. Happiness is not always getting your way. Happiness is learning to be mature.

The second way that God builds your character right after marriage and family is your work. He uses your job as a testing ground.

A good example of this is Joseph. Joseph was a guy in the Bible who had this dream of being a great leader and everything in his life went wrong. He was sold into slavery. If he later, after forty years, if he’d made his resume it’d be this. “I was betrayed by my brothers, I was sold into slavery, I was the housekeeper in a house, I was a slave, then I was an assistant in a prison. By the way, I was a prisoner while I was there.” Not a very good resume for being a leader of a major country. What was going on? Had God forgotten the dream? No, the Bible says this in Psalm 105 “Until the time came to fulfill His word the Lord tested Joseph's character.”

God has a dream for your life. But before that dream comes true or if it even does come true, God’s going to test your character to see if you can handle it. If you don’t pass the test the dream isn’t going to happen. Because God is more interested in your character. As I said, He’s more interested in what you’re becoming than what you’re doing.

Remember work is God’s idea. He thought it up. There was work in the Garden of Eden to do. There was work in paradise. It wasn’t just leisure. There were things to do.
In fact in Genesis 2:15 here’s the first job “God put the man in the Garden of Eden to care for it and work it.” Contrary to popular legend the oldest profession is landscaping. It’s gardening. It’s not something else you may have thought. But the first job was take care of the garden.

The Bible says this in Colossians 1 “Live the kind of life that honors and pleases the Lord in every way. You will produce fruit in every good work and grow in the knowledge of God.” God says I want you to grow through your work.

A few character qualities you might develop while you’re at work. Could any of you ever have the opportunity this week at work to work on patience? How about flexibility? How about cheerfulness? This is hard in some offices. Being cheerful. I could go on down the list – forgiveness, fairness, persistence. The list could go on and on. You can work on integrity at work. You can work on humility at work. You can work on dependability, on loyalty, contentment, honesty, on and on. That boss or that co-worker that you just can’t stand God is trying to teach you some things through that boss.

Here’s the point. While you’re working on your job, God is working on you. What God is doing in you is more important than what you’re doing. God is working on you while you’re working on the job.
The fifth reason for work is…

5. Credibility

Why do I need credibility at work? It’s to impact others. Our work is our witness. It demonstrates what we believe. It’s a testimony. It’s our testimony.

1 Thessalonians 4:11-12 says “Take care of your own business, and do your own work… if you do, then people who are not believers will respect you.” This is the fifth motivation in the Bible. It’s an example to unbelievers. It’s a testimony. It’s the fact that actions speak louder than words and God wants audiovisual Christians. Maybe the people at your work would be more open to the good news of Jesus, be open to become a Christian if you just be quiet about it. Stop being vocal about it and just live it out. Then they’d say, What’s different about this person? What is it? What is it about them? Here’s the key – this is so important to reaching people who don’t know Christ. Before your co-workers want to know that the Bible is credible, they want to know if you are. They want to know if you’re credible. Whether you like it or not, or whether I like it, we’re being watched. Especially if they know we’re Christians.
People don’t care how much you know, until they know how much you care.

ex. of pepsi
They want to see that you’re the real deal. There are so many fakes out there. There are so many things that are vying for their attention and saying, this is where you can find help. They want to know the real deal. They want to know that you and I are who we say we are. Your witness has to be backed up by your work. If you’re slacking on the job, if you’re having a bad attitude, if you’re constantly showing up late, or leaving early, if you’re playing solitaire on your computer instead of working, or stealing paper clips. Whatever it is you’re doing that’s making your witness ineffective, stop! Because God wants us to be a light in the dark places of people’s lives.

Matthew 5:16 says “Your light must shine before people so they will see the good things you do and praise your Father in heaven.” Circle ‘your light must shine” and then circle the word “they.” What’s this verse talking about? What is the light? You are. You’re the light. You’re the testimony. Your co-workers, if they know you follow Christ, they know what motivates you to do what it is you do. You walk the walk and you talk the talk because of what Christ has done in your life. They need to know that your motivation and the reason you do what you do is because of what you believe. Why? It’s because of the next part.

“… so they will see the good things you do and praise your Father in heaven.” They are the people around you. They’re your co-workers. They’re your kids. They’re your family members. And they see the reason you do what you do is because of what you believe. And because of that you can bring people to Christ. Just by your actions. Because then they want to know what is it that’s different about you? You’ve earned the right to be heard because of your lifestyle.

Colossians 3:17 says “Whatever you do or say, let it be as a representative of the Lord Jesus.” So here’s the million dollar question this morning. Is your workplace a better place, a happier place because people know that you’re a believer?
God has got you in your workplace for a reason. That reason is to reach the people around you.

Let’s look at the next level…

Necessity and prosperity are the financial motivations. Then we have identity and maturity and credibility as spiritual motivations. Now we come to the highest motivation for work…

6. Generosity.

We’ve had identity, maturity, credibility, now generosity. What does that mean? It means I work to give to others. That I actually work not for my benefit but I work in order to give to others. The Bible says this in Ephesians 4 “We must work doing something useful with our own hands that we may have something to share with those in need.” At this level of work I'm not working for necessity any more. I'm not working for prosperity any more. I'm working to help other people for their benefit. I like the Message paraphrase of this verse “Get an honest job so you can help others who can’t work.”

God says I want you to learn to be generous. A lot of people think they’re generous but they’re not. A lot of people when it comes to giving they stop at nothing! In fact, the only thing they’re generous with is their criticism. And they’re quite generous with that. But it is a good question, Why should I keep working once I have enough. Really, that’s a good question to ask. Why should I keep on working if I’ve got enough?

Very few people have ever considered the fact that maybe God would have you keep working so that you could help other people in need. So you could use that money for kingdom purposes. So you could use that to further God’s agenda in the world.

Andrew Carnegie used to say, “Do your givin’ while you’re livin’ then you’ll be knowin’ where it’s goin’.” Don’t say I'm going to give it all away when I die. No. Give it away now and enjoy watching it being used. That’s where the joy comes from. If you want to be a leader you’re going to have to set the example. This is higher level of work.

Paul was a great example in this area. Acts 20 he says this “I’ve been a constant example of how you can help the poor by working hard, and then remembering the words of the Lord Jesus ‘ it is more blessed to give than to receive’.” In other words there’s more happiness in giving than in receiving.
Because the only antidote to materialism is giving. You may say that you’re not materialistic but the only antidote for materialism is giving. Materialism is getting. Every time I give it breaks the grip of materialism in my life. It’s just not that important. Every time I give my heart grows bigger. Every time I give I become more like Jesus Christ who was the most generous person in the world.

The Bible says this in Luke 12 “Much is required from those to whom much is given.” And you know who that includes? You. Because you by very nature of living in America are one to whom much is given. The poorest of the poor in America are richer than everybody else. We just don't understand how blessed, how prosperous we really are as Americans.
So God is going to hold you more accountable for your job and what you do with what you’ve been given – your time, your money, your freedom, than other people around the world because you are an American. You got blessed in a way that you had nothing to do with it. It was simply God’s grace.

Proverbs 12:20 says this “Those who work for good will find happiness.” If you want to be happy? Use your time, your money, your energy, your effort, use it for good. And for God. Not for selfish reasons. Use it for good. And it says those who work for good will be happy.

Yeah, you can work for necessity, in other words to say alive. You can work for prosperity, to get rich. Those are legitimate motivations. But they are so low on the totem pole. God says, Work for identity, express your Shape. Work for maturity, to grow in character. Work for credibility, as a platform to share God’s love. Work for generosity, to give to others.

Have you had the wrong idea about work? There is so much more to God’s purpose for your work. Are you ready to step up to a higher level?

Sunday, September 09, 2007

PARENTHOOD - Unchanging Principles of Parenting by Cathleen Parks

Welcome to week number two of the series called Parenthood. Today, we are going to study what we call the unchanging principles of parenting. We are going to look at three principles that never change in all of our relationships, especially parenting because quite honestly, there are many, many things that do change especially in our philosophies of parenting. For example,
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Things change in your philosophy in parenting.

Today, though, we are going to look at an encounter that Jesus had with some children, and in it, we see the three unchanging principles, really, of all relationships. Let’s look at scripture. Mark 10:13 and following, here’s what the Bible says. READ People were bringing little children to Jesus to have Him do what? Would you say these next five words with me? “To have Jesus touch them,” but the disciples rebuked them. When Jesus saw this, He was indignant. He said, ‘Let the little children come to me and do not hinder them for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.’ He said, ‘I tell you the truth. If anyone will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child, he will never enter it.’ “ Verse 16, “And he took the children in his arms. He put his hands on them and he blessed them.” In that one little story showing Jesus encountering little children, we see the three unchanging principles of great relationships.
The first one, so important. If you are taking notes, number one is loving touch.

Loving touch communicates a rich sense of unconditional love and acceptance. Verse 13, people were bringing their little children to Jesus to have them do what? Say it again, to have Him touch them. Now, why were they bringing the children to Jesus to have Him touch them? Because there is power in loving touch. There is power. Now unfortunately I think a lot of people have this freaked out image of what the touch of Jesus looked like. I think I probably watched too much of the bad preaching channel where there would be a line of people and the preachers would take their hands and put them on the people’s foreheads and say, “Be healed in Jesus’ name,” and their hair would be everywhere. And so, I imagined all these little kids in front of Jesus standing up with His hands coming down on their heads saying, “Be healed in the name of the Father, and in the name of Me, and in the name of the Holy Ghost,” you know, or something like that. But in all reality, His touch was very likely incredibly different. How do we know this? Look at what Jesus actually said, “Let the little children come to me” Notice he didn’t say ‘bring them to me....he said let them come to me - I don’t know about your experience but I know that from my experience children don’t just GO to someone they aren’t comfortable with. MALL STORY So when Jesus touched the little children, it was very likely He was someone they felt comfortable with. Maybe he was kicked back, sitting on a rock, arms extended and they just came running up to Him and He would embrace them. He would hold them, maybe snuggle with them and speak just awesome words of encouragement to them. It was very, very relational. Now, why is this so important? Well, I’ll tell you something I remember learning in Child Development classes - years ago that helps to illustrate it. In the Thirteenth Century, there was this unusual king named King Frederick, II, that tried this just off-the-wall experiment. He was curious, what language would a child speak if that child was never, ever spoken to from the time he or she was born? Weird idea, but he wanted to find out what language would the child speak and so he had fifty babies brought into his laboratory of experiment and he had some ladies agree to take care of these fifty little infants, but the only agreement was, they were not allowed to speak ever to these babies. They were not allowed to show affection or emotion. They could just feed the baby, change the diapers … no googagaga. No oollaala. Nothing affectionate toward the babies. Well, the experiment failed. Can you guess why? Because all fifty babies within a year died. Now, why did they die? Not because they were lacking physical nourishment, but most would argue because they were lacking emotional and relational nourishment. They didn’t have the touch that was so important to them.

There are those that would say they are very touchy feely. And there are those that would say - no way - not me - I just don’t feel comfortable when people touch me. I’m kinda in between. Joe is much more touchy feely than I am. It’s always interesting to watch Joe move through a room because he just cracks me up. He doesn’t just hug you - he envelopes you. As he walks through a room you can see if other people are big touchers by how they respond to him. Some will do the obligatory hug - pat - pat - release and some will do the full hug - hold on - ask a question - listen intently for the answer - order a pizza - hang out a bit hug. I know alot of Pastors who would define themselves as not real touchy. But many of them will tell you they’ve prayed for the Spirit of God to do a divine work in their lives so that they can express themselves comfortably in the area of touch. Many will tell you that it’s when they started to have kids that they began to see/experience touch very differently. All of a sudden these individuals who didn’t want to hug unless it was absolutely necessary, now find themselves enjoying a nice cuddle on the couch with their son/daughter, or wanting to hold on just a little longer before bedtime, or feel the need to plop that cutie in their lap and never let go the first time someone hurts their feelings. My girls used to tell me, “Mommy, it didn’t hurt my body, it hurt my heart.” Now tell me that doesn’t just pull at your heart strings? So what made the difference for these people who were not the touchy feely type but now find that they are? Often times it was the difference in the ‘touch’ experience - touch, by the work of God changing a heart, shifting emotions, or maybe even healing past hurts has become instead of an uncomfortable experience, can become a loving, expressive part of a relationship. God really desires to work in peoples hearts. Especially when it comes to our children. So all that said, you really can’t use the ‘I’m just not a touchy feely person’ excuse when it comes to your kids. They need your loving touch. So if this is an area you struggle in pray about it, learn it how to be more physically loving with your kids. What do they say? Practice makes perfect. Just do it because it is so important in their lives.

Let me look at scripture, we’ll look together at a verse talking about Jesus in touch. Matthew 6:56, check this out, speaking of Jesus, “And whenever he went into villages, towns, or countryside, they placed the sick in the marketplaces, they begged him to let them touch him, even the edge of his clothes and all who,” say it out loud, “And all who,” what? “Touched him were,” what? “They were healed.” Now check this out. I did a word study on the word touched in the New International Version, and the word touched appears in the Gospels twenty times in regard to Jesus. And every single time the word touched appears in reference to Jesus, it always is in regards to healing. There’s power in loving and appropriate touch. Check this out, did you know that during their pre-teen years, a girls need for loving and appropriate touch increases. But dads, often get a little freaked out because their little girls bodies are becoming woman-like and they do this funky stuff like get their first bra and start experiencing different emotions and behaving in ways that they might not even understand, stuff like that. During all of this, a daughters needs continue to increase, but unfortunately at the same time dads level of comfort often decreases. Dads, let me say this to you.....it’s during this time that is probably most strange for you that your daughters need for loving, appropriate touch most increases and you must be fully engaged in loving touch. If just hearing this information isn’t enough to convince you then maybe this little fact will.... loving touch is the most important thing you can do for your daughter to deter sexual sin, because if she does not feel the love of an appropriate physical relationship with you, statistics tell us she is much more likely to seek out loving touch from others and you and I both know that touch is not necessarily going to be appropriate touch. When they learn to be touched appropriately by a loving and Godly person, they’ll learn to say no to inappropriate touch from an ungodly person. Another little piece of information that we need to discover is that little girls are often touched in a loving way five times as often as boys, and yet the boys’ needs are equal to girls. So a lot of times, you know, when a boy is two, whatever, they’ll be all huggy, lovey with their parents. When the boy turns seven or eight, their needs don’t change, but oftentimes they’ll start to get that, “Urhgh, that’s not cool.” kinda attitude and what we have to do as parents is, we have to be creative and make sure we are still engaged. For instance, eight- to ten-year-old boys, rather than a lot of hugs and kisses and things like that that’s not cool to a ten-year-old boy, what is cool? Secret handshakes, pats on the back, pats on the bottom - it’s a boy thing. Wrestling with them, being engaged in that kind of touch. You can do it. Okay? Loving touch - point one… let’s move on to point number two.

The second unchanging principle of parenting is abundant time,

lots and lots and lots of time and then more time. You know you’ve heard the saying “How do kids spell love?” and they said, “Kids spell love t-i-m-e.” Abundant time. Look at what Jesus does, verse 13. People are bringing little children to Jesus to have Him touch them, but the disciples rebuke them. In other words they were communicating that Jesus is just too busy. He is too important. He’s got dead people to cause to live again. He’s got blind eyes to open up, don’t bother Him with children.” But Jesus was not happy about that. Verse 14, “When Jesus saw this, he was indignant.” Now, the Greek word that is translated indignant, it could be translated as PO'd! Indignant is a soft translation. He was not happy. He said to them, “No, no, no. Let them come on. Bring them on. Let the little children come to Me. Forbid them not.”
I have a question for you, how many of you are Nascar racing fans? I gotta tell you the truth...a Nascar fan I am not. I know there’s a lot to it, but it’s just, you don’t see it at first. I’ll tell you, though, what is fascinating to me is the pit stop crew. I mean, you’ve go to admit that. Seven people in this little place and a car comes zoom, zoom, zoom. And a good pit stop will last twelve to fifteen seconds. They like, change the tires, put gas in, do an oil change, check the car, clean off the windshields, eat a Happy Meal, all this stuff in like fifteen seconds. Zoop, zoom, they’re out again, fascinating. I would argue today that many parents are doing what I would call pit stop parenting. It’s parenting in twelve to fifteen second spurts. Kid comes in. “How was your day?” “Great.” “Did you do your homework?” “Great.” “Did you wear clean underwear?” “Great.” “Don’t eat yellow snow and don’t have sex until you are married. Good night. I love you.” Zoomp. I mean, right? It’s pit stop parenting. “ Okay, get in the back of the minivan. We gotta go.” “What are we having for dinner, mom?” “I don’t know. Find a French Fry under the seat. We gotta go.” Driving by, “There’s dad. Wave at him.” “Da-a-d!” Who-o-m and you’re gone.
Now, obviously, I am exaggerating for a point because the truth is, we as parents spend much more than twelve to fifteen seconds engaged with our children. According to one article parents are much more generous than 10-15 seconds. This article states that the average parent spends thirty-seven seconds a day engaged in meaningful conversation with their children. I’m not talking about the the required conversation of homework, dinner, have you brushed your teeth yet - I’m talking about meaningful conversation. Thirty-seven seconds a day. ‘How?’ you say. Because the regular needs and requirements of the day just absorb us, don’t they? We’ve all had those days where we getto the end, we lay our heads on our pillow and we think...I was running all day but I feel like I didn’t get thing done. Life just happens. So reality says that if you are not careful, you can easily find the opportunity to us the excuse , “I just didn’t have time today to read that book, play that game, or play tickle monster with my kids.” But if were not careful - today becomes this week and this week become a lifetime and all of a sudden these precious gifts that God in his greatness has blessed us with are off to college or unpacking their first apartment. Let me just tell you right now, we can all come up with an excuse but there is no valid excuse for not spending time with our kids. You say, “I don’t have time.” No, you have time for what you choose to have time for. Period. Period. But you are a good person and you really care, and so in your heart you say, “Well, I’m going to, but just in a little while.” Okay? First, I have to get some things done. You say, “First, I have to .......an the possible ways to end this sentence are endless. It could be as long term as get a better job so I have to pay my dues..or as short term as get the laundry done so right now I’m just too busy. Let me tell you right now, if you don’t decide to do it now, you are not likely to do it. You have time to choose what you have time for. Thought number one is that we will express love with loving touch. Number two with abundant time, and number three, we want to be characterized by encouraging talk. By encouraging talk. Look at what Jesus said to these kiddo’s, verse 16, “And he took the children in his arms, he put his hands on them,” and he did what? Say it out loud, “And he blessed them.” I love that. I wonder what He said. Whatever He said, it was a blessing. He encouraged them. He lifted them up with His words. He didn’t say, “Hey, stop that! Hey, cut that out! Hey, stop touching your brother. Hey, stop hitting back there. Hey, I wish you’d be more like your sister.” He didn’t say, “Get over.” He didn’t say, “One, two, two and-a-half.” He blessed them, encouraged them. One of the most important things that we can do for our children is to speak words of life, rather than the words of death. Watch the words that you speak. Ask yourself if you are characterized more by catching them doing something wrong, always telling them what they weren’t or what they could be doing better rather than catching them doing something right. “Well done. Man, I’m so proud of you. Oh, you knocked them out of the park today! You’re the most awesome of all time.” When you call your child’s name what do they expect to follow? If your child automatically prepares for what you are about to say when you call their name - you have a problem. You have established a pattern of verbal interaction that in negative. If that’s the case - don’t beat yourself up - but get to work! You have a job to do. You must decided in your heart to be characterized by encouraging words. Practice saying them. Prepare for them - think of which words of encouragement would must influence each of your children and be genuine when you speak them. Look for opportunities and then pay attention to yourself - if you hear yourself speak a negative, purpose to speak 3 positives to counter-balance the negative. One of the most revealing movie quotes I ever heard was in Pretty Woman. (tell about scene)

Parents, we’ve got one chance. Time, talk, and touch … Take advantage of each moment you can because life goes by so fast. James 4:14 says What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. The last 12 years have experienced that mist. I held a baby in my arms and I took a mental picture of that moment and then I blinked and she was a little toddler walking across my living room floor, and I took a mental picture and I blinked again, and when I opened my eyes, I was releasing her to ride a bicycle without training wheels off down the driveway for the very first time. And I took a mental picture of that, and then blinked, and soon enough I’ll open my eyes, that child will no longer be riding off in a bike but driving off in an automobile and I’m sure I will learn to pray like you I’ve never prayed in my whole life. And then I’ll blink, and when I open up my eyes, that child will be driving off to college, or to get married, or to start a life on her own. And don’t allow yourself for a minute to think I am being over dramatic - let me read that scripture on more time....What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. Touch, time, talk - let’s take every opportunity to invest in them while we can.

Sunday, September 02, 2007

PARENTHOOD - The Parent's Priority

If you are a parent, know someone who is a parent, had a parent, and you would agree that parenting can be very difficult, would you raise your hands. Very challenging. I like what Mark Twain said. He said about parenting teenagers, he said, “When they are thirteen, put them in a barrel and nail the lid shut, then feed them through the knothole.” That was his advice. He said, “When they are sixteen, plug the knothole.”

I have had more joy from parenting, and there is also a lot of pain when we don’t get things right or our kids go off and do things on their own. One of the joys I have is just the library of awesome stories of the goofy stuff that our kids do. One of my favorites is when my youngest, Allison was 2 and half (vid)

Let’s set the foundational principle for our series. “The Parents’ Priority.” If you are not yet a parent and one day will be, or if you are a parent, what is our primary priority? If you are taking notes, this comes from Deuteronomy 6, and it is this.
“A parent’s priority is to gradually transfer a child’s dependence away from the parents until their dependence rests solely on God.” Let’s say that again. Let’s make sure that we understand that. Our priority as a mom and/or a dad is to gradually transfer dependence. Our children, when they are little, they depend on us for everything. Don’t they? And over time, we will help transfer their dependence to where they will no longer depend on us, but instead, they depend on the only One who will ever be completely faithful and true to them in every single way. We teach them to depend on God.

Now, where does this come from? Deuteronomy 6, (by the way,Cathleen and I don’t claim to be experts in parenting, we are just doing our best w/ God’s help - the answers are found in scripture) let me just set the context. It’s following Deuteronomy 5. In Deuteronomy 5, Moses had just revealed the Ten Commandments, the big ten that God would challenge His people to live by. Speaking of these commandments, Moses gives, really, one of the greatest teaching on parenthood in all of scripture. He says this, “These are the commands, decrees and laws the Lord your God directed me to teach you. To observe in the land that you are crossing Jordan to possess so that,” who? Would you say this, say it out loud, so that who? “So that you …” so that who else? “So that also your children,” who else? “And their children after them may fear the Lord your God as long as you live.”

As you teach your children to fear the Lord, as you teach them to live according to His commands, not only will you be changed, but the next generation and the generation after that will be different if we, as parents, train our children not to depend on us or themselves or what they see, but instead, on the One who created everything. Do you realize that as a parent, God has put within you the power to change generations and generations to come. How do we do that?
Deuteronomy 6 gives us the two most important principles that we would ever live out as a parent. If you don’t get anything else, this is what we want to embrace and eternalize. How do we transfer dependence from us on to God? Two things that we will do in our own lives, the first one,
if you are taking notes, scripture teaches us to love our God.

We are taught to love our God. Where does this come from? Well, verse 4, “Hear Oh Israel the Lord our God the Lord is one.” Very important, then in verse five, the Bible says this. “Love the Lord your God with,” what? How much? “Love the Lord your God with all your,” what? “Your heart and with,” what? Say it out loud, “And with all of your soul and with all of your strength.” Love your God.
With how much of your heart should you love God? with all. Notice, the scripture does not say with some, or with a little bit, or with a percentage, but we are told to love God with all of our heart. But wouldn’t you agree that many, if not most of us, we love God with a little bit of our hearts, and one of the most dangerous things that we can do as parents is expose our children to just a little bit of God.
Scripture teaches us we should love God with all of our heart. Now, the problem is, let’s just be honest. In the world that we live in, there are a lot of things that can distract us from loving God with all of our own heart. You know, as parents, as a dad, you know, I want to provide for my kids, and so many of us, we think to ourselves with good intentions, “If I can just give my kids more than I had growing up, then that will be very valuable for them.” So, we work so hard pouring ourselves into our careers trying to get more things when yet, we are not giving our children what they really need, which is us and a deeper relationship with the only One they need to really know ultimately is God, and God alone. We want to provide them the best opportunity, so we get them in soccer, and ballet, and in gymnastics, and all of a sudden, we organize their schedule so they are so busy. And we work hard so we can have a nice car to transport them in, so they will be safe, and their little booties will sit in leather seats. And then, when they are sixteen, we want to make sure that they can get a car because in most of our parts of town, not having a car at sixteen would be like borderline child abuse for our children. Right? Yeah. And then we want to save up so they can get the greatest education, and before long, if we are not careful, we become child-centered parents rather than God-centered parents. Our lives revolve around our children rather than revolving around God.
Love the Lord your God with all of your heart, and if you are so busy w/ your schedules you don’t have time to worship with God’s people and honor His name? Now, parents, don’t kid yourself. That will send a significant message to your children. How important is our involvement in church? And let me just say, by involvement in church what I don’t mean is that you come in late, sit there for an hour, and try to get off to lunch. That is not involvement in church. That is a spectator sport, and that is not real involvement. Involvement is saying, “I am a participator, a participant in the body of Christ and there is a Biblical function for me to do in my church, and I am immersed in deep growing relationships with others in Biblical community. I am a contributing part to the family of God. I am plugged in. I am contributing.” How important is your role like that with your children? Well, I came across a study that I thought was interesting about kids who grow up and become active Christ Followers as adults. If you are taking notes,

If mom and dad went to church:   72% of kids will as adults.
If mom only went to church:         15% of kids will as adults.
Now, dads, how important is your role?
If dad only went to church:           55% of kids will as adults.
Daddies, do not ever underestimate the value of your role in disciplining and leading your children to know Christ.
If neither mom nor dad:                 06% of kids will as adults.

Love the Lord your God with all of your heart. That means not only in our words, but in our actions.
Parents, do you love God with all of your heart, or with some of your heart? Because some, just a little bit, may not be what our kids need. They need all of it!

What would happen if, let’s say, if the walls could talk?
What would they say about your commitment to God if they looked at the magazines that you read, sitting out on the coffee table, or if you are a bathroom reader, you know...

What would they say about your heart? What about if they would the TV shows that you watch with you. What would they say about your heart? What about your computer? They got into your computer and looked at the history log and saw what you read over the last month? What do you think that would say about your heart? What if they just listened to the language that you said at your house? what do you think they would say about your heart for God? What about your checkbook. If they looked at your priorities in spending, where does God rank, really? Really? Not just what you say or hope or pretend, but who you are really.
You see, as parents, the best thing that we can do for our children is love God with all of our hearts. Love our God, love our God. And the second thing Deuteronomy 6 teaches us … It appears small at first, but it is incredibly important and profound. Number one, we will love our God, and number two,
we will lead our families. We must lead our families.

Where does this principle come from? Deuteronomy 6:6-9, I want you to see the spiritual leadership represented in these verses. “These commands that I give to you today are to be upon your hearts.” Verse 7, what do we do with them?
We impress them on our children. We talk about them when we sit at home, and when we walk along the road, and when we are driving to school or to T-ball practice. When you lie down and when you get up, tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. Write them on the door frames of your houses and on your gates. We lead our families spiritually. Spiritual talk becomes, not just something we do on the weekends on the way to church, it becomes a part of seven days a week, of everything that is going on. We lead our children spiritually.
I like the quote that Edward, Duke of Windsor, said this about America. He said, “The thing that impresses me most about America is the way the parents obey their children.” I want you to think about that for a minute. The thing that impresses me most is the way that parents obey the children.
Parents, question: Are you leading your children, or are your children leading you? Think about that. You lead them spiritually, you set the tone. You are the divine authority in the household. You set the tone. Now, you may say, “How do you lead?” Well, what I am not going to tell you is, “Here’s exactly what you have to do.” What I am going to do is tell you, if you are going to be an effective leader, here write this down, you. Whatever that means for you, you seek the heart of God and you do it. And what I will do is, I will tell you just briefly how Cathleen and I lead intentionally, not to tell you that you need to do this, because our philosophy would not be right for your family.
First of all, we govern their intake

TV, radio, movies, friends, where they go, what they’re involved in - Just because everyone else does something, doesn’t mean that you are going to let your kids do that. Just because every other kid can stay out, teenager, until one o’clock in the morning, you may say, “No, at our household I am coming home, or whatever.” You set the standards.
I like the single mom who was struggling with knowing what to do with her teenager, who always wanted to see rated-R movies with his friends, and he says, “But, there’s just a little bit of bad stuff, just a little bit. It’s not that bad.” And the mom was praying, “God, what do I do?” And God gave her an idea, something that I thought was awesome. She said, “I’ll tell you what. You can go see this rated-R movie, but first, you have to help me make some brownies.” And the teenager’s like, “Oh, I love brownies, as long as I can lick the bowl.” And she said, “Sure you can. What I need you to do to contribute is, would you go out and find some of our dog’s dog poop, and give me one spoon full of dog poop.” The son was like, “That’s nasty, mom.” “No, no, no. Just one small scoop. That’s all you need. Just bring that in, help me make the brownies, and you can go to the show tonight.” And the son was like, “Well, whatever,” and he came in with a spoon full of dog poop that he was holding out like this, and he gave it to his mom, and his mom said, “Oh, that’s too much,” and she took a little knife and cut it in half and dropped just a little bit of dog poop down into the brownie mix and stirred it up. And he said, “Mom, we can’t eat that.” She said, “Oh, sure.” She poured it into the bigger bowl and said, “Would you like to lick this bowl?” He’s like, “No, that’s disgusting.” And she said, “But what you don’t understand, son, is it is just a little bit of poop.” And all of a sudden, he realized that just a little bit of ungodliness is too much.

We encourage reading
Cathleen and I value reading and we instill that into our daughters - so they read on a regular basis (Jessica has already read more books than I did all the way thru H.S.)
We value family - Saturday is always family day, it’s been that way since Jess was just a tiny little thing. We honor that day. We cherish it. C & I do all that we can to protect it. We have what we call Family Nights (explain)

We lead relationally.
My kids see me take Cathleen out on dates. Now, why do I want them to see that? Because I want them to know that they are not in charge, that we guard the integrity of our marriage. We are not child-centered parents. We are God-centered marriage, and God says for us to pour our lives into one another, plus I want my daughters to see how a man should treat a woman so when some hairy-legged guy comes along with big bouffant hair, they will look for character and heart and see, “Is this a guy that fears God?” If not, they’ll easily walk away.

We live relationally.
I take my daughters out for dates, and I date them and I teach them what it is like for someone to treat them like a lady.
If your heart is wholly surrendered to Him, parents, you are in charge, and just because everyone else is doing something does not mean that it is the right standard for your family.

You are not so concerned about your children’s immediate happiness as you are their holiness and full pursuit of God in every single way. So how do we lead them? Well, the Bible calls it training. There is a very well-known scripture in Proverbs. It says this about training. The Bible says that we are to train up our children in the way that they should go and when they are old they will not depart from that.

So, parents, We train, if you are taking notes, we initiate, or we dedicate, or we train our children in the way that they should go. We initiate a craving for that which is true and right and pure and holy, and when they see the fruit of that, they say Godly living works. Our role is to transfer dependence. They no longer depend on us, now they depend on God. How do we do that? We love God. First, it starts with us, and then we intentionally lead our families. If you want to half-heartedly let life happen, let me promise you, life will happen, and you will kiss your kids goodbye, send them off to college, walk them down the isle, and you are going to wonder, “Where did it all go?”

Lead them. Lead them. You lead. God placed you in that role. Love God with all of your heart, and lead as He calls you to lead. How do you do it? We train. I have given you a list from Proverbs of some of the most important things that we, as parents, will train into our children, watch this (vid)

TRAINING FROM PROVERBS
1) Train them to manage God’s money. (Prov. 3:9-10)
2) Train them to carefully select friends. (Prov. 13:20)
3) Train them to watch their words. (Prov. 4:24)
4) Train them to be responsible. (Prov. 6:6-8)
5) Train them to guard their minds. (Prov. 23:7)
6) Train them to be generous. (Prov. 11: 25)
7) Train them to fear God. (Prov. 1:7)

We want you to know that we are very, very serious about partnering with you to lead your children to become fully devoted followers of Christ, but it is honestly not our job. It is your job. And you will be successful, not if you expose your kids to all these great activities which honestly pass away, but if you expose your children to the great truths of God, teach them about His power, His goodness, the power of prayer, the truth of His Word, the in-filling of His Spirit that will empower and lead us, and counsel us and guide us and correct us and be our teacher. So what do we want to do? We want to transfer their dependence on us, because when they are young, they depend on us completely. When they get older, they will depend on their friends or on themselves, but we want to teach them to depend on God. How do we do that? We love God first, with all of our heart. Not some, but all. And then, we intentionally lead our families. It will not happen on accident.
Allison, my youngest, will say to me, “You’re my best Daddy” then she corrects yourself and says, “Well actually, you’re the 2nd best, Jesus is the best Daddy” and I tell her, “I’ll take it! I’ll take 2nd place to Jesus Christ any and everyday. and I think to myself, “She’s on the right track.” The transfer is already taking place. It’s happening. The most important thing that I will ever do is to lead my girls to the One who gave His life for them, and when they know who they are in Christ, then they are ready to be shot out into this world to make a difference. Parents, your role is absolutely so important. You can train and change generations and generations and generations to come.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

The Power to Change Your Life

What would you like to change about yourself? Would you like to be more confident? more relaxed? more outgoing? maybe have less fear, less bitterness, less boredom?

There are very few people in life who feel like they have attained perfection. Most of us are very interested in changing and we realize there is always room for improvement. So often people ask, "Why is it I can't change? I want to change but I don't know how or I don't have the power to change." We may go to seminars, conferences, looking for the painless cure that's going to zap our life and change us instantly and give us self discipline. Or we go on diets. I once went on a diet for an entire afternoon. Or we join a health club and our enthusiasm goes great for about two weeks and then it kind of wanes and we go back into the same old rut and we don't change. We read self‑ help books. The problem with self help books is they tell you what to do but they don't give you the power. They says things like, "Get rid of all your bad habits.... Be positive, don't be negative..." How? Where do I get the power to change? That's the basic problem -- a lack of power in our lives. How do I get my life off dead center? How do I get out of the rut? How do I break out of the mold I'm in? Where do I get the power to get off center?

Good News! Jesus Christ offers the power we need.
Philippians 3:10 "All I want to know is Christ and experience the power of His resurrection." Ephesians 1:20 "I pray that you will begin to understand how incredibly great His power is to help those who believe Him, the same mighty power who raised Christ from the dead."
The word "power" is used in the New Testament 57 times. It is a book of power. It is used to describe the most powerful event that ever happened, an event that separated A.D. and B.C. All history was split by one powerful event. What is that power? It's the power to change your life.

We're going to be talking about power. How do I have the power to change and how does God change me and make me what I want to be and what He wants me to be? Power! [I think of the new chaplain at the prison. He was nervous. He was assigned death row. He was trying to be positive when he went in to counsel the guy that was going to be executed the next day. He said, "I've really been praying for you." The guy said, "But you don't realize. Tomorrow I'm going to the electric chair." The chaplain said, "Well... more power to you."]

Paul said, I want to know the power of the resurrection. The Greek word for power is the word dunamis -- dynamite. God says, I want to give you dynamite power in your life! Paul said I want to know it. It's my personal goal. And I want you to know it. The same power that raised Jesus Christ from the dead 2000 years ago is available for your life right now to change your life.
What is resurrection power? and.. how does it affect me?

Here’s what the Bible says.
1. IT'S THE POWER TO CANCEL YOUR PAST.

Your failures, your mistakes, your sins, your regrets. When I say cancel, I'm not talking about denying the past and saying it never happened. Cancel means to eliminate, neutralize, offset. Have you ever been half way through a project and wished you could start over? Like painting the living room? A lot of people feel that way about life. "I wish I could just start over. I've made so many mistakes. I wish I could wipe them out. Failures, problems, bad decisions." Everybody has regrets because nobody's perfect. I don't measure up to my own standards, much less God's. Some people can't seem to let go of their past and as a result they let the past control the present. They live in a state of regret. They're continually saying, "If only..." They are continually second guessing themselves. they're tortured by painful memories. "I blew it, therefore I'm going to pay for it the rest of my life."
God says that's unnecessary. God says it's unnecessary for you to go around with a heavy load of guilt, old hurts, memories of mistakes. Colossians 3:14 "He has forgiven all our sins and canceled [circled "canceled"] every record of the debt we had to pay." Christ has done away with it by nailing it to the cross.
It says, "He's forgiven all of our sins." What is sin? It's an archery term. It comes from bows and arrows. When a person in archery would shoot an arrow at a bulls eye and miss the target it was called a sin -- it missed the mark. That's why the Bible says, "All have sinned and have fallen short." It's an archery term. It falls short. The good news is that God offers complete forgiveness. He says He cancels every record of debt in your life. The words that describe forgiveness in the Bible are "blot out", "wipe out", "washed away", "canceled". It's completely forgotten.

Jesus Christ knows the things you've done wrong and He did not come to rub it in. He came to rub it out. He did not come to condemn you. He came to change you. Jesus Himself said, John 3:17 "I didn't come to condemn the world. . . I came to save it." He says I cancel out all of your past mistakes. It's like the Etch-A-Sketch. You make a mess, you flip it over and wipe the slate clean. The Bible says that's what God does to all the mistakes I've made in my life when I come to Him. He wipes it clean.

In Jeremiah 31:34 "I will remember their sins no more." That's got to be one of the most amazing verses in the Bible. God, who made the world, forgets. God chooses to forget your wrongs, your mistakes, your failures when you come and admit them to Him and ask Him to forgive you. He cancels your past. That's Good News!

Some of you if you would say today, "Christ Jesus, I want You to forgive me of all the things I've ever done wrong. I want to give my life to You. I want to make that commitment today." And then if you were to die tonight and stand before God in heaven and say, "God, about that sin I committed yesterday." He'd say, "What sin? What are you talking about?" Some of you have made some major mistakes in a business. He'd say, "What mistakes?" Some of you have gone through a divorce. He'd say, "What divorce?" God cancels your past. That allows you to get on with the present.
What is the basis for forgiveness? Romans 8:1 "There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus." When Jesus Christ died on the cross one of His last words from the cross were, "It is finished." In the Greek that's one word. It literally means "Paid in full." Canceled. It was what they would stamp on bills when they had been paid. It was stamped on prison sentences when they had been completed. Paid in full.

God says, "That's what I did on the cross. I paid for every mistake you've ever made." So, Jesus was crucified on the cross so you can stop crucifying yourself. He was hung for your hang ups. That's Good News!

If God forgets a sin the moment we confess it, don't you think you ought to forget it? How long do you remember a bill that's been paid for? I forget it. I don't worry about last month's utility bill. Once it's been paid, I forget it. Somebody said, God takes all your mistakes and your failures and puts them in the deepest part of the sea when you give them to Him and then He puts up a "No fishing!" sign. It's the power to cancel your past.

2. IT'S THE POWER TO CONQUER YOUR PROBLEMS.
The fact is everybody's got problems. You've got them. I've got them. It's a part of life. If you don't have any problems, check your pulse. The only people who don't have problems are in Cemeteries.

Our real problem is what we do with our problem. We try to solve them on our own power and our own strength. How do you know when you're trying to solve your problems in your own strength? You're tired all the time. You're sick. You're sick and tired of being sick and tired!

It's the power to conquer your problems. Rom. 8:35, 37
"Who shall separate us from the love of Christ. Shall trouble or hardship or danger? No, in all of these things we are more than conquerors through Him that loves us." Circle "conquerors". That means according to Webster, "one who overcomes by gaining control."

I have met some people who feel like their lives are out of control. "I am a victim of my circumstance! What can I do? I'm powerless. Just about the time I make ends meet, somebody moves the ends." You walk up to somebody and say, "How you doing?" They say, "I'm doing ok, under the circumstances." What are you doing under them? Somebody said, "Circumstances are like a mattress. You get on top and you rest easy. You get underneath and you suffocate."
It depends on where you are. A lot of people are under their circumstances. The fact is we can't control our circumstances, but we can control how we respond to them.
"But you don't know my problems. You don't know all the problems I'm going through. It's bad!" You're having a wonderful pity party. Everybody hates me, nobody loves me; I'm going to go eat worms!

This verse says "We are more than conquerors." In the Greek it says, "We are super conquerors" -- overwhelming victory. If you put your life in God's hands and you rely on the power of the resurrection, nothing can devastate your life, nothing can swallow you up, nothing can destroy you. That's the Power of God. No matter how dark the situation is, God can turn it around. No situation is hopeless. The same power that enabled Jesus Christ to rise from the dead, will allow you to rise over your problems.
It's the power to cancel your past. It's the power to conquer your problems.

3. IT'S THE POWER TO CHANGE YOUR PERSONALITY

What would you like to change about you? What would your spouse like to change about you? Maybe that would be a little more accurate. One wife said, "My husband is so temperamental -- 90% temper, 10% mental!"

The power to change your personality. Complete this sentence: "It's just like me to be______________________________. Always late, ... worry, ... never stay on a diet, ... always put my foot in my mouth, ... always blow up, ... always be depressed, ... always get angry... whatever."

The fact is God uses a two step process to change us: When we commit our lives to Christ, that's the initial turning point. When someone becomes a Christian, he becomes a new person inside. He's not the same anymore. A new life has begun." What happens? God says, I wipe out your past. All of it's gone. It's like starting over. That's why the Bible calls it being born again. Born again doesn't mean reincarnation, it just means you get another chance. Start over, new life! Not turn over a new leaf, you get a new life.
But then it's followed by a lifetime process.

Romans 12:2 "Don't let the world squeeze you into it's mold but let God remake you so that your whole attitude of mind is changed."
It's so easy to get into a rut, a routine, the rat race. There's a myth going around like this, "I can't change. I've tried to change. I've worked hard. I've used will power. I've read books. I've gone to seminars. I've listened to tapes, but I can't change. It's just the way I am. I'll never be able to change." You're right. You can't on your own power. But with God's power you can make a difference. God says, "I want to take your greatest weakness and turn it into your strength."

There is one thing that will keep you from changing. I don't know you but I can tell you one thing about your life. There is only one thing that's going to keep you from becoming the person you want to be and God wants you to be. What is it? Not the devil. It's not other people. It's not God. It's not circumstances.
It is one word. Procrastination. Procrastination is deadly. "I have every intention to change. I'll do it tomorrow." Waiting,
delay. Intentions don't do anybody any good.
Ever hear people say, "I'm aimin' to change." I want to say, "When are you going to pull the trigger?"
Procrastination is fatal. "One of these days.... I'm going to go to the dentist. ... I'm going to have that surgery I need. ... I'm going to spend more time with my family. ... I'm going to get serious about being a Christ-follower. ... I'm going to get active in church. ... I'm going to go after that dream. ... I'm going to get in shape. One of these days..."

Ever read about or hear the story of the Exodus? The Famous old school movie ‘The Ten Commandments’ “Let my people GO” There were different plagues and every plague made fun of a different Egyptian god. The cow, lice. One of the most interesting was the plague of frogs. How would you like to have frogs in your bed? The Bible says there were frogs everywhere! I'm sure Mrs. Pharaoh was putting pressure on Pharaoh to give in and get rid of the frogs. One day Moses comes and Pharaoh gives up. Moses says, "When do you want me to get rid of the frogs?" Pharaoh gives a clasic answer: "Tomorrow". He must have been crazy! There's a famous sermon on this text called "One more night with the frogs." Why in the world would anybody put off a change that was going to be positive? Why wouldn't he say, "Right now! Get them out of here." But he said, "Tomorrow."

You and I do that all the time. We procrastinate and put off making changes that would be good for us. Why? Maybe complacency -- we're just too lazy to change. Maybe fear -- we don't know what the changes are going to be. Maybe pride -- we're stubborn. We procrastinate.

Any NASA guru will tell you that most of the amount of fuel in a rocket is used up in the first few hundred yards. It takes tremendous energy and thrust to get the rocket off the launch pad. Once it's going in orbit, it's much easier to direct.

The hardest thing in life is to get going. The hardest thing in life is to break procrastination. It's one thing for me to come in here and say, "Jesus Christ can cancel your past. He can help you conquer the problems you're facing right now. He can change your personality." And you go out saying, "One of these days I'm going to let God do it. One of these days I'm going to let the power of God work in my life."

It’s the power of the resurrection. Jesus Christ is alive. Since He is alive He gives you the power to change.
Why not experience the power of Jesus Christ today.
(vid)

Prayer:

Jesus Christ has the power to make the changes in your life that you want so badly to see and He is available. He will give you the power to get started. He will give you the power to keep going. He will give you the power to break procrastination. Why can't I change? Why can't I be consistent? Why can't I stick with the things I know are good for me? Because you don't have the power on your own. You were made to depend upon God.

Have you been unable to let go of your past? Jesus Christ offers complete forgiveness. He can put your life back together again. Or do you feel like Humpty Dumpty. Do you feel like nothing can put you together? It is never too late to start over. You're never a failure until you give up. He can give you the peace of a clear conscious. Maybe you're overwhelmed by your problems. Easter says no situation is hopeless. Relax, trust, let go. You don't have to be controlled by circumstances. No problem is too big for God. He's still in the resurrection business. What are you waiting for? Open up your life. Why wait another day? Give your life to Christ right now.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

The Elijah Element - Re:Awake

How many of you have ever gotten a new car or new car to you? and then the very next day after you’ve gotten this new car
to you you see 100 of them just like yours - know what I’m talking about - there’s one, there’s one. they’re everywhere!
They were there before but didn’t see them.
Once you have eyes to see you can actually see some things that were there all the time but never really acknowledged them.
The color collage pictures that just look like a bunch of different colors swirled together, but if you look through them you’ll actually see an image w/in the collage. ( I was one of those guys you passed by at mall staring at the picture, after you had shopped for a few hours you passed by me again b/c I just couldn’t get it)
Once I saw the image in the collage I began to praise God I did it! and in that I slightly moved and lost it...
As we have been studying the life of Elijah this summer and looking at how we too could implement all these different Elijah Elements into our lives... what has happened in me and I believe has happened in us all is that we began to look beyond or look through ourselves and could now see, b/c of God’s Word all these elements that in reality may have always been right there but we missed them... we’re to distracted, to overloaded, maybe too busy, or just caught up in ourselves to the extent that we have been blinded a bit.
We have covered a whole lot in this study this summer and learned how much we could apply to our lives that Elijah lived out day by day - so that being the case today I wanted to revisit Elijah - quickly summarize some of the major elements that we can implement in our lives.
Try to crunch this down into 1 outline for us to keep or if you misplaced some along the way - we typically podcast every message but we’re not perfect and for different reasons we lose recordings so let’s jump back to the beginning.
1 Kings 17... Elijah jumps onto the scene out of nowhere to confront Ahab, the king of Israel - Ahab has been leading the people of Israel down an ungodly and idolatrous path.
and what we discovered was the immense contrast of one who was walking with the Lord, and one who simply lived for self.
To sum up the life of Ahab we could say,
Completely ignoring God and living for self.

We've seen people like this in our world. We know folks who fit this description don't we?
Completely ignoring God and living for self.
I think if we look really close, I think we'll see we all have a little Ahab in us. Not nearly to the extreme he took it, but something there. Ahab walked his own path, did what he wanted to do - we do that from time to time. “Aahhh it’s not that big of deal is it? I live under God’s grace”
Ahab choose to serve and worship other gods - we don’t do anything like that do we? That sounds so harsh. I don’t worship other gods! Really?
I do everytime I place something above God or at a higher priority than Him, or things I even choose to spend more time in or with - we have so many interests, hobbies, things we love to do,
watch on TV, and submerge ourselves totally in to. There are 1000's of things that fit this description.
In every instance, if not done in balance and with the proper priority in order w/ God, we too serve these other gods - we think they’re serving us, giving us great pleasure, but how naive we are. And soo... the 1st Elijah Element we saw was that Elijah was.. the polar opposite - a true follower of the Most High God.

One with a heart after God.

then we studied The Beatitudes which gives us a great picture of one who’s heart is running after God. Matthew 5:3-12
and we broke that scrip. down of how to be a man or woman who is ‘Going after God’ - more details on blog.

Then we saw that Elijah was a man of faith (vid)
We are to live by faith.

That means in it’s simplest form - obedience.
When we live by faith, walk in faith great things happen.
When we walk in obedience to God, in what His Word already says it is not only going to make a huge impact on our own lives, but a significant impact on the lives of others around us.
How cool is that! God’s Word will not return void/empty - the promises are true. All we have to do is live by them,
walk in them - what are wanting to see happen? what are you dreaming of? what do you want to see happen that is much bigger than you alone can make happen?
Simply live by faith - and watch the Creator of the Universe work
This is exactly what we see in the life of Elijah

Look at how often scripture shows us Elijah walking, moving in obedience -
17:2-5; 8-10; 18:1-2; 19:5-6; 7-8; 11-13; 15-19; 2 Kings 1:3-4; 15

in every command of God, Elijah moved in obedience, w/out hesitation (oh... im not sure about that God.. that doesn’t make any sense.. really, you want me to do that?)
Elijah went for it - w/ a heart completely in line w/ God - it was easy for him to live by faith.


As we kept reading the next element each of need to understand is that:
Where God Guides, He Provides

God told Elijah to run to Kerith Ravine - a desolate place - but God provided water from a dried up brook and ravens brought him food! Then from there God tells Eli. to go to Zarephath where you’ll meet up w/ a widow - 1 Kings 17:10-16
“So he went to Zarephath. When he came to the town gate, a widow was there gathering sticks. He called to her and asked, "Would you bring me a little water in a jar so I may have a drink?" As she was going to get it, he called, "And bring me, please, a piece of bread."
 "As surely as the LORD your God lives," she replied, "I don't have any bread—only a handful of flour in a jar and a little oil in a jug. I am gathering a few sticks to take home and make a meal for myself and my son, that we may eat it—and die."
Elijah said to her, "Don't be afraid. Go home and do as you have said. But first make a small cake of bread for me from what you have and bring it to me, and then make something for yourself and your son. For this is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says: 'The jar of flour will not be used up and the jug of oil will not run dry until the day the LORD gives rain on the land.' "
She went away and did as Elijah had told her. So there was food every day for Elijah and for the woman and her family.
For the jar of flour was not used up and the jug of oil did not run dry, in keeping with the word of the LORD spoken by Elijah.
Where God leads, He feeds, Where God guides, He provides.
God has help where we least expect it. He provides for us in ways that go beyond our limited imaginations or expectations.
No matter how difficult life becomes or how hopeless our situation may appear we can count on God to pull us through.
Where God leads, He feeds, Where God guides, He provides

So we said - If we want to receive from God, we must be in God's will.

The first area in which we need to be in the will of God is our relationship with Jesus Christ. This is our first priority. Maintain that love relationship with Jesus Christ.

Another area in which we need to make sure we are in the will of God is our relationship to the church. If we neglect our fellowship with one another then we will find ourselves out of the will of God
A final area of obedience is obedience in giving. So many people take themselves out of a position where they can receive from God because they will not be obedient in this vital matter.

God has promised that if we bring His tithes into the storehouse, He will pour out blessings upon us. “Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, so that there may be food in My house, and test Me now in this," says the LORD of hosts, "if I will not open for you the windows of heaven, and pour out for you a blessing until it overflows." Malachi 3:10
v.13-14 -
Elijah said to her, "Don't be afraid. Go home and do as you have said. But first make a small cake of bread for me from what you have and bring it to me, and then make something for yourself and your son. For this is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says: 'The jar of flour will not be used up and the jug of oil will not run dry until the day the LORD gives rain on the land.' "
Give to God 1st and He will provide!
But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Matthew 6:33
So we must be obedient to God in terms of our relationship with Jesus Christ and with His church, and in terms of our giving.
When we walk in obed. putting God 1st - He will provide.
Where God guides, He provides

The next element we need to implement into our lives is PUSH

in 1 Kings 17:17-24 we see that the widows son becomes ill and eventually dies - so Eli. takes the child and begins to pray: 20 Then he cried out to the LORD, "O LORD my God, have you brought tragedy also upon this widow I am staying with, by causing her son to die?" 21 “Then he stretched himself out on the boy three times and cried to the LORD, "O LORD my God, let this boy's life return to him!"
Look at how Elijah prayed 3 times here.
Don’t stop after one prayer. Elijah prays once for child, we’ll geez I tried, sorry lady.
Our tendency is to quit to soon - we pray once, don’t get an answer, “well must not have been God’s timing or will - I quit”
(it can happen... marriage... relat.... job.. school)
If you call someone, let it ring once, didn’t answer, I guess they’re not available, go over to friends house
go up to door, knock once, they don’t answer - you leave.

Why would our prayer life be any different - God is teaching us to persevere in our praying - He wants to answer, He wants our lives full of joy & happiness to so don’t stop.

The element we discovered is that
We all play a part

each of us have a mission, each of us play a part. In 1 Kings 18:1-8
Elijah connects w/ Obadiah and we saw the different ways each of them played their part in the Kingdom of God.
Ob. was more of a behind the scenes player while Eli. was front and center. We discovered that we have been shaped to serve -
we are shaped for significance. We have been created on purpose for a purpose - all of us have a mission, all of us play a part - we were not born to E.B.Ts & D. that God has bigger & better things in store for us all - so the ? is: what’s your part?

The next element we discovered was that Eli. was not only a man of faith, but
he was a man of Integrity.

in ch. 18 Eli. tells Ob. that he wants to see the king, but Ob. is not real sure about telling the king b/c others have told the king where Eli. was and when Eli. wasn’t where they said he was - they were killed! So Ob. is a little reluctant about losing his life.
But Eli. says, hey, you can bank on it, I’m gonna be here!
and that alone was enough for Ob.
You see “Our character is more caught than taught” and
it appears in - life of Integrity - and in that manner living this life of integrity is what gives us the credibility to impact others around us for the kingdom of God.

Then we read about the clash on Mt. Carmel. (vid)
Where Elijah basically takes on 850 pagan prophets - the prophets of Baal set up an altar and Eli. sets up an altar and whichever God answers by fire, He is God.
The prophets of Baal go 1st and they rave all morning, & all afternoon into the evening hrs. and get nothin.
Then Eli. gets ready and he tells his helpers to totally drench the wood w/ water and let the trenches overflow - basically saying I couldn’t even get a spark to land on this thing - Totally drown the thing man - like a typhoon
b/c I don’t want there to be any doubt, I don’t want a single
person questioning what’s really happening here.

Something similar ever happen to you?
Just as Elijah doused the altar w/ water basically saying, there’s no way I could even get a spark to land on this much less have it consumed in fire. Only God, the true living God will be able to.
as for us...
I mean you’ve hit rock bottom or you’re at your wits end - there is absolutely nothing more you can do - you’re out of options - if anything is going happen it’s gonna be God - only God can pull this off.
Welcome to God's Waiting Room. It’s that place in your life where there are things beyond your control that you can’t speed up—an answer to prayer, a miracle, a change in a situation—you want it to happen, and happen quickly, but it is totally out of your control and you have to wait on God. Have you been there? Are you there now?
We need to remember what God CAN do and not only what we can do

we must be patient and faithful.
and as he prays here’s what happens - 1 Kings 18:37,38
37 Answer me, O LORD, answer me, so these people will know that you, O LORD, are God, and that you are turning their hearts back again." (check this out)
 38 Then the fire of the LORD fell and burned up the sacrifice, the wood, the stones and the soil, and also licked up the water in the trench.
Sometimes we put our great big God in a little-bity box.
How big is your God? The God I know and love is HUGE, beyond my comprehension.

Then the funny thing was right after this amazing miracle that God displays His mighty power - He’s the man!
King Ahab tells his wife Jezebel and she’s so mad that she threatens Elijah’s life and get this, he runs... he runs out of fear.
We said, what is fear anyway? False Evidence Appearing Real
That’s exactly what was happening here to Elijah.
Then we discussed What should we do w/ FEAR?
don’t look inward or outward - look upward.

Trust in God. Instead of listening to others or ourselves, listen to God. “but whoever listens to me will live in safety and be at ease, without fear of harm.” Proverbs 1:33
Elijah was lone., scared, discouraged, and depressed - he was mess. As we read thru ch. 19 God showed us what to do when life gets us down - Rest, Renew, Refocus.
most spiritual thing take a nap, feel beaten down we need to be renewed in the PofL, then God told Eli. to refocus, back to the mission at hand.
then God showed Elijah how to deal with the loneliness he was experiencing by telling him as you refocus and get back to your mission connect with other godly men and women who will encourage, support, stretch, and urge you forward.
Another Elijah element for us is to:
Get Connected

We looked at Hebrews 10:24-25 that describes that we have been created for community. That each of us have these different needs that can only be met in true community w/ other believers, other people who share the same values as we do.

We finished our study in 2 Kings ch. 2 where we learned of 2 more elements to implement into our lives:
Investing in other’s spiritual development and...
Walk in Purpose and Progress

As Elijah’s life came to an end here on earth a couple more elements became very clear - He lived w/ a sense of purpose up to his very last day which included pouring himself into younger, up and coming leaders.
He took it as his personal responsibility to encourage and train disciples to continue God’s work.
As is the case w/ us... Jesus Christ gave the Church (that’s every believer, every Christ follower) the great commission
“Go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.”
Matthew 28:19-20

Each of us are to be walking in purpose and progress for the kingdom of God, investing in and pouring ourselves into so that we can advance God’s agenda of reaching the world.

Monday, August 13, 2007

The Elijah Element - More Power To YA

2 Kings 2:1-6

The life of Elijah has been a whirlwind of activity! From the time he stepped out of nowhere to confront the king of Israel, to his adventures of faith at the dry brook and the widow’s house, to his great victory on Mount Carmel. Elijah’s life has been pretty amazing to say the least! Now, that life is about to end! Verse one of our text makes it clear that God is about to remove the prophet from this earth. He will leave here like he lived here;
in a whirlwind!
I believe that Elijah sets a great example for those of us who are waiting on that time when we too will leave this world. If we were to be honest this morning, every saved person here would readily admit that they are anxiously awaiting that time when they will be home with the Lord in heaven. But, what are we to be
doing here, in the meantime, while we wait? Elijah shows us in this passage! As we read this account, we find there are three ways that Elijah spent his time as he waited on the whirlwind. One of these days all of our journeys will be over. Those who are saved will leave this world either by way of the cemetery or be way of the rapture. Either way, we will leave here in a whirlwind. Swept away into the presence of God. Until that day comes, we must live our lives in a way that is pleasing to the Lord and in a way that honors His will. Elijah shows us how to do just that. Let’s look in on Elijah and see the ways he spent his time as we think on the subject, Waiting On The Whirlwind.

Illustration: What if on your way to church this morning you drove up on me and my family and we we’re pushing our van to church this morning? You stopped and asked me if I was out of gas…I said no…then you asked if our van was broke down but no I told you it was running fine. Wouldn’t you want to know why my family and I were pushing the van instead of ridding in it? And with that I inform you that I preferred to push the van instead of drive it. Wouldn’t you think that was silly? In truth it’s not any more ridiculous than a Christian living their life and not utilizing the power of the Holy Spirit. Many Christians today are pushing their life through human effort and struggle when all the power of the Holy Spirit is available to them.

Illustration: When a mother eagle is trying to teach its eaglets how to fly, but the baby eaglets are too afraid to jump out of the nest. The mother eagle will go and catch something the eaglets love to eat like a rabbit or something and fly right by the nest just out of reach of the eaglets to coax them out of the nest. Then sometimes when the baby eaglet comes out of the nest it falls to the earth, when that happens the mother eagle with wings spread will catch them and literally lift them up with their wings. Until they catch the air currents they call thermals. An eagle can fly anywhere from 30 to 50 miles per hour, but when they catch a thermal they can get anywhere from 80 to 100 miles per hour. And it’s effortless because they are ridding on the wind. That’s exactly how we are to live as Christians, we are to spread our arms and surrender and let the Holy Spirit’s power lift us up and carry us as we surrender the Lord.

(V.1) “When the LORD was about to take Elijah up to heaven in a whirlwind”
WE NEED TO BE WATCHING AND WAITING
According to this verse, Elijah knew the precious truth that he was going to get to go to Heaven without having to pass through death. This was a privilege that had only been enjoyed by one other person in history. Genesis 5:21-24 tells that story of a man named Enoch. He was a man who lived for and walked with the Lord. When his time here was over, God simply took Enoch to Heaven, without him having to pass through death! This is the precious event that Elijah was anticipating. By the way, this is something that could happen to you and me! The Bible teaches us that there will be a future event know as the rapture. At that time, the Lord Jesus Christ will return in the clouds above this earth and He will call His people home to Heaven, 1 Thes. 4:13-18. This is a precious event that could happen to us at any moment, 1 Cor. 15:51-52, and when it does, we will go to Heaven without having to die to get there. That excites me! I think I’ll just repeat the prayer John prayed on Patmos: "Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus.", Rev. 22:20
Just as everyone seemed to know about Elijah’s rapture, the Bible has informed us today about the coming rapture. It has not been hidden, the information is available to anyone with a Bible. Even though all these people knew it was coming, no one knew exactly when it would happen! Elijah knew that God was coming for him, but he did not know just when. Therefore, he lived his last days and hours in anticipation of that coming event.

How did Elijah live up to his last day on earth?
V. 1-6 Walking With Purpose -
As Elijah anticipated his departure from this world, he continued to live as he always had. He continued to walk in humble obedience before the Lord God! Notice his statement, "The LORD hath sent me...", v. 2, 4, 6. If Elijah had been like many in our day, he would have spent his last days on the earth in retirement from service. He would have spent his time doing all the things he hadn’t had time to do while he was active serving the Lord. However, Elijah knew a truth that many people never learn: There is no higher call than that of following the Lord and doing what He asks you to do!
The lesson for us is this: there will never come a day when we can quit serving the Lord. Even though we know we are leaving, and that our leaving could be today, we should still seek to live lives that are filled with surrender to the call of the Lord. Several years ago, there was a group of people in Texas who became convinced that Jesus was going to return on a given date. As a result, they sold all their possessions, quit their jobs and went to the top of a mountain, sat down and waited fro the rapture. That is not what God wants you and me to be doing! He wants us to be busy in His work until He returns to take us home to glory! This was the problem in Thessalonica,
2 Thes. 3:11-13.
“We hear that some among you are idle. They are not busy; they are busybodies. Such people we command and urge in the Lord Jesus Christ to settle down and earn the bread they eat. And as for you, brothers, never tire of doing what is right.”

These people were looking for Jesus to return at any moment, so they just quit doing anything. That is not God’s plan! If we want to take a biblical example, let us look to the book of Nehemiah. As he and his workers were being threatened by their enemies, they worked with one hand and held a weapon in the other, Neh. 4:17. In other words, they watched and they worked all at the same time! I will say it again, there will never come a day when we can quit serving the Lord! If you have been guilty of quitting on the Lord, let me encourage you to pick up your tools again! There is work to be done! Let us work until Jesus comes for us, whether it be in the clouds or by the clods.

v. 1-8 Walking With Progress -
As the Lord led Elijah from place to place, these places he visited allowed him the opportunity to visit the schools of the prophets. He was permitted to speak to the young men who were training to serve the Lord. He was allowed to be an encouragement to them. These places also gave Elijah the opportunity to reminisce about his life and how the Lord had worked in it so powerfully and so wonderfully. Let’s take a moment to look at each of these places Elijah visited and note the significance each held for the prophet.

Why did the older prophet want his servant to accompany him to Bethel and Jericho? Surely it wasn’t just a sentimental journey for Elijah, one last trip down memory lane. No - this wise, old man wanted to teach Elisha - as well as us today - our need for more of God’s power and anointing.

1. Gilgal - v. 1 POINT OF SALVATION - Gilgal was the first place Israel camped when they crossed the Jordan and entered the Promised Land. Gilgal was the place of new beginnings. Here, they were near the battles, but not fighting them yet. They were in a place of safety, of preparation, and of communion with the Lord. Here, they renewed their covenants and grew strong in their relationship with the Lord.
For Elijah it was time for him to remember how it all began for him. How the Lord called him and filled him to use him for the glory of God. (To follow the illustration of pushing a car rather then driving it: this is the point you actually get into the drivers set and realize the potential of driving rather then pushing.)

2. Bethel - v. 2-3 POINT OF SURRENDER- Bethel was a holy place for the people of Israel.
It was at Bethel that the patriarch Jacob had met the Lord God, Gen. 28:11-22. Bethel signified the place of the altar and of total dependence upon the Lord. This is the place that Jacob totally surrendered his life to God. Bethel was the place of revelation. Bethel was the place where God became known and where He became big in the eyes of those who worship Him.
For Elijah, Bethel was a place to reflect upon all the altars he had experienced in his life. He remembered how his life had lived in total dependence upon the Lord God! (This is were you turn the key and actually start the engine and prepare to use its power instead of your own.)

DO NOT SPEAK OF IT – When Elisha says to the prophets that he knows Elijah is going to die but he doesn’t want to talk about it I don’t think it was so much because it was too upsetting to him, I believe it was a matter of focus. Yes everyone knew that God was going to take Elijah but lets don’t stop and worry over it, lets get ready for it. Just as our focus today is not to sell everything and go wait on top of a mountain for God to come rapture us out of this world. We are to be focused on what we’re doing for God this day at this moment in our life preparing ourselves for our future resurrection. God doesn’t want us to put everything on spiritual hold and freeze all our spiritual assets and wait for Him, He wants us to be busy working, walking and watching as we journey through this life.

3. Jericho - v. 4-5 POINT OF BATTLE- For the people of Israel, Jericho represented the power of God to give victory in the day of battle. This was the place of their first major conquest in the Promised Land. Jericho was the place of victory and power.
For Elijah, Jericho was a place for him to remember all the great victories he had enjoyed in his life. He could reflect back on all the great things God had done for him and through him. Times like the ravens, the everlasting meal, the resuscitated child, the victory at Carmel, all flooded the prophet’s mind. He remembered a life of powerful victories! (At this point you put the car in gear and begin to travel and experience the difference of moving in its power over struggling with your power.)
4. Jordan - v. 6-8 POINT OF TRANSFORMATION- For Israel, the river Jordan marked the end of their wilderness wanderings. It was a picture of death. That is, it was the place where the pilgrims died. When they crossed Jordan, they were no longer pilgrims, but they were a people who had arrived home. Jordan was the place of death.
For Elijah, it was the perfect place to reflect on all the ways he had died to self during his years as a man of God. There, he could reflect on the fact that he had lived a selfless life, and that he had lived a life to the glory of God! (At this point it’s like turning on the air-conditioner in your car when it’s about 100 degrees outside, so their you are driving down the road at speeds you could never push with your own strength, cool, calm and comfortable. It’s here you decide you’ll never go back to pushing your car again.)

The Christian life is not meant to be a life of stagnation. It is meant to be a life of progression. The Lord wants to grow us and fashion us into His image. As He leads us from place to place along the road of life, may we, like Elijah, simply follow in humble obedience to His will for us! After all, the greatest gift we can give the Lord is ourselves, totally surrendered and dedicated to His will, Rom. 12:1-2.
“Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God—this is your spiritual act of worship. Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.”

read vs. 7-14: As we are walking in purpose and progress we will naturally desire for more from God - How can we?
IF WE WANT A DOUBLE PORTION OF GOD WE MUST:

FOLLOW CLOSLY THOSE WHOM GOD HAS ANOINTED v.6
Elisha followed Elijah
Joshua followed Moses
Timothy followed Paul
I don’t think Elijah was trying to get rid of Elisha as much as he was putting his close companion, his successor-in-the-making, to the test. But Elisha was relentless. He stayed by the old prophet’s side. We need a few Elishas in our lives, intimate friends who will stick with us through thick and thin. They bring us strength and encouragement; they are a rare breed indeed!

V. 9-10 TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR THOSE WHO COME AFTER US - As they walk together, Elijah spends his last moments with Elisha teaching him about obedience and faithfulness. Elisha’s request and the stipulations attached to its fulfillment. Elijah doesn’t slap Elisha on the shoulder and walk off into the sunset. He knows this man is to take his place some day. He knows that Elisha needs and deserves the best training he can be given. The future depends on Elijah doing his duty today. Before he leaves, he must hand down his ministry to the same keeping of the next generation.

There is another generation coming along behind us. What are we teaching them about faith, obedience to God, faithfulness to the Lord’s house and work, love for the Bible, etc? What kind of legacy are we leaving behind as we travel toward our crossing? We are here this morning because some people were faithful to hand down their faith to us, 2 Tim. 2:2. “And the things you have heard me say in the presence of many witnesses entrust to reliable men who will also be qualified to teach others.” Our duty to those who follow is to give them what they need to get the job done for Jesus.

DON’T BE AFRAID TO ASK BIG THINGS OF GOD (V. 10)

The mind-set of too many Christians is far too limited. We would do well to learn a lesson about vision from Elijah’s faithful companion. Yet even Elijah, with all the great things he asked of God – remember, this is the man who called down fire from heaven – is a bit taken back here. “That’s a tough one,” he tells Elisha. “But if you see me when I’m taken from you, then what you ask shall be yours. If you don’t, it will not be.” After that there was no way Elisha was going to let Elijah out of his sight.
V. 11) They were walking along and talking together. Elijah was not preaching or prophesying. It was just the two intimate friends. Walking along together and talking. What a fantastic moment that must have been. Then just like that! Instantly he was gone “up to heaven in a whirlwind.” Elisha saw the chariots, and he cried out in amazement and fright. He must have been physically and mentally terrified at this sight. The whirlwind blew so hard against Elisha that it blew him away from Elijah.

BE WILLING TO CHANGE YOUR COAT (V. 13)

What if Elisha would’ve have thought he liked his clothes too much to put on Elijah’s coat? Elisha tore away his clothes just as he was tearing away from his old way of life in which he was a follower of Elijah to a leader of God’s people. You’ve heard the expression it’s time to make a new break, that’s exactly what Elisha did.

You know that as the years went on that Elisha looked down at that old cloak of Elijah and remembered the times they spent together. Times when Elijah fearlessly proclaimed the Almighty God to the pagan world, and the time when God’s power came to rest on Elisha. That old cloak served to strengthen the younger Elisha, whom God destined to use in even greater ways. and so can we... if we are willing to move w/ God and allow Him to change and mold us/

(the potter video)

Conclusion: I doubt if any of you are going to go out this morning and push your car home, so don’t leave here and push your spiritual life either. Surrender today to the power of the Holy Spirit in your life and allow Him to lift you up and power you life all the days of your journey here on earth.