Christmas: God's Promise and Presence (with Kaleb Roth)
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The Christmas story
really began in the Exodus story.
But God showed the world.
He made promises to his people and said.
I will deliver you out of bondage
and slavery into the promised land.
That was the runner of what we know
as the Christmas story
in the advent of Jesus
delivering us from our sin.
And so,
as we kick off this Christmas season,
we're going to start back in the exodus
to see
how God was faithful to his promises
in the hope that his people had.
And to do that, it was my son, Caleb.
And, Shelly and I have three sons.
Cannabis, our middle son.
And it is a joy and a privilege
and an honor
to share the pulpit with him this morning.
We grew up.
He grew up out here in Ranchos
and all three of the schools, Webster Arms
and Legs.
And Caleb has always had a heart
that chased hard after Jesus
since he was a little boy.
I know that that that it
it found expression as he grew up.
His sophomore year at LA, he started
the FCA group there,
and became president of that
and ran that for three years,
during his his junior
and senior football season,
as much as he wanted
and did succeed on the football field.
His heart was to chase after God,
and football
had to be more than just a game for him.
And he started a thing
called Beyond the game in which he rose.
They raised, $10 for every point
that that the team scored.
And over those two years, they raised over
$10,000 for Valley Children's Hospital.
He's always chase hard after God
and the things of God.
He went to college in South Dakota
to play football
and get his master is his degree
in mechanical engineering.
And upon arrival in South Dakota,
he started teaching
the fifth grade Sunday School class.
And through the football team,
when they would travel,
he would be their traveling chapel,
chaplain and lead chapel for the guys.
And when he got done playing football,
they asked him to come back
and be in the chaplain.
He's recently moved to Minnesota,
and he got to Minnesota
and went to church
and started teaching the fifth Street.
Fifth, sixth grade Sunday school class.
There.
And being in the kindergarten a want
a teacher on Wednesday night.
How cool would that be
as a kindergarten kid?
To have him teaching you,
and now is stepping
into leading the young adult ministry
at that church.
He's always had a heart
that chase hard after God,
and he shared with me a Bible study
that he's written multi-part Bible study.
And as a kid, if I want you to,
I want you to preach that to our church.
The things that God
is imparting to you, Caleb,
and the sensitivity you have to the spirit
and the maturity you have to listen to God
and build your life to him.
Parents always want their kids
to be better than them, right?
So. Thank you.
I love you, and I'm very proud.
Will you welcome Caleb this morning?
He gave you the extended bio.
I was just going to tell you my name. Sam.
The second middle kid.
I live in Minnesota
now, so thank you for the full bio.
Well, good morning side.
I'm very, very excited to be here and,
get a break from the tundra
that is Minnesota.
Now, looking at my dad and I,
you can see there's some differences.
The hair, the youth.
But something we have in common is.
I got a lot to say, and only so much
time to say it.
So we're going to get right, right into it
this morning.
But first, if you join me in prayer.
Heavenly father,
thank you for this opportunity to meet
and pursue you together as a church.
I pray that you would teach us and prepare
our hearts for all you have to say.
Bless this time for your glory. Amen.
This morning I'm going to talk about
the Israelites journey.
Going from Egypt to God's promised land,
and how I believe we can have hope
and God's promises even when we're going
through the deserts of life.
As we enter the Christmas season,
we can tend to see Scripture
in a different light.
As we get closer and closer
to celebrating the birth of Jesus
and the story in Exodus is no different.
The Israelites promise of a new home
is reminiscent of our promise of heaven.
Just as the Israelites were physically,
delivered from slavery.
We've been spiritually delivered
from slavery to sin through Jesus.
And just as the Israelites
were able to trust in God,
even though all they saw was
the desert, were able to trust in God.
Though all we see is this world.
And while
reading the Israelites story at Exodus,
I found it very compelling
how the Israelites
would continue to lose faith
even though they knew, what
God had told them, and God told them
what he had in store for them.
They spent a lot of time experiencing
the opposite of what God promised.
Instead of a land flowing with milk
and honey, they were surrounded
by the desolate desert
and it consistently wore them down.
And in considering the Israelites story,
I realize that often times in our lives
we hear in church that we can
that God's going to deliver us.
And and we read in our Bibles
that God is faithful to His Word.
But sometimes what we experience
feels like the complete opposite
of what we hear
and read in church. In the Bible.
So I'm going to
highlight three instances
in the Israelites Exodus story,
and their corresponding hindrances
that tried to keep them
from keeping their hope in God.
We're going to see
that I can trust
God when my situation gets worse.
We're going to see that I can trust God
in the face of fear, and that I can trust
God when it appears everyone
but me is experiencing God's promises.
But before we get into trust in
God's promises,
I think it's important to identify
what God's promises are.
And Scripture is riddled
with promises from God.
But to highlight a few, here's
just a handful of them on the screen.
We're promised in first John four nine
that God loves us.
It reads we love because he first love us.
First John one nine.
We're promise that God forgives us
if we confess our sins.
He is faithful
and just to forgive us our sins
and cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
We're promised that God is in control
in John 1633, in the world
you will have tribulation, but take heart.
I have overcome the world.
We're promised that God will guide us.
In Psalm 32 eight,
I will trust, and I will instruct you
and teach you in the way you should go.
And in Psalm 91,
three were promised that God protects us.
It reads, For he will deliver you
from the snare of the Fowler
and from the deadly pestilence.
And I realize
we may have heard these concepts
so often, that we recognize them
more as hopeful ideas,
rather than the definite truths
in our lives that they are.
But I challenge you this morning
to consider these verses and what they say
to be undeniable promises
from the Almighty to you.
As we continue.
Our story starts in Exodus chapter three.
So if you have a Bible
or brought one with you,
you go ahead and turn with me to Exodus
chapter three.
And it's here that we read that
the Israelites, God's chosen
people, are being persecuted
greatly under Pharaoh's rule in Egypt.
Pharaoh being the king of Egypt,
and Moses having fled Egypt,
finds himself talking to God by a bush
that's on fire but not burning.
You might have heard
this part of the story before,
and it's here that God tells Moses
that he is going to be the one
to bring his people,
the Israelites, out of Egypt in Exodus
chapter three, verse 11,
Moses responds to God with, But God.
But Moses said to God,
who am I that I should go to Pharaoh
and bring the Israelites out of Egypt?
And God said, I will be with you,
and this will be the sign to you.
It is I who have sent you.
When you have brought
the people out of Egypt,
you will worship God on this mountain.
Now, when Moses is,
hearing from God that that he's
been called to be used in this great way,
he does what I think most of us will do
when he looks for some type of reassurance
that what God is telling him
is actually true.
And then later verses,
we see that he's fearful
that the Israelites won't believe him,
and he's questioning if he even has what
it takes to be used by God in this way.
I think this is something
that applies to all of us.
How many times have we felt
called by God to live in a certain way,
or to follow him in a certain way,
or we just don't feel like we have
what it takes?
It's not necessarily
a question of our desire to follow God.
We just simply don't see ourselves
as having the required abilities
to conquer what's in front of us.
And that's what Moses is facing.
And I think God's response is very,
very significant.
When Moses is looking for reassurance, God
tells him, I will be with you
and you will worship me.
Notice in the second point
that Moses signed from God
that what God is saying is true
is that after
he brings the people out of Egypt,
they'll worship him on that mountain,
God gives Moses sign.
This is actually God's will after God.
Moses has already followed God.
Again, verse 12 reads,
and this will be the sign to you
that is I who have sent you.
When you have brought
the people out of Egypt,
you will worship God in this mountain.
The way I see it doesn't seem to be
what Moses is looking for.
It doesn't appear to offer
any confidence in the moment.
Moses wants to know
that he'll be successful
in bringing the Israelites out of Egypt.
So God says, we'll give Moses a sign
that he'll be successful
after he has already successfully
brought the Israelites out of Egypt.
It feels backwards to me.
Now, in later verses, God gives Moses
physical signs to convince the Israelites
that what he's saying is from God.
But I don't want to miss a point
here in verse 12.
And this is something
I've heard from Pastor Carl.
And I know a lot of us have also heard
sometimes
we just have to say yes to God
before we know what we're saying yes to,
because sometimes God calls us to follow
him, even though we aren't 100% confident
that we're going to succeed,
and only after we've obeyed God
in the way he's called us to obey him,
do we get the reassurance.
This is where faith comes in.
We follow God
without knowing what we're going into.
God calling you to go
is your call to action.
We don't know how we're going to do it,
but God said to the Israelites,
we're going to go talk to Pharaoh.
Some of us may have a calling
on our hearts from God,
and we want to follow it,
but we don't think we can because God
hasn't given us enough information yet.
We think we're ready to live for God.
If only he would tell us how we're
supposed to do what we're supposed to do.
It's not a comforting
notion, but we don't get to know
that all the time.
We don't need more information.
We don't need to know
what's going to happen.
We don't need more time
to think it through.
Let God worry about the who and the what,
and the wind and the why in the how.
And just say yes.
Because sometimes the reassurance
comes after obedience.
So if you want the comfort
and the reassurance and start obeying,
God's command is the call to action.
So Moses makes a decision
to answer God's call on his life.
Like many of us, he starts the journey
of hearing God's promises,
but not yet
knowing how they're going to be revealed.
And before too long, Moses and his brother
Aaron go to Pharaoh, asking him
about the Israelites, God of Egypt.
However, Pharaoh refuses and instead
increases the Israelites workload.
Exodus chapter five, verses 6 to 9
give Pharaoh's response.
That same day, Pharaoh
gave this order to the slave drivers
and overseers in charge of the people
who are no longer to supply the people
with straw for making bricks.
Let them go and gather their own straw,
but require them to make the same number
bricks as before. Don't reduce the quota.
They are lazy.
That is why they are crying out.
Let us go and sacrifice to our God.
Make the work harder for the people
so that they keep working to pay
no attention to lies.
The Israelites, who are already in severe
misery, now have to produce
the same amount of product.
With less resources.
Their workload is just absurdly increased.
And when the Israelites realize
that they're now in worsening conditions,
they become upset with Moses and Aaron
saying that they're they're going
to die by Pharaoh's hand.
Moses response to God is
recorded in verses 22 and 23.
Moses returned to the Lord and said,
why, Lord, have you?
Why have you brought this trouble on
this people?
Is this why you sent me?
Ever since
I went to Pharaoh to speak in your name,
he has brought trouble on this people.
And you have not rescued your people
at all.
Imagine being a Moses shoes here.
God calls him to deliver the Israelites,
and after trying
the Israelites situation gets worse.
Here's point one for before.
Have you ever felt like you're doing
exactly what God called you to do,
but you're getting further away
from his promises?
Moses didn't go to God looking to be
the one to deliver the Israelites.
And when God called Moses to free
the Israelites, he didn't want to do it.
When God was calling Moses at the bush,
that didn't burn.
It's written
that Moses as part of your servant Lord,
please send someone else point blank.
Moses doesn't want to be in this position,
but here he is trying to serve God.
And the opposite of what God said
would happen is happening.
The Israelites aren't being treated.
They're being treated worse than before.
I don't think this is a foreign feeling
for a lot of us.
We want to.
We try to obey
God and follow God and serve God
instead of getting to the other side
of God's promises.
We feel further than before.
We feel less hope, less joy,
and we maybe start questioning
that we're doing the right thing
altogether.
This is very counterintuitive to how
we might expect following God to look.
Most of us think we should get
rewarded in life when we put in the work,
and we expect our relationship
with God to function in the same way.
We might think, I'm doing
everything you asked of me, God,
and you said you deliver me.
So why aren't you keeping up your end?
Let's see what God says to Moses
when when he returns to him
and see if you notice any similarities
between what God has already told Moses
and what God says. How?
From Exodus chapter six, verse one,
then the Lord said to Moses, now
you will see what I will do to Pharaoh
because of my mighty hand.
He will let them go.
Because of my mighty hand.
He will drive them out of this country
and this country.
Couple verses later, verses 6 to 7,
we continue,
therefore say to the Israelites,
I am the Lord, and I will bring you out
from under the yoke of the Egyptians.
I will free you from being slaves to them,
and I will redeem you
with an outstretched arm
and with mighty acts of judgment.
I will take you as my own people,
and I will be your God.
Then you will know that I am the Lord
your God, who brought you out
from under the yoke of the Egyptians.
God essentially
tells
Moses the same thing you told them before.
It doesn't seem to be any new information
or reassurance.
Now that Moses has tried
to feed the Israelites
and they're in a worse situation.
Why would God call us to follow him
than seemingly not respond
to our to our efforts, or respond
with no new information
when our initial efforts fall short?
Two ideas come to mind.
Why God might respond in this way one.
Sometimes God allows our situation away
to worsen so that there is no question
that it is God who delivers us.
And two sometimes you already know
all you need to know.
In the moment
to explain this point.
I believe there are times
God allows our situation
to worsen, to a point
where it feels like all hope is gone,
so that when we do see his deliverance,
there's no question in there it is God.
And God allowed his saving us.
If we never experience hardships
and always succeeded on our first try,
it would be far more difficult
to grow in reliance on God.
But when it feels like we have nothing
and no one, and God's foundation
is the only place where we can stand.
How can we not glorify
God on the other side of hardship?
There's no room to be boastful
because if you could have saved yourself,
you would have saved yourself.
And sometimes God is showing us
that we can always save ourselves.
And it's very, very humbling.
When you find yourself in a position
you desperately want out of.
We have no way of getting out on your own
and in these situations,
we discover
how truly reliant we are on God,
realizing
that he is our only way to deliverance.
And it's important
to rejoice in these situations.
There's potential for growth and maturity
in these positions that is difficult
to find in many other places.
How else are we going to learn
how desperately
we need to rely on God
if we never actually rely on God?
And how quickly do we look to other people
and desires to rely on before God?
Sometimes we need to
be stripped of reliance on anything else,
even ourselves, to see that we can
and should rely on God and God alone.
And when we keep looking to God,
sometimes is going to have the same answer
as before.
We want more information,
more assurance, more confidence.
But God's already told us all
we need to know.
God told Moses
he was going to fear the Israelites.
Everyone Moses talked to Pharaoh
and Israelites situation worsened.
God told Moses the same thing.
He was going to free the Israelites.
Is God no longer trustworthy or reliable?
When our first attempt doesn't work
the way we expected, ours promises void.
When they aren't fulfilled as quickly
as we think they will be.
Some of us are looking for more answers
from God, but he's already told us what
we need to know.
We don't see your experience,
what we thought we'd see or experience,
so we assume either
we aren't doing the right thing
or we misunderstood
God, or God's no longer faithful.
And it is so much easier said than done.
I encourage you
to just stay firm in pursuing God,
knowing that his words are true
and his promises always come to pass.
If you're following God,
then just keep following him.
You might be really close to deliverance,
or you might have a long, difficult road
road ahead of you.
Still, still,
if you're following him,
then you know for certain
that his promises are in your future.
So just keep going.
Don't let go of the truths
God has already told you.
Eventually, the Israelites leave Egypt
and make their way to Canaan, the land
God was giving to them.
Some men went into the land to explore it,
and they came back,
and reported that it was just as great
as God had said it would be.
It was flowing with milk and honey.
There are all kinds of fruit in the land.
However, they also reported
that the people living in the land
were very powerful, with fortified cities.
And a man named Caleb,
who was with the group that explored
Canaan, tried to encourage the people,
but the others who explored the land
continue to give a negative report.
In numbers, chapter 13, verses 31 to 33,
we read.
But the men who had gone with him
said, we can't attack those people.
They're stronger than we are.
And they spread among the Israelites a bad
report about the land they had explored.
They said, the land
we explored devours those living in it.
All the people we saw are of great size.
We saw the Nephilim there.
The descendants of Anneke
from the Nephilim.
We seem like grasshopper in our own eyes.
And we look the same to them.
Numbers.
Chapter 14, verses 1 to 3. It continues
that night.
All the
members of the community
raised their voices and wept aloud.
All the Israelites
grumbled against Moses and Aaron,
and the whole assembly said to them,
if only we had died in Egypt
or in this wilderness,
why is the Lord bringing us to this land,
to let us fall by the sword?
Our wives and children
would be taken as plunder.
Wouldn't
it be better for us to go back to Egypt?
What convinces the Israelites
that they would be defeated
if they tried to take Canaan?
The God changes promise.
Was there any inconsistency between
what God said and what they saw? No.
But because of the fear
they experienced from the negative report,
the Israelites get scared.
I don't want to take Canaan anymore.
And later verses tell us that God says
the Israelites back in the wilderness
to die, and only a select group of them
get to enter the land of Canaan.
Much later.
Now, if the Israelites had listened to God
and attacked when told, would
they have been successful?
Of course they would have been successful,
but instead
they see something that scares them
and their faith is lost.
This brings out the second point
I mentioned earlier.
Just because God promises us
something doesn't
mean the path to
it will be easy or looks safe.
Even when we know God's promises.
It's very tempting to allow fear to keep
us from living the way God calls us to.
The Israelites were promised this land.
They knew they were promised this land.
But when they saw something that looked
threatening, they wanted to bail.
Just because it's God with God's will.
Doesn't mean we won't be asked to face
our fear and make sacrifices.
And when we're following God,
we can expect things that look scared
to be between us
and God's call in our lives.
And in those times, it can be tempting
to be convinced that God isn't in control.
Or we must have misunderstood something
because certainly God won and asked me
to face that.
It can be tempting to think of God really
wanted me to follow him in this way.
There's no way he put this immovable thing
between me and this call in my life.
But this is a fallacy
because what is immovable to God?
What is so great that God can't overcome
what is so mighty
that he isn't already above?
And maybe we aren't even questioning
God's ability,
the ability during those times
when we start to wonder about his will.
He's got really care about me.
Does he really see me and hear me?
Is it really God's will
that I don't live in fear or loneliness?
I've got really met
these things that I read in the Bible.
Why does my life feel
so far from his promises?
And when we're facing the seasons of life
and maybe start
wondering about these questions, it's
important to remember that
God is not limited by our limitations.
So coming to that scary thing
in front of you is not God's will for you,
whether it's the inhabitants of Canaan
or something else,
like trying to pay bills on time,
or struggling in relationship
with a loved one, or being let go at work.
Our God is greater than it.
And where's the the real risk
where the Israelites truly in danger
to losing to those in Canaan?
No, they weren't, but God.
God wasn't going to fail
at keeping his promise.
There wasn't truly a risk
of being defeated.
What they saw
made them think that there was.
And the same applies to us.
If we're pursuing God and serving God.
Then what's the real risk?
We might not get what we want
when we want them, and there's certainly
going to be hardships along the way.
But if we're living for God,
then glorifying him
should be at the heart of all that
we do anyways.
Who cares if we don't get what we want,
or if we face hardships because we get to
glorify God in those times too?
So mission accomplished.
We never have to doubt God's promises.
It might not look
the most hopeful at times,
but you won't be
let down by the end of it.
Some of us are in a season of life
that we don't see
any way out of, and it feels like
we're at the end of the road.
It's not.
God is greater than what you're facing,
and his promises are still true.
God doesn't make promises
to not keep them.
Choose to keep hope in God
and go take the promised Land.
Whatever you're facing will not win.
It's already been decided.
Some of us aren't
in that season of feeling hopeless yet,
but it's likely to come.
And when you find yourself in that season,
remember
God is not limited by your limitations.
You may think, there's no way
I have what it takes to face this,
and you're probably right. You don't.
We all have shortcomings,
and if we went through
our challenges on our own,
we would definitely fail.
We don't need to go through it alone.
Just like you've heard it said, don't
bring a knife to a gunfight.
Don't bring just yourself to a God. Fight.
You need God on your side
and with him on your side.
There's no way
you're going to come up short.
So the Israelites
go back into the wilderness
for 40 years
before making their way back to Canaan.
And the second time around in Deuteronomy,
Moses is recalling the Israelites
journey, giving instructions
before they take Promised Land.
In Deuteronomy chapter two, verses 4 to 6,
it's written what God told Moses
to tell the Israelites.
Give the people these orders
you're about to pass through the territory
of your relatives,
the descendants of Esau who live in Seir.
There will be afraid of you,
but be very careful.
Do not provoke them to war.
I will not give you any of their land.
Not even enough to put your foot on.
I have given Esau
the whole country of Seir as his own.
You have to pay them
in silver for the food you eat
and the water you drink.
Recalling back to the two
when the Israelites were on the move
and passing through this land,
God gave them a clear instruction, quote
do not provoke them to war.
This happens again
several verses later in a different land.
You have to imagine
what the Israelites are saying.
They've been traveling in the desert
for a long, long time.
They know that God has promised them land,
and they see land
that looks pretty attainable to them.
But God commands them not to take it.
We know from verse four that
the inhabitants of the land
are afraid of the Israelites.
Which leads me to believe that the land,
at least to the Israel Israelites, appears
like it'd be pretty easily attainable,
that they could get it
with relatively little difficulty.
And I
have to imagine that they're ready
to be settled into rest.
And sure, this isn't the land
God promised, but in the moment
it must have looked pretty enticing
to them.
And yet God commands them not to take it.
You may now or may later
find yourself in a season
where everyone around
you seems to have exactly what you want.
Not only that, but everyone around you
seems to have what God promised you,
but not yet given you.
Everyone else has a job
they love, and you're stuck at the job
that you despise
and you're still looking for work.
Everyone else has the perfect family
or spouse, and you seem to only fight
with your family or significant other.
Everyone else is taking vacations,
having these incredible experiences,
and you feel like you're struggling
just to make ends meet.
Maybe you feel
like you're following God
the way he's called you to follow him,
but you still aren't
experiencing his promises in your life.
And what can make this
so even more frustrating is feeling
like you're doing
what you should be doing.
Seeing others doing what they shouldn't
be doing,
but still feeling like they're
in a place in life that you want to be.
Who might see this and think,
I was this right?
God, I'm living my life for you.
Those people don't seem
to be following you at all,
and yet
they seem to have everything I want.
Not only what I want.
The things I thought
I was supposed to trust you for.
If they have all this
and they don't seem to be following you,
then what am I doing?
I might as well stop inconveniencing
myself and go get what I want my way.
Brings us to the third point from before
I can trust God when it appears everyone
but me is experiencing God's promises.
When we look around
and see everyone living the life we want,
how should we respond?
What are you?
What are you willing to give up God's plan
or your desires?
It's not bad to have these desires
and to see what others want
and want to have the same.
But what are you willing to give
up for it?
God has a plan
that is meant only for his timing.
It may or may not look like what you want,
but is it worth giving up for your plan
as fulfilling God's
promises on your life worth passing on
to take matters into your own hands?
I think it's obvious these
are rhetorical questions with answers
we know we should answer respond with.
But how do we live that out?
What does it look like submitting these
desires to God and waiting for his timing?
One way we do this
by trusting in the Holy Spirit.
If you haven't accepted
Jesus into your heart
and receive the Holy Spirit yet,
then that needs to take place first.
There are several staff members
who would love to talk you through that,
because you need
to have the Holy Spirit in you
before you can listen
to the spirit in your heart.
But for those who have, the spirit
isn't there for us to ignore.
Some of us might know
deep down there's a course of action
we're being called to take,
but for whatever reason, we haven't.
Maybe we've tried to follow the spirit
before.
Things didn't work out the way
we thought they would,
so we don't really see the point
in trying again.
Maybe we feel like we'll be led
people down if we make the decisions.
We feel the Spirit's calling us to make.
Maybe we're afraid to follow
where the Spirit's leading us.
One way we submit our desires to to God,
choosing to trust him when it feels like
everyone else has it figured out but
us, is by following the spirit
wherever the Spirit's guiding you.
Don't allow whatever's happening.
Don't allow
whatever's stopping you to stop you
any more from following the spirit.
Some of us might feel willing to follow
spirit anywhere.
We just don't feel a call
in any particular direction.
How am I supposed to follow the spirit
if I don't know where
the spirit's leading me?
If you don't feel the spirit leading
you and support you
to make sure you're seeking
the Spirit's leadership, pursue God.
Read his word.
Spend time meditating in the Bible.
Contemplate in what you're reading.
Serve God.
Be involved in church in any capacity.
Pray humbly.
Ask God to guide you, opening your heart
and your eyes and your ears
to his to his plan for you.
Not so that you'll just have confidence
in knowing what your future holds,
but so that you can serve him in the ways
he's calling you to serve him.
Pray not just for answers,
but for the strength and the courage
to follow in the spirit. Guide you.
And if you still don't feel the spirit
directing you, then be patient.
Wait.
It honors God to wait until you're led
by the spirit to pursue your desires.
In other words,
we choose to not pursue our desires
when the spirit has not yet
led us to that fulfillment.
We want to pursue something good.
But if we pursue because we get impatient,
we want what we want, regardless
of what the Spirit's guiding us.
We're
just setting ourselves up for failure.
It is a
blessing to submit a longing desire to God
by not pursuing it
until led by the spirit to do so.
And then it can be so difficult.
Seeing everyone around you look like
they have their lives figured out,
and you're struggling
to make it through the day.
But this is my encouragement to you.
Keep submitting to God.
You've heard it.
You know it.
Make the choice to believe it.
Giving up on God's plan because you want
what you want now is not worth it.
Answered God's call.
And serving and honoring him is.
So before the Israelites take the Promised
Land,
Moses has a lot of instructions
and commands for them.
God tells Moses that the Israelites
will soon rebel against God once they are
in the Promised Land.
Deuteronomy 3120 reads,
when I have brought them into the land
flowing with milk and honey, the land
I promised on earth to their ancestors,
and when they eat their fill and thrive,
they will, they will turn
to other gods and worship them,
rejecting me and breaking my covenant.
It may or may not feel like it
now, but if you're following
and submitting to God, his promises
will be fulfilled in your life.
And when they are, continue to follow
and submit to God.
We don't follow him
depending on our circumstances.
We don't follow him only when we don't see
any other way forward.
We follow God because he deserves it.
And we're called to
because God is not a means to an end.
God is the whole purpose.
God deserves our honor and obedience
at all times in every scenario.
Decide now that when God delivers
you, you're going to continue
to pursue him the way you pursued them.
When you felt like
he was your only option.
We plead desperately to God when we're
convinced he's the only way out,
but we're called to cling
just as desperately to him with just
as much fervor all the time.
This might get
difficult when we see God's deliverance,
and we feel like we have it
all figured out now,
and we start giving our attention
to God's many blessings
rather than to God Himself.
Don't let yourself get distracted
by the from the new ways
that God's calling you to live for him
in your new circumstance.
Use those blessings as a reminder,
never forgetting from who they came.
We should not serve God
just to get to a certain point in life.
We should serve God and then serve
God some more and then keep serving God.
The God that delivered the Israelites
from Egypt into the Promised Land.
The same God wants to deliver
you right now.
Allow him to deliver you by serving
and honoring him in the wilderness
and in the Promised Land.
Serve
God in your hopelessness and in your joy.
Serve God.
Before wrapping up this morning.
I want to suggest a practical way.
I believe we can keep hope in God's
promises.
Exodus chapter 16, verse 32 reads,
this is what the Lord has commanded.
Take an omer of manna
and keep it for the generations to come,
so that they can see the bread
I gave you to eat in the wilderness.
When I brought you out of Egypt.
I believe imitating what
the Israelites are commanded to do here.
Helps keep us encouraged
during the season of the life
where we don't actively see God working.
When times get tough and you aren't sure
how you're going to make it through,
it is vital to remember
how God has already been faithful to you.
God is unchanging
is the same God yesterday
as he is today, as he will be tomorrow.
The same God that rescued you last time.
The same God that's going to rescue you
this time wasn't too great for him
last time.
Not too great for him this time.
We can
remember God's faithfulness
a number of different ways,
whether it's writing down, pen to paper,
how God has saved you before.
It's taking a picture as something
that reminds you that God brought you out,
or keeping a memento, a physical object,
as a reminder that we can trust God.
We need some way to remember
God's faithfulness.
And he keeps his promises.
And when we inevitably fall on hard times,
and it's difficult
to see the light at the end of the tunnel,
we can look to our keepsake, clinging
to the memories of God's deliverance,
knowing that it's only a matter of time
until he does it again.
So as we go into this holiday season,
I encourage you to keep hope in God,
keep hope and God's promise
of forgiveness, his promise of love,
his promise of mercy and grace
and protection, his promise of salvation.
They're all true
and they're all worth believing in.
And they're all revealed so powerfully
in God Greatest Promise, which
is the Christmas story.
So now, as you please, join me in prayer.
If you've never accepted Jesus
as your personal Savior, I invite you
in the quietness of your heart
to accept God's greatest gift to us.
Revealed in the Christmas story.
There's no singular way of doing this,
but in your own words.
Admit to God that you have sinned
and fallen short of God's glory.
Accept the free gift
Jesus has offered us by willingly
being sacrificed on the cross and rising.
Three days later,
acknowledging that he is our only way
into heaven, professing
that our salvation is through
God's mercy and grace, independent
from our own righteousness in this world.
Heavenly father, I thank you
for sending your Son Jesus to us.
I thank you for your unconditional, never
ending love and forgiveness in our lives.
I thank you for your
faithfulness that we might always have
hope in your promises.
I thank you that we are entering
the season of the year
where we take extra time
to remember the birth of Jesus
and all the promises you kept
and fulfilled through his life and death.
I pray that we would choose to believe
your words regardless of our circumstance.
I pray that we would wait for your divine
timing in our lives,
that we would not be deterred
from living for you
in the face of fear
or impatience or frustration.
I thank you that you are with us
and that you will always be with us.
I pray all this in Jesus name, Amen.
If you made the decision
to accept Jesus in your heart
for the first time today,
we would love to know.
That's a decision
that is worth celebrating, that needs to
be celebrated and and shared.
So please find someone on staff.
They would love to talk to you
if you didn't make that decision.
But you're still curious
about what it looks like,
accepting Jesus into your life
and living out your faith.
Please also find someone on staff as well.
We have flips
that are eager to talk to you about Jesus.
Thank you for being with us today
and I hope you come back next week.
As Pastor Carl continues
the exploring the promise
of the Christmas story at 9 or 1030.
And we're going to close with worship.