Arn Buck – January 27, 2008
Heart Song Worship Center
Introduction
Although the following
passage was giving specifically to the Jewish captives in Babylon, I
believe that it is reflection of God's heart for each of us. It is
consistent with His nature as shown in both the Old and New
Testaments. God's intent for us is re–enforced by Romans 8:28.
Jeremiah 29:11 (NLT)
For I know the plans I have for you,” says the
LORD. “They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give
you a future and a hope.
Romans 8:28 (NLT)
And we know that God causes everything to work
together for the good of those who love God and are called according
to his purpose for them.
Most of us have heard at
least one story of someone rich and successful who desired the same
success for their son. They had ample resources to make their dream
possible. They sent him to the finest of schools. They had all the
contacts and the influence to get him started on the path to success.
Yet he continually resisted their help. He would try to do well in
school. He hung out with the wrong crowd and developed dependencies
on drugs and alcohol. His selfishness and desire for independence
ruined his life and broke his parent's heart.
I wonder how often we do
this with God? Except for Jesus no one has completely grasped God's
vision for them and taken advantage of all that He provides for our
success. How often do we search out all the scriptures that shows us
the potential that we have in God? How often do we dream about
really being what He whats us to be? How often do we struggle in
prayer seeking that next step closer to Him? Do we desire to be like
Jesus, as a young boy desires to be like their baseball hero or a
young girl desires to be like the pop star she idolizes. In light of
that how often do we dream about fulfilling our own dreams and
desires? How often do we break his heart as he sees us falling short
of what we could be? Do we fail to dream because we believe it to be
impossible? Didn't Jesus come as an example to show us what is
possible?
Brokenness – A starting Point
If we want to be all that
God planned for us, we have to make certain the we are not like the
selfish and rebellious son that was previously described. We
have to be brought to a point where our will and our desires get out
of God's way. Martin Luther once said, God
creates out of nothing. Therefore until a man is nothing, God can
make nothing out of him.” We become nothing through the
process of brokenness. Brokenness opens the door
for us to become God's handiwork. Like a wild horse we become
ridable. Our desire for independence is replaced with dependence on
God.
Psalms 51:17 (NLT)
The sacrifice you desire is a broken spirit. You will not reject a
broken and repentant heart, O God.
Isaiah 57:15 (NLT)
The high and lofty one who lives in eternity, the Holy One, says
this: “I live in the high and holy place with those whose
spirits are contrite and humble. I restore the crushed spirit of
the humble and revive the courage of those with repentant hearts.
The Hebrew word for
brokenness implies a crushing into fine powder. It portrays the
complete destruction of our rebellious spirit.
In brokenness God shows us
or reminds us of His role relative to our role. We are reminded that
He is above us. He is our source of strength. He is our glorious
and benevolent Lord and Master. We are reminded that it is a good
thing that He is the one in control and not us. He only has the
power to be the solution to all are problems. This brings us to a
point where we willingly surrender our will to His.
When we are broken God does
not violate our free will. He uses a often desperate situation to
get our attention. It gives Him an opportunity to see Him with
greater clarity and with a greater sense of reality than we normally
do. He uses brokenness to reveal our self deception to us. God
used the prophet Nathan to show David that He had not forgotten or
overlooked the sin the David committed with Bathsheba. David had
conveniently changed God's nature and character in His own mind.
Godly desires we might have are not necessarily His will.
We desperately need God's truth to help us with self–deception.
Especially here and now. I am amazed at the convoluted logic that I
have recently seen very intelligent men use to reject spiritual
truth. I have seen men with advanced theological degrees reflect
spiritual truth with their shield of self–deception that has been
refined to an art–form. Such self–deception is our enemy in this
area.
He uses brokenness to
replace our independence with dependence on Him. He uses it to show
our self deception to us.
Broken From Our Well–Intentioned Efforts
Many years ago my wife had an encounter with God in the form of a vision.
He meet her at a point of exhaustion and discouragement.
“One Sunday morning before church service in 1988, I went to the prayer
room to pray. That particular week I had been going through some
difficulty that had worn me down so much emotionally and spiritually
that I felt defeated. Leaning against the wall behind me, my body
slid down to the floor in a heap like a rag doll. In all honesty I
really cannot remember what the problem was that caused this
reaction. What happened next was so gloriously overwhelming that
everything else became totally insignificant.
I fell under the power of the Spirit and saw myself dressed as a
soldier laying face up on a battlefield. I had dropped my sword
during combat so I kept stretching my arm out to reach it. No matter
how much effort I made, it remained out of reach. The intensity of
the battle continued to rage around me as I lay there defenselessly.
Exasperated and desperate, I cried out to the Lord several times, “I
want my sword! Lord, I need my sword!”
Suddenly I heard God’s voice say two words: “I AM.” When
He spoke those two little words, His Hebrew names that I had studied
from the Bible flashed before my eyes as bright as a blinking neon
sign. Jehovah Nissi! El Elyon! El Shaddai! Jehovah M’Kaddesh!
Jehovah Sabaoth! Jehovah Jireh! El Hai! Jehovah Elohay! At the
very same instant that He said, “I AM,” the Lord caused
my sword to leap into my hand. The anointing power of the Holy
Spirit surged up my arm from the sword. The magnitude of His
presence was stronger than I had ever sensed before in my life. My
thought was, “Wow, this is probably how Moses felt at the
burning bush!” Moses was a changed man after his encounter
with God. Because of my encounter with the Lord of Glory, my faith
soared to a new level. Now I know beyond all doubt that God is real.
I know that God is indeed “a very present help in the time of
trouble.” (Psalm 46:1)
Although on that day my problem seemed as huge as a mountain, in just
a mere microsecond God flattened that mountain with His presence.
So it did not matter it
happened. The Lord is God and He is awesome. That is what matters!
The presence of God was what I needed that day. Truly it is what
everyone needs. If God is for us, who can be against us?
If we have God, we have all the answers to our prayers because His
divine power is constantly magnanimous. As the Lord said to
Abraham, “I am your very great reward!”
Since that day my faith in
His existence has been unshakable. The lesson He taught me that day
has always stayed with me. My prayer is that everyone would have
life changing encounters with the Lord of Glory during their
pilgrimage toward God.”
Submission Motivated By Love
Brokenness brings us to a point where we are submissive to God.
But often we find ourselves struggling again. As the Apostle Paul says
in Romans 7:19, “I want to do what is good, but I don’t.
I don’t want to do what is wrong, but I do it anyway.”
How do we sustain a genuine heart of submission that keeps us on the path
God has for us? If brokenness opens the door for us to become God's
handiwork. The door is held open by our love for Him. Jesus said in
John 14:15, “If you love me, obey my commandments.”
He expounds upon this further in the same chapter.
John 14:21 (NLT)
Those who accept my
commandments and obey them are the ones who love me. And because they
love me, my Father will love them. And I will love them and reveal
myself to each of them.”
The sacrifice of obedience
is a tangible demonstration of love. In love we refrain from
pleasing ourselves in order to bring pleasure to the object of our
love. Why is a diamond ring so special to a woman? She knows that
a diamond is expensive. Receiving one means that its giver purchased
it using money that could have used for their own pleasure. Instead
they used that money to bring pleasure to the receiver. Once more
the ring is a lasting miniature monument commemorating that
sacrifice.
In true love we take
pleasure in pleasing the one we love. In our love relationship with
God we must remember that He is the initiator of our loving
relationship. John 4:19 states, “We love because he first
loved us.” This is saying that our love to Him is in response
to the great love that God freely and consistently showers down upon
us.
1 John 4:16 (NLT)
We know how much God loves us, and we have put our trust in his love.
God is love, and all who live in love live in God, and God lives
in them.
Jesus' obedience, as our example was motivated by love.
John 14:30 – 31 (NLT)
I don’t have much more time to talk to you, because the ruler
of this world approaches. He has no power over me,
but I will do what the Father requires of
me, so that the world will know that I love the Father.
Conclusion
Idealistically after being
broken God's hand would remain on the rudder of our lives. In
reality during our lifetime we will take it from Him again and again.
We must never take control for too long. We should welcome His
dealings with us as a sign of His love.
God has great plans for each
one of us. We must dream and that dream must be the vision of what
God has planned for us. We must let the Holy Spirit show us the the
reality of the dream. Our inheritance in Him is great. Let us not
forsake this inheritance as Esau did. Let us wrestle with God as
Jacob did and let Him deal with us until we obtain His blessing.
Ephesians 1:3 (NLT)
All praise to God, the
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every
spiritual blessing in the heavenly realms because we are united with
Christ.
I am not
here to condemn or judge. I am in the same boat as the rest of us.
You don't see me given sight to the blind or raising the dead. I am
here to get us to consider the possibilities. What if we became more
of what God want us to be? If we did, how affective would the church
be, as the Body of Christ? How much better would the world be
because of us?
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