DOES GOD "DO IT MY WAY"?
Every person here tonight is a child of someone. All of us have had a childhood
experience. All of us have been in or are in a parent-child relationship as a child.
I want all of us to think as the child. Parents, I want you to think as an adult
child, not as a parent. Grandparents, I want you to think as an adult child, not as a
grandparent.
From a child's perspective, does this sound familiar? "If you would just do things
my way, everything would be fine. That is the problem. You won't do things my way."
Whether verbally or implied, every child received this message from his or her
parents. The message: "My way is the way. Just do it my way."
Now I want us adults to consider the transition that we made. When we reach
our teen years, at some point in adolescence, we become determined not to do it "their
way," but to do it "my way." The desire to do it "my way" increases in strength and
determination as we grow older.
All of us as adults like "important" things to be done "my way." Some of us as
adults want everything done "my way."
Important question: does God do things the way we would do them? Does God
do things "our way"?
- Does God do things the way people would do them?
- The Bible declares that God produced two great acts of deliverance.
- In both situations, God Himself designed the deliverance.
- In both situations, the deliverance occurred to accomplish God's purposes.
- In both situations, God set people free--God produced a seemingly
impossible freedom.
- The first deliverance: freeing the Israelites enslaved in Egypt.
- God promised Abraham that his descendants would become a great nation
(Genesis 12:1-4).
- God also promised that He would use that nation to bring a great blessing to
all people of the world.
- Over 400 years later God kept that promise by delivering the Israelites, who
were the descendants of Abraham, from Egyptian slavery (Exodus 12:29-42).
- God secured their release from captivity, but God knew that they did not
trust Him.
- They did not have the kind of faith that would allow God to work through
them to bring the blessing that He promised Abraham.
- Their becoming a people who trusted God was important to them and to
God's purposes.
- So how did God give them opportunity to grow in faith?
- God led them out into an unpopulated area away from Egypt's towns and
cities.
- God allowed them to be trapped between the Egyptian army and the
waters of the Red Sea.
- Escape was impossible.
- As slaves, they were totally incapable of fighting the Egyptian
army--they were not even armed.
- And there was no way to cross the sea.
- The people immediately went into total, complete despair.
- As far as they were concerned, they had escaped Egypt to be
slaughtered helplessly out in the middle of nowhere.
- Pharaoh knew that he was in total control of the situation (Exodus
14:8).
- In terror, the Israelites began screaming to God for help (Exodus
14:10).
- Instantly Moses dropped from the status of great deliverer to the status
of the villain who led them to death (Exodus 14:11,12).
- "Why did you bring us out here to die? Weren't there enough
graves in Egypt?"
- "Didn't we tell you in Egypt to leave us alone and let us be the
Egyptians' slaves?"
- God's rescue was 100% God and 0% them.
- He rescued them in the face of their greatest fear and deepest doubt.
- When they stood safe on the other side of the sea, they knew God did
it, and they knew that they had every reason to trust God.
- What do you think about God's method? Did God do that "your way?"
- Please note something very important.
- God's primary objective in rescuing Israel and giving them a home was
not about creating a good life for them.
- God's primary objective was keeping a promise to bring the world a
Savior.
- It was about creating a salvation that would benefit the whole world.
- God's primary purpose was to advance His preparation for sending His
Son Jesus to our world.
- The second great deliverance: giving all people the opportunity to be free from
the slavery of evil by accepting the atonement of Jesus' death.
- Sending Jesus into this world and making him God's sacrifice for sin was the
fulfillment of the second promise that God made to Abraham.
- God allowed His son to be born as a human being.
- His son taught the nation of Israel that God was ready to keep His second
promise to Abraham--the kingdom of God, the rule of God, would become
available to all people of the world.
- God created this deliverance, this freedom by allowing His son to be horribly,
painfully executed by crucifixion.
- As that occurred, Jesus' crucifixion looked like God and God's purposes were
in total defeat.
- What actually happened was total victory for God.
- He kept His promise to Abraham.
- He destroyed the power and control of Satan.
- He guaranteed Satan's total, eternal fall.
- He created the opportunity for every person in every nation and every
culture to be free and forgiven of all evil.
- To achieve this victory, God worked through betrayal, denial, fear, desertion,
injustice, contempt, abuse, mockery, extreme pain, agony, public humiliation,
public disgrace, and death as a public spectacle.
- What do you think about God's method? Did God do it "your way?"
- Again, it is very evident that God's deliverance is 100% God and 0% us.
- Just as Israel had to accept deliverance, we also must accept
deliverance.
- But we only respond to deliverance, we do not create it.
- Again, please note something very important.
- God's primary objective is freeing us from the slavery of evil--it is not
primarily creating a good life for us on earth.
- The primary objective had two purposes.
- The first is our personal, eternal salvation with God after death.
- The second is promoting godliness in this world by making salvation
available to all people.
- God's success in our lives and in the world is not measured by our
physical contentment.
- When you examine God's work and the methods that God uses, He does not
do things the way we would.
- Just consider a few examples.
- God delivered Jacob's large family from starvation by working through
Joseph's betrayal and his slavery in Egypt.
- God prepared Moses to lead Israel by working through Moses' exile in the
wilderness.
- God prepared Israel to follow Him in capturing the land of Canaan by having
them wander in a desert wilderness for forty years.
- God led Israel to repentance and redirection by using the Babylonian
captivity of the nation.
- God created the possibility of salvation for all people through the crucifixion
of His own son.
- God spread the church over the world of the Roman empire in a generation
by working through suffering and persecution.
- Is that the way you would have attempted to accomplished those things?
- Knowing the way God has worked, how do you think God is going to work in this
congregation? in your personal life?
- God would work in this congregation and each of our lives in the following
manner if He did it our way.
- It would be systematic.
- It would follow neat, progressive steps.
- It would be calm and peaceful.
- It would use prosperity.
- It would involve no problems and no troubles.
- It would make sense to us, be logical to us, and let us see exactly where
we are going and exactly what would happen.
- It would allow us to determine our own goals and to reach those goals in
a very orderly fashion.
- It would be comfortable and physically enjoyable.
- May I ask you two questions.
- What do you personally know and understand about successfully building
genuine, controlling trust in God?
- If God gave you the job of building people's faith, how would you do it?
- Would you prove that you really understand how to build faith by using
the level of faith that you have in your own life?
- What do you know and understand about successfully fighting evil in
people's lives?
- Again, if God gave you the job of teaching people how to fight evil in their
lives, how would you do it?
- Would you prove that you really understand how to fight evil by using the
success you have as you fight evil in your own life?
When you look at how God worked in Joseph's life, worked in the exile of
Moses, worked in the wilderness experience of the nation of Israel, worked in the
Babylonian captivity, worked in the crucifixion, worked in the sufferings of Christians in
the first century, how do you think God is going to work in this congregation?
When you look at how God worked in Joseph's life, worked in the exile of
Moses, worked in the wilderness experience of the nation of Israel, worked in the
Babylonian captivity, worked in the crucifixion, worked in the sufferings of Christians in
the first century, how do you think God is going to work in your life?
Does God do things our way? No. And it is very important that everyone of us
remember that.
David Chadwell
West-Ark Church of Christ, Fort Smith, AR
Evening Sermon, 28 June 1998
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