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Waiting For God To Give Directions | Steven Furtick

Steven Furtick

11m 47s1,738 words~9 min read
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[0:00]Everything you depend on that does not come from God will eventually dry up. Preaching good, pastor. Everything you depend on, I'll I'll take it further, that is not God. Even if it's good, will eventually dry up. Even people who like you will get tired of you. If you start needing them to meet needs that God is designed to me. Some of the people that you're angry with, they are good people, but they are not God. When you try to make a good relationship, a God in your life, it becomes a idol. The passage in First Kings 17 is about idolatr. It's about what happens when you decide to run to the resource and neglect the source. I'm going to break this down till everybody in the room can confront it. When I fill every spare moment of my life with social media, how can God speak to me? If I run to that, if that becomes my first resource and recourse anytime I want to escape my mind, then how can the peace of God guard my heart and my mind in Christ Jesus? Or you could say that about sex, or you could say that about a pill, or you could say that about a donut. I can go all day long. How long do you have? I mean, I got a big list of stuff that I've tried to run through, run to that wasn't God. And I said that accidentally, but it's kind of good. If you run to something that's not God, you will run through it eventually. It will not sustain you, it will not last forever, and it can only give you so much. Now, there's been no rain in the land. Why? Because the people needed to repent and come back to God, and maybe you do too. Maybe you do too. Maybe you need to say, you know, God, I'm experiencing a dryness in my life right now. That indicates the fact that I have been replacing you with something that is not you. And see, I think dryness is often a gift that God uses to direct us. God directs by dryness. To show you that something's wrong here, this isn't working here. Wow, I keep on putting more effort, more effort, more effort, but I'm not getting more results. I'm not getting more joy. I'm not getting more peace. I keep doing more and I keep feeling less, and that is a sign that God is redirecting you. To the text, to the text, to the text. In First Kings chapter 17, it says that Elijah is hanging out by a brook because there had been no rain in the land. You don't know what restraint I am using not to preach about the fact that he is suffering from the problem that his prophecy caused. Did you catch it? He said, there's going to be no rain. So God says, since I made you say there's going to be no rain, and since nothing can grow where there is no rain, I'm going to show you where to run, where you can receive even though there's no rain. And it works for a while. Eventually, the Bible says that the late autumn rains and the early winter rains that were meant to replenish the land didn't come. Now, we know by nature that the brook didn't dry up all at once. I mean, you don't go from a brook that's filled with water to a brook that has no water just like that. And so every day Elijah wakes up, it's a pretty good setup he has, all right? Let me tell you what God did. God's like, I'm going to give you water from the brook, even though there's no rain in the land because you spoke a word. You spoke a word to bring the people to a place, back to worshiping me. I'm going to bring you to a brook, and I'm going to let you drink from the brook, but you need to eat too, so I'm going to send birds. Not just any birds. You all ready? Dirty birds. I'm going to send some ravens. These are unclean birds for Jewish boy to eat from a dirty bird. That's a bad system already. But God would meet Elijah's needs daily through the mouth of a bird that he considered unclean. And he would meet his needs daily at the brook called Cherith. Oh, the the Hebrew, the Kerith Ravine gives the impression that he's by this brook and every day he wakes up there's something for him to drink. How many of you would say that in your life there were seasons where God provided new mercies every day in your life. And let me be more specific, you didn't know how, but he kept you going.

[5:17]Like it doesn't even make sense, but you had something to drink. Doesn't even make sense, but you had something to eat. Doesn't even make sense, but you got up and went to your job, and your job sucks. You didn't want to be there. Sorry, Mom. You didn't ask to be there. But I have watched in my own life the times where something that was sustaining me in one season, started to go away in the next season. And the Lord sent me to minister to somebody today whose brook is drying up. Whose brook is drying up. The thing that used to bring you joy or comfort, it's no longer bringing it to you anymore. Your brook is drying up. And you're thinking, maybe I did something bad, maybe I did something wrong. No, Elijah did exactly what God told him to, and his brook still dried up. There is no indication that God gave him a warning incrementally. In 14 days, this brook will be dry. He watched the water level go down, down, down, and waited for a word from God to tell him what to do about it. And when it says in the Bible, the word of the Lord came in verse eight, it says nothing of the space before the word of God came, where Elijah had to sit there, watch the water level go down, while his thirst increased and his hunger was not abated, but his resource was not replenished. I don't know what's going on with my mic. The devil must not want you to hear this. And the Bible says that as it went down, Elijah waiting for the word of God to come, has to wait in a place where he doesn't know where he's going next. I'm preaching to somebody today who is waiting for God to give you your next step. Who is it? Who is it? And you don't know what it is yet. You need God to show you your next step in your life, because God, I can't stay where I am, like I am, where it is. This isn't going to work. I I have to move on, but I don't know where. And now you feel like Abraham who God said, go to the place I'll show you. What kind of weird life coaching is this? Go where I'm going to show you. It makes me think of Psalm 103 verse 105. Verse 105. That's how long Psalm 103 is. You get all the way to verse 105 and the Psalmist says, your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path. But I don't really like the fact that God's word is compared to a lamp to my feet. Because what I really want is a floodlight where I can see all the way to my future. Ten years from now. Especially as a parent, God, show me exactly where my kids need to go to college so I can know how much I need to save and when I need to put it there, and my kid is three. But God is not going to give me the name of the college when my kid is three, when I have barely got them walking. But in our walk with God, a lot of times, we won't take a step toward a destination we don't know until God gives us all the details. That's not faith. That's not faith. He had to wait. Wait for the next word from God. And until it came, God kept him sustained in a place that was enough. It wasn't fancy, but it was enough. It wasn't bougie, but the birds got the job done. It wasn't five star, but his belly stayed full. And God is sustaining some of us in a place in this season of our life. Watch this, where it's enough, but we don't know what's next. And the problem isn't that God isn't faithful to us in this moment. Problem with us is we haven't read Matthew 6:34. Jesus has a word for everybody who is trying to project out into the future a promise that God will not give you until you get there.

[10:09]If I came to preach this message today just to me and Holly, it will have been worth me putting on this itchy Levi's jacket that Josiah gave me. Because Jesus said, here's your problem. Look at Matthew 6:34. Y'all got it? I know the number, I need the verse. Thanks. That's helpful. Put it up on the screen, y'all. Wake up, wake up, wake up. Give somebody some coffee back there. Matthew 6:34, you got it? Therefore, do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself.

[10:50]Each day has enough trouble of its own. So wait for the day to bring the trouble, it's going to don't borrow trouble from tomorrow that you may never even have to face anyway, because God might do something about it overnight. Yeah, it's Mother's Day, but I got a word from God.

[11:17]And I realized that a lot of us are not really losing the battle that we're fighting in the moment. We're losing the battle that we're imagining that's going to happen out there, but sufficient is the day for its own trouble, and sufficient is today's strength for today's struggles. But today's strength is not sufficient for tomorrow's struggles. And God will not give you the entire

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