Episode Transcript
Hey, this is Stephen Ferdick.
Speaker 2I'm the pastor of Elevation Church and this is our podcast.
Speaker 1I wanted to thank you for joining us today.
Hope this inspires you.
Hope it builds your faith.
Speaker 2Hope it gives your perspective to see God is moving in your life.
Speaker 1Enjoy the message.
Speaker 2I want to let you know if you don't live near Charlotte, but you've always wanted to come to Elevation Church, we figured out a way to come to you.
Speaker 1Elevation Nights Fall Tour twenty.
Speaker 2Twenty five coming up October twenty first through October thirtieth.
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Omaha, Nebraska, Saint Louis, Missouri, Louisville.
Speaker 1Kentucky, Dluf, Georgia.
Speaker 2We might as well say Atlanta, And if some of you from Charlotte want to drive to Atlanta, that'll be great.
There will be no traffic.
There never is any traffic on I eighty five.
It'll take you nine hours to drive there, but you should do that.
Tampa, Florida, Miami, Florida, where my beautiful I grew up.
Speaker 1Y'all give it up for Holly and Orlando, Florida.
Go to Elevation Nights dot com.
Speaker 2Happy eleventh anniversary to our Raleigh campus.
Speaker 1Help me celebrate them better than that.
Speaker 2Come on, Happy eleventh anniversary Raleigh, Raleigh Campus.
Speaker 1We're praying for a great next year of ministry.
Speaker 2It's our twentieth year of ministry as a church, and just we'll continue the celebration all year.
Thank you to all the wonderful guest preachers who filled this pulpit and preached, and all of our home team that preached.
Speaker 1But my middle son Graham looked at me the other day he said, it is time.
We want you back.
All these speakers have been great.
We want you back.
I'm back.
Speaker 2I want to share with you today a scripture that the Lord gave me during our break.
Speaker 1Our break was very unusual this year.
Speaker 2Part of the time is just rest, part of the time is study, songwriting and all of that.
Speaker 1The first half we spent in an unusual way.
Speaker 2Our oldest son, Elijah had a surgery and he was recovering from that.
It was a pretty major surgery, and then he got infected and we ended up back into ICU.
Speaker 1For quite a while after that, and he's doing all better now.
Speaker 2In fact, the Lord healed him, and he's clipping my sermon for TikTok right now as I preach it in a back room somewhere.
So let's give God phrase for that.
I told him before I came to preach us.
I'm going to be very clippable today.
I must say good stuff.
I'll make your job easy.
But in our Bible reading, as we were going through some of that for the better part of a month as a family, we came across Psalm seventy seven and there was a verse I knew I wanted to share with you when I got back with you, and it's going to lead us into.
Speaker 1A series today.
Speaker 2So remain standing for just when I read this one verse, just one verse?
Can you stand for one verse?
It's in Psalm seventy seven, verse nineteen, And I'll read this and then work backward from there to give you the message for today.
And the Lord's going to help us in some remarkable ways.
Psalm seventy seven, verse nineteen.
The Psalmist says to God, your path led through the sea, your way through the mighty waters, though your footprints were not seen, and had a beautiful scripture.
And the Lord really used that in my life.
I believe he wants.
Speaker 1To use it in yours really underrated scripture too.
Maybe it'll be your favorite.
Speaker 2At the end of today, he says, your path led through the sea, your way through the mighty waters, though your footprints were not seen.
And just turn to the person next to you and tell them, even if you don't see it, God is working, tell him even if you don't feel it.
Speaker 1God is working.
Speaker 2Let's put our hands together and praise the way Maper in this place.
Come on, praise the way Maper in this place.
God.
Speaker 1I thank you for every mountain.
Speaker 2You've brought me over, every valley you've brought me through.
It was nobody but you, and I praise you today.
Speak now through your word.
Speaker 1Use me as a vessel.
I'm willing and available and open.
Speaker 2Give me the courage, give me the clarity, the confidence to speak to your children today.
And may they receive it and obey it.
For it is in Jesus name that I pray and believe and call it done.
Amen, you may be seated.
Well, boys, bring out my teaching screen.
Let's get this series started properly.
As I announced to you our title for the next six weeks at least, and maybe even beyond that, because this is such a big topic that we're going to talk about, and the title of the series it doesn't come exactly from the verse that I read you, but I'll.
Speaker 1Show you where it did come from in a moment.
Speaker 2And before you judge my handwriting, just know that Abby has made fun of my handwriting so much.
And today I made her try to write on the screen before we came.
Speaker 1Out here, and she said, this is harder than it looks like.
Speaker 2I'm so sorry for how I spoke of you, father, But what I want to talk to you about for the next few weeks.
Speaker 1The title of the series is and you're gonna like this phrase because you could say it with attitude.
Okay, we're gonna talk about that's what I thought.
Speaker 2You know, you got to look at your neighbor and say it like you were just right and they were just wrong, and you tried to tell them but they wouldn't listen.
Speaker 1Tell them, that's what I thought.
That's what I thought.
Speaker 2Like you were certain and you were proved to be correct.
There is no better feeling.
Then, that's what I thought.
Or that phrase is so elastic that we use it also to mean that our bias was confirmed, like.
Speaker 1Well, that's what I thought.
Let's check it out.
Mean, sure, that's what I thought.
Speaker 2But we want to really use that phrase today to deal with the thoughts that we think, because honestly, not only pastorally but personally, ninety percent of the problems that I have faced in my life have not come from what the devil did to me.
Speaker 1Or from what others said about me.
Speaker 2The biggest problem that I have over and over again trying to do what God wants, or the biggest obstacle to God doing what he wants in my life over and over again seems to be this tricky little thing called my bracelets are catching the screen.
Oh Lord, that's like for this, let me try it over here.
Yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2The biggest problem for me over and over again it just happens over and over again, is that I get.
Speaker 1Trapped in what I thought.
This is gonna drive me crazy?
Speaker 2Over here, Welcome back Verdick who sabotaged my screen while I was on brick?
Speaker 1Was it Robert Madu did he mess up my screen?
Was it Torn Wells who messed up my screen?
The biggest obstacle?
Speaker 2And somebody shout, if you know what I'm talking about when I say that the biggest problem that I seem to have over and over again, it's not necessarily the enemies that I face, but it's.
Speaker 1What I thought.
Speaker 2It's not necessarily what my life is at this moment that's making me sad.
Speaker 1It's what I thought my life was going to be at this season.
Speaker 2It's not necessarily who I am as a person that makes me insecure.
It's what I thought I was supposed to be based on what I saw that other people showed me from who they are, but I didn't see their flaws, and so now I'm comparing my future to somebody whose flaws I have never seen.
And now I'm frustrated about where I am, not because of where I am, but because of what I thought.
I'm not frustrated because I'm not married at this age.
I'm frustrated because I thought I would be.
I'm not frustrated because I'm dealing with this situation.
I'm frustrated because I didn't have the chance to prepare for it.
And over and over again, in my life, the biggest enemy to what God wants to do is what I thought he was going to do.
Speaker 1Now, I want you to get a.
Speaker 2Time in your mind where you were what I like to call confidently wrong, and I don't know if you can think of one, or.
Speaker 1If you've blocked all of that out selective memory.
Speaker 2I asked everybody in my family, and if y'all know any way to fix that while I'm not using the.
Speaker 1Screen, that would be awesome.
Speaker 2If not, we'll all work around it and all of the OCD people will ignore that part of the screen that is not supposed to be like that.
Speaker 1Now, listen, I asked everybody in my family.
Speaker 2I said, I need an opening illustration for my new series called That's what I thought, And I need you to tell me a time when you were so wrong and you were so sure you were right.
And everybody in my family said, can't think of one.
Everybody in my family, I'll have to get back with you, And none of them got back to me with you.
The means they can't remember one time where they were completely wrong and assured that they were completely right, or it means that there's nothing really harder in life than to going back and admitting remembering when you were wrong.
You just hit the lead on those times in your life like don't want to remember them, And the problem with that is then you can't grow from.
Speaker 1Them as you go forward in the future.
Speaker 2Now, when we say that Jesus takes away our shame and our sin, that doesn't mean that he wants to cancel out the lessons that we learned from our mistakes.
It means that he frees us from the penalty of it and the bondage to it.
But it doesn't mean that Jesus wants us to live our lives just to continue to be wrong in all the ways that we were wrong a year ago, five years ago, ten years ago.
And there's almost nothing more difficult than remembering and admitting when.
Speaker 1You were just so wrong.
Speaker 2I had one this week.
I have fresh examples of being confidently wrong.
I did it at the dinner table.
One of our kids said something, and I just came back with something, and I didn't listen to the rest of their sinence and I completely missed the spirit of what they were trying to say.
Speaker 1Just confidently wrong.
Speaker 2Now I have about a twelve hour expiration dosage cycle on the dumb things I do.
It takes that long for me to digest my dumb and then apologize.
So twelve hours later, I found myself saying I was so.
Speaker 1Wrong for that.
Now that's hard, isn't it.
Speaker 2That's hard, isn't it to say I was wrong to talk to you like that.
I was wrong to assume that about you.
I was wrong to judge you like that.
I was wrong to put you in that position.
I was even to admit dumb things like I was wrong when I said that song sucked.
The first time I heard it, I thought it sucked.
Now I realize it's a bop, and I feel dumb because I like it, But I can't admit I like it because the first time I heard it, I thought it was silly.
That actually is a banger.
I've been wrong about songs that I've written before.
We wrote a song in this church one time, and I thought it was good, and then we went to record it.
And after the recording, I turned to Holly and I said, well, I thought that song was good, but it's not good.
Speaker 1She said, I thought it was pretty good.
I said, it wasn't good.
Speaker 2You could tell the people didn't like it, that people didn't care about it, and it's not going to go anywhere after we record.
Speaker 1Oh, come to the altar.
Speaker 2That's how wrong I can be about a song, and I'm glad I was wrong because it means there might be something else in my life right now that I think sucks, but it's actually going to be an amazing thing.
If I'm wrong about that, then I might be wrong about this.
Speaker 1It is the utter relief.
Speaker 2Of realizing that you were wrong and admitting it and growing from it.
But the only thing more difficult then remembering when you were wrong and admitting you were wrong, which I know is in a very good way to start a sermon.
None of us want to talk about that.
The only thing more difficult than remembering and admitting I was wrong is to realize I am wrong.
If it's that hard for everybody in my family and everybody watching this sermon to go back and remember I was so wrong, how could I have been so wrong to think what I thought, or to say what I said, or to believe what I believed, or to assume what I assumed.
The only thing more difficult than remembering it because it doesn't feel good, is realizing.
Speaker 1That I am wrong.
Speaker 2Right now, If we don't even want to admit that we were wrong, how much less do we want to realize that we are wrong or might be wrong or could possibly be wrong.
Just see if you can get it out out of your mouth.
I may be wrong about that.
And when you get to that point in your life, you realize that a lot of us in here we have iPhones.
Speaker 1How many of you have iPhones?
Speaker 2Hold up your iPhone right here at this part of the sermon iPhones.
Speaker 1I want you to realize that not only do you have iPhones, but you also have I thoughts.
Speaker 2And it's possible that the devil has you trapped in an eye thought right now in your life.
Speaker 1And I thought in the.
Speaker 2Psalm we just read, the Psalmist says something so incredibly miraculous and wonderful.
He says God's path led through the sea and his way through the mighty waters, though his footprints were not seen.
Speaker 1But to understand the process.
Speaker 2By which he arrived at that thought, I want to take you all the way back to the beginning of Psalm seventy seven, and journey with me now for a moment while I build this thought out for you.
That's what I thought.
The Psalmist is lamenting here.
There are four different types of psalms in your Bible.
There are psalms of praise, songs of thanksgiving, psalms of wisdom, and psalms of lament.
Speaker 1The mint is where they're just telling God their trouble.
Speaker 2Lament is where they are being honest with God, realizing that why would you hide it from him?
It's not like he didn't see the whole thing, Realizing that you can say something to God and He's big enough to handle your brokenness.
This is a psalm of lament, but I want to show you how it goes from a psalm of lament to a psalm of wisdom, and over the course of the next several weeks, I want to help you with your thoughts because some of your eye thoughts are wrong.
Some of your eye thoughts about people are wrong, some of your eye thoughts about what is still ahead of you in your life are wrong.
And you could be confidently wrong, and you can be completely trapped.
That's the situation for the psalmist in Psalm seventy seven.
Speaker 1It's not David writing this time.
Speaker 2It's one of the sons of Asaf, the musical leaders, and he's poor out his heart to God.
Speaker 1He says, I cried out to God for help.
Speaker 2I cried out to God to hear me when I was in distress.
Circle the word distress please, I sought the Lord at night.
I stretched out untiring hands, and I would not be comforted.
I remembered you, God, and I groaned.
What a strange thing to say.
I thought it was.
I remember you, God, and I was grateful.
I remember you God, and I praised.
I remembered you God, and I was encouraged.
I remembered you God, and I rejoiced.
He said it was so bad.
I remembered you and I groaned.
The reason Psalm seventy seven is special and you might want to study it is because a lot of times when they wrote psalms, they were asking God to deal with external enemies.
We've got this giant facing us, this army coming against us, this sickness that we're dealing with, and it was an external enemy.
Or in the case of Psalm fifty one, David is praying about his own sin.
He's saying, creating me a clean heart, O God, I did something horrible, and I need you to make me new, and I need you to raise me up, and I need you to give me a second chance.
But this is not a psalm about enemies, and this is not even a psalm about sin.
In this psalm, the primary problem for the psalmist is not an external enemy or even his own sin.
Speaker 1His problem is God.
His problem is God.
Speaker 2And more specifically, his problem is God, Where did you go?
Speaker 1His problem is God?
When are you going to help me feel something again?
Speaker 2God?
Speaker 1When are you going to answer this?
Speaker 2I'm holding out my arms to you, and you seem to be standing at a distance.
I'm not even sure you're in the room.
I'm not even sure you hear this.
And so as he's recounting this, I want you to understand the heaviness of it, so that when I encourage you in just a few moments, like I plan to do with God's health, you will understand the place this psalm starts at he has a problem with God.
And when you have a problem with bills, somebody can pay them for you.
When you have a problem in your body, you can go to a doctor about that.
When you have a problem even in your mind, you can have a therapist for that.
But what do you do when your problem is with the one.
Speaker 1Who has no boss?
Speaker 2What do you do when your problem is with the one who has no supervisor?
Speaker 1That you may ask to speak to.
Speaker 2What do you do when you're in a situation where what God did is so much different than what you thought he should do.
Speaker 1That is Psalm seventy seven.
Speaker 2I remembered you God, and I've grown, not shouted, grown, not clap, grown, not danced grown.
Speaker 1I remembered you God, and I growned, I meditated, and my spirit grew faint.
Speaker 2People will tell you all the time how much they've grown, but they won't tell you how much they groaned so they could grow into the place where they are today.
This is the process of becoming a person that God can use, and it is not easy.
He said, my spirit grew faint.
You kept my eyes from closing.
I was too troubled to speak.
And then verse five gives us the entire problem, not only with the Psalmists, but with ourselves.
I thought, everybody say I thought, I thought.
Speaker 1About the former days.
Justin do I even have to say it?
Circle?
Speaker 2I thought, Circle it for everybody in here who's having doubtful thoughts.
Circle it for everybody in here who's having fearful thoughts.
Circle it for everybody in here who's having jelly pettis, petty jealous, petty jelly thoughts, jelly thoughts were.
Speaker 1Calling them right now.
Speaker 2Circle it for everybody in here who is dealing not within that external threat and maybe not even.
Speaker 1A personal sin, but with a eye thought.
Now, when I.
Speaker 2Read this at first, you're gonna be like, he did the right thing.
Speaker 1This is what you're supposed to do.
Speaker 2This is what we teach in church that you're supposed to go back and remember.
If you're in a season right now where you don't know what God is gonna do, just remember what he did.
Speaker 1And that's what it sounds like on the surface.
But I want to dig a little bit.
Speaker 2Because I've been leaping two months to preach this message.
Speaker 1And I'm gonna preach it today.
Speaker 2I thought about the former days when my genes fit a little looser.
I thought about the former days when my hamstrings weren't so I thought about the former days when I didn't need these readers to look at my Bible and this size sixty seven font in order to preach it to you.
Speaker 1I thought about the former days, the years of long ago.
I remembered my songs in the night.
Speaker 2My heart meditated, and my spirit asked, what's wrong with any of this?
Speaker 1It's an eye thought.
Speaker 2I remember verse six, please my songs in the night.
My heart meditated, and my spirit asked, now, watch what happens when it starts with me.
Speaker 1Verse seven.
Speaker 2This is what you get back when you send out an eye thought.
This is what you get back.
And you know what, You can't block an eye thought, not with your fingers.
Speaker 1You have to deal with it.
And the Psalmist is putting.
Speaker 2It all out there for us today, which gives us permission to know that we can feel emotionally confused and still get spiritually strong.
Watch what he says.
It gets worse before it gets better.
Will the Lord reject forever?
Will he never show his favor again?
Has his unfailing love vanished forever?
Has his promise failed for all time?
Has God forgotten to be mercif?
Has he, in anger withheld his compassion?
I thought, and that's what came back, and what I heard the psalm is saying today.
And I wonder if it's true of you, he says.
I thought I suffered, and I thought I thought it was through.
I thought back over the best days of my life, and I thought they're behind me.
I thought about the things that I would love to see God do for me that he's done for others.
And I thought, well, I guess he just doesn't want to do it for me.
I thought, I thought.
I thought it was through.
I thought that my experience of God had completely dried up.
I thought he didn't love me anymore.
The Psalmas said that I didn't.
So, if you've ever felt that, you're in the Bible.
I thought that God had taken his hand off my life.
I thought he had just given up on me because others did.
Speaker 1I thought it was through.
Speaker 2And you see in this passage what they call the three peas of negative thinking.
I'm going to be talking to you over the next six weeks about I thought, I'm gonna be talking to you about three ways of negative thinking that you may recognize in your life.
They're all here in the psalm and we'll come back to them a few times, but I just want to point them out to you.
He says, Will the Lord reject forever?
Will he never show his favor again?
Has his unfailing love vanished forever?
I thought it was through.
I thought it was gone.
I didn't see his footprints in the sand.
Y'all ever seen that little poster on the thing, did you ever see butt prints in the sand.
Speaker 1That's another one.
You can look that up another time.
He says, I felt rejected.
Speaker 2I thought it was never gonna come again.
Now that's strong saying never.
That's strong when you think that he will never show you favor again.
And he said, I thought his love had vanished.
And they call these the three piece of negative thinking because they're traps.
And it's when you take something that happens to you and you make it personal rejection.
It's when you make it permanent never, and it's when it becomes pervasive, vanished everywhere.
It took everything away.
It's completely ripping through.
Speaker 1Your whole life.
Speaker 2Because one thing to have a problem, and you've got it in a corner.
And this is the one thing that I'm dealing with in my life.
But you know, the enemy has you in an I thought when it becomes personal, the Lord rejected me, there's something wrong with me.
It's fine to be disappointed because somebody didn't want to be your friend.
It is another thing to assume that they are worthy to be the Olympic figure skating judge of your life.
Speaker 1And then you stop.
Speaker 2Putting yourself out there because you think that somehow they have the stamp of approval to give the human race, and that they know just from their virtue, of their own goodness, whether or not you're worthy.
Speaker 1And now you've.
Speaker 2Got yourself isolated because you took it personal.
And there may have been something that they were going through that was so dark that if you would have known that, you would have given them a hug and said, I'll send you a Christmas card.
But now you've got it personal, permanent, it's never coming back.
It's always going to be this way.
It will never change.
I'm never going to be able to go a week without doing this.
I am never going to find anybody who gets me.
It's permanent, it's going to stay this way forever, and it's pervasive.
It's when you can't celebrate the kid that's doing good because of the one that you're worried about.
It's when you can't celebrate the health in your body because.
Speaker 1Of the hell in your mind.
It's because you're in.
Speaker 2An eye thought.
He said, I thought it was through.
I thought the dream was through.
I thought the vision was through.
I thought the relation.
I thought my joy, I thought my very joy in life was through.
Speaker 1It's an eye thought.
And if you're there today, let's start there.
Speaker 2I thought it was through.
There are some things in your life that may very well be through.
That's why you can't dwell on.
Speaker 1I thought about the former days.
Speaker 2That's why you can't watch Andy Griffith reruns and wish again for wholesome entertainment, and curse this Love Island.
That this crap these kids are watching and the devil is taking over a generation.
Speaker 1This is an I thought.
But the Lord y'all are laughing like y'all been watching it too.
Speaker 2I thought it was true.
I thought the best days were behind me, I thought.
And I want to show you something this really helped me.
Is something that he said in verse two, and yeah, yeah, yeah, he said when I was in distress.
Everybody say distress.
Distress is a normal part of the Christian life, just like it's a normal part of the human experience.
Distress in and of itself is not a problem.
When I was in distress.
The promise that God makes is not to protect us from distress.
The promise that God makes is not to keep all pressure from coming on our lives.
The promise that God makes is not to make sure that He always takes us the long way around any problem.
Speaker 1The problem is when the distress becomes despair.
There's a difference.
Speaker 2Distress is this hurts, but I have hope.
Despair is this hurts and I have no hope.
Speaker 1Despair is dangerous.
Speaker 2Despair is hurt minus hope.
Despair is looking at the situation saying never vanished, rejection, personal, permanent, pervasive.
Speaker 1I thought the psalmist said.
Speaker 2Not that this is just a difficult season and I got to get through it, because we all have those.
Speaker 1Not this is just a bad day.
Speaker 2And if I can make it till five o'clock without cussing anybody out, I can keep bringing home a paycheck and not get kicked out of this house that I'm behind a month on.
Speaker 1Anyway, It's not if I can get through this, it is is this all there is?
Speaker 2Despair is it's never going to get better.
Speaker 1That's where the devil wants you.
Speaker 2It's never going to get better, and you'll always lose your temper.
It's never going to get better, and you will always be a failure.
It's never going to get better, and you are always gonna be too loud, and you are always gonna be too quiet, and you were always gonna be too short.
Did you ever think maybe God made you short so you could fit through little doors?
Speaker 1Okay, now, if this is where the psalmist starts, we have got to.
Speaker 2Do something today to get you out of this.
If despair is dangerous, and distress is and dangerous, you can go through a lot of things.
You've been through a lot of things.
You've put up with a lot of things.
Tell your neighbor, I'm tougher than I look.
Tell them again, I'm tougher than I look.
Speaker 3To love.
Speaker 2I'm pretty smileful of you.
I'm tougher than I look.
I'm tougher than I look.
Speaker 1I took a.
Speaker 2Licking and kept on ticking.
I'm tougher than I look.
I'm like a weevile.
I wabbled, but I didn't go down.
I'm tougher than I look.
I've had some challenges to my faith.
I've had some questions about God.
Speaker 1I'm still here praising in.
Speaker 2Fact, that's my two word testimony when I can't think of anything else to praise him for.
Speaker 3Still here, somebody shouts, still here in a funk, still here, down in it, still here, wondering about it, Still here.
Speaker 1Piece isn't all.
Speaker 2So what you've got to do, child of God is never allowed distress, which is temporary, to become despair, which says forever.
And the devil specializes in turning distress into despair to get you so clouded by one conflict that you have forgotten your call.
Speaker 1Who am I preaching to today?
Speaker 2God sent this word to disrupt your despair?
Speaker 1Hear me?
Speaker 2God sent this word to disrupt your despair.
Every I thought that has been telling you you will not make it, every I thought that has been telling you you are not worthy of God's love.
The Cross made you worthy.
What does it have to do with your behavior?
What did it ever have to do with your behavior?
It's about his blood.
I call you worthy in the name of Jesus.
I call you healed by his stripes.
I call you forgiven.
And His favor is coming to your situation right now, into your room, into your home, into your wound, into your family, into your business, into that.
Speaker 1Thing that the devil told you is through is through.
Speaker 2Give up is through.
Quit fighting is through.
Don't go back to rehab is through.
Give up on it.
Just manage the ad.
Speaker 1It's through.
It's through, Just walk away from it is through.
Speaker 2Just move to another city and start over the same stuff all over again, till.
Speaker 1It catches up with you.
Is through leave is through.
Speaker 2Well.
I found something for the trap.
I found a truth for the trap for everybody who has been in an I thought, and I know you know the one I'm talking about.
Don't make me start prophesying it, tee.
I thought, the one that starts with you and ends with misery.
You know, every thought that it starts with me ends in misery eventually if it doesn't involve God.
So what I noticed from what I read from Brugemont and some of the other theologians that I was looking up, he said, I thought about the former days, and I thought it was personal, permanent, pervasive.
I would ask God to help me with the problem, but God was the problem.
I didn't know where to go.
Speaker 1Now.
I kind of lied to you when I set the sermon up.
Speaker 2I said, I was going to share a verse that I read that meant a lot to me right after alleged got out of the hospital, and I am, but it wasn't the one I read you when I started a servant.
It's one it's a little sniper verse.
It's a little sniper scripture.
It's like you could just gloss right over it.
But remember how bad of a state this guy was in.
What's going to turn it around for you?
What's going to turn it around for us?
What's going to break us out of these patterns and traps of thinking that the devil says never all?
What's going to break us out of this limited view of your situation that can't find God in it because you have gotten so.
Speaker 1Blurry in the battle.
Speaker 2And so I told my mom, I said, I'm going to be reading from Psalm seventy seven to preach this week.
Speaker 1And she likes I give a little headstart.
Speaker 2Well, she send me like a picture of her Bible open to Psalm seventy seven.
Speaker 1She's like, already beat you to it, preacher.
I'm trying to do her voice.
Speaker 2When I do that, I already beat It was a text, but that's how she would have said it.
Speaker 1And I said, bring that Bible because I want to show you something.
I give my camera.
Speaker 2This is not Psalm twenty three.
Everybody knows Psalm twenty three.
The Lord is my shepherd.
I shall not want It's a relatively obscure Psalm.
You see how she had that circled.
Sometimes it takes a minute to see it.
That's like the Lord, Well, this illustration isn't really working too well either.
Speaker 1But what I wanted to show.
Speaker 2You that I can show you direct me, man, do I need to stand somewhere different?
Speaker 1I do whatever, and you do that's better.
Speaker 2She has that Psalm seventy seven circled like a serial killer.
Speaker 1That's like a.
Speaker 2Right and I realized why she's got it all underlined.
I said, bring the Bible to church.
I got to show the people something.
She's circling everything in this Bible all the way down to has his unfailing love vanished forever?
Speaker 1Has his promise failed for all time?
And then on her Bible that's the part where that page ends.
I told her.
Speaker 2I was like, that's not the best part of Psalm seventy seven.
She's said, yeah, that's what I was reading right after your dad died.
Thanks a lot.
I was like, you know, that's a good part of Psalm seventy seven too, obviously when you're going through things.
But I said, read the rest and hit me a couple hours later.
Now, my dad died of als.
It was over ten years ago, and it was in June of twenty thirteen, and this psalm meant a lot to her during that low.
Speaker 1Time of her life.
Speaker 2And so she was reading it like we do, and we come to this place.
I thought it was through.
And she had just lost her husband.
She had just lost him after caring for him.
It was an atrocious, atrocious disease.
But what I want to show her and you today from Psalm seventy seven is in verse ten, May this change your life, made this break your pattern?
May this bring you out of the trap.
Because he said I was stuck in.
I thought, watch this.
Then I thought, that's the whole sermon.
Then I thought, circle it on the screen, justin.
Then I thought, no circle.
Then I thought, because the first thought wasn't the right thought.
Then I thought, I thought, I thought, I thought, and I got stuck in a loop of I thoughts.
Speaker 1Then I thought.
Speaker 2Verse ten is the hinge where everything changes for this Psalmist.
Verse ten is the hinge where everything can change for you and I.
Verse ten is the hinge that depression doesn't want you to know about.
Speaker 1Verse ten is the hinge that.
Speaker 2The devil wants to hide and delete off of your Bible lap.
Speaker 1Verse ten is the hinge that the.
Speaker 2Devil doesn't want you to turn to because after all of that which is real, after all of that which is a part of being you, after all of.
Speaker 1That, I thought it was through.
After all of that, he says.
Speaker 2Then I thought, let's see what he thought next to this, I will appeal the years when the Most High stretched out his right hand.
I will remember the deeds of the Lord.
Yes, I will remember your miracles of long ago.
I will consider all your works and meditate on all your mighty deeds.
Go back to verse ten.
Then I thought to this, I will appeal the years when the Most High stretched out his right hand.
Speaker 1Go back to verse two.
Speaker 2When we started with these eye thoughts, he was saying, when I was in distress, I sought the Lord at night.
I stretched out untiring hands, who stretched out I stretched out.
Ah, I can't do this much longer.
I don't care how many interior raises you do in the gym for your shoulders.
Speaker 1You can only do this so long.
Speaker 2And is it possible that the reason you are so faint in your faith, and so weary in your worship, and so discouraged about your destiny.
Speaker 1And the reason that you think that it's through.
Speaker 2Is because you have been so focused on this God, I can't give any more.
Speaker 1I can't do anymore.
I already feel so stretched God, I feel.
Speaker 2So empty, I feel so unseen, I feel so uncelebrated.
I keep stretching out my hands, I keep putting myself forth, I keep taking my next step, but you're not there.
Speaker 1Then verse ten, then verse ten.
Speaker 2Then I thought, I'm gonna appeal to a higher court instead of thinking about how I'm doing this, let me think about the years when God stretched his hand.
And when I start thinking about how he's stretched his hand, and I forget about my hands.
Suddenly my hands go up in worship because.
Speaker 3I remember that the bow is not mine, but it belongs to the Lord.
Speaker 2Fifteen seconds of praise for everybody who needs a.
Speaker 3Then I thought, Then I thought, well that's annoying.
Yeah, high five your neighbors say.
Speaker 1Then I thought, I thought over and over, I thought, Then I thought, oh yeah.
Then I thought I thought it was through.
Then I thought I might as well throw in the towel.
Speaker 2Then I was very focused on all the reasons I had not.
Speaker 1To go forward.
Y'all, slow, y'all are real, slow, y'all, slow like molasses in the south.
Speaker 2Then I thought, let me think about his hand, let me remember his deeds.
Speaker 1He does it in a quartet.
Speaker 2He talks about the mighty deeds of God, the works of God, the awesome deeds of God, the deeds of God.
Speaker 1He lists them off and wrap them off.
Because he said, I thought it was through.
Speaker 4And then after I had gotten done with all of my questions.
Then after I had poured out all my complaints, then after I had considered all the reasons that I had to be afraid.
Speaker 1I thought it was through.
But then I thought it through.
I thought about saying, all right, devil, I quit.
Then I thought it was through.
But then.
Speaker 3I thought it through, and I decided I would have despair unless I have to leave.
Then I what see the good this?
Speaker 1I'm the lord in the land of the livings.
Speaker 3Hot five seven people say, I thought it through.
Speaker 1I thought it through.
I thought it through.
I thought it through.
Speaker 3I thought it through.
Speaker 1Now let me tell you what I mean.
Speaker 2In verse nineteen, let's go right back to the top of the sermon.
He said, when I thought about the way God works, don't sit down.
Speaker 1You're about to shout again.
You might as well just save yourself a calorie burn.
You might as well just save yourself a cardio.
Just go ahead and.
Speaker 2Jump up now by faith and get ready to celebrate.
He said, your path lead.
Speaker 1Circle the word through.
Speaker 2Let's do Bible study.
I wanted you to take me around it.
I wanted you to carry me over it.
I wanted you to give me a boat.
But instead of a boat, I got a mighty hand.
Speaker 1And an outspread farm.
Your path, your path led through.
Speaker 2Tell your neighbor, I thought it through, your way through the mighty waters, through the mighty waters.
Though your footprints weren't seen.
Why didn't I see God's footprints?
Because he was working with his hand at a higher level.
He was driving back waters that I didn't know.
He needed depart so he could drown Egyptians that were chasing me and trying to bring me back into captivity.
What am I trying to say?
Think it through?
You just keep thinking the same eye thoughts and you're like, I.
Speaker 1Do think it through.
I'm an overthinker.
Just because you think it again doesn't mean you thought it through.
You underthinker.
Speaker 2You you think like this, Oh, well, the devil's attacking me.
I guess God's not with me.
What if you thought that through God must be so with me.
This is how you think it through.
Speaker 1God.
Speaker 2I went to my in laws fiftieth wedding anniversary the other day.
Speaker 1Clap your hands for that.
Speaker 2And it survived betrayal, and it survived addiction, and it survived special needs, and there were times where they thought it wouldn't make it.
Then I thought, the challenge is you can't see the path in the present.
W it's only in retrospect that the Red Sea looks like a blessing.
Speaker 1I'll show you what I mean.
Speaker 2Go to Exodus fourteen when the Israelites came up on the Red Sea.
You know the story.
You know the story.
They came up on the Red Sea.
They were leaving Egypt.
They had been slaves for four hundred and thirty years, and God was leading them out.
Speaker 1They were happy, They were ready to dance.
They even pecked their tambourines.
Speaker 2And as the tambourines are jingling in their suitcase, oh no, here comes trouble.
Speaker 1What is the sound of that very hot pitch.
Speaker 2It doesn't sound like a tambourine, It's an Egyptian chariot.
Speaker 1Oh no, the Egyptians are coming after us.
Speaker 2So watch what they thought, because I'm trying to get you to see that you might be wrong.
You might think the attack means it's through.
That's an I thought they thought.
Watch this Exited fourteen, the Lord said, Moses, the stretch your hand over the sea, that the waters going to go to full back over the Egyptians and their cheers and horsemen most stretches hand over see day break.
The justians of fleetwary, the Lord swipped them into the sea.
Oh so the Israelites didn't die.
The Egyptians did go to verse twenty eight to flow back and cover all the chariots and horsemen.
Now that all sounds so wonderful.
God drowned their enemies, right, And I know I'm rushing this.
Speaker 1I don't have time.
Speaker 2You go.
Speaker 1Come back next week for part two of this.
But what's crazy to me about.
Speaker 2This scripture is the scripture says that when they got to the edge of their escape route in Exodus chapter fourteen, verse eleven, they said to Moses, was it because there were no graves in Egypt that you brought us to the desert to die?
They thought that water was going to kill them.
That's what they thought, now, look at chapter fifteen, verse one, when they got to the other side and the Egyptians were all dead behind them, and the thing they thought was gonna kill him Exitus fifteen, verse one.
Exitus fifteen, verse one, and circle the word.
Then Moses and the Israelites sang this song.
Speaker 1To the Lord.
I will sing to the Lord.
Speaker 2That's fine, But you got to sing that same song on the other side so you can get through this.
Somebody say, then, I thought.
Speaker 1It is the.
Speaker 2Hinge of the scripture for the people of God.
Speaker 1They remembered their exodus.
Speaker 2This deliverance motif sets the entire story for Jesus, who would be the greater Moses, who would bring us out of the slavery to sin.
It's all set up here, and the Psalmist is looking back and saying, when I could not see your footprints, I remembered that your hand was working in the night.
And you've been looking at the wrong level, and you have been thinking at the wrong level.
And God's thoughts are not our thoughts, and his ways are not our ways.
And what if the attack is against you is actually sent to remind you how valuable what you carry actually is.
Think it through think it through.
The devil is not omnipresent.
The devil does not have unlimited ammunition.
So if there is an attack against your life, if there is an attack against your family, if there is an attack against your mind, there is something in your future that Hell has recognized.
Speaker 1Think it through.
Speaker 3What is it?
Speaker 2What is it that Hell knows about my family that I forgot about my family?
Speaker 1Then I thought it through?
Speaker 2And even more, what is it that God knows I need to learn that He would let me go through this?
And if you really want to get out of the I thought, what is it that He's going to use this for in somebody else's life?
Did I really suffer this much to stay silent about what he taught me as as a student.
Speaker 1So the word of the Lord is think it through.
Think it through.
Speaker 2It never comes like you thought it would come, not when it comes from God, because if it came like you thought it would come, then your thoughts would be God right.
Speaker 1And he says, my ways are not your ways.
Neither are my thoughts your thoughts.
Speaker 2And it just blessed me to think about all of the people in here who, instead of giving up on this pursuit of Jesus instead of giving up on your purity, instead of giving up.
Speaker 1On the impact God has called you to make.
Speaker 2Instead of thinking it was through, You're going to think it through today so that the song you have to sing on the other side reflects the faithfulness of the.
Speaker 1God who split the sea.
Speaker 2One moment, it looked like the sea was going to kill them.
The next minute they realized, Wait, God didn't bring us this far to drown us.
He didn't bring us out here to leave us.
He didn't bring us out here because He's not with us.
He brought us out here because the enemy can't swim.
Speaker 1Thank you for joining us.
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Speaker 1Is because of you that this ministry is possible.
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Speaker 1Thanks again for listening.
God bless you