Aug. 23, 2015
Jer. 29:8-14, Jn. 15:9-17
Jer. 29:8-14, Jn. 15:9-17
Story… 2 old-school farmers were talking when one
says, “I think I’m going to buy one of those new tractors.” The other responds,
“Not me… I’m going to stay with my tried and true horses.” They stare at the
tractor when the 2nd farmer says, “Don’t shoot your horse till you
know how to drive the tractor.”
“If you want to make God laugh… tell Him your
plans.” Or as it states in Prov. 16:9 “We make our own
plans, but the Lord decides where we will go.”
Prayer:
We’ve come to the point in the transition
process where folks start murmuring and complaining…. Are you murmuring? I’ve heard some! This happens in the
wilderness… We’re imperfect people and we often easily lose faith & trust
in the one who brings us out of bondage. We know we must take some risks, get
out of our boats and trust God. We also know we can’t do this alone… we need
each other. My friends… we all know what needs to happen… this isn’t rocket
science and we all know what needs to take place. Each of us is called to
participate in what God is calling us to be about.
So…
Today, we conclude our series by reflecting on God’s plan for us…. “I Have A
Plan”
If you know anything about Bart Simpson you
know he is one who always has a plan… a plan for getting into trouble and a
plan for getting out of trouble.
If we’re honest… many of us resemble Bart in
more ways than we care to admit. We are always making plans for something
whether good or ill and when they don’t work out then we’re planning an exit
strategy. This is nothing new for us humans… our Israelite friend’s do the same
more times than I’m sure they’d like to admit.
You may recall our 1st week’s
reflection when the Israelites escaped Egypt enthusiastically, then 15 days in
there complaining, they build idols, they fight with each other etc… Ex 14:15…
God says to Moses, “Why do you keep
complaining, tell the Israelites to move forward.” They do… but they
shortly forget that God is walking with them and they still find reason to
complain once again. The end result… 40 years in the wilderness. For the
Israelites… it becomes a patterned of faith and trust and disobedience that gets
repeated over and over.
This leads us to Jeremiah and another failing
on the part of the Israelites. Jeremiah is called by God to preach to the
Israelites and to tell them to turn back to God. God calls him even before he’s
born. God calls him as a young man… he’s 14-16 yrs old.
God calls a boy to proclaim the good news.
A
boy who has no experience.
A
boy who has difficulties speaking
A
boy who is going to tell a nation they’ve turned away from God and a boy who is
going to tell them to turn back to God.
Be
honest… How many of you would listen to a 14 yr old boy like this?
He’s called to tell them bad news… their very
existence is in jeopardy. Jerusalem and the Temple are going to be destroyed.
They are going to be carted off to Babylon for
70 years. Most of them will never return. The people beat him, put him in a
hole, and carry him off to a foreign land…. How would you like that job?
Yet… God says in Vs 11… “I have a plan”…. “I
will bless you with a future.” Like Moses, who only saw the Promised Land from
a distance… Jeremiah has to trust God with the future as well. The Israelites
thought they had the plan… they thought they knew best. They thought they had
right answers & didn’t need guidance from God. They didn’t want to hear
about God’s plan for their lives.
So… what is God’s plan for us? Let’s look at
what God tells us…
“I have Plans to Care
for You”
Vs 11… God says, “I have plans to care for you”….”Look
at the times I have provided for you…. If you turn to me… trust me.”
They knew the stories of God’s provision. They
knew the stories when God protected them. They knew God wouldn’t abandon them…God
hasn’t forgotten them. In the book titled, “The Land Between” a story that
reflects the wilderness journeys of the Israelites and compares those journeys
with the stories of people the author knows.
Author
Jeff Manion makes this analogy, “The
Israelites do not seem to have
changed over the course of two years in the wilderness… I have the sensation of listening to an old-fashion record player with
the needle stuck in a groove, repeating the same fragment of song over and
over”… Manion continues, “the intention of God is to dislodge the Israelites
from the rut of their lethal, faith-destroying groove… all the while…God is at
work rescuing them.”
Look around you my friends… what do you see?
What rut needs dislodging?
Has not God cared for you in the wildernesses
of life?
During life struggles do you turn away? Do you
hole up? How do you deal with the wilderness?
When finances have been tough… and out of
nowhere money shows up at the right moment. When the encouragement of a friend
soothed an ache. Recently a friend w/ medical issues was wondering how they
were going to meet a $5000 deductable… and somebody or bodies covered it. When
I trusted God… God provided. My friends…God
cares deeply for us my friends despite our propensity to turn away.
God
tells us I have “Plans to give you a Future”
I believe this is the most difficult truth for
us to deal with. We look around and we may not see too bright a future. All we
seem to see is what is wrong… what we don’t have. And that is the problem… when
all we see is scarcity we will never see a future no matter the plan. The
Israelites only saw what they we lacking… God told them they had a future… God
said, Vs 10… “in 70 years I will bring you back to Jerusalem.” I’m not sure
they saw it because they didn’t have faith & trust.
I
know I haven’t always looked at that way. Being an transition pastor
wasn’t the way I saw my future….I thought I would be in a church that was open
to change, doing some cool stuff… growing…. I’d stay there for 10 years or
better. I would be wonderful.
But that’s not what happened. All of the places
I’ve been have been short term calls. They’ve all been congregations in the
midst of transitions, and I’ve played a role in having them move forward. And it
seems I’m pretty good at doing this. But it wasn’t my plan… However it’s been
God’s plan.
You see… Jesus tells his friends, “I have
chosen you to be sent out to produce fruit.
Jesus says in John 14… “If you have faith in me
you will do the same things I am doing… in fact, you will do even greater
things than I.”
Do you believe this?
Do you trust God with your future?
God says, Jer. vs 14… “If you come looking for
me, you will find me.” Some
translations say, “If you turn back to me”…
“If you seek me with all your heart.” Are we trusting God with our future? Or
are we trusting in temporary fixes? The
Israelites were seeking temporary fixes… much of the time that’s our solution
too.
God
tells us I have “Plans to Bring You Back”
I believe the most significant and most
challenging Vs in the story, especially as it reads in “The Message Bible” is Vs 13…
“If
you get serious about finding me and want it more than anything else, I’ll make
sure you won’t be disappointed… I’ll turn things around and I’’ bring you
back.”
Most of us most certainly bounce back from the
difficulties we face. Hope is centered in the opportunity that the times and circumstances
will change. Hopefully… we learn something from the wilderness. Hopefully
through the wilderness we have learned to trust God more fully. The good news…
God is always inviting us back though we stumble.
The challenge is…are we serious about God
leading us? Are we serious about God’s Plan For Us?
Close:
Story…
Max Lucado tells the story of a man who had been a closet slob most of his
life. He just couldn't comprehend the logic of neatness. Why make up a bed if
you're going to sleep in it again tonight? Why put the lid on the toothpaste
tube if you're going to take it off again in the morning? The man admitted to
being compulsive about being messy.
Then he got married. His wife was patient. She said she didn't mind his habits ... if he didn't mind sleeping on the couch. Since he did mind, he began to change. He said he enrolled in a 12-step program for slobs. A physical therapist helped him rediscover the muscles used for hanging up shirts and placing toilet paper on the holder. His nose was reintroduced to the smell of Pine Sol. By the time his in-laws arrived for a visit, he was a new man.
But then came the moment of truth. His wife went out of town for a week. At first he reverted to the old man. He figured he could be a slob for six days and clean on the seventh. But something strange happened. He could no longer relax with dirty dishes in the sink or towels flung around the bathroom or clothes on the floor or sheets piled up like a mountain on the bed.
What happened? Simple. He had been exposed to a higher standard of living. That's what Jesus does.
-- Max Lucado, “In the Grip of Grace” (Dallas: Word Publishing, 1996), 116-117.
Then he got married. His wife was patient. She said she didn't mind his habits ... if he didn't mind sleeping on the couch. Since he did mind, he began to change. He said he enrolled in a 12-step program for slobs. A physical therapist helped him rediscover the muscles used for hanging up shirts and placing toilet paper on the holder. His nose was reintroduced to the smell of Pine Sol. By the time his in-laws arrived for a visit, he was a new man.
But then came the moment of truth. His wife went out of town for a week. At first he reverted to the old man. He figured he could be a slob for six days and clean on the seventh. But something strange happened. He could no longer relax with dirty dishes in the sink or towels flung around the bathroom or clothes on the floor or sheets piled up like a mountain on the bed.
What happened? Simple. He had been exposed to a higher standard of living. That's what Jesus does.
-- Max Lucado, “In the Grip of Grace” (Dallas: Word Publishing, 1996), 116-117.
This is what God’s plan can do for us.
No comments:
Post a Comment