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Homecoming Series Introduction
Psalm 84:1-4
Every human being wants a place to call home.
Home is a place of happiness, a place of peace and rest.
It is a place of safety, of warmth where we can relax and refuel.
Home is where we are loved unconditionally, with all our imperfections, and make lasting memories.
At home we don't have to perform a certain way to be accepted.
A homeless person is an unhappy and restless person.
In Psalm 84, the author is agonizing over the fact of being momentarily away from the house of the Lord, which he considers the home of his whole being, body and soul.
There is a hint of jealousy at the idea that while he is away, simple birds have made themselves at home in the house of the Lord.
The house of the Lord isn't just a physical location; it is synonymous with the presence of the Lord.
So he desires passionately to be in his presence again, where he can grow and become who God intended him to be.
The psalmist represents the Christian and the house of the Lord is the church.
A Christian without a church is like a person without a home.
Church is the home where God wants us to be.
And where he wants us to be, there his presence will be also.
The overarching story of the Bible is really about returning home.
From the moment Adam and Eve broke their intimacy with God and were subsequently driven out of the garden, God set in motion a plan to bring humanity back in a relationship with him.
And that plan will see its ultimate completion when at the very end God himself makes his dwelling among people.
The Bible is full of examples of people who either were going home or returning home to fulfill their destinies.
After 20 years working for his uncle, Jacob decided to return home and, along the way, God changed his name to Israel, connecting him to his true identity.
When the people of Israel left Egypt, it was to go home to the promised land, a land of blessing which flows with milk and honey.
Naomi returned home after a prolonged absence bringing along with her Ruth, who entered in the genealogy of the Lord Jesus.
The prodigal son returned home after wasting his inheritance.
Fearing rejection by his father whom he betrayed, he instead was welcomed home with open arms.
The lesson for us today from these old stories is that it’s not too late, we can still turn and head back home.
This series is for you:
If you know you left your home church and wish to return
If you stopped attending church and are sitting on the sidelines, undecided
If you don’t have a home church and are hopping from church to church
If your church shutdown definitively because of the pandemic and you are churchless
If you were hurt by your previous church experience and swore never to set foot in a church again
If you have never left your church, but you know God wants to use to bring others home.
If you are resisting God's call to do more where he has planted you
In this series, we want to explore what it means to come home, more specifically, to come back to church.
We want to answer the question where is home (There)?
What goes on at home (Saved, Empowered, Loved) and what is expected of us when we are home (The mission base)?
So come home and let's embark on this journey of discovery and growth.
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Sunday November 6th, 2022
Introduction
Location, Location, Location
Today I want us to see that good things happen when we are at the right place and at the right time.
I want us to learn that sometimes God can place us in a location that makes no sense.
He sometimes orders us to be in a place that's messy.
But ultimately, the location he chooses for us provides the best protection in a hostile environment.
In order to see how sometimes God places us in locations that do not seem right for us, let's look at the story of the prophet Elijah, who appears seemingly out of nowhere.
But before we read, let me set the scene for you.
Ahab is the king of Israel.
He has zero respect for God's will and does things that deeply displease Him.
To make matters worse, Ahab marries Jezebel, a worshipper of the false god Baal.
She is more evil than him, and together, they terrorize the people of Israel.
Let's read 1 Kings 17:1-7, 8-16
There is a 5-letter word in this story that I want to draw your attention to: There.
"There" is an adverb.
Adverbs modify the intensity, the quality and the manner of a verb.
Saying to someone "Sit there" is very different than just saying to them "Sit".
Omitting this powerful little word can dramatically alter a person's destiny.
"There" speaks of location.
All locations are not created equal
Psalm 133 demonstrate how powerful this little word can be.
Where there is unity, there is blessing and life in abundance (Verse 3)
A good location will draw interest and attention
(Our church site has been drawing lots of attention because it is in prime location)
Where God wants you may seem perplexing, maybe even inappropriate to you
God had Elijah hide near a stream and commands ravens, which are considered unclean animals (Leviticus 11:13,15), to feed him (Verse 3-4).
Application:
In a church (maybe your church) there may be practices, traditions, a culture that just don't sit well with you.
But if that’s where God wants you, stay put: That church is your There.
(Examples of things we do or have done as a church that may have caused people to leave or not join: redoing our stage the way it is now and painting things black, Pastor's political affiliation and his frequent absences and him ultimately accepting a position that will keep him away for long stretches of time, allowing women to preach, etc.)
God commands Elijah to go to a widow who will take of him.
This is perplexing because widows typically have very little resources in normal times.
But this is during a famine fueled by a severe drought.
This woman also happens to be from Jezebel's region, which means she is most likely a worshipper of the false god Baal.) (Verse 9)
Application: Church life can be messy, but it's beautiful.
God will use those we would tend to discount to be the source of our blessing.
God will cause us to mingle with people we normally would not.
We are now worshipping with them.
They run to our help and we do the same for them.
You are a blessing for others in the place where God puts you
Thanks to Elijah’s obedience, the widow and her family survived the famine as God provided for them throughout the drought.
(Verse 15-16)
When the widow’s son died God used Elijah to bring him back to life.
(Verse 22)
Application:
Do not neglect or minimize your capacity and the gifts God has placed in you.
In due time they will prove indispensable for others.
But you have to be at the place at the right time.
The location where God wants you will provide protection in a hostile environment
Elijah was in a land ravaged by a famine caused by the drought: without water everything that lives, good or bad, dies.
But he had food and shelter, and eventually he helped save a whole family from starvation
Cause of the drought: Deut.
11:16
Application: The days are evil (Eph 5:16).
Just look around you.
We are in a profound spiritual drought.
What was evil is now called good and what was good is evil (Isaiah 5:20).
Cause of the drought: Rom 1:21, 24, 26
This is not the time to be without a spiritual home.
Conclusion
Over its 28 years of existence, Mont Carmel church has withstood many storms that should have destroyed it.
Often we wondered how we managed to make it through some of the most devastating blows from the enemy.
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