He will go with you
Sermon • Submitted • Presented
0 ratings
· 7 viewsNotes
Transcript
Greeting
Greeting
Good Morning everybody! We are so grateful that you’re here with us this today. My name is Matt Coby and I serve as the Minister of Students and Recreation here at Gilliam Springs. This morning we’re going to be in Deuteronomy chapter 31. You’ll find it towards the front of your Bibles or you can follow along on the screens as well.
While everyone is turning there, If you are a guest with us we would love for you to text the word GSBCConnect to the number 94000, This will give us a record of your visit and allow us thank you by sending a special gift.
Intro
Intro
We find ourselves at the beginning of one of the most hectic weeks in the life of a small town. Graduation week.
Awards ceremonies, Graduation Parties, Family get togethers, graduation itself.
It’s like someone said, let’s pack a month’s worth of stuff into 7 days, that sounds like fun?!
but I find myself in a unique position. I have the distinct privilege of being able to do this every year, with 15+ students each year. (blank stare)
And I LOVE IT! It’s literally one of the reasons that I do what I do! to prepare our students to go out into the world as ambassadors and missionaries for Christ!
And while each graduate has a different journey ahead of them, they all share one thing in common.
Change is coming
Change is coming
This is not only true for our Graduates, but for each one of us, and as we’ll see in our text, it was true for the Nation of Israel as well.
If you’ve found your place, let’s read verses 1-8 together
Scripture Reading
Scripture Reading
1 So Moses continued to speak these words to all Israel.
2 And he said to them, “I am 120 years old today. I am no longer able to go out and come in. The Lord has said to me, ‘You shall not go over this Jordan.’
3 The Lord your God himself will go over before you. He will destroy these nations before you, so that you shall dispossess them, and Joshua will go over at your head, as the Lord has spoken.
4 And the Lord will do to them as he did to Sihon and Og, the kings of the Amorites, and to their land, when he destroyed them.
5 And the Lord will give them over to you, and you shall do to them according to the whole commandment that I have commanded you.
6 Be strong and courageous. Do not fear or be in dread of them, for it is the Lord your God who goes with you. He will not leave you or forsake you.”
7 Then Moses summoned Joshua and said to him in the sight of all Israel, “Be strong and courageous, for you shall go with this people into the land that the Lord has sworn to their fathers to give them, and you shall put them in possession of it.
8 It is the Lord who goes before you. He will be with you; he will not leave you or forsake you. Do not fear or be dismayed.”
Early Application
Early Application
Change is hard.
There are some people who can deal with it better than others, but there are still obstacles that have to be navigated any time change enters the picture.
Context
Context
In the passage we just read, We find ourselves at the end of an era.
An era that can be traced all the way back to the book of Exodus.
Now before we go any further, we need to know how we fit in to this passage. The temptation is to try to put ourselves in the place of Moses or of Joshua here, and there are definitely ways that we could do that.
but for today, I believe that we need to look less at the source of the change, and more at what we do with it.
We need to put ourselves in the place of the Israelites.
Moses has led them for over 40 years. Not only has he led them, He had a long history with them, and He was the person God used to rescue them from Egypt.
There was a familiarity and a comfort with the way that life worked with Moses at the wheel.
There was a Rhythm. Were there things that people didn’t like, sure. Did they want to make it to the promised land? Of Course!
but in much the same way as we do today, I’m sure they had some preferences as to how they would get there.
The Unknown is frightening
The Unknown is frightening
But in order to experience all that the Lord has for us, there are a few things we must accept.
Exegesis
Exegesis
Every Season has a beginning and an end
Every Season has a beginning and an end
1 So Moses continued to speak these words to all Israel.
2 And he said to them, “I am 120 years old today. I am no longer able to go out and come in. The Lord has said to me, ‘You shall not go over this Jordan.’
Moses’ Journey was coming to an end. and i’m sure many were afraid. Why? because they associated their lifestyle with moses’. Many of them were born during the 40 years of his leadership, so they knew nothing else.
Of course this not only brings fear, but it brings a sense of mourning as well.
Where do I go now? What will happen to me? Am i gonna be able to adjust to the changes?
A wise teacher of another generation once said: "Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering."
we may not be willing to admit it, but the fear of change, the fear of a new season of life. It can be paralyzing, it can cause us to believe that we’re suffering. because it requires us to let go. To let go and trust that whatever comes next will look different, but that’s okay.
Let’s be real though. Letting go is often easier said than done. Even the Israelites struggled with this
They felt the same way about leaving Egypt when Moses showed up. They believed that Slavery and bondage were better than the change that they were experiencing.
12 Is not this what we said to you in Egypt: ‘Leave us alone that we may serve the Egyptians’? For it would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians than to die in the wilderness.”
This is a great example for those of us who are struggling this morning with a big change in our life. Whether it has to do with graduation, a job situation, something happening in your family, or maybe you want to leave your old life behind to follow Jesus, but you’re afraid to let go.
We struggle because we’re only able to see so far.
It’s in moments of change and moments of uncertainty that we not only see that every season will run it’s course, but we also see that:
New Seasons put our faith to the test
New Seasons put our faith to the test
BUT GOD, I want to know all of the things, I want to see the whole picture, so that i can decide whether or not a want to go.
These are the types of things that we may not say, but we feel
Nabeel Quereshi
There was an theologian and Scholar, Nabeel Quereshi who knew that His new season of life would be put to the test just in telling his parents that He had accepted Jesus as His Savior and Left his Muslim beliefs behind.
In his book “Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus” He writes that his relationship with His family was never the same after that.
I was a crumpled heap on the ground, trembling before God. Two weeks after accepting my Lord, I tried to plead with Him, while wailing and stammering through quivering lips.
The night before, I had looked into my Muslim father’s eyes as they welled with tears.
To be the cause of the only tears I had ever seen those eyes shed, I could not bear it.
Though my father did not say much, what he did say has haunted me ever since. The man who stood tallest in my life, my archetype of strength, my father, spoke these words through palpable pain: “Nabeel, this day, I feel as if my backbone has been ripped out from inside me.” The words tore through me. I had not given up just my life to follow Jesus, I was killing my father.
My mother had even fewer words, but her eyes said more. “You are my only son. Since you were born, I have called you….a physical piece of my life and heart. Every day since you came into this world, I have loved you with all of me in a way I have loved no one else. Why have you betrayed me?”
Decimated before God, eyes pouring, nose and mouth unable to withhold the grief, I was finally able to sputter my question through tears and mucus: “Why, God, did You not kill me the moment I believed? Why did You leave me to hurt my family more deeply than they’ve ever been hurt?
His faith was being put to the test, and He wanted Answers
Psalm 119:105 says that:
105 Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.
God hears us in these moments and says: “I’ll give you just a little bit at a time”. You see, a Lamp only casts it’s light so far. It gives us just enough to see the next few steps, but after that we’re blind, and we have to trust that the light will continue revealing what’s next. Little by little.
God’s gonna give us exactly what we need, exactly when we need it. (Pause and Repeat)
Shortly after, In the same book, Nabeel said that God gave him his answer. Nabeel realized that “This is not about me. It is about Him and His love for His children.” that “All suffering is worth it to follow Jesus. He is that amazing.”
did that solve all of his problems? No. but it allowed Nabeel, for a moment, to see through God’s eyes
He did the same for the Israelites:
3 The Lord your God himself will go over before you. He will destroy these nations before you, so that you shall dispossess them, and Joshua will go over at your head, as the Lord has spoken.
4 And the Lord will do to them as he did to Sihon and Og, the kings of the Amorites, and to their land, when he destroyed them.
5 And the Lord will give them over to you, and you shall do to them according to the whole commandment that I have commanded you.
6 Be strong and courageous. Do not fear or be in dread of them, for it is the Lord your God who goes with you. He will not leave you or forsake you.”
I love the HE will, So that YOU Statements here.
God will do this, So that you will experience this.
It doesn’t say, you go do this, and then God will do His part. God is faithful, even when we struggle.
The Lord will do
The Lord will give
The people knew there would be challenges in front of them.
They knew there were people who would seek to harm them.
They knew that by the Logic of the world, they should’ve just stayed in Egypt.
But through Moses God is saying “I’ve got this!”
I take care of my people!
I take care of my children!
I will take care of you.
That’s how we know that:
In the Old and in the New, God is there
In the Old and in the New, God is there
Moses believed it. He had seen it over His 120 years.
From the time when God had rescued Him as a baby
to when He was forced to flee and start a new life in a far away land.
To the time when He thought He had lost His mind because a bonfire was talking to him.
To when God parted the Red Sea.
GOD WAS THERE!
So:
7 Then Moses summoned Joshua and said to him in the sight of all Israel, “Be strong and courageous, for you shall go with this people into the land that the Lord has sworn to their fathers to give them, and you shall put them in possession of it.
8 It is the Lord who goes before you. He will be with you; he will not leave you or forsake you. Do not fear or be dismayed.”
Moses wants the nation of Israel not to repeat the mistakes that they’ve already made. To see that God is faithful, and he wants to take care of us.
What he is saying is that our suffering is often rooted in our refusal to completely trust Him with our next steps.
Moses wants for us to trust God, to let go of the fear of change, so that we can enjoy the life that He has for us. Will you trust that He is big enough to handle it?
Whatever “IT” is. Will you lay it at His feet, trusting that He is Enough.