Flip the Script
Notes
Transcript
Flip the Script
Genesis 50:20
Online Sermon:
http://www.mckeesfamily.com/?page_id=3567
Queen Victoria ruled over the British Empire from 1837
to 1901, marking a 63-year reign that not only set a record in
Britain but also defined an era
known as the Victorian Age.
Shortly after ascending the
throne, she fell deeply in love
with Francis Albert Augustus
Charles Emmanuel and, just
five days after his arrival at
Windsor Castle, proposed to
him. On their wedding day,
February 10, 1840, Queen
Victoria wrote in her diary:
“How can I ever be thankful
enough to have a husband… to
be called by names of tenderness I have never yet heard used for
me – it was bliss beyond belief! Oh! This is the happiest day of
my life!”1
1
Mark Batterson, Win the Day: 7 Daily Habits to Help you Stress Less &
Accomplish More, Kindle Location: 238.
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The couple shared a profound love and had nine children
together. However, tragedy struck 21 years into their marriage
when Albert contracted typhoid fever and passed away.
Overcome with grief, Victoria turned Albert’s room into a
shrine, keeping it as though he might return. She even slept with
his nightshirt in her arms. Though part of her died with Albert,
she seemed to stop living altogether, becoming famously known
as the 'Widow of Windsor.”
His Name, Our Story
Queen Victoria’s grief became her identity, binding her
to loss rather than the vibrant life she once lived. But history
reminds us of
others
who
refused to let their
circumstances or
even their names
define
them.
Michael
King
became
Martin
Luther King Jr. to
honor a reformer’s
legacy; Cassius
Clay
became
Muhammad Ali to align with his faith; and Mozart continually
reimagined himself through his name. Yet true and lasting
transformation goes deeper—it requires divine intervention. In
Scripture, God renamed Abram to Abraham, Sarai to Sarah, and
Jacob to Israel, marking not just a change in name but in identity,
purpose, and destiny. As the saying goes, “The difference
between success and failure is the stories we tell ourselves.”2 If
we allow tragedy to dictate our narrative, like Queen Victoria,
we risk living in defeat and despair. But when we anchor our
identity in God’s unchanging character and trust Him with our
destiny, even in our trials, we experience divine comfort (2
Corinthians 1:3-5), spiritual growth (James 1:2-4), and an
indescribable, unspeakable joy (1 Peter 1:8). What stories are
you telling yourself? Are they shaped by fear, doubt, or faith in
God’s promises?
Telling Yourself a Different Story
prepared to face such giants. To overcome history, they needed
to rewrite their story. For three years, each team member listened
twice daily to a recording of a sailboat cutting through water,
vividly imagining themselves winning the race—2,190
rehearsals of victory etched into their minds. On September 26,
1983, aboard
Australia II,
skippered by
John Bertrand,
they
turned
visualization
into
reality,
shattering the
New
York
Yacht Club's reign. What are the stories you are telling yourself?
Are they accurate or inaccurate, helping or hurting you? Are
they based on what doubters or haters of you say or like king
David are you living a God-sized dream because you have given
editorial and complete control of your life to the Author and
Perfector of your faith? Their victory reminds us that rewriting
our story requires vision, faith, and perseverance—qualities we
see in David on the battlefield.
On August 22, 1851, Queen Victoria watched as
Commodore John Cox Stevens and his six-man crew claimed
victory in the America's Cup, beginning the New York Yacht
Club's unprecedented 132-year winning streak.3 Imagine the
challenge faced by the Australian team decades later as they
Just as the Australian sailors refused to let history dictate
their fate and instead rewrote their story with vision,
perseverance, and faith, David faced a similar choice on a very
different battlefield. While others saw only an unbeatable giant
and inevitable defeat, David saw an opportunity to trust God and
change the narrative.
2
3
The stories we tell ourselves define not just our identity,
but what we believe is possible through God’s power. The
Australian sailing team serves as a powerful example of this
principle, showing us what happens when determination meets
faith.
Ibid., Location 343.
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Ibid., Location 238.
For forty days, the Philistine giant Goliath, a towering
and fearsome warrior over nine feet tall, stepped onto the
battlefield every morning and evening, taunting Israel and
challenging any man to face him. Clad in armor weighing about
125 pounds, with bronze greaves on his legs, a bronze javelin
slung across his back, and a spear whose tip alone weighed
fifteen pounds,
Goliath's
imposing
presence struck
terror into the
hearts of the
Israelite army.
But one day, a
young shepherd
boy
named
David
arrived
with food for his
brothers and witnessed the Israelites fleeing in fear at the sight
of the giant. To David, it was a disgrace that an "uncircumcised
Philistine should defy the armies of the living God" (1 Samuel
17:26). Though he seemed the ultimate underdog, David's faith
in God emboldened him to face Goliath without King Saul's
armor, carrying only a staff, a sling, and five smooth stones.
As David declared, "You come against me with sword
and spear and javelin, but I come against you in the name of the
Lord," the crowd may have scoffed, but their laughter was shortlived. With one stone and divine intervention, David struck
down Goliath, proving once again that God "doesn’t call the
4
Ibid., location 531.
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qualified but qualifies the called!" 4 What giants are you facing
today? Fear, doubt, loss, or failure? Remember, God doesn’t call
the qualified—He qualifies the called. Trust Him to author your
story, and you’ll find victory in His strength.
Letting Go of the Past
Despite his youth and size, David trusted God to rewrite
his story on the battlefield. Similarly, the Israelites had their own
story to rewrite—not against a physical giant, but against the
invisible chains of
a mindset still
bound to their
past. While the
saying, ‘If you do
not learn from the
past, you are
doomed to repeat
it,’ holds truth, it
doesn’t mean we
should become so
entangled in past experiences that we resist the Savior’s call to a
life of hope and purpose (Jeremiah 29:11). The Israelites, after
400 years of slavery in Egypt, were miraculously delivered by
Moses and witnessed God’s power through the ten plagues. Yet,
despite their initial rejoicing, they soon grew weary of God’s
provision of manna and longed for the food of their captivity—
“cucumbers, melons, leeks, onions, and garlic” (Numbers 11:5).
As Mark Batterson rightly states, “It took one day to get Israel
out of Egypt, but 40 years to get Egypt out of Israel.”5 How long
will it take you to let go of your past and step into God’s
promises? The path is open—the choice is yours. Their story
serves as a mirror to many Christians today who, though freed
by Christ, remain ensnared by guilt, shame, and regret. How
often do believers doubt their ability to do great things in Jesus’
name because their identity is still shaped by their past failures
rather than Christ’s victory? On the cross, Jesus “flipped the
script on sin and death forever!”6 Living in the past dishonors
God’s grace and rejects the new life He offers.
But the journey doesn’t stop at letting go of the past—it
propels us into reaching for something greater. Letting go of past
failures isn’t merely about finding peace; it’s about stepping
boldly into the God-sized goals He has set before us.
Reaching for God-Sized Goals
Letting go of past failures frees us to embrace God-sized
goals with passion and tenacity. However, this is no easy task,
considering that nearly 80% of our daily thoughts are negative,7
often becoming self-fulfilling prophecies. No wonder so many
of God’s children never reach their God-given goals! The
Apostle Paul reminds us that the battlefield is in the mind (2
5
6
Ibid., location 567.
Ibid.
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Corinthians 10:3-5), but thankfully, we have access to divine
power to demolish every stronghold that holds us back. With
God’s help, we can silence our inner critic and replace it with a
voice of hope.
When
King
Saul told David,
“You are not
able to go out
against
this
Philistine and
fight him; you
are only a
young man” (1
Samuel 17:33),
David refused
to let Saul’s words or his own doubts take root in his mind.
Instead, he stood firm in faith, declaring that the Lord who
delivered him from the paw of the lion and the bear would
deliver him again (1 Samuel 17:34-37). Like David, when we
face giants that seem impossible to defeat, we must remember
Christ’s words: ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is
made perfect in weakness’ (2 Corinthians 12:9). The Goliath in
front of us is not an insurmountable obstacle but an opportunity
for God’s strength to shine through us.
7
Ibid., Location 705
Conclusion
Every great story has a turning point—a moment when
the protagonist refuses to let their circumstances, failures, or
fears define them. Queen Victoria, despite her immense
influence and authority, allowed grief to imprison her identity.
In contrast, David, standing before Goliath, refused to let fear or
the doubts of others dictate his story. The Australian sailing team
rewrote history through vision, faith, and relentless
perseverance. And the Israelites, though slow to break free from
their past, eventually crossed into the Promised Land when they
chose to trust God’s plan. The same God who guided David’s
stone, who redefined Abraham’s legacy, and who strengthened
the Australian sailors is the God who writes your story today.
The giants you face—fear, doubt, regret, or failure—are not the
end of your story but an opportunity for God’s grace and power
to shine.
Will you surrender your story to the Author and Perfecter
of your faith, trusting Him to flip the script, and free yourself
from the weight of fear, doubt, and regret? When God writes
the story, failure isn’t final, giants aren’t unbeatable, and our
weaknesses become a platform for His strength. Let go of the
past, silence the inner critic, and step boldly into the God-sized
goals He has prepared for you. Giants fall, chains break, and
victory is assured—because with God on your side, you are
never the underdog.
“Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we
ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us,
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to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all
generations, for ever and ever! Amen.” (Ephesians 3:20-21)

