2020-07-05 Psalm 139:13-16; II Corinthians 12:7-10 If God Can Be Trusted, Why Am I Like THIS?
Notes
Transcript
If God Can Be Trusted, Why Am I Like THIS?
(Psa. 139:13-16; II Cor. 12:7-10)
July 5, 2020
Read Psa 139:13-16 -- The question before us this morning is, “If God Can
be Trusted, Why Am I Like THIS?” I think it is near the top of issues for
most of us, especially young people. We all have baggage in this area. One
survey found that 95% of men and 99% of women would change something
about themselves if they could. We know ourselves to be flawed people.
One guy went to a Halloween party. Someone asked him to take his mask
off. He wasn’t wearing one! It happens to everyone. Even a man as great as
President Lincoln was once called two-faced. His reply: “If I had two faces,
would I be wearing this one?”
Lily Tomlin was quoted as saying, “I always wanted to be somebody, but
now I realize I should've been more specific.” Ever been there? Maybe
every time you look in the mirror? Perhaps Woody Allen said it best, “My
one regret in life is that I'm not someone else.” Wow – that’s a lot to carry
around. And at some level, we all have such feelings of inadequacy – even
wanting to be someone else. I always thought I was too skinny growing up.
Hated wearing glasses. Overachieved in other areas to make it up.
But did you ever consider that how you feel about YOU says a lot about how
you’ll feel about God? It’s pretty tough to be unhappy about our physical
appearance, personality, IQ or other abilities without consciously or
unconsciously arriving at the conclusion, if that’s the best God can do, HE
BLEW IT. And if God couldn’t get that right, how can I trust Him with
anything else? I can relate, can you? So – does God speak to this? Yes.
What is His perspective? Glad you asked. Let me answer with 3 questions.
I.
Did God Make a Mistake with Me?
Actor Burt Reynolds told how he and Clint Eastwood both got fired from
Universals Studios on the same day – obviously before they were famous.
Reynolds was told he couldn’t act. And Eastwood was told his Adams Apple
was too big. Reynolds says, “As we walked to our cars, we were quiet – but
then, it’s always quiet around Clint. So, finally I said, ‘You’re in trouble,
Clint. I can take acting lessons – but you can’t get a new Adams Apple!’”
1
The point is there is always someone who is only too happy to point out our
real or perceived flaws, right? The world is cruel, hard place in that regard.
And it doesn’t take us long to make our OWN list. But how you feel about
YOU says a lot about how you feel about God, so the question that moves us
to the heart of the issue is, did God make a mistake with me?
Did you know there’s a verse that says, “Man throws the dice, but God
makes the dots come up? Man throws the dice, but God makes the dots come
up?” Actually that’s a paraphrase of Proverbs 16:33 – “The lot is cast into
the lap, but its every decision is from the Lord.” Do you know what that
means? That means that there are NO ACCIDENTS!
Your parents may have been good, bad or indifferent, but God knew they had
exactly the right genetic makeup to produce YOU. You may have been
wanted or not, expected or not. Your parents may have been married or not.
But while there are illegitimate parents, there are no illegitimate children.
God prescribed every single detail of your body. He deliberately chose your
race, the color of your skin, your hair and every other feature. He
determined your natural talents and the uniqueness of your personality.
Those parents threw the dice, but it was God who made the dots come up,
and God WONDERFULLY planned YOU because there are no accidents.
Psalm 139:13-15: 13) For you formed my inward parts; you knitted me
together in my mother’s womb. 14) I praise you, for I am fearfully and
wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works; my soul knows it very well.
15) My frame was not hidden from you, when I was being made in secret,
intricately woven in the depths of the earth.” Know what this means?
Listen, from the moment you were conceived, there was God arranging every
single chromosome pairing to produce just the DNA architecture that became
YOU. Isn’t that good to know? It may have been a chance happening from
man’s perspective, but God was making the dots turn up just like He wanted
them. The record is clear – there are NO MISTAKES.
In an old Charlie Brown cartoon, Snoopy the dog is sitting by the side of the
road, watching all the kids go by. Snoopy is reflecting to himself. He says, "I
wonder why it is that some were born people, and others were born dogs. It
just isn't fair." And then in the last frame he concludes, "Why was I the
lucky one?" Well, the point is, whatever your talents, abilities, disabilities,
strong points or flaws – you are the lucky one. You are exactly what God
intended. With God, there are no mistakes. So work with Him.
2
II.
Why does it SEEM Like God Made a Mistake?
Pretty much the whole world helps us come to the conclusion that we are
inferior and therefore God made a mistake. It starts young. I heard of one
guy who said, “We used to play spin the bottle when I was a kid. If a girl
spun and it pointed at you, she could either kiss you or give you a nickel.
By the time I was 14, I owned my own house!” You don’t have to watch
many TV ads to conclude that you’re flawed, right? So, if God didn’t make
a mistake, why does it SEEM like He did?
The answer can be summed up in a single word. If you can get this concept it
can change your life. In II Cor. 10:12, “But when they measure themselves
by one another and compare themselves with one another, they are without
understanding.” The magic word is COMPARE. COMPARE. There is no
single act that defeats us as an individual more than the act of comparing
ourselves against others. That more than anything else is what makes it
SEEM like God made a mistake. But the mistake isn’t God’s, it’s OURS.
When we start comparing ourselves to others, really only two things can
happen and BOTH are bad. We either come back with a case of swollen
ego thinking how much better we are, OR we wonder why we can’t look as
good, sing as well, make as much money, blah, blah, blah, blah as someone
else. And yet -- we do it CONSTANTLY.
What was it that got Satan in trouble? Was it not when he said, “I will make
myself like the Most High.” (Isa. 12:14). What was it that got Saul in
trouble? Was it not when they sang in the streets of Jerusalem, “Saul has
slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands” (I Sam. 18:7). Someone
has said, “The reason we struggle with insecurity is because we compare
our behind-the-scenes with everyone else’s highlight reel.” That’s a tough
way to go through life, isn’t it? Comparing your worst with everyone else’s
best – and yet that it our natural instinct. That is a destructive outlook.
We conclude that we’re not pretty enough or charming enough or smart
enough or gifted enough. So what happens? We settle. Young people, you
take up with the first guy or gal who shows you any attention because you
believe you’ll never attract another. Comparing causes us to pull the rug out
from under ourselves. So what’s the answer? To take pride in ourselves?
3
No – the answer is to take pride in our Lord and what He intends for us.
Look to Him. After Jesus’ resurrection he gave a veiled hint at the
martyrdom that Peter would one suffer for His sake. Peter immediately
turned to John and said, “Lord, what about this man?” (Jn 21:21b). Jesus
replied, “If it is my will that he remain until I come, what is that to you?
You follow me!” There’s the answer. Get your eyes off others and seek out
what the Lord has uniquely equipped you to do. Don’t settle for 2nd best or
try to be the 2nd someone else. Be the first you that God made you to be.
How you feel about YOU says a lot about how you feel about GOD.
III.
Why Did He Make Me As I Am?
A. To Keep me from pride
Be honest now. How difficult would you be to live with if you looked like
Mel Gibson, were as athletic as Michael Jordan and had the mind of Albert
Einstein? Or ladies, what if you looked and skied like Lindsay Vonn or sang
like Carrie Underwood. Be hard not to get caught in the pride-trap, wouldn’t
it? Like the old Mac Davis country song entitled, “Oh, Lord, it’s Hard to be
Humble When You’re Perfect in Every Way”? God doesn’t want that for us.
The Apostle Paul was special – had even been to heaven by vision or real. He
might have gotten very proud about that. Wouldn’t you? But II Cor 12:7:
”And because of the surpassing greatness of the revelations, for this reason,
to keep me from exalting myself there was given me a thorn in the flesh, a
messenger of Satan to buffet me – to keep me from exalting myself!” God
afflicted him in some way to keep his feet on the ground. And if Paul needed
help to keep him from being overly proud, how much more we?
. To Perfect Me
God has an ultimate goal for your life. He intends to perfect you. His
intention is your perfection. Physical flaws and trials are part of the process.
Jas 1:2-4: “Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various
kinds, 3 for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness.
4 And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and
complete, lacking in nothing.” Do you see that whatever the flaws in your
life, it’s all part of God’s wonderful plan to perfect you, inside and out.
When you begin to look at yourself in that light, it puts a whole different
4
spin on things. His intention is your perfection – and your physical make-up
is no mistake. It’s part of the process to get you there.
If the sand gets in the human eye, it causes irritation, then infection, and if
not cared for, eventually loss of vision. But put that same speck of sand in an
oyster. It causes irritation, then secretion, and eventually the oyster forms a
pearl. Listen – your flaw or flaws are your grain of sand. You can let them
fester and ruin your life – but God’s specific intention is that You cooperate
with God in taking glory in your physical deficiencies as Paul did; you
cooperate with God in allowing your physical deficiencies make you a
better person inside and I promise you, you’ll be amazed at the pearl God
produces. His intention is your perfection.
Conrad Hilton, My Guest, tells of a poor Greek man who applied for a job as
a janitor. Bc he couldn’t write his own name, he as refused. So, he made his
way to the US, and in the land of opportunity founded a thriving company.
Years later in his Wall Street office, a reporter said, “You should write your
memoirs.” The man smiled and said, “Impossible, I cannot write.” The
reporter was astounded. “Just think how much further you would have
gone if you could.” The Greek man said, “If I could write, I’d be a janitor.”
In the same way, I urge you – cooperate with the You that God has made to
become the perfection He intends you to be. You’ll never be sorry.
C. To Show God’s Glory
The third reason that God has made you like He has is because He takes great
delight in showing His glory through flawed people. And there is something
PERFECT about your height, skin color, blemishes, shyness, and even your
past to allow Him to get glory in a unique way. Concerning his own physical
flaw, Paul said II Cor 12:9: And He has said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient
for you, for power is perfected in weakness.’ Most gladly, therefore, I will
rather boast about my weaknesses (all of them, not just this one), that the
power of Christ may dwell in me.
A few years ago, on our way back from a mission trip to Guatemala, my wife
and I were in the airport in Houston waiting for our flight to Denver when we
saw a man being pushed through the airport in a wheelchair. He obviously
had not feet and no arms. We immediately recognized him as Nick Vujicic.
We had seen him featured on 20/20 one night around May 2008. Nick is a
28-year-old Australian who was born without any arms or legs. He has one
5
slight toe like appendage on the left side that allows him to stand and
maneuver somewhat. He is actually able to do amazing things, including
putting a golf ball with a club tucked between his chin and neck. But the
most important thing about Nick is that he loves the Lord. He was raised by
Christian parents who encouraged his every activity and today he is married
with 4 children, and has a speaking ministry to young people around the
world, emphasizing the importance of accepting who you are and accepting
Christ. His story is an amazing demonstration of exactly what we are talking
about today.
Conc -- God has made us with the intention that we give back to him every
gift and every flaw that we have, so that when he turns it to good, He gets the
glory. To refuse to be happy with what we are and cannot fix is to refuse
His grace in our lives and that’s a serious matter. How you feel about YOU
says a lot about how you feel about God. Let’s pray.
6