Choices
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Following His Dream for Your Life
Online Sermon:
http://www.mckeesfamily.com/?page_id=3567
There are many great wonders in this world but
certainly one of the most beautiful but challenging of them is a
maze found in Venice, Italy called the Villa Pisani Labirinto.
Designed by Girolamo Frigimelica in the early 1700s this
“classical medieval
circular maze of nine
concentric patterns
and many dead ends”
was so intimidating
and challenging that
Napoleon got lost in it
and Hitler and
Mussolini were too
afraid to enter it at
all!1 What makes this
one of the most
difficult mazes in the world to navigate is not only its intricate
pathways but also its hedges that are too dense to go through
and too high to see over. This maze reminds me of the never
ending, unknown, almost infinite pathways of life we as
Christians must navigate! Living in an interconnected world of
constant texting, internet browsing and international news one
is constantly being bombarded with so many “voices of
choices” that knowing with certainty which are the right paths
to take seems to be an exercise in futility. And while the world
would have us chase after money, fame, and power this makes
little sense considering such endeavors are temporary and of
little value considering the eternity God has placed within our
hearts (Ecclesiastes 3:11)! Scripture states that the overall goal
of life is to please God (2 Corinthians 5:9-11) by “striving
towards becoming spiritually mature and attaining the full
measure of Christ” (Ephesians 4:13). While knowing this
overarching goal is of enormous value to us this still begs the
question of what does God-approved decision-making look like
when each of His own are given spiritual gifting and assigned
unique divine tasks to accomplish (1 Corinthians 12)?
While we know finding the right paths to take
in the maze called life is found through much
prayer and fasting to prepare one’s heart to
listen to God’s often gentle whisper and
command to go and serve in His name, many
believers still wander aimlessly in the maze
of life simply because they are too enamored
with their own path that seems so very right
in their own sight!
The following sermon is going to give several examples of
Biblical characters who when hearing God’s call obeyed and as
a result got to participate in a divine role in His kingdom that
far outlasted their time on this earth!
1
Taken from the following website:
https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/villa-pisani-labirinto
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“The Walls Come Down”
Joshua was called by God to lead the children on Israel
to take the Promised Land. It had been forty years since he and
the other eleven spies first surveyed the land (Numbers 14:34).
While it truly was a land filled with milk and honey, Joshua
still remembered both him and Caleb tearing their clothes in
disgust (14:6) because the other spies saw the size of the people
and fortified cities and became too scared to follow God’s plan
for their lives (13:28)!
As Joshua came near to
Jericho some forty
years later, he looked
up and saw the
commander of the
Lord’s army standing
before him with a
drawn sword (Joshua
5:13). Joshua fell face
down in reverence,
removed his sandals, for he was standing on holy ground (5:1415); and intently listened to what the Lord had to say about
conquering Jericho. The Lord told him that Jericho had already
been delivered into his hands if he followed His plan of
judgment upon the nation (6:2). For six days he was to have
the army march around the walls of the city and have seven
priests carry trumpets of rams’ horns in front of the ark. On the
seventh day he was to march around the city seven times with
the priests blowing the trumpets. Up until this time Joshua told
the army not to speak a single word (6:10) until they heard a
long blast on the trumpets and then they were to shout, and the
walls of the city would collapse, and victory would be theirs
(6:3-5). God gave Joshua a path to take that required incredible
faith. He could have devised his own plan to conquer Jericho
steeped in military strategy but instead chose to trust in God to
come good on His promise!
Like Joshua often the path that God presents
for our lives may not seem wise by human
standards but in faith will lead to pleasing
Him, which is the reason for which we exist!
Had Joshua said “NO” to God when he saw the giants in the
land of Canaan would he not have perished like all the other
Israelites who lacked faith? The choices we make in life matter
to God!
“Putting Others First”
Because King Ahab had “done more evil in the eyes of
the Lord than those before him” (1 Kings 16:30) God told
Elijah to announce His wrath upon Israel, “no dew nor rain in
the next few years” (17:1). The Lord then told Elijah to flee to
the Kerith Ravine where God instructed ravens to bring him
bread (17:4) but when the water dried up in the brook God told
him to go to Zarephath in the region of Sidon (17:2-9) and
request food from a widow. When Elijah saw the widow
gathering sticks, he asked her for something to drink and a
piece of bread to eat (17:10-11).
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She explained to Elijah that all she had was a
“handful of flour in a jar and a little olive oil
in a jug” that was about to be used to
prepare the last supper for her and her child
before they die (17:12).
The prophet told her don’t be afraid for if she granted this
request to take care of the servant of God the “jar of flour
would not be used up and the jug of oil wound not run dry until
the day the Lord sends rain on the land” (17:13-14). What
would you say to a request from God that puts others first and
at the expense of your own
well being or that of your
family? When God asks us to
walk in faith to do something
that requires the miraculous
how many times does our
“human foolishness” get in
the way of His ways that are
so much better than our ways
(Isaiah 55:8-9)? In essence
Elijah was asking the widow
to trust in the Lord, lean not
upon her own understanding but in all ways acknowledge His
right to rule her life and He would make her paths straight
(Proverbs 3:5-6). The widow in this story gave the prophet of
God her last meal and in doing so not only did she have food to
eat every day but also when her son became ill and died Elijah
cried out to the Lord and he was raised from the dead (17:1724)! Had the widow said “NO” to the Lord’s request to feed
Elijah would she not have prepared her last meal and both her
and her son died shortly thereafter? While you are unlikely to
be asked by God to make a physical life and death decision like
this one, does not every broad path that we take in life not lead
to spiritual deadness because we have missed the mark to
please our Lord? The choices we make in life matter to God!
“Course Corrections”
When Napoleon navigated the maze at Villa Pisani he
probably felt he was going in the right direction right up until
he hit numerous dead ends and realized he had lost all sense of
direction. Life is a sea of never-ending choices and when we
feel we are the masters
of our own destiny that
is when we are
wandering away from
our Lord! A good
example of a person in
the Bible who lost their
way was Apostle Paul.
Paul was circumcised on
the eighth day, a
descendant of Abraham and of the tribe of Benjamin
(Philippians 3:5), a Roman citizen (Acts 22:25), and a Biblical
scholar trained at the feet of a well-known scholar of this day,
Gamaliel (Acts 22:3). By his own admission Paul believed he
had advanced in Judaism beyond many of his own age and was
extremely zealous for Jewish traditions (Galatians 1:14). At the
time Paul was so convinced his love to protect the temple,
Torah and traditions of his people was the right path to take that
when Christ announced entry into the kingdom of God was
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based solely on faith in a risen Savior (John 3:16) he rejected
the Son of God’s path, persecuted and tried to destroy the early
Christian church (1 Corinthians 15:9; Galatian 1:13; Philippians
3:6). For example, in trying to make his path “right” Paul went
from one Synagogue to another and if the Christians would not
blaspheme the Son of God he had them put into prison and
often casted his vote to have them put to death (Acts 26:10-11)!
It was not until he heard the words of the Lord, “Saul, Saul,
why do you persecute me,” that he repented and accepted the
Lord’s mission for his life which was ironically to preach the
Good News to the Gentile and Jewish people in the face of
them persecuting him (Acts 9)!
From Paul we learn how important it is to be
constantly listening too and allowing God to
change our goals and dreams in life. In the
maze of life’s never-ending choices, we often
get confused, turned around and are heading
for a spiritual dead end. How desperately we
need to hear the voice of the Good Shepherd
who leads and “guides us on the right paths
for His name’s sake” (Psalms 23:3).
While had Paul said “NO” to the Lord on the road to Damascus
he would likely have lived a famous, rich life as a wellrespected Pharisee, he would not have testified to kings the
Good News (Acts 9), nor would he have had the privilege of
planting so many churches or even running the race well and
receiving crowns of righteousness (1 Corinthians 9:24-27). The
choices we make in life matter to God!
“Doing a 180 Degree Turn”
With God’s help not only can we make course
corrections but can also do a full 180 degree turn! The
Chronicler tells us that when Manasseh was twelve years old,
he became king and reigned in Jerusalem for fifty years (2
Chronicles 33:1). Not only did he choose his own selfrighteous path but also one that was in complete utter defiance
of God! For instance, “he rebuilt the high places his father
Hezekiah had demolished; he also erected altars to the Baals,
made Asherah poles,
and bowed down to the
starry hosts and
worshipped them”
(33:3). If this was not
evil enough, he built
altars in the temple of
the Lord and
“sacrificed his children in the Valley of Ben Hinnom, practiced
divination and witchcraft, sought omens, and consulted
mediums and spiritists” (33:4-6). Manasseh had shed so much
innocent blood that the prophet Jeremiah stated, “he filled
Jerusalem end to end with it” (2 Kings 21:16)! To make
matters worse he not only followed the evillest path in life he
could possibly find but also “led Judah and the people astray”
to join him (2 Chronicles 33:9). Since Manasseh and his
people refused to repent God got the army commanders of the
king of Assyria to put a hook in his nose and bound with bronze
shackles he was taken as a prisoner to Babylon (33:10-11).
This was not the end of Manasseh’s story for in his distress he
humbled himself and sought greatly repentance from the Lord
(33:13). In grace and mercy God not only forgave but also
allowed Manasseh to return to Jerusalem as their king.
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Manasseh then proceeded to get rid of the foreign gods and
removed the image from the temple of the Lord (33:15).
From Manasseh we hear a stern warning that
God will not be trifled with for He is more than
capable of discipling and bringing us back
onto the right path! While we don’t dare
minimize God’s wrath in this story neither
should we ignore the wonders of redemption
and restoration! God is truly full of grace and
mercy and when we offer Him a contrite and
broken heart, He forgives our sins and places
us on the righteous path that is a sweet
fragrance, holy and pleasing unto Him.
Had Manasseh said “NO” to God’s warning would he not have
died in the Babylonian prison without having served the Lord
with righteousness?
Conclusion
We have but one life to live and the choices we make in
life truly matters to our Lord! The maze of life is filled with
never ending, unknown, almost infinite pathways that we must
navigate. We must not let life merely happen nor should we
follow the many “voices of choices” this world has to offer.
God has placed eternity in our hearts so that we might look up
and see the One who alone enables us to go on our uniquely
defined path that He has in advance prepared us to take! We
learned a lot today from people in the Bible who let the Good
Shepherd lead them. From Joshua we learned that whatever
task God asks us to do we are to humbly but with great
confidence obey Him for what God speaks, He enables and
always makes happen. From the widow we learned how
important it is to have
faith that since God’s
ways are greater and
better than our ways
when asked to serve
others at the expense of
our own well-being we
are to trust and obey His
call for our lives is
always the right choice.
From Apostle Paul we learn how important it is to make course
corrections when God asks! Like Paul we often get so
enamoured with trying to be the master’s of our own destiny
that when God asks us to take another route we defiantly refuse
and end up going against Him. And finally, from Manasseh we
learn that while God disciples those He loves He also offers
grace and mercy. Praise be to God that no matter how bad we
get lost in the labyrinth called life by making bad or even
defiant choices against our Creator, if we humble ourselves and
repent the Good Shepherd will not only forgive but find us in
the darkest, deepest pits that our choices have thrown us into
and place us once again on a sure foundation, the right path that
is truly a holy and sweet fragrance unto Him!
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