Elevation with Steven Furtick - I Know How This Story Ends
Episode Date: August 12, 2019To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: http://ele.vc/TI55jRSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Hey, this is Stephen Ferdick.
I'm the pastor of Elevation Church, and this is our podcast.
I wanted to thank you for joining us today.
Hope this inspires you.
Hope it builds your faith.
Hope it gives you perspective to see God is moving in your life.
Enjoy the message.
First Samuel chapter 17, verse 50.
Just one scripture today that I want to share with you, but it's a good one.
It says in 1 Samuel 17, verse 50,
So David triumphed over the Philistine with a sling and a stone.
Without a sword in his hand, he struck down the Philistine and killed him.
There's power in the mighty name of Jesus.
And every war he wages, he will win.
So David triumphed over the Philistine.
And I'm not backing down from any.
Giant with a sling in a stone without a sword in his hand, he struck down the Philistine
and killed him.
Would you look at your neighbor and sing my sermon title?
Tell him, I know how this story ends.
Come on tell your other neighbor, the saved one.
Tell him, I know how this story is.
Father, we thank you for your word, the power of it, and that he who began a good
work is faithful to complete it in Jesus' name. Amen. You may take your seat. God bless you.
I know how this story ends. Because Holly and I have a rule in our marriage that when she's telling me a story,
if it's a negative story, then I need her to tell me the ending before she gives me the details.
Because sometimes she tells expanded stories. You like how I said that? That was real PC how I said that.
That was really cautious how I said that.
She tells stories and puts in all the deleted scenes.
It's the director's cut.
But sometimes I just need to know when she says today was a terrible day.
I need to know how this ends.
You know, oh, how was your day?
And then she starts with breakfast, but I need to know, like, well, how much does it cost
at the end of it?
Like, you know, is it $7,000?
Or does the, do we both have to go to the kids' school this time?
or just one of us. I need to know how this ends, or I'll just get lost in the middle.
It's different when you know how it ends. If you tell me how it ends, you know, don't worry,
it's not that bad. We got it all worked out. Well, then I can follow you on all of the twist,
but I just need to know how it ends. I need to know that this is going to be all right. I need to
know that it's not fatal. I need to know that they didn't quit. You just had a bad thing.
meeting because she'll be telling me something about something at the office and she'll
want to put it.
You know, she has good storytelling technique and she's a great storyteller.
But that works against us in marital communication because I'm not looking for suspense
and drama.
I just need the bottom line.
She'd be like, oh, I had a meeting with so and so today.
It went terrible.
And I'm thinking like, were they moving back to Nebraska?
Where are their families from?
Do we have to replace them on staff?
But just tell me how it ends.
Then you can give me all the details.
Then you can tell me that eggs were on sale when you went back home on the way to the thing,
and then the thing with the thing, and then the car cut off, but then it cut back on and it's
not in the shop.
Just tell me how it ends, and then I can listen to the story.
I want to show you something real quick.
This is a picture from our summer vacation a few weeks ago, just a picture of some family
time that we had.
Yeah.
See, that's how it ended.
I don't know.
Can they see it at the campuses?
Yeah, that's how it ended.
That's how it ended with Graham smiling, with everybody breathing, Delijah making some
questionable sign with his hand.
Notice there is only one or.
There were two when we set out and embarked on this family adventure.
But it ends like this.
Thankfully for me, as I've already mentioned, I have a great wife who, when she saw us struggling
on the kayak because contrary to my knowledge, sandbars are temporary.
They don't just stay there.
The sandbar that is there one minute might be gone in 30 minutes.
There's this thing called the tides.
You'd think I would know this stuff.
You would think you would drag the kayak further than just the very edge of the sandbar
before you walked all the way out to the middle of it to have a family memory.
But thank God for my wife.
Because when she saw us struggling, when the tide came in, how many know when God gives you a great wife, when she sees you struggling, she picks up the iPhone and records it.
So check out this video she took real quick from the shore.
...to the sandbar, but the tide is coming in away.
From floating, no minutes.
And they're not even, they don't know, and they're not even worried about it.
Oh, there's Graham.
He's running.
Wait, I lost my...
That's Graham running.
So, you know, Graham said it best.
He said, when we got back and we were telling everybody what had happened, he said,
that could have ended a whole lot different.
You know, because you obviously have the leisure of laughter because you know how it ends.
I mean, well, hey, pastor, I mean, it's pretty funny, actually.
The monoculars.
you're dry now, you're not dead, because it's different when you know how it ends.
But if the man on the jet ski hadn't come by, it could have ended.
This is what Graham said.
It could have ended a whole lot different.
Or if he wouldn't have had Southern hospitality to go get by kayak and bring it back to me with his jet ski, it could have ended.
Look at somebody say, it could have ended a whole lot different.
How many know there's some things in your life that could have ended a whole lot different.
That drunk driver swerved right into your lane, but some kind of angel just pulled that
car back over.
It could have ended a whole lot different.
Come on, you know I'm right about it.
If you had got stopped by the police at the wrong time when you were in college, it could have
ended a whole lot different.
Some of us, it's not that we never did anything wrong, we just didn't get caught.
If we would have been at the wrong place, at the wrong time, it could have ended a whole
lot different.
Polish your halo if you want.
I'm going to turn to the heathen section.
This is where the heathens sit.
It could have ended.
Come on, stand up and testify.
If it could have ended, if it had not been for the Lord on my side, you better give him
praise right now before he pulls up your search history.
It could have ended a whole...
You know I'm right.
Tell somebody you know that preacher is right.
So it's funny now.
And when I read David and Goliath as my text, there's some Bible nerd sitting out there,
maybe watching online going like, really?
David and Goliath?
All the stories in the Bible.
You want to pick this one.
Oh boy.
I already know this one.
David kills Goliath
Goliath goes down
Every time you read it
I already know about the slingshot
in the stone
He had five smooth stones
But he only needed to wine
The giant king
He had a big heavy helmet
Jesse called David
Said take this bread down to your brothers
check on them and David got down there and Goliath was shouting and David heard it and David said you won no smoke
and David grabbed the sleigh and he threw a stone at the giant and the giant went down I already know how this
story ends so since you already know how it ends let me suggest something to you
David never read 1 Samuel 17 verse 50.
It's different when you know how it ends.
So we can shout, but David was shaking.
Shaking in his sandals, holding his sling, trembling, wondering how this ends, wondering, will this jet ski get my kayak?
wondering, preaching to somebody today, and you have not read 1st, Samuel 1750 yet,
about this situation in your life.
And you are still looking at a giant that is bigger than you.
And since we know how David's story ends, I want to spend just a few moments today
thinking about how it could have ended.
Because it could have ended.
a whole lot different.
Had I gone to that one school and married that other girl?
How many, no.
It could have ended a whole lot worse for Holly.
She could have missed the whole buffet.
But now think about it.
If David makes some different decisions, the story ends a whole lot different.
And see, God is writing your story right now, for your family, right now, for this season
of your life, right now.
And although we know that Goliath goes down, David has to do it in the face of uncertainty.
And yet, no matter how many sermons you hear about David defeating Goliath, you must
recognized that there were three things that David had to face before he even ever got to
Goliath. And if any of these three things had gone differently, it could have been a whole
lot different. If David had been a typical teenager, when his father came and said, you know,
he's only 17 when he kills Goliath. And if he had had a response to Jesse's instruction,
when Jesse said, I want you to run these snacks down to your brothers.
If David had rolled his eyes, you know, God, Dad.
Seriously?
I'm like a future king, Dad.
Samuel has already anointed David.
He already knows he has a great future.
But now if David refuses to be faithful in his present because he's too focused on his future,
this story ends a whole lot different.
How many you heard the story of David and Goliath?
Raise your hand.
Yeah, no, because it's even a sports analogy.
People use it in the NBA, the NFL.
It's an archetypal story.
It's so famous.
It's so wonderful.
It's so fun to preach.
I bet I've preached it 50 times, at least 50 times, in this one church.
But watch how the story could have gone.
It could have been a whole lot different.
Jesse wakes David up one morning.
He says, I got a task for you.
I want you to run this cheese and bread down to your brothers on the battle lines there in the valley of Eli
fighting with Saul. David wakes up slowly. David rolls his eyes. David checks his phone. David
posts on his Instagram story, the fake account, the one that Jesse doesn't follow. And David puts that on Instagram. God, my dad makes me sick. This is ridiculous. God, I hate my parents. I hate my life.
David goes to the battle line, but he gets there 45 minutes late. He gets there after Goliath came out to shout his usual defiance.
He didn't know Goliath was on the battle line.
You don't know what day God wants to use you.
You don't know what conversation is going to turn things around.
You don't know what moment is going to be holy.
You don't know when a bush is going to burst into flames and spontaneously combust with
the presence of God and the direction for the next step of your life.
You don't know this, but if you don't show up, watch this and do the ordinary with a good attitude.
It could have ended a whole lot different.
Do you really think they would have taught us this Bible story in Bible school, in Sunday
school, if the story went like this.
Jesse woke up, David, David got up, David went down to the battle lines with a bad attitude,
dropped off the food, threw it at his brothers, and went back home.
And yet it could have ended like that.
That could have been the very end of the story.
It could have ended a hole.
It could have ended with David.
It could have ended with David feeling slighted because he was asked to do something that
he deemed insignificant.
You know who I am?
Dad, really?
You're asking me to be a delivery boy to take this food down to my brothers?
You serious right now?
Hi, Dad.
Okay, okay, I'll go, but I'm not going to run to the battle lines and I'm not going to have my eyes open for opportunity.
Okay, I'll go, but I don't have to like it.
Okay, I'll go to church, but I'm not lifting my hands. That's what the weird people do.
Okay, I'll go, but we're leaving early. That parking lot gets crazy and I want to be at the restaurant before the Methodist church lesson.
Okay.
Could have been a whole.
Come on, work with me with a vowel sound.
It could have been a whole.
You don't even have to buy a vowel.
Just say it.
It could have been a whole lot different.
I'm David.
I'm not DoorDash.
What do you think I am?
Uber Eats.
I'm not dropping nothing off.
My name is David.
Say my name, David, King David, Crown David.
Samuel put the oil on my head, David.
It could have been a whole lot different if David had tripped over the ordinary.
So here's what I'm learning is that opportunity presents itself as ordinary.
There is not going to be, you know, I want to kill my Goliath.
I want a great breakthrough in my life.
I want to whatever.
We use Goliath to mean anything, by the way, in church, if you're new here.
Goliath can mean anything.
It can mean we want a good parking space.
It can mean we want a healing in our body.
It can mean we want to stop eating so many chips.
Goliath can mean almost anything.
In this particular instance, it means anything that opposes the purpose of God.
He was standing against the people of God opposing the purpose of God, defying the armies of the living God.
That's what Goliath was.
And it usually won't be physical.
But before David ever got to the real battle, he had to face the ordinary.
There's not going to be one conversation with your kids that is going to change their life.
is going to be picking them up and dropping them off and trying to get them to say more
than three words to you at a time that is going to change their life.
It's three words on top of three words, on top of three words, on top of three words, on top
of three words.
You are not going to take your son on one trip to Ireland and reenact Braveheart or Scotland
or wherever that overrated movie happened.
And he's going to come back shouting freedom and he's a warrior now for Jesus Christ.
It's not going to be one trip when he turned 16.
It's going to be many trips.
It's going to be many back and forth and back and forth.
And David went back and forth and back and forth and back and forth.
See, we know how the story ends.
David didn't.
He didn't even know there was a giant in the valley of Elah.
Not when he sets out that day.
And if he refuses to do the ordinary, it could have been a whole lot different.
What a boring story.
This would have been. David's dad said, go. David went, did it with a bad attitude, came home, slept for eight hours.
Could have been a whole lot different if David had been typical. So then he gets there, right?
He does the ordinary. In fact, the Bible says this is amazing. He ran to the battle lines. He left his things with the keeper of supplies. He's very responsible. He runs to the battle lines.
So he's there in position with the attitude to see the opportunity.
And when he hears Goliath shouting, see, if David goes down, like most of us go around and just gets through his day,
he's not going to be in the frame of mind to seize the opportunity.
And even when he gets there and gives the brothers, the food that he brought for them,
One of his brothers has such a bad attitude with him that the second thing that David had to deal with before he even got to the real opponent was offense.
Now, I want to show you this.
It's very powerful how some of us are fighting the wrong battle.
We are fighting a preliminary battle and missing the real one.
Because when David gets there, he's like, what's up, guys?
You know, David is at due?
He's like, hey, guys, what did I miss?
And they're like, it's nothing new, man.
This dude is nine foot two.
He keeps coming out every day and keeps saying the same thing.
He keeps telling us, send your best man, I'll kill him, and you will be our slaves.
But we can't do anything with him because, I mean, look at him.
Look how big he is.
And David is like, look how big he is.
One country preacher said this.
He said, the rest of the army saw Goliath and said he's too big to kill.
David looked at Goliath and said he's too big to miss.
I wonder what's your perspective today.
I'm preaching for 15 people.
God said this challenge in front of you is an indication of the power within you.
David's like, so what do I get if I kill him?
It's like, well, Saul said, like at first he was like, does anybody want to fight him?
But it's been 40 days now.
And so Saul keeps upping the ante like the airlines do when they got to overbook flight, you know.
We need two volunteers from the country.
kindness of your heart to give up your seat.
We need two volunteers.
We'll give you $200.
We'll give you $500.
We need two volunteers.
We'll give you $1,000 voucher for travel.
The more desperate they get, the more the reward becomes.
Now, you can only use the $1,000 every 17 Thanksgiving on this voucher, and blackout
dates apply.
But now Saul has gotten so desperate.
He got to the point where he says, look, I'll give you my daughter in marriage, the hot
one and you don't have to pay taxes. So David's like, for real now? Somebody verified this. Now
here's the difference. Here's the difference. It could have been a whole lot different,
but David hadn't been out there 40 days and he hadn't gotten used to the dysfunction.
And he hadn't got used to stand in there defeated in a dead block. And so he comes up and to
them, Goliath just sounds normal. But to David, it sounds different. Wait a minute. He's not
supposed to talk like that. You know you can get comfortable in your dysfunction when you've
been in it long enough? When all your sick friends are lying around in five covered
colonnades, it can be easy for you to start making excuses. David was like, hold on. So he said,
what about God? And I get, what if I kill him? I love this, though, because this is what
always happens when God is trying to do something in your life. The enemy will always
present another enemy that is not the real enemy to keep you distracted from fighting the
one that you're called to defeat.
In David's case, it was his brother, his big brother.
His name kind of sounds like Goliath, but it's not Eliab.
He was tall.
For a minute, Samuel thought he was supposed to be the king, because Saul was tall, and
Samuel saw in Eliab what he had seen in Saul, which is height.
not heart. And God said, don't look at his height, look at his heart. Stop judging your
situation externally. It's what's inside that counts. It's what's inside that counts.
And Eliy starts judging David's motives. He's like, look at this in verse 28. He goes,
why have you come down here? And with whom did you leave those few sheep? Now, all of these
things David had taken care of. He's a very responsible young man. But really what's happening
here is I believe the enemy is trying to trigger David to get him to fight the wrong person.
Because watch, if he stands here and argues with his brother, he will never even see
his enemy. This might be the whole sermon for somebody. Now just look straight ahead if you're
Mary. Sometimes you're fighting against what you're supposed to be fighting for. And you have to call
a time out sometimes. You have to sometimes be like, wait a minute, you're not my enemy.
Wait a minute. You're not who I'm supposed to be fighting. And if David gets caught up fighting
Eliop, he never sees Goliath. If he gets distracted, some of us are defeated simply because we're
distracted. Now, you know how the story ends, but think about how it could have ended. David, for the next two hours, defends himself to Eliom. I was the other day checking on some Instagram post, seeing if they were touching people's lives. I would like to say that I always do it with a pure heart, but sometimes I'll scroll to look for people who say mean things to me. And that's a dysfunction, and I'm not saved all the way yet. I am saved, I was saved, I'm being saved. This is the part this is
progress. Sometimes I'd just like to imagine the response I could say. You know what the Spirit
Lord told me the other day? First of all, is one out of 300 people who say something negative.
That's number one. Number two, if you would invest a fraction of the energy into blessing people
that you put into defending yourself, you would be Mother Teresa. You would be St. Paul.
You could change the world if you would stop trying to defend yourself. And I'm coming right for you
because some of us trip over an offense, and so we never defeat the real opponent because we stand and argue with Eliob and we never even get to Goliath.
You that's so powerful? It could have had a whole different ending. It could have been a whole lot different.
And I bet Jackie wouldn't have taught me that Bible story in Sunday school if David had stood there and argued with Eliab.
Now, here's the thing that's practical about this.
Some of you are fighting Eliyb today.
And because you're fighting Eliyip, Goliath continues to go unchallenged in your life.
You know you're fighting Eliy up if you're still blaming people.
David did this move that I want to learn how to do when I realize I'm fighting the wrong
enemy.
When I realize I'm fighting something outside, when I really need to be dealing with something inside.
I realize I'm trying to control how other people are versus trying to have self-control
the fruit of the spirit for myself.
This is a word today.
This is a word today.
It said that David did something very strategic, and this is like the turning point of the story.
It said in verse 30 that when Eliab was going back and forth in David, David hit him real
quick with an insult just to let him know I'm not a punk.
And then after he said what he had to say, watch what he did.
David turned and asked somebody.
else. And watch this. When he turns away from Eliob, it positions him to face Goliath.
So whoever is for, you'll never even get to Goliath. You will never even get to the insecurity
that is causing the issue if you keep blaming the people who are bringing it out for you to look at.
Eliab wasn't the giant. Eliab wasn't the enemy. Eliab was his brother that he was supposed to fight for.
So now we've watched David two different alternate endings.
If he argues with Eliyip, then he misses Goliath.
If he doesn't obey his father in a simple thing, then he misses Goliath.
It could have.
Graham was so prophetic.
He said, it could have ended a whole lot different.
I was so mad at my mom for forgiving my dad.
I didn't think he deserved it.
What would that funeral have been like if she had listened to me rather than listening to God?
If we weren't even on speaking terms when he died.
It could have ended up.
And I only bring it up because every story in this room is still being written.
And sometimes you think you know how it ends.
But what if it's not over yet?
What if it's not over yet?
I'm going to preach it through that little facade that you have right now.
What if it's not over yet?
What if you've wasted a lot of time?
What if God really is able to redeem the years that the locusts have eaten?
What if it's not over yet?
I'm just posing a question.
What if it's not over yet?
What if your best days are not behind you?
What if the devil is a liar?
What if everything that you have been through can serve a greater purpose?
What if a generational curse was being broken through your battle?
What if God brought you to the valley of Elah?
He's the God of a turnaround, the God of a second chance, the God of a new beginning, and the God of a new ending.
Mary and Martha said, I know how this story is.
But one thing they didn't know is that Jesus doesn't provide resurrection.
He is resurrection.
So if he's on the scene, watch this.
When David showed up, he said, I come against you in the name of the Lord.
One more thing I got to show you.
Y'all, calm down.
The Bible study.
Not a football game.
It's not a basketball game.
There's nothing to be excited about in here.
It's not like the blood of Jesus is enough for you.
It's not like depression is defeated.
It's not like the devil has to back up when you call on the name of your God.
It's not like worship can push back darkness.
It's not like praise can break change.
You know, sit down.
Because now he has to go through Saul, the one that should.
have been celebrating him, the one that should have been supporting him.
David kills Goliath.
Stop being so boring when you read the Bible.
The Bible's boring.
You're boring.
Read it better.
This thing could have had so many endings.
It could have ended when David had a bad attitude toward the ordinary.
It could have ended when David was fighting against who he was supposed to be fighting
for.
He could have got offended.
It could have ended with ordinary.
It could have ended with offense.
And it could have ended with only.
Do you know only?
The spirit of lack and limitation?
Do you know only what Saul said to David?
David was like showing Saul his resume.
He was like, I'm pretty good at beating stuff that's bigger than me.
I beat a lion one time.
I beat a bear.
Put me in, coach.
And Saul said you're only a boy.
I wonder what's your only in your own mind.
Remember, Saul wasn't the enemy. Saul was supposed to be a friend.
You ever have something inside of you turn on you?
You're only.
I had it this week.
I was thinking that I'm just a preacher.
Because I was thinking how really influencing culture is done through rappers and fashion and others.
And I was thinking about changing a generation, and I felt discouraged about it.
Like, I'm only a preacher.
But there's this one verse that always comes up when I think that way.
And God told Jeremiah one time, he said, do not say I am only.
While I was thinking about that, I know this isn't exactly what the text means, but I was
thinking how God's name is I am.
So when you say I am only and you're supposed to take God's name, you mess up the name
that he gave you by diminishing it in your own sight, I am only.
Do not say I am only.
Do not say I am only.
I'm only a boy.
But David said, no, no, no.
I've never faced this giant before.
Get ready to shout.
But I brought the same God to this valley that I brought to the last valley.
Because the only reason I'm preaching it is because you're standing in front of something
right now.
You've never seen this before.
But David said, here's the common pattern I've noticed, okay?
I dropped the lion.
I dropped the bear.
It only stands to reason that if the lion didn't stand a chance, if the bear didn't stand a chance,
because they opposed my father's business.
If this giant opposes the purpose of God, I predict an upset victory over everything
in your life that is bigger than you that opposes the purpose of God.
God within you. Come on, he's the God of a turnaround.
So I know, somebody shout, I know how this story ends.
Because I know who wrote it.
The author and the perfector of my faith.
She looked at me last weekend on our date night and this movie was going to have a nice ending,
but then she remembered that the writer of this particular movie is noted for everybody dying.
in the end. And she looked at me. Now, I want you to get this when I say it, okay? She said,
it can't be over. I just remembered who wrote it. Come on. You know it's a word for you. You know
there's some things because we tell ourselves these stories. But if God wrote it, it's not over
until we win. It's not over until the light overcomes the darkness. Come on, Nairobi. It's not
It could have been a whole different story.
And I want to suggest that maybe it still can be, because I know in church we talk a lot about new beginnings.
What about new endings?
What about putting two more periods behind that one that you thought ended the sentence and making it an ellipses?
What about new endings?
What about to be continued?
What about the third day?
What about Sunday morning?
What about Jesus?
I know how the story ends.
So when I see him on the cross, I'm not worried.
The disciples didn't know that.
This is the challenge to know how the story ends, even when you don't know how it's going to get there.
It might not be a straight line.
It might not be perfect.
It might not look like somebody else's situation.
You get in the worst trouble of your life trying to wear Saul's armor, trying to fight like everybody else fights.
Yours might be messier.
Can I say something for somebody that God put on my heart?
Yours might look laughable.
I'm only high school educated. Good. God's going to get that much more glory because you didn't have a college degree.
Now when people look at you, they're going to have to know it had to be God. I know your GPA. It had to be God.
God's purpose advances. I know your GPA. You weren't smart enough, good enough, pretty enough. You didn't pray enough. You didn't do the right things. It could have been a whole different story. But the grace of God stepped in.
in the dick of time. Spoiler alert, Goliath goes down. Twist, Goliath goes down. And guess what?
That's not how the story ends. I'm sorry. I know it looks great on the flannel graph.
David's awfully cute with a slingshot, especially when it's one that you pull back, you know?
Like it's a spitball, like it's God's, like it's a spirit, spiritual spitball, boom. You know, I know. I know.
No, it's the cartoon version.
Here's the grown-up version.
You ready?
David never read 1 Samuel 1750.
Most of us never read 1 Samuel 1751.
All apologies to all the children's Bible teachers.
But you don't really know how the story ended.
Because David, when he hit Goliath with the rock, it stunned him.
But then David had something else that he had to do.
In the spirit of mortal combat, look at your neighbor and say, finish him.
The Bible says that after he knocked him down, because some of us are content just to stun
our enemy.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Just to come into church, feel good for a few hours, get a little word, go home, forget
about it, go right back into the same stuff, go right back into the same cycle, go right back
into the same deadlock, go right back into the same pretending, go right back into the same
image.
But David said something, he said something, he said something, he said, I didn't just come down
here to bring cheese and bread. See, I always thought that David was the delivery boy. But it
turns out that the way the story ends, David wasn't the delivery boy. Goliath was.
So now, I'm going to preach us home. You ready? What did Goliath have that David needed
that David didn't know that he would need? It's right in verse 50. It's right in verse 50.
It said he came to the battle without a sword in his hand.
Spoiler alert, he left with one.
Who was carrying it?
His enemy.
I declare, come on, y'all, I'm trying to be good.
But I declare, and if you want to see the victory,
you're going to have to defeat what's standing in front of you,
but you don't have to do it on your own.
Come on, let's stir something out.
All over the whole church, University City, Blakening.
I want every single warrior, every single worshiper to declare.
I know how this story is.
Tell the person next to you.
I know how your story is.
Tell them your story.
It ends with glory.
God's going to get the glory out of every situation in your life.
I know how it ends.
Some jet ski is going to bring me the kayak.
I don't know who God's got in the water.
But even now somehow.
The sister said to Jesus, God will give you what you want.
So David stands over the giant.
I always read it as being the final sequence in the battle that after he knocked him down,
he looked at the verse.
He took the sword from the scabbard.
Anybody ever said scabbard in the last 10 years?
He took the sword.
Little things like that keep me preaching, you know.
He killed him. He's already dead. He cut off his head. Why'd he do it? For a trophy? Because this wouldn't be his last giant.
Now, I always thought that the story was over when David cut off his head. How much more savage can you be? The head is off. The giant's down.
But that's not how the story ends. See, we only think we know how it ends. You tell you,
story, you're like, and then I got a divorce. That's not the end of your story. That's not the
last time you can love or be loved. That's not the end of your story. You know, they were doing
pretty good and then they did this. That's not the end of the story. That's just character
development. It can't be over because I know who wrote it. I said, it can't be over because I know
who wrote it. It's not the end of my story. I know how this story is. I know how I'm leaving
this battlefield, I'm not leaving empty hand. I'm leaving with a sword. I'm leaving with a lesson.
I'm leaving with a testimony. I'm leaving with a brighter day on my mind. I'm leaving with a
new praise in my spirit. I'm leaving with a prophecy. I'm leaving with a word from God.
You know, what's so crazy is that the whole point of the story has nothing to do with David to begin
with? It says that after Goliath died, that all of the Philistines, do you see it, when they saw that
their hero was dead, they turned and ran.
Your story is not even about you.
What you're going through right now might not even be about you.
You know how many people I've seen come out of grief
and release their greatest gift from their greatest grief?
Goliath has got your sword.
Goliath has got your sword.
You're going to be sitting across from somebody who needs it in five years
and telling them, I've been right there in the battle,
but here's what I found out.
The sword that came to kill you is going to be the one that God uses to deliver you.
And he killed Goliath with his own sword.
Your giant has got your sword.
But that's not how the story ends.
It cuts off his hand.
Sends the sword to the temple at Knob, which was where a Himalek was a superintendent.
A little while later, David goes back.
to Saul's palace, Saul starts going absolutely crazy trying to kill David.
David has to run from Saul.
Remember now, Goliath was not the last giant that David would face.
You don't want to stay stuck in just one victory of your life.
The Bible says he leads us from glory to glory, from strength to strength.
up. I'm trying to close. I'm trying so hard. Don't leave, but stand up and clap your hands
if you know. This is not my last one. This is not my last victory. I come against midlife
crisis in the name of the Lord. There's more for you to do. You have a legacy to pass on.
You're going to make a bigger difference in your future days. Your latter days shall be greater.
Okay, hang on a second. So David runs down to the temple, right? He's running from Saul. He's already
of Goliath and he has the leap so quickly that he doesn't have a sword.
He runs to the temple attendant.
He says, hey man, I need a weapon.
How many of you need a weapon to fight something in your life today?
You need a strategy.
You need an insight.
Come on.
You need a breakthrough.
You need a turn.
David said to him, I'm like, don't you have a spear or a sword here?
I haven't brought my sword or any other weapon because the king's business was urgent.
He said, man, I'm sorry, David.
I mean, I got one sword.
It's the sword of Goliath, the Philistine.
At least it used to be until you killed him.
But now the very weapon that you took from your enemy, the very strength you gained from
the thing you survived, the sword of Goliath, the word that God spoke over your life.
How many know his word is a sword?
It's sharper than any double-edged sword.
Hebrews 412.
The sword of Goliath, who you killed in the valley of Elah is here, is wrapped in a cloth
behind the Ephi.
If you want it, take it, there is no sword here but that one.
And David said, there's none like it.
Give it to me.
He started with a sling.
He ended with a sword.
And the difference was the enemy that he was willing to confront.
Now, I don't know exactly how this story is going to take, and I don't know all the details of it,
but I know how this story is.
We got the drop on David.
We read verse 50.
We got the drop on David.
We've been to the empty tomb.
We got the drop on, David.
We know how this story ends.
I know that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy.
Do you hear me preaching to you right there in your living room?
Do you hear me preaching to you right there in your kitchen?
You hear me preaching to you.
You're in a hospital room with a loved one right now.
But the God of all healing, Jehovah Rafika, is in the hospital room with you.
I know how this story.
I know.
No weapon that is formed against me shall prosper.
Now the Bible doesn't say that the weapon won't be formed.
It just says that it won't work.
So watch this.
The weapon was formed by my enemy.
Isaiah 54-17 is on the screen.
Right now the weapon was formed by the hand of my enemy.
What you're going through, it might not have been from the hand of God.
But you've got to read verse 16.
to understand verse 17, because verse 16, God says,
Behold, I have created the blacksmith who made the weapon.
So God said, the enemy might have formed the weapon,
but I formed the enemy.
And there is nothing that that enemy can bring against you.
Because I'm not in addition.
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