Elevation with Steven Furtick - The Glitch That Keeps On Giving
Episode Date: February 20, 2026Do I have what it takes? In “The Glitch That Keeps On Giving,” Pastor Steven Furtick of Elevation Church shows how God can work through the flaws we notice most and reveals that the weakne...sses we fear might be the very places His strength shows up the clearest.See 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.
2nd Corinthians chapter 10, verse 7 through 12.
The Apostle Paul wants to tell you something.
He has some expert advice for you.
on how to deal with this question.
And here's the question.
You ready?
This is the question every man, woman, boy and girl in the room is asking.
And you've been asking it your whole life in different ways with different amounts of money
in your bank account and different color hair on your head and different numbers on the scale
when you step on it and different places that you've lived and different jobs you've had.
You've been asking this question your whole life.
Do I have what it takes?
Do I have what it takes?
Well, Paul has a way of dealing with this question that I thought would be helpful for us today.
Let's read together 2 Corinthians chapter 10 verse 7.
He says, your first problem is this, you are judging by appearances.
He said, if anyone is confident that they belong to Christ, they should consider again that we belong to Christ just as much as they do.
Touch somebody say, you're not better than me.
So even if I boast, what are you arguing about it?
It was just one line.
Get back on the scriptures.
So even if I boast somewhat freely about the authority the Lord gave us from building you
up rather than tearing you down, motives are important.
I will not be ashamed of it.
I do not want to seem to be trying to frighten you with my letters.
For some say his letters are weighty and forceful, but in person he is unimpressive and
His speaking amounts to nothing.
Such people shall realize that what we are in our letters when we are absent, we will
be in our actions when we are present.
In other words, Paul says, I'm about to back it up.
I don't just talk big.
Because, verse 12, we'll stop here, we do not dare to classify or compare ourselves with some
who commend themselves when they measure themselves by themselves and compare themselves
with themselves, they are not wise.
Wait, I'm confused.
I thought we were reading the Bible.
This sounds like it could be a relevant Facebook post.
People say the Bible is outdated.
That sounds like a pretty good word for 2016 to me.
Comparison and competition, self-commendation.
He said it's not wise.
Well, where I really want to focus is verse 10, so let me read that again.
And Paul says, there are some who are saying that my letters are weighty and forceful,
but in person I'm unimpressive and that my speaking amounts to nothing.
So I want to speak to you today from this subject.
I want to talk about the glitch that keeps on giving.
the glitch that keeps on giving.
And let's pray one more time.
Father, open our hearts, our ears, our minds, and most importantly, what we learn today,
we're going to need the courage to put it into practice and the application to know what that means.
So do it in Jesus' name.
Amen.
Touch your neighbor, say you've got a glitch on your way down to your seat.
You got a glitch.
Amen.
Thank you.
I don't need anything right now, but just in case.
Yeah.
Okay.
I feel like I might get to preach it in a minute.
That's what I'm trying to say.
So, just stay right there.
Well, I want to give you a list of all the movies that have made me cry.
I went back through my life, and I thought about the first movie that made me cry.
It was called Follow That Bird.
Very emotional experience to me to see Big Bird ostracized and alienated, trying to find his way back home.
Second movie that made me cry, and I maybe should have reconciled this list with my mom's memory,
but I remember crying for this movie called Harry and the Henderson's.
Harry and the Henderson's.
When they were slapping Harry, and I know it's for his own.
good, but it just couldn't take that.
Then, you know, you mature a little bit in life, and it takes more, you know, you develop
emotionally and stuff, so that kind of stuff doesn't make you cry anymore.
Then the movies that make you cry change.
And so the next movie that made me cry, of course, was Rocky 2, followed by Rocky 3 and
Rocky 4 while we're at it.
And a movie that still makes me cry every time I watch it to this day.
And if this movie does not make you cry, I question your compassion and your Christianity.
In fact, I question your humanity and your humanity and your ability.
to feel at all. I think you might be a sociopath. If you can watch the movie Rudy and not cry or at least have a lip quiver, I don't know if you have any passion. I don't know if there's any reason for God to leave you on this earth. And I think you're probably going to go to hell when you leave this place. So it gets me every time. It was a sunny afternoon, Saturday afternoon, when normally I would be heading in to prepare for church. But I had a guest speaker and it afforded me the rare privilege and opportunity to take my two sons.
sons to see a movie. And I was not expecting that day to be wrecked by the movie Wrecked
Ralph. But it happened. When they put that girl on the screen called Vanelope and she was
stuck in a video game where they were supposed to race but she couldn't race. And they called
her Glitch Girl because there was something wrong with her programming and pixelation.
And so she wanted to race, but she couldn't race. And it was a little bit.
was because of her glitch, and the movie kind of takes a few turns.
And at one point in the movie, I was watching Glitch Girl Glitch, and she wanted to race,
and I started crying in the movie, and I told Grimm, shut up!
When he asked me, are you crying, Daddy?
And it just got me thinking about all the ways that my glitches have caused me to miss God in my life,
and thinking about how many people would go further, faster, if they knew how to deal with their glitch.
Just reminds your neighbor again.
They're not going to be offended because I made you say it.
Just remind them one more time you've got a glitch.
Just make sure that they're well aware of that fact.
Well, now, I didn't say give him a whole paragraph of evidence.
We preach things sometimes that are easy to accept,
but a little bit harder to apply.
And I understand that writing this book,
how God uses broken people to do big things,
is two parts. One is just convincing you that God uses broken people to do big things.
I bet you don't believe that to the level that you should. And all the efforts that we've made
to convince you, but sometimes they fall short. And we can tell you all the Bible characters.
I'm trying to pull this thing up, just one that I found online, how God doesn't pick the
ideal candidates for the offices that he appoints him to. And, um,
And one guy put it online.
I've seen this before.
Maybe you have, but he went through a list.
He said, you know, Noah was a drunk.
Abraham was too old.
Isaac was a daydreamer.
Jacob was a liar.
Leah wasn't very good looking.
Joseph was abused.
Moses had a stuttering problem.
Gideon was afraid.
Samson had long hair.
We all know God can't use you with long hair tattoos.
Rahab was a prostitute.
Jeremiah and Timothy were too young. David had an affair and was a murderer. Elijah was suicidal. Isaiah preached naked. You know, I've done a lot of things to get attention. I'm going to skip that. Point at the stage somebody and say, miss me with that, Pastor Stephen. I don't know. God told him to.
Jonah ran from God. Naomi was a widow. Job went through bankruptcy. Peter denied Christ. The disciples fell asleep while praying.
Martha worried about everything.
The Samaritan woman was divorced more than once.
Zacchaeus was too short.
Timothy had an ulcer and Lazarus was dead.
Now touch your other neighbor and say, what's your excuse?
The question isn't, can God use broken people to do big things?
I wonder would you put my book title up, not my sermon title, my book title up one more
time.
Just so you can see, I want to focus for week one on this one word, how God uses, how God
uses. And I want to talk about how he does that. And of course, we could have no better consultant
than Paul. I didn't put him in the list that I read because Paul is more known for his gifts.
It was very gifted. Paul was very gifted. We know he was gifted because God chose him of all
people to take the gospel to the Gentiles. And he was the first one to take it beyond the
original Jewish converts along with Barnabas. He was very gifted. Paul was very gifted in debate
and in reasoning as well as philosophy because he had studied under Gamalio. Gamalio was a part of
the Jewish Sanhedron and he was known as a guru. So Paul had that kind of pedigree. Added to the
fact that he was a Roman citizen which gave him entree and prestige into places that common people
could not go. Makes sense God would choose them then to preach in Europe and in northern Africa
and parts of Asia, and to establish churches in the most strategic cities of his day.
So we see him in Rome and we see him in Athens, and we see him establishing churches in
Philippi and Galatia and Ephesus, and Corinth, just to name a few.
But in 2 Corinthians, we watch him writing back to the church at Corinth, and he's having to do
something that you would never imagine Paul would have to do at this stage of his life and ministry,
considering his accomplishments, he's having to defend his credentials.
How could a man that learned and how could a man whose life had meant so much to so many
find himself in a spot where he's having to defend his credentials?
In fact, I don't take it as much of a dilemma as I do as an encouragement to know that even Paul, at this point in his ministry,
was still answering the question, do you have what it takes?
I put that out there because if you thought that question was going to go away when you hit 40 and it didn't.
If you thought that question was going to go away when you graduated high school and it did it.
If you thought that question was going to go away when you got married and it didn't.
If you thought that question was going to go away when you first started making six figures and it did it.
If you thought that question was going to go away when you finally,
prove to your ex that you could get somebody to and it did it.
Paul is at the pinnacle of his ministry effectiveness and he's still dealing with people
who are calling him unqualified.
And so he deals with this question and he confronts this challenge because what he has to
do in his life is too important for him to leave these issues unconfronted.
Now I want to say that over your life today, whether you believe you believe you.
believe it or not, that what God has purposed for you to accomplish is too important for you to
leave your issues unconfronted. Touch somebody say confront it. Sometimes you've got to take a
stand for what you know God has called you to do. And sometimes that means standing against what
others say. And sometimes that means taking a stand within yourself against yourself.
Paul said, you can't strip me of my credentials. You can't take away from me what I know
God is placed on me. I'm confident of it. He said, and the reason that you're getting into trouble,
and the reason that you come to the conclusion that you don't have what it takes, and the reason
that you are spending so much time trying to impress people is because you are judging by appearances.
There it is. That's the number one problem with our world today, I think. That's the number one
reason we get ourselves in trouble, and that's the number one reason that potential is unfulfilled,
because we judge by appearances.
But touch your neighbor and say, there's more to me than what you see.
Turn to her and tell her, there's more to me than what you see.
So don't judge me by what you see on the surface.
Don't judge me by what I look like right now.
That's what Paul was saying to these super apostles.
They had permeated and pervaded the Corinthian Church that he had established,
and now they were claiming superiority over him
and threatening to undermine the work that he had established.
He wrote back to the church, and he said,
you need to take another look.
I wonder how many things in our lives would look differently
if we look beneath the surface.
That's it, beneath the surface.
If you got past your first impressions,
I want to preach a sermon one day,
and I may preach it next week, and I may preach it in three years.
I want to call it the estimation game.
And I hadn't quite figured out everything I'll put in it yet, but it's just this idea that most of us vacillate between wildly overestimating what we can do without God and underestimating what we could do with him.
Because we look at it at the surface.
And just in honor of the sermon that I may preach one day, I just want to give a little illustration or something like that.
I want to play a little game with somebody right over here and play it with him.
I like his hat.
Yeah, come on over, man.
Why not?
Just a little game.
You know I like to do stuff like this to keep people from falling asleep during the sermon,
but I got some money.
You like money?
A little money.
I'm a short right here for everybody to see.
Got a little roll, got a little something.
Not much, but if you can guess how much it is, I'll give it to you.
You want to feel it?
You want to hold it?
He said something.
He said something.
He said something.
I've done this in all the other worship experiences.
But for adorable, he's the first one that did what he was supposed to do.
He did what he was supposed to do.
He said, I see blue under there, so I know there are some hundreds in the roll.
I don't know what you do recreationally to make money.
But touch somebody and say, look beneath the surface.
He got it right.
If you judge this stack by what you see on the surface, you are going to underestimate.
But if you peel back and look, come on, I'm preaching and you don't even realize it.
If you peel it back, you're going to see that there's more to the stack than you can
see on the surface.
That's my message.
I wanted to let you know.
You video it?
I preach to your iPhone.
I don't mind.
There's more to the stack than you can see on the surface.
somebody and say, I got layers. I got layers. And what you see is not all there is to me.
And what I see in the mirror is not indicative of my ministry, of my life, of my potential.
Take another look at me.
Take a look at me now.
Something's happening beneath the surface. I'm kind of struggling right now. I'm trying to get
some stuff in order, but there's something inside of me than is greater. What I'm
wrapped with is not indicative of what I'm made of. There's something.
There's more inside of me.
And if you notice, I walked away from him before he could guess the amount because I was
scared he was onto something.
That's why the devil's been fighting you because he knows you're on to something.
You're starting to see yourself in a new life.
You're starting to see yourself in a divine divin.
I see them.
So look beneath the surface, and it will give you confidence when you do.
Confidence.
That's what we're all trying to project into the world, but often we're trying to project something
that we don't possess.
to me. Often we're trying to project a confidence that we don't possess because we see our
cracks. But Paul said that if you're confident that you belong to Christ, you should consider
that I belong just as much as anybody. Now, I want to make an announcement, and this is in
the book, and I'm going to say it right now, and I'm going to say it to everybody who ever
felt like you couldn't come to church because of your conflicts. I want to say to everybody
who ever felt like you didn't fit in a church because everybody was so pretty and so perfumed.
I want to say it to everybody who has ever come to church.
felt like that the presence of God is the last place you should be because of what your clothes
smell like, because of who you've been hanging out with.
I want to say to everybody who came into church with a religious pretense that is much more
impressive than your actual performance.
I want to say to everybody who feels like there's two.
There are no second-class citizens in the kingdom of God.
It took the same blood and the same beating of the same Savior to get me in that it took
to get you in, so I'm confident.
It's believing that I belong.
Watch this.
True confidence is a byproduct of belonging.
True confidence is a byproduct of belonging.
True confidence.
The kind that'll just run up in my green room between the 930 and 1130 and barge in and
say, Daddy, can I get a Sprite zero?
The only person bold enough to run up in my room and ask
a question like that is my 10-year-old who knows that he belongs to me. Do you know that the Bible
says that you can come to the throne room boldly and look for grace in your time of need?
But you don't pray like this. You keep associating your confidence with your conflicts.
And so because you're conflicted and because you're cracked and because you're screwed up
beneath the surface and you know it, you don't come to God boldly. You don't run up and
get in his face and tell him that you need him on the level that you really need him.
You don't walk with your head held high like somebody who has been redeemed.
But the moment that you realize, you know what, I belong here.
I belong here.
I belong here.
Not necessarily because of my behavior, but my admission price was purchased.
This does not speak well in a statement.
self-help orient in culture because I believe in helping yourself, but I also believe that
there are sometimes when you can't.
And so the essence of church needs to be restated.
We've made the church so much like a country club that it's a wonder they let us keep our
tax-exempt status.
Do you know what I mean?
We've made the church so exclusive.
We've made the church such a place that you have to become something in order to belong
somewhere. That might be church, but that's not the gospel. The gospel is not you can belong
when you become. The gospel is you belong so you can become. Because nothing will change you
like realizing that I have a father. Nothing will change you like realizing before I ever take my
first breath he loves me. Nothing will change you like realizing I belong here. Shake
Three people tell him, I belong here.
I belong here.
He purchased my right to be here.
He gave me access into his throne room, and nobody can strip my credentials because nobody
gave them to me but Christ.
I belong here.
I belong here.
That's the greatest sensation I feel, you know, everywhere that God puts me, is giving
me opportunities, but I never feel like I belong.
I never feel every week, every week when I walk up on the stage, I wonder, when are they going to
stop handing the mic to the wrong guy. Where are they going to find the real qualified preacher?
I'm looking around for him because I know there's somebody out here with superior qualifications
to me. I know. I know me. I know my cracks. I know my glitches. And in case I don't,
there's people always to remind me. Do you know how I came up with the title for this book?
If you do, just pretend like you don't, because I'm going to tell you again.
Now, I wish I could say I went on a prayer retreat to the Smoky Mountains,
and the clouds formed the shape of the parentheses.
But what actually happened, I was on YouTube.
Right.
I was getting ready to preach on a Saturday, and I put on YouTube,
because I like that background noise, so I don't have to be alone with myself.
That was honest.
That was raw.
It was kind of slipped out.
And I had it on a preacher, right?
And you know how YouTube will take an algorithm and recommend something for you to watch next?
The little sidebar thing, you know.
I figured, hey, I may as well trust in the sovereignty of YouTube.
So they recommended this video up to me next.
These people are professionals.
These people know my habits.
These people are acquainted with my desires.
So it said that there was one I should watch next.
So I watched it next.
And it was a theologian.
This theologian is very well known, very well respected.
He was doing like a pastor's conference, and he was doing some question and answer.
So I put it on the the theologian, and I kind of walked out of the room.
And then I heard him call my name.
They were doing a lightning round where the interviewer was asking the theologian.
Now, this guy is famous.
I didn't know he knew who I was.
When they said my name and asked him what he thought about me, I thought he would say who?
That's what I was expecting.
Because I read this guy's book, or I should say, I was assigned this guy's book.
to read in seminary.
And I told you I wasn't qualified.
Come take the mic, anybody.
Well, they said, Stephen Ferdit.
They were going through names.
What do you think about this and what do you think about that?
Stephen Furtt.
You know how kind of, when you hear, over here somebody talking about you makes you feel important.
You know, so I ran back in and said, my name.
I said my name.
I made it now.
And he said, Stephen Furtt, well, the the theologian, I should show you the clip,
but I don't want you to see who he is because some of you, when you hear what he said about me,
if I told you who he was, you're not saved enough.
I'm serious.
My mom has thought about cutting his brake cables in his car, but I told her not to do that.
She's not as Christian as me.
They said, Stephen Ferdick, and he goes, his body language said it all.
He goes, he drops his head, he slums his shoulder, and he exhales as if the mere consideration of my name
was so wearisome to the great man's theological brain that he could not bear the burden.
It was like he was flushing out the toxins of hearing my name, just, and the crowd chuckled.
And he summarized my whole ministry, which is interesting because I never met him.
You are judging by appearances.
Summarized my whole minister with one word.
And I guess by now, I don't need to tell you what that word was, because it became the title of my book.
Stephen Ferdin.
And he said it so serious, too.
He said it so serious.
He said, unqualified.
It sounded like a gavel in Texas, a death penalty case.
Unqualified.
Now, there would have been a time where that word would have triggered some words in my mind
that would make unqualified sound like a Valentine's Day card.
I was surprised at my reaction.
I started laughing.
If you only knew.
You know what I thought?
Thank you, doctor.
Thank you, sir, for...
I almost slipped.
I thought, thank you.
Oh, by the way, you know what I did this week, y'all?
I signed him a copy of the book and sent it to him with a skinny red tie.
I just wanted to thank him for the reminder for saying what I felt my whole life.
And now that we've got that out of the way, let's have church.
Own it.
Does somebody say, own it?
Own it.
Yeah, I'm unqualified.
Yeah, I feel stupid sometimes.
Yeah, I feel inadequate from time to time.
Yeah, I'm not where I'm going to be, but I'm not where I used to be.
Yeah, I got some cracks, but I'm also called.
Yeah, I got some weakness, but I also got some strength.
As a matter of fact, call me unqualified.
It puts me in some pretty good company.
Abraham, Moses, Jacob, Joseph, Rehab, David, Paul, Peter.
Reach over to your neighbor and tell him, join the club.
Club unqualified.
Club dysfunctional.
Club screwed up.
Club, I lose my mind sometimes.
Club tempted.
Club unsure.
Club insecure.
Club, I'm not quite there yet.
Club, please be patient.
I'm a work in progress.
Join the club.
Where is my unqualified club?
Membership is free.
All you got to do is coming on your knees.
Paul had a great gift, but he's
But he still had to defend his credentials.
And the way he defends them is funny to me.
Because if you want to defend yourself, you know, you put up a front, but he gets real honest and real raw, real honest, and real raw.
And he's hurt.
And I can tell that he's hurt because he starts talking about his letters versus his speaking.
He said that some of you, verse 10, are saying that my letters are better than my preaching.
Did you read the verse?
Look at it with me.
For some say, you're always going to have those voices.
They're never going to go away.
If Paul had people saying it, you're going to have people saying it.
And by the way, most of us don't need YouTube to inform us that we're unqualified.
We have a little chatterbox that's alive and well.
reminding us of the fact.
So, he said, I know that some of you are comparing my letters to my speech.
For some say, his letters are weighty and forceful, but in person he is unimpressive,
unworthy, unskilled, untrained.
I know he wrestled with it because he mentions it again in the next chapter.
In 2 Corinthians, chapter 11, verses 5 and 6, he starts talking about, I may not be,
trained as a speaker. I know I'm not trained as a speaker, but I have knowledge. Now, you don't
talk like this unless you're wrestling with it. If you're a Christian for very long, you're eventually
going to have somebody ask you this question, and it's kind of a funny question, but they'll ask
this something we do as Christians. We say, when you get to heaven, who do you want to see first?
Now, when they ask you that, the first thing you've got to say, I want to see Jesus.
But then after you say that, I've asked people that before, and usually hear a lot of people say
They want to see Paul.
But I don't know if they do.
I don't know if Paul is the first person you want to see.
Because we know Paul according to his gift, but apparently Paul had a glitch.
Is that this man who wrote 23 percent of the New Testament, if you total up the number
of words of coin A Greek, which is the type of Greek that the New Testament was written in,
and you look at how many are attributed to Paul, it was up to 23 percent.
percent, makes him the second biggest human contributor to what we have as our New Testament canon
of Scripture, second only to Luke who wrote Luke and Axe.
That guy who we could argue was the most effective preacher of the last 20 centuries, who
took the gospel to New Frontiers.
That gifted guy had a glitch.
And apparently the way he preached, this preacher, because you know when you picture Paul,
I bet you picture him with a big booming voice, funny illustrations, B3 Oregon, but Paul stood
up to preach and some people said, he ain't nothing.
He can't preach like Apollus.
Apollus was another preacher during his day and people always wanted to compare Paul and Apollus.
And they say, I follow Apollus because Apollus was an orator.
He was spellbinding.
He had a vocabulary like a thesaurus.
He had metaphors and analogies and synonyms and intonyms.
Other grammar tools.
And boy, he could preach, so he preached.
He was spellbinding.
He'd preach, and people would leave.
Paul said, I know I'm not a very good preacher.
I know I'm not.
That gets me because he's talking about confidence, but then he talks about the conflict.
He fulfilled a great destiny, but he illuminates his deficiency.
One of the great things about pastoring a large church now is that I get to know some of the people who have always been my heroes from a distance personally.
And sometimes you wish that you had kept them at a distance, but sometimes you get to know them
and you realize that the secret of their strength isn't what you thought it was.
So there are three pastors that I consider the best, just my personal ranking, you know,
for whatever it's worth.
I've seen certain things that they do, and I respect them all on different levels for different
reasons, but they all in some way represent something that I would love to emulate.
And I've asked them over the last, I would say, eight months, the same question across three different areas.
So the first one, he's really great with money.
And his church reflects this.
He has millions in assets and zero in debt, both in his personal life and his church life.
And I see how he orders his life and how strategic and efficient it is.
And I ask him, what made you that way?
What do you think made you that way?
He answered quickly, I was so broke growing up. I was so poor. I had nothing. So when I finally got something, it was the poverty that I experienced growing up that gave me the discipline to handle what I had when I got it.
Okay. The second guy, he's the best empower, is that a word? He is the best at empowering other leaders that I've ever seen.
And now at around age 60, he's got leaders that he raised up and sent out all over the world
who are doing more than he could ever do through the power of his life multiplied.
So I asked him, how have you always had the virtue or the humility to be able to empower other
leaders in the way that you have?
Do you know what he said?
He said, I don't think it was humility as much as it was my insecurity.
I never saw myself as a great leader, so I had no other choice but to lean on other people.
That's the second one.
I want you to look for the common thread in the three of these.
The third one, he's the best preacher I've ever heard.
The best.
The best.
And I'll fight you over that.
He's the best.
I heard him say twice in the last couple of weeks, something that shocked me because I see his gift.
I see his gift, but I never saw his glitch.
I see his gift, and it surprised me when he said, when I first started preaching, my hand would shake so bad, I could hardly hold the microphone.
I had to get a microphone that would clip on me, because if I held one, my hand would shake too bad, and I couldn't hold it still.
And he said, when I first started preaching, he said, I preached harder than anybody else.
I preach for two hours, three hours.
He said, I would preach so hard that not only when I sweat through my suit, I would preach.
I would sweat through my shoes.
You could wring sweat out of my shoelaces when I got done preaching.
And he said, watch this.
This made me cry like Vanelopee on Reket Ralph when he said it.
He said, the reason I preached so hard is because I never thought I preached that good.
In each of those cases, it was their glitch that made them great.
It was the thing that they would have asked God to take away.
or it was the thing that they would have asked God to put in that he didn't, that fed their strength through their weakness.
This is such a powerful revelation when you consider that Paul wrote 23 percent of the New Testament.
And I found myself wondering, if Paul had been a better speaker, would he have picked up his pen
and written all those letters.
I wonder if Paul could have preached like Apollus, would we have Second Corinthians?
Would we have Romans?
Would we have Ephesians 320?
Now when Dem was able to do a measure a little more than all we ask or imagine according to this power,
which works mightily and us, he picked up his pen perhaps because he couldn't preach like Apollas.
It was, I got to be careful, because I'll get choked up thinking about it,
because I've spent so much time feeling like my glitch was going to keep me from being used by God.
But it was his glitch that became his gift.
The words that you read today that Paul wrote may not even be on the page if he could have preached better.
It was because he couldn't preach like Apollus that he wrote like Paul.
His glitch was the gift that keeps on giving.
How many Bible verses can you quote that Apollus wrote?
But Apollus could preach.
Apollus was impressive.
No doubt what he said was profound.
But he said it and it died.
Paul couldn't preach like Apollus.
So it forced him to sit down.
He said, I got to take my glitch.
and find a way to turn it into a gift.
And because he had a glitch, you've got to get this in your heart, because he had a glitch,
his words are still reverberating today.
I thought you might want to take 15 seconds and praise God for your glitch, and praise God
for your weakness, and praise God for your struggle.
You might as well put your weakness to work because it's not going away.
I'm not saying don't improve.
I'm not saying don't get more intelligent.
I'm not saying don't take the class.
I'm saying that there is a glitch in all of us.
That's a lie.
There are multiple glitches in all of us.
When Vanelope found out, I'm going to tie it all together.
Reck it Ralph, Apostle Paul.
Here they come.
They're meeting up.
Watch this.
Vanelope is stuck in a game and she can't race because she's a glitch.
But guess what?
The reason that they unplugged the machine to try to turn her into a glitch,
to begin with is because she was royalty.
She was a hero.
You got to watch the movie to get the full revelation of this sermon.
I want you to sit down and watch it for your quiet time this week, because when you watch
her, you'll find out that the way she ended up saving the game was that she glitched
to the finish line.
It was her glitch.
God, y'all don't hear me.
You keep thinking that your glitch is getting in the way.
I'm trying to tell you that Paul's glitch became the gift that we're reading today.
If you've got a glitch and if you got a weakness and you've got a broken spot in your life and you'll bring it to God in humility and sincerity
Your weakness is about to become your secret weapon
Your weakness is about to become your portal to God's power
Now give him praise if you believe
Give it praise if you believe it.
Give it praise if you receive it.
The reason I'm so smart with money is I was so broke.
My glitch became my gift.
The reason I empowered so many leaders is because I didn't think I was a very good one.
My glitch became my gift.
The reason I can preach and connect with people is because I was convinced I never could.
See, people who have a great gift often find that their gifts, gift stunts their growth.
But when you know you have a glitch, when you know that you have a deficiency, and you begin
to believe that my deficiency is connected to my destiny.
That's how God uses broken people to do big things.
Jump up on your feet if you receive this word on any level.
Clap your hands and give God praise.
I want you to summarize my message.
Hug at least six people and tell him your glitch is your gift, your glitches your gift, your glitches your gift.
If he could have preached better, maybe he wouldn't have written it down.
If he, sometimes what God leaves out is just as important as what he puts in.
If Paul had spoken 2 Corinthians, 1210, we wouldn't be able to throw it up on the screen.
They didn't have a tape recorder.
They didn't have pro tools.
Reason.
Logic.
Ableton.
I'm just saying stuff now.
He would have said it, but because of his glitch, because of what he couldn't do,
I would have liked to have been a better athlete.
I would love to be able to run the 40 faster than over five seconds.
I would love that.
But maybe if I've been a better athlete, I wouldn't have been a youth minister.
I know some of you would have loved to have a dad that raised you and you should have.
But maybe your deficiency, maybe the fact that you didn't have a great dad is going to be the thing that drives you to become one.
I don't think it's coincidence that the nerdy kids become the most successful ones.
Because since they don't have a whole lot of people around, they have to get to know themselves and they have to develop themselves.
And so then what in high school is loneliness becomes later in life success.
It's the glitch that keeps giving.
You know the thing that didn't happen for you, that you prayed it would happen and you felt like a failure when it didn't happen?
The thing you didn't get?
The opportunity that you screwed up.
Hey, maybe you screwed it up.
Maybe God didn't do it.
But Paul said, when I am weak, then I am strong.
Join hands with the person next to you.
You think God doesn't see your glitch?
You think he's limited by it?
You think the manufacturer doesn't know your defect?
Of course he does.
I chose you anyway.
And I know a lot of preaching says, you know, God's going to use you in spite of that thing.
Uh-uh, that's not my message.
I'm saying he's going to use you because of it.
It is going to be your weakness that feeds your strength.
Father, in the name of Jesus, I declare over every glitchy person
that the broken places in their lives, in the cracks in their heart,
are about to become the spaces through which
your glory most freely flows. We thank you that we are broken vessels, and we thank you that
what is broken is full of oil, and we thank you that in our lives that you are not limited
by our liabilities, but rather you specialize in turning weakness into strength. Now lift your hands
in the air. I want you to reach for God today. God empower these people by your grace,
empower these people to realize a great calling.
Empower your sons and daughters with the kind of blessing, with the kind of anointing,
with the kind of glory that can only enter through broken spaces.
Now clap those same hands and give God praise.
If you know your glimpse is your gift, if you know your weakness is your strength.
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