Elevation with Steven Furtick - You’re Worth It (Lisa Harper)
Episode Date: July 5, 2026It's easy to let your mistakes, your performance, or others’ opinions determine how you see yourself. But your worth was never meant to be measured by what you do; it was established long before... you ever had the chance to earn it. If you've been struggling with feeling like you're not enough, this message will remind you of the unchanging value God’s placed on your life. If you’ve just made a decision for Christ, please respond HERE: http://ele.vc/tIepfr Scriptures Referenced:Ephesians 1, verses 3-6 – God chose you before the world beganIsaiah 43, verses 1-4 – You are precious, honored, and deeply lovedPsalm 139, verses 1-16 – God knew and valued you before birthMark 15 – A Roman soldier recognized Jesus as God's SonSee 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.
Goodness, gracious.
If I had any estrogen left in my body,
would have shot straight out at that point.
I'd like to take just a moment, a moment of silence.
For those of you who are grieving the fact that Pastor Holly and Pastor Stephen are not preaching this morning.
When I was here last summer, I got to go out.
Some people were being baptized.
And so I was meeting people and I met a saint who had driven 30 hours.
It wasn't a Volkswagen bus, but it could have been driven 30 hours.
driven 30 hours because their whole family just wanted to come here, Holly or Stephen preach.
And I was just like, I'm so sorry.
I'm so sorry you have an old white woman from Nashville, Tennessee who just, I don't know
what it is about elevation, but I always feel inclined to wear leather here.
So there will be a lot of perspiration and squeaking going on in the next few moments.
But I, I, they could have anybody.
could have anybody from across the world would be honored to get to be in this house. And I'm not
sure why other than your friendship and your grace chunks that I get to come every year. But this is the
highlight of my daughters and I here we love, we claim you as cousins, even though some of you
might think differently in a few moments. So we need to start with prayer. Reach out and touch that
saint next year. That's not rhetorical. Touch them. Touch them appropriately, men, if you're
sitting next to a woman. I've heard it said that's tea. Is that right? If she's cool, if she's hot,
just be very, very careful. This is a Leviticus kind of prayer. Jesus, Jesus, Jesus, Jesus,
thank you. I was so reminded last night of what a gift it is that we still exist under the
common grace of free worship in this country. So, Lord, I pray that for all of us, the things that have
become, just wrote to us getting to drive to church on Saturday or Sunday and not worried about
hiding, not worried about being arrested. Oh, Lord, what a glorious gift it is that you allow us
to come together to your house to bring you the first fruits of our attention and our affection
freely. Lord, forgive us when we are quick to complain and slow to say thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you,
thank you for 250 years of freedom of worship. We are so grateful. We are so grateful. We are so grateful.
And Lord, sometimes we are so dumb and so preoccupied. And so, Lord, for those of us who've come
into this house of faith and our minds are distracted or tired and our hearts are numb or just
barely put one foot in front of the other, Lord, we pray through your spirit. Lord, we pray through your
that you would give us eyes to see and ears to hear and hearts that would be pliant to understand
at an even deeper level what it means to be your beloved sons and daughters. Lord, we pray that
you would reamaze us this morning, just as Holly said, Pastor Stephen, is being reamazed
as he has time to just marinate in the truth of who you are, who you called us to be. Lord,
would you quicken us to? Would you quicken us this morning? Lord, would we, um,
would we leave this building just more than ever convinced of who you are as a perfect,
holy, transcendent God who chooses to be close to us and more than ever secure in the fact
that on our worst day you said, you matter to me.
You're beautiful to me.
I still can't quite conceive of the fact that I was the joy set before you as you walked
the cross. So, Lord, I need your spirit to pierce the places in my heart that I agree with that
man in Mark's gospel. I believe, but, oh, King Jesus, help me in my unbelief. Do that for all of us
this morning, Jesus, and we'll be careful to give you and you alone all the honor and all the
glory and all the praise for what you do in this living room this morning. We love you, Jesus.
We need you, Jesus. We ask these things by the perfect authority of your name. Amen. And amen.
I thought with last night being so historic, I would start with a historic tale of my own,
something that's very rare. And so I'm not going back 250 years. It wasn't quite that long ago,
but I'm going to tell you about my last good date. And it was quite some time ago. I came to
Nashville, Tennessee from Florida to work for an athletic ministry.
called the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Graham, you know, FCA. And so I ended up being set up
with a lot of athletes, because I had some friends who were the guys played in the NFL,
didn't have any World Cup guys friends back then, because they have cute legs and those little shorts.
But anyway, sorry, that was ungodly. Y'all can strike that from the record.
Although it is kind of Song of Solomon-esque, right? We can leave it. We can leave it. It's in the
Bible. So anyway, one of my friends who worked from the NFL said, Lisa, I have got the perfect guy for you.
He loves all the old dead theologians you love. He reads C.S. Lewis. It's a really good guy,
really serious about his faith. He plays on the line. And when he said he plays on the line for an
NFL team, he just had me. It plays on the line because I'm not a small girl. And I really want
to date or possibly marry, if you know someone between 55, I'll go younger. I'm saying,
62 in death.
Somebody who's bigger than me.
You know, I just, sometimes I get set up with really tiny men.
And I'm like, hi, I'm Lisa from the large planet.
So I was like, he plays on the line that means he's a big in.
So I was real excited.
And so I'm not going to tell you his name because you can Google him and spoil alert.
He married someone else.
But it was a good thing.
Just stay with me on the date.
Are you still with me on the day?
Okay, so we start talking the phone.
No Zoom, no FaceTime.
All I had seen is him.
from the distance on ESPN.
And I knew his bigan, and I won't tell you the team he played for, but it's north of here.
We started talking, he had a great voice.
You know how voices are just, you go, I can just kind of sense a little bit of their heart
because their voices connected to their heart.
And then after two weeks of courting, he called and said, hey Lisa, our team, rhymed with
hilly is north of here.
He said, our team, we're playing the Falcons.
And I know Nashville is about four hours from Atlanta, but if you would be willing to drive to Atlanta,
we could meet face to face. I'd love to meet you face to face. And I was like, well, that would be
great. And so our meeting was a week away, so I went on a fast. And then I bought like a really
cute new outfit. Are any of y'all, I'm 62, any women over 50? Okay, do y'all remember when like
giant shoulder pads were in. So anyway, I bought this pink dress for feminine with like football player
shoulder pads because it's so in back then. And I drive from Nashville to Atlanta. And we didn't have
any buckies back then. I had to stop at a rest area to fruff my hair. And I get to the stadium and he
said one of the other wives, in an NFL player's wife, she'll meet you at Will Call to bring you up
to the wives section. I was sitting in the wives section. Do you all know any in a
F-O wives, they are tiny, just tiny, tiny, tiny little women. They're beautiful, but so
petite. And so this tiny girl came and met me, and she takes me up to the wives section. So
we're up, I don't know, we're like on the 50-yard line, just a few rows up. And I come up,
and all the other teeny girls were very kind to me, and I was the only brunette. And so I'm meeting
all the tiny blondes. And then I look out on the field, the game hadn't started yet, I look out
in the field, and there he is my date.
And he has his back to me.
And I don't know how to say this in church, but those pants are awesome.
And I never until that point liked football pants, and suddenly I just love those
little pants on a big man.
And so he turned around.
And I'm like from here to where y'all are in the theater seats.
I'm about that far away.
He turned around, but y'all, it was like a love story.
It's like, our eyes met.
And I was like, I love him.
And the game started, and he did really, really well.
He made a couple of key blocks and the team that rhymes with Hilly,
beat the Atlanta Falcons, sorry if you're a Falcons fan.
And then one of the teeny girls said, hey, we'll just call him Bill.
That's not his name.
She said, hey, Bill would like to see you before they fly back to Hilly.
And so if you'll go with us, the team, that was back, I don't know if they still do this,
but that was back in the day when all the players would shower and change into suits,
not pajama pants, actual suits, and then they'd get on a charter bus,
and then they'd go to the airport and get on a charter flight and go back to whatever town they were from.
And so she said, he actually wants to see you, because now we've still been 50 yards separated.
She said he wants to meet you face to face before he flies home.
And I was like, okay.
So I traips down with all the teeny heat tribe down to, it's like in the belly of the arena.
And all of a sudden all the players start coming out.
And they're just big guys and they all smell like polo.
And they all start boarding the bus.
And then here comes Bill.
And he comes right, and I can't use you, chunks.
You're not a good pride.
He comes right up to me, Amy.
I mean, like right up to me.
And he goes, hey.
And then he picks me up.
He picks me.
off my feet. And I was like, this is, like, this is glory. This is just glory. I expected Jesus
to come through and the white horse. It was amazing. Look to the east. He picked me up. And then I don't
remember what he said, because I was in a coma. And then we talked for like three or four more
minutes. And then they made the announcement. The bus is about to leave. Guys, you've got to get
on the bus. We're going to the plane. And he goes, just like this. He goes, wait right here.
as if I was going to leave.
I'm like, I'll be here three months from now, just standing right here.
It's all downhill from now.
It was just, I was like, okay.
And he goes, wait right here.
He turns around and the bus is right here.
And then NFL coach, and y'all would know this NFL coach.
He's dead now, but he was a big deal.
And so this NFL coach, he's standing on the stairs.
Bill's right where you are, chunks.
And Bill starts talking to the coach.
Bill has his back to me.
and the coach is facing me from the stairs,
and he keeps kind of looking around Bill's shoulders,
he'd be like,
so I knew they were talking about me.
They talked for like, I don't know, three minutes.
And then the doors of the bus shut.
And Bill comes like this.
I know, I know.
And the bus is driving away,
and guys are hanging out the windows,
just ragging him, saying things like,
she's already got you reptiles and you hang on to the ball bra.
I mean, they're just ragging him.
He is completely oblivious to the teasing.
Only has eyes from me.
Comes up to me.
I'll never forget what he said.
He said, Lisa, I hope it's okay if you let me ride with you back to Nashville.
I just told coach that I really wanted to spend this time driving back to Nashville to you
because that would give us four hours face-to-face to get to know each other.
and I'll get a hotel in Nashville, then I'll take a commercial flight in the morning to go back home to Hilly.
Because I told Coach, you're worth the fine.
Your worth the fine.
Has anybody ever said that to you?
Oh, yes, he did.
Oh, yes, he did.
We've just been singing about it.
Oh, yes, he did.
The God who breathed.
this universe into existence, looks at us on our worst day when we're not singing
elevation songs, when you're saying something that's not in the Bible in traffic, he
looks at us even in that moment and says, you are worth the find. That is the gospel. That is
the gospel. When that man who barely knew me ascribed worth to me, he said, you are worth the
merciless teasing of my teammates. You are worth the lack of physical rest that I will experience
driving with you through the night back to Nashville. You are worth a hefty monetary fine from my team
in the NFL. You are worth. So it cost him to subscribe worth to me. I have a definition for the word
worth. You probably know this. Worth tells us the value. It tells us the value.
the importance and or the usefulness of something. However, when worth is used in a
predictive, used as a predictive adjective, I didn't pay much for my doctorate,
when it's used as a predictive adjective, as in your worth the fine, it is entirely subjective.
That means worth as it is proclaimed is based on whoever is proclaiming its value.
In the context of that football player, he decided I was worth the fine.
In the oh so biased perspective of our creator, Redeemer, he has ascribed worth to us
and he says our worth is predetermined.
Turn to Psalm 139.
You'll know this.
Many of you, I hope, memorized this when you were kids.
It's one of my favorite of the songs, all of the 150 Psalms, P-S-A-L-M-S, were originally
written as songs, S-O-N-G-S.
So this is like God's Spotify list, these 150 songs in the middle of the Bible.
And this is how David starts this song.
You have searched me, oh, Lord, and you know me.
You know when I sit and when I rise, you perceive my thoughts from afar, you discern my going out and my lying down.
You are familiar with all my ways.
Before our word is on my tongue, you, oh Lord, know it completely.
You hit me in behind it before, and you lay your hand upon me.
Such knowledge is too wonderful for me.
It blows my hard drive.
It is too lofty for me to attain.
Where can I go from your spirit?
Where can I flee from your presence?
If I go up to the heavens, you are there.
If I make my bed in the depths, you are there.
If I rise in the wings of the dawn.
settle in the far side of the sea. Even there, your hand will guide me. Your right hand will hold me
fast. If I say, surely the darkness will hide me and the light become night around me. Even the
darkness will not be dark to you. The night will shine like the day. For darkness is as light to you. Listen to
this. For you created my inmost being. You knit me together in my mama's womb. I praise you because I'm
fearfully and wonderfully made. Your works are wonderful. I know that full well. My frame was not hidden from
you when I was made in the secret place, when I was woven together in the depths of the earth,
your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book
before one of them came to be. In other words, our worth precedes any accomplishment or merit on our
behalf. Long before your daddy had a wink in his eye, our creator-redeemer,
predetermine that he would subscribe priceless value to you.
There's nothing we earn.
We just sang that.
But I think for most of us we can sing it, we can say it.
But to grasp in a world that says you're only as valuable as your last performance,
in a world where we are entirely judged by how we perform and how much we produce,
It is really hard for us to wrap our dinky human minds around the concept that this perfect, holy, trinitarian God
ascribed invaluable worth to us before anybody would have said we were worth anything.
We hadn't done anything yet to be considered worthy.
And yet David makes it clear before any of us breathed our first breath.
Our heavenly father said, worse.
I'm ascribing worth to you. Flip forward to the book of Isaiah. I love Isaiah's prophecy.
And Isaiah underscores this idea of predetermined worth and priceless value that God ascribes to us.
Isaiah 43. But now this is what the Lord says. He who created you, Jacob, he who formed you, Israel,
do not fear for I've redeemed you. I've summoned you by name. You are mine. When you pass through the waters,
I will be with you. When you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire,
you will not be burned. The flames will not set you ablaze. For I am the Lord your God, the Holy One of Israel,
your Savior. I give Egypt for your ransom, Cush and Siba in your stead. Since you are precious
and honored in my sight and because I love you, I give people in exchange for you,
in exchange for your life.
Nations.
So that's God's scales.
We just got back from two weeks in Europe.
And while we were there,
we were at the Tower of London,
where the jewels of London are kept.
And then we went to where the jewels are kept,
the crown jewels, in Scotland, in Edinburgh.
And of course, you've got the guards
with the fuzzy Q-tip black hats.
We kept trying to make them laugh.
And they wouldn't.
They're guarding those jewels.
the crown jewels of the UK.
Those are priceless, estimated by historians to be priceless.
But that's just the jewels of the country.
That's not the land.
That's not the gross national product.
That's not everything in that Scotland or England or Ireland.
That's not everything.
And God said the entire nation, not just the jewels.
I'm not just exchanging you for Tiffany bracelet.
you are more valuable to me than entire nations with all their wealth right before I came out here
because I'm always a hot mess just looking for blooper reel to begin.
I was in the restroom trying to make my hair not look like roadkill on this humid day.
And I thought, oh, I need some lotion.
And I squirted the lotion in the bathroom and just sit shut, shut straight all over me.
just gobs of white on my pants, on my shirt, on this, on my arm, and my watch.
And I was like, you just can't take me anywhere.
I mean, you just can't.
I'm just a walking, Yehu.
And yet the God, the only true God, the God of the universe, transcendent, holy,
Trinitarian, perfect, perfect in and of himself.
He didn't even need relationship with us.
He chose for us to be his treasure.
He's perfectly sustained by fellowship with you.
each other. Augustine, one of my favorite old dead guys. I have a crush on him too. Augustine said,
only the Christian God is a perfect community unto himself, perfectly sustained, perfectly satisfied,
and yet he chose for us to be his treasure. And he said, you're worth so much to me. I'll give
entire nations in exchange for you. So our worth is.
Our worth is predetermined.
It's not, there's no earning on our behalf.
Our worth is priceless.
We are invaluable from God's estimation.
And then if you'll head to the right to Ephesians,
one of my favorite passages in all of the New Testament,
our worth is permanent.
Ephesians 1, beginning with verse 3,
Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ.
For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his side.
In love, he predestined for us for adoption to sonship through Jesus Christ in accordance with his pleasure,
some translations say good pleasure and will, to the praise of his glorious grace,
which he has freely given us in the one he loves.
loves, where it reads pleasure or good pleasure in your Bible. That comes from the Greek word
U dokia. You involves good and dochia is thinking. So in other words, when God set his affection
on us, he didn't do it out of pity. Our salvation is mercy. Our adoption is affection.
So the king of all kings didn't look at us and go, oh, she's such a yahoo.
She's old as dirt.
She lost a little weight with the help of Manjaro, and now she's all creepy.
She ain't got no man, that poor girl.
Let's just love on her a little extra, because she probably doesn't think she's worth it.
That is not the disposition of our Creator Redeemer.
He looks at me when I've got lotion all over my leather pants.
And he says, isn't she?
beautiful. It was my good thinking to adopt her. Y'all, even the word adoption in first century context,
it's crazy that Paul uses it in our relationship with God, the Father, God, the Son, and God
the Holy Spirit, because in this era, no parents would adopt an infant. There's too much risk in that.
Parents in Greco-Roman culture only adopted an older adolescent or an adult.
Why is that?
Y'all can talk back.
I'm not a pastor.
Why?
Why do you think they would only adopt somebody who was older?
Exactly.
Because you had proven potential.
They could see their GPA.
They could see how hard they worked at Chick-fil-A after school.
They could see this kid has promise.
And by the way, girls are never adopted.
in this era of biblical history.
Girls are not adopted because girls had no financial value other than producing an heir.
And so baby girls are rejected.
But there's a possibility if you are a young man who has promise that a couple will adopt you
and say, we'll give him our name.
We'll make him an heir.
The most famous older adoptee from this era is Octavian.
And I know most of y'all, like me, just examine your eyelids in high school history.
But you remember he's the very first Roman emperor.
Do you remember who preceded Octavian?
I know y'all did.
Julius Caesar.
So Julia Caesar was not the first emperor of Rome.
He was a military hero.
He was a dictator.
He adopted his nephew.
He adopted this kid named Octavian.
It was actually his great nephew at the age of 18.
because Octavian, he showed promise.
And so Julius Caesar adopted Octavian and said, I will give you my name.
And so after Julius Caesar was assassinated in 44 BC, Octavian fought and became the very first emperor.
He changed Rome from a republic to an empire.
He became the very first Roman emperor.
The Senate, that's kind of much like our Senate, the Senate, maybe not as much polar as
But anyway, their Senate said, we're going to name you Augustine. Augustus means one who is revered.
And he said, I'm going to take my adopted dad's last name as my first because I want to be attached to Julius Caesar's renown.
So his name went from Octavian to Caesar Augustus.
First Emperor of Rome, that we all think Caesar is a title.
It originated as a surname.
And then he went a step further.
because the Romans Senate, because Julius Caesar was such a great leader, they named him D. We would say D.V. in Latin, but their Vs are pronounced as W's, if you're a redneck American. D. We Phileas, son of God. So Octavian, because they had named Julius Caesar a God, that's what Octavian called himself. I am Caesar Augustus. I am D. Wee. Phileas. I am. D. Wee. Phileas. I am.
a son of God.
A little bit arrogant, right?
Do y'all remember the crucifixion account?
There's a Roman centurion.
And all he did was watch Jesus die.
Wasn't in a Bible study, wasn't in a home group,
didn't follow Jesus, wasn't Jewish.
But he was there at the crucifixion.
Y'all remember this story?
In Mark's Gospel, I think it's in chapter 15.
He watches Jesus die.
That's all he sees.
He doesn't see him raise Lazarus from death.
to life. He doesn't see him walk on water, doesn't see him turn water and white. All he watches is
Jesus suffer. And when Jesus dies and says it is finished, that Roman centurion says,
surely, surely he is Dewee Phileas. He is the son of God. Do you know the coins in his pocket at the time
were inscribed to promote the Roman Caesar as the son of God? Y'all, the coins.
context in our Bible drives me nuts when people says the Bible's boring. I'm like, no, you're a lazy
reader. This is so much better than Yellowstone. This is like epic. So it makes sense that Caesar
Augustus Octavian was adopted because he had promise. He had potential. That makes sense. That was
very uncommon. What was more common was this practice that they still
practice, they just don't call it this in my little girl's village in Haiti. It's expositio.
Exposistio comes from the Latin root, exponent, meaning to expose. What was most common in the era
Paul was writing is expositio, which meant if you had a little girl, and you already had one,
so you didn't need a spare, or if you had a son who was born, or if you had a son who was born,
deformed with something as minor as a cleft palate, you could take them to the edge of town
and leave them so that they would die in the elements. They still do that in my baby girl's
village in Haiti. That's why you rarely, rarely, in a developing nation that struggles with poverty,
it's interesting. You usually won't see a child with cerebral palsy or an extreme
deformity because it's too hard for them to feed their healthy kids. And so they still practice
taking unwanted or deformed or medically challenged children, infants to the edge of town
and leaving them there. Do you not Christians became known for at the latter part of the first
and second century? Christians became known for and actually vilified for this, that we would go
and rummage through trash dumps to find discarded infants, and we would adopt them as our sons
and our daughters. We became known for that. Do you know the first brick and mortar churches in that
era? Small, informal affairs. Always had a basin outside the front door of the church so people could go by
and drop off an infant. Because even as early Christians, we understood this isn't okay. It's not okay to take
an innocent, beautiful, worthy, valuable baby and put them in a trash dump. The Christians would
race the slave traders to try to get little girls so they wouldn't be put into prostitution.
Do you know, we were in Italy two summers ago doing a trips of Paul tour and I saw this.
I think it's called Ruado Day, Ruado Day Triteria. Suddenly I have this.
craving for pasta. Let me see what it's called. It's called, does anybody speak Italian? Ruato de
Travitelli. Travitelli. A Ruoto de Travitelli. Y'all were wanting Italian now too, aren't you?
You all go to North Italia after lunch. I have a picture of a Ruata Day Travitelli. This is all throughout
Italian archa. Okay, see bottom left. See that little box? That actually is a concrete cubby,
and it's on a cylinder, it rotates.
So you can come at night to the outside.
That was an ancient church.
You can come to the outside,
and that little Ruata Day, Travitelli, will be open.
And you can put your baby in there anonymously,
knowing that somebody on the other side of that wall,
probably a nun, will take care of your baby.
So even early Christians understanding that,
oh, people have value,
it impacted our kids.
architecture. Ruato Day, Travitelli. Here's the deal for Paul to speak to this audience of young
Christians in Ephesus and say, God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit thinks you are so
worth it that he didn't just save you. He has actually adopted you as firstborns as co-borns,
as co-ares, and you won't sit at the kitty table or on the porch, you will sit to the right of Jesus,
the son, in a position of honor. Y'all, that was so countercultural in their understanding.
That would be like a UNC grad, rooting for Duke, or Drake and Kendrick Lamar writing a song
together or Travis and Tay having a tiny wedding. I mean, that's just, that's not going to happen.
That doesn't happen. We read Ephesians and most of us are like, oh, that's good. That's not.
I kind of like that. I like from Pastor Stephen preached on that. We don't get the gravitas
of the God of the universe saying, you are mine. I didn't just save you. You're my kid.
y'all can diss me on social media it hurts my feelings a little bit but you diss my baby girl i'll come
find you and cut you in ribbons and i know holly and pastor seeven feel the same way about elijah
and graham and abbey i mean these are my kids for god to say we aren't just people he had to
save because we're train wrecks who couldn't save ourselves for god to say
there's so much more than worth the fine to me.
I'm actually adopting them into my family.
And you know, according to rabbinical law,
you can disinher a biological child,
but you can't disinher it and adopt a child.
So he's saying it's permanent.
He's saying, I have ascribed this value you haven't earned to you.
I've named you as priceless,
and it's permanent,
it is absolutely permanent.
I used to spend a lot of my free time volunteering
at an organization in Nashville,
a couple of organizations actually,
who help women who are in recovery, addiction recovery.
And I don't do it as much now because I'm missing,
and I just don't have as much time as a single mom.
But if you would set me up and I could get to the baby daddy,
I'd have more free time.
Just saying the onus is on y'all.
But I used to spend,
a lot of time.
Volunteering, I still get to do it a little bit,
but I love, love, love, love, love,
getting to spend time with image bears
who are coming out of any type of addiction
because the gratitude is palpable.
You know, there's just something about being incarcerated
that strips your pretense.
You don't have to have some loud preachers say
that God loves you, even though you haven't earned it.
They're like, I get it.
I mean, I know.
I didn't do anything to deserve this unconditional love.
He has lavished on me.
And anyway, those of y'all who are,
I know we've got some elevation campuses
and y'all don't have quite as much physical freedom
as we do.
Some of y'all are still incarcerated.
And you didn't know that this whole team here,
they talk about y'all like y'all are in the room.
You are family.
You fit here.
We love you.
This is not pity.
We honor you.
we can't wait to actually be face to face with you to pray and to worship. Thank you, thank you,
thank you. We love y'all. Y'all are not outside campuses. You are in the house campuses. Thank you so much
for listening today. The good pastors will be back next week, so stay tuned. But I used to spend
a lot of time with those girls. And one Thanksgiving, they said, Miss Lisa, would you spend Thanksgiving with us?
and I was so honored.
They asked me to spend Thanksgiving with them.
I was like, oh, I'd be delighted to you.
And they said, we actually have so much extra.
Do you know the best job that my friends could get out of,
when they stepped out of the halfway house into more freedom,
was at Chipporte?
I ate at Chipolte all the time,
because Chipporte will hire women who have federal offenses on the records
who've come out.
So that was the best job they could get.
oftentimes it was cleaning hotel rooms. So for them to say we have so much extra was
countercultural. And they said, we want to take our extra and we want to just put together a
Thanksgiving feast. And then so many of our friends are still home insecure. They don't have a
place to live tonight that we want to go all over Nashville and find our friends who don't have
homes and serve them meals. And I was like, yeah, I'd love to be part of that. And so I helped to make
this feast. Somebody had donated 150 of those, you know, the styrofoam takeout trays. We actually had
175, but our goal was 150, and we had turkeys, we had stuff from all over. And so we were just
humming. We're in this kitchen. 800 square feet is the size of their government subsized apartment.
And they were like 13 of us in there putting together these meals. We are singing, we are dancing.
I have no rhythm, but I have a lot of enthusiasm. We're singing, dancing, get these meals together.
when it was all said and done when we ran out of meat, they said, let's count it. We had 172.
So I was like, that is epic. So I said, let's pray and thank God for the extra, and then we'll go distribute these.
So we had this major Pentecostal prayer. And I was like, don't call me pastor in for anybody else in Nashville.
I'll get eviscerated, but they all call me pastor. And so, but don't call me pastor. That pee is,
who, that's polarizing. So anyway, we prayed. And then we said amen. I was like, okay, what's the plan?
and they were like, well, we hadn't planned any further.
And I was like, well, y'all, and they were like, one of us have our license.
Our license haven't been reinstated yet, so we don't have cars.
I'm like, well, y'all?
And they were like, will you help us?
I was like, well, yes.
So I've got an SUV because prophetically I thought God would give me a man and I would fill it with kids.
And so we piled my car with like 130.
There was one other car.
We had just boxes of food all throughout my car.
One of the girls got in my car.
Another girl was in the back.
and we started driving around kind of sketchy parts of downtown Nashville looking for people who might be
hungry. And our goal was not just to give somebody a meal, but was to look in their eyes and have a
conversation, hopefully sit with them while they ate. And the most memorable of those 130 or so meals
we gave away was the first and the last. The first was a train wreck because I chose them. And we're
driving down by Vandy. And there's just this kid dressed in rags. And so I assume he was
housing insecure. And so I hump my car up on the curb and I was like, hey, baby,
probably Graham your age. You're just punking. And I was like, hey, baby, we've got some extra food.
He was so offended. And then I saw the prod of shoes. But it was rags. The rest of me was rags.
So I thought he was homeless. And so he was really offended. So that was memorable. We got an
earful from him because he wasn't hungry. And then went all kinds of meals.
in the middle, but the very last guy was my favorite. We had talked with a fella who was living
behind this building, and he said, we'll run up the road. And when you see a little half-concrete wall,
the guy who lives in a cubby behind that, his name is cricket. He's a friend of mine. Go see if you can
find cricket. And sure enough, we found this man named cricket, precious, precious,
20-something-year-old man. And we had, as the sun was setting on Thanksgiving, the, I mean, it was
communion. It was one of the best meals I've ever shared with other Christ's fault.
And then, you know, we said goodbye.
And I didn't think I'd ever see him again.
And two weeks later, I was back in that same area because I'd gotten lost.
And I was trying to figure out how to get back to the interstate.
And I recognized the street sign.
And I thought, oh, my goodness, this is where we were two weeks ago at Thanksgiving
when I got to meet cricket.
And I thought, I wonder if he's still here.
So I pretended like I was a UPS truck, hump my car back up on the curb again,
started walking around, and ran into this young man who looked like he,
had been living outside. And I said, sir, excuse me, my name is Lisa, and I'm looking for a man
who used to live in the area named Cricket. And he said, Lisa, I'm Cricket. And living outside for a couple
of weeks can change your appearance. And I said, Cricket, I'm so sorry. I didn't recognize you.
I said, I don't know if you remember two weeks ago. And he goes, I remember it was Thanksgiving.
And I said, well, I found myself back in this neighborhood. And I just felt this strong inclination
to stop by and see you and to tell you that God sees you, and he thinks you're worth it.
And I don't know why I said that.
Sometimes I'll say things because of prayer and Holy Spirit.
And sometimes it's insecurity or it's Celsius.
You know, sometimes you go, I think that was Lord and it might be and it might not be.
But I said, I think, I think it was the Holy Spirit who impressed me to say,
you're worth it. And as soon as I said that, he just bent over and began to sob like a baby.
And he kind of pitched himself in my arms. And even though I'm not as petite as Holly, he was a tall guy.
It was hard for me to hold him up. I mean, he just put the whole weight of his body in my arms.
And I mean, he was just sobbing. And the only thing I could think to do was pray. And when I'm nervous, oftentimes I'll pray.
scripture. I'll pray the word of God, this love story we call the Bible. And so I just begin to pray.
So I'm 139. Oh, Lord, you have searched me and you know me. You know when I sit and when I rise.
You perceive my thoughts from afar. Every word you know before it proceeds from my mouth.
You hem me in behind and before you have laid your hand upon me. Where can I go from your
spirit? Where can I flee from your presence? Such knowledge is too wonderful for me, too lofty for me,
to attain, where can I go from your spirit?
Where can I flee from your presence?
If I go up to the heavens, you're there.
If I make my bed in the depths, you're there.
If I rise on the wings of the dawn, if I settle in the far side of the sea,
even there your right hand will hold me.
If I say, surely the darkness will hide me.
And the light become night around me, even the darkness will not be dark to you.
For, David goes on to say, for I'm wonderfully and fearfully made.
your works are wonderful i know that full well my frame wasn't hidden from you when i was made in the
secret place when i was woven together in the depths of the earth your eyes saw my unformed body
all the days ordained for me were written in your book before even one of them came to be long before
you met brett long before you had a baby long before you entered ministry he said this is my
worthy son he's so amazing and that's all i could think to pray over cricket when i got to verse 18
because after that David gets mad, and that's when he says,
do I not hate those who hate you?
And it gets a little grumpy.
And so I finished the prayer at verse 18.
And when I did, it's like it gave cricket just enough wherewithal to stand back up.
And he looked me in the eyes, and he had no alcohol in his breath.
His eyes weren't bloodshot, just completely clear.
I just think he was just in one of those thin seasons.
And he looked me straight in the eyes, and he goes, Lisa, you have no idea.
how much I needed to be reminded that I have worth.
And I said, yes, sir, I needed that reminder today as well.
And we hugged and I drove away a daughter and a son from completely different stations in life, different ethnicities.
And I stopped at a 7-11 at the end of the street because I couldn't drive anymore because I was crying so hard.
And I just pulled my car over and I said, God, forgive me, forgive me, forgive me.
Forgive me that because of my station in life, sometimes I forget what an extraordinary miracle it
is to be your daughter, to be adopted into your family. You didn't just, you didn't just rescue me
from the trash heap of my decisions. You didn't just leave me in a concrete cubby to become
someone else's responsibility. You said, she's my, and she's worth everything to me, even the
sacrifice of my only son, the worth, the worth you and I carry. If we could walk in just the minutenest
understanding of the miracle that that is, y'all, it would change the trajectory of our lives.
quite possibly it would change the lives of the people we get to rub shoulders with,
these precious, precious image bears around us.
So many of them who think, that's what I've been told my whole life.
Would you bow your heads and close your eyes?
We're going to close this family meeting with a prayer.
And I know I haven't earned the right.
I'm so grateful, Stephen and Holly allow me to come.
I haven't earned the right to ask you a question.
but I'm going to anyway.
I'm going to ask all of you to raise your right hands.
I promise I'm not signing you up for a coffee club or anything.
Just raise your right hands.
The reason I do that is so you won't hear a hand go up next to you.
Sometimes we can be a little nosy in church.
And for those of you who maybe have been wounded in church,
I want to assure you that you're safe at elevation.
I are serious, serious about the love of God here, but you are not going to be judged.
So everybody write hands up.
And would you just open those beautiful poems that God designed, just spread that hand wide open?
Now, if you're in a place in your life, a season in your life, or this may be the story of your whole life,
or the idea of being having value, intrinsic value,
the idea of being loved unconditionally by God,
the idea that the God who breathe our universe into existence
looks at you and says,
I am so proud of this one.
This is my son.
This is my daughter.
They're worth the fine to me.
If that's hard for you to wrap your mind around,
hard for you to hang on to,
maybe you would be so honest as to say,
I don't really believe that.
Would you close that beautiful hand into a fist?
Yeah.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you for your honesty.
Can I ask you for just a moment more to keep your hands raised?
Don't look around out of respect for the saints around you,
but there are hundreds with fists in the air.
Beautiful, not defiant, beautiful, tired fist in the ear.
Kind of reminds me of the Statue of Liberty.
Give me your tie.
Give me you're tired. Give me your hopeless. Give me your hurt. Give me your wounded. Give me your abandon.
Give me your no one ever looked at you and said, you, the cross-cut glass to get to you.
You are precious to me. All exchange nations for you. Those of you with your fist raised,
we're going to pray, and I'm going to ask you if Holy Spirit prompts.
would you pray this prayer of salvation? Pray this prayer of maybe for the first time or for the first
time in a long time just leaning into the wide open arms of the God who is described of value to you.
You're not a disappointment to him. You're not an interruption to him. He didn't save you because it's in his job description.
He saved you because it was his eudokia, his good thinking to set his favor.
on you. You're not an afterthought. You were the first thought. One glance of your eyes, you captured his
heart. Pastor, would you come and pray for these image bears, some of whom have yet to believe their worth?
Father, we thank you for the word that was spoken over us today, God, to know that we were the joy
that was set before you. We thank you for the spirit of wisdom and revelation, the resting in this place
today. Lord, would you open up our eyes to see ourselves the way you see us, God?
for those with their hands up in a fist right now, God.
Lord, we pray Holy Spirit that you would just continue to minister
as your word becomes alive in their hearts, God.
Oh, what an incredible manner of love
that you have lavished on us
that we would be called, children.
For someone in the room today,
you've never made a decision to receive the gift of God's grace.
I want to give you that invitation right now.
You can put your hands down for just a moment.
If you've never made a decision
to place your faith in Christ,
When I count to three, I want to give you the opportunity to throw your hand up in the air.
The last one was private, but this one's public because we want to celebrate what God has done in your heart.
If you believe that Jesus Christ is the son of God, that he died on the cross and rose again so that you could be forgiven and have new life.
If you want to receive the gift of his salvation today, when I count the three, slide your hand up in the air and do it boldly.
I want to celebrate your new beginning on three.
One, two, three. Shoot your hand up, hold it up high. Come on. I see you there.
you. God bless you. Our usters are coming around with you. Thank you for joining us. Special thanks
to those of you who give generously to this ministry is because of you that this ministry is possible.
You can click the link in the description to give now or visit elevationchurch.org slash podcast
for more information. And if you enjoyed the podcast, you can subscribe, you can share it with your
friends. You can click the share button. Take a screenshot and share it on your social stories and tag us
at Elevation Church. Thanks again for listening.
bless you. This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed Human.
