Joel Osteen Podcast - Still I Rise | Joel Osteen
Episode Date: March 22, 2026Don’t let temporary setbacks cause you to forget the promise. What God placed on your heart will still come to pass. Take back what life tried to steal. Rediscovering the Forgotten You will help y...ou reignite your passion and step confidently into the life God created you to live. Request our April offer and rediscover your dreams today! https://bit.ly/4aCX4D0 Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of the Joel Osteen Podcast ad-free and a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Hi, this is Joel and Victoria.
Thanks for listening to our podcast and thanks for supporting the ministry.
If you enjoy today's message, why don't you be a blessing and share it with a friend.
We appreciate you and pray for God's very best in your life.
Well, God bless you.
It's great to be with you today and I hope you'll stay connected with us during the week
through our daily podcast or YouTube channel and social media.
And you can come visit us in person.
We'd love to have you be a part of one of our services.
I like to start with something funny, and I heard about this man.
He called the church office, said, I want to speak to the head hog at the trough.
The secretary was offended.
She said, if you mean the pastor, you're going to have to call him pastor, but you may not call him the headhog at the trough.
He said, well, I was thinking about making a $5,000 donation to your church.
She said, hang on, porkie just walked in.
All right, y'all say it like you mean it.
This is my Bible.
I am what it says I am. I have what it says I have. I can do what it says I can do. Today I will be taught the
word of God. I boldly confess, my mind is alert, my heart is receptive, I will never be the same. In Jesus
name, God bless you. I want to talk to you today about still I rise. In life, things are going to
happen that we don't understand, that are not fair, that can knock the wind out of us.
a bad medical reporter, the loss of a loved one, a setback in our business. I can't promise you
that life won't knock you down, but I can promise you can get back up again. The scripture says the
same power that raised Christ from the dead lives on the inside of you. God has put bounce back in your
spirit. He knew we would face disappointments and things that could sour our future. He put in you a fire
that cannot be put out, a determination to overcome what's trying to hold you back,
a strength to rise up when every voice is telling you to settle. And when life knocks you down,
it's okay to process it and grieve the loss. I'm not telling you to ignore the pain, just be strong.
God made us with emotions. We feel things. What I'm saying is don't stay there. Don't let the loss
become your location. Don't let what happened to you become your identity. You need to have this
still-I-rise mentality. Yes, life knocked me down, but it can't keep me down. Still, I rise. Yes, I had a
bad break. The door closed. I don't understand it, but still I believe. Still I trust. Still a smile.
Still a praise. You have to have a made-up mind that when life knocks you down, you're not going to live defeated
and think about what didn't work out, you declare in the face of those circumstances,
still I rise. I was in my kitchen the other day and I had a glass of water and I reached over to
pick something up and somehow the glass slipped out of my hand and hit the countertop.
It broke into a dozen pieces. The glass had a thick bottom, maybe an inch of solid glass,
but it was shattered. After I cleaned it up, I went over to the countertop to see if it was damaged.
I thought it probably dented it or chipped it. The glass was so hard, but there was no dent,
no ding, looked perfect. It's because the countertop is granite. Granite is one of the hardest stones
much harder than glass. You can drop glass on granite all day long. Even though the glass is hard
and seems so sturdy and tough, it'll never break the granite. In the same way, God made you
harder than anything that will come against you. There are things you would think would break you.
The sickness, the addiction, the trouble. It feels bigger, stronger. But can I encourage you,
you are unbreakable. You are like that granite. You are harder than what's trying to break you.
You are stronger than what's trying to stop you. You are more powerful than what's trying to hold you.
Greater is he that's in you than what's coming against you. Now, you may, you may,
not have the strength on your own, but there's something greater in you. That bad break may seem
like it soured your future, knocked you down, but there is bounced back in your spirit. The same
power that raised Christ is going to raise you back up. Now, you can't have a weak, defeated
mentality. I don't know, Joel, I can't handle this. It's too much. Have a new perspective.
Yes, I'm hurting, but I know a secret, still arise. Yes, it looks. It looks.
bad, but still I believe. Yes, I'm outnumbered. Still, still I trust. Yes, I got the wind knocked out of me,
but this is not how my story ends. I'm not settling here. Still, I move forward. Still, I dream. Still, I expect
God's goodness. This is what Jacob did in the scripture. As a young man, he had to leave his hometown
because his brother, Esau, was angry with him. Jacob had stolen his birthright. Issaul was going to take
revenge, so Jacob fled to a faraway city and lived with his uncle for many years. That's where he met his
wives, Rachel, and Leah. They had many children. Jacob was blessed with cattle and livestock.
Well, after everything cooled down, God said to him in Genesis 31, return to the land of your
fathers, and I will be with you. Well, Jacob always wanted to go back home. So he gathered his family,
his flocks, his children. He headed toward Hebrew.
where his father, Isaac, lived.
It was a long journey,
and they made it to the city of Bethel and camp there.
That's where God changed his name from Jacob,
which means deceiver and trickster.
That's who he was in the past,
to Israel, which means prince with God.
It was a destiny moment where he had this new identity.
I'm not who I used to be.
I'm a new man.
He built an altar there and worshipped God.
They left Bethel and continued on the journey.
his wife Rachel was pregnant. She began to have labor pains. They stopped and the midwives begin to help her.
She went into labor. It was very hard. There were complications.
Rachel gave birth to the child, a healthy baby, but Rachel didn't make it. She died during childbirth.
Here it was the best of times, new baby boy and the worst of times. Jacob lost his beloved wife.
in those days they had multiple wives and he had married her sister Leah he was tricked into that but
Rachel was the love of his life first time he saw Rachel it was love at first sight so much so that
he told her father Laban that he would work for him seven years just to be able to marry her after the
seven years Laban didn't keep his word he gave him the oldest daughter Leah instead
Jacob said that's not what we agreed to well Laban said
then you have to work for me seven more years to have Rachel.
Jacob did it.
That's how much he loved Rachel.
Now his world is shattered.
He never dreamed he would lose the thing he loved the most.
It's one thing if she passed from old age, at their home,
they had reached their destination,
but he lost her along the way while they were in transition,
while they were dreaming about what was to come.
And sometimes on our journey in life, the unexpected happens. A dream dies. A door closes. A loved one doesn't make it. We didn't see it coming. We get knocked down. It's easy to stay down and wonder why it happened, live defeated, give up on dreams. We were doing the right thing, but the wrong thing happened. God, where were you? Why didn't you stop this? There will always be unanswered questions. Faith is about,
trusting when you don't understand, not trying to figure everything out. Don't put a question mark
where God has put a period. He's still in control. He's still ordering your steps. He still has a
purpose for you to fulfill. And it's not like Jacob was off course doing doing something he wasn't
supposed to be doing. Oh, God told him to go back home. He was being obedient following God's
plan for his life. You can imagine the pain he felt, the grief, and the grief.
sense of loss, being overwhelmed. This is the woman he worked 14 years for. This was the mother of
Joseph, a son that would impact the world. Suddenly she's gone. Here they were planning on seeing
their family, having a big reunion, all being together again. Then life happened. What made it even
worse is he couldn't bury her with his family. The custom in those days is you had to bury the body
within 24 hours. They were weeks away from their destination.
So right there on the side of the road, he dug a grave. He set a memorial stone and he marked her
passing. This was a critical point. Jacob could have settled there. He could have canceled
his plans and thought, no need for me to go any further. My dreams are shattered. I'm too
heartbroken. He could have lived in mourning. But verse 21 says, after honoring her passing,
Israel journeyed on.
The verse before says
Jacob set a marker on her grave.
When Moses wrote this, he used two different names.
It's not a coincidence.
God was showing us,
Jacob represents the human part of us.
Our emotions, the pain, the grief, the heartbreak.
That's Jacob.
He set up this pillar to mark her passing.
God didn't say, Jacob, you've got to get going.
Don't feel anything.
Be stronger. No, grief is not weakness. Grief is a sign that you loved. When you love deeply,
you grieve deeply. There's a time for mourning, a time for weeping, a time to process so you can heal.
If you don't grieve your losses and you hold everything in, just try to override it, it's not healthy.
There needs to be a release. Weeping endures for a night, then joy comes. Don't bypass the process.
But here's the key. The enemy would love for a season of mourning to turn into a lifetime of morning,
to where you set up camp at the memorial stone. You always think about what you lost. You relive the hurt,
give up on dreams, and settle in the sorrow. That's how Jacob fell. Those are normal emotions.
Then the scripture switches his name and says, Israel journeyed on. Israel is the spirit inside you.
you. It's who God called you to be. When Jacob wants to settle in defeat, Israel moves forward in faith.
When Jacob is overcome with sorrow, Israel rises up, wipes the tears, and presses on. Weeping
indoors for a night, that's Jacob, but joy is coming in the morning. That's Israel. Jacob will feel
overwhelmed by the loss, but the Israel in you says, still I rise. Still I believe. Still I trust.
Still I journey on.
We see this with Job.
He lost everything in the middle of the trouble.
When he should have been depressed, he looked up and said,
though he slayed me, yet will I trust him?
That was Israel coming out.
But when we have bad breaks and we have to bury a dream or bury something that you dearly loved,
Jacob will be there, the grieving, the sorrow.
But can I encourage you, there's an Israel in you as well.
Israel carries the power, the fortitude, the strength that causes you to rise back up, to defy the odds,
to journey on when all the circumstances tell you to settle.
Man, look what's happened.
It's not fair.
This has soured your life.
When Jacob wants to sit down, Israel stands up.
Jacob feels the pain, but Israel carries the promise that no weapon formed against you will prosper,
that there are beauty for those ashes.
Jacob will try to convince you that you're done.
You've seen your best days.
You can't handle this.
But if you'll listen carefully, you'll hear Israel saying,
no, no, still I rise.
Still I move forward.
Still I pursue.
Yes, that door closed.
I'm disappointed, but I'm going to knock on another door.
That's Israel.
Had trouble with your child or the difficulty at work.
Should have given you a nervous breakdown.
Taking your joy, your victory.
but you felt a strength, a power that you can't explain to keep moving forward.
That's Israel.
That's God sustaining you.
That's his spirit causing you to overcome.
Maybe a relationship didn't work out.
You lost a loved one.
You should get stuck thinking wide.
It's not fair.
I don't understand it.
That's where Jacob was.
But what happened with him is going to happen to you.
Israel is going to show up.
Jacob couldn't have done this on his own.
It was too much, too overwhelming.
But when he came to the end of his ability, Israel stepped in.
That's the spirit of God causing you to move forward, to continue on, despite what's tried to stop you.
Now, don't be down on yourself when things feel heavy.
Some people say, if you have faith, you shouldn't grieve.
You shouldn't feel the pain, feel the sadness.
No, Jacob doesn't go away.
We're human.
Jesus wept when his friend Lazarus died. He felt sorrow and heartache. In the Garden of Gassimony,
he was so overwhelmed. He sweat, drops of blood. He's God. Yet in his body, he had these emotions.
Not a lack of faith to feel things. The Jacob in you feels pain. Jacob reacts to loss and betrayal.
Jacob carries wounds and questions. That's the natural part of us. And on our own,
by ourselves, we would get stuck. The good news is, there's not just Jacob in you, there's
an Israel in you. That's who I'm calling out. Israel gets up after being knocked down.
Israel moves forward while they're still hurting. Israel trusts, even though there's
unanswered questions, Israel praises through the pain, speaks victory in the middle of the trouble.
Sure, Jacob buries the dream, mourns the loss, acknowledges the disappointment, but
Israel journeys on. You may be in a tough season too and you feel that pain,
discouraged over the difficulty. Jacob's been out a long time. Can I tell you,
Israel is in you, but you have to let him rise up. Starts in our thoughts. What are you telling
yourself? I can't handle this. It's too much. Why did they treat me this way? That's going to
keep Israel from showing up. He's in you, but you have to let him come alive. Try a different approach.
this was a bad break. I don't understand it, but God, I trust you. You said, you've armed me with
strength for every battle. You said, I can do all things through Christ. I may be down, but I'm not
staying down. Still, I will arise. See, Jacob had every reason to settle on the way to his destiny,
doing the right thing, pursuing what God told him, and he lost what mattered most of him.
could have become bitter, overcome by sorrow, stuck in unanswered questions, but he did what we all
have to do. He let Israel rise up. He was saying, in effect, I'm hurting, but I'm still moving.
I'm grieving, but I'm going forward. I've lost something precious, but I didn't lose my purpose.
We all had these times like Jacob that don't seem fair. You may feel the pain, but don't forfeit the
promise. What God is spoken over your life is still going to come to pass. It may be difficult,
but the Israel in you is saying, journey on. Keep dreaming, keep pursuing, keep expecting. You can't
keep a good person down. Despite what's happened, you will still arise. You will still see the
goodness of God. My father was pastoring a church back in the late 1950s and was very successful. They just
built a beautiful new sanctuary, seating a thousand people. He was on the state board for his
denomination on his way up. Then my sister Lisa was born with the birth injuries. Something like
cerebral palsy. The doctors told my parents that she would probably never be able to speak,
walk, or even feed herself. They didn't see that coming. Jacob was there. Their human emotions
and they were discouraged. They felt this sorrow, heaviness, wondering,
why it happened, but inside each one of us, there's not just Jacob, there's an Israel.
My father told how he felt this holy anger, this fire, this passion to pray and believe that Lisa
could be healed. That went against everything he was taught back then. In seminary, he was told
that the day of miracles was over, that it ceased when the last disciples died. He went to a hotel
downtown to pray and read the scripture. Jacob was grieving, but Israel journeyed on. My father saw how
Jesus went around healing people with great power and victory. Faith rose in his heart. He came
back to his church and started preaching with a new fire and passion, encouraging them to believe
that God can do what seems impossible. He thought they would be excited and on board, but it was just
the opposite. They didn't like it.
went against their tradition.
They ended up asking my father to leave.
My parents had poured their heart into those people and given them their very best.
My mother told me, lifelong friends never spoke to her again.
Like Jacob on the way to their destination, doing what God called them to do, a dream died.
Didn't seem fair.
God could have stopped it.
There were unanswered questions.
My parents grieved the loss.
they mourned what didn't work out, but they didn't get bitter.
They didn't hold on to the hurt and talk bad about the people and try to get revenge.
They realize God put a period there that that season was over.
See, God is our doorkeeper.
He opens and closes the doors in our life.
It doesn't always make sense to us.
He numbers our days.
Our times are in his hands.
Daddy had to bury that dream.
except that it didn't work out.
But just because one dream dies
doesn't mean God doesn't have another dream.
Losing a job, a relationship, a loved one,
that doesn't stop God's purpose for your life.
Your destiny is not in what you've lost,
it's in what you have left.
But here's the whole key.
If you focus on the loss,
what didn't work out, what they did,
you're going to get stuck.
And sure, you're going to feel the emotion,
disappointment, sadness. Jacob is there, but Israel's in there too. After you process the loss,
you go through the healing, Israel is going to rise up and say, journey on. Move forward. Don't stay
here and mourn this any longer. It's a season. Don't let it turn into a lifetime. And this is what
my parents did. They went out and started Lakewood with 90 people on Mother's Day in 1959.
My sister Lisa kept getting better and better defying the odds.
And of course, today she's perfectly normal.
Lakewood is still going strong 67 years later.
What the enemy means for harm, God knows how to turn to your advantage.
And sometimes what we think is the enemy is really the divine plan of God.
Things we don't understand, but it's all working for his purpose.
But had my father not journeyed on, we wouldn't be here today.
had my mother gotten bitter and lived with a chip on her shoulder, she would have never seen all the
blessing in favor. They were knocked down, but they made this decision, we're not going to stay down.
They felt the sting of rejection, being misunderstood and pushed out, but they also felt Israel
inside. Despite the opposition, they had the attitude, still we rise, still we believe, still we journey on.
the scripture says a good man falls seven times but he gets back up again the question is not are you going to get knocked down life happens to us all
the question is are you going to get back up again when it says israel journeyed on it means he rose up with a new attitude a new courage a new determination that said this bad break is not going to defeat me this loss is not going to define me
I know I am stronger than what's trying to stop me.
I am more powerful than what's trying to keep me down.
You have bounced back in your spirit.
Resurrection power.
Don't settle in the disappointment.
Journey on to the new things God has for you.
I heard about this five-year-old boy.
His name was Johnny and he was in church one Sunday morning with his family and the pastor was
up speaking.
Johnny kept standing up.
He couldn't sit still.
His mother whispered Johnny, please sit down.
He would sit.
30 seconds later, he'd stand back up.
This happened again and again.
At one point, he stood up and wouldn't sit back down.
His mother reached over, put her hands on his shoulders, pushed him down, and held him down.
He was so upset.
He looked at her and said, I may be sitting down on the outside, but I'm standing up on the inside.
Sometimes life will push you down.
It's like the circumstances won't let you get back up.
The medical report is holding you down or had trouble with your child.
That loss, you may not be able to get up on the outside, but like little Johnny, you have to get up on the inside.
In your attitude, in your thinking, you have to talk to yourself the right way.
Not this is too much.
I'll never get well.
This bad break has soured my future.
You're defeating yourself.
Israel is in use.
supernatural strength, courage to get back up, to journey on. But if you're only focusing on the hurt,
the disappointment, Israel will stay silent. You've got to wake him up. Get your fire back.
Get your passion back. God didn't bring you this far to leave you. He knows what's come against you.
He feels the pain. He collects your tears. This is not the end of your story. This is one chapter.
He had to bury something on the road, in transition to where God is taking you.
Wasn't a surprise to him.
It didn't cancel your destiny.
Do like Israel and journey on.
He continued to his hometown and he was reunited with his father, Isaac.
Hadn't seen him for decades.
He left as Jacob, the deceiver, the trickster.
He was known for his poor choices, but he came home as Israel, a patriarch.
a man of great honor and respect. I'm sure when he was burying Rachel the side of the road,
in transition, he thought he'd seen his best days, that he'd just have to survive. Here's how good God is.
After the loss of Rachel, after the heartbreak, he went on to see his 12 sons become the 12 tribes
of Israel. Benjamin, the son Rachel gave birth to when she passed. He was called the son of strength.
his tribe became known for courage and loyalty.
After the loss, Jacob saw his son Joseph rise to power and become the prime minister of Egypt.
Joseph was the one God used to save the Israelites during the famine.
This all happened after the bad break.
If Jacob were here today, he would tell you, loss is not the end of your story.
When life knocks you down, Israel steps in.
There's a power in you.
explain, a force to push you forward, a grace to make it through what should stop you.
And sure, you're going to feel the emotion, sorrow, grief. Jacob is your humanity,
but Israel is your destiny. There is a favor on the other side of the disappointment.
There are new beginnings in the path in front of you. Sure, it's okay to bury something,
acknowledge the season, grieve the loss, but don't let the loss become your location.
it's not okay to stay
Israel is there to help
you journey on to move forward
when things come against you
you think are too much you have to
remind yourself you are unbreakable
God has made you harder
stronger more resilient
than anything that tries to stop you
now don't have a weak defeated mentality
have a still-out-rise mentality
despite the loss despite the bad break
still I believe
still I pray, still I trust, still I journey on.
If you'll do this, I believe and declare Israel's going to show up.
God will not only bring you through, but you will flourish again.
Weeping may endure for a night, but joy is coming, strength is coming, healing, new
relationships, victory is coming.
In Jesus' name, and if you receive it, can you say amen?
I'd like to give you an opportunity to make Jesus the Lord.
of your life. Would you pray with me? Just say, Lord Jesus, I repent of my sins. Come into my heart. I make you,
my Lord and Savior. If you prayed that simple prayer, we believe you got born again. We'd love to send you
some free information on your new walk with the Lord. You can text the number on the screen or go to the
website, but I hope you'll get into a good Bible-based church and keep God first place.
We all go through disappointments and things that are not fair, but God sees every hurt, every injustice,
and he's promised to pay you back for the unfair things.
I'd love to send you my new resource, Double for your trouble.
It's filled with inspiration to help you stay in faith and not get bitter and think why me.
No, that setback may have been painful, but the fact is, it sets you up for double.
God will make the enemy pay and bring you out better than you were before.
This ministry is reaching people around the world with the message of hope.
And as our way of saying thank you for your gift of any amount, we would like to send you
a copy of Double for Your Trouble, a daily guide for Restoration.
This 31-day spiral-bound resource is an invitation into healing, restoration, and the abundant
life God has promised.
Whether you're walking through a season of loss, believing for a breakthrough, or simply
looking for a deeper connection with God, this guide is designed to be able to be able to be
This guide is designed to help you reflect, realign, and rebuild day by day.
Receive your copy and know that whatever you're facing today, grief, loss, uncertainty.
It doesn't define your future.
Choose to trust God.
He sees you.
He cares deeply.
And he is the God who restores double.
None of us like difficulties, but if you'll stay in faith, you won't come out the same.
You'll come out with double.
Victoria and I pray for you and your family every day.
Thank you for your prayers and support.
Your donations are bringing hope to people around the world.
Special thank you to our Champion of Hope partners
for all you do to make the ministry possible.
Until we see you again next week,
may the Lord bless you and keep you.
Be sure to request your copy of Devil for Your Trouble,
available this month by simply visiting us
at Joel Lohsteen.com or call 888-567
Joel. You can also receive God's Got You Restoration Duo. This book is a powerful reminder that no matter
what you face, you are not alone. God's got you and he will never let you go. In addition to these two
inspiration books, you can also receive the double portion restoration Bible collection. This beautifully
curated collection brings together the restoring of hope of double for your trouble and the
comforting reassurance of God's Got You paired with a
stunning CSB Thinline Bible, digital study edition in Camel Suede Soft Leather Touch.
This elegant Bible offers a rich, immersive study experience, an enduring companion as you
lean in to God's promises of renewal and restoration.
Let these resources strengthen your faith, study your heart, and remind you each day that God
is restoring, leading, and working double on your behalf. You can request these inspiring
resources by calling 888-567 Joel or logging on to joelosteen.com today.
If you've never been to Lakewood, we have a great opportunity to come. We call it Homecoming
Weekend. We'd love to meet you and your family. You can see the building and attend one of the
services. It's a great time to be a part of the Lakewood family. Looking forward to seeing you
at Homecoming Weekend.
