Life.Church with Craig Groeschel - Hope When You're Hurting | God Is: Part 1
Episode Date: March 6, 2022Sometimes it can feel like the weight of the world is on your shoulders. From everything going on in the world to personal struggles, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. No matter what you’re facing, c...hurch is a safe place to bring your doubts and fears. In this message, Pastor Craig is sharing how to find hope when you’re hurting. ABOUT THIS MESSAGEWhen you see God Is _____ what comes to mind? How can any of us really know what God's like? Too often, we view Him from our limited perspective, but it doesn't have to be that way. Together, let's discover how to fill that space with truth. WE’RE OPENWe’re continuing to monitor guidelines and best practices for gathering in a safe way. Learn more about everything we're doing to keep you safe and how you can help by using hand sanitizer, washing your hands often, and more: https://www.life.church/updatesFind a time and attend a service with us: http://www.life.church/locationsNEXT STEPSHave you made a decision to follow Jesus? You may be wondering what’s next on your journey. We want to help! Let us guide you to your next steps in your walk with Christ: https://www.life.church/nextABOUT LIFE.CHURCHWherever you are in life, you have a purpose. Life.Church wants to help you find your next step. Our hope is that your journey will include joining us at a Life.Church location throughout the United States or globally online at https://www.live.life.church. Find locations, videos, and more info about us at https://www.life.church or download the Life.Church app at https://www.life.church/app. FIND US ON SOCIAL MEDIAFacebook: http://www.facebook.com/life.churchInstagram: http://www.instagram.com/life.churchTwitter: http://www.twitter.com/lifechurchTikTok:https://www.tiktok.com/@lifechurchCONNECT WITH PASTOR CRAIGYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIId...Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/craiggroeschelInstagram: http://www.instagram.com/craiggroeschelTwitter: http://www.twitter.com/craiggroeschelTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@craiggroeschel 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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I want to talk to those of you who are hurting.
Maybe you're a little bit afraid.
You're alone.
You might feel exhausted or worn out.
Maybe you feel like you're losing hope.
I'm going to show you a guy from the Old Testament.
His name is Jeremiah.
And his words are recorded in one of the places in Lamentations 3.
And if you feel worn out, if you feel discouraged, this guy felt a lot like you.
In fact, I would encourage you to read Lamentations 3.
I'm going to tell you in what I'd call today's language what he said.
This isn't exactly the way he said it.
When he said it in Lamentation 3, it's more Bible-ing.
But I'm going to say it how you would say it.
I'm going to tell you how you would say it, but I promise you this is in the Bible.
Essentially what he said was this.
He said, people suck.
That's how you would say it.
He said, life isn't fair.
He said, my body is wrecked.
He said, I can't sleep.
I'm broke.
I don't know how I'm going to pay the bills.
I'm overwhelmed with anxiety.
and God doesn't seem to care.
That's what he said.
I promise it's more Bibley in Lamentations 3,
but that's essentially what he said.
And then in Lamentations 3, verse 19,
he said, I remember my affliction
and my wandering and the bitterness and the gall.
I remember them and my soul is downcast within me.
Yet, this, I am.
I call to mind and therefore I have hope.
Today, my goal is to help you call to mind
one of the beautiful, powerful attributes of God
that will give you hope when you're hurting.
He said, I call this to mind and therefore I have hope.
The faithful love of the Lord never ends.
Here's our attribute.
His mercies never cease.
Great is his, his soul.
faithfulness for his mercies begin afresh each morning today. It is my honor to talk to you
about the mercy of God. And the title of today's message is hope when you are hurting. Father,
give us hope through your word. May we experience your mercy, your goodness, your grace,
and your faithfulness and be changed in your presence by the power of your word. In Jesus' name,
pray and everybody said amen and amen. The mercy of God. This subject is honestly it's a lot more
complex than most people would think. There are honestly there are layers to every single
attribute of God and there's a lot of overlap but there's also a lot of distinction and so one of my
goals whenever I'm communicating or teaching is to really simplify, to take it to take
any kind of concept and to make it really, really simple. Now, I'm going to do that today.
I'm going to start simple and then I might confuse you, which is exciting because sometimes
confusing preaching is called deep preaching. Have you ever noticed that? I mean, like if it's
confusing is deep. And so that's just kind of a preacher joke. But what I'm going to do is I'm going to
start simple and then we are going to go a little bit deep into something that's complex and
hopefully come back out on the other side with a very powerful and very simple truth.
One of the challenges when we talk about the attributes of God, I think a lot of people see them all
in kind of like this soupy, goppy stew.
Like they all kind of go in there together.
Like there's a, they all kind of overlap.
Like there's love and joy and mercy and goodness and he's just and he's faithful and he's
full of grace and he's compassion and all this stuff.
And all of those are true and they do all overlap, overlap.
But they are also very unique and quite distinct.
For example, today I want to give you three of the attributes or qualities of God.
that are closely related,
but they're actually very, very different in function.
We're gonna look at three just to build our foundation.
One is justice, one is grace, one is mercy.
They're related, but yet very, very distinct.
What is justice?
Justice is simply defined whenever you get what you deserve.
And in our culture today,
when someone does something horrible,
we tend to think, let justice be served.
That's justice.
somebody gets what they deserve.
Grace is when you get what you don't deserve.
Do any of you deserve salvation?
The answer is no, we don't deserve it,
but we're saved by grace.
God gives us something that we do not deserve.
That's different from mercy.
Mercy is when you don't get what you do deserve.
And they're all a little bit different.
For example, most of us like justice until it comes down to us.
We don't want justice with us.
What do we want?
We want mercy.
We don't want what we deserve.
We don't want to get what we actually do deserve.
We want other people to get justice.
But oh, we want mercy.
For example, how many of you've ever gotten a ticket for driving too fast?
Ready for a little fact?
I've never gotten a ticket for driving too fast.
That's amazing.
54 years old.
And I know just this week, I'm going to get pulled over and I'll crush my record.
Ha!
But I've never got to.
the ticket for that, but I did get one ticket in my life, and it was for an expired license tag.
I went, Amos with me, we went to the traffic court thing. I don't know if you ever been there
before, but I don't want to talk bad about anybody, but I felt really humiliated. Number one,
about a third of the people knew me in there, like, Pastor Craig's here. What did he do wrong? I knew.
They're not a live church, you know, whatever. And so I went in there, and it was funny because
the guy up the front was calling people up, and everybody in there, I promise you, they were all
innocence. Like, was you? Well, it wasn't my fault. Well, I wasn't really speeding. Well, I didn't
make that left turn. Well, the light was green or the light was yellow, whatever. Everybody
in there wasn't their fault. When he called me up, he's like, Craig Rochelle, they're like,
oh, there's Pessor-Gra. I walked up, all the walk of shame up the front. And I stood before me,
he said, what's your story? I said, I'm just, I'm sorry. I'm an idiot. I forgot. I'm guilty.
And he looked at me, just shocked. He said, what did you just say? And I said, I'm sorry. He said,
not that part, the other part. I said, I'm guilty. He said, no, no, no, no, no, the other part,
the good part. I said, I'm an idiot. He said, yeah, that part. And I thought, oh, he's going to,
like, shame me. And he just said to me, the true story, he's like going, can you say that again?
I said, I'm an idiot. And he said, what kind of a idiot are you? So, I'm a guilty idiot.
He said, could you say it louder? And he gave me this look kind of like, just trust me and
work with me. He said, can you say it louder? So I was kind of falling along. It's like, I'm a guilty
I'm a guilty, guilty, guilty idiot. I'm the worst. Bad, bad, bad, bad me. I'm a guilty idiot.
And the guy looked at me and he said, oh my gosh, all these other people are innocent. You're guilty.
I can't have your guilt infecting them. You're forgiven. Go out of here. And I walked out of there
with no ticket for the gross. Somebody, that's mercy. That's when I was wrong. And I deserved
punishment, but I didn't get the punishment.
We want justice for other people, but we tend to want mercy for ourselves.
And God, this is good news, is a merciful God.
I want to show you a text in Ephesians chapter 2 that is not fun.
It's not fun at all.
Paul contrast our spiritual condition without Christ, our nature without Christ.
He contrasts that with God's mercy.
And he says in Ephesians 2, verses 1 through 3,
He says, once you were dead because of your disobedience in many sins.
So first of all, he says, you're spiritually dead because you did a lot of things wrong.
Then he said, you used to live in sin like the rest of the world obeying the devil.
So watch what he's saying.
You're spiritually dead and you're obeying the devil.
Then he said, all of us used to live that way following the passionate desires and inclinations of our sinful nature.
We did whatever felt good, whatever we wanted.
By our very nature, Paul says, we were subject to God's anger or his wrath, just like everyone else.
So let's summarize this and see what he's saying.
He's saying without Christ, you are spiritually dead, not physically dead,
spiritually dead because you're disobedience to God.
You're obeying the devil without Christ and you're following your sinful desires
and you're subject to God's anger or his wrath.
That's confusing when we at church preach about a loving God.
And this is where it gets a little bit complex.
How can a loving God also be an angry God?
That doesn't make sense to me.
What I want to try to show you is that love and anger can unquestionably coexist.
They can unquestionably coexist.
I'm going to give you an analogy, and I want to warn you, it's going to break down
because I'm going to compare God to you.
And the problem is, if you haven't noticed, you ain't God.
Okay, so it does break down some, but it's going somewhere.
For example, if you have a child and you love your child, but your child lies to you, what do you feel?
You feel simultaneous love toward your child and anger at the sin.
But they coexist.
If you have a friend that you love, but your friend likes to drink too much and drive drunk,
you can simultaneously love your friend and be really, really mad.
Your friend is putting himself or herself and other people in danger.
They coexist.
You can love your husband so much, but when he doesn't put the toilet,
let lit down. Come on somebody. You might not love him in that moment and you're asking for God's help
to love him. You can both love and be angry at the same moment. And so when God is angry, he can both
love people and be angry at that which hurts his creation at the same time. And Paul is talking about
this in the nuance as he says, without Christ, you're subject to his wrath. He's angry.
at the filth, the horror, the sin that goes against everything of His holiness.
And then in verse four, you see two of the best words in all of the Bible.
Remember, what are we without Christ?
We're dead in our sins.
We're obeying the devil.
We are subject to God's anger.
And then Paul says, but God.
Somebody say, but God?
Say it again.
He says, but God.
He says, but God is so rich in what?
But God is so rich in mercy, and he loved us so much that even when we were dead because of our sins,
he gave us life when he raised Christ from the dead.
In other words, even though we deserve to be punished, because of God's rich mercy,
he didn't give us what we deserve.
If you ever are tempted to think, well, God's not fair.
sometimes you need to say, thank God. He's not fair. Because if he was fair, I would get what my sins
deserve. God is rich in mercy. In fact, that's a rich word in the Greek, is the word Elios. And
this word is a present tense word. What it means is that God lives in a continual, ongoing state of
mercy. It's an unending state of mercy. He is really,
rich in mercy. It's continual. In other words, it's always been there. It always will be there.
And that's why it's new every morning. It was there yesterday. It was new today. It'll be new tomorrow
because it does not end. It's always there. It's continual, unending. He is abounding in rich
mercy. You may say, but wasn't God like the ticked off angry God in the Old Testament?
strike him dead.
And now he's like the loving wink, wink at sin,
push over God in the New Testament.
No, no, no, no, no.
He's always been just and he's always been merciful.
He's always been righteous and he's always been loving.
And here's the problem.
This is why so many people have a wrong view of God.
And let me just, again, we're going to go deep.
This is deep.
It may be confusing, but that's deep.
Okay.
This is where people go wrong.
So many people,
they don't understand God because their view of God starts in Genesis 3 and it ends in Revelation 20.
It starts in Genesis 3 and it ends in Revelation 20.
If you don't know, Genesis 3, that's when Adam and Eve fell.
That's when they sinned.
That's when they disobeyed God.
And Genesis 20 talks about the punishment.
That's the judgment.
That's the eternal damnation.
And so for so many people, when they think about God, their theology is, you're a sinner and you're going to hell.
You're pathetic and you're going to hell.
You fell short and you're going to hell.
You're not a good person, you're going to hell.
But that's not where the story of God started, and that's not where the story of God ends.
The beginning is in Genesis 1.
And in Genesis 1, God created everything and said, it's good.
It's all good.
The oceans are good.
The mountains are good.
The skies are good.
The birds are good.
The fish are good.
The watermelon's good.
The pineapple is good.
It's all good.
Then he created people.
And he didn't say people were good.
He said, now man is very good.
This is where it started.
It started with the goodness of God.
And he said, this is so good.
Enjoy it all.
Be naked.
Multiply.
Have fun.
Party in the garden.
Just don't eat the fruit of this one tree.
This is one.
and then Adam and he gave in a temptation, they ate the one.
God said, if you eat of that, you'll surely die.
The end of it, did they die a physical death?
No, they died a spiritual death.
And what did God do?
Because he's a mean, judgmental, angry God,
he struck him dead on the spot
and made little black spots right there by his first blade of grass.
That'll teach him, no, that's not what he did.
he said hey i'm sorry there are consequences for what you did got bad news for you child bearin's
going to be really hard and you're going to work a lot that's what's coming there's some consequences
but then what did god do in his mercy which is new every morning that has been there from the beginning
and will be there till the end in his mercy he sacrificed an innocent animal and made coverings with the
skin for their shame. His mercy is new every morning. It was there at the very beginning. It starts with
his mercy and his goodness. And it goes all the way to the end in Revelation 21 and 22 when we see
that God makes all things new again. It starts with good. It ends with good because his mercy
is new every morning.
When you understand the nature of God,
yes, he's always just,
but he's always mercy.
Your only reasonable response,
in view of God's mercy,
we offer our lives as living sacrifices.
He's always been good, he always will be good.
Are you tracking with me?
Is this a little bit deep?
I was hoping you to say yes.
Okay, we'll keep.
going on. All right. In the Old Testament, David sinned. And you may be thinking, there's a
Bashiba thing. Should have been up on the roof. Okay. This is a different time. David actually
was pretty dang good at sinning. Thankfully, God is a God of mercy. And this was a sin that could have
had some pretty big consequences to a lot of people in the Old Testament. And I want you to watch
what David did is he wanted to turn to God, but I want you to watch who he didn't want to turn to
when he had done wrong. He says this in 2 Samuel 24. He says,
let us fall into the hands of the Lord. Why? For his mercy
is great. He'll have mercy for my wrongdoing. Let me run to the God who is a
merciful God. And then he says, but do not let me fall into human hands.
I think that's kind of funny. I want to go to a merciful God because God may show mercy,
but so many people won't. Am I telling the truth, right?
Am I telling the truth?
God may be a merciful God, but oh my gosh, if you mess up, people will pile on.
And the tragedy is that so often those who should be most merciful, the body of Christ,
are often those who show the least mercy.
We're going to come back to this thought because it's really, really important.
But what I want to do first is I want to show you just how much mercy means to God,
just how much it matters to God.
In fact, if you look in the Old Testament, they're the most ridiculous, detailed descriptions of how God wanted his holy temple built.
Okay?
If you don't know, the holy temple would be his dwelling place.
And you can read again and again.
I mean, so many details that will make you want to skip that day of Bible reading.
Like this is how you build a portico and here's the entry and here's the storeroom and here's the upper part and here's the dimensions.
It can be this much and this much by this much, this long, and here's the cubits and here's the gold and here's the silver wood, here's the bronze and you do all this kind of stuff.
And then God says in the middle of my house, what I want you to build is a place of atonement.
In the very middle of all the descriptive glory and beauty of my house, I want you to build.
a mercy seat. Why? Because God was saying, in my house, I want you to always make room for mercy.
Make room for mercy. It's in the center of my house. It's in the center of my heart. It's the core of
who I am because with the birth of every new day, my mercy is already there. James was the one who said that
mercy triumphs over judgment.
Why is it that those people, Christians,
who should be full of the most mercy?
Why?
Because we receive the most mercy.
Why is it that those who receive the most mercy
are often the most judgmental?
Oh, dear God, help us all.
Help us all.
Help us all.
Perhaps one of the biggest reasons why
so many people stay away from God today,
not because of who God is,
but because how we represent God.
It's narrow-minded, hypocritical,
judgmental Christians without mercy.
And that's why, because we are people
who have received mercy,
we should be the most merciful.
What is our message?
It's the message of Jesus.
It's the message that Jesus is knocking on the door.
And if anyone opens up, Jesus comes in.
In other words, our message is,
come as you are.
come with your pain
come with your brokenness
come with your sinfulness
come with your insecurities
come with your dysfunctions
come with your drug problem
come with your porn addiction
come with your lying come with your envy
come with your guilt
come with your come with the things that you don't want
anybody to know about and just come
to Jesus just come to Jesus
just come to Jesus I'm not here to
to judge I've received
mercy I want you to have the same
mercy it doesn't mean
that we won't tell the truth, but it certainly means we're not going to judge you away.
Come just as you are.
Come with your doubts.
Come with your doubts.
We're going to talk about more of this this year.
There's so many people, they have a question about God.
They doubt, and the church says, you can't doubt, and so they leave the church.
Like, this should be the safest place in the world to take your doubts to God.
This should be the place where we're most secure with the most complicated questions about God.
You think God hadn't heard it before?
come with your questions to God.
Come with your complaints to God.
Come with the things that make you crazy about the church.
You think there's a lot of things you don't like?
Listen, I'm here every day.
I can give you a longer list of things I don't like.
We're not perfect.
We'll never be perfect.
We're far from perfect.
We can't be perfect.
So because we're not perfect, we don't demand perfection.
We have been forgiven.
We are people of grace.
And so my message is just like, come on and join me.
I need forgiveness, you need forgiveness.
Let's just go to Jesus.
He is so good.
He is so good.
Let's lay him straighten us out.
Because I can't straighten you out and you can't straighten me out.
So let's just go to him together.
Make room for mercy.
In the middle of my house, make room for mercy.
If there's anything in the middle, make room for mercy.
Make room for mercy in the church.
Make room for mercy in your heart.
You need to receive the mercy of God.
He's given it to you.
Now, receive it.
Accept it.
You're forgiven.
You're changed.
You're new.
That thing that you hate about yourself, that you can't let go.
Why are you holding onto something that God is already forgiven?
Make room for mercy.
Look at the person next to you and say, make room for mercy.
Type it in chat, make room for mercy, make room for mercy.
Make room for mercy.
There's a difference between.
justice, grace and mercy.
What is justice?
Justice is very clear.
It's when you get what you deserve.
And boy, we like when people get justice
except for when it's us.
And then there's grace.
Grace is when you get what you don't deserve.
Nobody here deserves salvation.
Nobody here can earn it.
You're saved by grace.
Grace is when you get what you don't deserve
and mercy is when you don't get what you do deserve.
I wonder who's thankful for the mercy
of God in their lives today.
Thank God for His mercy.
Thank God for His mercy.
Thank God that I do not get what my sins deserve.
Thank God that in his mercy, God sent Jesus.
And what makes it even more emotional is,
when someone sins, someone must die.
God is just, but he's also merciful.
So because of my sin, someone had to pay the price.
And this is where it gets really difficult, that someone was the son of God who paid it for me
in my place.
The one who never sinned paid it for me.
My ticket wasn't just forgiven, but someone paid for my wrongdoing, for my sinfulness.
Our only reasonable response, the author says this, let us present our bodies as holy
sacrifice, living sacrifices. This is our holy and acceptable act of worship. That's what we do.
Living for Jesus is worship. Worship isn't just singing the song. It's because of his mercy.
I worship him with the way that I live. Thank God for his mercy. Thank God for his mercy.
Some of you may say, well, I thank God for his mercy, but I'm still hurting. And I know that
so many of you are. There's so much pain going on right now. When I look around,
at those who are closest in my life, I see, I see more brokenness.
I see more sadness.
I see more anxiety.
I see more tension than I think I've seen in 31 years of ministry today.
And I want to go back to what Jeremiah said in Lamentations, chapter three.
He said this.
He said, the faithful love of the Lord, if this is so good, it never ends.
It's continual.
It's never ending.
His mercies never cease.
They were there in Genesis 1 and there in the end of Revelation.
He's always been a God of mercy and he'll always be merciful God.
He's always been just and he's always merciful.
And then the author says,
Great is his faithfulness.
His mercies begin afresh each morning,
whatever it is that you need from God.
His arms are open wide.
He starts with mercy.
He was merciful yesterday.
He's merciful today.
He'll be merciful tomorrow.
Whatever you need.
His grace starts anew today.
His goodness starts anew today.
His compassion starts anew today.
His love for you, it never ends.
Whatever you need from God, he is good.
He's always been good.
He loves you.
He is a God of justice and he is a God of compassion.
And so when you're downcast and when you're hurting,
Just like the prophet, you call this to mind, and therefore you have hope.
This is who my God is.
This is what he's done.
He's always been good.
He's always been loving.
He's always been faithful.
He did for me what I couldn't do for myself.
When I am alone, he is with me.
He will never leave me.
He will never forsake me.
He is the God who comforts me in my trials.
He is the God who strengthens me when I'm broken.
He is the God who heals me when I'm sick.
Where can I go for myself?
He is always there.
If I wake up, he's there.
When I go to sleep, he's there.
He was with me last night.
He'll be with me this morning because his mercies never cease.
They are new every morning.
So if you find yourself hurting today,
I bring good news to you.
His mercies are new.
Every single morning.
And it's available for you today.
Wherever you're hurting,
hurting wherever you're afraid. Take it to God. He can handle your doubts. He can handle your fears.
He can handle your brokenness. He can handle your anxiety. He can handle your complaints. He can
handle your sin. Take it to God. He is there. His mercies are new every morning. Father, we pray
today that by the power of your spirit, you would do a work in our church that only you can do.
Speak to us, God, move, God. Today as you're reflecting at all of our different church,
churches, those of you who are hurting, you've got a burden, you've got to wait, maybe an
unanswered prayer, it could be a sin that you're trying to overcome, could be someone betrayed
you, it could be any number of things, a financial burden, you're asking for healing,
whatever it is.
You feel alone, maybe you feel afraid, you're full of questions.
If you need the presence of God right now, would you lift up your hand?
Just all of our churches lift up your hands.
You can type it in the chat, I need the presence of God.
Father, I ask that by your grace,
we would come to you not with a Genesis 3 mindset
starting with our sinfulness,
but instead of Genesis 1 mindset,
started with your goodness,
that you're good and you let us come.
And even when we fail,
because of your rich mercy,
you sent Jesus for us.
So we trust you.
You're the most trustworthy God.
You're always a good God.
So, Father, we ask that you would meet
whatever needs that we have.
we cast our burdens on you because you care for us.
We cry out to you, God.
We bring our questions, we bring our doubts, we bring our fears.
And God, we choose to trust you.
Would you at this moment in a way that only you could do,
would you minister to your sons, to your daughters,
show us your grace, your goodness, your love, your compassion,
your mercy that is new every morning
reveal yourself.
Thank you, God, that you're exactly what we need.
As you keep praying today,
we talked about justice, we talked about grace,
we talked about mercy.
Justice is when people get what they deserve.
And it's a hard truth,
but when we're talking about a holy and a perfect God,
when we sin against that God,
justice is that we pay.
Somebody has to pay.
That's justice.
The amazing thing is,
Jesus, the Son of God, he gave his life as the Lamb of God,
the perfect sacrifice for the forgiveness of our sins.
So what do we get?
Well, by the grace of God, we get salvation,
meaning we're saved by the grace of God through faith.
It's a gift of God.
We didn't earn it.
We get something that we didn't earn or deserve.
And we get the mercy of God,
that even though we deserve punishment,
Jesus paid that price for us.
Let me tell you what, there is no better news.
There is no better news from the time you're born
born till the time your life ends in a God who is that holy and that just and that loving and that
merciful. That is a good God. In view of God's mercy, in view of what he did for us through Jesus,
our only reasonable response is to give him our whole life. And that's what I'm going to ask you to do
right now. And I want you to listen very, very carefully. There are some of you, you've been around
the church for a long time. I'm talking to you. Being a Christian isn't just praying a little prayer.
join a little class, it's not checking a box or going to a membership class, it's a full-on
life submitted to following Jesus. It's a wholly devoted life to Jesus. It's not a one-time
prayer. It's a lifestyle. It's a commitment. It's a relationship with the God of the universe.
How do we start that relationship? We step away from our wrongdoing. We step away from our
sinfulness. And we recognize what Jesus did, who He is.
is the son of God, who paid the penalty for our sins,
died in our place, and God rose him from the dead.
Now, by the grace of God, you can get what you don't deserve.
Salvation.
By the grace of God, we don't pay the penalty we do deserve.
Mercy and forgive this.
And because of that, our only response is,
I give you all of me, all of me.
I'm not a part-time Christian,
it's not this isn't to keep me out of hell.
Like, this is a all of me, God.
I want to belong to you.
I give my life to you.
At all of our churches today, some of you,
you're gonna recognize that Christianity is not just
a little thing to add onto your life.
It is your life.
You know you've sinned, you know you need forgiveness,
you know you need a savior.
And so today, you're stepping away from that.
You're recognizing that justice was served
when Jesus died and paid the price.
And grace was extended and mercy is given today
if you'll receive it.
And your response is, I give you my whole life.
All of our churches, those who say,
I need his forgiveness.
I want to follow him.
I want to give him.
That's my response.
I see who he is.
I know what he's done.
This isn't joining the church.
It isn't some kind of religious feel good thing.
This is a full-blown, all-in commitment to the one who gave his life for me.
Jesus, I surrender.
I want to be your disciple.
Wherever you're watching today, you need him.
You want his forgiveness.
You're ready to be a follower of Jesus.
Give him your life.
All in, Jesus.
Save me.
I give you my life.
This is your prayer.
Lift your hands high right now all over the place.
Lift him up.
Come on somebody.
We've got people today at all of our church is saying,
Yes, Jesus, I surrender my life completely to you.
Those of you online, will you just type it in the comment section?
I'm giving my life to Jesus.
I'm giving my life to Jesus.
Because of His mercy, this is my response.
Would you pray with those around you pray?
Heavenly Father, take my life today.
Jesus, forgive my sins.
Please save me.
Thank you for justice on the cross.
Thank you for grace that saves me.
and thank you for mercy that's new every morning
because of who you are,
because of what you've done,
I give you my whole life,
all of it, every bit of it.
Jesus, you're my Savior.
You are first.
I will follow you every day of my life.
Thank you for new life.
I give you all of mine.
In Jesus' name I pray,
Oh, I need some people who are excited to give God praise today.
Let's thank you for his justice, His grace, and His mercy.
