Life.Church with Craig Groeschel - The Artisan Soul, Part 2: Creating for God
Episode Date: March 22, 2014We are all artists with the ability to create something beautiful. Every action we take, the love we show, and the relationships we build have the potential to become something meaningful and inspirin...g. God put creativity in each one of us–with Hi... 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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Welcome today to all of our life churches and our network churches and those of you at church online.
Next week we're starting a brand new message series called The Counselor.
I'm so excited because we're going to look at four different stories in the gospel when Jesus essentially counseled people.
He asked them questions.
We're going to see Jesus ask, do you want to be made well?
We're going to see Jesus ask, why are you so afraid?
We're going to see Jesus ask, do you think I can do this?
And we're going to see Jesus ask, why do you doubt?
If you need some counseling, we're going to look at the greatest counselor of all time, some stories in the Gospels from Jesus and let him minister to us.
Now, if you missed last week, you missed a lot.
We had my good friend, Erwin McManus, teach an amazing message on his book, The Artisan Soul.
This is a book that will inspire you.
I want to encourage you to get it and let it minister to you.
He's teaching another message this week from the Bible on the very same theme that will bless you.
I love Irwin with all my heart.
His church, Mosaic Church in Los Angeles is an incredible church.
If you know people there, you'll want to send them there.
This guy loves Jesus.
When I grew up, I want to be just like him.
Would you give some life church love to my good friend Erwin McManus?
Thank you, well.
It's great to be back with you guys.
and Craig, I just want you to know that Mosaic in L.A., we just consider ourselves really fortunate partners with Life Church.
You guys are amazing, and I don't know if you know what you're doing here is affecting the entire planet.
You're not only creating community for people in your local cities and counties.
You're actually redefining for people how relevant Jesus is for the world today,
and so I'm just really grateful for your leadership.
we would follow you guys anywhere.
So I live in Los Angeles,
and one of the unique things about L.A.
is that L.A. is like an epicenter of human creativity.
There are more artists in Los Angeles
than any city in the world.
And you would think, well, L.A. must produce artists,
but they're actually not from L.A.
They're from Michigan.
They're from Oklahoma.
They are. They're from Missouri.
They're from the same neighborhoods
in the same schools that all of you are from.
Because there's a misconception about creativity and talent,
that there are pools of creativity and talent in the world,
and the rest of us just get to admire their greatness.
But the reality is that every small town in America
is proof that creativity exists across the world.
Because what does it really take to be an artist?
If you're like me, I can't dance.
I'm Spanish, and I can't dance.
I don't know how that happened.
And, you know, I really can't sing.
I'm not a musician.
I've really never excelled at anything in particular.
And I love watching talented people.
I love celebrating them.
In fact, one of the things that people ask me all the time is if you have a passion for something,
why doesn't God make that happen in your life?
Sometimes you're just supposed to admire someone else.
Celebrate their talent.
Celebrate their greatness.
Celebrate their beauty.
But what I do know is inside of every human being,
there are the essential ingredients of creating great art.
that everyone's life is supposed to be a masterpiece,
that everyone's life is supposed to be a work of art.
But one of the things I've learned about art
is that art is always expressive of the artist's soul.
That you cannot create something authentically
that isn't an extension of who you are as a human being.
I remember years ago talking to this artist,
he was incredibly brilliant and talented
and also really tormented and haunted.
We were sitting across the table,
and he said, I'm having a hard time getting a job.
And I said, why?
And he said, because everybody who wants to hire me,
wants me to prostitute my talent for their own personal benefit.
So, well, what do you mean?
He goes, well, they want me to create my art to promote themes that are not real.
They don't want to deal with real human issues.
And I said, well, what would be a real human issue or emotion?
He goes, you know, pain, anger, violence.
Those are real human issues.
He said, well, what do they want you to promote?
And he said, you know, things like happiness, joy, love.
And I paused and I said, I don't for a second want to deny.
that emotions and human experiences like pain and sorrow and suffering are not real.
Obviously, we live in a world of violence, a world filled with betrayal.
But is it possible that human experiences and emotions like joy or love or even happiness
could be authentic human experiences?
And there was a long pause.
And I could tell he was reflecting and thinking, and then he said,
that thought has never occurred to me.
And I realized the only reason he could create things that were rehearsed.
reflective of darkness is because it was the only material in his soul.
Everything that he created, translated despair or hopelessness.
It translated pain and disappointment.
It translated sorrow and brokenness.
And I realized, as I've worked more and more in the world of artists,
that what an artist has to do is be authentic to who they are.
But that doesn't mean that artists cannot create out of love.
artist cannot create out of hope, that artists cannot create something that's beautiful.
What it does mean is that we need to have hope and beauty and love and life inside of us to
create something real. If you saw Jesus as an artist, what kind of art would he create?
What would be the reflection of the essence of Jesus? And that's why I want to take you to,
I think, one of the more curious places where Jesus performs a miracle. It's Jesus' first miracle.
It's when Jesus well turns water into wine.
Now, this is the introduction, in a sense, of Jesus to his followers, that he is God walking among them.
Let's look together for a moment, John chapter 2 beginning in verse 1.
On the third day, a wedding took place at Cana and Galilee.
Jesus' mother was there, and Jesus and his disciples had also been invited to the wedding.
When the wine was gone, Jesus' mother said to him, they have no more wine.
Woman, why do you involve me? Jesus replied,
My hour has not yet come.
This is incidental, but I love the conversation between Jesus and his mom.
They're at a wedding.
It's not even Jesus's wedding.
It's not his family's wedding.
It's just somebody else's wedding.
They run out of wine.
That's not Jesus's problem.
But no, his mom makes it his problem.
They're out of wine.
He's a woman, what does it have to do with me?
My time has not yet come.
This is like a son saying, Mom, leave me alone.
And I love what Mary does.
She doesn't even respond to what he says.
She ignores everything he said.
It says, just do what he tells you.
because I'm his mother
and he's going to do what I asked
and by the way this is Mary's
only command in all the scriptures do whatever Jesus
tells you
it says nearby stood six stone water jars
the kind used by the Jews for ceremony washing
each holding them from 20 to 30 gallons
Jesus said to the servants
fill the jars with water so they filled them to the brim
then he told them
now draw some out and take it to the master
of the banquet they did so
and the master of the banquet tasted the water
that been turned into wine
He did not realize where it had come from, though the servants who had drawn the water knew.
Then he called the bridegroom aside and said,
Everyone brings out the choice wine first, and then the cheaper wine,
after the guests have had too much to drink, because then they're too drunk to know they're drinking really cheap wine.
But you have saved the best till now.
What Jesus did here in Cana of Galley was the first sign through which he revealed his glory,
and his disciples believed in him.
Do you ever read the Bible and you think to yourself this line doesn't fit, but it must fit because it's in the Bible?
Or you read something, this doesn't make any sense, but it has to make sense because it's in the Bible.
See, this last line doesn't make any sense to me.
And this is how Jesus revealed his glory.
Really?
Turning water into wine is how Jesus revealed his glory and his disciples believed in him.
They didn't need much, did they?
I'm thinking if I'm going to open up as God, I'm not going to start with turning water into wine.
It feels like somewhere between a miracle and a cart trick.
I mean, I would walk on water.
That sort of makes me divine, don't you think?
Feed thousands with few fish and loaves.
Call out someone's name who's been dead for four days
and bring them out of the tomb alive.
See, that is the kind of stuff you would expect from God.
Turning water into wine, this is how he revealed his glory.
I'm going, this doesn't make any sense.
And I've read about this passage,
I know there are ceremonial and religious,
and traditional implications and all this.
But what about the actual implications?
He just turned water into wine.
And is it really a huge human dilemma
that there's not enough wine at a wedding?
I mean, of all the problems in the world,
you'd think this would be one that God would say,
you know, I'm tapping out on this one.
All right?
You can handle this one.
I'm here for really huge, huge reasons.
We're here to deal with the brokenness
of all of humanity.
fix your party.
But I think there's something here that we do not want to mess.
And Jesus takes into this process of turning this water into wine.
We learned a lot about Jesus as an artist.
Because people ask me all the time, well, does art really matter?
Does beauty matter?
Does it really matter if we create something out of our lives?
Does God really care about the small things in our life?
And I go, well, let's look at Jesus' opening act.
He turns water into wine at a wet.
It didn't change the world.
It didn't end poverty.
It didn't stop all the violence.
It didn't end the wars.
It didn't overthrow an empire and set a nation free.
And so there's something here that we need to make sure we see.
Oh, and you know how the story goes, right?
He has them grab all these giant barrels that are empty, and he says, filled them with water.
And then when they filled them with water, he says, all right, now take it to the master of the ceremony.
And I'm thinking to myself, I didn't have them fill them.
with water. Because if he can turn water in the wine, can't he put water into empty barrels?
Okay, you take care of the first half, I'll show up later. I mean, this is kind of one of those
odd kind of things going, wait a minute, why does he have him fill it up with water? Wouldn't it be a
greater miracle? If you just bam, water in the barrels, look at that. But I'm not finished.
But one of the unique ways that God works is that he calls us to bring what we have.
So that when we bring what we have, he touches that and gives us what it becomes after.
He has been a part of that.
But by the way, we didn't create the water either.
See, this is the nuance of this thing, is that God created the water as well.
See, God created the water because God, in his essence, is the source of all life.
And so God created water because we need water to live.
He sustains us all, whether we believe in him or do not.
believe him, whether we acknowledge him or absolutely reject him. God provides water for all life.
And so that water that they brought wasn't something they created or something God created
that God had already given them. And that's the crazy thing about the way God works in our lives.
This is the creative process. Is that God's not asking you to create something out of nothing.
He's asking to take what you already have that he's already given you and bring it to him so
he can do more with you and with that to make the world better. And so when God's saying, I want your
talent. I want your intelligence. I want your passions. I want your discipline. I want your character.
I want all of you. He's not asking you for something that he didn't give you.
He's asking you to bring back to him and trust him with the very things he entrusted you from
the beginning. See, all of us were like water, but we're like water that has not yet been
put in the jar given back to God. And then he turns that water into wine, but it's kind of nuanced.
He doesn't turn to the wine, and then they know it's wine.
He says now just serve it to the master of the ceremony.
And so they take that water and somewhere in there, it becomes wine and the master says,
this is the best wine I've ever tasted.
Why?
I mean, everybody's drunk.
Am I allowed to say that?
See, that's the implication, all right?
Everyone's already had too much to drink.
No one is really at the heighten of their, at the height of their awareness.
They've sort of been dulled in their senses.
So why provide the best wine?
If you ever felt like you've just wasted your best stuff on people who don't care?
I mean, why would Jesus provide the best?
Because every artist creates out of their essence.
And God could never create anything that wasn't the best in the world.
Now, imagine the implications about you
that you're created in the image and likeness of God.
You are a reflection of the essence of God.
that material for creating is a soul
and you have been given by God
a soul designed in his image and likeness
and everything God creates is the best.
He never makes cheap wine
even if it will do.
They would have been more than happy with cheap wine.
They would have been more than happy
with a lower grade quality
but you see when God gets involved
it's always the best.
And I love the fact that Jesus
didn't sign his name on the barrel,
wine by Jesus.
You ever noticed?
that that's what like, you know, Christians do.
We make Christian T-shirts, you know, human by Jesus.
We put little fish on our cars, running the red light by Jesus.
We do all these things, and we go, and it's a Christian film, right?
And it's Christian music, and it's Christian art, and we even say it's a church because we want to make sure that people know.
Right?
Because if we didn't add Christian or add Jesus, they wouldn't know what's Jesus because it's usually average.
And in fact, I have to be honest with you, out in L.A., Christian is synonymous with average.
So when you say Christian music or Christian arts or Christian films or Christian stuff, it just means average stuff or below average stuff.
How did we get there when what Jesus does is always the best?
He provides the best wine in the world.
See, what we need to realize is that we need to bring God our best selves.
We need to get up every morning going, God, I want to bring everything I have.
All my passion, all my talent, all my discipline.
God, I want to bring everything I have.
I'm going to be fully alive in this moment because what you deserve from me, God,
is the best of who I am.
And if all you have to bring is the water, that's what you bring.
But you need to realize that when God is finished with you,
you're going to be the best wine on the planet.
And I love the fact that Jesus felt confident enough in what he created that they would want to know where the source was from.
Our community of faith, we took on the name Mosaic.
And I had so many people criticize me because it wasn't Mosaic Church.
It was just Mosaic.
They go, well, are you embarrassed to being a church?
You go, no.
What I want to do is I want to prove we are one.
Because, see, I don't wear a shirt that says human.
just in case you're not sure.
Right, you know?
You know, not a giraffe.
You know, I don't have to,
because you just, you perceive, and you feel and you touch and you see
and you realize this person is a human.
See, what would happen if we said,
we're going to let the quality of our lives,
the quality of our work,
the quality of everything we do,
we're going to make it so extraordinary,
we're going to be so committed to being the best of the best,
to be the best teachers,
and the best architects, to be the best doctors, and the best scientists,
we're going to be the best dancers and writers,
we're going to be the best parents on the planet.
We're going to be the best humans in the world,
and we're going to be defined by love.
And when people drink of our lives,
you know, where did that wine come from?
Because it's better than anything we've ever tasted in the world.
There's another time that Jesus used strange material for a miracle.
This one is kind of unusual, I think.
But the other one is, for me,
interesting in some ways. It's in John chapter 9. It says, Jesus went along. He saw a man
blind from birth. His disciples asked him, Rabbi, who sinned? This man or his parents said he was
born blind. Have you ever noticed that, like, theologians care more about who to blame
than how to heal? He says, Rabbi, who sinned? This man or his parents sinned that he was born
blind? He was blind, but he wasn't death. He could hear them talking. And Jesus says, neither this
man or his parents sinned, but this happened so that the works of God might be displayed in
him. As long as it is day, we must do the work of him who sent me. Night is coming when no one can
work while I'm in the world. I am the light of the world. And after saying this, he spit on the ground,
made some mud with the saliva and put it on the man's eyes. Go, he told him, wash in the pool of
Saloam. This word means scent. So the man went and washed and came home seeing. His neighbors,
and those who had formerly seen him begging, asked, isn't this the same man who used to sit and beg?
Some others claimed that he was. Others said, no. He only lived. He only lived. He only lived. He only lived. He was. He
looks like him, but he himself insisted, I am the man. How then were your eyes open, they asked.
He replied, the man they called Jesus, made some mud, and put it on my eyes, and then he told me to go
to Salome and wash. You ever wonder why Jesus healed like that? I mean, again, he's the
guy that doesn't need the water to turn it into wine. He can create, because he created the water,
he can do it again. He didn't forget that one. And he could just tell him. He could just
touch the man and he would see or he could just speak and his eyes would be open he could just have a
thought and that man's sight would be returned why go through all of this i think some of it is god
is an artist and he wants to keep teaching us how to create out of our lives and through our lives
because all of us are works of art and artists at work and so he starts spitting on the ground
and with spit he takes dirt and he starts making mud i've done some research
It takes a lot of spit to make mud.
A lot of spit.
And this isn't like dainty spit or anything like that.
It's manly spit.
It takes a lot of spit to make mud.
And again, this guy's blind, but he's not deaf.
He's hearing Jesus spit.
I love reading theologians on passages like this,
trying to explain away what's happening.
One of my favorites was, well, this was divine.
spit. You know, the divine spittal. It was God spit. This is the best you can do. It's God
spit. Look, spit is spit. I'm telling you that before God stepped into flesh, he wasn't
spitting an attorney. This is manned spit. Jesus being fully God, fully manned, this is the fully
man spit side. And spit, you may think, well, maybe it was cultural. Maybe spit was more valued back
man, right? Because spit would sort of be at the bottom scale, would you think? I mean, think
about it. You have spit right now in your mouth. Feel it. He doesn't bother. Without spit,
you die. You'll dehydrate. You need spit. But there's a thing about spit where, I mean,
imagine if someone else spit into a glass and then they said, we'll give you a million dollars
if you'll drink that other person's spit. I just rather to die poor than drink because
someone else's spit would be horrible, right?
But you know what's strange?
If you spit into a glass, you wouldn't drink your own spit.
It's only okay as long as it's inside.
But once it's out, it's spit.
I mean, it's not mine.
You ever just sneezed really bad?
It's not mine.
Right?
You know, just, oh, man, because it's spit.
And that's what Jesus is using.
This is his material is spit.
Couldn't you upgrade?
Oil is a lot more elegant, right?
Spit.
And then dirt.
He doesn't even upgrade the second material.
It's spit and dirt.
So he takes the dirt that they walk on every day.
He starts mixing it together and he creates mud.
I can only imagine what the crowd was saying.
Oh, and what is going on here?
What's he doing?
He's a madman.
And then he gets up and starts moving toward the blind man.
I could just feel a crowd kind of moving away.
And the blind man going, what's happening here?
I feel he's moving toward me.
And then Jesus puts the mud on the man's eyes.
And here to me, this is the brutal moment.
He says, all right, go and wash.
It doesn't heal him.
And he says, go to the pool of salome and wash.
No promise.
Would you expect a promise?
Isn't so much of the way we try to convince people to follow Jesus
as here are the promises?
No promise at all.
Now this man who was blind is also humiliated.
Well, what kind of person puts spit and dirt creates mud and puts it on a man's eyes and he says, go, go wash, the pool salam?
And not only does he give him a command that's virtually impossible for him, he's blind, he doesn't even offer him any help.
He doesn't appeal to the crowd, help this man get to the pool, salome.
He doesn't invite one of his disciples to take on a new task.
I mean, why doesn't he say, Bartholomew, take the man to the pool?
I mean, really, what did Bartholome ever do?
He had no job.
He did nothing of value.
I mean, the guy says, nowhere.
This would be Bartholome's moment.
I took the blind guy to the pool of Salon.
Remember me?
That's why.
I'm one of the 12.
Nothing.
Go to the pool, Salome, and wash.
Have you ever felt as if you were in a worse condition after you were touched by Jesus than before?
Come on, let's be honest for a minute.
Have you ever felt that?
like you trusted God and he left you humiliated? I have. See, this is what we don't talk about,
this period of life between the moment God cakes us with spit and dirt, and the moment
where we go to the pool of Salam and wash. Well, we're not really sure what's going to happen.
There's so much uncertainty. I got a text from a really influential speaker.
who loves God, and his daughter was in an airplane,
and she crashed, or they crashed,
and she crawled out of the plane over the person she loved.
It was the only survivor of a plane crash.
And we probably see the world a little differently.
So I was surprised they get a text from him and says,
hey, can we talk?
And so I said, sure, of course.
And he said, hey, my daughter just went through this horrific accident,
and she's having a really difficult time.
And not only is she physically struggling
from all the third-degree burns,
but her soul is really traumatized.
And you're the only person she listens to on your podcast,
and would you be willing to talk to her on the phone for a few moments?
I said, are you crazy?
Tell me where you live, and me and my daughter will get on a plane,
and we'll fly anywhere you are,
and we'll sit down and do anything we can,
because if it was my daughter,
and someone could help her, I'd do anything to get them here.
She'd come, and I said,
just ask her if she wants that,
and he talked to her, and so she said, yes,
and so me and Mara got on a plane and flew,
across the country and then drove several hours to their place.
And we're there having a conversation trying to help her reclaim a faith that was lost long
before.
And in the middle of that, I started getting all these emails because I had a company.
I was in the film industry and the fashion industry and the tech industry.
And we were doing really, really well and life seemed to be going beautifully.
We had a ton of employees in different offices.
and I get all these emails from lawyers telling me
my business partner has decided to cut me out of the company
and took ownership of everything I'd worked for.
And I lost everything in that moment.
And in my mind, I'm like, God,
I'm here across the country helping this family that I don't know.
Trying to care for this girl, that's someone else's daughter,
because this is what you've taught me,
I've got my daughter here, and we're doing this out of love for you.
right now, you're going to do this right now.
Oh, I know, God didn't do it.
You're going to let this happen right now.
Whichever is the right way of saying, God, why?
And I'm trying to deal with this and care for this family,
and I felt as if my gut had just been ripped out of my throat,
and we're driving back to the airport, and I thought I was going to die.
I just lost everything.
I watched millions of dollars disappear in a second.
I had to fly across the country, land back in LA and sit down with my wife who was an orphan.
From the age of to 18, she lived in a foster home who was left starving in a government project,
eating nothing but turnips and ketchup.
The person that I love more than anyone in the world that I wanted to provide a home for
and some security and stability in life, and I had to fly across the country and sit down with my wife and say,
I've lost everything.
It was one of the most humiliating moments of my life.
I felt like God had spit on the ground and mixed it with dirt
and put mud on my face
and then told me to find my own way to the pool.
And I stumbled through that moment.
I couldn't eat for weeks.
I lost like 20 pounds and 20 days,
which now looking back was actually quite good for me.
But I didn't feel good then.
I couldn't hold food down.
I remember when I looked at Kim and I said,
I lost everything.
My wife, not missing a beat without blinking an eye,
she looked at me and she said,
I thought I was your everything.
Who is this woman?
I mean, who wrote this script for her?
And she goes, we've been poor before.
We'll be poor again, but we'll be fine.
It's just a part of our journey together.
And when she said, I thought I was your everything.
I didn't know how to recover from that.
I didn't have a really good response.
So I said, I lost my other.
everything. You know what I'm talking about? The everything that pays for the other
everything. And the everything that makes you feel like a man, that everything that makes you
feel like you have value, that everything that makes you feel like God is with you, the everything
that makes you feel like you're fulfilling, your calling, that everything that makes you feel like
your life matters, everything that makes you get up in the morning, the everything that allows
you to keep breathing. See, I lost all that. And for the next 12 months, and I was just
18 months ago.
I had to take a loan on our house and pay back everything that was lost and finish every project
that they didn't finish.
And I just felt as if I was going to drown.
And it was one of those moments in life where I felt like I was walking around with spit
in dirt, turned into mud, kicked out in my eyes.
And I was stumbling and crawling and walking in the dark going, God, I don't know how
to get to the pool of Salome.
By the way, for all of us Gentiles, that passage,
John adds,
Saloam means scent.
And he puts that there so we can know
that Salome is this beautiful metaphor
for the place of obedience.
It's the pool of scent.
It's the place you must go.
And in this moment, Jesus is saying to this blame,
I want you to trust me.
I want you to go to the pool.
And if I were that guy,
I would just be grabbed.
a lot of Jesus' leg going, you're not going anywhere until you give me what I need.
Because a lot of times what we want is we want to hide under the covers of Jesus when he's sending
us to go and we feel as if he's left us to our own devices.
But when we trust him and we go in obedience to his voice, we find that God is the true
master artisan who can take spit and dirt and create a mud that brings us to healing we so desperately need.
What I love about this moment is that Jesus takes the most common material that we have, dirt,
and by the way, God gave us that material before himself.
And then he takes the most common material, the most base material, the most unviable material
from the body of the Son of God, which is spit.
And then he mixes it together and says,
let me show you what I can do
with the least viable ingredients in the world.
And if that's what he could do with spit and mud,
what in the world could he do with you?
What in the world could he do with us?
Some of us, we feel like water.
We feel ordinary in common,
and we just need to let Jesus, the master artist,
make us work of art and turn us into wine.
But I know there's some of you, you feel like you're just spit and dirt.
You feel like you just mud.
But I love about the combination of spit and dirt.
It's this beautiful reminder that if we just give God who we are and what we are,
even if we feel like it's worthless.
But we allow him to make us pliable and mouledible and adapt
because what the mud has the capacity to do is to be shaped by the hands of God.
And in that moment, everything changes.
I'm on a crusade.
I'm on a crusade to end this view of being human.
It's all about standardization and conforming.
It's all about the elimination of sin.
It's all about what you shouldn't do.
God didn't call us to obedience so that we could be puppets.
The endgame is not obedience, it's freedom.
He calls us to obedience so that we can be free.
And by the way, the end game isn't actually freedom, it's creativity.
See, God wants us to trust him and obey his voice
so that we might live free so that we can create the life that he created us to love.
You are a work of art.
But now it's time to become an artist at work
and realize that through you,
someone else's life will become more beautiful.
Through you, you will paint a future filled with hope and meaning and joy.
You are the instrument that God has chosen to create the world he dreams of.
The question now is, will you pick up the brush?
and begin to pay.
I thank you, Father.
There are seven billion containers
of beauty and wonder,
of creativity and imagination,
waiting to be touched by your hand
so that we can become the material
of a more beautiful world.
I pray, Father, for each person
within the sound of my voice,
that they would realize
that Jesus did not come to control
them, but to liberate them.
That the scriptures are not the material from which the world is to be standardized, but
the scriptures are a manifesto of creativity.
And it's time for us to hear your voice and live in that freedom.
I pray that every person hearing my voice would dream and risk and create.
This is my prayer in Jesus' name.
Amen.
At all of our churches, let's continue in an attitude of prayer.
God, we thank you so much for this message that you sent to inspire, to encourage, to
lift, and even to bring healing God in our souls.
As you pray today at all of our different churches, some of you may be in a season right now
where you feel like your gut is being ripped down to your throat, like Irwin talked about,
and you're hurting right now.
and you would give anything just to have a touch from Jesus and some healing.
And yet you feel like you're in the middle of dirt and spit,
that you just, you don't know how to get to the pool and you don't know how to wash.
And you really need guidance.
You need direction.
You need healing right now.
I want to take a moment and pray for those of you that are hurting.
And you say, I really, I do need that encouragement, the direction and the touch of the love of Jesus right now.
All of our churches, if you're in a season like that, it would be my honor to pray with you.
Would you just slip up your hand right now?
now at all of our different churches and say, I really am going through something right now.
It's my honor to pray for you. God, I thank you for your goodness and your presence and your
grace that even in different locations, God, you know the intimate details of what every person
is going through. And God, you care even more about this than we could ever imagine. God, we pray
that just as your son touched a blind man to bring healing, God, that your presence and your power
would touch our souls. And in the middle of God, God, God,
of not understanding or not being able to change our own circumstances. We thank you, God,
that you are good, that you are with us, and that your presence can be enough to carry us and sustain
us when we don't even know what to do. God, we pray that through any means necessary, be it spit
and on our eyes, God, be it what you would do through other people, God, through the way you'd
use our circumstances that you would bring a healing, God, bring a comfort, God that your presence
would minister to your church as we put our faith, God, in you. As you keep praying today at all
of our different churches, for many of you today will be a turning point unlike any other day that
you've ever had, because God brought you here very specifically to do a divine work in you.
Erwin said there are seven billion containers in a sense that we're we're kind of a jar, a clay,
we're a container, we're human beings that are actually made out of dirt.
And on our own, we can try to do some good things, but ultimately we need to be touched by the master,
the creator of the universe, who can touch us, heal us, and transform us.
Some of you right now, you may be at a very low place, and it almost appears that at times
God will allow us to get to a place where we're so low that the only thing we can do is to look up to him
and look for his grace and look for his healing.
At all of our different churches, there may be some of you right now who realize there is something more.
I believe with all my heart that there has to be an eternity, that there has to be a God,
that there has to be someone who created me for even more, and yet I can't figure out how to get there.
The problem is that our sin nature, it separates us from God.
And the good news is we serve a God through his son Jesus who loved us came to deal with our sin.
Today at all of our churches there are those of you, you're going to recognize that you can't work your way to God.
You can't be good enough for God.
And you want to call on God's son, Jesus.
And I want to give you that chance to do it at all of our different churches.
Those of you who say, yes, I need forgiveness, and yes, I need a Savior.
I believe Jesus came for me.
And I want to surrender my life to him by faith.
that that's your prayer, would you lift up your hands high right now and just say yes.
I surrender my life to him.
Just lift up your hands at all of our churches and say, yes, by faith I give my life to him.
Those of you at church online, you can click right below me, and I'm going to ask all of you
to join with those around you in prayer.
Just pray a lot.
Pray Heavenly Father, I need you in my life.
I recognize I am a sinner.
I need your forgiveness.
I need your grace.
Jesus, would you touch me?
Heal me.
Forgive me.
Change me and make me new.
From now on, my life is not my own.
I surrender it completely to you.
Make me your servant.
To create, to love, and to bring healing through your son, Jesus.
In his name, I pray.
All of our churches, would you thank God for a new life in Christ?
