Life.Church with Craig Groeschel - The Benefit of Doubt | The Benefit of Doubt | Part 1
Episode Date: February 16, 2025If you’ve ever questioned your beliefs, you’re not alone. Doubts don’t have to end our spiritual journey—they can actually lead us to a deeper faith than we ever expected. Let’s find out how... in this message.If you’ve ever questioned your beliefs, you’re not alone. Doubts don’t have to end our spiritual journey—they can actually lead us to a deeper faith than we ever expected. Let’s find out how in this message.Start The Benefit of Doubt Bible Plan: https://go2.lc/doubtplanDive deeper into your questions with Pastor Craig’s latest book: https://www.craiggroeschel.com/books/the-benefit-of-doubtGET TO KNOW YOU—NEW!You get to hear our voices—now we want to hear yours! Check out this special survey for podcast listeners. It’ll allow us to get to know you better and hear how we can support you. Find the survey at: https://www.life.church/podcastconnectNEXT STEPSHave you made the decision to follow Jesus? You might be wondering what’s next for you. We want to help! Check out these resources to discover what saying yes to Jesus means: https://www.life.church/yesABOUT THIS MESSAGEAt some point, we’ve all questioned what we believe. But doubt isn’t a dead end. Confronting our deepest questions can actually lead us closer to Jesus. Together, let’s discover The Benefit of Doubt.ABOUT 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.churchFind locations, videos, and more info about us at https://www.life.church or download the Life.Church app at https://www.life.church/appFIND US ON SOCIAL MEDIAFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/life.churchInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/life.churchTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@lifechurchYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@life.churchCONNECT WITH PASTOR CRAIGYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/craiggroeschelFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/craiggroeschelInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/craiggroeschelTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@craiggroeschel#lifechurch #craiggroeschel #thebenefitofdoubt 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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What do you do when you have questions about God, but you don't have any easy answers?
For example, you might have really prayed and believed by faith that God would heal your friend that had cancer,
and you prayed and you prayed and you prayed, but your friend died anyway.
Or you might find yourself right now going through something really, really difficult.
You're hurting and you're wondering, how in the world could a good God love you and let you?
you hurt in this way. What do you do when you want to believe in God, but you face spiritual doubts?
What do you do whenever your faith feels a little bit fragile or God seems distant? Or maybe it's not
you that are struggling in your faith, but maybe it's somebody that you know and love. For example,
you might be married and you thought, hey, we're in a Christian marriage, you know, we go to church
together, we're in life church together, and then one day your spouse comes up and says, hey,
I'm not even sure I believe in God anymore. Or you raised your kid in church. They were in life
kids, and they were involved in switch, and they were bold in their faith, and then they go off to
school, they get in with some new friends, they have professors that may not believe in God,
and one day they just say, hey, I don't really believe in God anymore, and they walk away
from their faith.
Or maybe you have a friend that loved Jesus but got hurt by someone in the church.
They got mad at the church, they got mad at God, now they've deconstructed, and they've walked
away from their faith in Jesus.
What do you do when you have spiritual questions and you can't find easy answers?
I'll tell you just kind of bluntly, sometimes some of us, as Christians, you know,
with really good intentions.
We try to help,
but we actually make things worse.
Anybody know what I'm talking about?
Sometimes someone's going through something,
they're asking real questions,
that they're in real pain,
and with good intentions,
we'll drop those little platitudes,
those little Christian sayings.
I call it bumper sticker theology.
It's just theology that fits on a bumper sticker.
For example, we'll say things like,
hey, everything happens for a reason.
Someone may have just lost their child, and you say that, and it doesn't help.
Everything happens for a reason.
Or someone says, I'm not really sure I can believe this, and a Christian says, the Bible says it, I believe it, and that settles it.
Well, good for you.
Glad you have that kind of faith, but sometimes with good intentions, that doesn't actually help others.
Or you might say, hey, don't worry, God's got this.
sometimes I look on and I say actually doesn't look like God's got this because I'm all of a mess right now.
What do you do when you find yourself with real deep and sincere spiritual questions?
Now, for those of you that have never had that happen, like you ought to just sit right now and have like a praise break right where you are.
You know, just thank God in heaven because it's very likely that you're in a minority because the weirdest thing,
and I'm telling you, like, you could literally be in church today, like in the middle of worship today.
And everybody around just praising God, and you thought everything was just good.
And then all of a sudden it's almost like these doubt missiles come into your mind.
And you could be like, I mean, is this stuff even true right now?
I mean, like, where is God when I'm hurting?
And why do the bad things happen in this world?
And why is it that I pray for things and they don't happen?
And you can literally have a moment of faith.
And in a moment later, you have a moment of doubt.
And you say, is there something wrong with me?
Am I really even a Christian at all?
It's hard for me to talk about personal doubts publicly because I'm supposed to be your pastor
full of faith. And I am your pastor full of faith most of the time. Some of the time.
A lot of the time. Not all the time. It was crazy. It's like you put me in front of someone who's not a
Christian and I have no doubt in my mind that God can do a miracle in their life all day long.
All day long. You put me in front of somebody, I'll share my faith, we'll talk, we'll debate openly, and I've got tremendous faith.
You asked me, does God have the power to heal? Miraculously? And I'll tell you, all day long.
But not as often whenever I pray. It's like, it seems like that.
Super personal. Amy and I had someone that invited us to come pray for.
a really special man that had ALS.
And the whole life group was there.
And this was a family that we knew a lot of and went to pray for them.
And we're there and he's in bad shape and everyone's looking to us.
And they said, okay, Pastor Craig, would you pray?
And I sat there heart racing and I said, Amy, why don't you pray?
And the reason why I wanted her to pray is because the last time I'd prayed for someone,
one dying. The last four times I prayed and prayed and prayed, and they didn't live.
And I know God can do it, but he just hadn't been doing it for me lately. And so if we can be real
like that, the moment you start to have doubts, it gets really, really scary. Because a lot of times
you kind of want to talk about it. You want to ask questions, but sometimes in a church environment,
you feel a little bit guilty. Like, I shouldn't have that question. You might feel a little bit
ashamed, you might worry. Like, am I the only one? Because I'm sitting on praise row where they're all
jumping and lifting their hands and smiling and saying amen to the sermon. And I want to say amen,
but right now my faith feels a little bit shaky. And it's not that you don't believe in God.
In fact, when you worry, it's actually kind of maybe a good sign that you do want to press through
your doubts, but sometimes you just have questions and you don't really feel safe asking them.
So what do you do if you wake up and realize it's not because God's not real, but I've got
questions and I don't feel safe asking those questions. What do you do? I wrote a book that
releases this Tuesday. It's called The Benefit of Doubt, How Confronting Your Deepest Questions
Can Lead to a Richer Faith. And the purpose of this book, quite honestly, is for some people
that Amy and I know in love that have been walking away from the faith, like very close people.
And what I want to do is I want to give, if you're doubting, I want to give you a resource that
will help you wrestle with doubts in a way that I would call constructive and helpful instead of
destructive and harmful. And what I want to do is I want to give those of you that have someone
close to you that you love that may be going through a faith struggle. I want to give you a tool
to help them work through doubt and real questions in a helpful way instead of,
what we often do in the church, inadvertently pushing them away. So let's start with this big premise,
and then we're going to dive into God's Word. What I want to show you is that doubt isn't the
enemy of faith. Doubt is not the enemy of faith. In fact, doubt is often a pathway to a deeper
and more meaningful faith. It is. It doesn't mean that you're losing your faith. It's often an
invitation to wrestle with some real questions and to move into, to grow into a deeper faith.
Now, to introduce some scriptures today, there's something called the relativity, the relatability
principle, the relatability principle. And if you don't know what that is, it's kind of fun.
It shows that you tend to dislike and distrust people whose lives seem perfect.
Do any of you know what I'm talking about? Raise your hand.
Online, you can type in the comment section, I understand.
You tend to dislike those whose lives seem perfect.
And you tend to trust and connect with those people who have similar problems to you.
For example, you don't like the person at work whose desk is always organized.
They're always getting praised.
Their life looks perfect.
Then you go to the store and you see that person with their kid and their kids having a meltdown.
Kids throwing a fit.
The kid's licking the floor at the grocery store.
and you think, hey, we can be friends.
You're my people, right?
You see them going through something, you're like, I like you now,
because your life has screwed up like mine.
And what's interesting is whenever I hear somebody else dealing with a doubt,
it's actually strangely comforting to me.
When I talk to people that I respect, that have a really sincere faith,
that also ask similar questions to me,
it actually gives me comfort and helps me push through doubts.
Let me show you in scripture some of the most faith-filled people
who had some of the same questions you might have
about their faith in relationship with God.
We'll start in the Old Testament, Sarah and Abraham,
when God says, hey, guess what?
Boom, congratulations.
You're going to have a child.
And they let go, God, will you kidding me?
At this age, they know,
medicine for our problems. I don't know, you guys aren't with me. At this age, you know,
this impossible, God, it'll never happen. We also look at the Israelites, you know, God delivers
them miraculously from the Egyptians. They walk through the Red Sea and they're like, God,
you've done miracles before, but we're not sure you can do them again. We're not sure we trust
you now. Gideon, he's like me. He's like, hey, God, if you're really with me,
prove it again one more time i know you've been faithful the last 47 times you'd never let me down
but give me a sign one more time god john the baptist he devotes his life to preparing the way
for jesus and john the baptist looks on to jesus and says hey jesus i knew you were the one
now i'm not so sure and then there's thomas doubting thomas
who says to Jesus, after the resurrection, Jesus is raised from the dead.
And Thomas says, Jesus, I won't believe unless I see it with my own eyes.
It's strangely comforting to me to see the people in the Bible that were full of faith,
also occasionally battling with faith questions.
And it reminds us of really, really good news.
if you ever find yourself doubting or struggling just a little bit, it shows us doubting doesn't
make you bad. It makes you human. It makes you human. Like you're flawed and we're broken and
we are tainted by sin pursuing a good and a loving God. And my favorite example that really gives me
a sense of like relief and hope is what happened after Jesus gave his love.
life when he was risen from the dead and right before what's known as the ascension when he
ascended into heaven, which would have been really cool. I just kind of imagine how did he do it.
Was it kind of like Jesus is standing there and it's kind of like a he's about to ascend and
it's kind of like a, I mean, I don't know, but that would be cool. Right? I mean, just think about it.
Okay, so he's about to be ascended and he's up on this mountain. He'd been raised from the dead
13 different times he appeared to the disciples. They're eating with them, they're having breakfast
with them. I mean, 13 times, it's recorded in Scripture that they have seen the risen Christ.
They're standing in front of him on a mountain, and Scripture says this, then the 11 disciples,
because Judas got canceled, the 11 disciples went to Galilee to the mountain where Jesus had told them,
to go. When they saw him, everybody say this loud online, type in the comment section just for fun
the next two phrases. When they saw him, what do they do? They did two things. They what? They worshipped
him, but what? But some doubted. Oh my goodness, that makes me feel so normal. Like they're standing
right in front of the risen Christ. He's there. And some worshipped. And some worshipped. And
some doubted. Those three words, but some doubted. Think about this. Those weren't his enemies.
Those weren't skeptics or strangers. Those were his disciples. These were the guys that saw him walk
on water. These were the guys that saw him multiply the loes and fishes and had leftover doggy bags to
take home. These are the guys that saw him cast out demons and raised the dead. And they're looking
at the risen Savior and some worship and some doubted. So what do you think Jesus did because he knew
all things when he's standing there about to go to heaven? What do you think he did when his boys
doubted? Think he rebuked them? Think he called them out?
Do you think he screamed up?
Gabriel, send me some backup disciples, because I can't do nothing with these guys.
Right?
No.
Jesus continued to love them.
And right after the text says, but some doubted, the very next verse in your Bible,
Jesus gave them the most important assignment in the history of the world.
world. The Word of God says, some doubted, and then Jesus came to them and said,
All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore, go and make disciples of all
nations, baptizing them. Can somebody thank God for 2,000 people being baptized on one weekend
in the middle of our presence because of a good God? Baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit
and teaching them to obey everything I've commanded you.
Surely I am with you always till the end of the age.
Some worship and some doubted.
And Jesus looked at those who worship and those who doubted
and said, go into all the world and preach the risen Christ,
baptize them in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
Make disciples and I'm always going to be with you.
Why?
Jesus said, go change the world, doubts and all.
in the middle of your worship
and in the middle of your doubt
go into all the world
and make disciples because doubt
isn't the enemy of faith
but doubt is often a pathway
to a deeper and more meaningful
faith
so if you find yourself
wake up in one day and go
I've got questions
let's try to identify
why you doubt
and then over the next three weeks
let's talk about what you do about your doubt.
Why is it that most of us have questions?
There's three big reasons.
Number one, you have questions that you can't answer.
You see something that doesn't seem fair.
There's something in the Bible that doesn't make sense.
Someone raises a question.
I just can't make sense of this.
You have questions you can't answer.
You face situations that seem unfair.
Why did that happen?
How could they do that?
Where is God?
Why would someone who calls himself a Christian do this?
And finally, you experience hurts that you can't resolve.
I cannot even believe that someone would do that.
Where is God in the middle of my pain?
If you find yourself in one of these situations,
you've got questions, you can't answer.
You've got hurts, you can't resolve.
You've got challenges with your faith.
Where do we tend to go wrong?
I would suggest that there are some of us in the Christian body
that we really don't have any bend.
We don't have any bend.
For example, if a stick doesn't bend, what does it do?
It breaks, right?
And there are some people, you got no bend.
Or you grew up in a home with no bend.
And so you come across something
that seems like an apparent contradiction in the Bible,
and because you don't have any binge, you're like, okay, I'm out.
Or you meet a friend that's like going,
you know what, I don't believe in God anymore.
Or you meet someone in school like, well, you know, I'm a Muslim and how can Jesus be the only way to God?
That's just stupid.
Or you've got a teacher that mocks your faith, you know, like, well, you know, the Bible says this and I don't believe that and they didn't all say this.
Or you've got a Christian that hurts you or a spiritual leader that you look up to that lets you down.
And if you've got no bend, you break.
And I need to say to some Christian parents right now, some of you need to get a little bend.
your kid comes in and asks questions, and sometimes you're like, how can you do that to me?
I'm not doing it to you.
They're looking for real answers.
Your kid might grow up in the church, and then they might all of a sudden go, well, I'm not sure about this, or, you know, I've got real questions, and they start to seek answers.
And I want you to understand that if you raised your kid in church, your kid grew up watching
your faith. Your faith. And at some point, they may need to ask some real sincere questions to make
your faith their faith. It's part of the process. You probably did it at some point. So if they start
to question, don't freak out. Don't Bible sticker preach at them. Don't tell them you hear grounded
and shame them for it.
Don't panic.
It's not a time to panic.
It's a time to process it.
And talk about it.
Talk about it.
One of the best things parents can do
when the kids tell them things
that don't freak out.
Just roll with it.
You want to keep them talking?
Just don't show emotion
and keep on talking.
And I would suggest that the church
and the home
should be the safest places
to ask hard questions.
The safest places.
You want to ask about
sexuality. Ask it in the church and ask it in the homes. You want to ask about heartbreak and Christians
letting you down and the Bible and science and questions about good God allowing suffering in the
world and about the pain that you're going through and about how someone could claim Christ
and act like that and about pornography and about sexual temptation, about confusion and anxiety
and depression and suicidal thoughts. The church and the home should be the sacred. The
place to ask the hard questions. And you look at Thomas, he did this in the presence of Jesus.
Like if Jesus made room for questions, shouldn't we? Let me show you Thomas. Scripture says this.
One of the 12 disciples, Thomas, was not with the others when Jesus came. So Jesus shows up.
Thomas isn't there, so he doesn't see it. They told him, we've seen the Lord. The verbal
the Greek for seeing, it's an act of tense. And that means they said it over and over again.
They're going like, we've seen the Lord, we've seen the Lord, we've seen the Lord, he's risen,
we've seen the Lord, we've seen the Lord, he's like your kids in the back seat of the car,
saying, are we there yet? Are we there yet? Are we there yet? That's the Greek text.
We've seen the Lord. But Thomas is like, hey, I haven't seen him. I won't believe unless I see the
nail wounds in his hands and put my fingers into them and place my hands in his side.
eyes got to see. I haven't seen it yet. I won't believe unless I can see and touch.
And that's probably the reason why we call Thomas doubting Thomas. And I'm going to tell you right
now, Thomas is getting a bad rap. He really is. In fact, what I want to do is I want to just
from him, I want to work to dignify his doubts. I relate to Thomas. Some of you would too.
He's a realist. I'm kind of guessing I'm reading into it. The dude was probably hurt somewhere in his
someone probably let him down.
He probably has some disappointments.
Thomas is like some of you.
He's been through some stuff.
And his doubts don't make him bad.
It makes him human.
In fact, I would suggest to you,
if you asked me to rank in order
the spiritual strength of the disciples,
man, I promise you,
I'm putting Thomas up high close to the top
And let me tell you why.
I'll give you several examples, and this is so important to encourage you that doubt is not the enemy of faith,
but often an invitation into a deeper and more meaningful and more personal faith.
In John 14, Jesus said this.
He said, I'm going to go to heaven.
I'm going to prepare a place for you.
And Thomas was like, oh, he's on the back row.
He asked a question.
What did Thomas say?
Thomas said this, hey, Lord.
we don't know where you're going.
You're going away.
You're going to prepare a place.
We don't know where you're going.
So how can we know the way?
In other words, he's just going like,
Jesus, we're with you.
Just give me some details.
And I guarantee you.
Peter's over there going,
I'm glad he asked that.
I didn't want to ask that,
but I'm glad he asked that.
I mean, that's going on, right?
And then you remember whenever Lazarus died.
And Jesus said, hey, let's go.
to him. In John 11, 16, Thomas said to the rest of the disciples, let us also go that we may
die with him. If Jesus is going to give his life, Thomas, if Jesus is going to give his life
and if Lazarus already did, hey, we might as well die with Jesus too. That's not weak faith.
That's bold loyalty. The guy had questions.
And his questions didn't ruin his faith.
His questions actually gave him permission to grow through some questions and eventually
strengthened his faith.
So if you have questions or somebody you know in love does, don't panic, process it.
And I want you to see how Jesus responded to Thomas's questions.
Watch this. Remember, Thomas didn't see Jesus.
like the other disciples. And then we see eight days later, the disciples were together again,
and this time Thomas was with them. I want you to notice this. Eight days later, Thomas came
back. He still hasn't seen Jesus, but he came back. Sometimes one of the most faith-filled
things you can do is come back. He didn't leave the church. He didn't quit his Sunday's
class. He didn't say, all you disciples are a bunch of hypocrites. No, he came back. Just like if you are
struggling with some kind of doubt right now and you are in church or you're watching online,
congratulations, you came back. You're trying to work through it. And eight days later,
he showed back up. Thomas was with them. The doors were locked, but suddenly, as before,
Jesus was standing among them. Now again, that's kind of cool. Kind of like the, that's cool thing.
Jesus sitting in the room, the doors are locked, and they're like, he's through the, I mean,
I don't know what he does, but like, that's, and then boom, there he is. So he's in a physical body,
and yet he walks through walls or shows up or whatever. It's miracle. And he's standing there and
says, peace be with you. Peace, peace. I'm here. Now, Jesus said to Thomas, put your finger here.
Now here's what's interesting.
Earlier, Thomas said, I want to touch him, but Jesus wasn't there.
But Jesus knows this.
And does he say, Thomas, you of little faith, you can't be one of my disciples, you're asking the stupid questions?
You're always asking the dumb questions.
No.
What did you do?
He says, Thomas, hey, put your finger here and look at my hands.
Put your hand into the wound of my side.
Don't be faithless any longer, Thomas.
believe. And Thomas touches them and sees the wounds. And he says, my Lord, my God. The doors were locked.
Jesus is standing there. And he doesn't shame Thomas for his questions, but he gives him exactly
what he needed to believe in Jesus. And I believe God will do the same thing for you. Why? Because I
promise you, God is not distant in your doubts. He's not distant in your doubts. Our God is not a
standoff savior. He's coming to you to give you exactly what you need. And so if he feels far off,
reach out to him. Why? Because he's reaching out to you. And when I promise you, you can ask God
questions. He can handle your questions. You can wrestle. You can wrestle. You
You can struggle, you can work through your doubts.
And because Thomas did this, he asked questions and Thomas got answers.
And here's what's so cool.
Doubting Thomas, guess what he became?
Hey, you know what he should be called?
Faith-filled Thomas.
That's what he should be called.
He should be called that.
Because it's believed that he actually traveled to India in 52 AD, and he started preaching
the gospel.
That's what he did.
He preached the risen Christ.
And Thomas was starting churches from 52 AD until 72 AD, according to tradition,
the enemies of Christ came up to Thomas and said,
stop preaching Jesus, stop preaching the resurrected Christ.
And according to tradition, Thomas refused to
until they took a spear and drove it through his body.
Think about this.
Thomas, the disciple that didn't believe
until he saw the spear wound,
was killed by a sphere for the faith that he once questioned.
showing us that your doubts don't disqualify your faith,
Jesus will meet you in your doubts.
And I love the 23rd Psalm when David said this.
David said, yay, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil.
Why?
For you are with me, for you are with me, for you are with me, for you are with me.
If right now, maybe you're not walking through the valley of the shadow of death,
but you're walking through the valley of the shadow of doubt.
I want you to remember that he is with you.
And what do you do when you're in a valley?
What do you do?
You don't stay in the valley.
You keep on walking.
Yet do I walk through the valley of the shadow of doubt?
You keep walking.
If you're in a valley right now,
don't let doubts be your dead end.
You keep walking.
You keep asking.
You keep searching.
and you show back up.
Because Jesus makes rooms for your questions,
and he'll often give you exactly what you need.
Faith, believe.
And I hope you'll understand.
Faith is not a destination.
Don't like arrive at faith.
Like, I've graduated faith.
No, it's an ongoing journey.
And so that's what I'm doing right now.
Whenever someone is sick and needs healing,
I do what God's word says.
If there are any sick among you,
let the elders lay hands on the sick and the prayer of faith,
they believe will heal the sick.
And by the stripes of Jesus, we believe that people can be healed.
And so I keep praying, I keep believing, I keep trusting,
and I keep asking, seeking, knocking,
and believing by faith that God is a good God.
And even if I don't feel faith in the moment,
I can promise you with it.
If it's a muster seat of faith,
I'll pray for healing.
I'll pray for restoration of your marriage.
I'll pray for healing in a broken relationship.
I'll pray for financial provision.
I'll pray for God to meet your need.
I'll pray for God to heal your anxiety.
With every bit of faith that I have,
I trust God because he is with me.
Doubt is not the enemy of faith,
but it's often a pathway to a deeper and more meaningful faith.
So, Father, do a work in our hearts today, we pray.
At all of our churches, without looking around, I wonder how many of you would, please
nobody looking around.
I wonder how many of you would just say, maybe honestly, that there might be some spiritual
questions that are causing you challenges right now.
Would you lift up your hands?
Just say, yeah, there might be some doubts.
And so many of you.
Online, you can type in the comment section that I've got real spiritual questions or
doubts, just type in whatever is true to you. I wonder how many of you would say that there's
someone in your life that you love, a family member, a close friend, someone that's got real faith
questions right now. Would you lift up your hands? A bunch of you. You can type in the comment section,
pray for a loved one that's doubting. Father, I want to pray for those two groups today. And God,
I thank you for the honesty of those who say that they do have questions. And God, I thank you
that this is a safe place to process. No judgment, but a safe place because Jesus made room for doubts.
And so, God, we take them to you. We think you're a good God. And I pray, God, that we would walk
with others with grace and with love, showing grace and truth, and helping others experience your goodness.
We're not going to let doubt be a dead end. We're going to walk through the value.
the shadow of doubt, God, because you are with us.
So God, we pray that this would be a very safe place, a healing place, to ask hard questions
and in your presence, God, to find truth and real answers.
As you keep praying today at all of our churches, there are those of you that I'd say
have real spiritual uncertainty when it comes to your standing with God.
Like if I just maybe could sit down with you and say, you know, how do you feel about
where you are with God?
if something happened to you and your life were over, where would you go?
Are you absolutely certain that you would spend eternity in the presence of God?
And if you say no, then you've got some spiritual uncertainty.
And what I want to tell you just very lovingly and pastorally is that there is a way to know
absolutely with a deep spiritual assurance that your sins are forgiven and that you belong
to God that you've been adopted into his family.
The way is Jesus.
He is the son of God.
was without sin, who died on the cross and God raised him from the dead so that anyone, this includes
you who calls on his name, the name that is above every name when you call on Jesus, he forgives
all of your sins and he makes you brand new. What do we do? We just step away from our sinful life
and we surrender all of our lives to Jesus. He becomes our Savior and our Lord today at all of
our churches, those of you who say, I don't know where I stand. Hey, we saw 2,000 people this week in
saying their sins have been forgiven.
You may want to call on him today.
You may want to stick around after another service,
and you may want to be baptized
because at this moment you are watching.
You're not here by accident.
You're here because of the love of God,
the purpose of God.
He's reaching out to you.
When you draw near to him,
he draws near to you at all of our churches.
You say, I don't know where I stand,
but I want to be assured.
I step away from my sins.
I give my life to Jesus.
When you do, you become new.
All of our churches, that's your prayer.
Jesus,
forgive me of my sins. I give my life to you. That's your prayer. Lift your hands high right now.
All over the place say, yes, I settle it. Right back over here and over here as well.
God bless you guys. Others today say yes, Jesus, I surrender my life. Lift your hands up and say,
I surrender and give my life to you. In the comment section right back over here, praise God for you.
In the comment sections, type in, I'm surrendering my life to Jesus. And at all of our churches
and online, would you just pray, Heavenly Father, forgive.
me for all of my sins. Save me. Make me brand new. Fill me with your Holy Spirit so I could know you
so I could do your will. God, so I could show your love. Thank you for new life. I give you
all of mine. In Jesus' name I pray. Church, could you celebrate today? Welcome those born into God's family.
Come on, come on, church. Come on.
