Ron Dunn Podcast - Ministry Of Failure
Episode Date: October 20, 2021Ron Dunn begins a new sermon series "Strange Ministers"...
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The economy, as you know, is a book of remembrances, and Moses is rehearsing with God's people
all the things that God has done for them and in them during the past years.
And he says, All the commandments which I command thee this day shall ye observe to
do, that ye may live and multiply and go in and possess the land which the Lord swear unto your fathers.
And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee these forty years in the wilderness
to humble thee and to prove thee to know what was in thine heart,
whether thou wouldest keep his commandments or not. And he humbled thee,
and suffered thee to hunger, and fed thee with manna which thou knewest not, neither did thy
fathers know, that he might make thee know that man doth not live by bread only, but by every word
that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord doth man live. And then he goes on to describe
what perhaps could happen to them after they've entered the land and have forgotten the goodness
of the Lord. He says in verse 14, Then thine heart be lifted up, and thou forget the Lord thy God,
which brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt from the house of bondage, who led
thee through that great and terrible wilderness, wherein were fiery serpents and scorpions
and drought and where there was no water, who brought thee forth water out of the rock
of Flint, who fed thee in the wilderness with manna, which thy fathers knew not, that he
might humble thee and that he might prove thee to do thee good
at thy latter end. Some time ago on late Saturday night, I needed to make a trip to the supermarket.
It's one of these supermarkets that stays open 24 hours a day, I was a little bit hesitant to go because of the way I looked.
This was a Saturday, and I had taken that day to catch up on all of those handyman jobs
that I had been letting go around the house.
I hadn't shaved all day.
I hadn't combed my hair.
I had on some old dirty jeans and an old leprous T-shirt and some old soiled and crumbling
tennis shoes, and I just didn't look like the respectable pastor of the local Baptist
church, and I certainly didn't want to meet anybody in that condition.
But I thought no decent person's going to be going to a grocery store at midnight, and
so it won't hurt if I run up there and pick up a few things that we're going to need in
the morning.
So I did.
And you know how you'll do in that situation.
You'll look straight ahead neither to the left nor the right, lest your eyes meet somebody
that you don't want to meet.
I was standing at the checkout stand, and I was aware of somebody behind me, but I paid
a little attention to it.
And when the lady finished ringing up my money, ringing up my purchase and sacked it up, she handed it to me, and
I turned to walk out, and standing behind me was one of my members, one of the ladies
in my church.
And she looked at me for a minute, and he looked me up and down, and she said, Brother
Dunn, she said, Brother Dunn,
she said, I didn't recognize you. And then she made this very interesting statement. She said,
you know, I've never seen you without a shirt and tie on. And she said, I didn't recognize you
without a suit on. And I got to thinking about that after a while, as soon as I could get away.
And I thought, now that lady's been in my church for seven or eight years. Been there Sunday
morning, Sunday night, a lot of times on Wednesday night. And yet she didn't recognize me out of
uniform. I began to wonder what she'd been looking at all those years when she came to church.
I don't suppose she ever looked at my face.
I guess she just looked at my suit or my tie.
I was wondering, perhaps some night she might be driving down the street and see one of
my suits on the side of the road and say, well, there's one of Brother Dunn's suits.
But maybe she might meet me on down the road hitchhiking and wouldn't even recognize me.
You know, they do tell us that one of the best disguises a person can wear is a uniform
because you have a tendency to notice the uniform rather than the face.
And these people that you see in unexpected places,
you don't recognize because you are accustomed to seeing them in certain ways and in certain places.
Now, I was this woman's minister,
and yet she failed to recognize me
because I didn't look like a minister.
And you know what?
There are a lot of ministers that God has
that he sends our way to minister to us that we fail to recognize
because they don't look like ministers supposed to look.
Do you get what I'm saying?
There are a lot of things, a lot of ways, a lot of means
that God uses to accomplish His purpose in my life.
And yet many a time I miss God in those situations.
I fail to recognize this situation as a minister of God
because it doesn't look like I think a minister ought to look.
You know, we have a tendency to believe that we can always
correctly evaluate everything that happens to us. I mean, we know a blessing when we see one,
and we know a curse when we see one. But I'm finding, and I think perhaps you are too,
that sometimes kings come to my door dressed as beggars and princes as paupers,
and many a time blessings come wrapped in the rags of a curse.
Sometimes sorrow is the disguise that a real joy wears.
And many times you and I will miss the ministry of God in my life
because I'm looking for God to minister to me in a certain specified way.
I want to talk to you tonight about one of these ministers
that God sends our way to work his purpose in our life,
to bring us where he wants us to be.
I call it the ministry of failure.
The ministry of failure. And I have no doubt tonight that my message will be
relevant because there's not a person here that has not experienced failure. Every Christian
experiences it sooner or later. Some of us seem to live in the same house with failure all the
days of our Christian life. But I want you to know tonight that one of the most effective ministers that
God has to work in your life is the ministry of failure. I'm going to make a statement,
and I will bring the Scripture out in a moment, but I want to make this statement that God not only allows us to fail, but there are times
when the Lord actually maneuvers us into a situation of failure, when the Lord actually
negotiates for our failure, because that is the only way that he can teach us a lesson
he's been trying to teach.
Have you ever found that sometimes the Lord adds some verses to the Bible that you just know weren't there before?
You know, you read the Bible, and you read it, and you read it, and you think you've read everything in it,
and one day you pick up a familiar passage of Scripture and you see something that's never been there before.
You just know the Lord's kind of inserted it while you were asleep.
Well, that's the way I feel about Deuteronomy chapter 8.
And not long ago I was reading this passage and I saw a phrase in it that I had never
noticed before.
And it's the phrase found in verse 2.
Moses says, And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee these
forty years in the wilderness.
Now, when you talk about the forty years of wilderness, you think of failure.
I think of failure.
The people of Israel had come to Kadesh Barnea.
God had given them the promise that if they would just believe him, obey him, they would
cross over into Canaan. And by the way, let me say that in the Bible, Canaan never represents physical death, notwithstanding
the good old hymns that we sing.
Canaan in the Bible never represents heaven, and Jordan never represents physical death.
Canaan in the Bible does not represent heaven.
There were giants in Canaan.
There are no giants in heaven.
There were battles to be fought in Canaan. There are no battles to be fought in heaven. There
was failure and sin in Canaan. There's no failure and sin in heaven. Canaan, not representing
physical death or heaven, represents what we might say heaven on earth. Canaan represents
everything that God saved us to be in this life.
Canaan does not refer to the sweet by and by. It refers to the sweet here and now, and that's where
God expects us to live. And Moses says in Deuteronomy chapter 6 that God brought them out
of Egypt in order to bring them into Canaan. The only reason that God led the people out of Egypt
was not simply to get them out of
Egypt, but to get them into the land of promise, into the land of fullness, where they could live
in the full promises of God and be everything that God wanted them to be. And I want you to
understand tonight that when God saved you, he did not save you simply to get you out of hell nor to get you into heaven.
He saved you in order that you might experience in your everyday life everything that God
wants you to be in the Lord Jesus Christ.
And Moses says he brought us out that he might bring us in.
But when the people had the opportunity to enter in, they made a mistake,
they disbelieved God, they disobeyed God, and you know the story, for the next 40 years,
they wandered in that wilderness. Now, I had always assumed that that 40 years was 40 years
of failure, and that's a right assumption. But I had also assumed that that
40 years was simply aimless wondering and was wasted time and wasted experience.
But I want you to notice the phrase that caught my attention. Moses says, Thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God, L-E-D, which the Lord
thy God led thee these forty years in the wilderness.
Notice, he led them while they were in the wilderness.
And in verse 15 he says, He led them through that wilderness and fed them while they were
in that wilderness.
And he did that, he says, in the latter part of verse 16, to do thee good at thy latter end.
I like that.
And that is the way you can sign everything that God lets come into your life,
that he might do thee good.
God led them in that wilderness experience in order to accomplish
something in their lives he could not otherwise accomplish. And suddenly I began to realize that
those 40 years in the wilderness were not wasted years, were not aimless wonderings,
but that even though they had failed at Kadesh Barnea, even though
they had disobeyed and disbelieved God, yet God did not abandon them, nor did He give
up in His purpose.
But He continued to lead them those forty years in the wilderness in order to do them
good, in order to accomplish in
their lives something he could not otherwise accomplish.
And I know I'm speaking to people tonight, perhaps right now, who are living in the wilderness.
You would have to, if you were honest, say, Preacher, I'm in the wilderness.
I have come to a point in my life where it looks as though I'm wandering aimlessly.
For a while in my Christian pilgrimage, everything was going smooth.
Everything was going as I felt it ought to go.
But something happened.
Maybe a series of circumstances fell upon me.
And it just seems like I've lost my direction.
I'm experiencing spiritual vertigo.
I'm disoriented.
I don't know whether I'm up or down.
I don't know whether God's alive or dead. I don't know whether He loves me or doesn't love me. And it seems that
everything I do just turns to ashes, and I'd have to say honestly tonight, I'm in the wilderness.
Well, I have good news for you. God never wastes time, and He never wastes experience.
And if you believe in God and if you belong to
God and are one of his children, I want you to know that everything that comes to pass in your
life, God uses that to perfect his purpose and plan in your life. And I believe that one of the most effective ministers that God has sent my way is the minister of
failure. And God has done some things in my life through failure that I know tonight he could not
have otherwise done. And so Moses said, God led thee these forty years in the wilderness. Why?
And he mentioned several things that God sought to accomplish
by that wilderness of failure, and I just want to simply share them with you tonight.
Why does God let us go through the wilderness? Why does He allow us to fail? Why are there times even actually negotiates for our failure. Number one, God uses failure to empty us of pride.
God uses failure to empty us of pride. Look at the second verse,
And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee these forty years in the wilderness. Why?
To humble thee.
To humble thee.
And he says the same thing in verse 16.
Who fed thee in the wilderness with manna which thy fathers knew not, that he might humble thee.
Verse 3, it says, and he humbled thee.
In other words, God led them into the wilderness. Why? To humble them, and he humbled thee. In other words, God led them into the wilderness.
Why?
To humble them, and he did it.
First of all, God uses failure to empty me of pride.
Now, man's basic sin, you might say the original sin of the universe is the sin of pride. And God's toughest task in your life
is to humble you and to empty you of your pride, to bring you to the place where you recognize that
you can't handle life by yourself. You can't even handle yourself by yourself.
And God has to bring you to the place where it seems as though he pulls the rug from under you
and you fall flat on your face.
I was studying the book of Proverbs not long ago,
and that very familiar verse where it says,
Lean not unto thine own understanding, but trust in the Lord.
The Hebrew word translated trust has the idea of falling flat on your face,
of lying helplessly face down on the ground.
That's a pretty good description of what trust is.
Of God bringing you to a place where you have no alternative to trust Him.
I want to tell you something that I believe. I believe a man will
never trust God until he has to. A man will never trust God until he has to. You see, there is
something about man that is basically self-sufficient. He likes to think he can handle it himself. And God is forced to bring us into
circumstances and situations where we have to confess, I cannot handle it. The old theologians
used to have a phrase that I think is a tremendous one. They called it being shut up to faith,
shut up to faith. That's where God hymns us in, in a corner
where the only way out is up. And I said, and I really believe this with all my heart,
that I'll never trust God until I have to. You see, as long as I've got another trick
or two up my sleeve, I'm going to use it. As long as I've got a back door, as long as
I have a fire escape, as long as I have some
other plan, some other gimmick, I'm going to use that.
And if God is going to bring me to the place where he wants me to be, and that is absolutely
dependent upon him, he must first of all destroy my faith in myself.
Now, I know that we say you've got to be confident and you've got to have faith in
yourself, and I understand that to a certain extent. But what I'm trying to get you to
understand tonight is, as long as I'm trusting in myself, I'll never trust in God. This was
Moses' problem when he started to deliver Israel 40 years earlier, back under when he saw the
Egyptian arguing with one of the Israelites.
You know, it's interesting for me to notice that when Moses thought he was qualified,
he wasn't. And yet when he thought he wasn't, he was. Have you ever noticed that? Forty years later,
after spending those years in the backside of the desert, God says, all right, Moses, I'm ready now to use you to deliver my people.
And Moses gave excuse after excuse of why he wasn't capable.
He said, Lord, the only experience I've had is bad experience, and I'm not eloquent, and
I have no authority, and people won't listen to me.
Lord, I just can't do it.
God said, you're just the man I'm looking for.
Now, the sad thing is it took God 40 years to get Moses to the place where he no longer trusted in himself.
Now, you say, well, I want to learn to trust God.
I want to be everything God wants me to be.
Well, you must understand that sometimes that is a painful process,
and the process is God has to bring about circumstances in your life to empty you of your pride.
Now, this pride takes two forms.
I've already been talking about one of them.
It's the pride of self-sufficiency.
The pride of self-sufficiency.
The pride that says, I can handle this situation myself.
And by the way, let me just insert this.
In all the family counseling that I have done, I have found that one of the big problems
and one of the big barriers to overcome is a man who is a head of the family
insisting that he's sufficient in himself,
that he's able to handle the situation and handle every circumstance in himself. And I repeat, one of God's toughest tasks in your life is to convince me that I am not sufficient,
that I am not capable of handling life situations all by myself.
And God will lead you into failure, my friend, in order to end to you of the pride of self-sufficiency.
One Sunday morning we had a young man saved in one of our morning services.
He came forward during the closing invitation and pronounced his faith in Christ.
I presented him to our fellowship and introduced him and told them that this young man had come to take his stand for the Lord Jesus Christ.
And as I did once in a while, I would allow this person just to share what the Lord had done for
him. And this particular Sunday morning, I said to this young man, Tommy, is there anything you'd
like to say? Would you like to just share with this fellowship what God has done for you. And that young fellow stood up there and thrust out his chest.
He said, yes, sir.
He said, I want you to know, preacher, I feel great.
I feel great, and I'm never going to lose this feeling.
Well, I knew he would.
You know, I knew that feelings don't last, and they're fickle and fleeting.
And I said, now, Tommy, it's great that you feel as
you do, but don't lean on that feeling. Don't trust in that feeling. You're not always going
to feel like that. He said, oh, no, preacher, I'm always going to feel just like this. I'm
never going to lose this feeling. Well, we went back and forth like that for a few minutes,
and finally I decided to let it drop. I didn't think it'd look good for the pastor to have a
fight with a new convert. And I said, all right, God bless you, son.
Have you ever noticed there are some things that only experience can teach somebody?
Well, about three weeks later, this young man, he didn't actually walk into my office.
He dragged himself into my office, chin on the floor practically.
And he said, Pastor, can I see you?
I said, well, sure, what's the problem?
He said, I think I'm lost.
You know, I was gracious enough not to ask him what happened to that feeling.
But it was hard.
I had to bite my tongue.
My tendency was to say, would you come to church next Sunday morning?
Let me tell everybody.
No.
But I said, well, son, tell me what happened.
And you know what happened?
He failed.
He failed.
He failed in his Christian life.
He failed in his obedience to God.
And suddenly when he did that, he lost that glorious, glowing feeling,
and he was plunged into despair because he thought that
he was self-sufficient in himself.
Now listen, I think one of the Lord's biggest problems in his earthly ministry was with
Simon Peter.
I get a lot of encouragement from Simon Peter because I'm about as stubborn as he is, and
you are too, in the things that God's trying to teach
you. Have you ever noticed that Simon Peter was always the first one to speak up on any occasion?
All he needed to encourage him to talk was two ears that would listen. And Peter was always,
always the spokesman for the crowd, and sometimes he got himself in a great deal of trouble.
I heard a man say the other day, Peter was always wondering why he couldn't walk straight
while he had one foot in his mouth.
Well, you just can't maintain your balance when you have one foot in your mouth.
Well, anyway, you see, if you'll follow carefully the career of Simon Peter,
you'll find that Jesus most of the time was trying to teach Simon Peter this
very point, that Simon had not arrived, that he had not achieved, that he was not sufficient.
And Jesus was constantly trying to empty Simon of his self-sufficient pride.
And on the eve of his crucifixion, Jesus made a prophecy. He said that the disciples would forsake him.
And that, of course, was Simon's cue.
And he began to speak.
And this is what he said.
He said, Lord, and I'm going to paraphrase it a little bit.
He said, Lord, I understand what you're saying.
And I know that the rest of this bunch is of the sort that will leave
you and follow you, but I want you to know, Lord, you can count on me.
I'm not going to forsake you, Lord.
I'm willing to go to prison with you.
I'm even willing to die for you.
Isn't that a pretty fair phrase of what he said?
I wonder if that discouraged Jesus.
At the end of three and a half years of ministry,
Simon still hadn't learned.
He still had not learned.
Now listen carefully to what Jesus says.
I told you a moment ago
that sometimes the Lord negotiates for our failure.
Here it is.
Jesus said,
Simon, Simon, Satan hath desired you,
that he may sift you as wheat. But I have prayed for you,
and when you are turned again, when you get straightened out from this mess,
you'll be able to strengthen your brethren. Now the word translated desired, Satan hath
desired to have you, is a word that means to obtain by asking permission.
To obtain by asking permission.
Do you know what Jesus was saying?
He was saying, Satan hath asked permission to get hold of you and turn you inside out,
and I have given it.
I have given it. Now, that's really encouraging to me in
one aspect. It means, it says to me, that the devil can't touch me without the permission
of the Lord Jesus. He cannot do it. God has built a hedge about me, and the only way the
devil can touch me and get to me is if the Lord Jesus gives his permission.
And he was saying, Simon, there's only one way you're going to learn.
There's only one way you're going to learn.
And by the way, he learned it.
If you'll follow his career, you'll find he never again had problem with self-sufficient
pride.
God taught him something through his failure.
He could not teach him any other way.
And I say to you tonight, there are some things
in your life, whether it's home life, business life, church life, personal life, there are some
things that God is not going to be able to teach you apart from failure. He's going to have to
manipulate you into a situation where you're faced with failure to empty you of your self-sufficient
pride. And he said, when thou art turned again,
which meant Jesus knew Simon was going to fail.
But when he failed and learned the lesson of that failure,
then he would be competent to minister.
He said, then you'll be able to strengthen your brethren.
And the Lord had to negotiate with the devil for the failure of Simon
in order for Simon to learn that lesson, to be emptied of his pride.
By the way, right along this line, and I really didn't mean to get into this,
but since I'm in the neighborhood, we'll visit it for a while,
of the devil touching God's people.
Have you ever read the book of Job?
You know the story of Job.
Well, you know,
as you read that, you need to remember something. Who initiated that conversation about Job?
Who brought up Job's name? God did. God did. The devil reported to God on a certain day. I don't know how he got there, but anyway, he was there in God's presence, and God initiated
that conversation.
And he said, have you considered my servant Job?
That sort of makes me wish God wouldn't do any bragging on me to the devil.
He says, have you considered my servant Job, that there's not a man like him on the face
of the earth?
And the devil said, oh yeah, but the only reason he serves you,
and boy, this is a good question, the only reason he serves you is because it pays.
Everything's going well.
Everything's going easy.
You've blessed him.
He's healthy.
If you were to lift that hedge and let me get hold of him, he wouldn't serve you.
And you know, that's a good question.
Are you serving God tonight simply because everything is going well?
What if everything in your life were to fall to pieces and you lose your health and you lose your family?
Would you still serve the Lord?
The devil asked God a question.
He said, does Job serve God for naught?
He's saying a man won't serve God for nothing.
A man serves God, the devil says, for what he can get out of it.
That's a pretty good question. And you know, it's interesting, as I read that, Job never one time gave credit to the
devil, did he? You read the book of Job, you'll find him never one time referring to the devil.
As a matter of fact, the Bible refers to Satan's affliction of Job as the hand of God touching Job.
You read it as the hand of God touching Job.
And I want you to know tonight that sometimes what the devil wants to do to me
just somehow or another fits right into God's plan.
The devil wanted to turn Peter inside out and sift him his wheat, and Jesus said,
well, you know, I think that'd be good for him, and I'll give you permission to do it.
And God will use failure to empty us of our self-sufficient pride. But not only of the
pride of self-sufficiency, he uses failure to empty us of the pride of self-sufficiency, he uses failure to empty us of the
pride of self-satisfaction, of being self-satisfied. Look at verse 3,
And he humbled thee, and suffered thee to hunger. He suffered thee to hunger. In other words,
God did such a work in their life as to deprive them of certain resources
and certain things they were depending upon and made them cry out,
Lord, I'm hungry.
Have you been brought to that place?
When I begin to move into an area, and just like this week,
as we come to a Christian Life Conference,
you know one of the primary things I pray for? I say, Lord, make them hungry. Lord, make them hungry. You see,
a man won't eat if he's not hungry. And you'll never discover the resources of God until God,
first of all, puts you in a situation where you're hungry for them. And the only way that
you can be hungry for what God has
is for God to deprive you of what you've been feeding yourself on.
And many of us have been complacent and self-satisfied with our lives
and our spiritual progress,
and before God can spur us on and bring us to His fullness,
He has to work in our lives in such a way that we cry out for God to meet our needs.
So the first thing is this.
God uses failure to empty us of our pride.
You know, I just have to mention before I leave,
the same God that makes you hungry
is the same God that feeds you.
You know, the only time God makes me hungry
is not to mock me,
not to make fun of me, not to see me writhe in hunger, but in order that he might feed me. And he says he fed
them with manna you knew not and none of your fathers knew. And I find that when God finally
gets me to the place where I cry out and say, Lord, I'm desperate, I'm hungry to have what you
have. I find that the Lord meets that need in the most unusual circumstances and ways. He feeds me
from unknown resources. And have you found, Christian friend, that sometimes God meets your
need from the most peculiar resources and from the most unexpected ways imaginable.
God uses failure to empty us of pride.
Number two, God uses failure to expose us to the wickedness that's in our hearts.
To expose us to the wickedness that's in our hearts.
Look again at verse two.
He led thee these forty years in the wilderness, number one, to humble thee, and number two,
to prove thee to know what was in thine heart, whether thou wouldest keep his commandments
or no.
And he says the same thing in verse 16, that he might prove thee.
And if you'll read in Exodus 15 and in Exodus 16,
you'll find that on different occasions God arranged adverse circumstances
in order to prove his people.
Now the word prove means to discover what is present by means of a test, to discover what is present, to expose what
is present by means of testing.
Now, God said that he led them through this wilderness to prove them, to expose what was
in their heart, whether they would keep God's commands. Now, it wasn't that God wanted to find out what was in their hearts.
God knew.
He wanted them to know what was in their heart.
And friend, I want you to know tonight that God knows what's in your heart.
He knows whether or not you're going to keep his commandments.
He knows that.
But you don't know it.
If you'll go back, you'll find that when Moses was making preparation to go up on Mount Sinai to get the law, Israel made a boast. This was their boast. All that the Lord God says
unto us, we will do. Everything God tells us to do, we will do. They thought in their hearts, they thought in their hearts was total obedience. They didn't know
that idolatry and terrible sin was in their heart, and God used that failure to expose them
to the unknown wickedness that was in their heart. Come back to Simon Peter. That was one of the accomplishments of his failure.
If you had sat down with Simon Peter, as Jesus attempted to do, and had tried to convince Peter
that lurking in the darkness of his heart was denial of Christ and cursing, he wouldn't have
been convinced. By the way, when it says that Peter swore, it doesn't mean he cursed like we think of cursing,
but it means he took God as a witness that he didn't know Jesus.
That's even much worse.
It means he called God in heaven to witness and bear witness to his statement that he didn't know Jesus.
And Jesus tried to convince Peter.
He said, Peter, in your heart, in your heart there is deep wickedness.
Peter said, no, Lord, it's not there. And the only way that Jesus could prove to Peter what
was in his heart was by letting him fall into that failure. Now, Jesus says, out of the heart are the issues of life.
Did you know tonight that in a man's heart, even though he is saved,
there is the possibility of every kind of evil?
I don't know how many times I've had men whose home, because of infidelity, is breaking up, have come to me and said,
Preacher, I don't know. I've never believed I would do something like this. I never believed I would do something like this. Well, I want to tell you something. If there is sin and
there is that wickedness in my heart, I want to know
about it. If I have a tumor growing in my body, I want to know about it. I want it to be exposed.
I want something to happen to expose to me the sickness that's in my body so it can be treated
before it kills me. And you see, when God lets us go into failure, God really is being
merciful to us because he is exposing to us some things in our lives so that we can deal with them
and get God's treatment and God's help in those areas of our life. You would never have been able
to convince Simon Peter. And there are some things in your life tonight you don't know are there. There are some things in your heart,
potentials in your heart you don't know are there. I'll tell you exactly what will happen.
God will arrange a set of circumstances and you will react to those circumstances and
you will surprise yourself. You will say, I didn't know that was there. I didn't know that was there. You know, when Christians
get behind the wheel of an automobile, they take on a different character. Something happens
to an American when he gets behind the wheel of an't drive his car, he aims it at the enemy.
And I've joked about that, and I've used that as sermon illustrations, because frankly,
that's never been my problem. Really, I'm, you know, I've always been cool and collected and behind the wheel. But you know, one day, some time ago, a situation happened where God exposed to me what was
in my heart, and I just use this as an illustration.
My wife and I were getting ready to go to Europe for a conference, and we were leaving
the next day, and we needed an additional suitcase.
And it was on a Monday, and I had staff meeting, and I didn't have time to have a staff meeting
and go over in Dallas and search for the right kind of suitcase.
So I decided that what I could do was to take all the men, there were five of us on the
staff, and we'd go in my car and we'd staff on the way, you know, talk on the way, and
I'd kill two birds with one stone.
Well, we went at lunchtime, went over to one of these big shopping centers where the place
was that I needed to go.
And you know how it's crowded.
You know all the ladies and men on the lunch hour buying things and parking and doing all
of this.
Well, there just wasn't a parking place available.
You know what a parking place is, don't you?
That's a space the size of your automobile on the other side of the street.
And there were plenty of places on the other side of the street, but as I would turn around
and come back, they'd be gone.
So I was just cruising, you know, just about five miles an hour, waiting for somebody to
back out.
I was conscious by looking in the rearview mirror, there was a fellow behind me who was
not looking for a parking place, he just wanted to get out of there,
I could see in the rearview mirror he is growing impatience, poking along behind me, and he
was looking for a chance to pull out ahead of me, but I couldn't let that bother me,
I was looking for a parking place.
And all the time my staff and I were talking about spiritual things, you know.
So in a moment there was an open space, and this fellow gunned his
engine and swerved around me, and as he swerved around me, he blew his horn two or three times
and shook his fist at me. Well, you know what I did? Well, I just blew my horn back at him
and shook my fist at him and said, same to you, brother.
And immediately when I said that, I remembered I had my staff with me.
You know, the least the Lord could have done was to let that have happened when I was alone so I could at least save face.
Now, that's a silly thing, but what I'm saying to you is this.
You know, I thought I had control of my temper,
and I thought I was a very patient, understanding, forgiving person.
And you know what?
God exposed something in my heart that I didn't know was there,
and I began to deal with that thing.
And what I'm saying to you tonight, friend,
is this, that every one of us have potential problems. Every one of us have potential problems.
And I'll be honest with you tonight, the breakup of any home could have been prevented
if a man or woman had listened to what God had been saying to them
through failure.
No home breaks up immediately, overnight.
There are always warnings.
Isn't that true?
There are always warnings.
Haven't you been able to see some warnings in your own life?
Some things happening and you thought, I never thought I'd do that.
I never thought I'd feel this way.
A year ago I wouldn't have thought that.
A year ago I wouldn't have said that.
What's God doing?
He's allowing you to fail in order that He might expose to you some potential deadly dangers in your life so you can deal with them.
You can deal with them. Number three, God uses failure to educate us as to the true values in life.
I believe one of my greatest problems, one of your greatest problems, is a wrong system
of values.
We place values on the wrong things.
And God has to patiently educate us and teach us what really counts in life.
And you'll find this in the third verse, And he humbled thee, and suffered thee to hunger, and fed thee with manna which thou
knewest not, neither did thy fathers know.
Why?
In order that, that's a purpose clause, in order that he might make thee know that man
doth not live by bread only, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord doth man live.
Now, folks, that's one of the greatest statements in all the Bible.
Man doesn't live by bread only, but he lives by the Word of God.
Now, this is so relevant to the Israelites because one of their primary complaints was
lack of food, lack of bread.
And God was trying to teach them that a man's life is not sustained by bread, but by the
Word of God.
Now, you know that's literally true.
That's literally true. God could keep you alive
without bread. Bread there, of course, symbolizes all of the material, physical things of life that
we need to sustain life. Now, God is pleased to use bread and air and food and water as the means
of keeping us alive, but friend, he doesn't need to do that.
I mean, you can eat the right kind of foods and get the right kind of exercise and join
the health club and jog two miles every day, but when God says it's time for you to die,
you're going to die.
And I'll tell you this much, if God wanted to keep you alive for forty years without
ever eating a drop of food or drinking a drop of water, He could do it if He wanted to.
I mean, He's going to do that in eternity.
You don't think we're going to sit down and steak and potatoes in heaven, do you?
A man is kept alive by the Word of God. In other words, he is saying this, that the source of a man's life is God,
not the means that God uses to keep us alive.
Now, the importance of seeing this is this.
If I look upon bread as the source of my life, as the source of the meaning of my life, as the source
of fulfillment in my life, then I'm going to work for bread.
He doesn't live by that.
Man's life, its source, its substance comes from the Word of God. Found, and I believe it more certainly than ever before tonight,
that the goodness of God is this.
God is always with me.
In good times and bad, in hard times and easy,
when I'm spiritual, when I'm not spiritual,
when I'm obedient, when I'm disobedient,
God is with me.
And God's chief purpose in my life is to bring me to the place where I recognize that the greatest good in life
is to know Him and to feel His presence and to serve Him and to worship Him and to honor Him.
And I tell you, folks, sometimes the only way
God can teach us that is through failure, the ministry of failure.
I hope you learn to recognize that minister. He doesn't always come dressed up nice and
neat in a suit and tie. Sometimes he's not a very
pleasant character at all to meet.
But he is
just as surely a minister of God
as your
pastor that stands behind the pulpit
on Sunday morning.
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