The Church of Eleven22 - How Great Thou Art - Worship is War: Wk 3
Episode Date: September 28, 2025What if worship isn’t just singing, but fighting? Worship isn’t just music—it’s war for your soul. From Carl Boberg’s thunderstorm poem that became How Great Thou Art to David’s praise in ...Psalm 145, we see that worship is deeply personal, fully surrendered, generational, and rooted in gratitude. But in the middle of distractions, selfish desires, and the enemy’s lies, worship becomes warfare. It’s the battle to keep our attention and affection on the only One who is worthy. God alone can carry the full weight of our devotion without failing. That’s why we say with confidence, “Then sings my soul, How Great Thou Art.” 📣 Episode Mentions: Scripture Passage: Psalm 145 Preacher: Pastor Ryan Britt Hymns Album https://lnk.to/Eleven22WorshipHymns 📌 Supplemental Resources From This Week: When Worship Feels Like Warfare - The Adamec's Story How Great Thou Art - Worship is War: Wk 3 (Full Service) Living in Awe - Deepen with Pastor Joby Martin S23E3 Worship is War Sermon Series About The Church of Eleven22 The Church of Eleven22® is a movement for all people to discover and deepen a relationship with Jesus Christ. Eleven22 is led by Pastor Joby Martin and based in Jacksonville, Florida, with multiple campuses throughout Jacksonville and the surrounding areas. To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: http://coe22.com/donate
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Amen. In the year 1886, an educated man, an author named Carl Boberg, is on his way home
across the Swedish hill country, and seemingly out of nowhere, a massive thunderstorm rolls in.
The sky turns dark, lightning begins to rip from the earth into the heavens.
The thunder is shaking the ground underneath his feet, and he's caught in the middle of this
storm outside, and he's looking around, and he feels completely helpless.
He feels completely overcome.
There's nowhere for him to go.
And so he just has to stand in the middle of the storm and watch it raging all around him.
And then seemingly just as fast as the storm rolled in, it rolls out.
And then a huge rainbow fills the sky.
And Carl Bowberg heads home and he sits down at his desk and he begins reflecting on this experience that he just had.
And he pince the poem called O Stor Good, which means, oh, great, good.
God. And it is from this poem that the church has gotten the song, How great thou art that we just
sung, that has blessed the church for more than a hundred years. Now, the interesting thing about
Carl's encounter that day is certainly the divine encounter that he had in the storm, but the
interesting thing about it is where Carl was coming from on his way home. You see, Carl had been at church.
And Carl had been sitting under God's word and listening and studying it. He had been singing God's
songs. His heart was full of God's love because he had been gathered with God's people. And so on his
way home, he sees a storm and in the middle of the storm, he sees God. It's interesting to me,
what if Carl was in a hurry that day? What if he was busy? What if he had not been in God's house
with God's people studying God's word? Could he not have experienced that exact same storm as a burden?
could he have not experienced that exact same storm as an interference with his life and him
trying to get where he was going?
But instead, because his thoughts were centered on God and his heart was filled with God's
word, when he sees the storm, what he sees is the mighty hand of God at work in creation.
Perspective in this life is everything.
Perspective is everything.
Carl has a divine encounter through a storm.
Another interesting thing about the song, How Great Thou Art, is how it begins.
became famous, as awesome as old Carl was, when you know him like I do, you're on a first
name basis. That's why I keep calling him Carl. When you know Carl like I do, do you know how
it became famous? It was hovering around in the 1950s and 60s at the Billy Grand Crusades.
It was starting to get a little attraction. And then in 1967, no other than the king himself,
Elvis Presley, recorded how great thou are. And that's how it became world famous. Now, if you
ask me, the king lives, baby. The king lives.
Him and Tupac got a private island somewhere.
That's what I'm going with.
We are in a teaching series called worship is war.
And Pastor Jobbys done a marvelous job kicking us off the last couple of weeks.
I'm going to continue on that.
We are in a series called worship is war, and it is absolutely that.
You see, we wake up every day, and we are in an attentions and an affections war.
We are in a thinking and a feeling battle every day all day.
And there are times, if I'm honest, when I'm prone to wander,
I feel it prone to leave the God I love.
There are times when I give a sympathetic ear to the temptations of hell.
There are times when I don't feel like I have anything to offer.
When I don't feel like I have much value, when I don't feel like I have anything to give.
There are days when all I want is what I want.
When I'm selfish, when I'm stuck in my own way, when I seem, I just cannot seem to be free of me.
Sometimes, if I'm honest, the enemy gets my ear.
this world and all its shiny stuff gets my attention, my flesh and my inner desires, they get my
indulgence. This is why it is imperative that I wake up and I fight. I fight for the Lord God
Almighty, the mighty one of Israel, the Lion of Judah, the King of Kings, and the Lord of Lords
that I fight for Jesus Christ himself to be the one who alone gets my worship. Because he's the only one
who can handle it. Worship is soul warfare. It's happening on a deeper level than our consciousness
at all times. We are dealing in worship in a world more real than the world that you and I see and
sense every single day. Here's the thing about worship is that God is the only one who can handle
our worship. He is the only one who can handle the weight of glory. Nobody else can handle it.
This is what we mean when we sing Then Sing My Son My Son.
So what we're saying is that I'm a person who has wants.
I'm a person who has needs.
I'm a person that has hopes and dreams.
I was made by God with significance.
And that all day, every day, I'm waking up and I want to attach all of me onto something
that merits it, that makes me experience value, makes me feel like I'm worth something.
I'm looking to attach all that I am to something every single day.
And I'm going to contend to us this weekend that it's not.
something you're looking for. It is someone that you're looking for. And if you attach yourself
to him that he opens his hands and satisfies the desire of every living thing. He is the only
one who is worthy to be worshipped. He is the only one who can handle the weight of your
absolute devotion. He can handle all you got all the time. He can handle all your bringing to
him all the time. He's the only one who can do it. And he will never, ever fail. He alone is
worthy to be worshipped. So we're going to be, how great that art is certainly the backdrop to
the sermon today, but if it had a title, the title would be four ingredients of God honoring
Christ exalting war-making worship. That's what we're going to talk about today. I hope you
came ready. Four ingredients of God honoring Christ exalting war-making worship. We're going to be in
Psalm chapter 145. It's called the Praise of David.
written by King David a long, long time ago.
And it starts in verse one, and it says this,
I will extol you my God and king and bless your name forever.
Every day I will bless you and praise your name forever and ever.
Great is the Lord and greatly to be praised.
And his greatness is unsearchable.
One generation shall commend your works to another and shall declare your mighty acts.
On the glorious splendor of your majesty and on your wondrous works,
I will meditate.
They shall speak of the might of your awesome deeds, and I will declare your greatness.
The first ingredient of God honoring, Christ exalting, war-making worship is this, is that it's
personal.
It's personal.
David says, I will extol you.
My God and King, I will wake up every day and bless your name forever and ever.
He doesn't say that you are a God.
He says, you are my God.
Worship is not passive. It's personal. You could even go as far as to say that it's aggressive.
When we wake up in this world at war, we wake up and there is the enemy of God and there is
human ego. And all day, every day, they are trying to steal fame, steal credit, and steal glory
from God. And as God's people, we stand up and we say, it is personal to us that someone is
trying to steal from our God who is worthy to be praised. We take it personally. So not on our watch,
we're going to give him what he's due.
We take it personally.
It's not something we sit back and just watch idly happen around us.
It is not passive.
It is aggressive.
Here's the thing about God.
God wants you to know how well he knows you.
God wants you to know how well he knows you.
Jesus says it like this in Luke chapter 12, verse 7.
He says, indeed, the very hairs of your head are all numbered.
Now, for some of us, the counting would take longer than others.
right? So you just hang on to your dad bald joke. You keep that to yourself. I'm a girl dad.
I have two girls. They're 12 and 15 years old. And as my wife and I started having children,
I just had this sense. I just always knew I was going to be a girl dad. I never had a category
that I would father boys. And so all I've ever really known is fathering girls. And honestly,
I love it. I'm a better human. I'm a better husband. I'm a better pastor. I'm a
better everything because God has blessed me with these two beautiful young girls.
And it's an honor to be their dad.
And one of the things that I say all the time when people ask me about my family and I tell
them I have 12 and 15 year old daughters, they're like, ooh, how's that going?
And honestly, it's going pretty good.
I mean, you can pray for us for sure, but we feel very, very blessed.
People will lean in and be like, hey, girl dad, you know, were you ready for all the tears?
And I'm like, look, man, the tears don't bother me.
I'm into it.
Bothers me none, emotions are from God, you just got to push into it.
I love it, let's go, right?
No problem.
Here's the thing that I wasn't ready for.
I wasn't ready for the hair.
The hair, it's everywhere.
It's all over the floor, it's in clothes, it is everywhere.
The amount of hair is sheerly mind-numbing.
I mean, the things that I've had to clean out of sinks and drains, you pull.
You pull the drain up out of it and it is just nuclear waste of death and pain hanging there.
I mean, it is unbelievable.
You walk around with this on your head?
I mean, the hair.
Now, I'm not saying I'm a professional, but I can do a ponytail and I can do a braid.
I'm not saying you would rock it.
I'm just saying, I can do it.
Now, my girls won't let me anywhere near their hair, but their mother, on the other hand,
she's a magician when it comes to hair.
from the time that they were born, her hands have been in their hair.
For hours and hours and hours and hours and hours, she has stood behind them braiding,
making flips and flops and french this and twisted that.
It's unbelievable what she can get their hair to do.
She can take an absolute rat's nest and turn it into just to something of beauty.
She's a magician when it comes to their hair.
You could take my wife right now and you could line up 100 girls.
And you could blindfold my wife and somehow make it where she couldn't hear or see.
And she could go down the line of all these girls braiding their hair.
And when she got to my daughter's hair and she touched their hair, she would know exactly who it is.
Why?
Because her hands have been involved in the details up close and personal and intimate in their lives every second of their lives.
She is nearer to them than anyone else.
And this is a finite picture.
It is only a picture of how well God knows you.
God doesn't just know what you do.
First Samuel chapter 16 verse 7 says it like this.
It says God doesn't look on the outward appearance as man does.
God looks at the heart.
He doesn't just know what you do.
He knows why you do it.
God knows you.
He knows you in the wildest and the most beautiful part of the gospel.
One of those compelling realities of God's grace is that he knows us,
And he wants you.
He doesn't just know us.
He wants us.
The reason we take worship personally is because God takes you personally.
It is personal for him.
Jesus explains it in Matthew chapter 13, verse 44.
He says, it's my favorite parable.
It's a short one, but it's packed.
He says, the kingdom of heaven, the values of heaven, the operating system of heaven,
the point of heaven, the goal of heaven, the joy of heaven.
This is what he's saying.
The kingdom of heaven is like a treasure hidden in a field.
When a man found it, he hid it again, and then his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field.
There's a couple of right ways to interpret this parable.
Number one is that God is the treasure.
You see, when God leads us to a place where we see him through Jesus Christ as supremely valuable,
then everything else in our world gets reassessed and gets right-sized.
Another way to say it is that when God, by His grace through Jesus,
shows us that he is first, which is who he is and where he is. When we catch the divine revelation
that God is first, everything else in our life begins to fit into order. That is one right way
to interpret this parable that God is the treasure. There's another way that I came across
a few years ago and it completely rocked my thinking. And here's his. Another right way to
interpret is that you were the treasure and that Jesus is the man. Let's read it. Let's read it again.
this, the kingdom of heaven is like a treasure in a field.
When Jesus found it, he hid it again.
I don't have time to explain that theologically.
That'll just be for another sermon.
And then in Jesus' joy, he went and sold all he had
and bought that field.
Jesus Christ, God the Son, the second person of the Trinity,
he leaves the glory, the dominion, the rule, the honor,
the praise, the power, and honestly the protection of heaven.
And he swans dives down here.
He puts on skin and he walks the roads that we walk,
tempted in every way that we are tempted, but he never fails. He never sins. He never transgresses
God's law. He upholds God's justice completely, living perfectly. And then at the exact right time in
human history, he looks at Calvary's cross, which is the just and due penalty for sin. The penalty for
sin is death. Jesus stares death in the face. He climbs up on the cross. He doesn't negotiate
terms for you. He doesn't pay 10% for you. He doesn't pay 20%. He didn't bargain down a new rate on you.
He gives up all of his blood. He gives up all of his blood. He gives up all of his
breath, he gives up his very life satisfying the demands of death, but he does not stay dead.
Three days later, he resurrects from the grave, and he comes out as a king of kings and
Lord of Lords having victory over death and hell and sin.
And for all who he would believe in him, he looks at you and says, you are mine.
I have purchased you.
You have been bought with a price.
I will never let you go.
You belong to me.
That is what he has done.
That is who he is.
It's personal for him.
It is personal.
Do you have any idea how valuable you are to God?
I mean, what's the gospel all about if it's not God redeeming his children
and bringing them back into love relationship with him for his glory?
Because it makes him happy.
Hebrews 12 explains it like this,
looking to Jesus, the founder and perfector of our faith,
who for the joy, what was the joy set before him?
You and me.
Set before him endured the cross, despising the shame.
He is now seated at the right hand of the faith.
throne of God. Jesus, make no mistake about it, he takes offense. He is personally offended by Satan
and by sin. That is why it says in 1 John chapter 3, verse 8, that the reason Jesus Christ came
into the world is to destroy the works of the devils because he takes it personally. Psalm 145,
verse 16. The psalmist continues like this. He says, you open your hand and you satisfy the desire
of every living thing.
You were made as a soul.
It means you're on an eternal journey of desire.
That's what it means to have a soul.
That you are in a forever journey of want.
You and me, we wake up, we go through this life.
We are want factories.
We want and we want and we want.
We want from deep down in our bones
and it's coming out of our pores in our mouths
every day we want and we want and we want.
The question is this ache of life.
want, this deep driving desire inside of us. What can fully and finally and only satisfy it?
There's only one person who opens his hands and satisfies the desire of every living thing.
And it's God Almighty. Where do you put your ache? It's personal. As soon as worship becomes
personal, it will become surrendered. The second ingredient,
of God honoring Christ exalting, war-making worship is that it's surrendered.
David writes this in verse one.
He says, I will extol you, my God and king.
Now, what's fascinating is when King David writes this, he is actually a king.
He's one of the most powerful people on the planet.
And for the last 30 years or so when he writes this Psalm, all Israel has been doing is winning.
David could walk around and his theme song be, all I do is win, win, win.
They have just been kick and tell and taken names for decades, and he can have anything he wants.
He can have anyone he wants.
And in this moment, King David proves why he's called a man after God's own heart.
Why?
Because David says, I may be a king, but I am not the king.
There is someone who is greater than I am.
There is someone more significant to me, and I am surrendered to him.
What did David know to write this from a place of authenticity?
Well, David knew this.
He knew that having a relationship with God is not primarily informational.
It's transformational.
Having a relationship with God is not primarily informational.
It's transformational.
It is not simply an acknowledgment of facts.
It is an invasion from another kingdom.
That's what it means to have a relationship with God when the Puritans used to preach the gospel.
And they didn't use the words that sometimes you'll hear in church today.
Like they didn't use the word evangelical or born again or saved or regenerate.
They didn't say any of these words when they would preach the gospel and someone would open their eyes to the reality of God
and what has been done for them in and through Christ Jesus.
What they would say is that this person has now been seized by the power of a great affection.
I love that.
This person has now been seized by the power of a great affection.
They have been enamored.
They have been hammered by the grace, the love, and the provision of Jesus Christ.
They have been seized by the power of a great affection.
Have you been seized by the power of God's great love for you?
This is how the hymnist writes it.
He says, and when I think that God, his son, not sparing, sent him to death.
die, I scarce can take it in. That on the cross my burden gladly bearing, he bled and died to take away
my sin. I've traveled quite a bit on the continent of Africa over the last 20 years, and some years
ago I was there, and we were on the border of Kenya and Uganda. And when you come to this,
it's in a little town, and the road that we were on is a dirt road that's really road. It's really
rudded out and it's kind of out in the middle of nowhere.
And when you come to this border crossing, the first stop you'll come to is kind of like
a mud hut and kind of a makeshift gate and it's got some barbed wire fence kind of running
in maybe 30 yards in either direction.
And you walk up to it and there's some people that are dressed in, I mean, it's kind
of official gear.
It's a little hard to discern what's going on.
And if you just bribe the folks at this gate, then they'll just let you go on through.
But if you don't, you have to get your paperwork out and they do this like dog and pony
show and then they stamp it and then you kind of keep moving on. Well, after you get through this
guard station, you go a half a mile-ish up the road and you come up to a much more official
looking building. And this one has legit gates and legit fences and people in military
garb and this is actually a border crossing. And you have to go in and get your passport out
and you have to do all the things. And then they'll let you cross from one country to the
other. Now, as I'm watching this happen, I'm like, why did we have to go?
through two different stops and they're like, oh, that first stop's not real. It's a sham. It doesn't
mean anything. It's just how they take your money. And I'm like, and everybody does this. And they go,
yeah, it's about tribal lines and things that happened a long time ago. And I'm like, okay,
well, explain it to me. And they go, well, look, in between the first stop and the second stop is
what's called a no man's land. It's about a half a mile and thousands of people choose to live in it.
They choose to live there. But it's not under the sovereign rule of either nation.
That it's not controlled by either system of government.
The people in the middle, they are stuck in between two different countries.
And they choose this.
And I'm like, I don't really get it.
I don't understand.
And the locals begin to explain it to me and go, listen, the people that choose to stay in no man's land or the borderlands,
the people that choose to stay there, they choose to stay there because it is here that they think they're in control.
It is a completely lawless land, and they are totally lawless land.
and they are totally alone.
Nobody's coming to rescue them, but they choose to stay there.
Why?
Because they don't trust people in charge on either side of the border.
They would rather be stuck than they would surrender.
They would rather be stuck than they would surrendered.
And I think this so often happens in the Christian life,
where people receive salvation,
but then God begins to do his transforming work in their life.
It's called sanctification.
It's a big fancy word.
He begins to transform.
them one thought, one desire, one habit at a time. He begins to work on them and he begins to grow
them up. And as he's leaving them into maturity, he begins to pull the weeds out. He begins to do
his pruning work as Jesus would define it. And all of a sudden, sometimes the Spirit of God
comes upon some things in our life that he wants to cut away. And we just don't want to let go of
them. And so we just grab and grab and grab and grab and grab. And when we do this, we're saying,
I want to stay stuck right here with all this stuff instead of live surrendered.
I want to feel like I'm in control of this part of my life.
I want to be in control of my finances so I'm not going to do them God's way.
I want to be in control of my relationship so I'm not going to do them God's way.
I want to be in control of this.
We live under the delusion that we're in control and we, and by doing this by gripping
tighter and tighter and tighter in the areas of our lives where we don't want to step into
trust with God.
What we're saying is that I would rather be stuck than I would be surrendered.
Another time I was in Africa, I was on a safari, and I was in a 15 passenger van.
And the question you ask, before I tell the story, the question is this, why do we choose stuck,
or why would anyone choose stuck over-surrendered?
When we know God's promises are yes and amen in Jesus Christ, when we know God offers us the
abundant life through Jesus Christ, that his promises will be fulfilled, that his mercies are new
every morning, that we are a new creation, created with purpose and calling and passion and
desires and dreams to walk out God's plan for our existence.
We know God has better.
We know God knows better.
So why would we choose stuck?
Well, one of the reasons that I think this happens is because we get a diminished, we get
a marginalized.
The world kind of beats down our view of God.
And God in our mind, not functionally, we would never say this.
But God in our mind, we begin to operate as though as God is small, as though God is weak,
as though God is distant, that he is far away.
But one of the things that happened when we were in Africa is we're in this 15-passenger van
and we roll up on this pride of lions, a lot of lions.
Now, if you know how lions work, there's a lot of lionesses and there's a lot of cubs,
but there's only one king.
And we roll up on this pride of lions, and it's like hard to see and you're trying to take
pictures, and so my buddy, not thinking, he opens the sliding door to the van.
and he gets out of the van on safari next to a pride of lions.
And he's trying to get a better angle to take pictures of this lion.
We begin to yell obscenities at him and we're like, bro, what is wrong with you?
We yank him back in the van and I'm like, dude, what do you think?
You think you're at the zoo?
Like you think there's a glass wall between you and that lion?
Make no mistake about it.
Make no mistake about it.
That lion is not in your world.
You were in his.
You want breakthrough in your life?
up every day and remind yourself that God is not a character in your story that you play a part
in His. Our God is not small. He is not weak. He is not distant. My Bible says that the Lord,
our God, the Lord is a warrior. The Lord is his name. Isaiah 4213 says, the Lord will go forth
like a warrior. He will arouse his zeal like a man of war. He will utter a shout. Yes, he will
raise a war cry. He will prevail against his enemies. Amos 413. He forms the mountains and creates
the winds. He declares to man what are his thoughts. He makes dawn into darkness and treads on the
high places of the earth. The Lord God of hosts is his name. Jeremiah 2011, I love this one.
The Lord is with me like a dread champion. Do you know what a dread champion is? Me neither.
Here's all I can figure from studying the scriptures is that there is a type of
champion that when his enemies see him, they dread his very existence. The Lord is with me like a
dread champion. Therefore, my persecutors will stumble and not prevail. Job writes this in
chapter 16 of Job. He says, he breaks through me. He breaks through me with breach after breach.
He runs at me like a warrior. God is not passive. He's not sitting oddly by the Holy Spirit,
at the hound of heaven. There is no question on my mind that he is running after each one of us
right now like a warrior. And some of us, he has been on our conscious saying, you're choosing
stuck and God wants you to step into surrendered because this is where the abundant life is.
Will you let go so that you can step into God's promises? The Lord is a warrior. The Lord
is his name. Sometimes, because it's become familiar, what is awe-inspiring and divine has
become normal and common. We need to know who we're talking about when we say God. He is not small.
He is not distant. You're coming here this morning and somebody says, where are you going to church?
I would offer you this. This is what the psalmist says. That Psalm 145, David says that I will meditate
on the glorious splendor of your majesty. Where are you going? I'm going to meditate on the glorious
splendor of our majesty. That's what we're trying to do here, is to think rightly about God
Almighty who was and is and is to come, so that we can live rightly as He's called us and
purposed us. This word majesty is an interesting one. Majesty is, it means the dignified beauty
of royal power on display. The dignified beauty of royal power on display. What if you went home
this afternoon and you walked in and your family was like, majesty? Can I get you anything?
you'd be like, well, maybe you can, you know.
We just don't talk like this.
It's not a part of our world.
But what do we mean the dignified power of,
the dignified beauty of royal power on display?
Many years ago, five years ago or so,
I wrote a 40-day devotional
through the New Testament book of Jude.
And I was tearing this book apart.
It's the shortest book in the New Testament,
which is probably why I chose it,
just trying to take the easy way out, I guess.
and I'm reading the sentence by sentence, and I actually start breaking it down word by word.
And one of the words in the book of Judah is this word majesty.
And I really began to reflect on it and think about it and internalize it.
And I can't really explain what happened.
And I'm not trying to be all weird about it, but it was one of those moments that I just had an encounter with the spirit of God.
I mean, I wasn't laying on the floor moaning or calling down the gold dust or anything.
It was just like a thing.
Like I was just in a different mental place.
And God gave me this devotion centered around the world.
word majesty. And I'm going to offer it to you. I want to read it to you and hopes to encourage you
in here in just a few minutes when we sing that we are reminded or we have received new revelation
or a better revelation around the reality of who God is. So I wrote this. I'm going to offer to you,
encourage you with it and hopefully it gets you stirred up from your bones. And when we sing,
how great thou art, we're not just saying words, but we're feeling it from our guts, okay,
because of who we're talking about. So here it says, here it is. It says,
is no one like him. There is no God but him. He was and is to come. He reigns on high over all things
visible and invisible. His ways are higher. His thoughts are wiser. His beauty is matchless and his sovereignty
is sure. He is everywhere, ahead of everything and behind everything. There is nothing that happens
that does not first pass through his hands. He holds the endless galaxies in his hands and knows the stars
by the names he is given each one. Before the beginning, he set at the foundation of the world across.
and he made atonement for all sins so that his children could come to him and be redeemed by
his mercy.
And he secured us for his glory.
Every whisper of wind and every calamity of storm to clear his might.
Every rolling wave and every soaring eagle give way to his presence.
Every child's tear and every mother's embrace come to us by the merciful touch of God.
To be near him is to be alive and to be his is to be immortal.
He is unending beyond time, never changing in character, never changing in intention.
He is incomprehensible in mercy.
He is more available to his children than gravity is to the earth.
He did not begin when the beginning began.
He began the beginning.
He did not start when start started.
He started to start.
At a word he brought forth day and night, land and sea, all things that crawl and swim and fly.
He leaned in and breathed the life of an eternal soul into his prized creation.
And up from the dirt came his image, staring back at him, reflecting him to his creation as the moon reflects the sun.
He is the Lord God of Israel.
He is the Lion of Judah, the righteous one of the remnant.
He is the Prince of Peace, the King of all kings, the first born among the dead.
He is the resurrected Christ.
He is the Messiah.
He is the lamb that was slain before the foundations of the world.
He is the joy that comes in the morning.
He is the eternity that has been set in the hearts of men.
And he is the true north that will guide us home.
He has 10,000 times 10, 10,000 angels flying around him, declaring his glory, saying, holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God Almighty, His love,
never fails. His hope endures forever. It is with gladness that he does all things. There is nothing
that runs deeper through the veins of creation than his grace. His purpose is undeniable. It is in him,
through him, and for him, by him, and to him that all things were created that were created.
He cannot be stopped. He will not be forgotten. He shall never be moved. He shall never be forsaken.
His name is above every name on earth and in heaven. He has set a feast for his family that will ever be
their joy. He has no fear. He has no shame. He is guilty of nothing, and he will always finish
what he starts. He is all knowing, all powerful, all loving, and good. He is tenacious in
dispensing his grace. He is ferocious in battle. He is undefeated, irrevocable, supreme in all his
ways. He is majesty. That's who we're surrendered to. Now in the spirit of authenticity. I read that
off the TV in the back, so don't be too impressed. Man, I'm hot up here. Hey.
I'm wearing a, I'm wearing a, I'm wearing a, I'm wearing a shacket.
I don't even know what a shacket is, but I got one on, you know.
Number three, God glorifying Christ exalting war-making worship.
It's generational.
It's personal, it's surrendered, it's generational.
The psalmist says this, one generation will commend your works to another.
God is worthy of more praise than one.
generation can give him. He is worthy of more praise than every generation can give him. And make no
mistake about it, my friends, we are in a fight for future generations. I do not say this as an alarmist.
I say this as an encouragement that our God is on the move. Make no mistake about it. I will say
it, revival has broken out. Absolute revival. People are coming to Christ by the hundreds of
thousands all around the world. And I am believing. And here's the thing about this revival is that
It's not being led by people like me who stand on stages.
It is being led by 15 to 25-year-olds all over our country.
You're sharing their lives to the Lordship of Jesus Christ.
Every great awakening that the world has ever experienced has been led by people 15 to 25 years old.
I am praying and believing that we are on the front end of 50 years of a watershed of revival
where this generation is going to lead us into a future in our land and around the world
where people are raised up and people are called out and they are living as though Christ is their
our highest allegiance and nothing matters more than him.
I'm believing revival is coming.
I'm believing that the Great Commission will be fulfilled, that every tribe, tongue, and
nation will hear the good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ and that every person will
have a chance to respond, and then we will hear the trumpet blast and Christ our king will
come home and get us.
This is what we're talking about.
It's personal.
It's surrendered.
It's generational.
God is on the move in this new generation.
Don't believe the lies.
Don't believe the lies.
God is on the move.
But it's not just out there.
it is in here as well.
In the last two years, our kids and student ministry here at 1122 has grown by 3,388 birth to 12th graders.
We have seen an 85% increase in attendance over the last 24 months in students grade 6 to 12th.
We have seen 1,860 middle school and high school students surrender their lives to the Lordship of Jesus Christ over the last two years.
We have baptized 2,669 students.
I don't know if you pay attention, whether you're Thursday nights, Sunday morning at our campuses.
A lot of our campuses, at the end of our services, we invite people to come down and pray.
And what fills the altar are young adults.
It fills the altar.
Man, what a thing of grace, God, is doing.
But make no mistake about it.
We're not just trying to raise good Americans here who vote and pay their taxes.
We are trying to raise gospel missionaries who are surrendered unto the Lordship of Jesus Christ.
Now, there are currently nine generations alive on the planet, the oldest of which is the greatest
generation.
This is people born before 1927.
And this past weekend, I went to my uncle's 100th birthday.
And I had a plan going in.
I knew I was going to be preaching about gratitude and the greatness of God.
And so I was going to go up to him and I was going to ask him a question.
And he was going to give me this really wise answer.
And then I was going to come back and I was going to tell you.
all about it and y'all are going to be like oh my god that was so great and then it would have been
off that's that was what i was going for right well i get there and i he's sitting down and he's
wearing his world war two vet hat well they don't make them like that anymore and side note my brother
calls me about two years ago and he's like bro i just pulled the best dad move ever i'm like what'd
you do and he's at the time his kids were like 16 15 and 12 they're just he's like they come
home every day and they're just complaining and they're whining and everything's hard and they're they're
just so entitled.
He's like, I just got sick of it.
Somebody's making fun of one behind their back, and it's like the end of the world, and
they're having this like metaphysical crisis.
And he's like, I just had enough.
And so I sat him down on the couch, and I said, you're going to sit your butt right
there and you don't get to speak.
And then I put on saving Private Ryan, and I made him watch the first 40 minutes.
He goes, and then after that, I looked at him and said, anything you'd like to complain
about?
Those are teenagers in the beach is in Normandy right there.
What do you got to complain about?
Hey, you do what you want, but I thought it was good.
I go up to my uncle, he's wearing his World War II vet.
He's a hondo, bro.
He's been around a minute.
And I go, I'm like, hey, it's good to see you.
I just have a question.
What's something you're grateful for?
And he says, well, Nathan, which is not my name.
Not my name.
He goes, did you see the cake?
I said, I did see the cake.
And that's it, that's what happened.
And so, look, from the greatest generation this year starts
a new generation, generation B.
I just want to say this, and then I'm going to go to close.
If you're under 30, look, I'm 44 years old.
I'm hopefully somewhere in the middle.
It belongs to the Lord.
I don't have much to offer.
I don't think I have much advice to give.
Just an encouragement.
If you're under 30, every day you wake up in this world is lying to you.
And it is trying to convince you that your value is somehow connected to something you earn,
something you do, something you say, and the most insidious of all lies is this.
The most insidious of lies being peddled in our world right now is that the most important
thing about you is how you feel about yourself and that you should arrive at how you feel about
yourself based on how you assess that other people feel about you. And so we think about what people
think about us, and that's how we land on value. That's what this lie wants us to do. I want you to know
that God Almighty has declared you with worth and value and significance, and you do not have to
believe the lie. And here's my encouragement to you is that no matter how hard it gets, no matter what it
costs, no matter how the ties of this world turns, no matter what goes on in culture, no matter what
the prominent lie or the prominent temptation of the day is, I want you to do, I want you to know
this, is that in every way Jesus Christ is worth it. He is worth it. He is worth your surrender.
He is worth your devotion. He is worth your affection.
he is worth your time.
He is worth it.
He is worth it.
It's generational.
And then finally, the fourth ingredient of God honor and Christ exalting,
war-making worship is this, is that it's grateful.
It's grateful.
The psalmist rites in verse three, he says,
great is the Lord.
And greatly to be praised.
He is great.
And when you came in, you got a gratitude list.
And the gratitude list is something that we've been doing at 1122 for a very, very long time.
Pastor Jobi started it, and on one side it says, grateful to God.
And the idea is simple here.
If you're joining us online, you can just bust out your phone and use your notes app and it works the same way.
The idea is simple here.
For every one year that you've been alive, you write down one thing that God has blessed you with that you're thankful for.
The science is in on gratitude.
Gratitude, felt gratitude, has the ability to rewire the map.
the pathways and the pathways of our brain.
When we feel gratitude, it actually fires off dopamine and serotonin in our minds.
And so when we practice gratitude, what we're doing is teaching our brain what to focus on.
And so we're going to, on your gratitude list, for every one year that you've been alive,
you write down one thing that you're thankful for.
That's the grateful to list.
And there's some things on my gratitude list just to get you going that'll help you think
in the right direction.
and things like, I'm grateful for my salvation.
Jesus did not have to save me, but he did.
Thank God.
I'm grateful for the Bible.
I'm grateful for my wife.
I'm grateful for my two girls.
I'm grateful for lasagna.
I love it so much.
I'm grateful for Christmas.
I'm trying to get my kids so I don't play music now.
I don't want to wait.
Halloween, shmallowin.
Give me Christmas music.
I'm grateful for the person
who put chocolate and peanut butter together for the first time.
I think they should have won a Nobel Peace Prize.
I'm grateful for air travel.
I'm not, but I want to be.
I fly all the time.
And I'm the most entitled, selfish air traveler you've ever met in our life.
And Pastor Jobie says that gratitude is the enemy of entitlement.
And so I want to be grateful, so I put it on my list because I'm trying to teach my brain how to think.
I've got a flight this afternoon.
You can pray for me and all the people around.
Number 43.
I'm grateful for the quiet places in between all the noise.
In between all the noise.
And that's what I want to do for the next few minutes.
We're just going to create a quiet place in between all the noise.
When's the last time, before you start thinking about where you've got to go
and where you're trying to get to and this and that, just hold.
When's the last time you had five minutes to just sit and be thankful?
When's the last time, you just took five minutes to just sit and say, thank you, God.
Now on your gratitude list, there's the Grateful Two.
I don't expect you to finish.
Nobody's going to finish, depending on how, unless you're like seven, and then maybe you could get done.
It's not to get done.
It's just to get going.
On the other side, there's the Grateful Two side, and then on the other side it says
Grateful Four.
See, gratitude, there's, the only way I can really explain it is there's like a good, better,
and best.
And the highest form of gratitude that I can encourage you to give.
and to feel is for the greatest gift that you've ever received.
And what is the greatest gift that God has ever given you?
Well, the answer is himself.
He is the greatest gift that could ever be given.
And in and through Jesus Christ,
he has completely given himself to us.
And so the grateful for list is,
God, I am grateful to you for you.
I am grateful for God.
and here are some things about him that I'm grateful for.
So I'm going to read my Grateful Four list,
and then I'm going to pray.
You're going to stay seated for four and a half minutes,
and you're going to work on your gratitude list.
Our bands are coming out.
They're going to sing over you, Psalm 145, that we just studied,
and while you're working on your gratitude list.
So you stay seated, you work on your gratitude list.
Our teams are going to sing,
and then someone will come out and lead us into response.
Here are 44 things that I am grateful to God for God.
I am grateful for God's holiness, his sovereignty, his supremacy, his position outside of time,
his irresistible saving grace, his common grace, his mercies are new every day,
his unconditional love, his steadfastness through the ages, his faithfulness to his present promises,
his glory, his beauty, his justice, his nearness, his joy comes in the morning,
He sings over his children.
I'm grateful for his eternal creativity, for his preeminence, his throne room of grace,
his covenant nature, his still small voice, his name that is above every name, his ways are higher,
that his word stands forever, his trinitarian reality, his benevolence, his future grace,
his fathering, his patience, his kindness that leads us to repentance.
His omniscience, his omnipresence, his intervening and redeeming work inside his creation,
his truth, his victory, his authenticity, his concern about every detail, his end game,
his absolute dominion. I am grateful that our God is slow to anger and abounding in mercy,
that his praise endures forever. He opens his hand and he satisfies the desire of every living
thing. I am grateful for the glorious splendor of his majesty. And I am grateful that he is
the alpha and the omega, the beginning and the end, the one who will be.
was and is and is to come.
Let's pray.
God, we are grateful to you for you.
We are grateful for you.
And in this next few minutes, God,
would you just stir us up with Thanksgiving and gratitude?
We've been so richly blessed.
We live in a world that oftentimes feels like it's at chaos,
but we know that Jesus, you say you're the prince of peace.
So we hold on to your kingdom.
you have our highest allegiance
and so we want you to fill us
with the peace of the kingdom of God.
They want us to help us to see
and to rightly think
so that our minds can be full
of right thoughts about you
and our hearts can be full
of your love.
So we receive and we believe
by grace that you love us
and that that's the most important thing about us.
So we invite you into this time
and we say thank you.
You're worthy of it all.
In Jesus' name, amen.
seated and you work on your gratitude list.
Our teams are going to sing and then we'll come
and someone will lead us to response.
