Last Saturday, I began a series of messages on 'How God Meets Your Deepest Needs". My first message was "Where to Find Hope". It's amazing that one of the powerful themes that permeated this past presidential election was "hope". President Obama successfully communicated a message of hope. People are in need of hope. The question is, where can we find hope? Romans 15:13 tells us that God is our source of hope.
“May God, the source of hope, fill you with joy and peace through your faith in Him. Then you’ll overflow with hope…” Rom. 15:13 (GWT)
One of my favorite Bible verses is Romans 8:28. The second point of my message was based on this verse and I thought I would share it with you.
The second source of hope is this:
HIS PURPOSE IS WORKING IN ME.
No matter what’s happening in my life – good, bad, or ugly – God’s purpose is working in me. When you have a problem that you don’t understand the purpose, that’s very difficult to handle. You know the most difficult kinds of questions of life are, “Why is this happening to me?” When the problem is there that’s kind of a freak accident and it doesn’t have any rhyme or reason to it. It just doesn’t make sense. Those are the kind of situations that are the most difficult to handle.
On the other hand, when you see a purpose behind your problem it gives you enormous hope. It also gives you enormous power to endure it. And God says, I am working in your life and I have a purpose no matter what’s happening.
God is doing good things in my life even when the situation is bad, even when I don’t feel it, even when it doesn’t make sense, even when I have no understanding. When the situation is bad, He is still doing good things in my life.
I want us to look at a couple of verses that we’ve looked at many times here at NLFC. But we keep coming back to these verses because they’re so profound, they really explain what life is all about. I hope by now if you’ve been a believer for some time that you’ve memorized Romans 8:28 ”We know that God causes all things to work together for good for those who love God and are called according to His purpose.” (NAS)
This is such a significant verse I want us to look at it word by word.
Notice first what it does not say. It doesn’t say, “All things work out the way I want them to.” We would like that and we’d like to interpret it that way but that’s not what it says. It doesn’t say, “All things work out the way I want them to.”
It does not say, “All things have a happy ending on earth.” Because that is not true. All things do not have a happy ending on earth. Reality teaches us that not every patient gets well, that not every couple that gets married lives happily ever after. Reality teaches us that not every business decision makes a million bucks, not every problem is resolved. So we know that’s not true. All children don’t get straight A’s and become captain of the football team. What does it say?
First it says, “We know that God causes all things to work together for good.” Circle “We know”. What that means is we don’t wish, we don’t imagine, we don’t desire, we don’t have false hope, we don’t have positive thinking. It just says, We know. It’s not a wish or a desire. It is a certainty. We are confident of whatever comes after this. “Hope is not the same as optimism. It is not the conviction that something will turn out well. But hope is the certainty that something makes sense regardless of how it turns out.”
“Hope is the certainty that something makes sense regardless of how it turns out” -- “We know” not hope or imagine – We know. What?
“… that God causes…” There is a grand master designer of the universe. And there is a plan that is in action and history is His story. There is no such thing as fate. There is no such thing as chance. There is no such thing as luck – good luck or bad luck. There is no such thing as karma, what will be will be, destiny or “I just happen to fall into it.” That is not true. There is a master designer. We make mistakes for sure. We make many mistakes. But God never makes mistakes.
“We know that God causes all things to work together for good.” Circle “all things”. What does that include? Does that include illness? Yes. Does that include unemployment? Certainly. Does it include divorce? Some of you have a question about that one. Does it include a miscarriage? Does it include failure? Does it include freak accidents? Does it include the stupid decisions that I make and the mistakes I bring upon myself? Yes! Absolutely, yes! Everything fits into God’s plan. The good, the bad, the indifferent. The things that I do, the things I don’t do. The things that I control, the things I don’t control. All things work together for good.
Notice: It doesn’t say, “all things are good.” And it does not say God causes all things. God does not. God does not cause rape. God does not cause war. God does not cause famine and poverty. God does not cause leukemia and cancer. To attribute those things to God is to turn God into a monster. God is not a monster. God is incapable of sin. It doesn’t say God causes all things. We bring a lot on ourselves.
But it does say that “God causes all things to work together for good.” Circle “work together”.
Illustration: Baking a cake.
When you’re baking a cake you’ve got to have some flour and some raw eggs and some Crisco and some sugar and some salt and some vanilla. Any one of those things by itself doesn’t really taste too good. Have you ever tasted flour? Crisco? Maybe the sugar some of you might say is ok. But none of those things on their own tastes good.
There are a lot of things in your life that are difficult to swallow. They’re bitter going down and you choke on them. “Why is that happening?” Not all things in your life are good but they all work together for good. When those elements are put together – just like the element of the cake are put together it produces a cake and the cake is very good. God wants to bake a cake in your life and He wants to take the elements in your life, even the things that are distasteful, bitter, and He wants to work them together.
God is weaving a tapestry of your life. And when He weaves that tapestry He uses some dark threads and some light threads. He uses some heavy yarn and some lighter yarn. When He looks down on the tapestry He can see the pattern that is emerging and the picture that He wants to make of your life. As He looks down from heaven, He has a different view than the one we see looking up. Have you ever looked at the underside of a tapestry? It’s a jumble of yarn that makes no sense at all. Looking up from the underside of that rug it makes no sense. You ask, Why did that happen. I don’t know. But one day you will know and you will see how He was weaving the dark and the light, the good and the bad, the happy and the sad, every experience of life into a pattern. Can God bring good out of the bad? Did He bring any good out of the crucifixion? I’d say so. The crucifixion was not good. It was quite painful. But God brought good out of it. When you understand that God is not only watching over you but He’s working in you. He not only has His presence but He has a purpose. That is a source of enormous hope. Enormous.
Notice the qualifier of this great promise. It is not for everybody. It says “… those who love God…” All things do not work together for good for everybody. In fact, if you are thumbing your nose to God, walking out the back door and saying, “Forget You, God!” all things are not working for good in your life. In fact, all things are working for bad in your life. This is not a promise to everybody. It’s a promise for those who love God and want to have a relationship with Him and who are trying to live according to His purpose.
Tonight, if you are here and you’re facing an impossible situation, the next verse is for you. Jeremiah 29:11 God says,
“I have good plans for you, not plans to hurt you. I will give you hope and a good future.” Jeremiah 29:11 (NCV)
You may think that what God is doing in your life right now is painful and is to no avail but God says, “My plan is good. You just don’t see it. You need to trust Me. You need to have hope because it’s a plan to give you a hope and a future.”
If you have walked away from God. And you think, “I was close to God at one time but I can’t get back to Him,” then the next verse is for you.
“God began doing a good work in you and I am sure He will continue it until it is finished when Jesus Christ comes again.” Philippians 1:6 (NCV)
God starts something in your life and what He starts He finishes. You may say you’re too far beyond hope. You’re not. You’ve walked away from it but when you come back and say, “God, I’m going to give You the mess, give You the pieces. Give me Your peace.” Then that which He started, He finishes in your life. And He keeps on keeping on.
Comments