Well, I just want to start by appreciating the clicker police.
Speaker:I've had. I grabbed it and put it on my chair, and I had about
Speaker:eight people come and say, do you have got your clicker? Have you got your
Speaker:clicker? And I do have the clicker today, so I will be
Speaker:clicking right along. We're glad that you're here this morning.
Speaker:A couple of announcements before we get started. First of all, right after this
Speaker:gathering at 12:30, we've got a luncheon for our upcoming Fall
Speaker:Fest this week. And so if you are planning to attend that, what
Speaker:we're gonna ask you to do is exit right out there to your left,
Speaker:go through the doors. They're gonna help you package the lunch together. And then you're
Speaker:gonna turn around and come right back in this room. So, yes, you're gonna bring
Speaker:your food back into this room. So you'll go right out there and bring it
Speaker:in this way. And then also, if there's one thing that we know that kids
Speaker:love, it is candy. And we need lots of it.
Speaker:And so if you have the ability to help participate
Speaker:by bringing candy for this thing, that would be fabulous.
Speaker:You could bring that and drop it off by the church office. You can bring
Speaker:it the night of if you want to. But there's never enough
Speaker:candy, right, D.J. never enough candy. Right. Okay.
Speaker:Next Sunday we also have a newcomer's luncheon. So if you are new to
Speaker:Springhouse. Newer to Springhouse, and you want to meet
Speaker:our staff and you'd like to learn about the
Speaker:church, then you're welcome to participate in the newcomers launch.
Speaker:And that will be next Sunday. So I encourage you to sign
Speaker:up and be a part of that. We're gonna continue the greatest stories
Speaker:ever told today. And you know, I realized every week I say, this is
Speaker:one of the more famous stories. But this is one of the famous stories. And
Speaker:that's why we're going over the greatest stories. We're gonna talk about the prodigal
Speaker:son. And so if you'll stand with me this morning, we're gonna do something just
Speaker:a little different as we read today what I'm gonna ask.
Speaker:I want you to read everything in yellow. And I will read what's in
Speaker:white. So everybody say, I'm yellow. I'm yellow.
Speaker:Kevin is white.
Speaker:There was a man who had two sons. The younger one said to his
Speaker:father, father, give me my share of the
Speaker:estate. So he divided his property between them.
Speaker:Not long after that, the younger son got together. All he had set
Speaker:off for a distant country and there squandered his wealth in wild
Speaker:living. So he went and hired himself out to a citizen of
Speaker:that country who sent him to the fields to feed the
Speaker:pigs. He longed to fill his stomach with the pods that the
Speaker:pigs were eating, but no one gave him anything. When he came to
Speaker:his senses, he said, how many of my father's
Speaker:hired servants have food to spare? And here I
Speaker:am starving to death. I will set out and
Speaker:go back to my father and say to him, father,
Speaker:I have sinned against heaven and against you.
Speaker:I am no longer worthy to be called your son.
Speaker:Make me like one of your hired servants. So he
Speaker:got up and went to his father. But while he was still a long
Speaker:way off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion
Speaker:for him. He ran to his son, threw his arms around him
Speaker:and kissed him. The son said to him, father, I have
Speaker:sinned against heaven and against you. I am no
Speaker:longer worthy to be called your son. But the father said
Speaker:to his servants, quick, bring the best robe and put
Speaker:it on him. Put a ring on his finger and sandals on
Speaker:his feet. Bring the fattened calf and kill it.
Speaker:Have a feast and celebrate. For this son of mine
Speaker:was dead and is alive again. He was lost
Speaker:and is found. So they began to celebrate.
Speaker:Meanwhile, the older son was in the field. When he came near
Speaker:to the house, he heard music and dancing. So he called one
Speaker:of his servants and asked him what was going on. Your
Speaker:brother has come, he replied, and your father has
Speaker:killed the fattened calf because he has him back
Speaker:safe and sound. The older brother became angry and
Speaker:refused to go in. So his father went out and pleaded
Speaker:with him. But he answered his father, look, all
Speaker:these years I have been slaving for you and never
Speaker:disobeyed your orders. Yet you never give me
Speaker:even a young goat so I could celebrate with my friends.
Speaker:But when this son of yours, who has squandered your property
Speaker:with prostitutes, comes home, you kill the fattened
Speaker:calf for him. My son, the father said, you
Speaker:are always with me, and everything I have is
Speaker:yours. But we had to celebrate and be glad,
Speaker:because this brother of yours was dead and is alive
Speaker:again. He was lost and is found. Father, I
Speaker:thank you for your word that it renders truth. I pray, Lord, that its truth
Speaker:would pierce our hearts today. In Jesus name, amen. You may be
Speaker:seated.
Speaker:You ever notice how before you have kids you judge
Speaker:everybody else's parenting?
Speaker:You're in the store and you're thinking, my kids will never act like
Speaker:that. Then you have kids, and all of a sudden,
Speaker:out comes a cell phone, gummies, candy. You lose your dignity and your
Speaker:sanity in the store while everyone else is making fun of you.
Speaker:When you're dating, you think their little quirks are
Speaker:adorable. She's so organized,
Speaker:he's so chill. Then you get married and now
Speaker:she's controlling and he's lazy.
Speaker:When somebody cuts you off in traffic, they are a
Speaker:terrible driver. But when you cut someone
Speaker:off, it's because I didn't see them right.
Speaker:Perspective changes everything. Perspective
Speaker:changes everything. I brought this stool here today because I believe it
Speaker:represents how most of us live our life. We tend to see life
Speaker:from our level where emotions, frustrations and
Speaker:assumptions live. We see what's
Speaker:happening to us, but we're not what God may
Speaker:be doing through us. We see the problem, but not the
Speaker:purpose. But when I change levels
Speaker:on this stool, when I
Speaker:step up to a higher level,
Speaker:my perspective changes. Same room,
Speaker:same people, but I'm looking at everything
Speaker:from a different vantage point. I believe that's
Speaker:what God wants for us. Ephesians 2.
Speaker:6 says that we have been seated in high
Speaker:places with Christ, in heavenly places with Christ. The Word also tells us that
Speaker:we've been given the mind of Christ. And so in that
Speaker:in our lives, we have been given the ability and the
Speaker:opportunity to look at situations and circumstances
Speaker:from a perspective that is far superior than our
Speaker:own. And so we look here and
Speaker:down there. In my perspective, I see pain. But from
Speaker:God's perspective, He sees purpose. From my
Speaker:perspective, I see a mess. But from God's perspective,
Speaker:He sees the opportunity for a miracle.
Speaker:From my perspective, I see failure.
Speaker:But from his perspective, he sees a God who is able
Speaker:to be faithful. From my perspective
Speaker:down there, I see what's gone wrong.
Speaker:But from his perspective, he sees everything that he has gotten involved with
Speaker:and made right. Perspective
Speaker:changes everything. It changes everything.
Speaker:This story begins with a young man
Speaker:standing before his father, determined, divided
Speaker:and restless. And we aren't told
Speaker:what created the situation that caused him to go to his
Speaker:father, expecting his inheritance immediately. We
Speaker:don't get the backstory, but something had to have
Speaker:happened. Because people do not naturally just walk
Speaker:out on something that's good. Maybe
Speaker:it was frustration that built up over time.
Speaker:Maybe it was small disappointments or quiet resentments.
Speaker:Maybe it was a longing to be somewhere else or to be
Speaker:someone else. Anybody ever felt that way.
Speaker:Maybe he felt overlooked or misunderstood
Speaker:or tired of living in his Father's shadow. Whatever it
Speaker:was, it didn't happen. I believe in a moment it happened In a
Speaker:series of moments that led to this moment. And now
Speaker:he is here looking at his father in the eye, and he's saying,
Speaker:give me my share of the
Speaker:inheritance. This is my daughter Ruby.
Speaker:Now, I want to just let you in. I'm a little bit of the OG
Speaker:school when it comes to discipline. So
Speaker:my daughter Ruby was in our early learning center when she was 2. And
Speaker:we continued to get phone calls from the directors because Ruby had
Speaker:this problem of biting children. She would go to class
Speaker:and she would bite someone. She would go to class the next day and
Speaker:she would bite someone. She'd go to class the next day and she would
Speaker:bite someone, and I would have to go and pick her up. Well, one
Speaker:day I got her in the car and I took her home and I said,
Speaker:ruby, what did you do? She said, I bit someone. So I
Speaker:took her arm and I bit her.
Speaker:She did not bite one other person. Nay, one more
Speaker:time after that time of me biting her. And I want to tell
Speaker:you that if one of my children were to come to me
Speaker:and say, I hate you, and I want to leave home and run away,
Speaker:I might just go right upstairs and grab their bag and start packing it for
Speaker:them. Set it right there on that porch. Because here's the thing.
Speaker:I know that as soon as they get as far as the mailbox,
Speaker:the realization will set in that what they've got is good.
Speaker:What they've got at home is really. Is really good.
Speaker:Here's the thing. He's saying, give me my
Speaker:inheritance. It was deeply hurtful and offensive
Speaker:to the father because it was as if the son was saying, you are
Speaker:better off to me dead than alive. You're better
Speaker:off to me dead than alive. Now, a man's
Speaker:property back in this culture wasn't just his wealth.
Speaker:It was his identity, and it was his legacy. The
Speaker:land told the story of his name, his family,
Speaker:his history, and his hope for the generation to come after
Speaker:him. So when the son demanded his share, he wasn't
Speaker:just walking away from home. He was walking away
Speaker:from his identity, from his legacy. He was walking
Speaker:away from whom he was meant to be. And still
Speaker:the father. Excuse me. The father didn't stop him.
Speaker:The father did not stop him. He didn't
Speaker:argue. He didn't beg. He
Speaker:simply let him go. The word tells us this. He divided
Speaker:the property between them.
Speaker:Real love has the capability
Speaker:of letting go
Speaker:even when it breaks your heart. Because the moment love starts
Speaker:being controlling, it's no longer love.
Speaker:So the father stands there watching his son disappear. Down the road, knowing full
Speaker:and well the road he's chosen. And the road the son has
Speaker:chosen is a road that's going to hurt him. It's going to lead to
Speaker:destruction. It's going to lead to disaster. And I believe that the Father's
Speaker:heart was breaking, but in that break, he was hoping that whatever
Speaker:choices this son was setting out to make, that maybe, just
Speaker:maybe, those choices and those consequences of those choices would
Speaker:bring him back home. Would bring him back home.
Speaker:Sometimes we have to walk through a consequence in order to learn a
Speaker:lesson. So the son liquidates everything
Speaker:associated with his Father and begins to live, the Word tells us, a
Speaker:wild lifestyle, engaging in everything and
Speaker:anything that would bring him temporary
Speaker:pleasure, every sin possible. And
Speaker:it leads him, as sin does, to a place of complete brokenness
Speaker:and destruction. Jesus is wanting us,
Speaker:I believe, to grab something in this portion of the story because
Speaker:it's easy to look at this young man and see that sin,
Speaker:his sin, is the main issue. But the issue really
Speaker:wasn't sin. It was separation.
Speaker:And if you're actively living in the place, if you're here this morning under the
Speaker:sound of my voice and you're actively living in a place of
Speaker:sin, I want you to know that sin isn't your biggest
Speaker:problem. Separation is separation
Speaker:from the Father, from the God who breathes stars. Isaiah says this. Your
Speaker:iniquities. Excuse me, your iniquities have separated you from.
Speaker:It is our sin that separates us from our God.
Speaker:And it isn't what the Son did that ruined him. It
Speaker:was how far he ran from the Father. Might I
Speaker:suggest this morning that distance will drain you faster than sin will
Speaker:stain you. Distance will drain you
Speaker:faster than sin will stain you. Our
Speaker:perspective down here, our perspective down here
Speaker:is that if I will just stop doing that,
Speaker:if they will just stop doing that,
Speaker:everything will change. If I stop losing my temper, everything
Speaker:will be okay. If I stop lusting, everything will be
Speaker:fine. If I stop drinking, everything will go away.
Speaker:If I stop looking at that, everything will be just fine. But here's the
Speaker:truth. See, sin is just the symptom of a deeper issue. And that issue
Speaker:is lack of relationship. Lack of
Speaker:relationship with God. Listen, you can cut off the
Speaker:branch, but if the roots are still there, nothing's going to change.
Speaker:You'll just find another way for sin to manifest itself.
Speaker:You can fix the behavior, but if your heart isn't healed,
Speaker:you'll find another outlet. That's why
Speaker:Jesus didn't come to modify our
Speaker:behavior. He came to heal. And
Speaker:when our Heart is healed, then the behavior follows, the
Speaker:behavior changes. See, we tend to want to fix our sin
Speaker:and try to fix other people's sin from our perspective
Speaker:and not from his higher perspective. Here's the thing. Your sin in
Speaker:this room this morning might be greed,
Speaker:but your real issue is fear.
Speaker:Your sin might be anger in this room this morning,
Speaker:but the real issue is unforgiveness or pain.
Speaker:Your sin might be gossip, but the real issue
Speaker:is insecurity. Your
Speaker:sin might be sexual immorality, but the real sin. The real
Speaker:issue. Sorry. The real issue is rejection.
Speaker:Your sin might be pride, but the real issue is shame.
Speaker:Your sin might be addiction, but the real issue is emptiness,
Speaker:because you're filling a void that only the Father's love can
Speaker:satisfy. Guys, sin
Speaker:is not random. It's a signal.
Speaker:It's pointing to something beneath the surface that needs
Speaker:to be addressed. A wound, a lie, or a longing
Speaker:to be healed. And the Father's not
Speaker:standing over you saying, fix that. He's
Speaker:saying, come home. Let me heal you. Let
Speaker:me heal you. Because once the
Speaker:relationship is restored, the symptom loses its power.
Speaker:When you walk away from the Father, I believe that your life begins
Speaker:to leak away from you. When we walk away from God, our life just
Speaker:begins to dissipate. You may look alive on the outside, but your
Speaker:soul begins to starve. And we look to feed it with things that don't bring
Speaker:life. Many years ago, Margaret was sitting in our office, and her
Speaker:daughter Valerie was there. And Valerie had accidentally tripped and knocked a
Speaker:cup of water over a laptop that she had sitting there. And she was
Speaker:in the middle of really needing to be on a laptop working. And so Margaret
Speaker:stood up and they cleaned up the water and the laptop wasn't working. Well, they
Speaker:go over next door, and Barbie's there, and there's a laptop sitting there on the
Speaker:floor. Well, Margaret says, barbie, do you have a laptop that we could use that
Speaker:Valerie could use? And she said, well, there's one there on the floor, but it
Speaker:has its own problems. Here's the thing.
Speaker:Sometimes we go and we will make. We will take on more problems
Speaker:instead of addressing the one at hand. Sometimes we're
Speaker:content with going into a situation where we'll take on more problems
Speaker:than actually addressing the root cause of the issue. Let me
Speaker:get rid of this symptom with another symptom. Let
Speaker:me get rid of this visible symptom and utilize an invisible
Speaker:symptom and just live from there.
Speaker:But God wants to get to the root and he wants to get to the
Speaker:heart. And so, in his great love for you and me, in his
Speaker:great love for you and me, God will allow
Speaker:painful circumstances to take place in our lives
Speaker:painful circumstances to take place in our lives so that we would wake up
Speaker:and be willing to see ourselves and our situation
Speaker:from his perspective and finally
Speaker:come to our senses. The Word tells us when he came to his senses, he
Speaker:said, I will arise and I will go back to my father. The
Speaker:turning point in this story isn't when he runs out of money.
Speaker:It isn't when he's in the pig pen. It's when he comes
Speaker:to his senses, when his eyes are open
Speaker:to a higher perspective. And this, my
Speaker:friends, is where repentance begins.
Speaker:Repentance is not an emotion. It's not just a sorrowful
Speaker:plea to the situation or what we've done wrong. It's not
Speaker:an emotional response with tears. It can be part of it, but
Speaker:that's not what repentance really is. Repentance, I
Speaker:believe, has three components, and we often neglect the last
Speaker:one. The first part of repentance is changing the way that
Speaker:you think you can change your behavior all day long.
Speaker:But until you change the way you think about it, the root of changing
Speaker:behavior is not going to go anywhere. So the first part of
Speaker:repentance is changing the way you think. The second part
Speaker:flows right naturally. After changing the way you think, it's changing the behavior.
Speaker:So we turn away from the behavior. I change the way I think, I. I
Speaker:turn away from the behavior. And that's a lot of times where we put the
Speaker:period and we just move on. But guys, I don't believe that the first two
Speaker:can even happen without the third one being involved. We change the
Speaker:way we think, the behavior changes, and then we
Speaker:run to a merciful God. We run
Speaker:to a merciful God. We run to a God who has the
Speaker:supernatural power to help us get out of the situation
Speaker:and the pain and the destructive path that we're in. All three of
Speaker:those ingredients are part of the repentance process. And for the life
Speaker:of the believer, repentance is a part
Speaker:of our journey. Guys, I was
Speaker:struggling with two issues over the last three weeks. Two, they're not
Speaker:connected, but man, two issues and boy laden in there in that sin world.
Speaker:One was pride. Anybody ever dealt with pride?
Speaker:I'm not alone. I was in situations in the last three weeks, I
Speaker:thought, I've got the answer. I got the monopoly on the answer to
Speaker:this. I was looking from my
Speaker:perspective in another situation. I'm walking through
Speaker:Fighting. And I'm wrestling with bitterness against how I've been
Speaker:treated. And sometimes that bitterness that you walk in can lead
Speaker:you to places where you just are in the pig pen. Because I see
Speaker:it my way, I don't see it his way.
Speaker:And until I change the way I think, coupled with the behavior and
Speaker:the actions with it, and run to a merciful God, nothing's going to change in
Speaker:my life. And maybe you are here and you're contending and
Speaker:wrestling with something in your life that you need to turn
Speaker:from. Repentance gives us the
Speaker:ability to stop thinking like a slave and to remember that we are
Speaker:sons and daughters of the most high God. Romans 2:4
Speaker:says, God's kindness leads us to repentance. And we have been
Speaker:placed in positions to be the hands and feet of Christ in that.
Speaker:Several years ago, Allen was serving communion. I don't remember what section it was, but
Speaker:he was on the steps and Allen tripped and he fell.
Speaker:I didn't see this, but he told the story later. And you know, when he
Speaker:fell, so many people got up and they ran over to help
Speaker:him. Could you imagine if he fell and everybody just looked
Speaker:at him and scoffed and laughed and then kicked him while he was down and
Speaker:said, look, you fell, Allen, you're hurt.
Speaker:Just want to make sure, you know, you fell. Did everybody see that? Can we
Speaker:pan the camera there,
Speaker:guys? None of us plan the fall. None of us
Speaker:plan the fall. But when the fall happens, I pray that I have
Speaker:loving people in my life who will run to me and help me get
Speaker:up from the fall.
Speaker:God's kindness leads us to repentance. How does he manifest
Speaker:his kindness? Through believers who have been through some things and say,
Speaker:hey, I need to render kindness in this situation because you've
Speaker:fallen and you need to change.
Speaker:And so we've been placed in a position to be the hands and feet of
Speaker:Christ. The young son didn't wake up because he feared
Speaker:the fathers. He woke up because he
Speaker:remembered the Father's goodness.
Speaker:And it changed everything. He
Speaker:didn't have to fix himself before returning. He didn't need a
Speaker:plan. He needed a person. And that's the
Speaker:turning point of the story. The son didn't stop at a well to wash
Speaker:his face. The word didn't tell us that he goes to a clothing store to
Speaker:make sure he looks the part. It didn't say that he went back and earned
Speaker:all of the money back so that he could pay back what he squandered.
Speaker:He showed up like he was
Speaker:grace doesn't wait for you to get cleaned up. It meets you where
Speaker:you messed up. And then in the story,
Speaker:something really scandalous happens. Jesus says,
Speaker:but while he was still a long way off, the Father
Speaker:saw him and was filled with compassion.
Speaker:And he ran. Son,
Speaker:now I want to tell you something.
Speaker:Mideastern, Middle Eastern men did not run.
Speaker:It was undignified. They would have to lift their robes and
Speaker:expose their scrawny legs in order to run. They
Speaker:didn't run. Running
Speaker:was just something that. This is something that they didn't
Speaker:do. But this father didn't care about his dignity. He didn't care
Speaker:about what the neighbors thought. He didn't care about how bad his boy
Speaker:smelt or how foolish that he might look. He cared that his
Speaker:son was coming home. And so
Speaker:he takes off running. Because love doesn't mind looking foolish when
Speaker:restoration is on the line. Love does not mind
Speaker:looking foolish when restoration is on the line.
Speaker:So before the Son. Before the Son can finish his apology,
Speaker:the Father throws his arms around him. Before
Speaker:the confession, there's compassion. Before the explanation,
Speaker:there's restoration. And that's the gospel over. In 2
Speaker:Corinthians, it says this. All this is from God
Speaker:who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the
Speaker:ministry of reconciliation. That God was
Speaker:reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting people's
Speaker:sins against them. Might I
Speaker:suggest to us this morning that we understand that you don't
Speaker:fix your sin to find God. You find God and he fixes your sin.
Speaker:You find a relationship with God and he begins to fix your
Speaker:sin. The young man who got baptized. Right up here, Cody, I'm going to tell
Speaker:on you, okay? He said to Scotty, he said, I sometimes
Speaker:cuss. Can I get baptized? Absolutely,
Speaker:brother. You can get baptized. You don't fix your sin
Speaker:to find God. You find God, and then he fixes your
Speaker:sin.
Speaker:This is what grace looks like. A father who runs toward
Speaker:you when everyone else runs away.
Speaker:We don't deserve this type of love. Psalms says this. He does not treat
Speaker:us as our sins, deserve or repay us according to our
Speaker:iniquities. As far as the east is from the west, so far as he has
Speaker:removed our transgressions from us guys,
Speaker:God cares more about getting you back than getting you
Speaker:right. And if you are wandering away
Speaker:from this king of the universe, this star breathing God, this
Speaker:morning he wants you back. And I don't think
Speaker:it's happenstance that you're sitting here this morning because
Speaker:the God of the universe has his arms Wide open for you.
Speaker:The father didn't demand an explanation. He didn't stand there with
Speaker:a litany of questions. Where were you?
Speaker:What did you do with my money?
Speaker:He didn't need to talk about the past because love was already building a future.
Speaker:And so the father says, bring the best robe
Speaker:because your shame is covered. Put a ring on his finger
Speaker:because his authority has been established. Put sandals on
Speaker:his feet because you are no longer a servant. You are a child of this
Speaker:house. And not only that, you are my son.
Speaker:This father says, do you notice something here?
Speaker:The father neglected to bring up the sin. Our perspective
Speaker:would say, we need to address this sin. We need to talk about this sin.
Speaker:We need to pay penance for this sin. We need to make sure that this
Speaker:sin doesn't happen again. But what we're not understanding it is that symptom of a
Speaker:root issue. If you get to the root issue, the sin is going to dissipate
Speaker:and go away because of relationship.
Speaker:Man at a funeral I was at yesterday named Austin, he was sharing a
Speaker:story. He goes hunting and he had killed a buck for
Speaker:the first time. And he pulled it in. But I guess with hunting season,
Speaker:there's a time where your license expires or whatnot. And so you go through
Speaker:this process. And he didn't have his license up to date or portion of it.
Speaker:And so. So he has to go to court for the very first time. Never
Speaker:been there before. And he's talking about that the deceased was his father in law,
Speaker:but at that time it was his future father in law because he was just
Speaker:a boyfriend to the girl at this time. So he goes to court, he doesn't
Speaker:know what he's doing, doesn't really know what to wear. He's never been to court.
Speaker:He's been somebody who's done all of the right things, but he just was a
Speaker:lapse of judgment here. And so he goes in there and
Speaker:explains to the judge what happened. Well, the father
Speaker:in law shows up that morning to court with him, to stand and be with
Speaker:him. And so he gives this case. And the judge says, okay, that will be
Speaker:a $10 fine. Now let me tell you something. Have you ever been in
Speaker:court? $10.
Speaker:$10. So he goes around to the
Speaker:clerk's window to pay the $10 fee. And the clerk says, that would be
Speaker:$460 because you have the payment
Speaker:for the guilty sentence, but you also have these things called court fees.
Speaker:So he pays this $460 and he leaves rejected, with his head
Speaker:down. Come Next Sunday, this future father in law
Speaker:comes up to him and hands him an envelope. And inside the envelope is a
Speaker:check for $450. Now, why did I share
Speaker:this story? This future father, this
Speaker:was a boyfriend. This future father in law had
Speaker:no reason to pay this bill, had no reason to take
Speaker:on the penalty. But because of love and because of relationship,
Speaker:he comes in and pays the bill. And guys, that's exactly what our God
Speaker:does. It's exactly what our God does.
Speaker:The motivation to pay the debt was love and relationship. And when you come home,
Speaker:the father does not rub your failures in your face. He wraps
Speaker:his arm around you and whispers, you were never meant to live
Speaker:without me.
Speaker:So now the father has his son back and he
Speaker:can't help but celebrate. And guys, anytime a
Speaker:relationship is reconciled, it is cause for
Speaker:celebration. It is cause for celebration.
Speaker:But while everyone was inside celebrating, there's another story that's
Speaker:unfolding outside in the field. You see, out in the field, the older
Speaker:brother hears the sound of celebration and stops in his
Speaker:tracks. He's been working hard, doing everything that he's supposed to
Speaker:do. Faithful, disciplined, responsible.
Speaker:And now, after all of these years of consistency,
Speaker:he hears laughter that isn't his. He smells food that's not
Speaker:belonging to him. And he sees a robe and a ring given to him
Speaker:to the one who wasted everything.
Speaker:And resentment starts to rise.
Speaker:He calls a servant over and he says, what's going on?
Speaker:And the servant replies, your father has killed the fattened calf because
Speaker:his younger son has come home.
Speaker:But instead of joy in this older brother, there's anger
Speaker:instead of relief, there's bitterness. And in that
Speaker:moment from the older son, we see a different type of
Speaker:distance from the father. Not the distance of rebellion,
Speaker:but the distance of resentment. You see, the older
Speaker:son has a perspective too.
Speaker:All these years I've been slaving for you and never disobeyed your orders.
Speaker:That's what he says to his father. Here's the tragedy. And this
Speaker:is what I want us to grab. You can stay in the
Speaker:father's house and still live like a hired
Speaker:hand. You can take room in the
Speaker:father's house and still operate like a hired hand. The
Speaker:older brother never left home, but he still missed the father's heart.
Speaker:Listen, rules can guide you, but only relationship can change you.
Speaker:You can follow all of the rules, but if you don't have relationship,
Speaker:you've missed the heart of God. Listen, I've been married
Speaker:to Shari for over 15 years and I
Speaker:obey the rules of marriage not because
Speaker:I'm married. But because I love Shari,
Speaker:my fuel to obey the rules of marriage isn't because I'm under some
Speaker:institution or some rule or anything. The reason I obey the rules of
Speaker:marriage is because I love her. Relationship
Speaker:fuels my obedience. Relationship
Speaker:is key. I believe relationship is the currency
Speaker:of the kingdom to which we live. Justin was talking
Speaker:about in the pool. He was talking about baptism. And he talked
Speaker:about him to Scotty, to Scotty, to Cody. What he's talking about is
Speaker:being in relationship. Not fake relationship, real
Speaker:relationship, authentic relationship.
Speaker:Relationship is key. And the greatest victory
Speaker:in the kingdom is when relationships are restored.
Speaker:Have you ever seen someone forgive the unforgivable?
Speaker:Have you ever seen someone be so wrong that they
Speaker:deserve to do something to the person, but they love them above the hurt?
Speaker:Have you ever seen. It's remarkable. It's supernatural,
Speaker:because in our flesh, we want to take people out.
Speaker:The greatest defeat of the enemy is when he tries to place a
Speaker:wedge between people. And then love from the father
Speaker:supernaturally gets involved and those two people come back together.
Speaker:And so our heart check is this. You can live in the father's house and
Speaker:still miss the father's heart.
Speaker:In other words, you can be absolutely right in the
Speaker:way you feel, but you can respond in a way
Speaker:that misses the father's heart simply because you
Speaker:were operating from your perspective and not
Speaker:his. I
Speaker:believe that forgiveness in the world is a 5050
Speaker:proposition. I will meet you halfway. Here's
Speaker:my forgiveness with strings attached. Forgiveness in the
Speaker:kingdom is not a 5050 proposition. Forgiveness in the kingdom
Speaker:is 100%. I have washed that away
Speaker:as far as the east is from the west. We can walk forward
Speaker:in pure relationship.
Speaker:Forgiveness in the kingdom allows us beyond our
Speaker:hurts, beyond our pain, beyond our struggles to take the next step forward,
Speaker:first and foremost with our God, but also
Speaker:with one another. Proximity does
Speaker:not equate to intimacy. You can serve God faithfully
Speaker:and still not enjoy him fully. Do you know that God desires to be
Speaker:enjoyed? You can be in his house
Speaker:and be so worried about whether you're doing everything right and crossing every
Speaker:T and dotting every I and miss him altogether.
Speaker:This isn't just the story of one prodigal son. It's the story of
Speaker:every heart that has ever wandered or ever
Speaker:been hardened. And the father stands
Speaker:in the same place for both, watching the
Speaker:road, waiting for relationship.
Speaker:So you may be in the pig pen this morning.
Speaker:There may be something that you need to repent for this morning.
Speaker:You may be distant from this glorious God who's waiting on the road
Speaker:with his arms wide open, saying, here I am. Come,
Speaker:let us reason together.
Speaker:You have a father who's saying, come home. This
Speaker:story is about two sons. The younger son
Speaker:thought freedom meant distance. He believed he could just get away from his father
Speaker:and that he would find happiness. But he was wrong.
Speaker:The older son thought faithfulness meant favoritism.
Speaker:He believed it just if he just worked harder and he did all the right
Speaker:things, that the father would finally notice him.
Speaker:But he had access to the father all along.
Speaker:Both were seeing this from ground level, from
Speaker:their perspective, from their
Speaker:own understanding. Neither of them was seeing it from the
Speaker:father's vantage point. The father's
Speaker:perspective is always higher. It's always
Speaker:better. Would you stand with me this morning?
Speaker:If you're going to minister to people, if you'll come forward.
Speaker:You know what makes that pig pen so nasty?
Speaker:I believe what makes that pig pen so that that feed the trough
Speaker:so nasty? It's not that the pigs are eating. I don't know what they feed
Speaker:pigs, but that slop, that's not what makes it
Speaker:nasty. What makes the trough nasty is that
Speaker:all of our saliva is in it together.
Speaker:That's what makes it nasty. But here's the deal.
Speaker:You don't have to stay there eating my saliva or your
Speaker:neighbor's saliva in the pig pen.
Speaker:Everything can change. Today
Speaker:you say, I don't know how to fix this behavior in my life.
Speaker:Stop trying to fix it. Come and get the relationship straight with your
Speaker:father. Maybe you're looking at some situation
Speaker:from an earthly low perspective and you need God to change it.
Speaker:Lord, change my perspective about this. I need your eyes, God. I need to
Speaker:see your perspective in this situation. Come.
Speaker:He knows how to give you a pair of his eyes to see it the
Speaker:way he sees it. Maybe
Speaker:you're sitting there and you're like, I have checked off all the list. I have
Speaker:done so many things right and I don't understand why that person
Speaker:gets to get away with X, Y and Z. I don't know why that
Speaker:person gets to have the blessing. I don't understand why that is.
Speaker:Here's the thing. Can I tell you. God doesn't just want to get you to
Speaker:a place where you accept that for other people. He wants to get you to
Speaker:a place where you rejoice with them when they do
Speaker:so. There's a lot of opportunity to meet the God who breathes stars and
Speaker:knew you were going to be here today. You can do like that song
Speaker:said that they sang this morning. I've decided I'm not going to leave this
Speaker:place the same way I came. The only way to do
Speaker:that is to encounter the God of the universe. Let's
Speaker:worship.