Good morning, Springhouse. Oh, you can do better. Is it a good morning?
Speaker:Is God good? Come on,
Speaker:come on. God is good today.
Speaker:Well, I am so glad to be with you in the presence of the Lord.
Speaker:You'll have to forgive me if I'm limping a little bit this morning. I'm pretty
Speaker:sure I'm passing a kidney stone before you right now. But I'm gonna
Speaker:preach through this because I believe God's given me a word. So I'm gonna do
Speaker:it today. Before we get started, I have a few
Speaker:announcements. First of all, aren't we so thankful for the
Speaker:ministry of f. Stop doing pictures for us. Family
Speaker:pictures. If you came today, prepare to do family pictures that will be
Speaker:out there through the way to the fellowship hall. And if you came today and
Speaker:you didn't sign up but you'd like to have a family portrait, we'd be glad
Speaker:to do that for you as well. It's a free gift from us to you
Speaker:and they will have that back to you in time for Christma. Okay, a
Speaker:couple other things for us to just make note of. Okay? First of all, we're
Speaker:heading into Advent next week, which is the four weeks leading up to
Speaker:Christmas Day. And on December 5th and 6th, something very special is gonna
Speaker:be happening here. And it is our very own Springhouse kids
Speaker:production of A Star Is Born. And we want you to come and be a
Speaker:part of that on those nights. That's a Friday and a Saturday night,
Speaker:and then the day after on the 7th, we're gonna have a Springhouse
Speaker:Christmas party here. So what that's gonna look like if you wanna
Speaker:worship and word, we're gonna do that at 9am in this room. And then
Speaker:following that, at 11, we're gonna do a reprise of A Star Is Born. Yes,
Speaker:I believe it's gonna be that good. And we're gonna do a reprise of the
Speaker:show. And then we're gonna have lunch and there's gonna be candy and there's gonna
Speaker:be all types of fun things for the kids to do and you to do.
Speaker:Please make plans to come and celebrate with us during that
Speaker:very special time on December 7th. Then later
Speaker:on in the month, on December 19th, it's our annual Carols by
Speaker:Candlelight. And let me tell you, you're not gonna wa. Candlelight.
Speaker:Make a point to be a part of it. It's always a packed house and
Speaker:a rich time together. And then one of my favorite services of the year is
Speaker:on Christmas Day at 11 o'. Clock. And I'll tell you, I've been here nearly
Speaker:three decades, and I have only missed one Christmas Day.
Speaker:And I remember it. I remember the year I missed it. It
Speaker:is the thing that ties that day together. Please be a part of
Speaker:that, that day. It's 11 to 12. So we know you have plans with your
Speaker:family, and we will get you out of here on time for those
Speaker:plans. And then, man, you missed an incred incredible
Speaker:midweek series. Real Talk with Pastor Justin. So go back and look at that
Speaker:online. We will not be here this Thursday. Hopefully you'll
Speaker:be with family gathering, and we do not have midweek gathering again until
Speaker:January 8th. And so there will be no midweek gathering for the month of
Speaker:December. If you show up on Thursday night, hopefully somebody else shows up, too, and
Speaker:y' all can go to Starbucks and hang out. We won't be here, but
Speaker:we will be back on January 8th.
Speaker:Okay. It's Thanksgiving week, and so we are going
Speaker:to talk about the pathway to gratitude. Would you
Speaker:say that the pathway to gratitude.
Speaker:And so we're gonna draw from the book of Luke, hopefully a story that you
Speaker:are familiar with. So if you'll stand with me this morning, let's read with
Speaker:gusto and excitement this morning, because anytime
Speaker:God gives a word, it is exciting. Okay, here we go. As
Speaker:Jesus and his disciples were on their way, he came
Speaker:to a village where a woman named Martha opened her home
Speaker:to him. She had a sister called Mary who sat
Speaker:at the Lord's feet listening to what he said. But
Speaker:Martha was distracted by all the preparations that he
Speaker:had been. She came to him and asked, lord,
Speaker:don't you care that my sister has left me to do the work by
Speaker:myself? Tell her to help me. Martha.
Speaker:Martha, the Lord answered, you are worried and upset
Speaker:about many things, but few things are needed, or
Speaker:indeed only one. Mary has chosen what is
Speaker:better, and it will not be taken away from her. Father, I
Speaker:thank you for your precious word. I thank you for the gift of your word.
Speaker:And I just pray, Lord, that it would minister to our hearts today. In Jesus
Speaker:name, amen. You may be seated. Well, I
Speaker:am extremely grateful for a lot of things, and
Speaker:first and foremost, I just have to tell you I'm thankful for
Speaker:macaroni and cheese. Planning
Speaker:on eating some of that golden deliciousness this year
Speaker:on Thursday? And I hope that you're planning on having some good food and that
Speaker:you're grateful for it. It is the season to be thankful. It's the season
Speaker:to be grateful. But might I suggest to you that the
Speaker:life of a believer should be saturated with Gratitude.
Speaker:I'm going to say that again. The life of a believer should be
Speaker:saturated with gratitude. But the culture with which we
Speaker:live, the culture, the society we live, we have reduced the time
Speaker:we've had to earmark a time to be thankful. And that is the
Speaker:fourth Thursday of the November month where
Speaker:we get together with family, some people who we actually don't like,
Speaker:and we invite them over our houses and they sit around our tables and
Speaker:we look at them and we have shallow conversations and we eat some pretty
Speaker:good food, hopefully. And then with the people that we really want to say thank
Speaker:you to, because we're such in a hurry, we'll send them a text message.
Speaker:Send them a text message and say, happy Thanksgiving. And if we're really in a
Speaker:hurry, we'll put them in a group message, because everybody loves a group text message
Speaker:with all of the thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, and all of
Speaker:the turkey emojis. And if you're really, really busy, you won't even have time to
Speaker:spell out the word thank you. You'll just put, ty.
Speaker:Isn't that the culture we live in? I'm
Speaker:thankful for macaroni and cheese. I'm thankful for friends
Speaker:who helped me not make tragic choices in my life.
Speaker:So tragic that even my baby was kind of scared to be held.
Speaker:I'm grateful this year to be your pastor,
Speaker:to walk alongside some of the most wonderful, fabulous, fascinating people
Speaker:in my life. I'm grateful for my family.
Speaker:I'm grateful that the Lord has given me Hadassah. He's given
Speaker:me Lucia, Ruby, Nora, and soon to be Eliana, and my
Speaker:wife Shari. I'm thankful. I'm thankful. But I'm not just
Speaker:thankful because a date on a calendar tells me to be thankful.
Speaker:I'm thankful because of the overflow of blessing
Speaker:the Lord has placed on my life. I believe that the mark
Speaker:of gratitude flows from the overflow of
Speaker:selflessness. Gratitude flows from the
Speaker:overflow of selflessness. So I want to
Speaker:talk today about the pathway of gratitude. And I want to start with a story
Speaker:that I recently heard that I thought really fit with today's message.
Speaker:There's this man who loves to fly. He loves to fly
Speaker:internationally, he loves to fly nationally, and he's a businessman. And
Speaker:he flies. And he flies frequently across seas. And his favorite airport
Speaker:is the London Heathrow Airport. Has anybody ever flown through London Heathrow?
Speaker:And so he loves that airport. And he doesn't love that airport because they
Speaker:are organized or on top of things or the flights get out
Speaker:faster or Anything like that. He likes it because there's this
Speaker:doughnut shop in this airport called Little Tiny
Speaker:Donuts. And every time he goes to London Heathrow Airport,
Speaker:he goes to this donut shop, Little Tiny
Speaker:Donuts, and picks up a box of eight fresh
Speaker:little mini donuts and eats them every single time. And so he has
Speaker:this itinerary, and it puts him in London Heathrow, and he's gonna go
Speaker:by and get those donuts just like he always does. And he's super excited. In
Speaker:fact, his entire day is wrapped around getting these donuts. And so he lands in
Speaker:London Heathrow for the layover. And
Speaker:when he gets to the layover, he's looking around and he goes and gets the
Speaker:donuts, and he's looking around for a place to sit. Because, see, the donuts are
Speaker:only good when they're fresh. The donuts are only good when they're fresh.
Speaker:And so he gets the donuts and he's looking for a place to sit, but
Speaker:he can't because there are tables everywhere, but there are tons of people in
Speaker:this airport, so he really wants to sit down. And he's looking around and he
Speaker:sees in the back, there's this round table, and there's this man sitting there, and
Speaker:he's reading a book. And there's one chair on the other side of this
Speaker:small round table. And so he goes up to the table and he makes eye
Speaker:contact with the man, and he nods to the chair, and the man nods to
Speaker:the chair and he says, okay, that's my invitation to sit down. And so he
Speaker:sits down and he's excited, and he puts his stuff down and he
Speaker:grabs his newspaper and he opens it up and he reaches his hand
Speaker:and grabs that first donut. And, oh, it was just delightful. He
Speaker:puts it in his mouth, he's chewing it up. It is everything he had hoped
Speaker:for for that day. So much so that before he actually consumed that entire
Speaker:donut, he reached his hand back in the box and put a second one in.
Speaker:He was really enjoying these donuts. Well, as
Speaker:he's chewing these donuts and enjoying the savory flavor of these donuts and reading the
Speaker:paper, something astonishing happened. The guy that was sitting on the other side of
Speaker:the table takes his hand, reaches across the table and
Speaker:grabs a donut out of the donut box.
Speaker:And the man reading the paper looked over at the man reading the book, and
Speaker:they make eye contact. And not only did he take one of the donuts out
Speaker:of the box, but he smirked at him while he did it. As if
Speaker:this was something acceptable, as if this was okay.
Speaker:And so the man reading the paper was not very happy about the man grabbing
Speaker:his donut. So he continues to read the paper,
Speaker:and he grabs another donut and puts it in his mouth. And he's just kind
Speaker:of like, what just happened here? And as he's thinking, what just happened here?
Speaker:The man across the table reading the book reaches out again and
Speaker:grabs another donut. And this time, the man
Speaker:reading the paper looks eyeball to eyeball to him while the other man's
Speaker:smiling and gives him this stare, blank, like, what are you doing?
Speaker:And so as he's staring him eyeball to eyeball, he reaches over, puts his hand
Speaker:in the donut box, slides the donut box toward him, pulls
Speaker:out another donut, pops it in his mouth. Hopefully he'll get the sign.
Speaker:Well, the guy with the book kind of straightens up, and he's smiling and happy
Speaker:and reaches further across the table and
Speaker:gets a third donut. On the third donut, the man closes the
Speaker:newspaper, slams it on the table with his hand, and says, I've gotta move.
Speaker:And so he reaches down to grab all of his stuff. And when he reaches
Speaker:down to grab his stuff on top of his bag, he sees a box of
Speaker:donuts that has not been opened
Speaker:the entire time. The man with the newspaper was eating
Speaker:the donuts that belonged to the guy with the book.
Speaker:Here we have a story of two heart postures. The first heart posture is,
Speaker:what's mine is yours. The second
Speaker:heart posture is, what's mine is mine. And if we
Speaker:ever live in a culture saturated with what's
Speaker:mine is mine, if we ever live in a culture that
Speaker:says, I've earned this. I bought this. I did
Speaker:this. And you wonder why the blessing of heaven can't
Speaker:flow free in your life because you are holding on so tight to
Speaker:what you have. I'm going to tell you right now, I believe with all of
Speaker:my heart the reason the Beshears family is able to walk through a season with
Speaker:a new house being built is because they opened their home when they had no
Speaker:room for multiple families to come stay with them. When you give out of
Speaker:your nothing, the Lord returns a whole lot to your behalf. He returns
Speaker:things to you many fold than you can ever imagine. And the Lord is
Speaker:blessing you guys because of your generosity and your willingness to open up what you
Speaker:have and say, there's always a place at my table. Is
Speaker:it said for you guys? Is it said of you that you always have room
Speaker:at your table or Are you one of the ones
Speaker:clenching with dear life every little thing that you have because your
Speaker:name is on it? Let's look at the pathway to
Speaker:gratitude by looking at five roadblocks. Five
Speaker:roadblocks that stop us from reaching a lifestyle
Speaker:of gratitude. Using the story of Mary and Martha,
Speaker:the first one I want to look at, the first roadblock to our pathway to
Speaker:gratitude is distraction. We
Speaker:are distracted.
Speaker:I didn't get an amen. I'm going to try that again. We are
Speaker:distracted. You are distracted.
Speaker:I am distracted. We are so. We are. We
Speaker:squirrel everywhere. Squirrel, squirrel, squirrel. We are
Speaker:so saturated with distraction. Can I tell you,
Speaker:I believe that we were not created to consume as
Speaker:much information as we consume our
Speaker:brains and our minds and our lives. We are
Speaker:overstimulated and over saturated. But here's
Speaker:what's so crazy about that. We give an amen when a statement like that's
Speaker:made, but we do nothing to stop it. In fact, we go chase it. We
Speaker:are looking for more information, looking for more stimulation, looking for more things
Speaker:to distract us. Busyness is not a
Speaker:badge of honor. The things
Speaker:that God has given you, he has graced you in certain things.
Speaker:Some of you are able to carry a load a lot heavier than the person
Speaker:sitting next to you. If God has graced you to do that, praise God for
Speaker:some of you, he has graced you to do fewer things. But
Speaker:may none of us step out of God's grace when he has given us something
Speaker:to do. How are the indicators? What are the indicators? Whenever
Speaker:we're stepping out of God's grace, the indicators are fatigue,
Speaker:family issues, being distraught, being
Speaker:sick. All of these are indicators that you may not be. If
Speaker:you're running on fumes all of the time, if the
Speaker:fruit of the spirit is not evident in your life, then
Speaker:you may not be leaning into the spirit.
Speaker:Imagine going to the gas pump and putting water in your gas tank.
Speaker:That's not going to last very long. You'll get some of the residue from the
Speaker:gas you had in before, but eventually your car's going to go kaput.
Speaker:Can I say it's the same thing with your life. We are
Speaker:so distracted. This is what the word says. But Martha was
Speaker:distracted by all the preparations that had to
Speaker:be made. Can I tell you that some of you hear this? Please.
Speaker:Some of you are going to get to Thursday. You're going to wake up
Speaker:early. You're going to go to bed that night and you're going to miss the
Speaker:entire day because you were distracted
Speaker:by all the preparation of Serving everybody else.
Speaker:Now we're going to have a turkey at my house, and my wife's going to
Speaker:have to make it. She gonna be preparing that
Speaker:turkey. But what. I don't. But I'm not saying that my wife
Speaker:is the only. I cook at my house too. Okay? Geez,
Speaker:Justin. Some
Speaker:of you guys are gonna make some great dry turkeys, okay? It's gonna be great.
Speaker:Okay, here's the deal. There are
Speaker:preparations that have to be made. See, here's the
Speaker:thing. We read this story about Mary and Martha, and we automatically assume that
Speaker:Martha has done something wrong. Think about it.
Speaker:We think Martha has just completely. She's just done something
Speaker:completely wrong. Like she shouldn't be preparing that Jesus is there. Do you notice at
Speaker:the end of the story, it never says Martha changed anything.
Speaker:It wasn't that Martha was necessarily doing anything
Speaker:wrong. It's that she had the wrong heart posture.
Speaker:You can be a preparer, you can be
Speaker:doing things, and you can be doing it with the wrong heart
Speaker:posture. In the same way, you can be doing nothing
Speaker:and be doing nothing with the wrong heart posture.
Speaker:It's all about heart posture. Jesus told Martha, you are worried
Speaker:and troubled about many things. When we are hurried, overwhelmed, overstimulated,
Speaker:or emotionally scattered, we literally use the ability to see the
Speaker:blessing that sitting right in front of us when we're
Speaker:going so fast. Brittany Grisham said something to me once that
Speaker:convicted the mess out of me. I was with her, and
Speaker:she was saying, kevin, I so enjoy walking alongside
Speaker:you, ministering alongside you. And I have. Brittany and I have
Speaker:ministered together since youth grew. I mean, we've. For a long time. But I went
Speaker:to her house one time and she said, but you know, Kev,
Speaker:the thing is, is I don't mind helping you get to the vision, but I
Speaker:just don't want to be trampled upon in the.
Speaker:You see, the thing that we are doing is not more important
Speaker:than the people we are doing it with. All of
Speaker:this, everything that you see here is all about
Speaker:God's people being restored to him and restored to
Speaker:one another. Everything has to do with relationship.
Speaker:Everything has to do with eternity. And
Speaker:we can get so mixed up on this turkey, it's got to look just right,
Speaker:be just right, and miss the whole point of everybody
Speaker:who's gathered around. Some distractions
Speaker:are not just there by happenstance. Some of the distractions you put in your life
Speaker:on purpose because you're trying to avoid a conversation that you need to have.
Speaker:Aren't you glad you came to church? This morning.
Speaker:Hurry overshadows the good stuff.
Speaker:Hurry overshadows the good, important stuff. I have a
Speaker:feeling. Has this PowerPoint been updated? Y' all have the most recent
Speaker:one up there? We're gonna find out in just a minute, aren't we? Okay.
Speaker:Martha wasn't necessarily doing something wrong. She was doing the right thing with
Speaker:the wrong heart condition. She was distracted, worried, overwhelmed,
Speaker:emotionally scattered. Jesus, says Martha. Martha, you are worried and
Speaker:troubled about many things. There was Christmas
Speaker:time, and I was just in a season where I was
Speaker:doing, doing, doing, doing, doing, doing, doing. You ever know anybody that's just always just
Speaker:doing, doing, doing, doing, doing. I was doing so much, and I was not
Speaker:focused on anybody around me. And I had a group of friends who wanted me
Speaker:to come over to their Christmas celebration. And I believe that I
Speaker:actually told them I was coming, and I didn't come. Have you ever told somebody
Speaker:you were gonna come and then you didn't? No. You guys are perfect. Okay,
Speaker:well, I made the mistake. I said I was coming, and I didn't come. And
Speaker:I thought to myself, I felt so bad because they just wanted to hang out
Speaker:with me. They just wanted to spend time, and I just felt so bad. So
Speaker:I said, you know what? I know what I'll do. I'm gonna go buy some
Speaker:massive Christmas gifts, and I'm just gonna bless em. And so I go
Speaker:to Target and I buy up the shelves and I wrap them up, and I
Speaker:go to their front doorstep, and I lay a pile of gifts right there. Right
Speaker:during the party, the party I was supposed to be at just laid gifts and
Speaker:walked away. I was so proud of myself. And so I walked away,
Speaker:and I just was going and going, and I. And I got
Speaker:in my car, and I'm just awaiting the text message,
Speaker:the text message that said, thank you so much for these wonderful gifts. You know,
Speaker:nobody said anything to me. The next day, I'm
Speaker:looking at my phone saying, maybe something's wrong. Maybe I didn't pay my phone bill.
Speaker:Surely they got these gifts. I mean, nobody gets gifts and doesn't say
Speaker:thank you. And I went through that day, not
Speaker:one thank you, not one message. And then I was ticked.
Speaker:And so the next day, I just said, well, you know what? Forget them. I
Speaker:text them and said, did you not see the gifts on your porch? And I
Speaker:got one response. And the response was this.
Speaker:You cannot buy your way into relationship.
Speaker:Presence with a CE is far greater than presence.
Speaker:Some of you need to take this into Friday of this week.
Speaker:Silence. You know what Friday is?
Speaker:Some of you need to take this into Friday and Saturday of this week because
Speaker:some of you are going to go into the negative in your bank account trying
Speaker:to buy relationships. When presence with a CE
Speaker:is all that is needed. Distraction
Speaker:hides blessings. Presence reveals them. Mary slowed down. She sat.
Speaker:She listened. You cannot be grateful for what you refuse to slow
Speaker:down long enough to notice. So
Speaker:distraction then leads to our second row barrier, which is not.
Speaker:This is the wrong slideshow. So I'm going to try to make
Speaker:this happen here, okay? Selfishness. When
Speaker:we stop appreciating people, we start
Speaker:expecting from them.
Speaker:Selfishness filters every decision
Speaker:through you. Selfishness filters
Speaker:every decision through you guys. I missed this this week with my
Speaker:nine month pregnant wife, Shari. I had an activity that I
Speaker:wanted to go do with a friend and I went and did that activity and
Speaker:she had asked. She didn't ask me to do anything all week. She asked me,
Speaker:would you come home and do this one thing at this specific time? And it.
Speaker:Oh, this is so bad. So horrible. It was an appointment I set up
Speaker:and I made her meet with the person and I stayed there. Horrible. I
Speaker:am the most selfish husband. Oh, Jesus, can y' all come pray for
Speaker:me right now?
Speaker:But can I tell you my wife loves me.
Speaker:And it was modeled in her response to my
Speaker:selfishness. You see, love's test
Speaker:happens when the rubber hits the road. Love's test
Speaker:is really about the response when somebody comes upon your path and
Speaker:wrongs you. And she responded with such
Speaker:grace. And I did not deserve it.
Speaker:Paul says to value others above yourself.
Speaker:Do nothing out of selfish ambition, but in humility, value
Speaker:others above yourself. Selfishness
Speaker:shrinks gratitude because it turns every blessing into not enough.
Speaker:Listen, Mary expected. Sorry. Martha expected
Speaker:Mary to serve her agenda. When we walk in selfish
Speaker:ways, we expect people to bow down to what we want in our
Speaker:agenda. Agenda.
Speaker:When we walk in selfish ways, we expect people to bow down to
Speaker:our agenda. Selfishness creeps in
Speaker:quietly. This is what the. It's. Ask these questions. Why am I doing all the
Speaker:work? Why isn't
Speaker:anyone here helping me? Why
Speaker:aren't they meeting my expectations?
Speaker:Selfishness is a roadblock toward gratitude.
Speaker:And if it's not distraction that leads to selfishness, the next thing it
Speaker:leads to is not. It's to
Speaker:Chili's.
Speaker:Sorry. It hurts to laugh. Okay, baby. No, it's
Speaker:chilies. Maybe macaroons. All right. It leads to pride.
Speaker:Pride. You're like, what did we miss in the first gathering?
Speaker:Pride is the next step after selfishness. Selfishness says,
Speaker:serve me pride. Says, my way is right
Speaker:as your pastor. The first thing, when I met with the elders
Speaker:and they conferred the appointment of lead pastor,
Speaker:and then we had a meeting with the leaders, the very first thing I asked
Speaker:for is, the very first request that I had from the leadership of this church
Speaker:is I said, I need your permission to fail.
Speaker:I need your permission to fail.
Speaker:I know it's astonishing to hear, but I am not always right.
Speaker:Shari knows that more than anyone. But I'm here to inform you that your
Speaker:pastor is not always right. But I know a God who always
Speaker:is. And I know what it
Speaker:looks like to have a bad attitude towards somebody who's not right and misses it.
Speaker:I know what it's like to respond the correct way to somebody who
Speaker:missteps or misses it. I'm not
Speaker:always right. Pride says, you're right. I'm right all
Speaker:the time. Martha stands over Jesus and says, lord, tell
Speaker:her to help me. Pride tells God how
Speaker:things should go. Have you ever tried that? How's that worked
Speaker:out for you? Pride makes your perspective the standard. It
Speaker:makes your expectation the requirement. It makes your experience the
Speaker:truth. Mary shows humility by sitting at
Speaker:Jesus feet. Martha shows pride by standing in accusation.
Speaker:James 4, 6 says this. God opposes the
Speaker:proud, but gives grace to the humble. Is there
Speaker:anybody here who needs grace? Raise your hand if you need grace. I just want
Speaker:to check. Litmus test here. Look at your neighbor and say, I need
Speaker:grace. Look at them and say, remember that Thursday.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:He gives grace to those who walk in humility, who are humble.
Speaker:Pride makes gratitude impossible because pride
Speaker:convinces you that everything you have is earned,
Speaker:owned, and deserved.
Speaker:When I taught back at the school at Lancaster, when I taught early
Speaker:on, when I started there, I was in a classroom full of students. And
Speaker:you know what? I thought I was the cat's pajamas when it came to teaching.
Speaker:I mean, I was like, I am the teacher. And
Speaker:I got in there and I taught this history lesson. And I knew
Speaker:that every student got the information that I was trying to convey because I
Speaker:did a great job presenting the information. And I was
Speaker:ready on that Friday to give them a test. Because, Scotty, I did my
Speaker:job. I taught and taught and taught, and they have better retained
Speaker:everything that I said. So I handed out that test
Speaker:and I collected that test. And I had about 12 students in that room, and
Speaker:eight students failed. And I was happy
Speaker:to give them all an F. F for you. F for you. F. Why?
Speaker:I taught the subject. I did my job. You didn't do your job
Speaker:retaining it. Can I Tell you just a sidebar. If you're a
Speaker:teacher and over half of your class fails the test, you
Speaker:didn't do a good job teaching. Okay.
Speaker:But arrogant, prideful Kevin thought, hey,
Speaker:I did my job and made the dumb mist. Going right into the
Speaker:faculty meeting with the principal saying, hey, I taught this thing, and I had
Speaker:eight kids fail the test. She came to my classroom, said, we're gonna have to
Speaker:remove you from this class.
Speaker:And she said, kevin, here's the thing you don't understand. When the
Speaker:student fails, the teacher has failed.
Speaker:And I had an epiphany that it wasn't about me
Speaker:giving information to see if they get it right. It was about me making
Speaker:sure that they owned and learned the material.
Speaker:And I have failed my students because of my arrogance and
Speaker:my pride. Gratitude only
Speaker:grows in humble soil. And so if you've
Speaker:got distractions that lead to selfishness, selfishness leads to pride.
Speaker:What does pride lead to? And this, guys, this is really. I'm honing in
Speaker:right here on what I want your takeaway to be right here. Because this week
Speaker:is a week where some of you are going to be sitting at tables with
Speaker:people that you don't want to sit at tables with.
Speaker:You're going to be conversing. Some of you have already gotten out of gatherings
Speaker:that you didn't want to go to. And it's because of this issue here,
Speaker:and it's not this one, because this is going to be. I'm going to get
Speaker:there. Bitterness.
Speaker:Distraction leads to selfishness. Selfishness leads to pride. Pride
Speaker:leads to bitterness.
Speaker:Martha says, lord, don't you care?
Speaker:You cannot hold bitterness and gratitude in the same heart.
Speaker:Let me say it this way. If you rehearse it in here,
Speaker:if you rehearse what happened in here over and over again, you
Speaker:can't release it here.
Speaker:This is what bitterness, bitterness looks like.
Speaker:I have never. I've struggled with bitterness in my life. I have
Speaker:never been bitter towards someone I didn't love.
Speaker:Are you with me? If I meet a random Bob and he
Speaker:does something wrong, and I've never. I don't have any relationship with him. I
Speaker:probably am not going to struggle with bitterness.
Speaker:But if you struggle with bitterness, if you've struggled with bitterness and you
Speaker:think of that person, it has to be somebody that you've had some
Speaker:relational equity with. And so
Speaker:what happens is this. You meet this person
Speaker:and you strike up a relationship with this person. And in
Speaker:this relationship, all these wonderful things happen.
Speaker:Wonderful life, wonderful conversations,
Speaker:experiences, adventures. Help when you're hurting.
Speaker:Prayer Just being there when you're down, being there when things
Speaker:go awry. I mean, just wonderful, incredible things
Speaker:take place in that relationship that bond you together. And
Speaker:then that person makes one bad choice.
Speaker:And all of a sudden, that one bad choice, that one
Speaker:mistake, that one mission, that one hurt,
Speaker:that one failure, overshadows everything
Speaker:that has been good in that relationship.
Speaker:And so we walk around like this with that
Speaker:bitter mistake, and we walk away from everything
Speaker:that brought that relationship to fruition. Every good and wonderful
Speaker:thing, we walk away from it because we're going to hold on to this one
Speaker:thing, this one choice, this one mistake. Some
Speaker:of us are going to go to tables this Thursday and sit down with
Speaker:somebody that you're holding a big old canister of bitterness toward.
Speaker:It robs us of the ability of seeing everything
Speaker:that brought the relationship to the forefront.
Speaker:We carry this around. I find it interesting that while we
Speaker:carry this for people, this is how we expect people to
Speaker:view us,
Speaker:Because we always got good stuff, right. I want you to view me in the
Speaker:positive light, while at the same time, I'm going to view
Speaker:my neighbor like this.
Speaker:Ephesians 4, 29 says this. Do
Speaker:not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but
Speaker:only what is helpful for building others up. Why do I start here? At the
Speaker:end of this scripture is going to address bitterness. Why do I start this? I
Speaker:was not going to start here, but I thought, you know what? No, this is
Speaker:a great place to start. Because out of the root of bitterness comes unwholesome
Speaker:talk according to their needs, that they may
Speaker:benefit those who listen. And then it says, do not
Speaker:grieve the Holy Spirit of God. Might I
Speaker:suggest to you, friends, that when you talk bad about other people,
Speaker:when you slander and you gossip, you are grieving the Holy Spirit. Holy Spirit
Speaker:of God, with whom you were sealed for the
Speaker:day of redemption. And then it says these three words. Say them with me.
Speaker:Get rid of all bitterness. Not
Speaker:some. Not. Okay, I can get rid of this because, you know, I liked your
Speaker:outfit and your hair today, so I think we're good now. You've paid enough
Speaker:penance for what you did to me, you know. Okay, you're so.
Speaker:No. Get rid of all bitterness, rage,
Speaker:anger, brawling, slander, along with every form of
Speaker:malice. And then it doesn't just. I love that God doesn't just tell us what
Speaker:not to do. He tells us what to do. It's not enough.
Speaker:Listen, it's not enough to just get rid of it. There's more.
Speaker:There's always more with God. Be kind and
Speaker:compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as
Speaker:Christ, God forgave you.
Speaker:In other words, let's look at this. Bitterness
Speaker:turns memories into weapons and rewrites a good
Speaker:story around the worst moment.
Speaker:In other words, bitterness revises
Speaker:your story so that the worst part becomes the highlight. The
Speaker:headline. Bitterness is like an emotional
Speaker:eraser. It wipes away every good memory that a person created.
Speaker:Bitterness narrows the story down to one moment, one
Speaker:wound, one disappointment. Bitterness blinds the
Speaker:heart. It breaks relationships. It blocks gratitude.
Speaker:The Bible warns that bitterness will defile everything it
Speaker:touches, including your ability to see the good in someone.
Speaker:And so if you start with distraction and it leads to selfishness, and
Speaker:then you're walking in pride and it leads to bitterness, Bitterness
Speaker:opens the door for the biggest blockade toward gratitude,
Speaker:and that is unforgiveness. It's the
Speaker:heaviest roadblock because you'll never reach
Speaker:gratitude if you stay chained to the past.
Speaker:Jesus responds to Martha not with anger, but with compassion.
Speaker:And there's only seven times that I can find in Scripture that the Lord says
Speaker:a name twice back to back. And this is one of them. He says, martha,
Speaker:Martha, have you ever been trying to get somebody's attention and you need them to
Speaker:listen to you? Scotty, Scotty,
Speaker:hear what I am saying to you.
Speaker:To respond out of compassion. Jesus does.
Speaker:Forgiveness breaks the chains. Forgiveness
Speaker:heals the heart. Forgiveness makes space for gratitude.
Speaker:Again, forgiveness is not pretending that the wound didn't hurt. I'm going to
Speaker:say that again. Forgiveness is not pretending that the wound didn't
Speaker:hurt. Guys, let me tell you something. You're gonna be hurt by the people
Speaker:who love you.
Speaker:In fact, just to make it a little more concrete, raise your hand if you've
Speaker:ever been hurt by somebody who loves you. Okay,
Speaker:so we're all pretty much on the same playing ground.
Speaker:So if we're on the same playground, why are so many of us holding
Speaker:onto it?
Speaker:Why are so many of us holding onto it? Several months ago, or
Speaker:several years ago rather, there was a situation where I felt like I
Speaker:really hear heard something from the Holy Spirit and I acted upon it.
Speaker:And the way that I went about it was completely wrong.
Speaker:And it caused hurt, it caused division, it caused a
Speaker:severing of a relationship. And I was broken and grieved because it
Speaker:never was my intention, but it is what happened.
Speaker:And there were moments in that severing of relationship I thought, this is
Speaker:never going to be repaired. And
Speaker:it wasn't going to be repaired with a flesh reaction. It was
Speaker:never going to be repaired with a flesh antidote.
Speaker:But do you know how gracious and wonderful our Holy
Speaker:Spirit is that he got into that other person's
Speaker:life? The one that had every right to walk out on my life,
Speaker:Every right to be upset, be hurt, be wounded, to hold on to bitterness.
Speaker:And you know that the Holy Spirit of God worked on their heart
Speaker:and they decided to sit across from me at lunch in tears and say, kevin,
Speaker:I forgive you.
Speaker:Can I tell you that our relationship has been so much better
Speaker:and deeper and more meaningful post that interaction than before?
Speaker:Because when the Holy Spirit gets involved and you
Speaker:surrender that hard space to him, what he does is he
Speaker:removes your flesh glasses and he gives you
Speaker:eternal ones. He gives you Holy Spirit glasses to
Speaker:see things the way he sees them, to see the person.
Speaker:Listen, I want to see you with the hurt I've experienced. I want to see
Speaker:you with this wound. But the Holy Spirit gets involved in these things. No,
Speaker:there's so much good. There's so much good.
Speaker:There's so much life. And if you'll just lay down your
Speaker:pride and your hurt, if you'll lay down that bitterness, I will
Speaker:show you all of the good things. And guess what? There's more.
Speaker:There's more to be had. But you gotta be willing to
Speaker:surrender. You gotta be willing to give it to the Lord. You gotta be willing
Speaker:to recognize that you are going to be hurt and other people are going to
Speaker:hurt you. And you're going to hurt people because we're broken.
Speaker:Colossians 3 says this. Therefore, as God's chosen people,
Speaker:holy and dearly loved, clothe yourself with compassion,
Speaker:kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. I hope
Speaker:that these are common things happening around tables this week on
Speaker:Thursday. But more than just this week, this would be a lifestyle and life
Speaker:posture of those who call themselves believers, Bear with each
Speaker:other and forgive one another. If you have a grievance against someone, forgive as
Speaker:the Lord forgave you. And over all these virtues, put on love. You
Speaker:know what the very. You know what the most important word in that first sentence
Speaker:right there? Forgive as the Lord forgave you. You know what the most important word
Speaker:is? It's the word as.
Speaker:Because we read that and say forgive because the Lord forgave
Speaker:you. It's not what it says. It says
Speaker:forgive as the Lord forgave you.
Speaker:Has anyone been forgiven much from the Lord? Raise your hand,
Speaker:guys. If it's pride, if it's deceit, if
Speaker:it's lust, if it's theft, all the things I
Speaker:am a guilty person.
Speaker:I'm grateful for Mac and cheese. I'm grateful for friends. I'm
Speaker:grateful for family. But I am grateful that I am really redeemed because of the
Speaker:blood of Jesus Christ. I'm grateful that he sought
Speaker:fit to not draw lines, but to draw
Speaker:circles. I believe that true forgiveness draws circles and
Speaker:invites in. It doesn't draw lines. The big buzzword right now in the culture is
Speaker:this word boundaries. Make sure you create a boundary so you don't get hurt again.
Speaker:Make sure you put distance. Make sure you just keep everything separate in a
Speaker:way. And then we cleverly get into scripture and we weave our way to be
Speaker:able to preach that message. But here's the thing. I do believe in
Speaker:seasonal boundaries. When you're healing, that's important. But I do not
Speaker:believe in eternal boundaries because Jesus did not come up to me and say,
Speaker:kevin, I forgive you. Now I don't want anything to do with you for the
Speaker:rest of your life. He says, I forgive you. Now come back in.
Speaker:Let's try this again. And if we are to forgive
Speaker:as the Lord forgave, then guess what it is. Chance
Speaker:after chance after chance after chance after
Speaker:chance. And you, my friends. Kevin, I
Speaker:have the opportunity this week, today, to
Speaker:release, to surrender, to forgive, so that my life
Speaker:can be radically changed. And I won't just walk with somebody who's got Jesus on
Speaker:my shirt praising the Lord on all the situations that are
Speaker:going well. But I could be a testimony of Christ
Speaker:to a dying world in situations that look ugly, that
Speaker:look bad, that are fueled with hurt, hurt and woundedness, and all of those things
Speaker:that they can say, wow, I can't believe that Kevin had
Speaker:compassion on that person who didn't deserve it.
Speaker:We've been talking all year about the greatest stories
Speaker:ever told. What if one of your greatest stories was that this
Speaker:year you decided to let go, surrender and forgive somebody. Forgive
Speaker:the unforgivable. And somebody says to you, how'd you
Speaker:do it? And you say, I couldn't.
Speaker:It was the power of the Holy
Speaker:Spirit.
Speaker:True forgiveness draws circles, not lines. Martha was not
Speaker:irritated with a stranger. She was irritated with someone she loved.
Speaker:Have you ever been irritated with somebody you love? Some of y' all
Speaker:are irritated with the person you're sitting next to right now.
Speaker:Not every person is a blessing, but every single person is a lesson.
Speaker:And as people marked by forgiveness, we ought to also be people marked
Speaker:by gratitude. Jesus
Speaker:said, few things are needed. Indeed, only one.
Speaker:There are some important people in my life that have
Speaker:been in my Life. Some of these people, you know,
Speaker:the man on the left, his name is Mike Gibson. And Mr.
Speaker:Mike, man, he was such a blessing to my life. There was a season when
Speaker:I was being. I was the youth pastor and I was with the youth. And
Speaker:man, I just, I felt alone. I felt like I didn't have any support.
Speaker:I don't mean that this was true, but this is how I felt. I didn't
Speaker:have any support. I didn't have people rallying around me. And I went and I
Speaker:shared that with the elders. And do you know that that next week Mr. Mike
Speaker:came up to you youth. And every week after that, he came up and just
Speaker:stood there and all he did was pray for me. Said, I'm here, what do
Speaker:you need? I'm here for you. The second lady, or the first lady in
Speaker:the picture, her name is Rena Montgomery. Rena was my bus driver as a high
Speaker:school student. She was the very first person who said anything to me
Speaker:when I came to Smyrna assembly. I dawned the doors. I saw two things in
Speaker:that old sanctuary. I saw a disco ball and I saw Rena Montgomery.
Speaker:Rena screamed out loud. She was so excited to see me.
Speaker:And she was a blessing and an encouragement to my life. And the last one
Speaker:there, her name is Margaret Meek. She was the kids pastor here forever. And she
Speaker:was like a second mom to me. I will tell you right
Speaker:now, I would not be lead pastor of this church had it not been for
Speaker:this woman and her investment in my life. Now, the things
Speaker:outside of them having significant impact in my life. The things that these three have
Speaker:in common is that they're all with Jesus, Jesus right now.
Speaker:Margaret, at our funeral, Arwen, her
Speaker:daughter got up and said, you know,
Speaker:oftentimes we look for extraordinary moves of God and
Speaker:extraordinary moments, and we think that those are the moments we're going to remember most
Speaker:to the people we're closest with. But she said, that's not what I
Speaker:found with my mom. She was talking about Margaret. She said,
Speaker:I find it in the ordinary days. And so
Speaker:with that I got a little plaque that or a little thing that I put
Speaker:in my office and it says, enjoy the gift
Speaker:of the ordinary. Enjoy
Speaker:the gift of the ordinary. Guys, if you're carrying this,
Speaker:don't let this become ordinary. You have the choice
Speaker:to not let this be the ordinary. This could be the
Speaker:ordinary. And I tell you, this is so much more fun and more delicious,
Speaker:more filling.
Speaker:So what I say is, if I were to see, I
Speaker:don't know what's going on right now with the clicker. But if I were to
Speaker:see these three people, if I were to see these three people again,
Speaker:I wouldn't spend time. If I, you know, have you ever. Has anybody ever had
Speaker:somebody pass away and you're like, if I had one more moment. Moment. If I
Speaker:had 30 more seconds, if I had one more minute. If I had whatever.
Speaker:I wish I had one more minute with each of those. I wouldn't tell them,
Speaker:look what I've done. Look what I've. See, See what? What's happened in my life.
Speaker:I wouldn't say that to them. I probably wouldn't even say I love them. I
Speaker:wouldn't ask them what it is to be like to be with Jesus. I would
Speaker:simply say two words to them. Thank you.
Speaker:Thank you. Now, here's what
Speaker:I've learned this year. You are
Speaker:probably sitting by a person with whom you
Speaker:are so grateful for, yet it has
Speaker:been an eternity since you have actually conveyed your gratitude
Speaker:to them. Well, they know. They know. They live with
Speaker:me. They see it. They know. And you haven't put in words. And I don't
Speaker:know what that is, that little wall that comes. You're closest to that person
Speaker:yet. It just seems so hard to actually express gratitude. Well, guess what?
Speaker:I'm about to give you an opportunity today because this is going to be a
Speaker:different year. 2025 is going to be a different year. It's going to be a
Speaker:year where Thanksgiving is just the springboard to a lifestyle of
Speaker:gratitude. And so everyone, on most of the chairs, there was this
Speaker:thank you card. This was just a reminder because
Speaker:your someone may not be next to you right now,
Speaker:but I'm going to ask you to do something in the next few moments. They
Speaker:may be sitting across the room here, they may be sitting next to you, but
Speaker:we're just going to take a few moments. We're going to steal a few
Speaker:moments here and we're just going to look people eyeball to eyeball. And
Speaker:you're not just going to say thank you. You're not going to say Ty or
Speaker:happy Thanksgiving. You're going to
Speaker:say Barbie, I'm so grateful that you see me, me. I'm so
Speaker:grateful for the way that you have run beside me so faithfully all these years.
Speaker:The way that you lift my arms and you encourage me. I'm so grateful
Speaker:for the staple that you're in my life. The person who never wavers,
Speaker:never goes away. The rock that I can lean on
Speaker:if I'm in distress or if I'm discouraged. I can always count on you. The
Speaker:moments when I ran after other things. I looked back and those things fell in
Speaker:shambles. And you were always there. You never wavered on me. And I'm so
Speaker:grateful for your friendship. Thank.
Speaker:To express our gratitude to one another. Put it into words.
Speaker:Now. Allow the Lord to begin to develop a
Speaker:culture of gratitude within your life and within this house.
Speaker:Would you stand with me? And we're going to take the next few moments and
Speaker:you move about the room as you need to. And let's give thanks today.