Sunday, April 26, 2026

SERMON: WRESTLING WITH GOD

 


NAYLOR COMMUNITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH

Naylor, Georgia

 

I.  Introduction

            -- turn in Bibles to Genesis 32:22-32 [read Genesis 32:22-32]

 

Genesis 32:22 That night Jacob got up and took his two wives, his two female servants and his eleven sons and crossed the ford of the Jabbok. 23 After he had sent them across the stream, he sent over all his possessions. 24 So Jacob was left alone, and a man wrestled with him till daybreak. 25 When the man saw that he could not overpower him, he touched the socket of Jacob’s hip so that his hip was wrenched as he wrestled with the man. 26 Then the man said, “Let me go, for it is daybreak.”

 

But Jacob replied, “I will not let you go unless you bless me.”

 

27 The man asked him, “What is your name?”

 

“Jacob,” he answered.

 

28 Then the man said, “Your name will no longer be Jacob, but Israel, because you have struggled with God and with humans and have overcome.”

 

29 Jacob said, “Please tell me your name.”

 

But he replied, “Why do you ask my name?” Then he blessed him there.

 

30 So Jacob called the place Peniel, saying, “It is because I saw God face to face, and yet my life was spared.”

 

31 The sun rose above him as he passed Peniel, and he was limping because of his hip. 32 Therefore to this day the Israelites do not eat the tendon attached to the socket of the hip, because the socket of Jacob’s hip was touched near the tendon.

 

            -- on the anniversary of Prince’s death earlier this week, I posted the famous opening line to his song, “Let’s Go Crazy” – “Dearly Beloved, we are gathered here today to get through this thing called life” – and that’s really what it’s all about

            -- and even though Prince pointed out in his song something that all of us as believers in Christ would agree with – that life is forever – that there is an afterlife that we are looking forward to – a world of never ending happiness – we still find ourselves just trying to get by in this life day by day

            -- every person on this planet – every person in this country – and every person in this room is just trying to get through this thing called life

            -- we’re all just trying to find our way, the best we can – and sometimes the way is easy – sometimes the path is smooth – but other times, the road is rocky and difficult – and it is a chore to make it through

            -- sometimes we find ourselves on these rocky and difficult paths because we live in a fallen world – a world that has been cursed and corrupted by sin since the fall of man in the garden of Eden

            -- but sometimes we find ourselves walking the difficult path because we have strayed from the path God wants us on – from the way God would have us go – we try to do this thing called life on our own and in our way and in our own strength – and it never goes well

            -- and there are times in our lives when God steps in – through His prevenient grace – the grace that goes before – the grace that prevents us from getting too far away from Him – God steps in and points us in another direction

            -- as Kim so poignantly learned while driving the wrong way down a country road one way, God allows U-Turns – which is what she read on the sign at a little country church that finally convinced her to turn around

            -- but sometimes, even when God sends a sign – we ignore Him – and because He loves us so much, He manifests Himself in our path – using people and places and events to get our attention and help us to see Him and to see the path we should be on

 

            -- I had a friend who was running from God once – she was in a bad place in life – drinking – doing drugs – having random hookups – but God was calling her – and she knew it – she saw the sign – she heard His voice – but she kept on running – she chose to go in another direction

            -- but God stepped in and got her attention in a major way – she wrecked her vehicle in a single car accident one night – she actually flipped it – she shouldn’t have survived – but she got out without a scratch

            -- I’m not saying God caused the accident, but I do believe He saved her life that night –He used that accident to finally get her to see where her bad choices were leading her and what was going to happen to her if she continued on the path she was following

            -- she wrestled with God’s call for a little while longer, but finally gave in – she turned her life around – she turned to Jesus in faith for the forgiveness of her sins – and she’s a pastor here in south Georgia today

 

            -- when we’re heading down a wrong path, we often find ourselves wrestling with God and with His call to turn around and come to Him – just like my friend – and just like Jacob in this story from Genesis 32

 

II.  Background on Jacob’s Life

            -- it seems like Jacob began wrestling with God early in his life – he always wanted to go his way and not God’s way – and he wrestled with God and he wrestled with his parents and he wrestled with those around him -- if you look at the story of his life from the Book of Genesis, you can see that quite clearly

-- it all started when Jacob was born -- Jacob was the son of Isaac and Rebekah -- the grandson of Abraham and Sarah

            -- now, Isaac and Rebekah had difficulty conceiving -- but after twenty years of marriage, God blessed them and Rebekah became pregnant with twins

            -- apparently it was not an easy pregnancy -- the Bible says that the babies jostled within her and she cried out to the Lord seeking answers as to why this was happening to her -- in response, God told her that the descendants of the two sons she was carrying would become two mighty nations -- that they would be separated from each other and that one would be stronger than the other and the older would serve the younger

            -- her difficult pregnancy was the result of her sons struggling and wrestling with each other in her womb -- and she was told this struggle would continue throughout their lives and be carried on by their descendants

            -- and, as God had prophesied, when the time came for the babies to be born, they came out of the womb in the midst of conflict -- Esau, Jacob’s older brother, came out first, the stronger of the two, with Jacob grasping his heel in a portrait of who he was to become

            -- from the very moment of his birth, Jacob tried to grasp that which was not his own -- and he used any means possible to do so, including lying, cheating, and deceiving -- in fact, that's what a literal translation of the name Jacob means -- "he deceives" -- and over and over again, we read in the Bible of how Jacob’s deceit and scheming led him into trouble

 

            -- when Jacob and Esau were young men, Jacob connived a way to get Esau’s birthright -- the birthright belonged to the older son -- it included the family name and titles and a chief portion of the inheritance, "but it was more than just a title to the physical assets of a family -- it was also a spiritual position" -- and in the case of the people of God, "the birthright was the one through whom the covenant promise" made to Abraham and Isaac would be realized [http://www.bible.ca/ef/expository-genesis-25-29-34.htm]

            -- but Jacob’s brother Esau didn't care about all of that -- he considered himself a self-made man -- he didn’t want to be seen as needing anyone else’s help in life -- so, the Bible tells us that Esau "despised his birthright" -- he didn't want it -- he didn't care about the promise of God -- in fact, it appears that he didn't care about God at all – he wrestled with God, too – but in the end, he ended up rejecting God and going his own way -- in Hebrews 12:16, Esau is described as "godless,” which is the state of all of us who turn away from God’s offer of grace and mercy and forgiveness

            -- Esau’s only concern was in getting what he wanted the moment he wanted it -- and when Esau came back from a hunt famished and found Jacob cooking a stew, he let himself be deceived and tricked by Jacob and willingly gave up his birthright in exchange for a bowl of stew

 

            -- the struggle between the twins came to head when Isaac was dying and it was time for him to give his blessings to his son -- as the oldest son, Esau would receive that blessing, which was all he had left since he had been tricked out of his birthright by Jacob

            -- a blessing in the Bible was a tangible blessing -- it carried with it great power and changed the lives of those who were blessed -- the blessing was considered the most important thing a father could pass on to his children

            -- Esau should have been the one to receive the blessing from Isaac, but Jacob and his mother Rebekah conspired against Esau and came up with an elaborate scheme that involved covering Jacob in goat hair and having him wear Esau's clothing so that Isaac thought Jacob was Esau

-- in this disguise, Jacob ended up with the blessing from Isaac -- but he got a lot more in the bargain -- when Esau found out what Jacob had done, he swore to kill Jacob -- so Jacob fled the land of Canaan and went east to the land where his mother was from -- Jacob’s deceit and trickery caused him to run away from home in fear for his life

            -- Jacob ended up in the home of his uncle Laban -- Rebekah's brother -- where he fell head-over-heels in love with his cousin Rachel -- he ends up marrying both Rachel and her sister Leah as he continues his deceitful ways in Laban’s household -- over and over again, he gets into conflict with father-in-law Laban because of his deceit and scheming -- eventually, the conflict reached the point where Jacob realizes it’s time to run away again

            -- as he’s struggling with the question of where to go now, God speaks to Jacob and tells him it is time for him to return to the land of Canaan -- the only problem with returning to Canaan is that it means he’ll have to face Esau and the trouble he left behind

            -- in the first part of Chapter 32, Jacob does what God says and heads home with his wife and family and all his possessions -- but before he gets to Canaan, he learns that Esau is coming with 400 soldiers to meet him, presumably to make good on the promise from Esau to kill him

-- Jacob gets scared and separates his family and possessions into two separate camps, in the hope that at least one camp will survive if Esau attacks the other -- and he comes up with a plan to turn away Esau’s wrath by bribing him with a gift of livestock and other possessions

-- as this passage opens, Jacob is at the ford on the river Jabbok and is getting ready to enter the land of Canaan -- he sends his wives and family across the river with all his possessions and has them split into two camps, each heading in different directions, while he stays behind to contemplate his situation

 

III.  Jacob Wrestles with God

 

-- so, let’s pick up the story of Jacob in the first part of verse 24 [read Genesis 32:24a]

 

Genesis 32:24a -- So Jacob was left alone

 

-- for the first time in a long time, Jacob was alone -- there was no one there with him -- no people -- no family -- no possessions -- nothing but him -- standing there on the bank of the Jabbok River

-- the Bible doesn’t tell us why Jacob chose to be alone that night -- perhaps he wanted to prepare himself for his meeting with Esau -- perhaps he wanted a moment of peace before conflict came -- perhaps he wanted to meditate or spend time with God -- we don’t know for sure, but we do know that being alone is sometimes the best place to be

-- you see, when we are alone, then there is nothing between us and God -- and it is in these moments of aloneness that we can experience God and hear from Him in ways we simply cannot in our regular lives that are so filled with noise and busyness and chaos

-- being alone helps us find and hear God

 

-- Jesus modeled that for us in the gospels when we read that He left the crowds and the disciples behind and went up on the mountainside by Himself to spend time with the Father

-- and we see that same spiritual discipline of getting alone with God practiced by the early church fathers and spiritual leaders throughout history -- getting alone with God is something that is highly encouraged in the Bible if we are to be who He has called us to be

 

            -- this biblical truth still resonates with us today – we talked about this in our sermon series on the spiritual disciplines and the spiritual gifts -- in order to fully engage with God -- in order to fully experience Him in the depth of your soul -- you must be alone with Him -- you must put yourself in a place where you are alone and quiet and still and there is nothing between you and Him -- a place where you can hear His small still voice -- a place where you can experience His presence and nothing else -- a place where there is nothing but you and God

-- that is the heart of the instruction in Psalm 46:10, “Be still and know that I am God”

 

-- when you are struggling in life -- when you are struggling with a decision or with spiritual issues or with anything else – when we’re wrestling with a decision or with trying to find a way to do this thing called life -- it can be helpful to follow the pattern of Jesus and Jacob

-- find a place where you can get alone so you can seek answers and peace -- comfort and blessings -- from being in the presence of God without anyone or anything else to distract you

 

            -- read verse 24 again [read Genesis 32:24]

 

            Genesis 32:24 -- “So Jacob was left alone, and a man wrestled with him till daybreak”

 

            -- now who is this man that came to Jacob while he was alone? -- where did He come from? -- and why did he wrestle with him?

            -- as we’ll see later on in this passage, this man was no mere mortal -- this man was God Himself -- God appeared to Jacob on the banks of the Jabbok River in human form

-- an appearance of God in human form in the Old Testament is what we call a theophany [spell theophany]

-- a theophany is the physical appearance of Jesus in the form of a man in the Bible before the incarnation and the birth of Jesus in the New Testament -- usually, when Jesus appears before men in this way, the Bible writers refer to Him in the text as “the Angel of the Lord” -- if you ever run across that phrase -- “The Angel of the Lord” -- in the Bible, that’s a reference to God Himself in human form

-- for instance, when God appeared to Moses in the burning bush, it says in Exodus 3:2 that this was “the Angel of the Lord” who appeared to him in the flames of fire – and further on in that passage, it says that when Moses went over to the bush, that God spoke to him – it’s obvious from that passage and many others in the Old Testament that the Angel of the Lord is the appearance of God in the flesh – and since the Father is described as being spirit – this can only be Jesus

-- so, here in Genesis 32:24, we read that a man appeared to Jacob while he was all alone on the banks of the Jabbok River and wrestled with him until dawn – this man was the Angel of the Lord – this man was the preincarnate Jesus – this man was God

 

            -- we’ve talked about this a little in our introduction to this passage, but what does it mean to wrestle with God?

-- when we say we’re wrestling with something, it means that we’re struggling with something in our life -- usually a decision or a direction or something else that we are going over in our mind and trying to figure out what we should do

-- to wrestle with God means the same thing, but in this case, it means that we are struggling with God about something spiritual

 

-- generally, we find ourselves wrestling with God in three main ways

            -- first, a lot of us have wrestled with God during a time of spiritual doubt or spiritual drought -- a time when we’re questioning your faith -- when we’re questioning the truth of what you believe -- when we’re just not sure anymore and we have to make a decision as to whether to continue to believe and trust in God or not -- we wrestle with the reality of God and of spiritual things in our minds

            -- another way we wrestle with God is when we’re facing a difficult task or trial -- maybe things are going really bad -- maybe you feel like you’ve hit rock bottom and you just don’t know how you can continue -- you don't know what to do -- you don't know where to go -- you see no way out and the promises of God seem far away – you’re facing a difficult and rocky path -- and in that moment of doubt and despair and brokenness, we find ourselves wrestling with our faith and whether we trust that God is actually capable of seeing us through – that there is light and hope on the other side of what we’re facing

-- finally, a major time we wrestle with God is when He is calling us to change direction in lives -- it might be a situation where He is leading you and telling you to go somewhere that you don’t want to go -- or maybe He’s telling you to do something or to quit some sin or habit or activity, and you don’t want to do it -- and, so, we’re struggling with the decision -- we’re struggling with accepting God’s will and Lordship in your life

 

-- ask any pastor what it felt like when they were called into the ministry -- and I guarantee you that most of them will tell you it was a time they felt they were wrestling with God -- it was a struggle whether they were going to follow God down that path or continue doing their own thing -- and that happens with a lot of spiritual decisions

-- that’s what we mean when we say someone is wrestling with God -- it’s those moments in life when our will comes against God’s will -- when we have to choose whether we’re going to submit to Him as our Lord and Savior or whether we’re going to do what we want to do regardless of God’s command

 

            -- that's where we find Jacob that night on the banks of the Jabbok River -- he was coming to grips with who he was and he was seeing that he was not who he should be -- all his life he had been a deceiver and a schemer and cheat -- and now he’s about to face the consequences for his actions – because Esau is coming – and Esau promised him that the next time he saw him, he was going to kill Jacob

-- it’s time for Jacob to face the music – so, we see him standing there on the bank of the Jabbok River – he’s wrestling with who he is and what he has done -- at the same time, he finds himself wrestling with God as God is calling him to fulfill his birthright -- to fulfill the promise given to Abraham -- to become the type of person who God wants him to be – as God is calling for Jacob to change direction in life

-- and that’s why we read that Jacob wrestled with God on the riverbank until daybreak --he was working out all his frustration -- all his character flaws -- all his deception and lying and cheating -- he was re-living what he had done to Esau and was having to make a decision as to how he was going to deal with the consequences of the past and live the rest of his life from this point on -- whether he was going to continue to be who he had been or whether he was going to allow God to change him for the better

 

            -- verse 25 [read Genesis 32:25]

 

Genesis 32:25 When the man saw that he could not overpower him, he touched the socket of Jacob’s hip so that his hip was wrenched as he wrestled with the man.

 

            -- what an interesting verse -- the Man – the Angel of the Lord -- God in the flesh -- wrestled with Jacob but could not overcome him -- what is this verse saying? -- what are we supposed to get from this? -- that Jacob was stronger than God?

            -- no, what this is saying is that Jacob was fighting God with everything he had and he was refusing to submit himself to the Lord -- God was telling Jacob what He wanted Jacob to do and showing him who He wanted Jacob to become and Jacob was saying, "No -- I don't want that -- I want something else – I want to go my own way – I want to live my life how I want to live it"

            -- some people are tough cases, and it takes a lot to break them -- it takes a lot to get them to surrender their will to God’s – and that was Jacob – he was refusing to give in to God

 

-- God was wrestling with Jacob to bring him to submission -- to bend his will into alignment with God’s will -- God was wrestling with Jacob to get him to quit trusting in his own strength and scheming and plans and to trust and obey God in all things

            -- as Jacob wrestled with the Man by the river that night, Jacob thought he was fighting for his physical life -- in reality, this was a fight about his spiritual life -- Jacob’s body and will were strong -- and he fought with God until daybreak -- he refused to give up

-- eventually, God touched his thigh and put it out of joint -- touching the thigh was to humble him and make him powerless and aware of his own weakness -- at any point during the fight, God could have done that

-- God could have destroyed Jacob at any moment with just a touch -- He could have reached out and broken Jacob’s body and spirit and will -- but God didn’t want to overpower Jacob in that way -- He wanted Jacob to voluntarily submit and yield to Him in humbleness and faith, the same way He wants us to come to Him on our own free will

 

            -- but God did what He had to do to get Jacob to the point of decision -- you see, God had a plan for Jacob's life that was greater than Jacob’s plan -- He had a plan for Jacob's life that would affect the spiritual life of all creation for all eternity

-- the Messiah – the Savior of the world – was going to come through Jacob -- but to make this possible, Jacob had to change -- he had to submit -- he had to follow God and God’s will -- he had to change who he was -- so, finally, God reached out and touched Jacob's hip and wrenched it out of socket

            -- God will do what He has to do to reach us and to change us into the people He wants us to be -- and if that means we have to suffer pain in our lives -- if that means we have to go through trial and tribulation in order to turn to God like Jacob or grow more mature in our faith, then God will do it

            -- He will never force His will upon us, but He will lead us to the point where our choice becomes clear -- just as He did with Jacob here in this passage

 

            -- verse 26 [read vs. 26-29]

 

Genesis 32:26 Then the man said, “Let me go, for it is daybreak.”

 

But Jacob replied, “I will not let you go unless you bless me.”

 

27 The man asked him, “What is your name?”

 

“Jacob,” he answered.

 

28 Then the man said, “Your name will no longer be Jacob, but Israel, because you have struggled with God and with humans and have overcome.”

 

29 Jacob said, “Please tell me your name.”

 

But he replied, “Why do you ask my name?” Then he blessed him there.

 

            -- we read that the Man told Jacob to let Him go, because it was almost daybreak -- God will not contend with us forever -- He will wrestle with us and lead us to the point of decision, but eventually we have to make a choice whether to follow Him or not

            -- when God showed Jacob his true weakness by touching his hip, Jacob reached that point of decision -- he finally submitted to God and realized that true blessings don’t come through our own scheming and planning -- they don't come through deceit and cheating – true blessings only come from God – and anything else is a temporary façade

 

-- when God broke Jacob’s reliance on self, his fear of failure in life gave way to faith -- by surrendering to God, Jacob realized that he had actually won -- by putting his faith and trust in God for his life and his future, Jacob realized that he was going to be okay -- that things would work out -- and, so, Jacob clings to God and won’t let Him go

-- these verses reminded me of the way Mary Magdalene held onto Jesus after the resurrection and refused to let Him go -- she was so in love with Him and so happy to see Him again that she just could not bear to be parted from Him -- she grabbed Him and held Him close and refused to let Him go until Jesus finally had to see, “release Me, for I have yet to ascend to the Father”

 

-- when you come to know God in a real and personal way, you can’t help but hold onto to Him with all that you have and all that you are -- Jacob had known God for twenty years, but God had never reigned in his life until this moment -- and now Jacob is holding on to God for dear life

-- as Dave Guzik put it, “Jacob was reduced to the place where all he could do was to hold on to the LORD with everything he had. Jacob could not fight anymore, but he could hold on. That is not a bad place to be.”

 

            -- Jacob says he won’t let God go until He blesses him -- and God looks at Jacob and asks a curious question, "What is your name?"

            -- several years ago, we had a Major who was working temporarily in our squadron -- he came through the Environmental section one day and walked up to me and said, “Who are you?” -- I told him who I was and what I did -- and he turned from me to my coworker and said, “and who are you?”

            -- it was all rather strange -- but it was his way of getting to know us -- not just our names -- but who we were -- what we did -- how we contributed to the squadron and the military mission

            -- God looks at Jacob here and asks him that same question -- “Who are you? -- What is your name?” -- and Jacob is forced to reply, “My name is deceit -- my name is schemer -- my name is heel-grabber” -- it was God’s way of getting Jacob to confess who he had been -- it was God’s way of getting the truth into the open -- of leading Jacob to the point of true repentance so that forgiveness could flow

 

            -- and as soon as Jacob confessed his past sins by telling God his name, God poured out His grace into Jacob’s life -- God said, “that is who you were, but your name will no longer be Jacob -- instead you will be Israel, because you have struggled with God and with men and have overcome”

            -- when Jacob wrestled with God and eventually submitted his will to God, Jacob began the process of repentance and forgiveness and sanctification -- he began to change into the person God had called him to become

-- and, as a result, God’s blessing was to change his name to reflect this spiritual change in Jacob’s life -- he goes from being "the deceiver" to becoming "Israel" -- one who struggled with God and who is on the way to righteousness

            -- with that blessing, Jacob was no more -- Israel had been born -- a new name -- a new life -- a new person -- a new future

 

-- in verse 29, Jacob asks God, “tell me your name” -- this is significant, because at this point, Jacob was desiring more of God, not more from God like he had in his earlier life -- he wants to know who God is

            -- but God doesn't give His name to Jacob -- the name by which we know God comes through experience -- and God didn't want Jacob to define Him only through this one event

-- God wanted Jacob's walk with Him to be one of revelation and discovery, not one of tradition -- He didn't want Jacob to only know Him as the God of Abraham and Isaac, but to come to know Him as his own personal God

            -- in my own life I have known God as provider, protector, savior, king, lord, leader, creator, and many more -- it was up to Jacob to come to know God in a personal way as God led him down the path of righteousness -- just as it is up to us to learn who God is as He leads us each down our own paths

 

            -- verse 30 [read vs. 30-32]

 

Genesis 32:30 So Jacob called the place Peniel, saying, “It is because I saw God face to face, and yet my life was spared.”

 

31 The sun rose above him as he passed Peniel, and he was limping because of his hip. 32 Therefore to this day the Israelites do not eat the tendon attached to the socket of the hip, because the socket of Jacob’s hip was touched near the tendon.

 

            -- Jacob recognized this site as a holy place -- as the place where he wrestled with God and saw Him face-to-face and lived -- and as the sun rose above him, Jacob crossed the Jabbok River and began a new life with God

            -- one thing to note here is that as Jacob left, he limped because of the hip that was stricken -- although Jewish scholars say God eventually healed him, we are not told this in the Bible, and we have to assume that Jacob limped the rest of his life -- a physical reminder of an inward and spiritual grace that changed him forever -- and a testimony to all who saw him

            -- we always bear the scars of our paths in life -- some are physical, like Jacob's, while others are hidden and emotional or spiritual scars -- but they serve as reminders to us of God's presence and of His grace and that He doesn't give up on us when we fall and fail and head the wrong direction in life

 

IV.  Closing

            -- although Jacob began as a deceiver -- although he cheated and lied and did whatever he could to get ahead -- still God did not give up on him -- and that's encouraging to me -- because if God can reach down and change a deceiver into an overcomer like Jacob -- if He can reach down and change a murderer into an evangelist like Paul -- if He can reach down and change a denier of the faith into an apostle and elder like Simon Peter -- then He can reach down and change me into the person He wants me to be, too -- He can do the same for you

            -- the path to blessings comes through repentance and forgiveness -- it comes with a searching of the soul and wrestling in the dark of the night -- it comes when we finally can say and mean the words Jesus spoke in prayer that night in the Garden of Gethsemane, “Not my will, but thine be done”

 

            -- as we leave here this morning, I want you to take a moment and consider where you are with God -- are you where you need to be? -- are you the person God wants you to be? -- are you struggling and wrestling with Him about your faith or about a decision or direction He wants you to take?

            -- let me encourage you to get alone -- to find a place where you can be quiet and alone with God -- whether that’s high on a mountainside or by the banks of a river or in your quiet place at home -- find that place and cry out to God -- wrestle with Him if you must -- but seek Him and find Him and come to know Him and obey Him as Jacob finally did

            -- let us pray

Sunday, April 19, 2026

SERMON: GIFTS OF THE SPIRIT – ENCOURAGEMENT, SERVICE, AND GIVING

 


Naylor Community Christian Church

Naylor, Georgia

 

I.  Introduction

            -- turn in Bibles to 2 Corinthians 7:13-8:7

 

2 Corinthians 7:13 By all this we are encouraged. In addition to our own encouragement, we were especially delighted to see how happy Titus was, because his spirit has been refreshed by all of you. 14 I had boasted to him about you, and you have not embarrassed me. But just as everything we said to you was true, so our boasting about you to Titus has proved to be true as well. 15 And his affection for you is all the greater when he remembers that you were all obedient, receiving him with fear and trembling. 16 I am glad I can have complete confidence in you.

 

2 Corinthians 8:1 And now, brothers and sisters, we want you to know about the grace that God has given the Macedonian churches. 2 In the midst of a very severe trial, their overflowing joy and their extreme poverty welled up in rich generosity. 3 For I testify that they gave as much as they were able, and even beyond their ability. Entirely on their own, 4 they urgently pleaded with us for the privilege of sharing in this service to the Lord’s people. 5 And they exceeded our expectations: They gave themselves first of all to the Lord, and then by the will of God also to us. 6 So we urged Titus, just as he had earlier made a beginning, to bring also to completion this act of grace on your part. 7 But since you excel in everything—in faith, in speech, in knowledge, in complete earnestness and in the love we have kindled in you—see that you also excel in this grace of giving.

 

            -- eight-year-old Gabi Mann keeps a treasure box in her home – it’s actually one of those plastic bead boxes with the individual sections that snap shut – if you’re old like me, think of a pill organizer – that’s what it looks like – but this container protects treasures that have been given to Gabi

            -- in an article on the BBC website, the author wrote about how Gabi proudly opened each separate section in the container and pulled out bag after bag containing individual treasures – after warning the journalist that she could look, but not touch, Gabi opened each bag and proudly displayed her treasures

-- one bag held part of a broken light bulb – another, small pieces of brown glass worn smooth by wind and rain – “There's a miniature silver ball, a black button, a blue paper clip, a yellow bead, a faded black piece of foam, a blue Lego piece, and the list goes on -- Many of them are scuffed and dirty -- It is an odd assortment of objects for a little girl to treasure, but to Gabi these things are more valuable than gold”

– Gabi did not collect these items herself – but each of them was given to her, and that’s what makes them special – the truly miraculous thing is that gifts were not given to Gabi by her friends or family – but these were special gifts given to her by crows that she befriended in her neighborhood

-- it all began when she was four years old and dropped a chicken nugget from her lap onto the ground as she tried to get out of the car – a crow ran up and snatched the nugget and watched her as she waved

-- the next day, the crow was back, hoping that something else would be dropped – and, sure enough, as the toddler got out of the car, she dropped more food items, which the crow gladly picked up

-- this went on for some time – and then more crows started to come – Gabi realized what they were doing and intentionally began sharing part of her lunch with the crows – making sure to give them a treat when she got off the bus after school

-- before long, the crows would gather in anticipation of the school bus and eagerly greet Gabi as she climbed down the stairs and shared her lunch with them

-- her parents helped her set up a bird feeder and bath and they began to feed the crows on a regular basis – same time, every day – and the crows magically appeared to enjoy the treats that they were given

-- it was shortly after Gabi started feeding them every day on her back patio that the gifts began showing up – after the crows had emptied the feeder of the peanuts that Gabi put out for them, she would go out and find a shiny trinket left on the bottom of the empty feeder – the gifts came sporadically – sometimes it was an earring – other times a shiny rock – sometimes small pieces of metal – Gabi never knew what to expect, but she knew when she got a gift from the crows it would be small enough to fit in their beak – and she collected all of them in tiny bags and stored them in her treasure box as reminders of her friends and the gifts that they exchanged1

 

            -- we may not have crows for friends who bring us gifts in response to the food we offer them, but as Christians, each of us has a spiritual treasure box filled with memories and mementos from the acts of service and grace that we provide to others

            -- in Matthew 6:19-21, Jesus said, “19 “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. 20 But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moths and vermin do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. 21 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

 

            -- this morning, we are going to talk about those very treasures – where they come from – and how we can store them up in heaven

            -- we are finishing up our sermon series on the spiritual disciplines and spiritual gifts – I know this has been a long series, but I hope you have gotten something out of it – we’ve covered a lot of ground – there’s still a lot more we could cover – but I wanted to make sure and target the disciplines and the gifts that are represented here in this congregation

            -- hopefully, I touched on your spiritual gift as we went through this message, for I tried to cover all the ones mentioned in church after we completed the spiritual gifts survey together

            -- this morning, we are looking at the last three of the spiritual gifts which have been given to us to minister God’s grace to others individually through acts of service and giving and encouragement or exhortation

            -- so, let’s look now at Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians and see what we can learn about the exercise of these spiritual gifts from Paul’s instructions to the church at Corinth

 

II.  Scripture Lesson (2 Corinthians 7:13-8:7)

            -- we began our study of the spiritual gifts in 1 Corinthians, looking at Paul’s listing of the gifts there in 1 Corinthians 12:1-11 – so, you should be familiar with the context and audience of these letters

            -- as you remember, the church at Corinth was a new church – it was comprised of both Gentiles and Jews – and it was struggling to find its way – the Gentile believers were holding on to some of their pagan beliefs and practices and bringing them into the church – while the Jews were clinging to the Law and having a hard time understanding how to live in grace and not legalism

            -- the result was a church that was very confused and very mixed up and very carnal – so Paul had visited them several times and taught them how to live in this new way of Christ – and in response to questions they had and issues that had arisen, he wrote these two letters to help them understand how to live for Christ in the power and presence of the Holy Spirit

            -- so, it is in 1 Corinthians that we find Paul’s instructions on the spiritual disciplines and the spiritual gifts and we find his great discourse that we know as the “love chapter” – 1 Corinthians 13 – where Paul tries to help the Corinthians to stop looking at themselves but to live out the royal command to love

            -- as Jesus said, the first and greatest commandment is to love the Lord our God with all our heart and soul and mind and strength – and the second commandment is to love our neighbors as ourselves – which we talked about last week

            -- it is through the outpouring of God’s love into us and through us that the church of Christ truly begins to find its way and when we see the reason that Christ called us to be His hands and feet in the world today

            -- out of all the spiritual gifts that we have looked at, most of them have been given to build up the church – to edify the believers – to help them grow and mature in Christ so that they can begin to pour out God’s love and grace and mercy to those around them

            -- these last three spiritual gifts – the gifts of giving and service and encouragement – are the way the church puts feet to their faith and shows grace to the church and to those in their community

 

            -- look with me now at 2 Corinthians 7:13, and let’s start there

 

2 Corinthians 7:13 By all this we are encouraged. In addition to our own encouragement, we were especially delighted to see how happy Titus was, because his spirit has been refreshed by all of you. 14 I had boasted to him about you, and you have not embarrassed me. But just as everything we said to you was true, so our boasting about you to Titus has proved to be true as well. 15 And his affection for you is all the greater when he remembers that you were all obedient, receiving him with fear and trembling. 16 I am glad I can have complete confidence in you.

 

            -- like we just discussed, the church at Corinth had a lot of problems – but as Paul shone the light of Christ on their issues and instructed them in the way they should go – they didn’t just listen to his message and go home to Sunday dinner – no, they took it to heart – and they put into practice – and they began to change

            -- and Paul sees that here – Titus had been ministering in the church of Corinth on Paul’s behalf and had been helping teach the people how they should live – and he has just now come back and joined Paul in Macedonia – in northern Greece – as Paul is continuing on his missionary journey

            -- and as Titus shared all the good news about how the Corinthians had embraced the teachings of Christ and turned away from their pagan idolatry and practices and how they relied on grace instead of the law – Paul’s heart was filled with joy – he says here in verse 13 that he was encouraged by everything that he heard – he was so happy that they were now living for God and that Titus had seen the transformation for himself

            -- encouragement is like a bright light in a dark place – encouragement can give a person hope and can be a beacon of light on a dark day – we all need encouragement from time to time – and that’s true for all of us – even the Apostle Paul

 

            -- I read about this middle school in Tennessee where a group of students “took it upon themselves to make sure that everyone feels loved and included.

            -- “They started leaving positive notes, written in brightly-colored highlighter, around school hallways and in bathrooms. The notes are simple, but powerful. "If you realize it or not, someone loves you," one note read -- "Never give up," was taped to a mirror. -- Another said, "Stay strong." So far, the group of students has left 100 encouraging notes with more to come.

-- “Nicole True is an 8th grade student at Harriman and a member of the group that came up with the idea to leave the notes – she said, “I think it makes all the difference in the world -- Considering the fact that all of us have had someone come up to us and say 'that really affected us in a major way.’ It’s a small act that just makes everyone's day a little bit happier.”

 

-- encouragers lift people’s spirits and help them keep going on, even though they may be experiencing difficult times in their lives – out of all the spiritual gifts, this is the gift I wish I had – in Acts 4:36-37, we are introduced to Joseph, a Levite from Cyprus, whom the apostles called Barnabas – the name Barnabas means “Son of Encouragement”

– how wonderful is that? – to be the type of person that is just so encouraging that that is how you are known – that your name is changed to Son of Encouragement because that is who you are?

-- that is awesome – I so wish I had this gift – I so wish I was known in the same way – we see that in Barnabus’ life – he’s the one who went and got Paul and brought him to Jerusalem to introduce him to the apostles – he’s the one that took care of John Mark, even when Paul didn’t want anything to do with him – he’s the one that helped serve the widows at the food distribution to make sure everyone had enough – Barnabas is always there – serving and giving and encouraging those around him – lifting them up and making sure they know they are loved

-- that’s what people with this gift do – that’s how they live – that’s who they are

-- we know the encouragers – we see them – we are drawn to them – these are the people who we call when we’re down – these are the people who send notes and who check on us when we’re struggling – these are the people who praise us with their words and who tell us we’re doing a good job, even if we don’t feel like it – these are the people who hold us and who are there for us when we’re walking through times of darkness and difficulty

-- I have a lot of respect for the encouragers – the exhorters – for those with this spiritual gift – for they keep us going

-- and that’s what Paul is saying here – I am encouraged by what you are doing – I am encouraged by the report that Titus has given – I see what you have done – I see who you are becoming – and I have complete confidence in you and your relationship with God

            -- this is the ministry of the encouragers – and it is special indeed

 

            -- look at Chapter 8

 

2 Corinthians 8:1 And now, brothers and sisters, we want you to know about the grace that God has given the Macedonian churches. 2 In the midst of a very severe trial, their overflowing joy and their extreme poverty welled up in rich generosity. 3 For I testify that they gave as much as they were able, and even beyond their ability. Entirely on their own, 4 they urgently pleaded with us for the privilege of sharing in this service to the Lord’s people. 5 And they exceeded our expectations: They gave themselves first of all to the Lord, and then by the will of God also to us.

 

            -- Paul moves on to discuss an area of ministry that he has confidence the Corinthians will excel in – he shares the example of the service and giving from the Macedonian churches to encourage the Corinthians to follow suit

            -- back in the Book of Acts, we read of Paul’s visit to Jerusalem to meet with the elders of the church – with Peter and James and John – this James is the brother of Jesus, not the brother of John – John’s brother had been killed by Herod – and James, the brother of Jesus, had risen to a leadership position in the church after he had put his faith in Jesus following the resurrection

            -- Peter, James, and John affirmed Paul’s calling and ministry – they recognized him as a fellow apostle – as one who had seen the risen Christ and who had been given his ministry directly from Jesus Himself – they confirmed that Paul was to be the apostle to the Gentiles – carrying the message of the resurrection of Christ and the forgiveness of sins through faith by grace to the Gentiles while they ministered to the Jews

            -- the only thing they asked of Paul was that he would remember the Jewish believers and to set aside offerings to help support those who were destitute and unable to provide for themselves – Paul remained true to that request – and as he traveled among the Gentile communities – preaching Christ and setting up churches along the way – he reminded them of the debt they owed to Christ and to the Jews, from whom Christ came and from whom the holy scriptures were originally given

            -- while he was in Macedonia, Paul made the needs of the Jewish believers in Jerusalem known to the churches – and although they were living in poverty themselves – although they were in the midst of severe trials of their own – God’s grace gave them the ability to offer gifts and service to those who were less fortunate than they

            -- Paul writes here that God’s grace welled up a rich generosity among the Macedonians – and they gave even beyond their ability as an act of faith and in gratefulness to what God had done for them

 

            -- when we teach and speak about the spiritual gifts, we tend to separate out the gifts of service and giving – but really, they are just different sides of the same coin – the gift of service is the supernatural ability that is given by the Holy Spirit to serve someone else -- the Spirit-given capacity and joy to work faithfully, practically, and tirelessly for the good of others

            -- this gift of service might take the form of direct action – as in helping someone do something – or physically meeting a need that someone has

            -- the people who have this gift are action-oriented – hands-on – people who love to take action and who inspire others to join with them in whatever ministry is at hand

            -- John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, famously said, “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can.”

            -- this describes the role of those with the gift of servanthood – the gift of serving – but it also describes those who have the gift of giving – for giving is related to serving

 

            -- while serving means direct action and getting your hands dirty by participating in ministry, others are called to serve through giving – primarily, through the gift of giving money and other resources to others

            -- as The Spiritual Gifts Project points out, “The spiritual gift of Giving is the Spirit-given ability to joyfully, freely, and sacrificially share one’s resources—time, talent, and treasure—for the work of God and the good of others. While all Christians are called to be generous, those with this gift experience extraordinary eagerness, joy, and discernment in giving.”

            -- obviously, there were some in the churches of Macedonia who had this gift – who heard of the need of the destitute in Jerusalem and who led the effort to collect money and resources to support their Christian brothers and sisters – to support those who they had never even met – but who they were connected to through the Spirit

            -- Paul says they gave beyond their ability to give – as they began to give of what they had, God provided the excess – just as He multiplied the fish and the loaves to feed the twelve thousand – when you begin to give sacrificially as God calls us to do, then God meets us in that place and makes it happen

 

            -- several years ago, when we had started Koinonia Church, we became aware of a need in the community where we were meeting – there were a lot of really poor kids in that community that could not afford backpacks and school supplies – and we felt like this was something that God wanted us to do – so, we reached out to the school around the corner and asked if we could provide backpacks and supplies – and they gladly said we could

            -- we told them we were a small church – we only had a handful of people – we didn’t have a lot of resources – but we told them we would give what we could and trust that the school would make sure it got to the kids that needed it

            -- we went out and bought backpacks and school supplies and spent all the money we had on that – it wasn’t much – and then, out of the blue, a check came in the mail from someone who wasn’t part of the church – they had heard about the ministry, and wanted to help – and then another check came and then another

            -- our little church was able to provide enough backpacks and school supplies that year to make a real difference in the community – we gave beyond our ability – and God multiplied the offering, just as He did here with the Macedonian churches

 

            -- those who have this spiritual gift of service and giving know that God will always provide – they have a faith in the providence of our God to meet whatever needs arise – they give more than they possibly can – they give until it hurts – because they know that God will take care of their needs just as they are taking care of the needs of others

            -- when you give with a sacrificial heart – when you are led and empowered by the Holy Spirit to serve and to give in this way – God will meet you there and magnify the blessings

 

            -- verse 6

 

2 Corinthians 8:6 So we urged Titus, just as he had earlier made a beginning, to bring also to completion this act of grace on your part. 7 But since you excel in everything—in faith, in speech, in knowledge, in complete earnestness and in the love we have kindled in you—see that you also excel in this grace of giving.

 

            -- Paul writes here that he has complete confidence in the church at Corinth – he shared with them what the Macedonians had done – how they had given above and beyond in faith that God would meet the need – and he urges them to do the same in response to the need of the people in Jerusalem

            -- Titus had already told them about the need and encouraged them to make an offering to the people in Jerusalem – and Paul asks them here to bring this act of grace to completion as he prepares to go to Jerusalem with these gifts from the Gentile churches

            -- he tells the church at Corinth that he has already seen how they have begun to excel in all things through their faith and trust in God – their faith – their speech – their knowledge – their earnestness – their love – had grown and matured as they had learned to put their whole faith in God to meet their needs

            -- and so, he calls them to join in this ministry – to serve and to give their time and talents and resources to those who were in need – so that the love of God that had been given to them through Paul might be magnified and enlarged through the grace of giving to others

 

            -- people who have the gift of giving have a heart that responds to the need around them – they are the first in the church to see the need – they are the first in the church to begin to give – and they are the ones who encourage others to join them – to encourage others to give from the heart, also

            -- people with the gift of giving are those who come up with ways to meet needs through fund-raisers or giving campaigns – they call on people to make things and give of their excess so that others can be blessed – they lead the church in stewardship and in responsible giving

            -- I’ve told you before that I don’t like church fund-raisers – I don’t like it when a church raises funds for themselves – but I wholeheartedly support fund-raisers for specific ministries and needs

            -- I have no problem with raising funds for mission efforts or to help others who are hurting – when Hurricane Katrina hit back in 2005, we raised funds to send to churches out there who were on the ground ministering to people in need – I support that – and I think that’s something we should be doing

            -- and this is where the people who are gifted in servanthood and giving come in – for they are the ones with the vision who see the need and come up with a plan to meet the need and encourage others to join in

            -- these people lead the outreach in servant ministry in a local congregation – and just like encouragers support those who need a special word or light in the darkness – those who serve and give support those who need help in a tangible way – either through direct service or through financial gifts – as empowered and led to do so by the Spirit

 

III.  Closing

            -- let’s bring this to a close

 

 

            -- as everyone here is painfully aware, we are in the grip of an exceptional drought – this is the worst drought that we have had in south Georgia in over twenty years – and it couldn’t come at a worse time

            -- for this is planting season for farmers – the time of the year when we’re trying to get seed in the ground and produce food and resources for others – it’s the time of the year when the animals are starting to reproduce – when birds are nesting and mammals are having babies – and it’s the time of the year when the plants are starting to grow and flower and produce seeds and fruit

            -- and without water, all of this will be affected – all of life will feel the effects of the drought and the lack of rainfall in our area – we’re already seeing the rivers and ponds dry up – and some people are having problems with their wells – we need water – and we need it desperately

 

            -- I thought about that this week -- I'm not a big gardener, but we put out some wildflower seed and they sprang up and began producing flowers –I noticed they were wilting and starting to turn yellow – they needed water

            -- so, I got out the sprinkler and hooked it up and put in the yard and let it go for several hours – and not only did the wildflowers perk up – but the wildlife did, too – I have a small bird bath in the yard and the birds haven’t been going to it – I put a pump in there to spray the water up to get their attention – and between that and the sprinkler – the yard just became alive with birds and squirrels drawn to the water

            -- when I went out and turned the sprinkler off, it hit me what that meant – I controlled whether these plants and birds had water or not – I could turn it on or turn it off – I could choose to give them a lot or a little – it was up to me – it was my choice

 

            -- and it’s like that with the exercise of our spiritual gifts, too – while the Holy Spirit has gifted us with the supernatural ability to minister to God’s people – to serve them through leadership and prophecy – through acts of knowledge and wisdom – through exhortation and mercy – through service and giving – it’s up to us whether we allow the Spirit to use us or not

            -- God has given us these manifestations of the Holy Spirit to use for the common good – to share with those around us – to use as ministers of His grace and love in this world today

            -- but how much good are we doing if we never turn the sprinkler on? – and how much good are we really doing if we only turn the sprinkler on when we want to – when it suits us – when we feel like it or when it’s for the people we like?

 

            -- as I turned the spigot off and watched the water in the sprinkler slowly die down and then stop completely, I wondered whether that little bit of water had helped or not – it would be better, I thought, if I could provide water more consistently – constantly – dependently

            -- I thought about getting a soaker hose and putting it out – those hoses with the little holes that you leave on all the time – that just put out water constantly – then I could give out the water to the plants and the birds and the animals whether I felt like it or not – it would continue to flow out as long as the spigot was open

 

            -- that’s the way we need to approach these spiritual gifts – we need to become soaker hoses for Jesus – letting love and mercy and grace continually flow out of us to where it is most needed – to exercise our gifts in such a way that we are indistinguishable from the presence of the Spirit within us – to use these spiritual gifts to touch those around us so that they might experience the love and mercy of God as we have

            -- it’s not enough to just know about these spiritual gifts – to take a survey and find out where God has gifted us – it’s not enough to know about the spiritual disciplines – the means of grace by which God makes Himself known to us and through which we grow deeper in our relationship with Him – we have to use them – we have to put them into practice

            -- but we have to be consistent in both the disciplines and the gifts – we need to stop using them like spiritual sprinklers that we turn on from time to time when we feel like it – but we need to become more like soaker hoses – who soak up the love and mercy and grace of God and pour it out to those around us – ministering to them as God has gifted us and as the Spirit has empowered us

            -- that is the message that I want you to absorb today – that is the point of this entire series

            -- you know what to do – you know how God has gifted you – now go forth and put into action that which you know – excel in the grace and ministry of God – as you pour out the love of God into this world today and tomorrow and every day after

            -- with that, let us pray and ask God to give us His strength and His grace to do even more than we think we are capable of

            -- let us pray

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1 The girl who gets gifts from birds by Katy Sewall -- https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-31604026