Aligning Expectations: Embracing God's True Purpose

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And being a Lutheran my whole life, there was a part of me that wanted to see something of some kind of Lutheran historical significance. And I was in my early 20s, and I can't say that I really remembered all of it, but as I was looking at the map, I saw that on the road going back to Frankfurt, just off of the road that we were on, was the city. It was the city of Worms. [00:01:05] (23 seconds)


And for those of you who may remember your Lutheran history, there was the Diet of Worms. It was when the emperor decided that he was going to hold a trial, and for four months, he grilled Martin Luther, and at the end of it, declared him a heretic. And I thought, oh, let's go to the castle, let's go to the cathedral, rather, where the Diet of Worms was held. [00:01:28] (21 seconds)


And we looked back and three guys, each of whom had university degrees that were for the most part math degrees, hung our heads and realized we didn't remember the difference between circumference and diameter. And so the tree was just a little was not 36 feet across but more like 11 feet across and while an 11 foot tree is really something impressive for us it was incredibly disappointing when you have expectations that are way up here and you see something that is way down here well we call those misguided expectations and what a misguided expectation can do is it can cloud your eyes so that you don't get to appreciate the wonder that's before you and that's what happened in the gospel lesson that was just read. [00:03:40] (62 seconds)


And what happened is that their misguided expectations were dashed. Because Isaiah 61 would have been very familiar to these people. They knew this. This was one of the messianic prophecies. This was one of the things that led to the long -expected Messiah. And Isaiah 61 begins with the words that Jesus said. If you go back into Isaiah 61, you'll hear that some very familiar passages arise, shine, right? This is my anointed one. [00:07:08] (36 seconds)


And it's to this captivity that Jesus stands among them and says that he's one to release the prisoners, to give sight to those who are blind, light to those who are in darkness. He comes to those who are in prison to that. He comes to those who are in prison to that. He comes to those who are in prison to that. And because the children of Israel at the time of Jesus had built their hopes and their dreams on four verses from Isaiah 61, rather than understanding the whole story, because they had misguided expectations. [00:11:43] (42 seconds)


And the Father is running towards you with His arms out like this, yelling something about a fatted calf, or something like that. And you're standing there, and you're standing there, ready to be a fucker because He wants you to be a man of His faith, surprisingly efectoful. Father's presence, and I know you're standing there like that. He's running out to hug you. Oh, wow! But there's more. Because He comes to you and says, what do you want, what would you like? [00:17:38] (23 seconds)


And he commands us to pray to him. And he commands us and tells us that if we pray according to his word and promises, then we can say, thy will be done, right? Good. Isn't his word and aren't his promises his will? And we can confidently pray to God, thy will be done because this is what your promise told me. And we can expect that God will not dismiss us. We can expect that the son of God will not walk through our midst and on his ways. [00:19:40] (39 seconds)


And the first one is one that God doesn't want me to do and that is sin. Suffer the consequences, temporal consequences of sin. I get to do that now but there's none of that in heaven. There is neither. No rebellion, no anarchy, there's no turning against God, none of that. And the Bible tells us that in heaven there are no more tears and no more pain. It's a different place. I think that's kind of awesome. [00:24:19] (34 seconds)


But here, in this dark room with just a little bit of light where it seems like things are getting darker, there are a lot of people who don't know him, who don't know him. And in my experience, people who were in this spot, who are still in prison, who are still blind, well, they have some expectations, don't they? And the expectations, well, they're of a God that's completely different than the one we know. [00:26:03] (35 seconds)


And if I go into God's presence and I ask for Chris, not just today, but tomorrow, and I go to him again and again because sometimes he likes to wrestle with us. Well, God has a way of doing things with our prayers. I'm reminded of a time just after I came back, from Finland. I moved to Saskatchewan. Saskatchewan and was living there and I was fairly well off because I didn't have any expenses the whole time I was living overseas and so all of my income went into the bank. [00:28:59] (33 seconds)


And it occurs to me that after being in the Holy of Holies, being in the presence of the Almighty God, you are a silly buddy. We are a silly buddy. Because when we come out of the presence of God back into that dark room, we are going to bounce. There's something that will change in us and put a bounce in our step. We're going to be more and more flexible, confident in our faith and able to be able to sit down with people who don't believe the same things we believe. [00:36:52] (39 seconds)


But one of the coolest things is that when we take time and we spend the time in his word and in prayer, and we are there seeing the incredible smile of our Father through all of this, when he sends us back into a dark place, we're going to glow in the dark. Brothers and sisters in Christ, we have a God who shuffles expectations. And he's going to work in his word to take your high expectations and bring them down. [00:37:23] (36 seconds)


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