Complete Obedience: Lessons from Saul and Christ

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### Quotes for Outreach

1. "I became a believer about 30 years old, and it took me a few years. I was a little slow to realize, hey, this is more than just a set of rules to live our life by. I mean, this is a fantastic handbook for life. Not only does it teach us who God is, but it also gives us a place and a playbook to flourish in our life. And that's to have peace, that flourish, to have peace in our life. And we get to see examples from of like things that we ought to do, and we see some clear examples of things we ought not to do. It is a great playbook." (39 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "You know, it's one of the ways that we flourish in our lives. It's through each other. You know, we talk about wanting everyone here at this church to flourish in God's grace. And one of the ways that we do that is we realize, hey, Christ-centered living, it's not done alone. You know, we have a lot of distractions in our life. You know, we all need help. We need help hearing God's instruction and His direction in our life." (30 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "The way to overcome evil is to lay down our lives in sacrifice for one another. And we recognize that evil will finally go away when Christ returns. That will be when evil returns. Goes away. See, the more we can really learn to trust God's instruction in our lives, the better. And we trust that there's a good reason for God to do something." (27 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "We see Jesus come in. And Jesus fully obeyed the Father by willingly dying on the cross for us. And then finally in verse 34 and 35 we wrap up with Samuel grieving over Saul. Just as Christ grieves over our sin, I think this passage in Saul's life story reminds us that God is the true King. That he gives us instruction. And yes he expects us to be obedient. But we can be so thankful that he also does what we could not do for ourselves." (40 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "We rest in him knowing that we're dependent upon him. Because Christ, he is the true King. Christ is the true King that does what we can't do for ourselves. This morning we get another opportunity take communion together. To enjoy a meal with one another as a family. And in this we get to look around and realize nobody's better than anybody else here. We're all broken. We're all struggling to be fully obedient. We all need Jesus." (42 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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### Quotes for Members

1. "You know, we all need boundaries and we need help to be obedient, to follow God's call, to hear His direction in our life. Otherwise, we just get distracted. We get distracted, we get distracted with these other things. Saul, you know, he didn't have a phone or a TV. You know, he kind of had every reason to be a success, but yet his pride and his self-focus destroyed him. He didn't hear God's instruction or he didn't trust it. He abandoned God's ways to live for substitutes. Substitutes are like living for our job, living for money, living for comfort. Or in Saul's case, he was living for the approval of others. These things, they can be called false kings or false gods. We tend to worship them. We tend to make them the very most important thing in our life." (58 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "So anything less than full obedience is actually disobedience. And we see this play out. We see this play out because Saul, he didn't do exactly what God asked him to do. Just a few decades later, the Amalekites took King David and some of his men's families captive. And then even later, in the book of Esther, there's this guy, Haman, who's a direct descendant from King Agag. And Haman wanted to exterminate all the Jewish people. So Saul's partial obedience here almost results in the destruction of all the Israelites." (42 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "See, Saul, he is so self-deceived that he's oblivious to the sin that he has. And he comes out as if nothing is wrong. He thinks he's won this great battle but he has no clue that he's ignored the Lord's part of the victory and that he's not been fully obedient to God's direction in destroying the Amalekites. Honestly, I can kind of relate to this one too. Because I get pretty excited about my work victories. And I don't always take them to the Lord. I don't always pause it long enough and realize, hey, the Lord made that happen." (37 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "We see the consequences of Saul's sin. He loses his kingship. He loses his relationship with Samuel. See, our sin, it is manipulative, and it is very destructive. It leads us to focus in on ourselves rather than God and others. It leads to broken relationships, and anxious and difficult lives. But know this. Know that anyone whose heart is truly repentant will never, ever be despised by God. If we're truly repentant, God forgives. Because he loves us so much that he'll do for us what we can't do for ourselves." (52 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "So in verse 29 and 30 Samuel tells Saul, God doesn't change his mind. This decision for you to lose the kingship, it's done, it's final. And even as I read this, seeing Saul's reaction to that, it still seems like he's very worried about his self-image. There's some debate, was Saul really repentant here? Maybe he changed a little? But I think a little clue in this is verse 30. Forget that he talks about the Lord your God several times to Samuel, but he also says, Yet honor me now. See, Saul's not necessarily about crying out to God to bring honor to God through him. He just wants to be seen as holy. By the people. It's easy, it's easy to say I'm sorry when we get caught. But that's not necessarily repentance which requires us to turn away from sin. And we've got to let the Holy Spirit in our lives change us." (70 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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