Embracing Our Divine Calling Through Action

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1) "The concept of The Calling in the Bible is rich in multifaceted. It is deeply embedded in the narrative of God's relationship with humanity. The calling transcends a mere invitation or a task, and it signifies a divine summon that shapes identity, purpose, and destiny. And if we're being honest with each other, all of us in this room have had questions about identity, purpose, or destiny, or all three of them. At some point in their life, if it's not right now, you've wondered, what in the world was I built for? Why was I put on this earth? What am I going to do? There's got to be more to life than this. And the reality is, when we get to our calling, those three questions are answered, our identity, our purpose, and our destiny." [03:05] (46 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2) "In the Western church, we've created a machine where it's all about our comfort. We go to church on Sunday because we get free things. Churches have t-shirt cannons and free coffee and all of the great things that people want when they go to an event. However, when they show up at church, they're expecting the same thing. So when we say it's the call to action, the Western culture would assume that their call to action would be to wake up a little bit earlier on Sunday morning. Get to church, get out before football starts, right? So it's this watered down Christianity. We show up to church and we think that we've done everything that Jesus has asked us to do." [10:34] (35 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3) "When we take action, God meets us in our obedience and does more than we could ever imagine. Okay. So, so let's start with the leper. Now, we read the scripture, but to understand it, we have to understand some other things. Okay. In this time as lepers, they were outcasts, right? They were contagious. No one wanted to catch leprosy. And so what happened when somebody showed signs of leprosy, they were cast out of the city gates and they were forced to live on the land alone or in a leper camp. They weren't just seeing this physically unclean either, but they were also seeing the ceremonially unclean. Nobody wanted to be around them. And there, and it was a fear. So they were forced out of society and they, they lived alone." [13:14] (47 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4) "They said that one thing is for sure. If we sit here, we're dead, which actually ties directly to James verses 2, or verse 2, or James 2 verse 17. So also by faith itself, it does not have works. If it does not have works, it's dead. This is very literally true for these guys. They could sit around all day and say, oh, we're dead. We're dead. We're dead. We're dead. We're dead. We're dead. I think that if we go to this camp, the Syrians are going to have mercy on us. I believe that when we get there, the Syrians are going to give us food. I believe with everything inside of me that these Syrians are actually good people that are misunderstood. And what's going to happen is when we get there, they're going to greet us with a cup of water and fill in the blank, a steak, a burger, let's do something, not red meat, chicken. They can believe that all they want, but if they do that, they're just going to die believing." [20:10] (54 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5) "When we move, God moves. We have to understand this. Our action activates God's miraculous intervention, because the story continues. We didn't read all of it because it is a lot. It's funny, though. So here, here's what happens, okay? They sneak up on the camp. hearts are beating. I don't know what's going to happen. They're going to die. And most likely, these lepers didn't know each other. They just became friends because they had a similar skin condition. And so they're, they're, they're going to die. And then I'm sure one of them might be thinking, like, like, if they come at me, like, I'm throwing him in front. Like, you guys know the thing, like, if you're in the woods and you're being chased by the bear, you don't have to be faster than the bear. I just got to be faster than Pastor Eric." [24:19] (50 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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6) "Water into wine is a weird miracle. Like when you have read the whole Bible and you look at everything, that one stands out. And I think like early on in my life, I thought like, oh yeah, water into wine is a good first miracle. Like what I said earlier, everybody's on board with it. Nobody's getting angry at water into wine. Even if you don't see the miracle happen and believe that he's the Messiah, you still got one. Everybody's happy with that. But we read all throughout the Bible, the lame are healed, the deaf see, demons are cast out, thousands are fed. He walks on water, food is multiplying. He helped a bad fisherman look like a good fisherman. But this one's weird. Water into wine. I think that there's more than meets the eye here." [43:14] (56 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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7) "Our actions do prepare us for what only Jesus can do. Like the water transformed into wine, Jesus' blood cleanses us from within. So maybe somebody walked through the doors and metaphorically inside their water, but when the day is over, they're transformed from the inside. And it makes us whole. And I want to say that we're not just a church that says, I'm not going to do this. Nobody says this stuff because we need something to get done. As I stand here right now, our pastors are in the air over the ocean flying into Fiji to put on a men's conference and a women's conference where they're going to see hundreds, maybe thousands of people come to know Jesus Christ as their personal Lord and Savior." [48:16] (54 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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