Embracing Risk: The Courage to Share Faith

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Sermon Clips

"Instead of a sermon, I'm going to pair you all off, and we are going to hit the streets telling people about Jesus and healing sicknesses and just whatever's going on in their lives. So you're going to get an address here. It's going to have the name of a partner and an address where you're going to meet them. And we've got about two hours. All the addresses are Milpitas or North San Jose. We'll meet back here at 1230. A couple rules before. Before we go, don't take your wallets or your cell phones. Don't pack a lunch. Someone there is going to, I'm sure, feed you. Eat whatever they offer you. Even if it's too spicy, we don't want to offend the people we're trying to reach." [00:34:13] (39 seconds)


"When Jesus had called the twelve together, he gave them power and authority to drive out all demons and to cure diseases. And he sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal the sick. And he told them, take nothing for your journey. No staff, no bag, no bread, no money, no extra shirt. Whatever house you enter, stay there until you leave the town. If the people do not welcome you, leave their town and shake the dust off your feet as a testimony against the Lord. And so they set out and they went from village to village proclaiming the good news and healing people everywhere." [00:38:47] (54 seconds)


"But now they were sent out on mission, and I think this is the moment the disciples discovered that following Jesus might be dangerous. It might be scary. It might involve risk. He says, all right, guys, go on out and fight Satan in the lives of the people around you. Teach them. Care for them. Heal them. Win them over for God. Let them know with your words and actions that the reigning power of God, which is the kingdom of God, the kingdom of God, is the kingdom of God. The reigning, active power of God has come to earth. It's drawn near. It is available to them." [00:40:50] (50 seconds)


"And on your way, you don't get to take any food or clothes or monies or supplies or any kind of protection, and you will be rejected at some points. So what was that moment like for the disciples when suddenly their job, their description changed? We can think all kinds of negative emotions, the same ones that we would feel. Fear, inadequacy. I'm not ready, Lord. I'm not enough. What if I say the wrong thing? What if I embarrass you? They'd feel discomfort. They'll feel anger. This is not what I signed up for when I decided to be a disciple." [00:41:42] (49 seconds)


"I want to posit to you that you might be bored because you are safe. David last week showed us the requirements that we need for sleep, and among those were safety and comfort. When those qualities are present, when we're safe, when we're comfortable, it makes it possible for us to relax and to fall asleep. As he was preaching on that story of Mary and Martha, he points out rightly there's times for us to relax, to relax into the presence of Jesus, to find rest there, to find deep relational connection and peace with Christ." [00:43:40] (45 seconds)


"And a partner scripture with this, this scripture which we see just immediately preceding that, we learn that there's also times in which it's necessary, not appropriate to sleep, in which times in which Jesus sends us into danger, to risk, to adventure in his name. Times when we're called upon to do battle with the devil in the name of Jesus. Can you remember a time in which you were doing that and you felt your blood pumping through your veins?" [00:44:25] (35 seconds)


"Now, here's the thing in our culture. Our culture teaches us that risk is always bad. That safety and comfort is always good. I feel like this is what ruined children's playground equipment in America. Right? When some of us were younger, the slides were a lot taller. But is this true? Is risk always bad? Is safety and comfort always good? I think when risk shows up, a lot of good things happen. We pray more. We see God show up. We get the thrill of being part of the story." [00:55:11] (48 seconds)


"Consider every movie, every good movie that you've ever loved watching, every book you've ever really been just totally engaged in. them, there was some kind of a struggle. And someone being brave in the context of that struggle, maybe there was a villain to defeat. Maybe there's just something of their own life. They had to overcome some kind of overbearing parent, or they had a tough circumstance, or they had self -doubt. Something they had to overcome and be brave. And as humans, we love to watch people be brave." [00:55:56] (39 seconds)


"Jesus calls you into mission with him. And he will be with you. I can only say from my own experience that when I was a child, I was a Christian. But when I have been bravest in my walk with Christ, I have felt him nearest. And we certainly see that at the end of Matthew in the Great Commission. He sends us out in mission. He sends us out in pairs, in teams. It's too hard to go alone. It's too hard with burnout. We lose steam. We lose focus. They go in pairs." [01:13:43] (45 seconds)


"Could you ask a Christian friend to pray with you and join you in some way? Could you join with a friend and say, hey, could we collectively pray for these other people? Could we collectively try to bless these other people in some way? It doesn't need to be spectacular. It doesn't need to be glorious. It just needs to be brave and purposeful." [01:14:35] (26 seconds)


"Lord, we just thank you for your word. We thank you for your movement. We thank you for what you're doing. Lord, we're scared. We're nervous. But we just pray you'd help us somehow, some way to be brave and to get that joy of serving with you. In Jesus' name, amen." [01:21:35] (19 seconds)


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