Embracing Stillness: A Journey of Faith and Renewal

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Sermon Clips


This pandemic has disrupted our lives, our work, our play, our sports. It has disrupted our gatherings. It has turned what was normal and made it abnormal. It's a wake-up call. One of the ways God speaks is through allowing circumstances into our lives and into our world that are not pleasant. [00:19:41]

Sometimes bad things have to happen for good things to grow. We want to take this opportunity to do that, and since we are the next generation of our parents, we're kicking this off. We've been doing it here locally for a couple of years, but we want to take it nationally because the opportunity has presented itself. [00:22:04]

I think a lot of times when things are still, we have to redefine what stillness means. In our culture, especially in American culture, we are like if you ain't moving, you ain't successful. You ain't doing nothing. Sometimes you have to redefine it. You have to stop to re-situate yourself. [00:26:23]

If we can readjust our perspective and know that when we're in the darkroom, we are being developed, then the darkroom changes. The dormancy changes. The perspective you have when you're still completely changes. [00:28:13]

When we're made to lie down in green pastures, whether we're going to actually look around us and see all the green grass that he's actually situated us in there, or whether we're just going to be running so fast to move forward, we get to the next thing and realize in looking back we missed out on all this green grass. [00:30:22]

There are things happening underneath the ground. There are nutrients being absorbed, and if you don't let it lie dormant for a while, then when the produce, when the harvest comes, it won't be flavorful. It won't be as big and juicy. It won't yield the kind of results if you don't really just let it do the stuff you can't see. [00:31:05]

If you don't choose to accept the season of rest, you will realize that you missed the beauty in that season of rest because hindsight is always 20/20. So if you wait to suck up the nutrients of the dormant season until you know why you need those nutrients, then you'll always miss it. [00:34:41]

Passions are gonna be renewed. Somebody told me that they took up sewing because they started sewing something they always wanted to sew but never had the time for it. People are gonna rediscover passions if we will stop being frustrated that we're at the house and just go ahead and take advantage of it. [00:34:55]

I think she consistently was pouring herself out over her lifetime, so then when you get to the end, it's just more of the same. One of the things that I just said, I've said it a few times, but I said it to Dad again last night, and it was that there are a couple of things I think I wish I would have asked her. [00:45:28]

When you choose to dwell, meditate on his word, continually talk to God, there's something that happens in your heart and in your mind about where you're living, where you are living despite where you are living, what's happening around you. [00:52:14]

I think some of the greatest lessons we learn about ourselves happen when things are still and dormant, but I also think some of the greatest lessons we learn about who God created us to be happen when things are hard. He teaches us what he put in us, but also he teaches us who he is in us. [01:12:40]

Finding your identity in Christ, that he came to satisfy the standard of God that no one can satisfy. The standard of God is absolute perfection, and no one can satisfy it, but he came and he satisfied it, so all those who place faith in Him, what Jesus does is credit to your account. [01:17:25]

Ask a question about this sermon