Finding Faith in the Wilderness of Doubt

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There are people in our spheres of influence, whether we've recognized it or not, that need us as followers of Jesus to love well, to listen deeply and stay faithful in the tension of learning what it means to come alongside those in your spheres of influence as they wrestle with faith or church hurt or the in between. [00:03:37]

The idea is that this is a message for those people. But I'm also real with the fact that those kinds of people probably would never dawn the doors of a church because they have doubts, church hurt, and everything in between. So then why talk about this? [00:03:16]

What do I do when I feel like God has left me all alone? What do I do when when I feel like God has left me all alone? And more importantly, it's it's this wrestling. That's one question. But more importantly, the other question is actually this. How does God want to meet us in our wilderness experiences? [00:04:21]

I think it's fair to say that in the wilderness becomes a per uh I think it's fair to say that the wilderness becomes a perfect metaphor for those times in your life when what has come before has ended, but what comes next has yet to begin. [00:09:29]

It's that feeling you get when when you're not where you were, but you're not quite sure where you're going. At best, it isn't denying that God has ever moved. It's more of like this dark sense of despair. You're you're no longer sure how or where God is moving. [00:09:47]

But two months into freedom, what do we see? two months. They're hangry, grumbling, and full of regret. And some of you would say being angry is is is enough to be grumbling and full of regret. Right? Some of you, right? What do they do? [00:10:59]

But this is what the wilderness does to us, right? This is what the wilderness does to us. When we feel uncertain, disoriented, or afraid, we we start to look backward and and we call it better, even if it was deeply broken. [00:12:08]

Complaining is actually about the condition of our hearts. As one commentator puts it, "Our complaints are rarely caused by outward circumstances. They reveal the inward condition of our hearts." Really, the Israelites had nothing to complain about. [00:14:48]

The Israelites confused what they wanted with what they needed. And this is often the source of our discontent, thinking that our greeds are really our needs. Now, most of us don't need more evidence that God has not abandoned us. [00:15:40]

And what we notice is that God doesn't rebuke them with thunder from heaven or send them back to Egypt, does he? Instead, what does God do? I think if you read in between the lines, it's it's God chuckling and going, "Of course, they would complain." [00:16:32]

In other words, Jesus is saying, "Look, you actually don't need more provision. You need me. You need the one, the mana in the wilderness was pointing to all along. You need the Savior who doesn't leave you alone in the wilderness." [00:18:24]

It's a forgetfulness that sets in when we experience doubt, church hurt, or the in between. It's a forgetting of of the God who rescued us and how he showed up last time. And so, like the Israelites in Exodus, it's second nature to complain when God doesn't meet our expectations. [00:14:10]

Not the polished one, not the filtered one, but the one that says, "Lord, I'm still here, but I don't understand. And to be honest, I am really tired." And if that's you, or maybe if you're walking with someone who's there, let's not rush past the grief of unmet expectations or fast forward through the questions and the doubts or tell people to just have more faith as a way to avoid their pain. [00:22:36]

Our role as ambassadors is to offer compassion, understanding, unwavering love even when we don't have all the answers. My son and I have been um watching uh this apologetic what's his name? Uh connect what's his name? Cliff. I don't know if anybody have seen this guy named Cliff Connecti or whatever. [00:23:58]

To overuse this phrase, but it's true. It's it's it's a marathon, not a sprint. It requires consistent presence, patience, and a willingness to sit with them in their uncertainty. After all, Jesus said, "Blessed are those who mourn." He didn't say, "Blessed are those who get over it quickly." [00:25:50]

And this hopelessness, this wilderness between what was and what's next can feel desolate and lonely. I know. But it's not a place where God abandons us. It is a place where our true needs are often revealed, where hearts are tested, and where we have the opportunity to learn to trust in God's provision even when it doesn't look the way we expected. [00:33:50]

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