In this message from Pastor Steven Furtick of Elevation Church, we’re reminded that, while we don’t get to choose every situation, we do choose the story we tell ourselves.

You don’t get to choose every situation, but
you get to choose the story.

Oh, the power of God is in that truth!

You choose the story you tell yourself.

So if something is hard, you can be like,
“Oh man, this is hard.

I thought God told me to do it, but I guess
the Lord isn’t in this.

This is hard.

It must not be God.”

What if Jesus would have thought about the
cross that way?

“Oh, this is hard.

This must not be the will of God.

I must not have heard God on this one.”

That’s a story.

Here’s another story: “This is so hard it
must be God.

The Devil must have gotten a memo that I’m
on to something good.

I’m on the edge of Canaan.

That’s what these giants are here to signify.”

It is dangerous when you select a certain
story.

“Nobody cares about me.”

Give me your phone.

I will show you people who care about you
who checked on you this week, but you let

that Devil in your editing room and gave him
your typewriter (I’m an old-school preacher).

You gave him the seat in the chair to edit
your story.

You get to choose your story.

I didn’t always believe this.

I thought, “Certain people have certain stories.”

No, no.

Those are situations.

Life will give you a lot of suffering.

You don’t get to choose it, but if you’re
going to have to suffer enough because of

the situations life brings, why would you
choose to suffer with a story?

I don’t know who this is for.

It’s probably not somebody in this room.

You’ve suffered enough.

What you’re going through is hard enough.

What you’re dealing with is heavy enough without
telling yourself a story about it that reinforces

the thought that God is not with you.

I’m still in Acts 11.

Peter told them the whole story.

He saw what God did.

They heard it.

He saw it; they heard it.

He showed up and said, “I heard what y’all
have been saying about me, but there’s a hole

in your story.

You’re telling me what you heard.

Let me tell you what I saw.

I saw the vision of the whole earth being
reached by the gospel of Jesus Christ.

I saw it.

I experienced it.

I know that God is for me.”

“How do you know?”

“Well, I was there.

I was there when he picked me up.

I was there when nobody else could give me
the comfort and the balm and the medicine,

but God helped me through that night.

I was there when I was in the middle of an
emotional storm that I saw no way through,

but look at me on the other side, dancing
on the shore.

I was there.

You can’t tell me God is not real.

You can’t tell me he didn’t choose me.

You can’t tell me grace doesn’t work.

You can’t tell me it’s over.

You can’t tell me the best is behind me.

You can’t make me doubt it.

I know too much!

I saw it!

You tell me what you heard; I’ll tell you
what

I saw.”

You choose the story.

Now, if this is the most difficult season
of your life right now, you still get to choose

the story.

Did you clap because you’re going through
hell?

You get to choose what you tell yourself,
the story of this season.

Watch this.

One person says, “I’m going through the valley
of the shadow of death.”

Somebody else says, “There’s a table for me
in the presence of my enemies.”

It’s the same situation, but it’s a different
story.

Shout if you know that the Devil might take
your money, he might rob you of a few years,

but you can’t have my story, my joy, my anointing,
my authority!

Get under my feet, snake!

One of my best friends is going through the
most horrible season of their life right now.

He and his wife lost everything last year.

I don’t mean that like we say it.

You know, your video game progress got lost.

I’m not talking about that.

I’m talking about stripped.

I’m talking about I felt like I was watching
the book of Job.

I thought they would lose their faith.

I really did.

What would make me mad is every time I would
call to encourage them, they would start encouraging

me.

I was like, “Stop it!

This is your encouraging phone call.”

Have you ever been trying to unlock the door
and somebody else is unlocking it at the same

time?

“Stop it!

Stop it!

Stop it!”

The wife said something.

They lost their ministry and had to move to
the other side of the country.

Much of it was his decision.

It wasn’t her decision, and then as the consequence
of his decision, she ends up having to leave

everything she has known…the town she grew
up in, the ministry, all of it.

Left it.

Gone.

Other side of the country.

Then she gets diagnosed with cancer.

So I’m like, “Are you for real right now?

Her?”

I saw her after all her hair was gone from
chemo and after she was 33 percent smaller

than she was when I saw her last.

All of the stuff was in full effect.

She started talking about, “Thank God for
the insurance.”

Think about this.

She said, “Even though we lost everything,
if we hadn’t moved across the country, we

wouldn’t have gotten put on different insurance,
and our old insurance wouldn’t have covered

this.”

So I’m thinking…

I kind of have an attitude about it.

I’m like, “Well, if God can get you to the
other side of the country for better insurance,

he should have stopped the cancer.”

That’s how I think.

I know.

Your halos are just glowing right now.

Y’all trust the Lord with all your heart and
lean not on your own understanding.

Sometimes I lean on my own understanding.

I’m like, “This is ridiculous.”

I didn’t say it out loud, but I’m sitting
over there thinking it.

I’m thinking like, “Well, did God really have
to make you lose everything, get you across

the country, give you insurance if he’s a
healer?”

I’m thinking that.

I called them yesterday.

I was like, “I keep thinking about this insurance
thing y’all keep saying.

It’s bugging me.

It doesn’t make any logical tactical sense.

The Great I Am who can part the Red Sea can’t
stop you from getting cancer; he just gets

you on a better insurance policy.”

I said, “I don’t get it.”

She said, “It’s not your story.”

I want you to look at the Devil and say, “It’s
not your story.”

She said, “If I believed that this was the
end for me, I wouldn’t survive, but if I believe

that I will see the goodness of the Lord in
the land of the living…”

She said, “That’s my story and I’m sticking
to it.”

Let the Devil know, come hell or high water…

I get to choose the story I tell.

Yeah!

I feel empowerment in this word.

I get to choose the story I tell.

I get to choose.

Be careful about selective stories, be careful
about self-centered stories, be careful about

secondhand stories, and be careful about short
stories.

This point is not for Holly.

She has never in her life…

I might have to pay for this when we get home,
but it’s going to be worth it to get the point

across.

When my wife was growing up, her dad used
to say, because there were three women in

the house…

Well, three daughters and a wife, so it was
him versus the estrogen, and the estrogen

was just so powerful.

When they would start telling a story, he’d
go, “How long is this story going to be?

I just need to know.

Should I get comfortable in my chair?

Should I fluff my pillow?

Should I get an MRE?

How long are we going to be here in this story?”

I thought that was so rude that he would say
that, but now I know what he was saying.

It’s not I don’t want to hear it; I just want
to pace myself with my attention span, make

sure I take some notes so I can refer back
to point 3A.

But it’s always so eloquent.

I don’t mind.

Anyway, she says something all the time to
people that I have never said to anyone.

Somebody will be telling a story.

This happened last week.

She said last week to somebody…

They were starting to tell a story.

I’m yawning.

I look interested, but I have an inner yawn.

I’m thinking the more I nod, the faster they’ll
do this.

She goes, “Oh, this is a great story.

Please tell me everything, and don’t leave
out any details.”

“Shut up!”

When it said Peter told the whole story, I
thought about Holly.

I thought about the whole story, all of the
details.

Sometimes you let doubt cut you off in the
middle of a sentence God is speaking in your

life.

So be careful about the short story.

Be careful when people try to summarize your
life into a neat little category.

Be careful when you tell yourself a story
like that’s all there is.

That’s not all there is.

There’s more to the story.

There’s a hole in your story right now, and
I wonder what you’re going to fill it with.

When Peter went down to preach to Cornelius,
he went down to tell him the good news about

Jesus Christ.

When he recounted it to the circumcised believers
in Jerusalem, he left one part out.

Let me show you what he left out of his story.

He left out the sermon he preached while he
was there.

I want to show you just one thing before I
sit down and put this mic up and send you

home happy.

I want to show you why some of you are stuck
in a part of your story that was never intended

to be the end.

When Peter got up to preach to Cornelius,
in Acts 10:39 he said something about Jesus

that “We are all witnesses…”

“I saw it.

I know what you heard.

I saw it.

I was there.

I saw him save me.

I saw him pay the price for my sins.

I saw him shed his blood.

I saw him with the lashes on his back.

I saw him as a sheep before the shearer, and
he didn’t say a word.

I saw it for myself.”

“We are witnesses of everything he did in
the country of the Jews and in Jerusalem.

They killed him.

They hung him on a cross [comma]…”

The word of the Lord for you today, my brother,
my sister: don’t stop at the comma.

The next verse says, “…but God…”

I love those two words like I love the breath
in my lungs.

“But God…”

We were trespassers.

We had broken his law.

We did not deserve mercy.

Somebody shout, “But God…”

If you stop at the comma, you’ll never get
to see the but.

God was raising him from the dead by the time
the story started to spread.

Resurrection is possible when you realize
he didn’t stay on the cross.

When they nailed him on the tree, they put
a nail in his hands, but early one Sunday,

he showed Thomas something.

“Put your finger where the nails were.”

There’s a hole in your story.

This is the gospel of Jesus Christ!

There’s a hole in your story.

Follow me down to the garden tomb where they
laid his body in a cave.

His body is not there.

He is risen!

There’s a hole in your story, and the best
is yet to come!

He who began a good work in you will be faithful
to complete it!

If you believe it, give him a shout right
now