In this message, Pastor Steven Furtick shows us what it looks like, not only to face a storm, but to keep our hope in the middle of it. In Acts 27, the apostle Paul’s boat was stuck in a storm so vicious that many of the men on board, “…finally gave up all hope of being saved.”
You have an appointment.
What happens in our hearts is that we get
disappointed.
We get disappointed in the way God does certain
things.
We get disappointed in the people who don’t
help us along the way, but just because you’re
disappointed in people, don’t jump off the
ship and drown in the sea.
Just because people let you down, don’t give
up on God who never will.
Just because you lost a job, don’t stop trusting
that God is your provider.
Jehovah-Jireh is still his name.
Jehovah-Ropheka.
He’s still a healer.
I’m still going to get there.
I’m still going to Rome.
I have an appointment!
Some of the stuff you’re going through right
now is getting you to the places you asked
God to take you, but you just don’t like how
you’re getting there.
We could preach a series on this.
How many want me to preach a whole series
on the appointment in the storm?
Did you know that you have an appointment
in the storm?
Paul knew something in the storm the other
people didn’t know.
What did he know?
How could you stand up and tell people after
they’ve been through 14 days of the tempest
and the billows and the lightning and the
thunder and the breakers…?
How can you tell them when the winds are blowing,
knocking you sideways, and Peter’s wig comes
flying off in the storm…?
How are you going to tell me in the storm
to stay with the ship when you already told
me it was going to break apart?
How could God call you to stay with something
that is breaking?
Yet it is staying with the breaking that produces
the blessing.
It’s breaking.
Not my boat; my heart.
My heart is breaking.
Did you know the place God promises to dwell,
not visit, is the broken and contrite heart?
What does that mean?
That means that when my heart is breaking
it is important that I abide in God’s love
so I can experience his presence in a greater
measure.
It may not be your boat that is broken today;
it may be your heart.
It may be your business.
It may be the number in your bank account
that is screaming, “You are broke.”
All right.
“I am broke.”
God is not.
This is how I want to preach to get people
through a storm.
Isn’t that what we’ve been saying, that we’re
in the same storm but we’re not in the same
boat?
You will remember that it is not what you
go through that determines where you end up.
Many people went through betrayal worse than
you went through, and they’re not bitter,
and you are.
Many people were disappointed more than you
were disappointed, yet they still have strong
faith, and you don’t.
Many people are struggling with their daily
needs more than you are, and they’re less
worried than you are about it.
It is not what I go through that determines
where I end up.
It’s not.
It’s who I listen to.
Paul said, “You should have taken my advice.
I told you.
I told you to stay in the harbor.”
They set out to go to Rome.
They got caught up in a storm.
They lost their course.
This is what happens.
Right?
You get blown off course.
“Oh no.
This was not on our GPS.”
Back in the day, we had TripTik from AAA.
“They didn’t put this on my TripTik.
This wasn’t on my itinerary.”
You get blown off course.
Then you start freaking out, and now you’re
like, “Oh my god!
I was going to retire in 12 years, but now
I see the situation.”
When you get blown off course, you have to
decide at that point, “Who will I listen to,
and what will I guide by?”
These are the questions you must answer in
this crisis of your life.
This is the heart of what God is asking today.
Who will you listen to, and what will you
guide by?
Paul said, “This is not a good time to sail,”
and they sailed anyway.
Paul said, “We ought to stay here in this
harbor for a little while.”
The reason they didn’t want to stay in the
harbor when Paul told them to stay was because,
it says, it was undesirable to winter there.
So rather than stay in a place they didn’t
like, they sailed into something that would
destroy them.
See, it’s not the first storm you have to
worry about.
The first storm is a storm you can’t control.
It started raining Friday here in Charlotte.
It looked like God got sick of everybody.
I was like, “Oh, the governor let off the
stay-at-home order, and at the same time this
storm comes out of nowhere.”
I’m like, “Lord, are you speaking?
I’ll stay inside.
I’m sorry, Lord!
I won’t go out anywhere.”
I didn’t know what to do.
Out of nowhere.
Storms are like that.
One text message can change the next three
years of your life in 80 characters…out
of nowhere.
That’s the first storm, the one you can’t
control.
You can’t do anything about crossing the current
in the stormy conditions.
Some storms are just seasonal.
Some storms can’t be avoided.
I mean, I can’t control what happens in China.
I can’t even control what somebody does in
Michigan.
I can’t control certain things, but God said
to tell you, “Don’t create a second storm
by your decisions.”
See, you can ask God to protect you in the
first storm.
“God, I don’t know what to do.
You do.
God, I can’t do anything about this.
You can.”
But what a lot of us have been doing in this
season of uncertainty…
We have been creating second storms that are
worse than the first.
Let me break this down all the way like I’m
cutting up some filet mignon where a 2-year-old
can eat it.
This is a good word for anybody who…
You’ve been dealing with depression, but you’ve
been drinking to get through it.
Now, depression is something that happens
to a lot of us.
I don’t know anybody who hasn’t had a season
of darkness in their life.
But if I try to drive out darkness with darkness
and I depend on something in the darkness
that is going to make me addicted to something
even when the light comes up, the second storm
is worse than the first.
I have to be really careful.
If my kids do something that makes me mad…
I said I wouldn’t preach a parenting sermon,
but here’s a little technique I’ve learned.
Don’t let your response be a bad example for
the behavior you’re trying to correct.
“Stop screaming!”
I think this is contradictory.
I think my kids are confused right now.
A lot of us are dealing with loneliness right
now in this season.
That’s a storm you can’t always control.
But if you run to places in the storm that
are more dangerous than the storm itself…
How many times have you left a place you didn’t
like?
Some of y’all left a church you didn’t like.
The problem is you can’t change if you never
stay.
Staying power.
Paul was a church planter.
Anything you plant is only as good as the
roots.
Starting power without staying power.
“Oh man.
I’m excited about this quarantine.
I’m going to have time to spend with the Lord
now.”
You and the Lord got lonely.
I don’t know who this is for, but I’m going
to say it because I feel like it’s by the
Spirit of God.
Don’t run to a relationship that is a compromise
of your character to solve loneliness.
The second storm might be worse than the first.
Don’t run to something because you’re lonely
that is ultimately going to put you in a condition
where you end up like the sailors in verse
20.
“We have no hope.”
See, what they were guiding by went away.
I don’t know if you saw this in verse 20.
I think this is where it gets tricky to steer.
As long as you have a reference point to know
what’s normal or what’s good or how much time…
These things really help in life.
In verse 20, I thought it was relevant to
our situation.
He said, “When neither sun nor stars appeared
for many days and the storm continued raging…”
The storm could rage and they could keep believing,
but when the stars disappeared they lost hope.
When what you were guiding by goes away and
every day just looks the same and feels the
same…
Now I get to feeling like this is endless.
Now I get to feeling like maybe these chains
are never going to break, this storm is never
going to cease.
They lost hope.
We know they lost hope because Luke says they
lost hope.
The only way Luke could know they lost hope
is they must have been saying, “There’s no
hope.”
I mean, come on.
It’s not like hope is something you can see
on someone’s forehead.
“How’s your hope?”
There’s no meter for that.
It’s not a video game.
You don’t have a little power bar.
They must have been saying, “It’s hopeless.”
They must have been saying that.
Paul stands up, and he decides that what you
go through doesn’t determine where you end
up.
Who you listen to determines where you end
up.
I think right now you are walking through
a valley between two voices.
One is wisdom; one is worry.
One is gratitude; one is grumbling.
One is blame; one is faith.
“Now, wait, Pastor Steve.
Wait, Pastor Stephen.
Wait a minute.
The opposite of faith is doubt.”
No, no, no.
Doubt doesn’t keep you from having faith.
Doubt gives you something to have faith for,
but blame will block faith every time.
Blame will always block faith.
Watch Paul shift.
He’s like, “Y’all should have listened to
me!
But if I blame you, I can’t trust God.
If I blame you, it is going to block me from
receiving what I need from God in this moment.
So, you should have listened to me.
We could have avoided this.”
How many know and will be honest to say, “There
are some storms I went through in my life
that I could have avoided”?
Come on.
Point your fingers up to the air like this.
“It could have been avoided.”
I mean, some of the things in my life I blamed
on the Devil were really a decision.
They both start with the letter D, but some
storms can be avoided.
Ask Jonah.
Ask Jonah if some storms can be avoided.
The only reason Jonah went through a storm
is he had an appointment.
God said, “I’d rather take you through a storm;
I’d rather take you through a hard time than
have you waste your life in the wrong place.
Now we have to get you there.
If I have to send a storm to get you there,
if I have to shut it down to get you there,
if I have to remove people and comfort to
get you there, you’re going to get there if
you listen to the right voice.”
Paul stood up and said, “I hear you talking
about how there’s no hope.”
I hear you talking about how it’s going to
get worse, and I hear you talking about how
it’s just this and it’s just that, and I hear
Democrats talking, and I hear Republicans
talking, and I hear people using this for
a political purpose.
“I hear all this, but let me tell you, I have
an appointment.
As a matter of fact, last night I had an appointment.
I didn’t see it on my calendar.
It was off the books.”
Paul said, “Last night an angel…”
I have an appointment with an angel.
I’ve got angels all around me, protecting
me and keeping me.
I’ve got angels on my side!
I’ve got glory out ahead!
I’ve got angels!
I’m here because my angel said.
You have an appointment with an angel, and
you have an angel telling you right now, “You’re
going to make it.
In fact, you’re going to be better.”
It’s all right.
I’ve got an angel!
Now who are you going to listen to?
Your angel or your enemy?
My angel said I’m going to make it.
My angel said I’m right on time.
My angel said it’s working for my…
I’ve got staying power!
I love what the angel said to Paul.
“You can’t die in this storm.
You have an appointment in Rome.
You have to stand trial before Caesar.
Can I give you the good news?
You’re not going to die in this trial.
Can I give you the bad news?
You’ve got a bigger one ahead.”
Greater things.
Bigger storms.
Better stories.
I’ve got an angel.
I’ve got an appointment.
So Paul is like, “Oh, I can’t die.”
Did you ever watch a TV show and you knew…?
I remember when we started watching that zombie
show back before that looked just like the
news.
The Walking Dead.
The trailer used to come on.
(Don’t send me a thing about the Word of God
and The Walking Dead.
It’s in the Bible, the walking dead.
Third day, Jesus Christ, Lazarus…it’s all
in there.
Same stuff.)
I saw the trailer, and I saw that the same
guy who was in the first episode was still
in it (because we watched it later) in the
current season, so it took some of the suspense
out of the first season, the second season,
the third season, the fourth season, the fifth
season.
Now, when you have a word from God concerning
your life…
And it could be simple.
He said he would never leave me nor forsake
me.
So if he’s going to stay with me, then whatever
happens in this storm…
I already saw season 6.
They can’t kill Rick.
It doesn’t matter how many Walkers.
They can’t kill him.
I saw the season finale!
I’ve got staying power!
I’ve got the Holy Ghost!
I wish we could high-five our neighbors, but
tell somebody, “I’m in the season finale.”
Staying power.
That’s what we’re celebrating today: not that
we avoided the storm but that we stayed
in the storm.