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♪ theme music ♪
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(Derek) Welcome to Hope Sabbath School,
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an in-depth, interactive study
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of the Word of God.
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We're in the middle of a series,
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God's Mission - My Mission,
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seeing the heart of God
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to bring a revelation of His love
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to everyone on planet Earth
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and save as many as possible,
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as many as will believe
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in His grace and mercy.
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Our topic today, well, we're looking
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at an ancient prophet named Jonah
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and Excuses to Avoid Mission.
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That's not to give you ideas,
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but to see how we can make it
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past those excuses.
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So, welcome to Hope Sabbath School
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and welcome to the team.
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Good to be together again.
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Take a look at each other there.
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You look like the whole world,
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and that's what Hope Sabbath School
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is about, isn't it, every nation,
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kindred, tongue and people coming together
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to study the Word of God.
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We've got some team members
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joining us remotely.
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Sabina, great to have you back with us,
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glad you're here today.
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Leeah, good to see you again.
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And Hope, good to see you, Hope.
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We're glad you're here
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for Hope Sabbath School today.
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And we've got emails
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from a few people around the world,
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and can I ask you to write to us:
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sshope@hopetv.org.
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Share with us how you're blessed.
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You can even send us a digital picture
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of your family, maybe a study group
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that you're leading.
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We want to see how God is blessing you
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through a study of His Word.
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Here's a note from Virginia
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in the United States of America.
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Denise writes and says, "I've wanted
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to send you a message for a while,
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so while watching Hope Sabbath School
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this Friday evening,
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it seemed like a perfect time.
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I've so enjoyed the different teachers
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on Hope Sabbath School."
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Well, I happen to be teaching today,
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but there are quite a few teachers
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even in our group today.
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"I have to admit, it's taken a while
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for me to get used to the new set..."
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Well, you're right; we used a set
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for about 10 years until it
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started falling apart,
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and we have an amazing new set.
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"...took a while, but I think it was
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probably time for an update," said Denise.
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I think the people that moved
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the old set around would agree with you.
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"Hope Channel has
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always had beautiful sets
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and such professional filming
and programming.
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I consider it an honor to help
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in a small way with electronic giving.
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May God continue to lead
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and guide you all."
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Well, Denise, thanks for writing
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to us from Virginia
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here in the United States of America.
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Well, across the ocean, in Zambia,
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Letty writes, and she says,
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"Greetings, Hope Sabbath School family,"
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we gave Letty the wave; she says,
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"and the whole Hope Sabbath School family
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around the world
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and the entire production team."
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So, we want to wave to them, too.
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"The study of the Bible
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has been a huge blessing in my life.
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I put it upon myself to download
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the weekly programs and to share them
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on many platforms with my friends,
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family and the entire church!"
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(Team) Amen!
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(Derek) What do we call that?
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That's joining God in His mission, right?
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That's what this series is all about.
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"If it will ever be possible,"
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writes Letty from Zambia,
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"I would love to be part of the team.
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May God bless your ministry.
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Pray for me as I also pray for you."
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Well, I want to tell you, Letty,
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and I know the team agrees,
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you are part of the team, right?
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You're doing, there in Zambia,
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what we can't do in this country
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for your people.
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Thank you for writing to us.
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Here's a note from a donor couple
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in Jamaica, and they write and say,
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"Christian greetings
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from the beautiful island of Jamaica.
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My husband and I are pensioners,"
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that means that they are on retirement,
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"but we're thankful to the Lord
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for the work He has done
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raising up Hope Channel around the world.
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We are positive that many souls
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are being blessed daily
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by the various programs,
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especially Hope Sabbath School."
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Wow, that's why they wrote to us.
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"Thank you for your commitment
and dedication.
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Enclosed is a contribution
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toward the evangelistic outreach,"
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that's why we exist, right?
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"May the Lord continue to bless
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Hope Channel and the leaders
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as you continue to allow the Holy Spirit
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to use you for God's honor
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and glory. Amen."
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(Team) Amen.
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(Derek) And a donation of 100 dollars
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to bless the ministry.
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Thank you, Jamaica, for being part
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of the great miracle,
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and thank you to each one of you
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who say, "I want to be part."
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Maybe you've been thinking about it.
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You can go to our website,
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hopetv.org/hopess.
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Some of you watch the program there.
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Click on the Donate button
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and say, "Dear Lord, bless
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the global evangelistic media ministry
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of Hope Sabbath School."
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One last note, I don't remember
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the last time we got an email from Cuba,
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not the first time, I know, but...
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"Hello, Hope Sabbath School team,"
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writes Adiel from Cuba.
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"I've been watching your progam,
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and I'm glad God is using you
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for the precious work
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of sharing His message.
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God bless you; Jesus is coming soon."
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(Team) Amen.
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(Derek) Well, Adiel, thanks for writing
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to us from Cuba.
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Doesn't it encourage you
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to hear from all these different parts
of the world?
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It really is amazing.
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We realize that many are listening
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in a second language,
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which is why, those of you
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who are watching from around the world,
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we try to speak slowly and clearly
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because we want to thank you
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for listening to us in maybe a language
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that may be your second or third language.
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But, the Holy Spirit helps us, doesn't He,
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as we study the Word together.
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Well, right now we need your help
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to sing our theme song.
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It's a 3,000-year-old Scripture song.
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My wife put a new tune to it;
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it's kind of a happy tune,
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and it speaks about mission,
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because it says in Psalm 9,
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verses 1 and 2, "I will praise You,
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O Lord, with my whole heart;
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I will tell of all Your marvelous works."
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We join God in His mission.
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Let's sing it together.
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♪ music ♪
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(Derek) Well, we're going to study today
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about a prophet who didn't want
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to tell of all God's marvelous works.
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In fact, he wasn't glad and rejoicing
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in the Lord either,
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but I think there'll be some lessons
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that will help us
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to join God in His mission.
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Let's sing our song together again.
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♪ music ♪
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(Derek) Amen. Let's pray together.
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Father in Heaven, what a privilege it is,
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not only to praise You
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with our whole hearts
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for You are worthy of our praise,
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but also to tell
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of all Your marvelous works,
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to join You in Your mission to share
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Your immeasurable, unfailing love
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with the world.
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Today, as we look
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at an ancient prophet, Jonah,
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and excuses for mission,
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I pray that You would help us
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to find freedom from those things
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that hinder us from being the witnesses
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that You've called us to be for You.
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I thank You in the name of Jesus. Amen.
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(Team) Amen.
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(Derek) Well, we're considering Jonah,
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and we'll learn about him primarily
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in the book that bears his name,
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the book of Jonah.
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It's a small book near the end
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of the Hebrew Scriptures.
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I was in the city of Joppa just recently,
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and several important things
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happened in Joppa.
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One of them was someone was raised
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from the dead by the power of Jesus' name.
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Do you remember who that was?
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It was Dorcas, raised to life in Joppa.
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What else happened?
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Well, Peter had a vision in Joppa
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that he should not call any person unclean
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when a message came
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from a centurion, you remember?
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But, perhaps Joppa is best known as being
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a place where Jonah went
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to try to run away from God.
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And we're going to consider
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the excuses he made and the excuses
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some others may make to avoid mission,
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but hopefully we can get past them.
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We might even identify some excuses
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that we have made in the past
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or may still make.
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So, Jonah, chapter 1, Samuel, if you
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could begin our study today in Jonah,
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chapter 1, and read for us
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the first three verses.
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(Samuel) I'm reading
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from the English Standard Version,
and it reads:
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(Derek) Now what do we know
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about the Ninevites, the Assyrian Empire?
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What did Jonah probably know
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about them, too?
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Well, if we just had these verses,
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what do we know?
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The Lord says something; what do we know?
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(Team) Wicked.
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(Derek) They were wicked, right.
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So, even if we didn't have any details,
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we would say they were very wicked.
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But, Sabina, I'm going to ask you
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to find another little book;
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it's right there in the Minor Prophets
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after the book of Jonah,
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Micah, and then Nahum.
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Some of these little books
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are hard to find, but Nahum,
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chapter 1 and verse 1,
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and then I'll have you read
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chapter 3, verses 1 to 4.
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We learn a little more about Nineveh.
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(Sabina) Okay, so I'll be reading
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from the New International Version
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and Nahum, verse 1, says:
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And then chapter 3, verses 1 to 4 say:
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(Derek) What do you think about this city?
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One of the excuses that someone might make
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and perhaps one of the motivations
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for Jonah to say, "Let me get a boat
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anywhere in the other direction,"
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is because of...? Fear, right?
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I mean, these were a fearful people,
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but if Jonah had remembered something
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of the Lord's work, it might have
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helped him to find freedom from his fears.
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Let's go back to 2 Kings, chapter 19,
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and, Travis, would you be willing to read
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for us 2 Kings 19, verses 32 to 37?
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Sometimes when we
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are tempted to be afraid,
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we need to remember what God has done.
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(Travis) And I'll be reading
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from the New King James Version:
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(Derek) Some of us are very happy
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that you read that text; there were a lot
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of difficult names there, thank you.
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You can go - and I was
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in Israel just recently - and you can see
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reliefs in museums of devastation
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that the Assyrians brought,
even in Israel.
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But, the Lord delivered His people
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there in Jerusalem.
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So, if that memory was there,
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why would the prophet Jonah be so fearful?
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What do you think?
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Leeah, what do you think?
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He knew how God had delivered in the past.
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(Leeah) The Assyrian Kingdom
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continues to resurface, so I think
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there was probably the fear
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that, "Well, why did they come back?
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if God struck them down once,
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why do they keep coming back?"
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There's a lot of fear that comes
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when something kind of "rears
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its ugly head," as we say.
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(Derek) Okay, good point.
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In other words, maybe they're
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coming back for revenge.
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"God delivered us in the past,
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but can we be certain
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that He will deliver again?
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I'm actually going to them now."
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What do you think, Jason?
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(Jason) It can be a combination of fear
and also feeling like they don't
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deserve it because they're so wicked.
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(Derek) We're going to come
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to the "don't deserve it" in a minute,
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but the fear thing would be what?
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You've been in the military, right?
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You hear about these people.
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And you won one battle by the Lord.
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(Jason) Yeah, it gets to be overwhelming
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because of the things you heard
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and feeling like, "I can't do this,"
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feeling inadequate, in that sense.
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(Derek) Nancy.
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(Nancy) I would say there is one of him
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against a whole city, but he's forgetting
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that he's with God,
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and with God on our side...
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(Derek) I mean Sabina read
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that description in Nahum; it was
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pretty overwhelming, wasn't it? Travis?
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(Travis) So, I think if we're
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going to be hard on Jonah,
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we're going to have to be hard on Elijah,
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the same who slew all the prophets of Baal
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and then runs from a queen.
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So, we could be hard on Jonah,
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but there are other prophets.
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I mean, Elijah, he was
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quite a prophet of God,
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and he was afraid of Jezebel.
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(Derek) So, maybe there are times...
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I see your hand raised.
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Because that same Elijah
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would stretch his body
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over a lifeless child,
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and he would be raised to life, right?
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And yet, he does run from Jezebel.
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And yet, later God deals with Jezebel.
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I mean, there's nothing
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too hard for God, right?
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But, you're saying one time
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we might feel strong
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and other times overwhelmed by fear?
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(Stephanie) I think the difference is,
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is where I'm placing my eyes -
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on evidence that God exists,
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and He's led me so far,
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or on what I can see presently,
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which can change in an instant
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when God's in it.
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(Derek) I'm remembering a quotation.
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Lots of hands raised, this is great.
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But, I remember, "We have nothing
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to fear for the future
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except as we shall forget
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the way the Lord has led us
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and His teaching in our past history."
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So, maybe in that moment -
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you talk about focus - we shift our focus
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even though the evidence
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is still there, right?
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Now, a couple more, and then I want
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to ask is there...Travis, you said,
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let's not be too hard on him.
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Can you think of a time when fear
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got the best of you
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in a challenging mission assignment? John.
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(John) Going back to the quote
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that you just recited,
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Jonah must have forgotten
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about the stories of how God
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delivered them from the Assyrians.
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And also, Jonah must have
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thought to himself, I mean God did it,
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even if he had remembered
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God did it before,
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would He do that again?
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And at times in our own lives,
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we think like that, "Okay, yes, God
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gave me that victory back then
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in reaching this person,
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but would He do that again?
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And so, those are some reasons
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that could be why Jonah was fearful.
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(Derek) We're going to have to give
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a testimony time, honest time.
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Some of you have been
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in difficult places on mission trips
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or long-term assignments; Sabina, you're
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in a long-term ministry assignment.
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Can anybody think of a time
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when you felt fear
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kind of well up, like, "Whoa!"
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Adison, you're nodding and smiling.
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(Adison) When I was 13 years old,
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so this was way back now,
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I remember sharing with a group
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of about 50 to 60 people from the public
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about the sanctuary message,
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about Exodus 25 and that important topic,
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and it was one of my first times
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I had ever spoken publicly.
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And I remember human emotion
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taking over in that moment,
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and it was like a paralysis.
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I was just paralyzed with fear.
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And, you know, 13 years old,
there is still...
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Anyway, I love this story about Jonah;
it reminds me of that.
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(Derek) And you weren't
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in Papua New Guinea, you were...
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(Adison) No, I was home.
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Yes, I was on Vancouver Island in Canada.
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(Derek) Sometimes fear
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might come for different reasons,
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but you felt that.
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Anybody else can think of a time? John?
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(John) I'll leave the country unnamed,
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but I was in a certain country
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going door to door
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giving out Christian literature
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and praying with them.
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And soon there were
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some certain other religious extremists
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who came, and they took us
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to the police station.
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And during that time, my friends and I
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were quite fearful as to what was
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going to happen next.
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But, the Lord amazingly delivered
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by sending some other people
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who came to the rescue.
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(Derek) But the fear came?
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(John) Yes.
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(Derek) Sabina, you think of a time.
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(Sabina) Yes, I think that one
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of the times where I felt the most fearful
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was actually when God invited me
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to leave my job, back in the day,
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to go into fulltime ministry.
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And for me, it was
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a very challenging request from God
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because I had lots of uncertainties
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about my future, you know,
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how He would provide for me,
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what ministry would look like for me.
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And it took me maybe about half a year
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to take a step further than He
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had already impressed upon my heart,
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even though I had, like, a strong sense
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of calling since I was a teenager.
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It was at 28 only that I sensed that He
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was directly indicating my next move.
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And for me to respond to this move,
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it took me, as I said,
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more than half a year.
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I asked for some evidence from God,
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and I really had a hard time trusting
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that He was the One
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who was speaking to me.
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So, I eventually responded,
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but I was quite fearful at the time.
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I was quite fearful
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of my family's judgment.
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I was quite fearful of not having enough
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to provide for myself in the future.
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I was quite fearful
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of where all this would end.
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And, you know, I'm thankful;
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now 10 years almost have gone by,
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and God is good.
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(Derek) So, I guess one thing,
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and then we're going to move on
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to another excuse
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after just a moment here.
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We ought to be sympathetic, compassionate
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toward people who may wrestle
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with some fears, because we've
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also wrestled with fears, right?
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So, we're not judging Jonah
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or anyone else, but we're saying
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how do we make it past the fear?
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And that's my final question for us
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before we move to the second excuse.
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Fears will come, right?
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How do I make it past that fear
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if it's clear that God has
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given me a mission?
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God has asked me to do something. Nancy?
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(Nancy) We have to remember
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what we're dealing with,
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the Great Controversy between good
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and evil in the universe is real.
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And so, when we remember what it's about
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and whose side we're on,
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it will give us courage.
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I wanted to mention that one situation
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in which we may feel fearful
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is when we're among peers that have
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the same head knowledge about God
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but perhaps not the same heart knowledge
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and the heart experience.
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And so, we may feel like, "Well,
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it's not cool," maybe, "to stand out
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and be bold for God."
-
But when we really understand
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what's happening and what is at stake
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and who's on our side,
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then we will be bold.
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(Derek) I'm going to ask Hope,
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because Hope you're, today,
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the youngest member of our team.
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I know you've done ministry; you've had
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a youth prayer group that you lead,
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were there ever times
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that you felt fearful,
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and if so, how did you make it past that?
-
(Hope) One time that comes
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to my mind for sure is when I was
-
doing some canvassing, and that is
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selling Christian books door to door.
-
And I was in a neighborhood that was
-
a little bit lower class, and I remember
-
feeling so afraid, and I actually called
-
my leader, and I was just like,
-
"I can't do this."
-
And I remember I just had
-
to hold onto the Bible promises,
-
and that was the only thing
-
that could get me through that.
-
And one verse that actually sticks out
-
in my mind is Psalm 34:4, and it says,
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"I sought the Lord, and He heard me,
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and delivered me from all my fears."
-
And, when we seek God in our fear,
-
not waiting until after we've freaked out
-
and then coming to Him, but seeking Him
-
while we're afraid, I think that's
-
something that's really important,
-
just keeping that connection with Him,
-
because He is the only One
-
who can free us from our fears.
-
(Derek) Thank you so much.
-
Wow, that's one
-
of my wife's Scripture songs,
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"I sought the Lord, and He heard me,
-
and delivered me."
-
So, how do I find freedom from my fears?
-
The answer is not by trying harder, right?
-
God is the One who can deliver us
-
from all our fears. Samuel?
-
(Samuel) Here in the Scriptures
-
that we read, a couple of times
-
the Bible mentions, "He went away
-
from the presence of the Lord."
-
And when we go away
-
from the presence of the Lord,
-
that's when fear creeps in.
-
But, we must continue to stay
-
in the presence of the Lord
-
through faith in Him,
-
that He who has called us
-
will carry us through. for me.
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(Derek) And maybe not
-
that fear crept in, but fear was
-
increased, right, exponentially increased.
-
The fear was there.
-
Hope is saying when you feel the fear,
-
run to God rather than away from Him;
He is the One.
-
If we run away, the fear
-
just increases, right,
-
and becomes overwhelming.
-
We've got to move to a second.
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I just want us to know then, if someone
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says, "Well, I've been asked
-
to do this, but I'm afraid," that we
-
would come with compassion, right?
-
And maybe even a testimony,
-
like we just heard from Hope.
-
You know, "Hey, I felt that it was real.
-
I checked with my leader,
-
but I also remembered the Word
-
that God had hidden in my heart
-
in Psalm 34 and verse 4."
-
A second excuse that we see or discover
-
in the story of Jonah is the idea,
-
an excuse that, "God, You're saying
-
these people need to hear,
-
but I don't think those people
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deserve to hear that good news,"
-
whether it's a certain neighborhood
-
or a certain country
-
or a certain socioeconomic level.
-
And by the way, there are people who think
-
that the homeless don't deserve it,
-
but there are also people who think
-
the rich don't deserve it.
-
We have all of these different ideas.
-
Let's take a look at Jonah
-
and see if we can learn something
-
about his attitude
-
and actually his faulty view of God.
-
Jonah, chapter 1, I'd like to go
-
back to verse 3, Kylynda,
-
if you would read that.
-
We heard it at the beginning,
-
but what faulty view of God
-
do you hear in this text?
-
(Kylynda) Verse 3, I'm going to be reading
-
from the New King James Version:
-
(Derek) So, help me, someone.
-
You're smiling, Stephanie.
-
What faulty view of God
-
is in that narrative?
-
(Stephanie) The belief that you
-
can go away from God; you can run away
-
and He won't see you.
-
(Derek) You remember the Psalm of David
-
where he says, "Where can I..."?
-
"...go from Your Spirit?
-
Or where can I flee from Your presence?
-
If I ascend to heaven...
-
or farthest parts of the sea..."
-
So, there is a faulty view
-
of God there, isn't there?
-
We've got to move to the next verse.
-
Leeah, if you would read for us
-
in the same chapter, 1, verse 12,
-
let's see another faulty view of God.
-
Listen carefully, because the faulty view
-
of God will distort our idea
-
about whether people
-
deserve His grace or not.
-
(Leeah) I'll be reading
-
from the English Standard Version,
-
Jonah, chapter 1, verse 12:
-
(Derek) What's faulty there?
Anybody? Jason?
-
(Jason) That God desires,
-
like, a sacrifice, like throw himself?
-
But, we know the Bible says
-
a contrite heart, a broken heart
-
is what God wants, not a sacrifice.
-
(Derek) Right, so there's
-
this distorted view of God
-
that somehow, "If you throw me in,
-
God will somehow be happy."
-
What would bring joy to God
-
is to obey the mission assignment, right,
-
not to throw him into the sea.
-
Well, let's go on to chapter 3
-
and verse 4 now, when he finally,
-
and you know the story.
-
He's thrown overboard.
-
God prepares a great fish,
-
and I don't know how that happened.
-
You say, "That's not normal."
-
You're right; that was a miracle.
-
"Submarine" catches him,
-
an aqua-submarine, and then vomits him
-
up on the beach, and God says,
-
"I haven't changed my mission plan,
-
which is to show My love
-
to the people of Nineveh,
-
and I want you to go."
-
What do you see in chapter 3 and verse 4?
-
John, would you read that verse for us?
-
Jonah 3 and verse 4,
-
and what's missing there?
-
(John) Jonah, chapter 3 and verse 4,
-
from the English Standard Version:
it says:
-
(Derek) What's missing
-
in this picture, folks? Adison?
-
(Adison) Grace, redemption.
-
(Derek) Yeah, "Repent," right,
-
"for the Kingdom of God," you remember
-
what John the Baptist said, right?
-
There's both a word of judgment,
-
if you will, but also we need
-
a word of...? Grace.
-
Why doesn't Jonah say, "If you
-
don't repent, this will happen in 40 days,
-
but if you repent, God is
-
abundant in mercy and kindness
-
to all those who call upon Him"?
-
Why, why doesn't he say that? Samuel?
-
(Samuel) I think the excuse is
-
he doesn't want them to repent.
-
He doesn't want them to be saved.
-
He doesn't want them to have salvation.
-
(Derek) He has this thought
-
that maybe God is more generous
-
and more compassionate than he is, right?
-
But, you're right, he doesn't
-
want them to be saved.
-
So, these distorted pictures.
-
Well, it gets even worse,
-
and I'm going to ask Adison
-
if you'd read Jonah 3, verse 10,
-
and chapter 4 through verse 4.
-
It's kind of startling, because this is
-
from a prophet of God.
-
Let's see what he says.
-
(Adison) And I'm reading
-
from the King James Version, verse 10:
-
(Derek) This is one
-
of the most successful
evangelistic meetings
-
in the history of the planet.
-
It's not a very good sermon, right?
-
But the Holy Spirit works,
-
which is how any life is changed,
-
and a whole city repents!
-
And Jonah is what?
-
(Team) Exceedingly angry.
-
(Derek) Exceedingly angry.
-
I'm not going to ask you if you were God
-
how you would treat that prophet,
-
because fortunately God was
-
as merciful and gracious as Jonah thought;
-
otherwise, he could have lost
-
his life right there. John?
-
(John) In some ways, I almost think
-
that, yes, God was trying to reach
-
the city of Nineveh,
-
but in bringing Jonah into this mission,
-
He's also trying to reach Jonah
-
and to show that mercy and compassion.
-
(Derek) So, faulty view of God
-
or certainly a faulty view of salvation,
-
how could that get in the way for us
-
in our mission today? Kylynda?
-
(Kylynda) I think we all have biases,
-
and it's unavoidable, but sometimes we
-
want to project these same biases to God.
-
We want God to agree with us
-
that some people are better than others,
-
or we can treat people in some way
-
and treat other people in a different way.
-
And we have to learn to say, "God,
-
how should I look at the world
-
through Your views?"
-
whether it's intentional
-
in the case of Jonah
-
or even unintentionally, "Please save me
-
from looking at other people
-
through biases that I've
-
built up in my life."
-
(Derek) Can anybody think
-
of someone that you met,
-
Sabina, I see your hand there,
-
can you think of someone that you met
-
that your first impression was,
-
"There is no way that God
-
could save that person"?
-
Think about that. Sabina?
-
(Sabina) There have been people
-
I've encountered in ministry
-
and in life in general that I found
-
very rooted in ideas or ways
-
that definitely were not pleasing to God,
-
but I've personally have not thought
-
that they were unworthy.
-
But, I have found people
-
that have thoughts just as you are saying,
-
like their ideas about salvation
-
are rooted, not in God's grace,
-
but in an understanding
-
that maybe through their works
-
they are going to achieve salvation,
-
and that they, because they believe so,
-
don't think they are worthy
-
of receiving God's grace.
-
So, that's also possible, right,
-
not only what we think about other people,
-
but what we think about God's salvation
-
may hinder us from coming to Jesus, right?
-
(Derek) I remember one time I was
-
speaking in Brazil, in Rio de Janeiro,
-
and I was speaking in a church.
-
And there was a young man,
-
and he was a strong young man.
-
He looked like a bodybuilder,
-
and he had tattoos over almost all
-
of his body that I could see.
-
And a first impression would be,
-
"Why is he even here?"
-
But, as he listened to the Word of God,
-
he was leaning forward, focusing,
-
and when an invitation was given,
-
this young man got up and walked forward!
-
(Team) Amen.
-
(Derek) But sometimes, as Kylynda said,
-
we may have biases.
-
We say, "Well, that wealthy businesswoman
-
is not going to be interested."
-
"That homeless teenager
-
is not going to be interested."
-
But the question is, rather,
-
is God interested in them?! Samuel?
-
(Samuel) There are two ways that I think
-
faulty views can hinder us from mission.
-
One view is that there is this notion
-
that God doesn't destroy,
-
and that everyone
-
will be saved at the end.
-
So, if everyone is going to be saved,
-
why do I need to go
-
and share God's mission?
-
On the opposite extreme is this view
-
that God has already chosen some
-
to be saved and some to be lost.
-
So, if God has chosen some to be saved,
-
why do I go bother
-
and share God's mission?
-
So, these are some views
-
that exist in the world, very much so,
-
faulty views that can hinder
from sharing God's mission.
-
(Derek) The Word of God challenges that
-
when it says, "Today, if you
-
hear His voice, don't harden
-
your heart," right?
-
There is a choice that we make. Jason?
-
(Jason) And also, we could tend
-
to lean into the point
-
of, "It's not my job to do it;
-
maybe someone else will come along
-
and witness to them," you know,
-
and kind of free yourself up
-
from trying to do that mission,
-
even though God has called you to do it.
-
(Derek) We'll come to that
-
as another excuse in just a minute.
-
That's good; you're moving forward.
-
First excuse is...? "I'm afraid."
-
And we've all been there,
-
and let's be compassionate
-
if someone is struggling.
-
Second excuse is...?
-
"They don't deserve it,"
-
because of my faulty view of God.
-
Even though in the back of his mind
-
he knew better, didn't he?
-
But there is a third excuse that I think
-
Jonah could definitely have thought about,
-
and that is, "That is
-
way too difficult for me."
-
Someone mentioned, "There's one of me,
-
and there's that great city,
-
and You're expecting me to go
-
into the midst of that city
-
that Nahum describes as full of blood,
-
corpses stacked up?
-
Way too difficult for me."
-
Think about a mission assignment
-
God may give to you, a difficult one.
-
Just imagine it; it may be inner city,
-
it may be a foreign country,
-
it may be the other side of the world.
-
What are some excuses
-
that you might come up with?
-
I'm going to ask Hope to start with that,
-
and God's going to...
-
I know, Hope, you're thinking
-
about getting some mission training,
-
but then God throws you,
-
let's say He throws you to Mongolia, okay?
-
Mongolia. What are some things
-
that might cause you, Hope, to say,
-
"That's too difficult for me"?
-
(Hope) I don't know the language.
-
I don't know the culture.
-
I don't know anything
-
about any of the people.
-
(Derek) Yeah, so I've got two right away.
-
I don't speak Mongolian, and I
-
don't understand the culture, alright?
-
Are those valid concerns?
-
(Team) Yes.
-
(Derek) Is it too difficult?
-
(Stephanie) Not for God.
-
(Derek) It depends how I'm looking, right?
-
I might have to say, and we've had one
-
of our team members
-
just recently learn another language.
-
I don't even know what it looks like,
-
but someone just learned
-
the Albanian language, right?
-
But, I could say, "That's too difficult
-
for me, a language/culture."
-
What else might cause me to say,
-
"Oh, send somebody else"?
-
You said, "Send someone else," right?
-
What other...we'd like
-
to call them reasons, right,
-
but if God's calling us,
-
all of His biddings are enabling,
-
so He's going to do.
-
But from a human perspective,
-
what else, John?
-
(John) It's not safe for me or my family.
-
(Derek) Yes! I mean, sending Hope
-
over to Mongolia without bodyguards,
-
you know, that's not safe.
-
Or, someone, I remember my wife and I
-
as a young couple got a call to go
-
to a part of the world
-
that they called "the white man's grave."
-
And I had the fear that I
-
would bury children there, right?
-
It may not be safe.
-
Sabina, you want to respond
-
to one of those three,
-
or is there something else
-
that we might go, "This is too difficult"?
-
(Sabina) I'm thinking of something else.
-
It relates to what is shared,
-
but it's something else,
-
like material deprivation, I think, is,
-
depending on where you are going,
-
how you are going,
-
really, you may not have
-
the same facilities or amenities
-
that you have in your home country, right,
-
or even you do, but you are going
-
to spend a life with less
-
than what you wished.
-
(Derek) So, I'm going to ask you
-
to share a testimony.
-
Travis, you've been
-
to a lot of different countries, right,
-
and I'm sure there were times
-
when some of these...
-
We'll call them reasons;
-
they become excuses if we what?
-
Finish the sentence:
-
They become excuses if we...?
Don't go, right?
-
But they may still be reasons,
-
right, is that right?
-
Don't know the language,
-
don't know the culture; it's not safe,
-
so those are reasons,
-
but we go anyway if we're focusing
-
on the Lord and how He's led in the past.
-
Can you think of a time when you go,
-
"This is difficult, too hard for me"?
-
(Travis) Well, Derek, it's interesting
-
you ask the question, because, as we're
-
going through this study,
-
I'm struggling internally,
-
because I've just been asked
-
to take on an orphanage in Bangladesh.
-
And I'm like, "Lord, I have
-
way too much going on
-
with other orphanages
-
and different things."
-
Like, I can't handle it.
-
(Derek) You shared with us
-
in a previous study that you
-
actually helped launch
-
a new orphanage in Malawi, right?
-
Started there, putting roofs on churches,
-
because your background
-
is in construction.
-
But your background
-
wasn't in running orphanages, right?
-
So, now here this...
-
What do you know about Bangladesh?
-
(Travis) I don't know anything
-
about Bangladesh; I don't know anything.
-
I started looking up the tickets,
-
and my wife says, "You have
-
so much going on!
-
Can you really handle this?"
-
And so, now I'm thinking, as we're
-
going through this study,
-
you know, I think about Martha
-
being distracted with much serving.
-
Is there a balance, because I
-
certainly would want to help
-
the orphanage in Bangladesh,
-
but at the same time,
-
can you have too much?
-
And that's what I'm struggling with now.
-
(Derek) What's the big question?
-
This is real, right? It's right now.
-
He's thinking about it during this study.
-
What is the big question I ask
-
when someone says, "I'd like you
-
to come and do this"?
-
What do you think?
-
(Kylynda) Has the Holy Spirit
-
called me to go?"
-
I think it's very hard,
-
because as I mentioned
-
we have internal biases,
-
but we also have internal thoughts
-
about what God might be saying.
-
It's really difficult to wisely discern
-
the voice of God.
-
You need prayer, you need Scripture,
-
and you need conversation
-
with other people that can help guide you.
-
(Derek) There's a lot of counsel
-
right there, isn't there?
-
Because, sometimes we might even have
-
like delusions of grandeur,
-
that I'm like the savior of the world.
-
And what I'm hearing Kylynda say is,
-
"Is this something the Holy Spirit
-
is impressing me to do?
-
Or, do I join with them in prayer
-
that God would bring someone
-
just as he brought someone to Malawi?"
-
Does that make sense?
-
Now, is it possible
-
God's asking Travis to do that?
-
(Team) Yes.
-
(Derek) But we don't know for sure, do we?
-
We have to listen.
-
Sabina, what are you thinking?
-
(Sabina) I believe that, in just going
-
with what Travis was sharing,
-
there needs to be an inner conviction
-
that comes from God
-
so that we can move forward.
-
But then, as we put the story of Jonah
-
in perspective, one could say,
-
"Oh, but Jonah was not convicted."
-
So, I would say there needs
-
to be an inner conviction based also
-
on what the Scripture is teaching.
-
So, if your reasons
-
for not being convicted are
-
going against Scripture's wisdom,
-
then maybe you should follow
-
Scripture's wisdom and respond to God.
-
But, maybe if the reasons that you are
-
not having that inner conviction
-
are aligned also with God's Word,
-
just as Travis was saying,
-
like, "Maybe I have too much on my plate.
-
Do I have enough resources now?
-
Am I the right person to do that?"
-
So, those are all valid questions
-
that we don't want to ignore as well.
-
(Derek) We've looked
-
at three main excuses,
-
and then Jason added a fourth one,
-
which I actually wrote down
-
as another excuse, but, fear.
-
And fear is real; there can be real things
-
not just imaginary fear, right, real fear.
-
"They don't deserve this," but that
-
really comes from a faulty view of God,
-
because from God's persepective,
-
how many people deserve salvation?
-
(Derek, Team) Everyone.
-
(Derek) Why are you saying
-
they don't deserve it?
-
"It's too difficult," that's real.
-
I look, I go, "I don't know the language,
-
the culture; it's not safe."
-
Another one Jason mentioned,
-
"Someone else could do it better."
-
Have you ever felt that way? Samuel?
-
(Samuel) Another excuse I think of,
-
particularly here in the story of Jonah,
-
is that Jonah was a Jew,
-
and the people of Nineveh were Gentiles.
-
And so, there is that racial tension,
-
which can often hinder us
-
from going into missions.
-
(Derek) And by the way, those Gentiles,
-
as you called them, from Assyria,
-
killed a lot of Jewish people.
-
They came and slaughtered and destroyed
-
a lot of cities, but that's
-
an interesting bias to this
-
that says, "I don't want them
-
to be saved," right?
-
As you've listened to the study,
-
and I'm going to start
-
with some of our remotes;
-
Leeah, I'm going to start
-
with you if that's okay.
-
I don't know the answer to the question,
-
but as you hear this story of Jonah,
-
we've looked at three or four excuses,
-
what do you feel in your heart
-
(and I'll give the rest of the team
-
time to share) is an excuse
-
that you might easily grab onto
-
that you need to just give to God?
-
Say, "God, I just need
-
to give that to You, because I do want
-
to join You in Your mission,
-
whatever that looks like."
-
(Leeah) In anything that God
-
has called me to in my life,
-
I have felt quite a measurable amount
-
of fear, and fear mainly for the unknown.
-
Like, we named so many reasons,
-
maybe I don't feel like I can afford it,
-
or I don't understand the culture,
-
or I don't understand the language.
-
But, all of these things can be denounced
-
when we go to God and when we say,
-
"This is my fear."
-
God understands that we're
-
going to have fear, and He
-
probably expects it, too,
-
because He knows that we're human.
-
But, like somebody said earlier,
-
I think in instances where He knows
-
we're going to be afraid, or like Jonah,
-
when He knows that we're going to resist,
-
maybe that call to mission is more for us
-
and for our heart change than it is
-
for the people that we're
-
actually going to witness to.
-
(Derek) Alright, so, just letting go
of that fear.
-
By the way, I received some healing
-
a few years ago where God
-
directly said to me, "Derek, I want
-
to deliver you from all your fears."
-
And I was anointed that day, by the way,
-
because I grew up with a lot of fears,
-
and some of them were
-
from my family of origin, a lot of fears.
-
So, I can relate to that.
-
Let's show some kindness to Jonah, right?
-
Anybody else, as you've looked
-
at this study, something you just feel...
-
Kylynda, is it the same or something else?
-
You just say, "God,
-
I want to give that to You.
-
I could easily grab onto that
-
and make it a reason when actually it
-
could be an excuse holding me back."
-
(Kylynda) Well briefly, several years ago,
-
I had the opportunity to work in a lab
-
in a different country.
-
So, I'm a scientist; it's my first day,
-
and I'm eating lunch
-
with my new colleagues, and they say,
-
"Well, what are you doing this weekend?"
-
And I thought, "Oh, you know,
-
maybe I shouldn't mention going to church
-
or Sabbath," because in science
-
it could be perceived that someone
-
who embraces faith
-
is not intelligent
-
or they're intolerant or bigoted,
-
or, you know, maybe it's not appropriate
-
in this culture to discuss religion,
-
so I said, "Nothing."
-
And then someone else came to the table,
-
another scientist, sat down,
-
not of my faith, and started
-
to pray for his food.
-
Everyone at the table went silent
-
until he finished, and then we all
-
started talking again.
-
And I think it was like a personal rebuke
-
to me because it wasn't
-
quite the same shade of fear.
-
I wasn't afraid that they
-
would hurt me or say things,
-
but pride and apathy, they play a role
-
in how people might perceive me.
-
And I want to ask God's forgiveness
-
and grace to say, "What do You
-
want me to do, and can I be open
-
to do that no matter the circumstance."
-
(Derek) And, we need to recognize
-
that there is a time
-
and place to share more.
-
Even Jesus said, "There are some things
-
I would share with you,
-
but you cannot bear them now."
-
So, we don't have
-
to share everything right away,
-
but you were feeling there,
-
you used the word rebuke,
-
or at least a loving reminder
-
from the Holy Spirit, "When I ask you
-
to do something, don't be afraid," right,
-
"Don't let that hold you back." Nancy.
-
(Nancy) Derek, I'd also like
-
to mention comfort.
-
Some of us don't want
-
to go off somewhere else
-
because we're comfortable.
-
We know God, we're happy in our church,
-
and maybe going off to another country
-
with our families, and the grandparents
-
won't get to be with the children,
-
you know, things like that.
-
But, Jesus says, if you can remind me
-
of where in Scripture, that sometimes we
are called to leave...
-
(Derek) Father and mother?
-
(Nancy) Yes, yes, and, "Great
-
will be our reward."
-
And so, yeah, I wanted to mention comfort.
-
(Derek) Comfort, right, because there
-
may be bedbugs there or snakes
-
that I don't like, or people
-
that I don't like.
-
There are lots of reasons.
-
We need to move to Isaiah,
-
and I'll give you a chance
-
to share at the end,
-
because Isaiah finds
-
his way past all excuses.
-
And, I think there's a clue,
-
and, Stephanie, if you could read for us
-
in the book that bears the prophet's name,
-
in Isaiah, chapter 6, verses 1 through 7,
-
I think there's a clue in this passage
-
as to how he abandons all excuses,
-
because verse 8 is a verse we'll read
-
after you've read 1 through 7.
-
(Stephanie) Alright, and I'll be reading
-
from the New King James Version:
-
(Derek) Now the first half of verse 8.
-
(Derek) So, there are lots of excuses
-
because he's going to be given
-
a difficult assignment,
-
but the second half of verse 8,
-
how does he respond?
-
(Derek) Whew! What was it
-
in the first seven verses?
-
There's something there, isn't there?
-
It makes sense from all the things
-
we've been studying.
-
What was it in the first seven verses
-
that gave him the courage
-
to abandon all excuses,
-
call them reasons, and say,
-
"Here am I, send me"? Adison?
-
(Adison) He had an experience with God.
-
He saw the glory of the Lord,
-
the character of God,
-
and that changed him
-
and moved upon his heart to say,
-
"Here I am, Lord, I want to serve You.
-
You are beautiful, amazing."
-
(Derek) That's one thing.
-
Stay with us now.
-
He saw the glory of the Lord.
-
He had a revelation
-
of the glory of the Lord.
-
What else? Samuel?
-
(Samuel) I think the verse
-
also talks about how your guilt
-
is taken away, and your sin atoned for.
-
(Derek) So something was
-
happening to him spiritually. What else?
-
(Nancy) Perspective.
-
(Derek) There was something else
-
really big that happened there
-
in those verses.
-
What was it? Yes, Kylynda?
-
(Kylynda) He was touched
-
by the fire from the altar.
-
(Derek) Something supernatural happens
-
when we abandon all of our excuses,
-
and it comes in the context
-
of that encounter
-
with the living God, right,
-
and the freedom from all of the shame
-
and guilt and sin and all of that.
-
Something supernatural happens
-
that enables us to say....Stephanie?
-
(Stephanie) Yes, he recognized who he was
-
in the presence of God.
-
He understood that he was a human being,
-
and he was in the presence
-
of the Almighty King.
-
(Derek) So, someone's watching today,
-
and you're saying, "I want to be the woman
-
of God/man of God,
-
join God in His mission,
-
but I've been...Honestly I
-
called them reasons,
-
but maybe they're excuses.
-
I need a revelation of the glory of God,
-
and I need something supernatural
-
to happen in me."
-
Is God able to do that?
-
I hope you're raising your hand
-
and saying, "Yes," because He is!
-
And He's done it;
-
it's recorded in Scripture.
-
People, I'm sure Mary, when she was told,
-
"The Holy Spirit will come upon you,"
-
she had to wrestle with fear,
-
"This is too difficult,"
-
but surrendering and trusting a loving God
-
to say, "God, here am I, send me."
-
Is that your prayer today?
-
I want to pray for you just now.
-
Father in Heaven, we didn't just come
-
to study today to rebuke people
-
for making excuses.
-
We came so we could see how easy it is
-
to have reasons not to go.
-
But, we've learned
-
that an encounter with You,
-
that, yes, Your supernatural blessing can
-
enable us to do whatever You ask us to do.
-
Today, we just want to say,
-
whatever that looks like in the mission,
-
Lord, we're available.
-
Here we are, please send us.
-
And when we see miracles,
-
we will give You all of the praise.
-
In Jesus' name. Amen.
-
Well, thanks for joining us
for Hope Sabbath School.
-
Go out and be a blessing
-
to those around you.
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♪ theme music ♪