EYES ON YOU, II

In the face of fear, a person often thinks: "How can I possibly survive this?"  But a person who proclaims themselves to be a child of God, does not ask "How can I possibly survive this?"  They ask: "How could I possibly not?" For a child of God rests on the reassurance that is the character and quality and capability of God. Part 2 of this 2 part sermon places us squarely in 2 Chronicles 20, in the heat of a man named Jehoshaphat's trouble. 

Jehoshaphat was king over the kingdom of Judah... and that kingdom was surrounded. Enemies from several sectors were amassed against it; in both strength and number these enemies overpowered little Judah. The situation was so dire, the enemies so near to swarming, that Jehoshaphat had no choice but to be completely honest with himself, his kingdom and his God: "For we have no power against this great multitude that is coming against us; nor do we know what to do,..." 

From Jehoshaphat we learn that it is actually a strength to recognize when an enemy is too strong for you. It is actually wise to acknowledge that you do not know what to do. For it would be weak of Jehoshaphat to pretend or convince himself and others that he had the strength to succeed when he knew he did not; it would be foolish for Jehoshaphat to enter a battle when he knew he did not have a plan. So Jehoshaphat did the strong and wise thing and admitted in faith his weakness and ineptitude. He told God, "I do not know what to do... but my eyes are upon You. Let's speak that with the necessary emphases: I do not know what to do, but my eyes are on You.

There will be times in life when we do not know what to do, but if we know enough to look to God, we know enough. When from our perspective a situation is impossible, it is time adjust our stance, to look from the perspective of faith, not sight. For from the perspective of faith, all things are possible, Matthew 19:26. With our eyes on God, a path comes into focus, leading us through the battle and directly into Him.

  • HOW COULD I NOT?
It happened after this that the people of Moab with the people of Ammon, and others with them...came to battle against Jehoshaphat. Then some came and told Jehoshaphat, saying, “A great multitude is coming against you from beyond the sea... And Jehoshaphat feared, and set himself to seek the Lord, and proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah. So Judah gathered together to ask help from the Lord; and from all the cities of Judah they came to seek the Lord.
The first thing we need to do in the face of fear is remember the character of our God and that is precisely what Jehoshaphat, and the kingdom of Judah with him, did:
“O Lord God of our fathers, are You not God in heaven, and do You not rule over all the kingdoms of the nations, and in Your hand is there not power and might, so that no one is able to withstand You? Are You not our God, who drove out the inhabitants of this land before Your people Israel, and gave it to the descendants of Abraham Your friend forever?
Our enemy, whatever or whoever it is, will probably be strong... it might even be stronger than we are but it is definitely not stronger than God. It's power is not as strong as God's, nor is it as comprehensive. For God's reign is over the whole earth, and the full range and variety of forces in the world. Yet not only does God have power over all, He is incomparably skilled in that power. God has been driving His children's enemies away since the very first enemy sprouted.

If we are going to rely on God, we need to know those things. We need to be familiar with the battles and the ways He has already won. We can't put our faith in the three letter word "God", we need to put our faith in the actual spirit of God... and we cannot do that if we do not know Him. No matter how much we try, we cannot rely on someone we have not built a relationship with. We might be able to muster up some hope... but that will falter when the day becomes dark and road starts to incline. No, without a personal, intimate, authentic, steadfast, steadily built, relationship with God, we will not be able to rely on Him. Not because He is unreliable but because our faith would be.

When we build a relationship with God, we begin to understand and also experience His Hand in our lives. It is then not only easier, but also more productive, for us to ask ourselves  "In what way could we possibly lose?" when the One Who fights on our behalf cannot be defeated? Why waste time stressing about the several things that could go wrong when we have One firm promise that they will go right?

  • THE BATTLE IS NOT YOURS
"Position yourselves, stand still and see the salvation of the Lord, who is with you..."
Every time we flip an ounce of fear into faith, we divest our enemy of a weapon. Indeed we disarm them when we arm ourselves with faith. Jehoshaphat instructed the citizens of Judah to position their stance... not for a better position from which to fight, but a better vantage point from which to watch God fight on their behalf. All of Judah stood before the Lord in faith rather than cowering away from their situation in fear.

Therefore they had positioned themselves to be receptive to God's answer to their admission of weakness and prayer for help. They received the answer they needed to breathe again:
 "Do not be afraid nor dismayed because of this great multitude, for the battle is not yours, but God’s... You will not need to fight in this battle. Position yourselves, stand still and see the salvation of the Lord, who is with you, O Judah and Jerusalem!’ Do not fear or be dismayed; tomorrow go out against them, for the Lord is with you.”
How would we receive that beautiful answer, any answer, that peaceful reassurance if we do not stand before God in anticipation of it? Can such intimate conversation occur between two strangers? Two distant strangers? You can't call God if you don't know His phone number, so to speak. And if you haven't familiarized yourself with Him, you won't recognize His voice if He calls you. You probably won't even pick up the phone. 

All of that to say, the only way we truly would be able to stop worrying at God's command is if we truly trusted that what He says is true: that He is with us, that we need not fear, and that He will fight our battle.

But if we have developed a relationship with God... what an answer. What a blessing for God to take control. God stands in for us; He volunteers for trial by combat in order to free us from the sword. He is all at once comprehensively around us: beside us and fighting for us. And then He... always... wins. 

To be able to rely on God in such a situation as Jehoshaphat and Judah were in, surrounded by a stronger more savvy enemy, is the pinnacle of faith. You probably do not have several nations' armies marching against you... you're probably not a king. But your enemy is just as real, just as fierce. Your addiction, depression, your illness, your emotional or physical pain, your loneliness or confusion or hopelessness or whatever it is is just as real... and just as weak as any enemy we set before God.

  • THE VALLEY OF BERACHAH "BLESSING" 
Instead of crying in fear of the enemy, they sang in praise of the Lord. They praised before the victory because even though it had not happened yet, victory was ensured the moment God had spoken it. Faith is the tunnel through which we receive blessing and the landing pad on which it arrives. Believe in a big victory, receive one. The bigger our faith, the bigger our blessing because as we hand more and more over to God, more and more is subject to His will. And God's will for His children is blessing. He waits to be invited as an authority over the details of your life... so that the details of your life become subject to His strength and wisdom. God will not take our will away; but when we pray for His will to override our own, suddenly every detail is tailored for blessing.

God won that battle for Jehoshaphat and Judah. Not only were they not destroyed by it, they gained from it. Only God can so perfectly arrange for us to benefit from situations and people that plotted to harm us. With God on the battle field, we will always reap from it valuable things and lessons and opportunities we would have missed if we tried to fight on our own. That defeated army left behind all kinds of valuables which gladdened and reinforced the kingdom of Judah. They therefore named that place The Valley of Berachah, the valley of blessing

Indeed it was a blessed place. We stand in a blessed place, wherever we are, when we stand before God in faith. The strength of God on behalf of His children became known to the nations around them. Suddenly little Judah did not appear so weak, and neither will you. The kingdom became quiet with rest all around. They were at peace... not because they managed to outmaneuver their enemy but because God had. They kept their eyes on God instead of the enemy, instead of on the boisterous wind, and they resulted in victory.



In the midst of the battle, in the middle of a tumultuous sea, fix your eyes on God.

EYES ON YOU, I

Everybody wants to walk on water. Everybody wants to walk on water, but walking on water metaphorically, requires the same amount of extraordinary strength and coordination it would require literally. If we want to have the type of extraordinary blessings that "walking on water" implies, we need to build the spiritual muscle and coordination skills to do it. In part 1 of this 2-part sermon, we explore Matthew 8:23-27 and Matthew 14:22-33 to understand what it takes to walk on water into miraculous blessing.

  • WALKING ON WATER 
Immediately Jesus made His disciples get into the boat and go before Him to the other side, while He sent the multitudes away. And when He had sent the multitudes away, He went up on the mountain by Himself to pray. Now when evening came, He was alone there. But the boat was now in the middle of the sea, tossed by the waves, for the wind was contrary.
In the fourth watch of the night, water sloshed in darkness against the disciples' boat in the middle of the sea. Quietly, Jesus walked across those waters to meet them. When the disciples noticed the figure approach, they were astonished to the point of fear. They had never witnessed power so strong it could defy the laws of nature. 

Jesus announced His presence, but before they would allow themselves to be mollified, indeed before the fear would dissipate, Peter responded: "Lord, if it is You, command me to come to You on the water." For Peter knew from his recent and intensive course with Jesus that only He was capable of such power; if it was Jesus, Peter knew that he would be made able to walk on the water. Such an expression of faith it was! Peter knew that he could identify his Lord by the power He held. He knew that only Jesus was capable of answering affirmatively to impossible requests. Jesus answered simply: "Come." And Peter climbed down from the boat and began to walk on the water toward Jesus. 

Most of us make it to this stage of the desire to walk on water; that is, we all ask God to help us to do that seemingly impossible thing we have been praying and striving for. We are all willing to take that first step of simply asking. And it is not a small thing, that first step. Truly it is an accomplishment in faith to direct a prayer to God rather to some other thing. We could be asking any other source to help us, like the secular world does, but we have chosen to ask God. Unfortunately, most of us then make the same mistake Peter then made.

  • BOISTEROUS WIND
The faith was short lived... for when he noticed the wind was boisterous, Peter became afraid and then began to sink. Like Peter, we all put our first, faithful foot forward, but before the second foot lands, our faith falters. Instead of keeping his eyes on Jesus, Peter looked at the tumult the wind caused. He looked at the bobbing boat, the stirred up waters. He looked at the chaos and the chaos got its grip on him; suddenly he was wet, subject to the whim of the tumultuous wind. 

Why don't we realize that extraordinary blessing will require extraordinary faith? How can we expect to walk steadily toward a blessing if we are not walking steadfastly in faith? If we want to walk on water, we need to make that request to God; if we want to keep walking on water, we need to develop the faith to do it. As we work, wait, and pray toward blessing, we need to keep our eyes on God. We need to burrow deep in scripture in order to receive the guidance and reassurance, instruction and discipline from God required to obtain the blessing.

It's easy to become distracted by the boisterous wind. There are constant and fierce and fearsome distractions in life. We must choose to look at the Creator rather than the destroyer. Why should destruction hold our attention when our God's strength is mightier than its? Circumstances, relationships, opportunities and so much more in life might falter, fail or even end but with eyes on God, we are directed away from becoming the debris of those storms.

Peter was fine, firm on the water when he looked toward Jesus in order to meet up with him. Realize this crucial detail: the wind did not start when Peter began to walk. The wind had already been blowing destructively... but it did not matter, it did not effect Peter until Peter took his eyes off of Jesus. He did not even notice the wind while he was engaged in conversation with Jesus! We do not get wet in the storm when we stand with Jesus in the center of it. When we give the winds our fear, they suck out our faith. We become so focused on the turmoil that we neglect to use the tools God built in us to endure the storm. 

How could we ever endure it, if in giving our attention to the storm, we neglect to remember to use the arsenal of spiritual weapons which enable us to survive it? Strength and discipline, prayer and hope, wisdom and faith... righteousness and compassion, two actions which reap what they sow! 

  • LORD, SAVE ME
But as he sank into the dark waters, Peter remembered Jesus' presence and power and willingness to save and cried out: "Lord, save me!" And through Peter's faith, Jesus swooped in to support: "And immediately Jesus stretched out His hand and caught him..."  We need to remember that our God is present and powerful... and willing to save. Our Father in heaven knows us so well; He knows that we will break our gaze of faith and falter in fear. Therefore He has made Himself receptive to our calls for help. When we call to God in earnest faith, there is no delay in His answer. Scripture uses the word "immediately" to describe the speed in which Jesus reached out to catch Peter. We need to train ourselves in faith to automatically call out to God as soon as we lose our balance on the water, as soon as we lose Him in our line of sight.

When they climbed into the boat, Jesus asked Peter: "...why did you doubt?" He was genuinely curious. Why don't we believe, though many of us say that we do, that God is capable of keeping us afloat? Is it because we start to sink and instead of blaming our brittle faith we blame God?

Faith is a mighty thing. A small but compact word, dense with spiritual tools we build and sharpen throughout our lives. Faith is the comprehensive tool we need to wield throughout life if we plan to walk on water. There will be wind on the water and it will not always be easier to keep our eyes trained on God. In order to actually do it, to keep our eyes on God, we need to develop a relationship of familiarity and trust in God. We need to know (soul-deep) Who He is, what He has promised, and what He is capable of in order to rely on those things while on the sea in the storm. 

  • YOU OF LITTLE FAITH 
"Now when He got into a boat, His disciples followed Him. And suddenly a great tempest arose on the sea, so that the boat was covered with the waves. But He was asleep. Then His disciples came to Him and awoke Him, saying, “Lord, save us! We are perishing!” Matthew 14:23-25
We are not always aware of God's consciousness, even true believers. As beautiful and unique and indescribable as those moments of awareness of His presence are... they are also intermittent, sometimes even rare. There would be no need for faith if we sailed our little ship with a conscious Jesus at the helm and in sight. Let 2 Corinthians 5:7 remind us that we walk by faith, not by sight. It might appear sometimes that God is sleeping...if we allow ourselves to believe that lie, our own anxiety will stir the storm up several more degrees in severity.
But He said to them, “Why are you fearful, O you of little faith?” Then He arose and rebuked the winds and the sea, and there was a great calm. So the men marveled, saying, “Who can this be, that even the winds and the sea obey Him?”
It is ludicrous to us that the disciples actually thought that they could sink while in the presence of Jesus, right? Well since Jesus told us in Matthew 28:20 that He is always with us... since Jesus told us in John 14:17 that the Holy Spirit will be with us and in us, it would be ridiculous for us to think that we could possibly sink.




Eyes on God is faith. We look past the mess, through the chaos, to our Light and Guide and source of strength. We place our attention on His direction, rather than on the boisterous wind. We are not subject to the dangers of the sea when we are walking on it toward Jesus. In part 2 of this 2-part sermon, we will explore what "Eyes on You" means from the battlefield.