|
"DOUBTS & DELIVERANCE"
(New
Series: "Dangers In The Desert!")
TEXT:
Ex.
13:17-14:31
You know
you are going to travel over a vast desert, so you hire the finest guide
you can find. Now that you have your guide the journey begins.
What are
going to be the greatest dangers in the desert?
a. Lack
of water?
b. Lack
of food?
c. The
heat?
d.
Getting lost?
e. Wild
animals and marauding enemies?
Are
these the greatest dangers in the journey? NO! The greatest dangers are:
a. DOUBT
about the guide!
b.
INGRATITUDE over the provisions
c.
REBELLION against the guide
d.
IMPATIENCE over the journey
Israel's
journey to the promise land held many dangers, but they were NOT from
the guide or the provisions God made available, they were from their
own hearts where the doubts, ingratitude, rebellion, and impatience
developed.
These
same dangers exist for us in our journey of faith through this
wilderness of life as we travel toward eternity and our promise land.Israel's
initial test and danger was trusting their guide.
Would
they trust God's guidance by the cloud by day, the fire by night - and
through his servant Moses?
The
initial test of faith has to do with trusting our guide, in our
spiritual journey this means God!
PROP. SENT:
The Bible clearly teaches us that we must learn to trust God's guidance
in our life!
The
biggest dangers in our journey have little to do with what others do,
they are the dangers that reside in our own hearts.
I.
DIMENSIONS OF DELIVERANCE 13:17-14:4
A.
Freedom! 13:17-22
1. After
a long period of slavery
Israel
finally is free from Egypt!
a. They
had watched God answer their prayers for deliverance.
b. They
had witnessed the hand of God against the Egyptians through the 10
plagues.
2. Their
freedom had been bought by faith in God in answer to prayers of
deliverance.
a. God
still sets sinners free this way!
b. It
was a great day when they were set free … it still is today!
3. Their
first test in the new journey would be one of trust or faith in God as
their guide … this is always the test of new faith!
a. They
will struggle with doubt, God can handle this .. it is UNBELIEF He has a
hard time with - and there is a difference!
ILLUS:
Christ
never failed to distinguish between doubt and unbelief. Doubt is can't
believe; unbelief is won't believe. Doubt is honesty; unbelief is
obstinacy. Doubt is looking for light; unbelief is content with
darkness.
John Drummond (1851-1897)
b.
Doubts not dealt with however can turn into unbelief.
4.
Notice the difference between God's perspective of
Israel
and their own: (see
14:17-18)
a. God
refuses to take them the shorter route because they would face strong
enemies they weren't ready for. (Philistines)
b.
However, they leave "armed for battle"
(14:18)
- they think they are ready for anything!!
c. Most
new Christians think they can handle anything that comes their way -
they are infused with joy, new found faith, excitement over the journey,
etc. but God often knows what is best for us and can direct our lives in
paths that we don't always anticipate.
5. They
have Joseph's bones with them, a statement of faith by Joseph almost 400
years earlier coming to fruition - he had prophesied 400 years earlier
that this day would come for
Israel
and they were to take his bones with them to the land of promise! (Who
says old messages can't minister to us today!?)
6. God
gave visible witness of His presence among them, a cloud by day, a fire
by night - always there out front of them!
7.
Surely there could be no doubts about God in this new journey,
everything was wonderful, great, marvelous!
a. They
anticipated an uneventful journey filled with promises and power!
b.
However, the first danger of the journey was about to hit, the danger of
doubts over their guide - God's leading!
B.
Frustration! 14:1-4
1.
Notice that God speaks to Moses and tells him to take
Israel
in circles back toward
the border of
Egypt -
almost directing them back into their enemies hands!
a. This
was hardly the direction they thought God would take them.
b. Why
not the shortest and easiest route?
After
all they left "armed for battle"
- they figured they could handle the Philistines!
2. God
knew however that they needed to pass the first test of trust in his
leadership or the future battles would be in question.
3. If
they can't handle the enemy they already knew, how would they handle the
enemies they haven't met yet in the journey?
4. They
must have been completely confused over this direction from God, it just
didn't make much sense!
a.
Here comes the first danger in any journey in the wilderness: will
you trust the guide?
b.
Failure to trust God here would mean disaster later.
c. It
was necessary for them to realize that God was trustworthy, that it was
not their talents, skills,
or
hardiness as soldiers that would make the biggest difference, it was
God's power that would make the difference.
ILLUS:
Gladys Aylward, missionary to China more than fifty years ago, was
forced to flee when the Japanese invaded Yangcheng. But she could not
leave her work behind. With only one assistant, she led more than a
hundred orphans over the mountains toward Free
China. In their book The Hidden Price of Greatness, Ray Besson and
Ranelda Mack Hunsicker tell what happened: "During Gladys's harrowing
journey out of war-torn Yangcheng ... she grappled with despair as never
before. After passing a sleepless night, she faced the morning with no
hope of reaching safety. A 13-year-old girl in the group reminded her of
their much-loved story of Moses and the Israelites crossing the Red Sea.
"'But I am not Moses,' Gladys cried in desperation. 'Of course you
aren't,' the girl said, 'but Jehovah is still God!'" When Gladys and the
orphans made it through, they proved once again that no matter how
inadequate we feel, God is still God, and we can trust in him.
-- Jonathan G. Yandell.
Garden Grove,
California.
Leadership, Vol. 16, no. 1.
5. Their
confusing wandering in circles would lure Pharaoh into thinking that
God's people were nuts!
a. Often
unbelievers think Christians are crazy when they see them follow the
Lord in paths that don't always make much sense to the natural mind!
b. In
Pharaoh's arrogance however God was about to make a demonstration of
just how trustworthy
He is as
Israel's
guide to the promise land.
c. Note
too that God's desire was not just to do more pain to
Egypt,
in fact,
it was
to use this final example as a way to SHOW
EGYPT
TOO that He is God! (see 14:3b)
6. So
far so good,
Israel
follows God's directions though it put them near the border of Egypt
again.
a. I
wonder how many felt frustrated about not getting on with the journey or
this particular direction of it?
b. How
many times do we get frustrated with God when our journey doesn't seem
to move in the direction we think it should and when we think it should?
TRUST HIM!
II.
DANGERS OF DOUBT! 14:5-18
A.
Fear! 14:5-15a
1. With
Egypt pursuing them again, and being trapped between their army and the
Red sea - Israel becomes fearful!
a. How
many times does this match our experience of faith, we find ourselves
trying to follow God and all of sudden we find ourselves in a bind with
no apparent way out!
b. Fear
may begin to make us question God's love and goodness, even His
reality!
2. At
such times all those wonderful"counselors" show up that only make
your fears worse, not better!
3.
Certainly Moses found the "experts" now in the camp! They
complained that they should never have come this way.
4. Fear
can make doubts turn into rebellion!
a. Be
careful not to listen to unhealthy fear when your faith in God is
challenged!
b.
Nothing good comes from unhealthy fear - fear about God's
trustworthiness!
c. Fear
can keep you from discovery, discovery of God's power and help.
ILLUS:
Listen to these examples of inventions and ideas that some people said
"couldn't be done" so they resisted the new.
1. The first successful cast-iron plow, invented in the United States in
1797, was rejected by
New Jersey farmers under the theory that cast iron poisoned the land and
stimulated the growth of weeds.
2. An eloquent authority in the United States declared that the
introduction of the railroad would require the building of many insane
asylums, since people would be driven mad with terror at the sight of
locomotives rushing across the country.
3. In
Germany it was proved by "experts" that if trains went at the frightful
speed of 15 miles an hour, blood would spurt from the travelers' noses
and passengers would suffocate when going through tunnels.
4. Commodore Vanderbilt dismissed Westinghouse and his new air brakes
for trains, stating, "I have no time to waste on fools."
5. Those who loaned Robert Fulton money for his steamboat project
stipulated that their names be withheld for fear of ridicule were it
known they supported anything so "foolhardy."
6. In 1881, when the New York YWCA announced typing lessons for women,
vigorous protests were made on the grounds that the female constitution
would break down under the strain.
7. Men insisted that iron ships would not float, that they would damage
more easily than wooden ships when grounding, that it would be difficult
to preserve the iron bottom from rust, and that iron would deflect the
compass.
8. Joshua Coppersmith was arrested in
Boston
for trying to sell stock in the telephone. "All well-informed people
know that it is impossible to transmit the human voice over a wire."
9. The editor of the Springfield Republican refused an invitation to
ride in an early automobile, claiming that it was incompatible with the
dignity of his position.--
James S. Hewett, Illustrations Unlimited (Wheaton: Tyndale House
Publishers, Inc, 1988), p. 407.
5. Had
Israel listened to the voice of the fear mongers among them disaster
would surely have taken place!
a. It
was natural to have doubts and fear, but it is supernatural to TRUST
GOD!
b. God's
solution to this threat:
(1.
"DON'T BE AFRAID"
14:13
(2.
"STAND FIRM"
14:13
(3.
"SEE THE DELIVERANCE - TODAY!"
14:13
6. God
can be trusted!!!
a. This
would be the last they would see of the Egyptians, but only if they
didn't give in to their fears and doubts.
b. This
was the most dangerous moment for them - will they trust their guide or
listen to the voices of discontent among them?
B.
Frozen 14:15b-18
1. Fear
however was even beginning to get to Moses, even he cries out to God!
a. God
advises them all to stop being frozen in fear and to get moving!
b. But
where can they go? Egypt on one side,
Red sea
on the other, they are trapped!
c. You
are never trapped when God is with you!!
"He always makes a way of escape!" (1
Cor. 10:13)
2. They
would not move without faith because there was no where to go, but if
they had faith that God would open a way then they could get up and
move! SO MOVE!
3. Not
only will Israel experience God's glory, but the Egyptians will see it
too and know that God is real.
a. God
opens up the
Red sea
creating a dry path for His people to pass through.
b. God
holds back the Egyptians until
Israel
has crossed safely over.
c. When
Egypt tries to the follow the path of faith in rebellion against God
disaster strikes.
III.
DECISIONS DEMONSTRATED 14:19-31
A.
Faithless 14:19-28
1.
Egypt assumed they could follow the same path as people of faith but
without trust in the God of that faith
- they
found out otherwise!
a. To
travel God's paths you must have confidence in Him as your guide!
b. To
those who mock God the path of faith only leads to destruction.
2. In
Egypt's arrogance and pride they thought they could USE God for their
own ends, how wrong they were. (Gal 6:7
"Do not be deceived: God cannot be mocked. A man reaps what he sows."
NIV)
3.
Israel discovered the joy of deliverance because she didn't cave in to
doubt,
Egypt
discovered the painful results of rebellion against God … the time of
getting what they had sown had finally come!
a. While
at first
Israel
felt confused by the path of God, it is now Egypt that is confused! (see
14:24)
b.
Though
Israel
may have doubted at first, her obedience brought victory,
but
Egypt's rebellion against God brought them defeat.
ILLUS:
The story is told of a farmer in a Midwestern state who had a strong
disdain for "religious" things. As he plowed his field on Sunday
morning, he would shake his fist at the church people who passed by on
their way to worship. October came and the farmer had his finest crop
ever--the best in the entire county. When the harvest was complete, he
placed an advertisement in the local paper which belittled the
Christians for their faith in God. Near the end of his diatribe he
wrote, "Faith in God must not mean much if someone like me can prosper."
The response from the Christians in the community was quiet and polite.
In the next edition of the town paper, a small ad appeared. ... It read
simply, "God doesn't always settle His accounts in October."
-- William E. Brown in Making Sense of Your Faith. Christianity Today,
Vol. 33, no. 11.
B.
Faith! 14:29-31
1.
Without faith
Israel
would not have found her way through the trial.
2. The
lack of faith can destroy the journey, but faith will make it exciting
and reveal great things!
a. If
the lack of faith in the real world can be detrimental,
how much
more the lack of faith in the spiritual realm can be harmful!
ILLUS:
Everything that can be invented has been invented. - Charles H. Duell,
U.S. Patent Office director, 1899
Who the h--- wants to hear actors talk? - H. M. Warner, Warner Bros.
Pictures, c. 1927
Sensible and responsible women do not want to vote. - Grover
Cleveland, 1905
There is no likelihood man can ever tap the power of the atom. -
Robert Millikan, Nobel prize winner in physics, 1923
Heavier than air flying machines are impossible.- Lord Kelvin,
president, Royal Society, c. 1895
Ruth [Babe Ruth] made a big mistake when he gave up pitching. - Tris
Speaker, 1927
The horse is here to stay, but the automobile is only a novelty. -
The
Michigan banker who advised Henry Ford's lawyer not to invest in the new
motor car company
Gone with the Wind is going to be the biggest flop in
Hollywood
history. I'm just glad it'll be Clark Gable who's falling flat on his
face and not me. - Gary Cooper
-- James S. Hewett, Illustrations Unlimited (Wheaton: Tyndale House
Publishers, Inc, 1988), p. 408.
b. Faith
in the God who guided them gave them their great victory … they had
successfully won over the great DANGER IN THE DESERT - to
doubt the guide!
3. The
Israelites found a new joy, a new power, a new faith - and a healthy
fear of God now from this experience … they were ready for the rest of
the trip!
4.BUT
- there are other DANGERS IN THE DESERT TOO … (future messages!)
CONCLUSION: The
journey of faith is full of the struggles of doubt, but also the joys of
deliverance.
Israel
discovered that deliverance came only when they conquered their doubts
and fears and trusted in God. The greatest enemy of faith is fear, it
leads to doubt which can lead to destruction.
The
journey through the wilderness can only be peaceful if you trust your
guide! DO you trust God for your journey? |