“A Powerful
Reason for Gratitude”
2 Peter 3:9
ÓCopyright 2003 by Rev. Bruce Goettsche, November 23,
2003
Thanksgiving is not always a joyful holiday.
There are some people who view the day with dread rather than gratitude. When you are alone, you feel even more
alone during holiday celebrations.
When you have experienced a significant loss the empty place at the
table is even more pronounced than ever at the holidays.
But even in light of these difficult things,
I suspect most of you will try to find some time this week to enumerate your
blessings. Hopefully you can be
thankful for your family, your friends, a place to live, your health, your
citizenship in this great country, and your hope of eternal life that is found
in Christ.
This morning I want to zero in on one very
special but often neglected reason for gratitude. We find this blessing in a
rather odd spot. It is found in 2
Peter chapter 3. In this section
of his letter, Peter addresses a growing restlessness among the
Christians. The first generation
of Christians has started to die.
These great saints are beginning to wonder when the second coming of
Jesus is going to take place.
Peter understands the problem and the
cynical attitude of the world.
Peter affirms several things: first, God’s Word is reliable. It was this same Word that created the
world. It is this same Word that
promised Noah there would be a flood and that flood came upon the earth. When
God makes a promise He delivers.
Second Peter tells us that we need to
remember that God is eternal and we are temporal. Time is different to God than it is to us. It is kind of like the difference
between a parent and their child.
To the child it seems like it takes forever to get to Christmas. To the parent, Christmas seems to
arrive quicker every year. God may seem to be slow in keeping His promise in
our minds, but that is our perspective, not His.
Third, Peter affirms is that this “delay” in
Christ’s return is because “God is patient with you, not wanting anyone to
perish, but everyone to come to repentance”. God is waiting for everyone who will believe to come to
faith. He does not want to miss or
exclude anyone.
It is the characteristic of God’s patience
that I want to lightly touch on today.
Notice God’s patience in three areas:
GOD IS PATIENT IN PURSUIT OF HIS
PEOPLE
Peter tells us that God is patient with us
because he wants us to come to repentance. He is patient because He wants us to turn to Him.
Could God
force us to bow before Him? Yes,
He could. The Lord is powerful
enough to bring every person to their knees in subjection to Him, but He
restrains His hand. The Lord wants
us to come willingly to Him. He
wants us to serve Him because we love Him and not because we have to
serve Him.
In the movie, The Horse Whisperer, Tom Booker, played
by actor Robert Redford, employs his special gift of "gentling"
horses.
A tense, New York magazine editor couldn't believe her eyes
as she witnessed the gradual transformation of her daughter's horse from
traumatized to tamed. In one telling scene, the horse, frightened by the
editor's ringing cell phone, galloped off into the far end of a large pasture.
Booker walked into the pasture and sat down, where he waited for what appears
to be hours. The horse, drawn by its curiosity, inched closer and closer.
Finally, it cautiously approached close enough to touch the
"whisperer," and allowed itself to be led back to the safety of its
stall.
In a
similar way God "gentles" the untamed or traumatized people who run
from him. God reaches out to those
who are “by nature objects of wrath”.
He doesn’t give up on us simply because we are difficult. I venture to say that there are few who
are here today who would have been here if God had not been extremely patient
and persistent. God uses a variety
of means.
He
sends influential people into our lives. Throughout
the course of our lives God sends a variety of people our way to turn our
hearts toward Him. There are Sunday School teachers, godly parents and
relatives, Pastors, Christian friends, musicians, radio ministries,
authors. God uses all of these
people to draw us to Himself.
Many of
us can point to a particular moment when we said “yes” to God’s offer of
eternal life. We may say a
particular person “led” us to Christ.
In reality there have been a whole sequence of people who have
introduced you to the Savior.
There are Sunday School teachers, Christian parents, Christian friends,
musicians, authors, speakers, Pastors, television programs, gospel tracts and
probably many other people and resources.
God calls out to us through many different voices.
He
patiently uses different circumstances. The Lord calls
to us through a number of different means. He calls to us in good times and in bad. He calls to us in the pleasant things
and in the difficult things. He calls to us through the noise and in the
quiet. God pursues us patiently
and relentlessly.
Francis
Thompson has written a wonderful little piece called “The Hound of Heaven”. In
this poem Thompson pictures his life as an attempt to run from God. God pursued Him like a blood hound
pursuing his prey. Gordan
MacDonald has written an excellent contemporary adaptation of the poem. At one point he writes,
I have raced away from Him in moments of naïve optimism,
and, just as quickly, have dived for cover when life’s circumstances unraveled
and I was numb with fear. But, no
matter my direction or my frantic pace, there has always been this relentless
sense of pursuit, an awareness that there was One close behind who was not in a
hurry, not upset, not panicked, and never undignified. (p.32)
God is
patient in His pursuit of His people.
GOD IS PATIENT IN THE GROWTH OF HIS
PEOPLE
God is not only patient as He pursues us for
salvation, He is patient as we grow as believers in His grace. Let me ask you some questions,
·
How many times have you
known what was right to do but did the wrong thing anyway?
·
How many times have you
done things your own way and then had to come back to the Lord to ask Him to
bail you out?
·
How many times have you
hurt someone because you jumped to conclusions or couldn’t resist being critical
instead of loving?
·
How many times have you
engaged in a sinful fantasy of some sort rather than grateful praise to God?
·
How many times have you
come into a house of worship and only gone through the motions?
The Apostle Paul sums it up the best,
The trouble is not with the law but
with me, because I am sold into slavery, with sin as my master. 15 I don’t understand myself at all, for I really
want to do what is right, but I don’t do it. Instead, I do the very thing I
hate. 16 I know perfectly well
that what I am doing is wrong, and my bad conscience shows that I agree that
the law is good. 17 But I can’t
help myself, because it is sin inside me that makes me do these evil things.
[Romans 7:14-17 NLT)
I love these words of Paul because I relate
to them so readily. I look at my
own life, even as a Christian, and see my persistent weakness and nagging
rebellion. If God “gave up” on me,
I wouldn’t blame Him. The wonder is that God does not give up on us. He patiently nurtures us. He repeats His instructions again and
again until we understand. He refuses to give up on us even though at times it
appears we will never get it right.
Joe Bayly captured what I am trying to say with a wonderfully simple, Psalm
of Wandering
Lord you know
I'm such a stupid sheep.
I worry
about all sorts of things
whether I’ll find grazing land
still cool water
a fold at night
in which I can feel safe.
I don’t.
I only find troubles
want
loss.
I turn aside from You
to plan my rebel way.
I go astray.
I follow other shepherds
even other stupid sheep.
Then when I end up
on some dark mountain
cliffs before
wild animals behind
I start to bleat
Shepherd Shepherd
find me save me
or I die
And You do.
GOD IS PATIENT WITH THE FOOLISHNESS OF
THE WORLD
God is patient with
the world; even though the world increasingly denies Him. The world offends God with their
idolatry; but He waits. The world
taunts Him with their godlessness; but He patiently pursues. The people of the world strike out at
each other wounding the heart of the Creator, but still He waits. His timing is
gracious and perfect.
God is patient in
order to declare and demonstrate His mercy and grace to His people. God puts up with the state of the world
because He still has things He wants us to learn. When the lessons are completed, the school will close. We must never mistake God’s restraint
as indifference.
IMPLICATIONS
We Don’t Have to be Perfect NOW. Our
relationship with God is often hampered by our feelings of unworthiness. We know we are not measuring up and we
are embarrassed and withdraw from the Lord. God is more patient with our growth than we are.
Our Father treats us like the earthly father
who is teaching his child how to play baseball. Patiently, persistently, and frequently we teach our child
how to catch the ball, how to swing the bat, how to throw, and how to play the
game. We don’t try to do all these
things at once. It is too much to
learn. We proceed slowly. We try to develop one trait at a time.
We look for any hint of progress and then celebrate that progress.
I picture God the same way. He patiently instructs, cheers me on,
picks me up when I fall, hugs me when I’m discouraged and then urges me to keep
working.
Our Failures do not make it impossible
for us to know God. I know there are people who feel they
have been so bad in their life that God could never receive them. There are people who are so bruised and
battered that they feel they are “damaged goods” and God would not want them.
There are people who have done horrible things and doubt they could ever know
the love of God.
God’s astounding patience reminds us that
God will meet us where we are. He
seeks us and pursues us no matter how far we have drifted. His arms are open. He knows where you have been, what you
have done, and what has been done to you.
Still He loves you.
We Can’t Blame God if we Miss Out on
Grace. This is a sobering thought. God reaches out to each of us. He has declared His glory in countless ways throughout our
lives. If we do not trust His
grace; if we do not take hold of the salvation that is offered us in Jesus
Christ; if we do not get to Heaven, it will not be because of God, it will be
because of our own refusal to believe.
It is possible to become so hardened to the
truth that we no longer hear God’s whispers of love. A man who works with his hands develops calluses to keep his
hands from feeling pain when he works hard. A person who plays a stringed
instrument develops calluses on their fingers so they can push down on the
keys. This is a good thing when it comes to your body but it is a disastrous
things when it comes to your soul.
We become hardened when we deliberately turn
away from the Lord. We hear the
whispers of conscience but we ignore them. As we continue to ignore them, we find that we eventually
the whispers grow silent. It’s not
that God has stopped speaking; we have lost the ability to hear.
I don’t know how long it takes for a
person’s heart to get hardened. I
do know if you hear what I am saying, there is still time. If something inside of you tells
you that you are not “right with God” there is still time for you to choose in
simple faith to admit your rebellion and to stop running. There is still time to open your arms
to the Lord who has pursued you all your life. There is still time to be saved. I don’t know how much time is left, so I would encourage you
to act now. I encourage you to
start by simply talking to God.
Perhaps you might say something like this,
Lord Jesus, thank
you for pursuing me with your love.
I know that I deserve to be cast from your presence. Today I receive the offer of
forgiveness and new life that is made available because Jesus died for my
sin. Today I receive Him as my
Savior and I will strive to follow Him as my Lord. Please help me.
Amen.
The Patience We Have Been Shown Is the
Patience We Should Extend.
According to a
traditional Hebrew story, Abraham was sitting outside his tent one evening when
he saw an old man, weary from age and journey, coming toward him. Abraham rushed out, greeted him and
invited him into his tent. There
he washed the old man's feet and gave him food and drink. The old man immediately began eating
without saying any prayer or blessing.
Abraham asked him "Don't you worship God?" The old traveler replied "I
worship fire only, and revere no other god." When he heard this, Abraham became incensed, grabbed the old
man by the shoulders and threw him out of his tent into the cold night
air. When the old man had
departed, God called to his friend Abraham and asked where the stranger
was. Abraham replied, "I
forced him out because he did not worship you." God answered, "I have suffered him these eighty years
even though he dishonors me.
Couldn't you have endured him for just one night?"
The Lord asks us to love one another as He
has loved us. Practically, we need
to be more patient with each other.
We need to focus on a person’s strengths and their needs rather than
their annoyances. We must never
give up in our attempts to share the good news of the gospel. We must be creative, resourceful, and
persistent in seeking to show the love of Christ even to the most rebellious
sinner.
It is God’s patience that has brought us to
this day. It is because of His
patience that we grow and develop. And the realization of God’s marvelous patience should
make us more patient with each other, and should fill us with gratitude not
only on Thanksgiving, but every day of our lives.
ÓCopyright 2003 by Rev. Bruce Goettsche, November 23, 2003