Joshua Study - 2026-03-18

Joshua Study - 2026-03-18

Episode description

An ongoing study of the book of Joshua. This week’s lesson presented by John Kratz.

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0:14

Welcome to the Lansdale Life Church podcast.

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If you're seeking a closer relationship with Jesus Christ, this podcast is for you.

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Thank you for joining us today.

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All right. Now we can start. Right. Okay. Don't, don't sit back there. Come on forward.

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All right. Okay. All right. Does that have your name on it?

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In memory of, right? Yes. Yes. Monuments and remembrances. Well, Lord, we thank you for your

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goodness to us. We thank you that we can gather in your name, various walks of life, persuasions,

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activities, life situations, but father, there's one thing that we have in common

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and that is that we're all purchased with your blood. So we thank you tonight that we can claim

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that as victory and we can walk in that, not walking by ourselves and thinking by ourselves

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and hoping by ourselves, but Lord, because of what you have done, what you're doing

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and for your return, we pray. And everyone said, amen. Amen. Amen. All right.

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The book of Joshua is very different now. We're finally out of the law giving stage

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and we're into some of the excursions that as people of God, they are now transitioning

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into the promised land. And that's exciting because all the theory that was and all the

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building of the nation and all that was to be done as God formed in them, who they are supposed

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to be is for all intent purposes, pretty well finished. Now it's abiding in those laws and

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precepts and going into the land and doing physical battle and conquering the land. And

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if you look at the story, by and large, that story is like our life. Our life in Christ,

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he has given us riches. He has given us gifts that are given to us individually.

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He has given us a victory and it's for ours to do what? To claim, to walk in and to thank the Lord

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for, to do battle for those things and move forward in his name. So let's talk a little

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bit about memorials that are for remembrance and a testimony. Now think about this. God uses even

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the smallest details for remembrance and I want you to think about the details of your own life.

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These Israelites that are presently now gathering and moving over into the promised land

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had no remembrances like being delivered from the plagues, like being delivered from Egypt,

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like seeing the miraculous activity such as Chris was talking about and I always picture

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the Heston standing on the rock and all the things that went through that movie

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as a magnificent portrayal of God's might and power. And yet these people did not have that

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opportunity. They were born in the desert. All they knew was camping and doing and working around

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and now it was time for them to enter into a new phase of life. And so what God wants to do,

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he wants to indulibly come to them and have remembrances so they can build upon and how

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many of us have remembrances of things in our life. It doesn't have to be spiritual.

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It's that things have happened and things that have been doing,

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I've been influencing rather that we now have as a memory of those things and we're going to talk

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about that in a little bit. So in a review of chapter four, the first set of stones was a

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memorial of God's faithfulness. You know, they were 12 men, they had to pick up a stone

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and so forth two different times and so the first memorial was very public.

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It was an idea of being faithful to their God. They arranged the stones at Gilgal as a sacred

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memorial marking the spot where the nation had entered the promised land. So that's a place

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marker or a placeholder that they could look at. And it wasn't by their own strength and it was

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only by the hand of the Lord that brought them to this point. So we have that as a memorial.

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God made a way where there was no way and he kept his promises and he led us,

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meaning the Israelites, through to this point in time. So here we are embarking on a whole new

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threshold. And then it says in the scripture that when children would ask what do these

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stones mean, they would simply tell them of God's power. So it's a reminder.

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Now the second set of stones, it was a hidden testimony and anybody has read or remembered

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where those stones were placed? In the Jordan. They weren't even for public use, it was private.

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It was a hidden testimony. These hidden stones, stack of stones, were not visible but private

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to Joshua. They marked the exact place where the presence of God stood showing the authority of

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Joshua after they followed Joshua's orders. See, Joshua was new. They knew him but he wasn't the

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one. Okay, well what about this Joshua? You know, is he going to be anointed like Moses was?

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And we find out that they then accepted and followed him after this remarkable dividing

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of the Red Sea, of the Jordan. And we're also asked to remember his works and pass these stories

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to the next generation. So they're stories that we tell our children and our grandchildren

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about the goodness of God, how he saved us and what we have gone through. And again,

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the witnesses are those who testify to the truth of an event or fact confirming that something

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really happened. No guess. I can show you the stones. This is where God was. He visited us.

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The priest came down in the river. They held up the Jordan at flood tide. All the people

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passed through. And if you look at the sequence of things and all the infantry, all the families

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passed through, those priests held that arc for a very long time as a million and a half,

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two million people passed through there. And it was a testimony as to what they did.

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All right. So now let's change and let's take a focus. We're talking about memorials. We're

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talking about remembrances. So here's a question and a quiz for you. What's that memorial?

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The Arlington Cemetery. Right. So that's something we know. Okay. Here's another one.

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The Arc de Triomphe. Okay. Here's another one. Yeah. The five soldiers holding the flag,

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winning the war. So we all know those. We have those things in our mind. Well, how about this

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on a more personal note? How about family pictures? Things that mean something.

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Here's a picture. It doesn't mean anything to you, but it's my three boys in front of one of my

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finished cars. Well, it's meaningful because I had three boys that we liked the same sport.

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We liked the same hobby and it's meaningful. So it's a memorial to our friendship, fathers and sons,

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what I did for a hobby. So it was meaningful to me in light of looking. And this thing is on a shelf

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with a lot of my little trinkets in my bedroom. And every once in a while I look at it and I say,

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okay, well, that's a good remembrance. We have all those things. We have two suitcases under

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our bed. And since we live in a retirement community, there's not a lot of room and they

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are filled with photos. I don't know half the people in the photo. But every once in a while,

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Joni says, well, what about this? So I go rooting through these things and, you know, my word,

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sometimes I feel like I throw them all out, but I don't do that to be kind to her. And I guess to

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me and myself too. So we have those things. And when you see the picture, it reminds you

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of the circumstances and of the events that were meaningful to you, or maybe not so much.

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You know, who knows? What about this trophies, maybe ceramics that represent accomplishments,

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our first Bible or our life verse, our salvation, our baptism dates,

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trinkets representing our past. Here's a trinket of my past.

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It's a bomb. It won't go off. Honest. But it was something that I found as a

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diver in Bermuda when I lived there during the service. And it's a memorial to, yes, I was there

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because in the World War II, they used to use lead shot like this to practice their bombing raids.

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And this I found on the bottom of the ocean. It doesn't mean much to you. It's heavy. It's

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clunky. But it's something that sits on that shelf. Every time I go to bed, I think about

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that, I look at it. So my question to you is, in a secular sense,

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what memorials do you have? What comes to your mind when I think of that?

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And I gave you two of mine. What comes to your mind as something that you remember?

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Diplomas. Okay. Do you still have your diploma?

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Yes. All right. How often do you take it out and look at it?

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Not very often. Okay. But you have something. It's a memorial, an accomplishment, right?

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Yes, right. Good for you. Anything else? Anybody else?

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Oh, everybody's quiet tonight. You want to say something?

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I don't know. I have a little shelf at home in my family room of my TV with all my little

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memorials. I have little things like I have a cup that I got from the last day of Shea

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Stadium when they closed. And I have a hockey puck because I'm a big Boston Bruin fan.

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And I had a friend that lived in Boston, and I would go up there sometimes,

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and we'd go to the Bruin games, and I got a puck. So I have that up there. Things like that.

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Oh, yeah. Let's see. Oh, Jill, what was your memorial?

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When our kids were little, we kept a box of remembrances of all the things. I'll leave them

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there. That's okay. And we have in there pictures of things that, miracles, you know, of remembrances

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of what God has done. Another thing that I do have is a cup from a friend of mine

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that was made out of, I don't even know what, maybe wood or something like that.

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But she was moving from Wek Ministries to another country, and it reminds me to pray for her.

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Oh, yeah. I have some t-shirts from missions trips, and some of them with all the students that

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were on the missions trip that all signed it. And, yeah, so we have them with Nicaragua with

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foam, you know, McRoberts, we have a bunch of missions trip t-shirts. That's cool. Yeah,

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it's good. Yeah, exactly. Let me moth-eaten by that, right.

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Anyone else? They thought, yeah, Ginny.

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I have a memorial on my wrist from where I was last weekend with the community I'm also involved in,

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and it says on this bracelet, Unafraid. Yes. Hey, very good. Very good. She had a nice hiatus

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and weekend. Oh. I have shoes that I did my personal record.

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All right. Okay. I mean, nobody can beat that. I just remembered something. When I put up

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the Christmas tree every year, you put the ornaments on it as almost every ornament on

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my tree is a monument, because they all remind me. Very good. I have things like my kids' first

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Christmas, and I have one with me and my wife our first wedding, and I have one for each one

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of my pets that I had in my life. Oh, my gosh. Yeah, so I have all kinds of monuments on there.

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You're active. You know, since we moved all that, we don't do a tree anymore, so all that's in a

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box. I look through it every Christmas, but I don't even open it up anymore. Yeah, no, that's

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good. Okay. So we've established that monuments are important to us, and you know, you wonder why

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God was so interested in providing these monuments. It really wasn't for His sake. It's for our sake.

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The very testimonies that you talked about, the things that are meaningful, are the fact that

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you remember them, and it means something to you, and you drift back in consciousness to those

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things like your children's memories when they were young and so forth. It brings to remembrance

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those activities and experiences. Okay. So we accomplish that question. What are some of your

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memorials or remembrances? So God commits His people to remember what He has done in Deuteronomy

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8.2, and it says, you shall remember the whole way that the Lord your God has led you.

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In other words, not just some of it, the whole way that He's led you.

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Remembering the acts of God somehow eases the pain of present circumstances. How many found that

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true? You're into situations whereby you don't have an out, you don't have an answer, and all

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of a sudden some things from the past, God pulls up or you remember and you begin to think about

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these wonderful promises that He has either fulfilled, things that He's going to do in

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your life in the future, and it somehow begins to bring ease to the situation.

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And that's why we do that. I used to keep on my cell phone answered prayer requests. I have the

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list of things that we pray for on the cell phone, and I used to transfer that to an answered list.

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The thing got so long under the notes, and one day I accidentally erased it. It was about

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85 or 90 things, but I used to periodically go through those things about answer this,

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answer that, and had a date on it. And it encouraged me to be able to remember those

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things because so often we forget what God has done. We think, okay, well, yeah, and you think about,

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jeez, He hasn't done anything lately. Well, He has. It's just that we don't remember it.

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Okay. In Psalm 105, it says, remember the wondrous works that He has done, His miracles and the

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due process of events that sometimes we go through. Let me give you an example.

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Some of you know I had to take a financial hit because of my business, and I had to go bankrupt.

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And the Lord brought all that back, and in that bankruptcy, and it was an astronomical

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amount of money. But there was two quarters of withholding taxes that as we closed the

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corporation down, I suddenly realized my accountant didn't pay. And I had $15,000 over two quarters

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on top of the hundreds of thousands of dollars. And I looked, I said, it's just impossible

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how I even get through this. So we negotiated to get rid of the overhanging debt, and we paid

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that down. But for about two weeks, I was extremely disappointed. And in a quandary,

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and I was, Lord, I mean, how much can I take? And miraculously, some group of, and an individual,

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came to me and paid those taxes for me. It was a miracle. And we have to remember those things,

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because when I was studying this, I think, well, what was the miracle? The miracle was

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that that had happened to the tune of $15,000. Now that may not seem a lot to you, but at that

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point in time in my life where I was destitute, and I didn't have two nickels to rub together,

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God did something. It was a miracle. And then those things are due process. We pray for something,

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we begin to believe, we begin to thank God for it, and after a while, we see answers.

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How many have long-standing requests before the Lord that go for years sometimes?

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You know, I tell people, I don't often pray for people at the top of my head, other than if they

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would come to the altar or whatever. But when I do say I will pray for you, that means I'll pray

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for you for the rest of my life until answered prayer becomes something that is evident. And so

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we have those things that are long-standing. In due process, he will, again, he's always working,

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we may not see it, but consequently, we will experience it at some point in time of our life.

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So there are those things that are instantaneous and those things that are process. In Psalm 77,

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it says, I will remember the deeds of the Lord. I will ponder all your work and meditate

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on your mighty deeds. What about meditation?

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Meditating on the Lord is far better than meditating on your circumstances. Agreed?

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Now, here's the real question. How many do that?

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Woe is me! And you know, you can go down that spiral tube. It can be days, it can be hours,

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it can be minutes, or it can be immediate as you learn to fortify inside what God is doing

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through you in these circumstances so that you don't have to spend days in the quandary,

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hours in the quandary. You can come and you can say, Lord, I don't know what this is all about.

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I'm giving it to you. And you know what? The Lord lifts that burden from your heart. Now,

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you may go back into that. You know, you may be cued on something where, oh my gosh,

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bring it to the Lord again quickly. And you'll begin to see that God brings what? Righteousness,

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peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit. So, we have these things that we are asked to do.

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In Joshua 4, 6, and 7, we cover this just a little bit. When your children ask,

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you shall tell them so that these stones shall be to the people of Israel a memorial forever.

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Mama, what are these stones? What do they mean? Well, that means when God was with us,

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he brought us into this land, and you can build a whole story on that. It's an opportunity.

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You know, it's interesting. As you begin to let your life shine through what I call

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relational evangelism, I think I'm going to trip on that box of power yet.

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I often just kind of put a sentence in there, and I'm looking for an opportunity. You know,

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well, the Lord's good, and you know, he'll take care of you, or blah, blah, blah, or whatever

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about my own life. And then sometimes people that are not familiar with the Lord will come back.

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Well, what do you mean by that? Just drop a little bit of a hint. Let them be

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enough interested in your situation to begin to ask the next set of questions. And then

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that opens up a door for another dialogue. Okay, questions that I want to ask you.

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If you were to create a place of remembrance today, what moment in your life would that

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represent? What would that look like? What might that be?

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Don't all jump at once. Think about that. Okay, John.

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I think all of us who own a home end up making that a place of remembrance. I mean,

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sometimes you live there a very short period of time, but I can remember when my dad had passed

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and my mom was starting to fail. My sister, brother and I just got together and said,

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you know what? We shouldn't sell this place and split it up. This is a place of great memories.

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And I don't know what happens to our property. But anyway, I think,

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similarly, I'd imagine that, you know, something like that might happen.

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Do you still have the place? Yeah. Okay.

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All right. Yeah. Brings back fond memories. Yes. Anybody else? Jenny?

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In Pottstown, where I was last weekend, another practitioner like myself, I'm a licensed mental

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health worker in Pennsylvania, but he helped me find the runaway shelter in Pottstown,

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where I got to know the Lord. Now, I didn't get a chance to go there because it was raining on

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Monday, but I am going to take a bus ride back out there and go visit it. Yeah.

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A great place to remember where you came to the Lord. Yeah. Anybody remember the day that

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you came to the Lord, the hour? You saw my hand go up.

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You saw my hand go up. Oh, dear. Yes. I believe it was in my kitchen.

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Okay. Yeah. I was in my kitchen, and I was reading through the scripture of John 14.

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And yeah, it was just a miraculous thing because I had just had like a vision of

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Jesus with all the disciples sitting around, and he said to him, you know, it's important that I go,

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but I'm not going to leave you like an orphan. I'm going to come to you in another form.

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I'm going to send the Holy Spirit. And that's when it hit me, the Holy Spirit. I went out.

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Yeah, I went out. Haven't been the same since. Oh, that's good. Yeah. Anybody else?

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I don't know. I was 17 and I was at that Christian camp. All right. And I remember

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that I cannot stand up like I'm right in there. I met the Lord.

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That's good. Anything else? Anybody else? Yes. Hey, what are you doing back there? You usually go

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to the front, man. Good to see you. Good to see you too. I would say for me personally,

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like I was, I thought what the Bible talks about, you know, forgiveness, and I forgave somebody I was

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holding a grudge against. And I just felt like so much peace and joy. And I can understand why

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Jesus tells us to forgive. It releases that bitterness and that poison that's within you.

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So that's something that I will carry with me, you know, for the rest of my life. Just

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always forgive. And, you know, when we don't forgive, that begins to eat at us and it brings

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concentration on that one element. And we go round and round and round on that. But to forgive

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is to, again, forget. All right. So that's answer. What has God done for you

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that you never want to forget? So I think we answered that. For me it was, again, I think

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this salvation that I experienced. Every summer I would go to one of my uncles. They were farmers,

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chicken farmers, cattlemen, and so forth. And we used to go to church. And my parents were not

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following the Lord. And I got saved at one of those meetings, came home in the fall,

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and business as usual. And I asked, I think when I was 10 years old, I asked my mother and father,

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why don't we go to church? Well, that put such a guilt trip on them, that they just started

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to go to church and they rededicated their life to the Lord. And hence we have lived a Christian

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life. But it was the idea that when we testify of the goodness, things can begin to change.

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Another question. Were there trials that you went through that God used to shape you?

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In other words, like the forming of a gemstone, the pressure. Can you explain that? What trial

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is significant in your life? That looking back on it now, it made you a better person.

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You, again, I just share from my own testimony, that bankruptcy situation that I have referred

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to with you, a lot of you know the story. I wouldn't trade it for the world because I've

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learned so much in that desperation, in that experience. I had to dig deep and find out who

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God was. Anyone, any trial, or we don't want to admit those things, but we all have trials.

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Yes, Jenny. When my first husband left me with a one-year-old, a three-year-old and a four-year-old,

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and a dollar. And that was a time in my life where I was angry at God at first for not

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keeping my family together and saving my marriage. But I saw the Lord provide for us over the

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years, and I became a much stronger woman. That's wonderful. Looking back, would you have

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traded that? I got rid of them, so no. Okay, all right. Moving on. Well, listen,

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there's nothing like being honest. That's good. Anyone else? Any thoughts? Yes, please.

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I think it was 2022. I had a bad reaction to medication, and I always lose focus when I'm

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on the spot. Give me one second. So I was in a coma, and I had to learn to walk again.

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And at first, the insurance company denied me going to a rehab after the hospital. They sent

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me right home. But then I had to appeal it because I couldn't take care of myself. And

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being the caretaker for the family, it was the first time that I really and truly could not

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take care of myself. And it was hard. But to know that I have to take care of myself first,

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like really, really, really take care of myself first, so that then I can be well enough to take

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care of the family. And that was like a real life lesson for me. You know, being a caretaker

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myself, I run a caregivers group in Meadowood. And the very thing that we talk about continually

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is you have to take care of yourself or you'll burn yourself out. So consequently, you know,

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you were in a situation. Did that illness drive you there because of the responsibilities of a

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caretaker or not? You know, I fell and I had been reaction to this in the retreat.

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Okay. Well, good. You're on the mend now, right? Very good. Okay.

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Another question. Did you or do you ever struggle to feel like you belong in God's kingdom?

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Like, have you ever struggled to feel that you belong in the God's kingdom?

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Okay. No answers on that one. So all right. Okay. What were your struggle if you would share it?

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Go ahead. My mom raised us in the Christian church. We went to church a lot a little bit

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when I was younger. But as we grew, we kind of all fell from God. And especially with me,

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my personal experience is I was as a teen and a young adult, like straight out of me in high

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school and then going into college, I was far from God. Like I didn't pray. I didn't even

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really believe in God. Like I was, yeah, I was the complete opposite from where I am now.

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And so I feel like I kind of met Jesus kind of later in life and on my own,

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like I knew of him, but I hadn't had a real relationship with him until like two years

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ago when I was like 21. And at first it was really hard being the complete opposite from

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like what you would think a Christian is or living in God is. And you did, I did feel like

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imposter syndrome for a while because pretty much completely changed my life and turned my life

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around. And it's something that I struggled with a lot even when I was, and when I am strong in

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faith, sometimes I feel like it's normal to feel like, Oh, I'm not like this idea that you're not

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the perfect Christian or stuff like that. Like the idea that you're not perfect because you

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fall to sin, but I feel like that's part of learning and getting closer to Christ.

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But it's something that I did experience a lot, especially in the beginning of my walk with Christ,

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because I was so far from him before. So coming to him and being like, I don't know what this

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is a totally different life. Like this is not the life I'm used to living. So I feel like that

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was a really difficult time in the beginning of my walk with Christ.

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That's wonderful. Very good. I'm glad that you came back.

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You know, there's always a, an obvious when you raising kids, when they're little,

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they have little problems. When they get bigger, the problems ingrow. And then when they're big

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and they're going from teenage to adulthood. And more than likely there are problems with

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girls and boys. I've had three boys, but now I have two granddaughters.

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So I've experienced in some of their dilemmas. But the biggest thing that we pray for is as

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they make that transition from their parents experience in the Lord to their experience.

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And that can be a very hollow and dangerous thing with regard to saying, okay,

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I'm going to do it my way. And I did the same thing. I mean,

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I can remember seeing visions of the Lord when I was young at the altar, always went to church

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four times a week, you know, live in the life. And at some point in time at 19,

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I came home one day and I told my mother, I said, I'm going in the service.

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I don't want to live this life. Don't want to follow God. And that was Wednesday and Friday.

34:21

I went to Texas and was in the service. So I rejected all that. And I understand that for guys,

34:29

it sometimes takes longer or slower to get the educational curve of Christianity. Maybe you

34:35

didn't. I don't know what the age that was. But so there is an experience that all of us have,

34:41

whether it's firsthand or whether it's our children, that when we go through here,

34:46

those struggles can work for us or against us. And what does the image of your name,

34:55

written in the book of life, stir you about your place in the kingdom? And so I think we've

35:01

answered that. And I think we have given that enough thought. So let's take a look at some

35:08

of the more core remembrances that we should all consider. Well, number one is the cross of Jesus

35:17

Christ. And that's what brings us together here tonight. Because of the cross, we come from

35:24

different lives, different situations, but yet it draws us. There is salvation and then

35:31

there is forgiveness, continual forgiveness. It says in Luke 22 and 1 Corinthians 11,

35:38

do this in remembrance of me. And we're talking about the Lord's supper.

35:42

So that remembrance is something that we always should bring to us. It should bring to us an

35:51

understanding of what it really means. It's a past experience and it has a future to it also,

35:57

what he's going to do and what he did. So that's a remembrance. The Lord's supper

36:03

is the central Christian act of remembrance. It's the basis of which we gather together,

36:10

live our life. We remember Christ's sacrifice that was freely given on our behalf. Our forgiveness,

36:21

and thank the Lord for forgiveness because of his sacrifice. And the new covenant because of

36:28

the shed blood, the covenant that he has, it'll never be broken. It's interesting to know

36:35

that Abraham, when God made a covenant with him, God never turned back. He never relinquished.

36:42

It's like us. If we don't have fulfillment in our life, it's because we have walked away. The

36:51

question that I ask then is, what does the cross mean to a believer today?

36:56

What does that mean in your life when you think of the cross of Jesus?

37:02

Well, I'll answer it first for me. It humbles me to think that God did that for me.

37:12

And you think about that multiplied out by millions and millions of people.

37:18

And it's really a wonderful thing to think about how blessed that experience is. You had maybe a

37:26

different experience, but we all had to come to the cross and know what that is. And that could be

37:34

different for 25 or 35 of us. And by the way, Chris, look at all the people in here tonight.

37:39

We got a crowd tonight. Boy, I'm telling you, thank you all for coming.

37:44

And so we acknowledge that God is at work in our life. And for all of you that are experiencing

37:56

the depth of trials and tribulations, I encourage you that God is always at work,

38:03

always at work, always at work on our behalf. Sometimes the point of reference,

38:09

because of the cross, it will take longer than what we think. Have any one of you ever prayed,

38:15

Lord, I need the answer now. Yeah, okay. We've had that. That's for sure. So that's one remembrance.

38:24

The next remembrance is the resurrection. And you know, I always go back and forth with a friend

38:31

of mine. We debate these things. Is it more important to think about and to experience what

38:38

God did in coming to birth, what Christmas means and the birth of Jesus, or is it the

38:43

resurrection? And I always say it's the resurrection in my perspective. It was wonderful that he did

38:49

what he did, but the resurrection seals it in the fact that it's a real experience that nobody can

38:56

take away from us, that he was dead and now he's alive three days later. Thank the Lord for that.

39:03

The scripture says in Luke 24, he is not here, he is risen. So therefore the tomb is empty.

39:11

We remember that Jesus defeated death and this anchors us in many different ways,

39:18

but it could anchor us in our hope, our future resurrection if we die and again,

39:25

our resurrected and our courage in suffering. It's an interesting thing. We always think about the

39:33

victories in our life. And if I live long enough, maybe I'll begin to write some things down about

39:42

some of the sufferings in our life because that's where we really learn. The mountain tops are great,

39:48

aren't they? Oh my gosh. But where do we learn? In the valleys, in the desperation and circumstances

39:55

and things. 2 Corinthians 1.4, God comforts us in our tribulation. And I have to say that again and

40:06

again to people. He comforts us. He looks after us. He didn't change. He's there.

40:13

And the question that I ask then, why is the resurrection essential to the Christian faith

40:20

and not just the cross? Why is that? Well, for one, Jesus' victory over death. Two,

40:28

it validates the cross really works and it gives us power to live our life in newness of life.

40:36

Any other thoughts about what the resurrection means to you?

40:40

Okay. We'll leave it go at that. All right. Another core remembrance. Remember, God did these

40:49

things for us, not himself, for us. God's work in history. Now, think about this.

40:57

And history usually for most experienced Christians start at salvation and what it means

41:06

in the resurrection we've talked about, what it means at birth. But just like the Israelites

41:11

remembered Exodus and the Jordan Crossing, we are to remember what? About creation.

41:18

I, in my retirement now, have time to smell the daisies. And we have this cathedral room

41:28

or vault sun room at the end of our, our part of our house. And it's just, and it faces south.

41:37

And there's a great big window up top and the sun is there. And I just have to go in there and I,

41:42

every time I go in there and the birds are now starting to come back and they're singing.

41:46

And I just get lost in the Lord. His creation is so beautiful. Now, mind you, a couple of weeks

41:51

ago, I was looking at two feet of snow. But again, here we are, grass is getting green.

41:56

And it's just the idea that you can just enjoy his creation for what he did. He made it for us.

42:03

He, it was an exemplary activity of what his goodness is. The creative elements of his,

42:11

the expression of his love for us. So that's number two. God becoming man. That's another

42:18

appreciation that we have. How can God become man? How can he fit that all in and be born

42:25

of a virgin? The cross and the blood shed. We talked about that. The resurrection,

42:32

defying death. And again, Pentecost. What's so interesting about that? He gave us the Holy

42:39

Spirit. That's another element to remember to thank the Lord for. He would have forgiven our

42:47

sins, but when he brought the Holy Spirit, he gave us what? Through the Holy Spirit,

42:53

the power to live the life. The dunamos, the Holy Spirit. And that's important.

43:02

I often think, and we have gone through Exodus, and we've gone through Deuteronomy, and we,

43:10

those of us that share on Wednesday night, we often say to each other

43:14

directly or indirectly, think about if we had to live that life. And the only way we know

43:21

that we sinned is whether we went and we went before the priest with an offering,

43:25

and he spoke on behalf of our sins, and then what else was there?

43:31

You yourself are trying to follow God. There's no internal Holy Spirit to be able to strengthen

43:37

you to do the righteous acts that he asks. Yet he is asked, and that's because the law

43:43

fell short, and he's given us that Holy Spirit. All right, how about this?

43:53

What other important element is missing out of that list that should be mentioned here?

44:02

And you're part of that.

44:08

The church, he's given us the church so that we don't have to live the life by ourself.

44:18

No, I can do it myself. Yeah, right, that doesn't work very well.

44:22

It says in the Bible, do not, what? I just lost my thought.

44:33

Do not forsake your assembling of yourself together. Okay, thank you Francine.

44:38

And what happens when we do that, when we forsake the assembling of ourself together?

44:43

We become opinionated. We become thought processes on ourself. We're right, they're wrong.

44:51

But the equalizer is, and the value is, that you see Christ in one another.

44:57

That's hard to think about. He's the equalizer for all of us here, these different points of life,

45:04

but it's the church. Now think about the church. You know, God can work miraculously.

45:10

He can bring salvation to people, singularly. But what's he ask us to do? Pray for those

45:19

that are in need. He can miraculously do things sovereignly as he will.

45:27

But if you look in scripture, he has looked for a partnership with us. We are to pray. Well,

45:34

do you think that God doesn't know the prayers that we're asking? Sure he does.

45:39

And he's not caught short on the things that we think, oh gosh, it has to happen now.

45:44

But he wants us to partner, to bring about his kingdom through the lives of the church.

45:51

That's the reality, because people do not see God unless they have a vision.

45:57

And a lot of Muslims now have visions and dreams, and that's wonderful.

46:02

But unless somebody articulates that and begins to frame up what God is about, they may not know

46:13

how many of us have ever talked with somebody in a near-death experience.

46:20

Then, you know, it's meaningful at that point in time. I had one individual that talked with

46:26

some longer time ago. He was going to do it his way. It was my daughter-in-law's stepfather.

46:34

He was a Jewish person, and he listened, and then he stopped. And both my son

46:42

tried to talk with him. I talked with him. Meghan, my daughter-in-law, talked with him.

46:49

And he died of cancer. And Meghan called, and she said, Dad, you think I should go? I said,

46:56

look, you have nothing to lose. Go there. She wanted to tell him one last time.

47:01

He said, no, I'm not going to listen. And you know where he landed up. I don't know that he

47:07

didn't have an instantaneous experience, but for all sake purposes, he went to his reward.

47:13

And it's very sobering to think that those that don't know the Lord,

47:20

there is no hope, as the Bible says. And again, the last one, God's faithfulness

47:27

is establishing the church as the tool to usher in his kingdom. That's important to remember. That's

47:34

just as important as the other things. That's the culmination. You are the expression of his love

47:40

to the world. All right, another core experience here that we look at. How about our own testimony?

47:49

The grace and the transformation in each heart. And I will tell you that if we have 30 people

47:55

here, there's 30 different experiences of a testimony that God has brought to bear.

48:03

Never the same, no carbon copy. It's unique how God speaks to us and draws us.

48:11

And we have our own testimony. 1 Corinthians 6, 11 says, remember what you were,

48:18

but you were washed. You are changed. You are bought. You are his.

48:27

There's no free ticket anymore. You know, just, okay, I'll, and I live with some people in this

48:35

retirement community. How should I say this kindly? They've accepted the Lord and that's

48:43

all they do. It's all they did. There's no manifestation of activity in their life that

48:52

can be spoken of. And I grieve for them because they don't know the reward. How many find a reward

48:58

in ministering to other people, the love of God? Yeah, I mean, there's no greater reward than that.

49:05

No greater reward than giving yourself. Fine is finances, time, treasure, whatever the case may be,

49:12

to those that are in need. Another one, Ephesians 2, 11, 13, you were far from God. We all were.

49:22

And we could maybe have a bet on who was the fatherist. We don't want to go there, but we

49:26

were all far away at one degree or another, but his blood brought you near God, the blood of

49:33

Jesus. Now, remember this, where God found you, think about that, the degradation of your

49:42

circumstances. And, you know, for one, that when I was 10 years old, I didn't have degradation,

49:49

but I didn't know the Lord, but I was still lost. What He rescued you from? Well, I will tell you

49:58

that when I rebelled and decided to go my own way and go into service, I did bad things.

50:08

And I can remember the very night I was going to come home, discharged from McGuire Air Force Base

50:15

one night, come home one day, say goodbye to my parents, and move to Florida. Had a job lined up,

50:23

everything. And my mother, of course, she was praying, a praying mother. How many are praying

50:29

mothers here for our kids? Yes. Okay. And she said, well, would you go to church with us tomorrow? I

50:35

said, no. I said, I'm not going to go to church. So they got up Sunday morning. She said, would

50:41

you go? I said, well, okay. I went. And that was a turning point in my life because there was a

50:46

minister there that ministered to me specifically on my need. And I cried my eyes out and never

50:51

did go to Florida. Okay. And you know, it was instantaneous. It was something I, he rescued

50:56

me from myself and circumstances, how he changed you and is changing you. It's not just you came

51:07

to salvation X number of years ago, but what is, what is he doing in your life now? You cannot be

51:13

a Christian that is earnestly following him and not see change and experience and trust and all

51:20

the things that you're building because he's building a strong person, a strong man, so to

51:26

speak, quote unquote, in your life and woman. Excuse me. Question. What does your testimony look

51:34

like or what do you live out in your life as a testimony to Christ? Anybody want to take that?

51:40

What are your expressions of your, of your experience in the Lord?

51:49

Anybody? Okay. We got to jail. I've been quiet till now.

51:59

So I actually became a Christian when I was a child. It was either five or nine. I don't even

52:05

remember specifically, but so my whole life has been just a journey of growing in Christ. Thank you.

52:17

But the most, the most important part in my life didn't come till I was about 50 years old

52:25

because, oh, for heaven's sake.

52:31

There. I was, I was, I have, I've had three husbands and it's not

52:39

because of the way that Samaritan woman was. It just happened that way.

52:46

But my first two husbands, I more or less picked them out myself, much to my dismay later.

52:54

But the, my third husband, God put him in my life. And so I remember complaining at God one

53:00

day. I'm like, okay, God, you're the one that put him in my life. So why isn't he perfect?

53:08

What audacity. But anyway, God said to me very specifically right then,

53:17

Gail, when are you going to learn it's not about you? And I was in shock. I'm like,

53:22

how could it not be about me? It's my life. But he said to me right then, Gail, until you

53:31

give yourself, abandon yourself to me, surrender yourself completely, not by little pieces,

53:36

not this, I'll give him this and I'll give him that. I want your whole life. And until,

53:41

and unless you do that, you're never, never going to be at peace or have the joy you're looking for.

53:48

And for six months I struggled with him over that. But that was the big pivotal turning point in my

53:54

life. And it, everybody has to come to that point to really grow in Christ and to change

54:01

because you have to die to yourself. And when you were talking about the cross, I'm thinking,

54:05

yeah, the cross is important to me because it means my death as well as his.

54:10

Absolutely.

54:13

Okay. I think what does manifest in my life now is I've been pure for the last 16 years.

54:24

And I had a coworker a few weeks ago who was like, well, don't you smoke? And I said,

54:32

nah, I don't smoke. And she goes, well, what do you do when you're drinking then? I said,

54:37

I don't drink. I have no desire for that stuff.

54:44

And the answer was, oh, you live a boring life. And I say, yes, amen to that.

54:49

No, it's not. Not at all. You know, when you are on this side of the cross, it's a whole different

54:56

understanding. I mean, a secular person does not understand the life that we live. I mean,

55:03

it's impossible. Okay. So another core value, God's instructions and wisdom to us

55:15

and obedience and direction is what we have to end up with in 2 Timothy 2.8. It says,

55:20

remember Jesus Christ risen from the dead in Psalm 119, remember your word to your servant.

55:26

So in remembering God's word to us and infiltrating into our life, we begin to get direction. We begin

55:35

to get accomplishments. We begin to see God answer prayer and we are to remember God's word first.

55:42

That's how we grow. For those of you that weren't here, just a quick hiatus.

55:48

Because when you are Christian and you have these thoughts, that's the carnal nature.

55:56

How do you overcome that? It says, if you look at the word conscience in your life,

56:01

the Lord comes down. He gives us the word. If you read the word, the word is assimilated into

56:08

the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit takes that word and then works through your conscience to direct you

56:15

to righteousness and a good life. So you remember the word. It starts with the word. Those of us

56:21

that don't read the word, you're not going to have a very successful Christian experience. That's

56:27

where it all starts. You want to remember his promises, his warnings, his calling.

56:34

Forgetting leads to drift. It's not that you're going to end up just throwing everything out.

56:40

Slowly. Oh, you haven't been to church a week. And then it's two weeks. And well, we'll watch it on

56:48

live TV. That's nice. You can sit in my living room in the cup of coffee and watch Chris.

56:55

That's great. But that doesn't work, ultimately. Remembering leads to faithfulness.

57:03

So Christ's return is one last thing. It encourages us to persevere because he's coming

57:10

again. We are not so destitute, as Paul says. And we would be if we knew that Christ was not

57:21

coming again. But he is. And consequently, we build our faith on that. Every communion points

57:28

to what he has done, but also looks forward. And he says this. You proclaim, and then it

57:36

tells you about the Lord's Supper until he comes. He's coming again. Isn't that glorious? The fact

57:45

that he's going to win this. He's got it. Amen. So we remember what? Christ is always at work,

57:54

always at work, never stops working. Justice will be done ultimately. And Christ will make

58:01

all things new. Knowing this, then, does this encourage you? And if so, how? Then the depths

58:09

of despair. My wife does not like me to say this, but I'll say it because she's not here.

58:18

This is our hell. This is the worst it gets. We will be translated to a life that is everlasting.

58:28

Ron, don't tell her I said that. Okay? Don't blackmail me. All right?

58:36

Yeah. Thanks, Jill. But I mean, this is it. It can get no worse than this.

58:45

So thank the Lord that we're transcending to eternity. And think about this. There's going

58:51

to be no end to that. I can hardly even get my mind around that thing. I don't know what we're

58:56

going to be doing. Maybe building kingdoms. I don't know whatever, but that's good. I love that.

59:02

This keeps us hopeful and steady in this broken world. And I guess as we look around,

59:09

it's becoming more broken and more broken as things go on. So let's not forget his goodness.

59:18

It says in Deuteronomy 8, 11, make sure that you never forget the Lord. And don't

59:24

disobey his laws and teachings. That's not going to do you any good.

59:29

Abide by them. Do them because you'll be righteous. Judges 8, 24, 34. And the people of Israel did

59:38

not remember the Lord their God who had delivered them. And you know, we all have,

59:45

I thought I turned this down and I apologize. I'm sorry.

59:49

I guess my wife's giving me a rebuke.

59:55

All right. Okay. Think about this. They were always stiff-necked and rebellious.

1:00:01

He wanted to get rid of them. Moses interceded. So he brought a new covenant and that's to our

1:00:10

advantage. Psalm 106.13, but they soon forgot his works. They did not wait for his counsel.

1:00:21

How many are impetuous? Lord, I want it now. Wait, wait, wait. Don't do anything without the

1:00:28

administrative head stamping approval or guidance in your life saying, okay,

1:00:33

this is the way you walk in it. It is dangerous not to live that way. And Hebrews 2.1,

1:00:39

therefore we must pay much closer attention to what we have heard lest we drift away from it.

1:00:46

It is slow. It happens. I've seen many people drift away. So it's time. So we won't answer this

1:00:57

question. How do you practically remember his blessings to you? So in closing, let's look at

1:01:05

this. The Bible consistently now calls us to remember what God has done, what he has doing.

1:01:15

So our faith stays anchored, not drifting. You notice something when you are, when you,

1:01:25

I used to do a lot of boating and you come to the shore and you throw an anchor out. Well,

1:01:29

if you don't throw the anchor out on the beach, after a while the tide begins to move your boat

1:01:34

and all of a sudden you come back to where you were and your boat's way out there because you

1:01:39

haven't anchored it. You drift. It's slow. A couple inches, a couple feet. Oh, you know,

1:01:45

boat's all right. We'll worry about it later. And all of a sudden, bingo, the boat's gone.

1:01:49

I have to swim for it. So those things are important to us. And I want you to remember

1:01:57

them because they are memorials to us and remembrances. So Lord, we thank you for tonight.

1:02:04

We thank you for the participation. We thank you that you are working in our life and the

1:02:09

testimonies that were shared tonight. They're so wonderful, how you brought all of us from

1:02:14

different walks of life. Yet here we are together and we thank you for that Lord.

1:02:20

We thank you for the church that is being built and the gates of hell shall not prevail.

1:02:27

And so we ask Lord that as we go our way, we will be strengthened in light of our circumstances,

1:02:35

whether they are mountain top or whether they are valley. We thank you. We would not change this

1:02:41

for the world. We bless you and all of God's people said, amen. God bless you. Thank you

1:02:47

for your participation.

1:02:52

Thanks for joining us at Lansdale Life Church as we praise God and discuss His word. Don't

1:02:59

forget to join us for Worship Lives Sunday mornings at 10 a.m. Eastern on YouTube.

1:03:05

Be blessed and have a great day!