God wants to do a new thing in your life –– but you may have to make room for it. In “Clearing Out Your Mind,” Pastor Steven Furtick reveals how, by holding onto the way things used to be, we may be limiting what God wants to do next.

When you are positioning yourself according
to the peace and the purpose of God, and when

you are present in the situation where he
has placed you…

God said, “All of the other things people
run after, I’m going to bring it to you.”

If you want in on this word, shout, “God is
going to bring it to me!”

Come on, tell the person next to you, “I don’t
have to chase it, stress about it, cheat to

get it, violate my morality or my ethics.

God is going to bring it to me.”

This is the covenant of grace.

Watch this.

I tried to get to God.

I couldn’t, so he ripped open heaven, stepped
down to come inside of me, so that the righteous

requirements of the law might be fully met
in us.

No, I cannot achieve his holiness, but God
is going to bring it to me.

Heaven is going to come to my house.

Heaven is going to come to my mind.

Peace is going to come to my marriage.

God is going to bring it to me.

I want to shut the whole sermon down for a
minute and give God praise by faith that he’s

going to bring it to me.

What you need, he’s got it.

God is going to bring it to me.

When I praise him, blessings come down.

God is going to bring it to me.

I don’t have to beg him; God is going to bring
it.

Peter wasn’t looking for a vision for his
life.

God brought it to him.

All he did was go to Joppa.

Can we talk about Joppa for a minute?

I thought about calling this message “The
Joppa-tunity of a Lifetime,” but that was

corny.

I scratched that one out real quick.

You can have it.

That’s not a good title for a message.

But it got me that he was in Joppa, because
I was like, “Hmm.

Joppa.

Joppa, Joppa, Joppa, Joppa, Joppa.

Joppa is a port city.

I know that.

They put the timber there.

They would take the timber, and the timber
came there when they built Solomon’s temple.

I think they brought the timber from Lebanon
to Joppa because it’s on the Mediterranean

coast.

They brought timber there, and then they sent
it to build the temple.

Oh, maybe Joppa is something where God takes
the raw materials.

Joppa.

No, that’s not it.

Joppa, Joppa, Joppa, Joppa.”

Why does it say over and over again he was
in Joppa?

Go to Acts 10:1.

It says it a couple of times.

Remember, Peter got in trouble.

He didn’t have to go looking for trouble;
trouble came looking for him.

Peter wasn’t looking for controversy.

He wasn’t looking for conflict.

He wasn’t looking for problems.

He was in Joppa because there was a woman
in the church at Joppa who was very important

to the believers there.

He was in Lydda raising people from the dead.

You know, just the stuff you do.

When he was in the middle of this crazy revival
in Lydda, which wasn’t too far from Joppa,

this amazing eKidz volunteer died.

Her Greek name was Dorcas.

Her name was also Tabitha.

They asked Peter if he would come to comfort
them.

He got there, and he saw how important she
was to all of them in Joppa.

He started looking at all of the clothes she
sewed for widows.

She had a ministry to the poor.

She cared about people.

She served on the parking team.

She cared about people.

She worked on production at Raleigh-Durham.

They
hated to lose Dorcas.

Peter got kind of bored.

He was a man of action.

So he’s like, “This is cool taking a tour
of everything she did, but y’all leave the

room.”

Check out this Scripture real quick.

I know I said Acts 10, but I want to go back
to Acts 9.

I want to give you the whole story.

We know what happened when he got to Joppa.

How did he get there?

It’s important.

He went to Joppa to visit Dorcas.

Acts 9:40: “Peter sent them all out of the
room…”

She has been washed and placed for burial
in the upper room, and as they’re memorializing

her: “…he got down on his knees and prayed.

Turning toward the dead woman, he said, ‘Tabitha,
get up.'”

Peter is like, “We can have a funeral or we
can have a resurrection.”

Peter was bold.

He tried it like Jesus one time.

Jesus did this same exact thing, but it was
with a little girl.

This little girl was dead, and Jesus sent
everybody out of the room, because he knew

if they stayed in the room, their doubt might
make it impossible for faith to really do

what faith can do when it is unencumbered
by doubt.

What’s the title of this message?

Make Room for the New.

When Jesus sent them all out, he said something
in Aramaic: “Talitha koum!”

It means, “Little girl, get up.”

Now watch Peter imitating his Master.

He sent them all out of the room and turned
toward the woman and said, “Tabitha, get up.”

It’s almost like “Talitha.”

It’s just one letter different.

He thought something.

“If Jesus did it and if his Spirit lives in
me…”

I came with a message for somebody.

Make room for resurrection.

Make room for things in your life that you
were just about ready to bury to breathe again.

“Tabitha, get up.”

And she did.

“She opened her eyes, and seeing Peter she
sat up.”

Well, I guess so.

She sat up, and he stayed in Joppa a little
while, and they liked him.

He was very popular in Joppa.

Peter could have run for mayor of Joppa, because
he demonstrated great power in Joppa.

Joppa.

It’s a place where you don’t expect anything
great to happen but something does.

Joppa is like your job.

Job-ba.

Joppa.

He was just doing his job, just going to see
it, and a miracle happened.

He was just going to see it and going to comfort
them and going to do what he did, and a miracle

happened.

Joppa: the place where God puts stuff together.

Why he was in Joppa.

Joppa.

It’s kind of familiar.

Who else went to Joppa in the Bible?

I was trying to remember.

I was talking to the interns this weekend.

I put them on the spot.

We had such a good time.

I said, “Who else went to Joppa?”

They went through every character in the Bible,
guessing: Zacchaeus, Bartimaeus, Luke, Matthew,

John.

I was like, “No, no, no, no.”

It’s somebody in the Bible.

I’m going to give you a hint.

It involves a fish.

Rhymes with corona.

Jonah went to Joppa.

Watch what he did in Joppa.

Are you ready?

Jonah 1:3 says, “Jonah ran away from the Lord
and headed to Tarshish.

He went down to Joppa, where he found a ship
bound for that port.”

God called him to Nineveh, but he resisted
it.

He resisted going to Nineveh because those
were not the people he expected God to bless.

He resisted what he did not understand.

He resisted what he could not conceptualize.

He resisted what he had no frame of reference
for.

He went down to Joppa and boarded a ship heading
away from the Lord.

So now I have a contrast, and I want to ask:
What will you do in Joppa?

Will you be like Peter who when he got to
Joppa and God sent him an opportunity to say,

“Peter, I want you to make room for something
new.

I want you to believe that I can break a barrier
in your life.

I want you to believe that I’m about to do
something your mind has not conceived.”

Will you be like Peter who went with it or
are you going to be like Jonah who ran from

it?

Peter went to Joppa, and while he was in Joppa
praying, he saw something amazing that he

didn’t expect.

He looked, and he saw a sheet from the four
corners, representing the four corners of

the earth.

God is like, “I’m about to break all of your
barriers.

I’m about to break through your unbelief.”

See, we talk about making room for the new.

You want to go have a yard sale, or something
like that, or put everything on…

It’s not about closet space.

It’s not about clearing out your closet; it’s
about the transformation of your mind.

Do you have room for the new in your mind?

Because they didn’t.

Peter didn’t.

When God showed Peter what he was about to
do…

This is the way it always is.

When God shows us something, we compare it
to our previous point of reference, and then

we start consulting our resources.

God wants to bring us new relationships, but
if you’re not ready for new people in your

life, you will bring the same patterns to
the new relationships that you brought to

the old relationships.

We literally keep people out of our lives
God wants to send because we are holding on

to the hurts from the ones who have already
left.

I feel the Spirit of God breaking barriers
as I preach right now.

You’re like, “What does this message have
to do with me?

I’m not getting on an airplane and going to
preach to somebody in Caesarea like Peter

did.”

You don’t have to.

All you have to do is dare to believe that
God is making room for the new in your life

right now.

Even sometimes when it was painful for me
and I thought I was losing things in my life,

I wasn’t losing it; God was moving it.

Who is this for?

I just need to know.

Probably about 20 people.

You didn’t lose it; God moved it.

He said, “You will still be eating last year’s
harvest when you have to move it out.”

Somebody shout, “Move it out, God!”

“Anything that is in the way of me being who
I need to be in this season…

Get it out of my heart.

Get it out of my mind.

Get it out of my habits.

You can have it, God.

I don’t want it.

I want what you have.”

You can’t receive new miracles with old mindsets.

Make room for the new.

It looks like this: emptying yourself, humbling
yourself, and asking God, “What do you want

to do in my Joppa?”

Or you can run from it and resist it.

You can keep remembering when the kids were
so cute.

They are 43 now.

They stopped being cute quite a while ago.

The church was trying to figure out, “How
do we protect what we loved while we embrace

what is new?”

I don’t know.

I think there are at least three lessons in
this text.

Do you all have a minute?

Make room for the new.

First, God says: Don’t limit yourself by labels.

The first thing God told Peter…

He said, “You have your nice little neat categories.”

Because when the sheet came down, Peter saw
all kinds of animals.

Y’all need to know, in this culture, they
respected visions.

This was not like Peter’s hallucination.

You know how some people now are so weird
and are like, “Well, the Lord showed me a

vision of us walking on the beach.”

It’s like, “Bro, you need to ask her out and
stop trying to embed it in this weird spirituality.”

Peter actually saw something, but remember,
there’s sometimes a tension between what you

thought God showed you…

It’s a tension, and that tension is a real
gift, because that’s where growth happens.

It’s like, “God, I thought I was going to
be married to her the rest of my life, but

I’m not.

We’re not married now.”

That’s painful, but what you do with it becomes
your Joppa, which determines if you run from

God’s purpose for your future or run toward
it.

That’s Joppa.

The word God gave me was “Don’t limit it with
a label.”

The first thing he told Peter…

Peter said in Acts 11:6, “I looked into it
and saw four-footed animals of the earth,

wild beasts, reptiles and birds.”

Then after he saw the pigs in a blanket, he
said, “Then I heard a voice telling me, ‘Get

up, Peter.

Kill and eat.'”

Now when I read that, I said, “God was trying
to get Peter to go hunting?”

No.

It wasn’t about the animals.

He was about to send Cornelius, who Peter
saw as an unclean Gentile.

So he was using this…

It wasn’t about bacon; it was about barriers,
mental barriers.

When he said, “Get up, Peter.

Kill and eat,” it wasn’t that God wanted Peter
to kill a pig; it was that he was trying to

kill Peter’s categories.

In this season of your life, God is trying
to kill your categories.

He’s going to use people you did not even
like to grow you up and mature you.

There was one person the other day who shared
a Bible verse with one of my kids, and they

left our church years ago.

They didn’t even like me when they left, but
when they gave a Bible verse to my kids, I

said, “God, I don’t care who hands them the
Scriptures.

I’ll take a cold cup of water in the pit of
hell from anybody.

I don’t care who hands it to them.

Use who you want to use, God.

Do what you want to do.

Kill my categories.”

As a matter of fact, when we say, “All things
work together for the good,” what we mean

when we quote Romans 8:28 out of context…

Romans 8:28 is connected and conjoined, incidentally,
to Romans 8:29, which says, “…according

to his purpose.”

So what it means by good is it’s going to
fulfill his purpose, not my preference.

What it means is I can’t categorize.

That’s God’s job.

It is God’s job to know what’s best for me.

It is God’s job to know what needs to happen.

It is God’s job to know what experiences I
need to get.

So God said, “Stop limiting it by labels.”