In the midst of difficult and confusing situations, it can be hard to know what to do. But what if God is already handling it?
What if is a phrase I like to refer to as
fear’s greatest hit.
I mean, how many things in your life did you
not do because what if?
How many things in your life did you do that
you shouldn’t have done because what if?
How many nights could you have slept but what
if kept you awake?
How many mornings did you wake up anxious
because what if was your alarm clock?
Not just what if.
Moses wants to know, “What if…”
Pay attention to the next word.
“What if they…?”
It’s a good question, “What if?” and it’s
where many of us wonder and wander our whole
lives.
“What if they?
What if they laugh at me?
What if they don’t accept me?”
Now on one hand, Moses is in a hypothetical
situation, because he hasn’t even done anything
yet, but he’s just playing out the possible
after effects of his obedience.
“What if they?”
On the other hand, it’s not hypothetical at
all; it’s historical.
Moses is afraid of the same rejection he experienced
40 years earlier recurring.
Forty years earlier, Moses had killed an Egyptian
in defense of his people, and because he did
the right thing the wrong way, he ended up
on the run.
There’s something about when you’ve tried
to do the right thing and put your heart in
something, but you did it the wrong way, that
you don’t even want to try again.
So now Moses is asking something that’s hypothetical,
but it’s based out of what is historical.
He’s projecting his past into his potential,
and it’s his limiting factor, but God wants
him to know, “That staff in your hand…”
To us, a staff is a shepherding instrument,
and Moses was using it to tend his father-in-law’s
sheep, but to Moses the staff represented
a whole lot more than his vocation.
It represented his mistakes, because if he
had never killed the Egyptian and ended up
a fugitive on the run from Egypt, where he
was adopted into royalty, he never would have
had the staff in his hand.
So when God asks him, “What’s in your hand?”
it causes Moses to have to reckon with the
mistakes he has made that have landed him
in the position he’s in.
When God speaks to you about your potential,
he will cause you to confront your past.
He asks, “What’s that in your hand?”
To Moses it’s a staff, but it’s also his past.
It’s also his instrument, the thing he has
to do what he’s doing.
So there’s a whole lot happening in this staff,
and yet God says, “What you have is what you
need.”
God wanted to say that to a single mom today.
What you have is what you need.
He put enough in you to raise that child.
He foresaw that you would be in this situation,
and he compensated for what others didn’t
give you by putting a resolve and a grit and
a determination in you that’s more than enough.
Everything you need is within reach.
So leave your list of what you don’t have
alone today.
What is that in your hand?
The wisdom you need is probably in a book
on your shelf that you haven’t read.
I was talking to a guy who pastored a church
one time that was bigger than mine.
I said, “I need some advice.”
He said, “I gave you a book.”
I said, “You mean that book three years ago?”
He said, “Yeah, that book three years ago.
Did you read it?”
I said, “No, I didn’t get around to it.”
He said, “I knew you were going to be at this
place, because I’ve been there, so I gave
you what I knew you would need.
You missed it.”
He said, “Call me back when you’ve read the
book.
At least read a couple chapters, and we’ll
talk.
What are we even going to talk about?”
You know, sometimes when you pray and ask
God to download information about a decision,
“God, how should I handle it?” he’s like,
“Did you even read the Book?”
We’ve never lived in a time where the information
that is in the Word of God has been more accessible
to us.
My god!
They’ll send you alarms.
They’ll break it down for you.
They’ll give you a Bible reading in a year
plan, a Bible reading in the book of Psalms
plan, a Bible reading in Southern dialect
plan.
They’ll give you how to read the Bible with
your dog in 32 days every morning on your
walk with your dog, an audio Bible, a Bible
in Braille.
Touch somebody and say, “Grab it.”
You have to grab it.
Joy is there; you have to grab it.
Wisdom is there; you have to grab it.
It’s there.
The information you need for the transformation
of your life is waiting to be seized by those
who will open their eyes to what they’ve been
given.
Everything you need is in your reach.
It was something he had already in his hand
that produced what he needed to move forward
into the future to accomplish God’s purpose
on the earth.
I’m moved by that, because I get caught up
in what I don’t have.
I know you don’t.
I didn’t say you did; I said I do.
Here’s the thing the Lord is teaching me.
It’s less about what you have and more about
how you handle what you have.
I’ll prove it to you.
Do you have Netflix?
All right, go on Netflix and put it on 30
for 30.
It’s a documentary series from ESPN.
Put it on the one called “Broke.”
It will show you athletes who made millions
of dollars, and by the time their careers
were over they were in debt.
Because it’s not what you have; it’s how you
handle what you have.
That’s true with money.
I’ve met rich people who are further behind
than poor people.
I’ve met poor people who are greedier than
rich people.
It’s not what you have; it’s how you handle
what you have.
That’s what God wants to know.
How are you handling it?
It’s not the woman you married; it’s how you
handle the woman you married that determines
whether you get the marriage you want.
Now the selection process is important.
You can cook better with good ingredients,
but I’m saying that somebody might be able
to take your same ingredients and make something
delicious.
It’s not what you have; it’s how you handle
what you have that determines what you do.
I found out that teenagers think they’re busy.
They do.
They’ll tell you, “I’m busy.”
“How are you doing, man?”
“Oh god, I’m busy.”
“You’re busy?”
They’re 13 years old.
I follow up with a question.
“Do you have a baby?
Because if you don’t have a baby, you don’t
know busy.”
Preach with me.
In fact, I want all you busy 13-year-olds…
You’re so busy.
I want you to find a 25-year-old woman in
the lobby, one who has a little car seat she’s
trying to carry on the way out the door from
church.
Walk up to her and tell her how busy you are,
and watch her look back at you and take about
the next five minutes to show you that it’s
not how much stress you have; it’s how you
handle the stress you have that determines…
I’m saying you could do a lot more if you
handled it differently.
You could accomplish a lot more if you handled
it differently.
It’s all in how you handle it.
It’s usually not the things you think are
stressing you out that are stressing you out.
It’s the things you are mishandling in other
areas of your life that make you hate your
job, or it’s the things you’re mishandling
in your job that make you hate your life at
home.
So now you come home and take out your frustration
from there on them.
Because you didn’t handle it here, now it’s
showing up over there.
Touch your neighbor and say, “Handle it.”
You have to learn to handle it, whether it’s
weights in a weight room or whether it’s life.
See, you keep asking God to take some of the
weight off of your life, but faith doesn’t
take the weight off of my life; it shows me
how to handle it.
How many of you have a situation in your life
today, and you want God to show you how to
handle it?
Just wave your hand if that’s you.
Well, God is good and God is strong.
God is great and God is good, so God told
Moses, “I heard my people crying out, and
their cry reached me, and I’ve come down to
rescue them.”
That’s what he told Moses in Exodus, chapter
3.
He said, “I’ve seen my people in cruel oppression.
I saw how Pharaoh was treating them.
I see what you’re going through.
I see what it’s like.
I see that you’re trying.”
God said, “I came down, and I’m going to handle
it.
I’m going to handle this.”
Now before you get really excited about it,
God has his own way of handling things.
You’ll be asking God to send all of the people
away so they can get some food, and he’ll
tell you to steal a little boy’s lunch and
bring it to him.
That’s how he handles it.
You’ll be looking at Jericho, and you’ll see
some big walls, and you’ll be like, “God,
we need to knock these down.
Will you handle it?”
And God won’t give you a wrecking ball; he’ll
give you a trumpet, because God has his own
way of handling it.
You’ll tell him, “I don’t have anything to
pay my debts off of,” and he’ll ask you, “What
do you have in your house?”
You’ll say, “A little bit of oil,” and he’ll
tell you to go to your neighbor’s and borrow
jars, and you’ll say, “No, that’s the problem.
I’m in debt.
I don’t need to borrow anything else.”
He’ll say, “But go to these people and borrow
it in the right way, and when you borrow it
in the right way, now you’re going to get
something you didn’t have.”
God has a strange way of handling things.
Or you’ll be praying that he would send the
Messiah, and you’ll be thinking that Thor
is going to come down out of the sky and save
the world, and God will show up and speak
to a virgin girl and say, “I know that even
though you haven’t been active with a man
yet and your husband is going to want to divorce
you, what’s in you is conceived of the Holy
Spirit, and it’s going to come forth, and
it’s going to be the salvation of the world,
but it’s going to start in a manger.”
Because God is going to handle it in a strange
way.
I’m speaking to somebody.
You’re in a situation right now, and God is
handling it, and you don’t even know it because
he’s handling it in a cradle.
If the cradle isn’t enough proof, he proves
it on the cross when he defeats death with
the very instrument that symbolizes its most
violent nature.
He doesn’t defeat death with a tank.
He doesn’t defeat death with the sword.
He defeats death with a cross, because God
has a strange way of handling your situation.
He’s handling it, and you don’t even know
he’s handling it, because you’ve never seen
it handled like that before.
He tells you to turn the other cheek, and
usually you’re the one turning someone’s cheek
when they offend you.
God said, “No, I have another way to handle
it.”