If you haven’t been here for the first two messages (of this series), let me catch you up a little bit. Advent is a time in the church calendar….it’s actually the English translation of the Latin word adventus, which means coming or arrival. It’s a season where we carve out space to hope and space to long. There’s three postures of the soul that we embrace during the Advent season. One is waiting. The other is anticipating and the third is preparing. We’re preparing for the once again coming of the Messiah into the world. This year we’re journeying with the prophet Isaiah using our lectionary passages. We’re using the Isaiah passages to point us to the birth of the Christ child. Two weeks ago, out of Isaiah 64, we said that our deepest longing is God’s fullest presence. Oftentimes what we need isn’t an answer given to us, it’s an arm around us, and that’s what we get at Christmas. Last week, we said that God is able to use the barren wilderness to birth beautiful life. In fact, you don’t have to leave the wilderness to encounter God, he builds a highway to meet you there. This Sunday we’re going to be camping out in Isaiah 61. Dr. Jeff Brodsky from Joy International is preaching with me today, so we’re team teaching this message.
As I was thinking about Isaiah 61, I was reminded of one of the most popular Christmas movies of all time. I think it’s been played as much or more than any other Christmas movie. It’s It’s a Wonderful Life. How many of you have seen this movie? It’s the story of George Bailey who grows up in this town and has big dreams, and then he encounters….LIFE. Things don’t turn out the way that he hoped. One evening it gets extremely dark for him and he’s standing on a bridge and he jumps off of it, intending to take his own life. A guardian angel, Clarence, comes in and saves his life. After he saves his life, Clarence takes him on a tour of his life. Clarence’s goal is to allow George to step back from his life and look at it and to see the difference his life has made. If George weren’t a part of this world, things would have gone drastically different. His brother, whom he saved from drowning, would have drowned. The pharmacist he saved from accidentally killing this one boy would have gone through and done it. Clarence takes George on, what I’ll call, a tour of “insteads.” Instead of this thing that did happen, this would have happened. Instead of that, this would be the new reality of the world we live in.
Instead is a powerful word, isn’t it? It’s a word of exchange. Instead of this, you get that. This week I had an experience with the word ‘instead.’ I installed a new—-I’m not exactly Mr. Fix-it—-light dimmer on the light in our kitchen. Instead of the light in our kitchen turning on, the light in our bathroom turned off. So I called my friend Gary, who’s an electrician, and right when his wife answered the phone, she said, “Ryan, what did you screw up?” This may have happened before. I told her what happened and she said, “How about this? How about you stick to the Bible and let us stick to electricity?” Fair enough! Instead is a powerful word, isn’t it? Think about it: Instead of economy, you get first-class. That’s a good instead. Instead of just barely squeaking buy in a final in school, instead you aced it! Instead’s a powerful word.
It’s a word Isaiah picks up as he points to this ‘instead’ exchanged reality that comes as a result of the divine Messiah. Let me lay some ground work for these instead that Isaiah’s going to point out. Isaiah 61:1-2. The prophet Isaiah is writing and looking forward to a time where Israel will be taken into exile and then they’ll start to come home. God’s going to work, and God’s going to move, and God’s going to bless, and listen to what Isaiah points towards. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because the Lord has anointed me to bring good news to the poor; he has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to those who are bound; to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor, and the day of vengeance of our God; to comfort all who mourn.
Isaiah, to a group of people heading into exile, points to a deeper, a bigger story that’s going on. He says that one day God’s going to speak into your captivity and he’s going to bring freedom. He’s going to proclaim LIBERTY (or freedom) to the captives. Isaiah points out that before God can start any sort of exchange in your life, any sort of ‘instead’ that he wants to bring about—-and there are some he wants to bring about—-the very first thing he must do is speak a word of freedom over your life. Freedom is the foundation of living in God’s favor, in God’s blessing. I know that in a room this size, this morning, there’s a number of people here that need a word of freedom today. I just want to invite you to lean in, to listen close, because this good news is for you. If we want to experience God’s favor, God’s blessing, we must first receive his freedom. It’s exactly what Jesus came to bring. Christmas is a liberty celebration.
Here’s the way Isaiah builds on that word, that word of freedom. He’s going to give us three ‘insteads.’ The first one is 61:3 — To grant to those who mourn in Zion—to give them a beautiful headdress instead of ashes…. You have to imagine a person in exile. Their home’s been destroyed. Their temple has been wiped out. Every dream that they’ve had has been dashed, and they’re being marched in chains off to a town that isn’t their own to be in a culture that isn’t home. It’s in THIS situation that this word comes….instead. Do you know how hard it would have been to hear this for those exiles? It would have been as hard to hear as it might be for you today. That this ‘instead’ life can be a reality. The first thing Isaiah wants to speak into is this idea of fatalism that we often carry on our shoulders. Here’s the lie that fatalism tells us: The way it is now is the way that it will always be, and there’s nothing you can do to change it. Isaiah speaks into that lie using this metaphor of ashes. Ashes were, in the ancient world, something people would place on their head and they would go down over their body and over their face, and it was a picture of a life that was just burned out. A life that had been decimated. A life that was sort of done. {Ashes might be the way that we describe the Denver Broncos’ season.}
Isaiah says that instead of ashes there’s a beautiful headdress. He has in mind a green headdress woven from either laurel leaves or meadow flowers that they would often place on the head of a victor after an athletic contest. Here’s the picture Isaiah is painting — It’s one of victory INSTEAD of defeat. The captives are not only freed, but they are turned into conquerors. Listen to the way it’s recorded in Isaiah 61:4 — They shall build up the ancient ruins; {The ancient city of Jerusalem that’s destroyed.} …they shall raise up the former devastations; they shall repair the ruined cities, the devastations of many generations. God’s going to take where there’s rubble and he’s going to start to rebuild. I got this sense that there’s people in this room where there’s some rubble that God wants to rebuild on. It may be your faith that’s in shambles. It may be your hope that is absolutely decimated and completely destroyed. It may be your joy that’s just zapped. I want to tell you this morning that I believe that God wants to rebuild some things in your life if you let him. He wants to speak this word over you and over me this morning.
Here’s the second ‘instead’ — …..the oil of gladness instead of mourning…. When people mourned, in the ancient world, their skin would dry out, and it was a public symbol of ‘man, we are walking through the valley of the shadow of death.’ They epitomized externally what was going on internally. It was a way of inviting others….hey, we’re in the thick of it, and if you’d like to, you can join us in mourning. Isaiah says that there was an oil people would put on their skin to liven it up again, and that’s the picture that Isaiah begins to paint. Instead of this dry mourning, an oil’s coming. All throughout the Scriptures, oil would signify both the Spirit of God and the presence of God. Look at the way he says it in (61:7) — Instead of your shame there shall be a double portion; instead of dishonor they shall rejoice in their lot; therefore in their land they shall possess a double portion; they shall have everlasting joy. That’s a great word, is it not? That what God’s going to do to this nation of exiles—people in waiting, anticipating, and hoping—is he’s not only going to bring them back to their land, but he’s going to expand their land and he’s going to take away their shame and lead them into joy.
Imagine the shame an exile would have felt. Their life’s work being decimated. Everything they hold dear ripped from their hands. They’re in a culture that’s not their own. Guilt is when we feel bad about what we’ve done; shame is when we feel bad about who we are. God (through the prophet Isaiah) speaks this word of hope into the deepest places of our souls. I love the way Brené Brown puts it: “Shame is the most powerful, master emotion. It’s the fear that we’re not good enough.” God says no, no, no, no, no, I am speaking a word of joy instead of shame. He’s building on ancient ruins, he’s leading us from defeat into victory, and he’s speaking a word of everlasting joy into our narrative of man, I wish I wouldn’t have, or I wish that didn’t happen, or that thing that person did to me just replays over and over and over in my mind and assaults my soul. Isaiah says there’s a better word. It’s a word of everlasting joy. {Will you look up at me a moment?} You and I can either hold onto our shame or we can hold onto God’s joy, but we cannot hold onto both. We can’t hold onto both. It’s impossible. The only way that the word of hope gets in our soul is if we open our hands and release our shame and invite God into our pain and say, “Would you come in? Would you speak a better word? Would you do what you say you’ll do through the prophet Isaiah, and would you lead me out of shame and into your joy?” I think that maybe today is a hand-opening day for some people. Jesus, I’m not even sure if you can, but if you can, I am inviting you into my pain and I’m asking that you would start to bring this everlasting joy and instead speak a word of ‘instead’ over my pain and lead me to it.
Here’s the way it closes (61:3) — ….the garment of praise instead of a faint spirit… The picture of a faint spirit is when you wake up in the morning, open your eyes, and your initial thought is I think this is as good as it’s going to get today, I might just stay in bed. Has anybody else been there? It’s the idea or the feeling of being depleted, of being weak, of being decimated. In contrast, a garment was something, in the ancient world, that they would put on when they were going out into the world. They would go out to do business. They would go out to meet somebody or visit somebody’s home. It was a way of saying we are prepared for whatever the day is going to bring. A garment of praise. We are not decimated. We’re not weak. We’re not faint. We’re ready, at the drop of a hat, to praise. What Isaiah’s word says is praise instead of sorrow.
This word of praise that Isaiah speaks is not a word of praise that goes back and just undoes everything that happens in the past. You and I know that’s not possible. Right? It’s a pointing towards the future of what God will do. When we wear that, we wear it with anticipation. We wear it with imagination…..God, what are you up to? How might you lead out of this darkness and into your light? We wear it in the same way the people marching to Jerusalem in the Psalms of Ascent would sing: When the Lord restored the fortunes of Zion, we were like those who dream. Then our mouth was filled with laughter, and our tongue with shouts of joy. (Ps. 126:1-2) Part of having a restored spirit is embracing new dreams. God, what might you do? How might you move in this dark situation?
For the nation of Israel, we have to step into their story a little bit or else the impact will be lost on us. As they’re getting dragged off by the Babylonians in 586 BC, as they see Jerusalem destroyed, how real do you think these ‘insteads’ might have seemed to them? Not real at all. They would have been a distant fantasy at best. This is where memory would serve us well, because they were in captivity for 70+ years, but God was good on his promise in Isaiah 61. He brought them back to the land. He restored them. They rebuilt the temple. They reenacted their praise to their great God. It didn’t happen overnight. But it did happen. But it was only a partial fulfillment, because if you know anything about the ministry of Jesus, Jesus actually begins his public ministry by quoting this same verse. Look at Luke 4:18-21 with me. Jesus is in his hometown of Nazareth and is in the synagogue on a Sabbath day. They give him the scroll of Isaiah and he found the place where it was written, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.” {Sound familiar? It should, it’s Isaiah 61. It’s what Jesus says right after that gets people upset. Here’s what he says….} And he rolled up the scroll and gave it back to the attendant and sat down. And the eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on him. And he began to say to them, “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” Freedom to the captives. Liberty to the oppressed. Chains broken. Hope given. And nothing changes. You can just imagine (after saying all this)….Jesus of Nazareth. Mic drop. Out. Everyone’s going, “Wait a second. We thought you were going to come and be the military ruler.” We thought you were going to come and overthrow Rome, who’s absolutely decimating us. We thought you were going to come and do something that would really be helpful for us. This fulfillment isn’t exactly working. It’s not what we had in mind!
I think we often get it wrong, too. How many of you have ordered a gift for somebody off of Amazon this Christmas season? This is what happens: When you order a gift off of Amazon, you get an initial response via email that says your order has been placed. Then a little while later, you get a followup email that says your order has been fulfilled. That means whatever you’ve ordered has left their processing center and is on the way. Do you have the package yet? No. It’s not on your doorstep yet, but it’s on the way. It’s coming. When Jesus says this promise has been fulfilled, he’s saying that you’re going to see glimpses of this fulfillment all around you. You’re going to see people healed. You’re going to see people freed. You’re going to see people who were oppressed who are walking in joy. You’re going to see all of these things, but you’re not going to see it in all of its fullness just yet. One day the package will be here.
You and I live between two poles—we live between the incarnation and the resurrection of Jesus, where all of these promises were inaugurated, where they started. But we also live in between the Second Coming where it will be fully realized. It’s in the incarnation, in Jesus of Nazareth, that Jesus brings ‘instead’ life into eternal reality. Instead of sin that causes death, we get life. Instead of separation, we get acceptance. Instead of brokenness, we get beauty.
Israel was horribly disappointed with their Messiah. So much so that they tried to kill him. Just keep reading in Luke 4. His inaugural ‘this is my ministry’ speech doesn’t exactly go well because they wanted him to overthrow Rome. {Lean in for a moment.} We often want the same thing. The wholeness and beauty that Jesus brings. The forgiveness. The life. The invitation to follow and be part of his kingdom. We often want THE END. We want the package to come and Jesus says oh, oh, it’s on the way. Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away. (Rev. 21:3-4) That day is coming! Amen? But it is not yet. And we live in this in between—in between incarnation and in between Second Coming. Here’s how to live in the in between: KNOW that God is the God of ‘insteads.’ He wants to speak it into your life, and he wants to speak it through your life. So he calls us to himself and then he send us out as ambassadors of hope. As carriers of joy. As citizens of the kingdom of God to be chain breakers and joy bringers in the lives of the people around us. That this Isaiah 61 ‘instead’ might become a reality for more and more people. In your life and in mine.
I can tell you, I have never met anybody that lives this calling out better than Dr. Jeff Brodsky. Jeff’s going to close out our message, because like I said, I think his life beautifully paints the picture of this God of ‘instead.’ Jeff, tells us about that God and how you’re following him.
Dr. Jeff Brodsky/Joy International: I was really blessed when I received a call from Pastor Ryan, to share the pulpit with him today. I believe he’s the epitome of a five-fold ministry pastor/teacher. I was honored he asked me to share with you this morning. When I saw the message, especially the passage with Isaiah 61, I thought, “Oh my! That’s my life verse!” God has definitely called me to set the captives free. That is what my whole life is about.
I can’t thank you all enough for your prayers, especially over the past 5-6 weeks now. It’s been quite a nightmare for me. It was actually just a few days after I got back from a trip to Cambodia, which was an extremely powerful time there. Two days later, I went through, literally…..I was bedridden for five weeks. We didn’t know if it was cancer or what. Thank God, it wasn’t. Thank you so much for your prayers. I really appreciate it. Still healing. Not 100% but I’m getting there.
So when it talks about bringing good news to the afflicted and setting the captives free, freedom to prisoners, oh my gosh, that’s Joy International! Talking about an ‘instead’ life…. Ever since 1976, when I accepted Jesus into my life and became a Messianic Jew. I was born and raised Jewish in Brooklyn, New York. The day I accepted Jesus into my life, I was ready to go into the ministry immediately. First thing I did was call my parents and told them, “Jesus is really the Messiah.” I expected them to get excited. They did not get excited. As a matter of fact, it was 22 years later…..literally, on his death bed, I led my father into a relationship with the Lord.
In 1979, I was in real estate. I was on the verge of becoming a millionaire in real estate. I was a young person in Fountain Hills, Arizona. I thought, “Oh my gosh! This is great! I made it big!” A nice Jewish boy from Brooklyn, he wants a big bank account. Something was wrong. I was miserable. I wondered, “What is wrong? Something’s not right here!” About two o’clock one morning (which is when I usually wake), I lay down flat, spread-eagled before the Lord and poured my heart out to him. Isn’t it interesting the way you pray? When you pray you’ll ask God for a million things and say in Jesus’s name, amen, then you’ll get up and walk away and do what you’re going to do. I wonder how many times God says, “Uh, excuse me, didn’t you want an answer?” Well, I wanted an answer so I just shut up and waited and hoped that he would speak to me. He did that night. That was the night he called me into ministry.
Little did I know, two years after that I was sitting in the back of a car reading the words of Jesus and John 15:11, where it Jesus says I speak these things to you that my joy….. {It’s interesting that even the candle that was lit today was for joy. All the times the word ‘joy’ was spoken today I was sitting there going, “Yeah!!!”} John 15:11, Jesus is speaking: I speak these things to you that my joy would be in you so that your joy would be complete. (His paraphrase) I have found my life that by putting JOY……Jesus first, others second, yourself third. If you live your life by putting Jesus first, others second, yourself third, that’s the way to experience true joy. It was that day that Joy International was born, thirty-seven years ago.
As far as me being barefoot…. I’m not going to share the whole story. You talk about an ‘instead’ life, well, instead of being nice and comfortable and wearing nice warm socks in the winter or shoes going through the snow…. Yes, I walk in the snow barefoot. Weather doesn’t play a part. I have not had a sock on either foot in 2,708 days, and yes, I’m counting. I’m hoping and praying that one day God will say, “Okay, you can put them on again.” I hate being barefoot. People think I like being barefoot after seven-and-a-half years. I hate it! I would give anything for God to tell me, “Okay, it’s time.” But until he does…. People think I have a disease from walking around in third-world countries barefoot, especially after my last health issues with my right leg. I don’t think God has called me to experience that {a disease}. As long as my being barefoot will motivate people to action in a way that will help us rescue more girls……
Our organization, Joy International, rescues children from brothels. We have rescued children as young as four years old. There is no worse crime, there is no worse evil perpetrated against a child than this. These girls have to service 10-15, sometimes 20, men a day. Every day. Seven days a week, until they’re no longer desirable and they’re tossed in the street like trash, if they don’t die of disease or take their own lives because they can’t take it anymore.
My ‘instead’ life started the day called me into ministry instead of being a millionaire. He told me to win millions to him, millions of souls. We’re getting there. Somewhere between 300,000-400,000 since I went into the ministry. Instead of a life of comfort, God asked me to live humbly, being totally barefoot. I don’t know why. I do know that when God asks you to do something you have to say yes or no. There is no maybe. Maybe is ‘no’ until it becomes a ‘yes.’
I never realized how my being barefoot affected other people as well. I remember six weeks ago when I was in Cambodia….. I have teams now of highly-skilled, trained men that train Special Forces, including military. I have two former members of Israeli Special Forces that are going with me (in four weeks) back to Cambodia to do training with the police with my Director of Global Police Training and Tactical Operations. When I was there six weeks ago at the closing ceremony, we had trained twenty anti-trafficking police. One of the eleven generals there at the ceremony came up to tell me how he was affected by my story. I had shared with the all the trainees and others there, “You have seen me all week getting off the tuk-tuk barefoot, and I noticed you all laughing at me. Many of you don’t know the story.” So I shared my story at the closing ceremony. General Pithei got up afterwards, in tears. He said, “I have never respected a man more than this man for what he has chosen to do for our people.” He went on, “Many of you don’t know, with the killing fields, that so many of our people had to escape into the jungles, including my parents. They lived in the jungle, barefoot, for two years. They had to leave their homes. Millions with no shoes. They had no choice. This man has a choice and he does it to help out people.” It overwhelmed me.
The Christmas holiday is upon us. I love to celebrate the holidays with my wife and family, but in the back of my mind it’s always the girls. It’s a nightmare for them! Holidays are a nightmare for these girls. Holidays like Christmas, and especially Valentine’s Day. That’s when lonely, frustrated men take out their loneliness and frustration on the girls. It’s a nightmare for them, until they’re set free, then they can really celebrate.
I worked for five years to put together a team that could train police (to rescue the girls). I went undercover for many years. It was incredibly risky. If they caught us, they would either severely injure or kill us. We would spend weeks collecting footage from the brothels and bring it to the police. When we’d go the next day for a raid, everybody was gone! There was so much corruption. I said to God, “God, there has to be a better way. I can’t believe you brought me this far to fail.” That’s when he gave me the idea to train police. They would be extremely vetted (to know that they’re not corrupt), and we finally put this team together in Cambodia. The success that they’ve had is unbelievable. Since we’ve started with this team, it’s been about 830 or 840 rescued children. In a little less than 60 days, we’ve had 30 rescues. Of those rescued, we had 13 men that were being trafficked from Cambodia to Malaysia for forced labor.
The work isn’t over. Once the girls are rescued more hard work begins. Instead of the life they had, they have an opportunity for new life. The last night I was in Cambodia, we had a raid happen and had six girls rescued, three of them only fourteen years old. We always have a prosecutor and two female social workers with us when we rescue, because those girls are deathly afraid of men. Even police. So many corrupt police will act like they’re rescuing them and then sell them to a brothel that’s even worse, where the beatings are worse. We had a prosecutor making the arrest and it was so wonderful seeing the woman brothel owner being arrested and taken away. The life expectancy of these girls is five to seven years before they’re no longer desirable.
Our fight and work continues every day. I recently learned of a new nightmare. General Pithei shared a new thing happening all across Southeast Asia and China with organ harvesting of young children. There’s another group called breeders. They want the pregnant girls in the brothels to have the babies. They’ll actually train the babies to service and satisfy men from infancy, so that when they’re older they won’t feel as though they’re doing anything wrong. It’s a nightmare, what’s happening in our world today, especially to children.
So what’s God’s answer? I know I’m one of them. WE are! We’re the answer. Instead of hands that cause hurt and pain, these girls want arms that can embrace them tenderly. To show them that they’re safe and cared for. That can happen with you. We bring teams overseas to hug these girls, especially you women. Instead of vile evil men using these girls for repulsive, degrading acts, God created her with lips—not to perform degrading acts—but to sing praises, and to worship and glorify Him with their mouths. Instead of a life of sorrow, I want to see these girls have praise. Instead of defeat, victory. Instead of shame, joy. I’m a five-fold ministry and want to see everyone saved. I don’t know how people cannot accept Jesus when they find out who He is and what He can mean in their lives.
When a girl is rescued, you would think she is ecstatic. She is terrified! Absolutely terrified! Shaking! Screaming! Crying as they’re being carried out. When they get to a safe house where other girls have already been rescued and the girls surround them, the other girls say, “You don’t have to be scared no more! They going to love you here.” You talk about instead of sorrow….praise. “They will love you here. You don’t have to do those bad things anymore.” The look on the rescued girl’s face when she realizes her nightmare is over is JOY! I can’t begin to tell you how I feel to know I play a part in that. And those of you who give to Joy International also play a part in that!
The end result that I look for in the lives of every single one of these girls, without question, is salvation. I want to see them enter into a relationship with the Lord. And when they do…..the joy that they have as they sing praises and worship Him. {A video showing the children praising the Lord, singing worship songs, is shown with comments by Dr. Brodsky voiced over.} This is the end result I look for in the life of every girl after she’s rescued. You’ll notice that some of the girls (and boys) here are very young. When I go to one of these worship events, I’m overwhelmed when I think of the ‘instead’ life now instead of what they were doing with their bodies. To see their bodies in praise and worship to the Lord…..oh my! There’s no greater sound than hearing children singing praises to the Lord, but there is another sound I enjoy hearing and the sound you should hear from a child. {Video shows children laughing and playing games and just being kids!} This is one of our team members in one of the villages where we minister. We bring bags of rice for the families. We bring shoes.
How can South Fellowship minister to the least of these? How can South Fellowship bring good news to the afflicted? Bind up the brokenhearted, proclaim liberty to captives, and bring freedom to prisoners? By joining forces with me as you have. Sending me and my Special Forces team to……not just Cambodia. We’re doing this training all over the world. When we come back from Cambodia, I’m going to Minnesota to do a training at the airport there for the police. Not everyone is called to go, but everyone is called to give. There are many ways you can do that. The upcoming training trip to Cambodia will cost $7500.
What greater gift can you give this Christmas than the gift of freedom? Once these girls are free that’s when they’ll experience a life of joy instead of shame, victory instead of defeat, and praise instead of sorrow. Instead of captivity, they pray for rescue. Instead of slavery, they dream of freedom. YOU can be the answer to their prayers. Thank you so much, pastor.
{Pastor Ryan returns to front.} We’re going to close our time together. We serve an ‘instead’ God, don’t we? This is an ‘instead’ holiday. Instead of just soaking in the glory of heaven, Jesus cloths himself in flesh, in humanity, and steps into your world and mine. The same thing that Jeff does for these kids all across the globe is what we celebrate on Christmas. It’s a rescue mission. It’s an invitation back into the life that God has for us. I would love for you to leave this place convinced that (1) God wants to bring you freedom from whatever you’re walking through. Second, that you would be convinced that He’s empowered you to be someone who speaks freedom into the lives of others, whether it’s in your home, in your neighborhood, in your workplaces, in your family over this holiday season, that He’s an ‘instead’ God and He has an ‘instead’ message to speak through you. Maybe you invite someone to come with you on Christmas Eve. Or, you reach out to someone in your area of influence, but man, he’s an ‘instead’ God and it’s an ‘instead’ message and you’re one of his carriers. Let’s pray.
Father, today, every person in this room is in a different spot. Lord, I know there’s some people here today and they walk in with chains, and they walk in with baggage, and you have a word of freedom for them today. Lord, I pray, even right now, by the power of your Spirit, you would minister. That you would break chains. Where there’s defeat, you would lead to victory. Where there’s sorrow, Lord, you’d bring us to joy. Where there’s shame, you would lead us to praise, please. Lord, we lift up Jeff to you and we’re grateful for the ministry that you’ve called him to and our partnership with him, and Lord, I pray that you would continue to use his life for the joy of many, for the freedom of many, and that as we as a church partner with him, that we would get a taste of some of the excitement that those girls have in singing their praise to you. Lord, we thank you for that word this morning. You’re an ‘instead’ God and we’re your ‘instead’ people and we praise you in the name of Jesus. And all God’s people said……Amen.