Matt Carder - May 3, 2015

Flawed Heroes (Your Story Matters, Pt. 4)

Your Story Matters

It's easy to put heroes of our day and those of the past on pedestals because their accomplishments and statures seem larger than life. But do you know the one thing all heroes have in common? They have flaws. When we look at the story God is telling around us as well as stories in scripture, God seems to change the world not in spite of someone's flaws, but because of them. Take this sermon as a reminder that God uses brokenness and grace as his change agents, not performance or perfectionism.

From Series: "Your Story Matters"

"Your story matters." It's an easy thing to say but sometimes a difficult truth to believe. Thus, knowing WHY your story matters can provide the context needed to actually live from a foundation of purpose and significance. YOU, yes you, are a crucial part of a story that God is crafting and has been since the beginning of time. We hope this series gives you the foundation to believe it.

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KEY SCRIPTURE


(Click on each passage listed to view it at bible.com)

START TALKING


  • What organizations, causes, or groups have you supported (financial, service, prayers, etc.) in order to make a difference in the world?

START SHARING


  • What injustice, suffering, or brokenness in the world most deeply stirs your sense of frustration or anger at the way things are? How has that impacted your sense of God’s activity or care for the world?
  • If suffering produces perseverance, along with character and hope (Romans 5:3-5), how might that practically change the way you view and live through personal moments of suffering?
  • Jesus referred to the “renewal of all things” in Matthew19:28. What do you think that looks like? How can this promise be a sense of hope or encouragement for you?

START LIVING


  • Matt said that this message wouldn’t resolve all of the tension or answer all of the questions when it comes to suffering. Where do you still feel unsatisfied in understanding they “why” behind the suffering in your own life or the suffering in the world?
  • Even if you don’t feel (at the moment) an intense concern with the level of suffering in the world, others may certainly feel that. 2 Corinthians 1:3-4 says that we are to comfort others in the same way we have been comforted by God. Be aware and look for the people in your life, taking the opportunity to comfort and encourage as they suffer or wrestle with doubt.

RESOURCES & QUOTES MENTIONED


“If God were good, He would wish to make His creatures perfectly happy, and i fGod were almighty He would be able to do what He wished. But the creatures are not happy. Therefore God lacks either goodness, or power, or both. This is the problem of pain in its simplest form.” – C.S. Lewis

“Sometimes murmuring, sometimes shouting, suffering is a ‘rumor of transcendence’ that the entire human condition is out of whack.” – Philip Yancey

“My argument against God was that the universe seemed so cruel and unjust. But how had I got this idea of ‘just’ and ‘unjust’? What was I comparing this universe with when I called it unjust?” – C.S. Lewis

“If God thinks this state of war in the universe a price worth paying for free will…then we may take it is worth paying.” – C.S. Lewis

“On the cross he went beyond even the worst human suffering and experienced cosmic rejection and pain that exceeds ours as infinitely as his knowledge and power exceeds our own.” – Tim Keller

“Faith means believing in advance what will only make sense in reverse.” – Philip Yancey

“They say of some temporal suffering, ‘No future bliss can make up for it,’ not knowing that Heaven, once attained will work backwards and turn even that agony into a glory.” – C.S. Lewis

“With great restraint, God watches this rebellious planet live on, in mercy allowing the human project to continue in its self-guided way. He lets us cry out, like Job, in loud fits of anger against him, blaming him for a world we spoiled. He allies himself with the poor and suffering, founding a kingdom tilted in their favor. He stoops to conquer. He promises supernatural help to nourish the spirit, even if our physical suffering goes unrelieved. He has joined us. He has hurt and bled and cried and suffered. He has dignified for all time those who suffer, by sharing their pain. He is waiting, gathering the armies of good. One day he will unleash them, and the world will see one last terrifying moment of suffering before the full victory is ushered in. Then, God will create for us a new, incredible world. And pain shall be no more.” – Philip Yancey

WORSHIP SET

 

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