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Into the Wild Part 2

September 6, 2020
Jared Herd

Sermon Notes

The rabble with them began to crave other food, and again theIsraelites started wailing and said, “If only we had meat to eat! We rememberthe fish we ate in Egypt at no cost—also the cucumbers, melons, leeks, onionsand garlic. But now we have lost our appetite; we never see anything but this manna!”
- Numbers 11:4-6

Where can I get meat for all these people? They keep wailing tome, ‘Give us meat to eat!’ I cannot carry all these people by myself; theburden is too heavy for me. If this is how you are going to treat me, please go ahead and kill me—if I have found favor in your eyes—and do not let me face my own ruin.”
- Numbers 11:13-15

“To embrace that teaching and others like it at face value can result in a kindof spirituality that deals with darkness by denying its existence or at leastdepriving it of any meaningful attention. I call it “full solar spirituality,”since it focuses on staying in the light of God around the clock, bothabsorbing and reflecting the sunny side of faith….It tucks all the sinisterstuff into the dark part, identifying God with the sunny part and leaving youto deal with the rest on your own time.”
- Barbara Brown Taylor, Learning to Walk in the Dark

So they asked him, “What sign then will you give that we may see it and believeyou? What will you do? Our ancestors ate the manna in the wilderness; as it iswritten: ‘He gave them bread from heaven to eat.’ ”
- John 6:30-31

Jesus answered, “Very truly I tell you, you are looking for me, not because yous aw the signs I performed but because you ate the loaves and had your fill. Donot work for food that spoils, but for food that endures to eternal life…
- John 6:26-27

“‘No,’ he answered, ‘because while you are pulling the weeds, youmay uproot the wheat with them. Let both grow together until the harvest.”
- Matthew 13:29-30

Wilderness Rule #2
Cynicism is an indicator of a binary mind. Gratitude is the habit that sets usfree.

Sunday Bible Study Guide

PDF Experience

Mixer

What do you enjoy about light and dark and the turn of the seasons? What are some of your experiences in the places you’ve lived or visited?

Connect

1.       What was your childhood experience with the dark? What brought you comfort?

2.    Each of us is undoubtedly experiencing adjustments in our routines, livelihoods and relationships. What is something that you miss that you can’t wait to have back again? How are you handling the waiting/wilderness until then?

3.     From last week, how did you do with Wilderness Rule #1: Don’t focus on being perfect. Focus on being present? How did any changes you made help someone else in their own wilderness?

Sermon Questions

1.  Pastor Jared said that in nature darkness is necessary. Last week, we were reminded that God desires to grow us and He meets us in our wilds in order to do that. This week, what have you thought about your wilderness being ‘necessary’ to growth in your faith? What are the hindrances to growth when we take only the ‘good’ parts that we like and we throw away all the ‘bad’? Why would God want us to have a balance of both?

2.     In Numbers 11: 4-6, we learn that God’s people were stuck in their own binary thinking. Like them, when we long for the good things of our past, we can fall into a spirit of grumbling about the misery of our current situation. And we are like them today: we don’t have a misery problem, we have a memory problem. What would be helpful to remember when grumbling becomes the familiar path of your wilderness? How can you better embrace the new capacities God is creating in you?

3.       We were challenged this week with Wilderness Rule #2: Cynicism is an indicator of a binary mind. Gratitude is the habit that sets us free. How can we use gratitude as our strategy of making sense of what is happening in our world? What gratitude practices can you begin this week?

Go Deeper

The Bible is a constant parade of ordinary people - God’s people - who messed things up, faced hardships of all kinds, and yet, God used them to advance His plan for the redemption of mankind through Jesus Christ. When we spend time getting to know these people, we see ourselves, and that is what makes God’s Word alive and relevant to whatever we are facing in our day. Consider the story of Esther, a Jewish girl who marries Persian king Xerxes I. God used Esther to pave the way for the coming Messiah - she risked her life to go to the king to plead that he reverse his edict that all the Jews were to be killed. Her cousin, Mordecai, sends her this encouragement in Esther 4:13: “...Who knows if perhaps you were made queen for just such a time as this?” Esther’s reply back in 4:17, “...I will go in to see the king. If I must die, I must die.”

Then there is the story of Joseph, son of Jacob (Genesis 37, 39-45). Sold into slavery as a young man by his jealous brothers (who told their father he was dead), Joseph found himself as a servant in the household of Potiphar, the captain of the Egyptian guard. Joseph endures many hardships as a slave, including incarceration for a false accusation against him, but one day, his character is noticed, and this Jewish slave is elevated to a trusted governing position in the house of Pharaoh. We eventually see famine strike the land of Joseph’s (Jacob’s) family, but God already had Joseph placed in a position to help - Joseph had a place in God’s plan for the coming Messiah! Joseph says this to his brothers in 45:7-8, “God has sent me ahead of you to keep you and your families alive and to preserve many survivors. So, it was God who sent me here, not you!”

Let their responses resonate in your quiet time this week. You were made for a time such as this. God is sending you ahead.

1.    This week we were introduced to the concepts of “solar spirituality” and “lunar spirituality.” What resonated with you in how you approach your relationship with God? What are the pitfalls of too much of one or the other?

2.    In the story of creation (Genesis 1), God set the sun, moon and stars in the sky to separate the light from the darkness. Our binary thinking tells us that when the sun sets, it is gone. Similarly, we think because we can’t see God in our troubles that He must be gone. But what is the truth? The balance of day and night (and the sun and the moon) in the heavens gives us some answers. In what ways is God bringing some balance to the light and dark of your 2020? Can you see the partnership of the sun and the moon - and of God and you in the world?

3.    As Pastor Jared said, God is the God of the feast and famine, the weeds and the wheat. What did Jesus say in John 16:33 and how might that encourage you to be an Esther or a Joseph in 2020? What can you declare about God in your troubles and believe He is for you like they did? Do their stories give you a ‘language for dealing with life when it crumbles?’ (Pastor Jared)

4.     Hebrews 11 is the chapter often called the Hall of Faith - a listing of demonstrations of what faith can do in adversity. Read through their summaries and then read Hebrews 12:1-4. Like these pillars, God has set a race before you. Like Esther, you were made for such a time as this. Like Joseph, God is sending you ahead this week in the world. And remember Jesus said, in Him you may have peace. How are you going to commit to running the race well?

5.    Ask the Holy Spirit to help you run the race this week with endurance and to keep you focused. Tap into Him to fill you with everything that a marathon runner will need. Write this out in a prayer for this week.

Suggestions to Serve

Good Neighbor Drop-N-Drive | The Church at RB | Thursday 10AM-2PM

Prayer

Kids are headed back to school. Distance learning is still in place for most families. Lift them up in prayer for the Holy Spirit to be at work in these families as they step into this wilderness.