Bent Knees Break Chains | Pastor Steven Furtick | Elevation Church

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
Let's give our attention to the Scriptures in  Genesis, chapter 50, beginning in verse 14.   The verse I've heard the most from Genesis  50 is verse 20. I'm going to read that one,   but I want to give you a fresh context around  it to help usher the principle in this text   into the problem you're facing in your  life. I believe it's going to be very,   very personal for you today. My friend Rick  Beato does a YouTube channel, and he has a   thing. He's a guitar player/musician/producer,  and he calls it What Makes This Song Great? He takes songs you've heard a thousand times by  worship leaders like Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin,   and Boston. He takes those hymns of the faith,  and he breaks it down and shows you things   you heard, but you didn't know you were hearing  them, and it's what makes the song great.   I'm going to take a page out of his playbook  today. I'm going to show you what makes this   verse great in verse 20, where it says God takes  what others mean for evil and uses it for good. Let me show you what makes  that verse great. To do that,   I want to get a start and ramp up from verse 14.   The Bible says, "After burying his father, Joseph  returned to Egypt, together with his brothers   and all the others who had gone with him to bury  his father." That's a big contingent, because   the chariots of Egypt and all of  the officials went with Joseph. So it's a huge traveling party,   and 70-plus descendants of Jacob. It's  a big group. Then it comes to a personal   decision. Verse 15: "When Joseph's brothers  saw that their father was dead, they said,   'What if Joseph holds a grudge against us and  pays us back for all the wrongs we did to him?'"   Well, now's a fine time to think about  the consequences of your actions. Right? You're not sorry you did it; you're just  sorry you got caught. You're just scared   of the consequences. Listen to what they  did. Verse 16: "So they sent word to Joseph,   saying, 'Your father left these instructions  before he died…'" Yeah, I'm sure he did.   When other people tell you what God  said to you as a form of manipulation… "The Lord told me you're supposed to  date me." The Lord has my direct number.   He can tell me. The Lord  doesn't play the telephone game,   so he'll tell me. "The Lord said we should  go in business together." That's funny,   because he told me you were a crook,  because I checked your online review. "'This is what you are to say to Joseph:   I ask you to forgive your brothers the sins and  the wrongs they committed in treating you so   badly.' Now please forgive the sins of the  servants of the God of your father." That's   what his brothers said their dead dad said, which  we know isn't true, because he didn't really like   them. Joseph was his favorite, so he would have  told Joseph directly, you understand. That's   why the Bible says, "When their message came to  him, Joseph wept." Not because his dad was dead. His dad has been dead for three months at this  point…40 days of embalming, 30 days of mourning,   and then a journey that's 11 days on each side.  So, he has had time to mourn his father Jacob.   He is weeping because they still haven't changed,  even after all the grace he has given them.   That's what he's crying about. This is the  fifth time he cries between Genesis 37 and 50. Verse 18: "His brothers then came  and threw themselves down before him.   'We are your slaves,' they said.   But Joseph said to them, 'Don't be afraid. Am I  in the place of God? You intended to harm me, but   God intended it for good to accomplish what  is now being done, the saving of many lives.'" Verse 21: "So then, don't be afraid." "I'm not  going to kill you. I could, but I'm not going   to…not because of your little  fabricated speech from dad,   but because I see God's purpose in this moment  and in this season." "'I will provide for you   and your children.' And he reassured  them and spoke kindly to them." Back up to verse 18 one more time. "His brothers  then came and threw themselves down before him."   They bowed before the one they had betrayed   and said, "We're your slaves." "But  Joseph said to them, 'Don't be afraid.   Am I in the place of God?'" I got up here this  morning to tell you Bent Knees Break Chains. That's the title of this message.   The truth I want to communicate to you is all  in those four words: Bent Knees Break Chains. Father, I thank you that the chain-breaking power  of your Spirit is standing up inside of me right   now to preach deliverance to every captive. Do  it, God. In Jesus' name, I give you thanks, amen. I want you to start by considering   this premise: the position we're in  influences the decisions we make. The position you're in really influences the  decisions you make. It sounds obvious, but   it's illustrated all throughout  the book of Genesis. God said,   "Let there be light." He was in a position to make  a decision to do something about the darkness,   but you could run around shouting,  "Let there be light" all you wanted to,   and unless you have flipped the switch and  are current on the power bill, no lights are   coming on. The position you're in determines the  decisions you make. A subpoint to this is: you   are not God. Your neighbor doesn't look convinced,  so you tell them for me. Say, "You're not God." Sometimes, if you get confused, just remember,   "The position I'm in influences the decisions I  make." The easiest way to explain it is parenting.   When you start doing stuff as a parent that you  hated as a kid, and you turn around… Every parent   in this room has had this thought: "I sound  just like my mom." "I sound just like my dad." It's because you now are in a position  that not only you have to provide   but protect these lives you treasure so much. So,  you're doing things the kids don't understand.   "You can't go there. Don't talk to them." They  think, "You don't want me to have any friends." "Yes, I do want you to have friends. Like  I want to hang out with you all the time.   I'd love for you to have somebody else to hang  out with. I just don't know about these kids." The position I'm in is affecting the decisions  I make. See, empathy is tricky for the kid to   have for the parent, because although the parent  has been a kid, the kid has never been a parent.   That's why teaching your kids to drive   is like the scourging whip they laid on our  Savior's back when they hung him on the cross. It's because it is the punishment of their  inability to feel empathy, because the position   you are in determines the decisions you make.  That's true in parenting. That's true with money.   A lot of times, we say little cliches  like, "Money isn't everything."   It is if you don't have any. How many of you have  ever not had any money and had to do things…? I'm not talking about robbing anybody.  I'm not talking about anything crazy.   I'm just saying, when you didn't have it,  you didn't walk around saying stuff like,   "Money isn't everything." You went around saying  stuff like, "Can I cut your grass? Can I wax   your bald head? Can I clip your fingernails?"  Money isn't everything once you have money. We get in a position where maybe we've come  to a place where we're blessed in our lives,   and then we're like, "Well, money isn't  everything. I don't do it for the money."   That's because you have some! But if you don't  have any, you have to do what you have to do   to catch the crumbs that fall from somebody's  table. Stop judging people for things they are   doing in desperation for situations you haven't  been in or that you haven't been in lately. Personal confession: I was a staff member  at a church before I started this church,   and I would always keep this mental list of dumb  stuff the pastor was doing that I would never do.   One day, when I get a spare minute, I'm  going to write him a whole card. It's going   to be a 17-page card of all of the things I  judged him for in his position as a pastor   from my position as a staff member that  I now just want to say, "I'm sorry." Especially because I met him when he was  into his tenth year of pastoring that church,   and I didn't know how tired 10 years can  make you. Do you see all this gray y'all   put on me in these last 16 years? So now I feel  differently, because the position you're in… I want to nail this down. If  I lay this foundation right,   then we can really celebrate the truth in the text  that bent knees break chains, but first of all,   acknowledge that the position you're in influences  the decisions you make. Now let's flip that,   because the decisions you make  influence the position you're in. You are very timid in celebrating that truth.  I have never seen such a half-hearted clap.   "I think he's probably right, but I don't like  it, because I want to say the Devil did it.   I don't really want to clap for that." It  could be possible that not everything that   happened to me was caused by decisions I made,  but some of it, a little of it, 10 percent of it… When's the last time somebody  lost their job and told you,   "You know what? I just really sucked at it. I was  lazy. I talked bad about everybody. I chewed gum   with my feet up and played Wordle seven  hours and worked one." Nobody says that. In church (this is dangerous), you'll slap a  spiritual justification and a summary on something   that happened through a series of decisions you  actually made, thereby enabling your dysfunction   by over-spiritualizing your decisions.  Goodbye, everybody! I've said enough.   I don't mean to be Yoda on you, but those  two things really go hand in hand. The   position I'm in determines the decisions I make.  Sometimes I did something because I'm depressed. The depression may not be my fault. I believe  there's a genetic element to depression.   But in the process of me complying with the habits  that brought me to that place, I may prolong   my stay in depression by my decisions. When we  talk about, "The Devil attacked me. The Devil   attacked me. The Devil attacked me…" Well, the  Lord gave me a word on that a few weeks ago. He   said, "It is not the attack that matters the  most; it is what you do after the attack." Watch this. New Testament verse. I hope I get  back to Genesis 50, but I'm anointed for this   right now. The Bible says the Devil is like  a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour.   It does not say he can devour whoever he wants,  but he can attack whoever he wants. The difference   between him attacking you and devouring you  will be the decisions you make in the attack. So, when you feel anxious, what do you  do with that anxiety? When you feel sad,   who do you speak to about your sadness?  When you feel overlooked, do you retaliate,   or do you bring it to God and  allow him to help you process it?   We could describe Joseph's life  in terms of a chain of events. In reviewing all of those Scriptures this week, I  felt myself wishing we had three days to do this,   because everything in Joseph's life… Oh, it's so  rich with detail. Just to boil it down to "What   the Enemy means for evil, God means for good…" My  friend Rick Beato, my YouTube guy, would break it   down and show you the isolated tracks. He'd  be like, "This is what makes the song great." I want to show you how the events in Joseph's  life that God did not prevent that were painful   positioned him for the purpose of Joseph's  life that he could have never imagined.   So, let me do a typical sermon about Joseph  in two minutes. You have to walk through   everything that happened to him. Right? He had  a dream. He told his brothers. That's an event.   His brothers got mad about it and didn't like  his Gucci coat that his father Jacob gave him. Now, understand, when they threw him into a  pit, they saw him as a snitch because he came   out to check on them and see if they were  doing their jobs. You can understand, then,   that from their vantage point, the position they  were in influenced the decisions they made. It's   easy in this passage to feel like you're Joseph,  but have you ever been his brothers too? Have   you ever been jealous? Because you do things when  you're in a position comparing yourself to others… That's why the Bible says  when you compare yourself   to somebody else, you're not wise. That's  what it says. It doesn't say it's evil;   it says it's not wise. You are going to  do dumb stuff trying to be like somebody   who does not have your same bone structure,  background, or the same blessing on their life. Reuben saved his life, because  he said, "Let's not kill him.   Let's sell him. We can probably get 20 shekels  for him." They sold him to the Midianite   caravan. These are the events of Joseph's  life. So, if I'm walking you through it,   I'm saying by the time you get to Genesis 50:20,  he's 56 years old. You didn't know that, did you?   You thought he was standing there saying, "What  the Enemy means for evil, God means for good"   while he was going through his  testing, but he went through 40 years   to get to the point where he understood  the events of his life…all of them… The dream he had, the coat he wore…the good  things. The pit they pushed him into… Y'all,   he even ended up in prison because he did such  a good job serving this man named Potiphar,   and Potiphar's wife "Hotiphar" (I named her)   said, "Hey, big boy. Come to bed with me. I like  your coat. I like your character. I like the way   you clean windows." Remember, he has a menial  job, but he has a great sense of responsibility. Everything he did in Potiphar's house drew  attention because God's favor was still on   him. God's favor is still on you. Pushing a  mop, God's favor is on you. Washing dishes,   God's favor is on you. Quarter of a  tank of gas and don't know how to fill   it…God's favor is on you.  Oh, by the way, when you get   a promotion that puts you in a tax bracket  you never imagined, that's God's favor too. It was your Father who put the favor  on you to bring you into the position.   When you understand that, that God raised you up,   it makes you two things:   it makes you humble in high circumstances  and hopeful in low circumstances.   When I see that my Father favored me…  Joseph knew that early in his life. He saw this vision that his brothers were one  day going to bow down to him, but he didn't   see everything that would come before that. This  chain of events, things that happened to Joseph   that he largely could not control… Some people say   he shouldn't have told his brothers his dream,  and they wouldn't have pushed him in the pit. I say if he didn't go in the pit, how could he  have gotten to Egypt so there was food waiting   for them when they came through the famine?  It makes me think that even my mistakes   can become miraculous if I give them  to God and be humble about them. A lot more happened to Joseph, and although we  won't explore all of it today, I just want you   to hear some of the other things that come before  this so you can put yourself in this story,   in a way, to try to figure out "In this season of  my life, what decision is God leading me to make?"   The events that led you to this point in your  life, however painful they were… I forgot to tell   you this part. When he got to prison, he started  interpreting dreams for the other prisoners. I wouldn't have done that, because I would  have been pouting that "I don't belong here,"   because Potiphar's wife accused me of raping  her, and I was actually running from her.   I probably wouldn't have been able to get past my  own pity party. Pit…he was in the pit…pity party.   I'm just checking to see if I still have  your attention. There's a lot of background. So, there are a lot of things  that happened. Eventually,   when he interpreted… The cupbearer had  this dream. He was like, "I saw these three   vines coming off of one branch. It had grapes on  it. I squeezed the grapes, and then the cups were   filled." Joseph is like, "Oh, in three days  you're going to get your position back. It's   going to be great. On Pharaoh's birthday,  he's going to put you back into position." The baker was like, "Oh yeah, me too, me  too. I had a dream too. There were baskets   on my head and bread in the baskets, and  the birds came and ate it." He was like,   "Oh yeah. That's because your head is going  to be cut off in three days. That's why it's   three baskets. And the birds will eat your flesh."  So, all of that happens just as Joseph spoke it. The cupbearer gets out of prison and completely  forgets to mention Joseph. Oops. For two years he   stays chained in a dudgeon, not because of his  decision but because of an event. But here's   what I want to show you. Within every event is  a decision. You got it? I'm not even asking you   to understand it yet. Just, did you hear it?  Within the event there's always a decision. Illustration of this. Today, we are  having a worship service. It's an event.   The service is an event. We sang about four  songs. That was part of the event. Hopefully,   somebody offered you a breath mint and a pen when  you came in the door, if you came in the door,   or you logged online, and here I am now,  standing behind my pulpit with my Bible open,   ready to preach to you. I've  been praying about it all week. This is the event. This is the  service. But worship is a decision   you have to make in the event.   The service is the event. Worship is the decision.  Worship is an offering. Some of y'all didn't sing   a note. You were watching this like you're going  to vote whether they stay on the stage or not.   Like, "Oh, I don't know…" You are not  Simon Cowell. Why weren't you singing?   God is the star of this. God is the  audience of this. Why didn't you sing?   "No, no. Pastor Steve, Pastor Steve, Pastor Steve,  I didn't sing because I can't sing that good." That doesn't stop you in the shower.   Another thing is if the person next to you  doesn't like your singing, you just told   them 10 minutes ago they're not God. So, if  they don't like how it sounds, it's good news,   because they're not the audience  you were singing to anyway. So   get this. When we were singing at the  campus I'm at, "I'm going to see a victory…" If that song went by and you didn't sing it…   I mean, sing it out of tune, sing  it loud, sing it bad, sing it good,   sing it falsetto, sing it bass, sing it tenor,  sing it alto. If you didn't sing it, and if you   didn't believe it and put your heart in faith  and say, "You know, I don't feel that right now,   but I believe it. In Jesus' name, I'm going to see  it with my kids. I'm going to see it on my job. I'm going to see it in my body. I'm going to see  it in my mind. There is a breakthrough with my   name on it. I don't know when, but I have  faith for it. I'm going to see a victory…"   If you didn't sing it, how  can you expect to see it?   The song was the event, but your  worship was a decision. I forgive you. Hearing the sermon is an event. Sharing it  with somebody who needs it is a decision.   What if they're about to give up and you  could send them a link? I'm talking to you.   Logging on watching a sermon… This is an  event. You can watch a lot of things on   YouTube. But what if God prompts  you to send it to somebody else? "Hey, man. Thought about you today. Preacher is  up there talking about decisions and stuff, and   I was just thinking how you have  to make this decision right now.   So here it is. I love you. I'll see you  Tuesday." Whatever. That's a decision. The   more we separate the event from the decision, the  more room it gives God to move in our situation.   I'll go a little deeper. Here's  one. I thought of a bunch of them,   but I won't give them all to you today.  Y'all won't like this. Traffic is an event.   What time you leave the house…   Got 'em! Like traffic was the Red Sea,  like you didn't know it was there,   like it isn't there every morning. "I'm sorry;  the traffic was bad." The traffic is always bad.   It's 485. They're going to be  building it for the next 485 years.   You knew that when you pushed it till the last  minute and hit "snooze" for the third time. Leaving early is a decision, and  the decision to leave a little early   might affect your decision to road-rage.   See, we have to stop blaming so much stuff in our  lives. Joseph is a model. We have to stop blaming   the events and start making the decisions  God is calling us to make within the events   that can empower us to move forward or else  we will always be a slave to what happened. Joseph has a decision to make now, and I think  it's such an emotional moment for him, because   his father loved him a little too much,   because he was born of Rachel, who was the wife  Jacob really wanted, not Leah. Because he was the   firstborn son of Rachel, Jacob's favorite wife  (Holly, you're my favorite wife, by the way),   that gave him a little extra status. But he's going through this shift. A  lot of people will tell you Joseph's   life is about going from the pit to the  palace. I don't see it that way at all,   although that geographically describes  his position, because he ended up   being promoted, when he interpreted Pharaoh's  dream about the famine, to a position of   responsibility where he could prepare the  people for the famine, even his own family. Although that's true, it's really not  the heart. He's really going from status   to service. God brings him from a place of  great status to a place of great service.   Or you could see it this way too: he's going  from a place where he has to get from pain   to purpose. The position you're in  determines a lot of the decisions you make,   and a lot of the decisions you make  will determine the position you're in. If at any point in Joseph's life he would have  decided, "This isn't fair. Forget it, God…" If he   hadn't served with excellence in small positions,  he could not have been trusted in a bigger one.   All along the way, there were little  decisions he was making that you're making…to   do it with your whole heart or to only  do it when someone else is looking. Little decisions you make…corners  you cut or you don't;   words you speak and times  you bite your tongue because   it's not going to help anything anyway. Little  decisions. Where would you be financially if you   had made little decisions differently along  the way? "Well, now I don't have any money,   and I'm doing like what Pastor said. I'm in a  bad position, so I'm taking desperate measures." But would you have to take desperate measures  if you made some different decisions?   Could it change from this point forward,  that your future is not chained to your past?   We've talked a lot about the chain of events  that led to Joseph's moment of decision,   but how about the chain of decisions  that put him in this place? The chain of decisions. Think about that. It's  a lot more interesting than giving me a list of   everything life did to you. I told somebody one  time, "When I first got married, I got fat." And   I did. I was turning into a big old boy. The way  I explained it was like how Adam explained why he   ate the apple in the garden. "This woman  you gave me, Lord, is a wonderful cook." I was actually perverting the  gift God had given her as a cook   to explain the situation of my cellulite. Y'all  know the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Jebusites,   the cellulites. Well, they were all coming against  me. Somewhere in that, I had to own the fact that   I ate what she put on the plate and then went and  filled the plate three more times to get this way. So, it's not exactly true to say, "I  got fat," like it's something that   just crashed into the earth, like it was  a meteor shower, like it was a snow day.   I ate food. I didn't exercise. I got fat. That's  the event. The number on the scale screamed at me.   I rebuked it. It didn't change. I prayed  about it. It didn't change. I quoted Genesis   50:20. "What you mean for evil, God means for  good." I reversed the curse. It didn't change. Then I decided. I didn't get to  decide once; I got to decide daily.   Joseph has a decision to make in this moment,  because now his dad is dead, and the only thing   that can keep him being kind to his brothers  is how he views his relationship with God,   because his relationship with them  is obviously never going to change. They lied about him when he was 17, and they are  lying about him as he's 56. He has been playing   with it. He has been playing with whether or not  he wants to pay them back. He has been doing it   for decades. When they first came to him, he was  39. The famine had only been going on two years. When they came to him, he pretended like he  didn't know who they were. I think he was trying   to decide, "How am I going to move forward?"  He was already in a position of power. He was   already in a position of authority. He was already  in a position of influence. The position you're in   influences the decisions you make. So he didn't tell them. For a little  while, he'd go cry in private,   and then he'd come back out and be strong in  public. He even stuffed their bags with silver   and then sent his own men to arrest them and throw  Simeon in prison. That's how bad it felt to him.   So, I want you to think about when something  bad happens to you, the event. (I wish I could   draw this. I am not a good artist. You can  draw it and post it online later. Okay?) Something bad happens. When Joseph says,  "God meant it for good," he does not call   their abuse, neglect, and betrayal good. He's  moving past that. So, something bad happens.   Many bad things happen to Joseph. It's almost  a disservice to what he has been through to   call it "Something bad happened," but let's just  call it that. This thing happens, and it's bad. Now the decision Joseph has to make… Because,  remember, the event is not the decision.   So now he says, "That was bad, what you did to  me. That was bad, how you sold me. That was bad,   what I went through. I'm not sugarcoating  anything or spiritualizing your decisions.   It was bad." Sometimes the first step to  getting to "God is good" is to say it was bad. "It was bad, and it hurt, and it harmed, and it  set me back, and I wish it hadn't happened. If I   got to write the script, I wouldn't have put that  in it. It was bad." You know we do "God is good   all the time. All the time God is good." But it  is bad a lot of the times, and a lot of the times   it is bad, but God is good all the time,  and all the time God is good. But it is bad.   That's bad. Read the news. That's bad. That's  horrible. That's unthinkable. That's inhumane. A lot of us in this room know somebody like  Joseph. Everybody in this room knows a Joseph.   You watched what happened to them, and you  could not believe how they responded to it.   My Joseph who I think about all the time is my  buddy Levi Lusko. He's a pastor in Montana, a   foreign country. He's an international  missionary to the state of Montana. I love him for many reasons, but, y'all,   I put my hand on his chest to pray for  him the other night, because he turned 40.   I was praying, and God anointed me, and I was  speaking stuff over his life that I couldn't   even understand where it was coming from.  When Graham was 5 and his daughter was 5,   and his daughter died of an asthma attack while  he was out of the house, and he stood over her   and prayed God would make the sun stand still  and save his daughter's life, and she died… That would have broken me. I had a context  for it because I had a boy who was 5.   I thought, if I were in that position,   I think I would be tempted to stand up and  tell y'all I quit, because how can I speak   this faith over you? How can I trust a  God who would let me go through that? So now, standing on 10 years later   and watching him turn 40 and seeing…  I hope he watches this message.   Text him and tell him to watch it. He can watch it  right now. He's on a different time zone out there   in Montana. I think it's, like, 1843 in Montana.  It's like a different year zone in Montana. I prayed over him, and he's a powerful man. He  wrote a book. It was bad. He wrote a book to let   the Devil know, "My daughter Lenya will live on  even if there's no breath in her lungs." Do you   follow me? This is my Joseph. I think about  him all the time when I go into a pity party,   because I think about, "If he can decide that,  to keep preaching in the middle of what he…" That's why I love lifting these Bible  characters up to you on Sunday. Even if   you don't know somebody like that personally,  you get to be with Joseph for a little while,   and you get to think about the  fact that at the moment… I mean,   most of us would have been waiting for  this moment to pay our brothers back. "Oh,   I'm just waiting until Jacob dies. When  Jacob dies, I'm about to let y'all have it." Jacob lived to be over 140. Do you know how  long Jacob held on until he had put a blessing   on all of the kids? Then he dies, and they walk  for 11 days to bury him, they walk 11 days back,   and then his brothers send some weak message,  talking about, "Before he died, Dad said…" Trying   to relay a message, showing him the evidence  that there has been no change in their hearts. They bow before him, and he has  to decide what he's going to do,   because he can't control what they do.  You can't change them. Stop trying.   They're on their knees before Joseph,  but not for the right reasons.   "Forgive us. Forgive us. Forgive us. We are your  slaves. We'll do whatever you say. We're sorry."   You're not sorry. You're still lying. And he  wept. He came out and showed us something.   Right after he got done weeping,  he still made the right decision.   Your emotions don't determine your decisions,  not when you've seen the goodness of God. "What these brothers did was evil,  but I'm not going to let what   they did be the final word on what I  do, because I still have life to live."   So, if I look at them and say, "Reuben, Simeon,  Judah," and start calling them by name, and I say,   "This is the moment I've been waiting for. Y'all  want to throw me in a pit? I'm in the palace now…" If I use this moment of my  power to put you in your place,   then I am putting myself in God's place.   That's what he said. He said, "No, no, no."  They're on their knees. He says, "Wait, wait,   wait. I'm not God." Verse 19: "Am I in the place  of God?" You have to go through verse 19 to get   to verse 20. "All things work together for the  good. God uses what the Enemy meant for evil." We kind of skip to that verse. No, no, no. Get  to this verse first: "Am I in the place of God?"   Not only are they on their knees, but  Joseph, after everything he has been through,   in the moment of decision… You are at the moment  of decision right now. "Am I going to stay chained   to my past? Am I going to live in this resentment  toward others and this regret toward myself?" Some of you are angry at yourself.   You think you're God. You think you can make  a big enough mess that God can't clean you up,   but it's not true. You're not God! If he died for  you, and if he calls you, and if he comes for you,   and if he raises you, even you yourself  can't change his mind. The gifts of God   are without repentance. Joseph has a decision to make, and  he does it like this: "I'm not God."   In the moment of decision, he takes a posture,  as the second most powerful man in the land…   He takes his posture to say, "God   has been…" I wonder what it would look  like for you to have this mentality to say,   "God put me here for a purpose, and I'm submitting  everything that has happened to me to God.   I'm going to put myself in a position on my  knees before God." I never come to preach to you,   if I can help it, that I don't do this, even if  it's for 10 seconds before I round the corner. A lot of times, the way I'll preach, stuff  will just be coming to me to the last minute.   But I try every time to take one minute by myself  and say, "God, when I get out there today… There   are people out there whose parents abandoned them.  There are people out there who were molested. There are people out there who are going through  the scariest medical situation in their lives,   or their kids are. There are people out  there who have no idea how they're going   to catch up on four months worth of mortgage.  There are people out there today who need you,   and I can only meet that need on my knees."   It reminds me that if I do this, I can do this. See, the power you need is not in me, but if I go  to the one who has all power and all authority,   and I get down low, and I say, "God, I lift my  eyes to the hills. Where does my help come from?   My help comes from you," I know bent knees can  break chains. I know one word from almighty God,   one breath from the Spirit of… I feel chains  breaking right now! I feel burdens lifting   right now! I feel shackles shaking on prison  floors and prison doors flying open right now!   When you do this, God does that. What you did to me was bad, what happened to me is  bad, what I'm going through is bad, but if I blame   you, then my blame will become bitterness, and my  bitterness will become bondage…not your bondage;   it will be my bondage. So, I either get to stay  chained to the events or I get to make a decision. This is where God brought you to. This is why you  logged on. This is why they sent you the link.   This is why you came to church. You thought  you decided to come to church? You're crazy.   God sovereignly brought you to church. You  had 10 excuses not to come, what didn't fit,   and "I have nothing to wear," but here you are.  It's a size too small, but you came. Why? For   this moment. God wanted you to know you are in an  important moment of your life, and if you do this… Every athlete knows you can't hit a golf  ball well if you don't bend your knees.   That's where your power comes from. You can't  shoot a basketball right if you don't bend your   knees. That's where your accuracy comes from.  You can't do a takedown standing up straight.   There are no Division 1 wrestling champions  who stand up straight, talking about… Why are you fighting your battles  like this when God gave you this?   "This is how I fight my battles,  Devil! Watch me surrender to God."   Because bent knees break… You can't do  it in your own strength. If you could,   you would have by now. God brought you  to your knees because he's breaking   some generational chains. I feel the Holy  Ghost. Come, Lord. Break those chains. The past has no power over you. The blood of Jesus  speaks a better… I break it in the name of Jesus!   You still have so much life to live. Joseph  lived to be 110. He was 56. It's only halftime.   High-five somebody and say, "This  is your halftime speech." Come on,   let's turn this into a locker room.  I'm down by 20, but I have time on…   Watch me bend my knees. Watch me  hit this song. Watch me trust God! I have a decision to make what to do  with the time and the life I have left.   Bent knees break chains. As   long as you rehearse what happened,  you can never reverse what happened.   What makes this verse great? If Rick  Beato were here, he would tell you this.   It's not what you think. Verse 20 of Genesis  50 could be the worst verse in the Bible.   It could be, when it says,  "You intended to harm me…" It's what comes after the comma. God  brought you here so you can make a decision.   What comes after your comma? It's just halftime.  This is just a comma. Not a coma…a comma.   How could one comma make such a big difference?  Because that's where Joseph went from the event   to the decision. I'm choosing  to do this on my knees,   because if I let this hold power over me, I stay  a slave. I won't be chained to what you did,   and I won't be chained to what I did  when I remember what God has done. He set this up in your life. You don't  have to believe that, but you can.   I can decide. Is this the moment  that you decide to own your story,   the bad and the good, and put something after  the comma? I hear the Spirit of God saying,   "Finish the sentence." In the spirit of  Kanye West, I'm going to let you finish. "You tried to hurt me. It hurt me, but my  hope is…" What happens after the comma.   "…but God intended it for good to accomplish  what is now being done, the saving of many   lives." Decision, decision, decision. Verse 21:  "So then, don't be afraid. I will…" Decision.   "…provide." He makes this decision. "If I don't feed you, it will eat me,   so I'm going to use this as food." He fed  that family, the same family that failed him,   by a decision. You have a decision to make today.   Are you going to stand up and try to  be self-strong in your own strength or   are you going to bend your knees?  I'm talking physically this week. I want some of y'all to pray on your knees  for at least a minute a day this week. It   doesn't have to be long, but you drop on  your knees just to remind yourself. "Well,   God doesn't need me to kneel." No, you need to  kneel, because the position you're in determines   the decision you make. When you get up, maybe  you walk differently. Maybe you talk differently.   Maybe you remember, "I'm favored by God, and he  has a purpose and plan for my life." Bent knees. When you submit it to God… How do I know when I've  submitted it to God other than physically? Okay. A   couple of things. When you stop waiting for others  to change for you to obey, you're on your knees.   "The way they treat me is not going to make me  toxic." That's one sign. Another sign is you start   becoming absorbed in the process of what God tells  you to do and stop being attached to the outcome.   That's when you know you're on your knees. "This is how I fight my battles. I have to  do what God gave me to do today. That's all   I can do." Do you know how I know when  I'm really anointed to preach? When I   don't care how you look at me while I'm  doing it. That's when I'm like, "Uh-oh."   That's when I've got my powerup, my  invincibility star. Remember Super Mario? This is so important. When you have given up  the illusion of control, but you have committed   yourself to the process of obedience of what God  spoke, now you're on your knees. Look. The Bible   says in Philippians 2:5 that this is what Jesus  did. He considered it not robbery to be equal with   God. He was God. "In the beginning was the Word.  The Word was with God, and the Word was God." He did this. He became sinful man and humbled  himself to the point of death on a cross.   We're not just talking about Joseph; we're  talking about Jesus. And he lives in you.   He said when Jesus humbled himself, God has  given him… God will lift you up. You have to   trust God to lift you up. You have to trust God  to position you and bring you where he wants you. The Scripture says in Philippians  2 that one day every knee will bow.   Everybody will be brought to their knees. If life  hasn't humbled you enough yet, if you're still in   the dream state, that's okay. Life will eventually  bring you to this point. So, why not bow now?   Why not do it God's way now? If you do it his way  now, you'll be ready for whatever he has next.   Joseph didn't die in the pit. He didn't  quit in the prison. You didn't either.   Give God praise that you didn't quit. It  was his mercy that got you through it.   Quit trying to look so strong. It was his mercy. I don't understand being a self-made man,   because if I'm self-made, that means I  can be Enemy-broken. I'm a God-made man.   He did it for me. He was with me. I bow before  him to give him the glory. That's not weakness.   Bent knees aren't weak. That's  where your strength comes from.   Joseph goes on to raise these two kids. Do  you know their names? Ephraim and Manasseh.   Joseph got an extra ridge in the  allotment of the Promised Land,   and the half-tribe of Manasseh got property too.  His kids got blessed because of what he did. Wow! There's a lot on the line right now.  Some of you are breaking generational chains,   and you don't even know it, but  you need God's help to do it.   "Not by might, not by power,  but by his Spirit…" Bent knees   break chains, not you proving you're right,  not you refusing to admit when you're wrong. I love what the Bible says. If you will bend your  knees now… I don't mean physically in this room.   I mean if you will submit and surrender these  events, this situation, to God and ask him for   his wisdom and act on what he shows you, ask  him for his wisdom, act on what he shows you,   make the decision to turn pain into purpose… Look  at what happened to Joseph. You won't believe it. Verse 22: "Joseph stayed in Egypt,  along with all his father's family."   The death of Jacob was an event. Staying  in Egypt was a decision. "He lived   a hundred and ten years…" I told you that already,  but I didn't tell you this. Next verse: "…and saw   the third generation of  Ephraim's children." Y'all,   that's great-grandchildren. God is not  through with you yet. It is too early   and too soon for you to quit. "Also the children  of Makir…" It means sold in Hebrew. That's   what happened to him. That was the event. "The  children of Makir son of Manasseh…" You got it? The children of his child were placed  at birth…where? On Joseph's knees.   When you bow your knees to God and surrender your  situation to him, it makes room on your knees   for the future he has in store for you.   So, I close with this thought for everybody who  has been brought to your knees by a situation   in your life: expect God to bring to your knees  a new beginning. God wants you free and clear   from all of the junk, all of the bondage,  all of the bitterness, all of the blame. You have to do what you have to do to get on your  knees so you can get your knees ready for what   God wants to bring you next. He is able…I preach  this to every nation right now…to do exceedingly,   abundantly, above and beyond what you ask or  imagine. God wants to bring you what's next   when you get on your knees. Joseph said,  "I've been in prison before. I didn't like it.   I want to be free now, so, God, I'm on my knees." Lord, today, we lift our hands just as  a sign of our prayer and our eager hope   for the freedom Jesus died to bring  us to be made a reality in our lives.   I thank you today, Lord, that this  week is going to be different. It's going to be different because we're  not going to spend it chained to bitterness.   We're not going to spend it looking  for something or someone to blame.   We're starting this week, right here, right now,   bowing before you, saying, "Jesus Christ is  Lord, and what God has planned for my life…   No man can stop it. No curse can stop it. No  betrayal can stop it. No sickness can stop   it. No recession can stop it. No virus can stop  it. No pandemic can stop it. When God gets ready   to bless me, when God gets ready to raise me…  When God has a purpose, it will come to pass." Let's give him 60 seconds of praise  that bent knees break chains.   Come on, throw off those  chains! Throw off that attitude! Throw off that shame! Throw off that guilt! Throw  it off and praise him! Praise him! That's not   enough. Who the Son sets free is free indeed. Bow  your head. The Scripture says that if you confess   with your mouth Jesus is Lord and believe  in your heart God raised him from the dead,   you will be saved. This is a salvation  moment of decision for somebody. You are making the decision right now to place  your faith in Jesus Christ, to place your   faith in his death, to place your faith in his  resurrection. He died for your forgiveness.   He rose again to give you life. He invites you  to follow him. He has promised you his Spirit.   All you have to do is receive it. The moment you  hit your knees his forgiveness will hit your life. I want to lead you in a prayer right now. We're  going to pray this across all of our campuses   and our eFam around the world for the benefit  of those who are making the decision right now   to place your faith in Christ, because he  has already made the decision to save you.   It's God who calls you. It's God who's  drawing you. It's God who works in you.   He brought you to this moment. For those of  you who need to come to him for the first time   or come back to him, I want you to repeat this  prayer after me as you bow your heart before God. Heavenly Father, I am a sinner  in need of a Savior, and today   I bow my heart to you. I give  you my life. Make me new.   I believe you died that I could be  forgiven and rose again that I could live. Jesus, I receive you as my Lord   and Savior. I bow my life to you. I  belong to you. This is my new beginning. That's the most important decision you'll ever  make, the decision to be a follower of Christ…not   only to place your faith in him  one time but to follow him daily.   We want to hear from you. Right now, put it in  the comments if you just gave your life to Christ.   Say it. "I received Jesus." Just put it right  there with your name, where you're from, and   if there's anything our team  can be praying for you about. Also, there's a link if you go in the description.  You should be able to click on it and get a little   bit more information so our team can help you in  any way possible, because we want you to break   chains. You can only do that through the power  of God. I'm just believing with you. Whatever   you're believing God for this week, I'm standing  with you, but not only standing with you…kneeling. Paul said, "For this reason  I kneel before the Father."   We just want you to know you're not alone. Thank  you for being a part. Make sure you let us know   you were here. I love to see in the comments what  you got out of the sermon. Thank you to all of   you who give. Thank you, thank you, thank you.  Your giving, your generosity, is bearing fruit   all over the world. Anyway, I have to go. I'll see  you next time. Make sure you subscribe. See you.
Info
Channel: Elevation Church
Views: 1,527,586
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: elevation church, steven furtick, steven furtick sermons, elevation church sermons, 2022 sermons, pastor steven furtick, preaching, bent knees break chains, bent knees, broken chains, event, decision, position, comparison, favor, submission, freedom, bondage, power, choices, influence, position influences decision, chain of events, surrender, pain into purpose, pain, purpose, this is how I fight my battles, genesis 15, sermons about decisions, sermons about prayer, sermons about purpose
Id: ZqROe_tjjDk
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 65min 34sec (3934 seconds)
Published: Mon May 16 2022
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.