Dig Until God Does | Pastor Steven Furtick | Elevation Church

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This guy is such an obvious fraud. I feel bad for all the people who mistake listening to a motivational speaker and listening to a loud band for “feeling the spirit”. He preys on people with low self-esteem.

👍︎︎ 1 👤︎︎ u/GuyHereGoes 📅︎︎ Jul 19 2023 🗫︎ replies
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there is nothing like elevation nights and  we have added three special summer dates we   are coming your way tell them where we're  going to be I'm so excited about this so   on July 19th we're gonna be in Savannah Georgia  on July 20th Greenville South Carolina and July   21st Nashville Tennessee we're coming did you  hear the lady that's very soon you got to get   your tickets right now so we can worship  God preach his word everybody's coming you   better be there I'll see you elevation  nights here comes the word of God go   to elevationnights.com and get your tickets  and then to the message let's hear the word Let's go back to our Scripture  in 2 Kings, chapter 3.   If you're seated, stand really  quick for the Word of God. All of a sudden. Put that little phrase  in the chat if you're joining us online   or look at the person next to  you and say, "All of a sudden."   The Scripture we were singing about a little  bit… By the way, that song is not released,   so, no, you can't get it. I guess if  you screen record it I can't stop you,   but if you put it on YouTube, we will  take it down because it's not out yet. One of the Scriptures we were singing there   in 2 Kings, chapter 3… It's a pretty amazing Bible  story. I would say one of my top 10 favorites.   I want to go to verse 13. "Then Elisha said to  the king of Israel, 'What have I to do with you?   Go to the prophets of your father  and the prophets of your mother.' But the king of Israel said to him, 'No,   for the Lord has called these three kings  together to deliver them into the hand of Moab.'   And Elisha said, 'As the Lord of hosts lives,  before whom I stand, surely were it not that   I regard the presence of Jehoshaphat king of  Judah, I would not look at you, nor see you.'" This is what I was preaching about a little bit  last week. "But now bring me a musician. Then it   happened…" When the musician began to play, then  it happened. "…when the musician played, that the   hand of the Lord came upon him. And he said, 'Thus  says the Lord: "Make this valley full of ditches." For thus says the Lord: "You shall  not see wind, nor shall you see rain;   yet that valley shall be filled with  water, so that you, your cattle,   and your animals may drink."'" Just start  pointing to everything in your house right   now and say, "Everything around me  gets to drink from this blessing." "'And this is a simple matter in the sight of the  Lord; He will also deliver the Moabites into your   hand. Also you shall attack every fortified city  and every choice city, and shall cut down every   good tree, and stop up every spring of water,  and ruin every good piece of land with stones.'   Now it happened in the morning, when the grain  offering was offered, that suddenly water came…"   Suddenly. You like that "sudden" stuff? We're  going to talk about that "sudden" stuff today. "…suddenly water came by way of Edom, and  the land was filled with water." It's kind   of appropriate that I didn't get to my second  point last week, because my first point was   you'll know when you need to, and then my second  point… Check this out. How ironic is this that I   didn't get to this point. My second point was it  will flow when it's supposed to. Isn't that crazy? The part I didn't get to that I was supposed  to say was "It will flow when it's supposed   to." And guess what? I couldn't preach it  until right now, because this is the word   God wants spoken in this moment. Somebody  shout, "It will flow when it's supposed to."   High-five five people on your way  to your seat. Say, "Let it flow." It's not Christmastime. Not "Let  it snow." Let it flow. Suddenly.   I'm kind of reestablishing something I said  last week. I'll say it a little different   here and get it up to top. By the way, I want  you to understand something about all of the   things you see in life that seem to come out  of nowhere. They don't come out of nowhere. Most of the stuff we recognize all of a  sudden flows from something that wasn't   all of a sudden. Most, not all, of  the stuff we recognize all of a sudden   flows from something that wasn't all of a  sudden. When I stood in front of the mirror   about 20 years ago and realized Holly had  made me fat in our first year of marriage… My realization that my waistline had gone from a  collegiate 32 to a "first year of marriage" 38…   That's six sizes. It didn't happen suddenly. That  six-size expansion project on my stomach wasn't   sudden, but I did walk in front of the mirror  one day with my shirt off and suddenly realized…   So, most of the stuff we  recognize all of a sudden… "Wow!   I look pregnant. My wife is not pregnant. If  any of us is going to be pregnant, it needs to   be her. This is bad." The way I am wired… I went  on a sudden Atkins diet, and it was delightful. Through bacon, peanuts,  and the power of Diet Coke,   I got it back down…slowly, not suddenly. I'm  just saying it in a playful way that most of   the stuff we recognize all of a sudden  flows from something, like a steady diet   of pasta and Doritos. I didn't suddenly eat 700  bags of Doritos. I just ate two a day for a year. So, when we shout about "suddenly," we  want to take a moment to recognize that   while certain things come into our lives all  of a sudden that are desirable, other things…   I could call these the other suddenlys. It's  where you wake up and realize all of a sudden,   "I don't like the person I'm living with anymore." "All of a sudden, this thing in my life  has gone from something I can control   to something that I can't. All of a sudden,   I'm drinking not just for the sake of winding  down but getting through each day. Suddenly,   something that was helpful to me feels  like something that is holding me." Now, I don't want to be negative about this  beautiful Scripture in 2 Kings 3 because it is   such an exciting Scripture, but understanding  that we will often find ourselves in sudden   situations that were created through gradual  decisions can help us to go back in our lives   and allow the Holy Spirit of God to begin to  reverse some of the things our routines created. The Holy Spirit is speaking to me about the things  all of a sudden in our lives that he can change,   but it has to start somewhere. So,  if there is something in your life,   like these kings in this passage I read  to you… The king of the northern kingdom,   the king of the southern kingdom, and the  king of Edom have all gathered together. On their way to a war, they run out of water.  They have marched seven days through the desert,   and suddenly they realize, "We need a word  from God or we're not going to make it.   We need God to intervene or we are not going  to survive." They realize that suddenly,   but what had started before their  moment of realization was subtle.   It was a turning away from God that  resulted in them being in a vulnerable spot. A lot of times in my life, I have  recognized something suddenly   that built slowly. One of my buddies told me  about a line in a book. I think he said it was   a Hemingway book. I didn't read the book, but I  liked the quote. One character said to the other,   "How did you go bankrupt?" The other character  said, "Two ways: gradually, then suddenly." "How did you get divorced?" "Two ways:   gradually, then suddenly." A sudden moment to  realize something that had started long before.   All of a sudden. So, most of the stuff  we recognize all of a sudden (that's   what we were singing a minute ago) flows from  something… Maybe it wasn't caused by one thing,   but it flows from something  that wasn't all of a sudden. Touch somebody next to you and say, "It  wasn't sudden. It showed up suddenly,   but it wasn't sudden." The same could be  said for success. All right. Let's turn   this really quick because it feels kind of  dark in here. It feels kind of negative in   here. I want to shift this energy really  quick. I'm calling on the God of Jacob,   the God of Joel Osteen. I  want some positivity in here. Success isn't really sudden. If it is sudden,  that's troublesome as well, because if the success   is too sudden it won't be sustainable, but most  success God gives will take you up the stairs.   Very few elevators to this.  Our church is called Elevation,   but to really grow through this ministry, or  any ministry through the Word of God, there   will be steps God will use to strengthen you, and  they won't all feel like they're going upward. Sometimes it will feel like you are going  down, down, down, down, down, but if you   humble yourself under the mighty hand of God… One  Scripture said, "In due time he will lift you up."   The lifting might happen suddenly,   but there are layers beneath every sudden  lifting that unless you peel them back and see,   you will misunderstand the nature of success just  like you can misunderstand the nature of struggle. Struggles don't ingrain themselves all of a  sudden; they happen slowly, and so do successes.   One of my friends was telling me about…   I'll tell you who he was, because it will be  a little bit better if I make it specific.   He's one of the greatest songwriters I've ever  written with. His name is Jason Ingram. I've   written 20 or 30 songs with him in the last  few years. I love getting in a room with him. He has this ability to just  spit out a bridge for a song   that will blow you away. I saw him do it  one time. We were writing this one song,   and he just goes, "You take what the Enemy  meant for evil, and you turn it for good,   you turn it for good." Then he goes, "Or  something like that." All of a sudden. When we finish writing that particular song,  he looks at me and goes, "That's the song that   you write 300 other songs to get to that one  song." I realized something about his skill   set as a songwriter. What he did suddenly in that  moment was the result of stuff he did steadily.   A steady hand brings a sudden blessing.   I asked him a little bit more about his story.  He's one of the most successful songwriters. Not only one of the best songwriters but one  of the most successful songwriters. He has won   Grammys and Dove Awards and probably  Stellar Awards, and he's probably on   his way to an Emmy or a Tony or an Oscar  that I don't know about at this moment.   He told me that when he first  started as a songwriter… I'm going to get back to 2 Kings,  chapter 3, but let me get there slowly,   and then suddenly, when it hits,  it'll mean more. If it starts slowly,   when it hits suddenly, it'll  mean more. When it starts slowly   and it hits suddenly, it'll mean more. I am  preaching and you don't know that I'm preaching. If it starts slowly, when it hits suddenly,  it'll mean more, and it can last longer. So,   was it bad luck or was it God's  design that when he first started   writing songs and went to Nashville, every  publisher he met with in town rejected him? His wife had quit her job and had moved  with him to start his career, and he   couldn't find one publisher who said, "Yes."  Many of them said, "You just don't have it."   One woman named Cindy was willing to give him  a publishing contract. It wasn't much money,   but it was enough to live off  of with a newborn baby. So,   he began to write songs off that publishing  advance from one woman who believed in him. For a year he wrote. He turned in 150 songs in  the first year. At the end of the first year,   not one of them had been recorded. Not one had  been recorded other than on his demo machine.   It was probably a Tascam Portastudio 414 before we  were doing it on our voice memos on our iPhones. I   didn't ask him that detail, but it was probably  something archaic like that. Even if it wasn't,   let me tell the story that way  because it makes it better. The   second year, for some reason, Cindy decided  to renew his contract for another year. He wrote 150 more songs. One got recorded. But  before you shout about the one that recorded and   you think I'm going to tell you it was "I Can  Only Imagine" and went on to be a smash movie,   it wasn't. That song was put as a secret  track. Half this room doesn't know what   a secret track is, because the secret  track is not available in the digital age. A secret track was on a compact disc.  After the last song had finished playing,   it would go about four minutes, and then  there was another song, a throwaway song,   a bonus song nobody ever heard because they  turned the CD off. That's where his song went.   We got 300 songs, one recorded,  and that's a secret track.   In the third year, when he  was nominated for a Grammy,   a lot of people said, "Where did this  guy come from?" Secret to sudden. When you pray, don't be like the  hypocrites and go out and go,   "Hey! Does anybody see me serving? Does  anybody see the 300 songs I wrote?" No.   We don't want to hear them. They suck. Keep  writing those songs, and then maybe one day,   if you do it enough in the secret place… (I don't  know why I'm preaching this hard 20 minutes in.) One day, what is secret God can make sudden. But  we live in a day when nobody has any time to be   shut up in the secret place. Everybody wants  the sudden thing, but it is the secret things   that produce the sudden things.  Now I feel the Holy Spirit. Now   I feel the wind. Now I feel it blowing.  Somebody shout, "Secretly, then suddenly." Whether it is our secret struggles we need to  bring to God and say, "God, help me deal with   this. Help me process this. Help me deal with this  with just you and me before something you could   have secretly healed becomes suddenly exposed.  God, I want to get this done in the secret place   where you can minister, where you can touch, where  you can uproot, where you can make it right." Everything we realize suddenly started  secretly and built slowly. A secret track,   and the next year he's at the Grammys.  I'm not saying you'll win a Grammy.   I don't even think you'd really care as  much as you thought you would if you did.   I am saying that it can happen suddenly. When it does, what you have done secretly  will be the treasure of the process.   In our story, not only is there a sudden  need they bring the prophets to speak to,   these three kings who are… I just want  to make sure you know the situation.   They went through the desert, and they ran out  of water, and they're getting ready for a war. That is definitely familiar to me.  Sometimes you go through desert seasons   on your way to fight battles, and what  it takes for you to get to the battle   takes so much out of you that you definitely  don't have what it takes to fight the battle. So, the prophet comes, and he begins to prophesy.   He prophesies about a few different things, and  I'm going to show you the contrast here. He says,   first of all… The hand of the Lord came on him,  and in verse 16 he said, "Thus says the Lord:   'Make this valley full of ditches.'" Verse 17:  "For thus says the Lord: 'You shall not see wind,   nor shall you see rain; yet that  valley shall be filled with water,   so that you, your cattle,  and your animals may drink.'" Let's break that down a little bit. What  is he saying in these two verses? Well,   the first thing he is not  saying is what he is seeing.   Before we get into what he says,  let's get into what he isn't saying.   He doesn't say, "The ground is dry." He  doesn't say, "This battle is hopeless." He doesn't say, "This situation is desperate,"  although it is. It makes me wonder if one of   the reasons we get dry inside is because we  need to stop saying so much about what we see   and start saying more about what God says.   The structure of this is really helpful for  your daily life, because there's what he sees   and there's what God says. Twice  he says, "Thus says the Lord."   In verse 16 he says, "Thus says the Lord."  In verse 17 he says, "Thus says the Lord." You might be in a situation where you're like,  "This is terrible, but thus says the Lord.   This is painful, but thus says the Lord."  "Are you teaching us to live in denial?" No,   I'm just teaching you not to live in dryness.  It only makes it feel drier to drive down and   dig down deep into the things you see when  what you see doesn't match what God says. Now, this is where I lose a lot of people. I  can always feel I lose a lot of people here,   because they think this is the  "abracadabra," "hocus pocus"   part of the preaching of the Word of God,  and it's not. This is the greatest skill   I would get you to learn in regard to dealing  with the disappointments in your life, the dry   places in your soul, and even the needs you have  that you tend to meet in all of the wrong ways. I didn't plan any of this, but this flows  how it's supposed to when it's supposed to,   and I told you to let it flow, so I'm  going to let it flow. "This is…thus says."   That's a shift I want you to begin to make. "This   is…thus says." Both are important. The this  is enables you to deal with where you are. The thus says, when you get a word from God and  hold on to it and believe God for it and walk in   it and work with it… The "Thus says the Lord"  is what gets you from this is to what can be.   I believe there are some people  who are sitting under this message   today who have been so stuck in  this is you forgot thus says. When you don't feel like a conqueror  and you make yourself a victim   and forget he called you a victor, it is just  a matter of time before you feel very dry.   So, this is the switch you have to make. "This  is unfair." Victim language. "Thus says the Lord,   he will repay me double for my trouble, and no  weapon…" The thing about God is he will tell you   to do crazy stuff that completely contradicts what  makes sense in your logical mind. I'll prove it.   This is what the Lord says. Verse 16. "Thus says  the Lord: 'Make this valley full of ditches.'" A ditch for what? It's dry. I don't need a  ditch in a dry place. Not yet, but thus says…   This is a "getting ready" moment  for you. "Thus says the Lord."   I love the Word of God. How about you?  It's what God uses to dig in my spirit   to prepare me to receive what he's  bringing by his hand into my life.   No, digging doesn't feel good, not  for the digger or the dirt. Trust me,   I know. Don't you remember my story from a few  weeks ago, how I used to dig graves for dogs? Did you hear that story? Were you here? I  had a job digging graves for dogs and cats,   and that prepared me for ministry. I believe  it did. It prepared me for parenting.   I told Abbey the other day, "Hey, I want you to  memorize this. If a boy ever wants to date you,   here's your opening speech: 'Hey,  before you date me, you just need   to know my dad has experience doing weddings  and digging graves.' Because I'm that dude.   So, tell him when he shows up, 'Before we  start this relationship, you need to know,   either way it goes, my dad can do what needs to be  done.' I'm the man for the job." I told her that. "When you start dating in about 35 years, tell  your first boyfriend that…when you turn 50."   Now listen. It's amazing what God speaks.  He says, "There's going to be water flowing   from the land of Edom." Isn't that a crazy  place for water to flow from, the same desert   they marched through to begin with? Isn't it crazy how sometimes God will bring  the greatest blessings from the driest places?   The same desert you just marched through for  seven days, and became dehydrated as you did,   is the same place the blessing is going  to flow from. Thus says the Lord. The   same comfort with which God is comforting you  through this crisis in your life is going to   be the same comfort you are going to give to  others when you get to your place of service. The same lessons you're learning through  this breaking season are going to be the   same lessons that turn into blessings for  the people you help when you get through it.   That's amazing. It's amazing what he told them  to do…dig ditches in the valley. It's debatable   whether he meant it literally or figuratively. I  really don't care. It speaks to a mindset for me. Whether they really started digging all night  to get ready for the rain or whether he was   just kind of saying it like, "Fasten your  seat belt; it's going to be a bumpy ride…"   That doesn't necessarily mean there is an actual  seat belt involved. It's a saying. I think maybe   "Dig ditches in the valley" was a saying,  but I know for a fact it was an expectation. He tells him to do that. "For thus says the Lord:  'You shall not see wind, nor shall you see rain;   yet that valley shall be filled with water…'"  He also tells him what God intends to do.   The thing he didn't say that I found  almost as interesting as what he did say   is how it would happen and when it  would happen. That's interesting. If you went seven days without water,  that's long enough to be desperate.   Seven days is a long time. I don't even know  how they've stayed alive these seven days   if they passed through their rations.  We're talking about water, not Wi-Fi.   How many of you think you would go on  a fast… Seven days without Wi-Fi would   be enough to drive you to sackcloth and ashes,  just seven days without an Internet connection. We have to realize how weak they were in this  moment to really appreciate the value of the word   God gave. There's always this part of us that will  listen to a little faith message like this and go,   "Yeah, but my situation…" Nuh-uh.  We're talking about water. No water. I don't care how many awards you  win. I don't care how many great   things you accomplish. I don't care what  number your net worth says. No water?   It's over. That's how bad it is. So, if it's that  bad and God's word comes, the way we would expect   to read this verse is "The hand of the Lord  came upon Elisha, and he began to prophesy. And when the hand of the Lord came on Elisha and  he began to prophesy, 'Make this valley full of   ditches,' all of a sudden, water came." All of a  sudden, the thing I need will be released in my   life. But the Bible doesn't say the water suddenly  came. The Bible says an instruction was given.   Now, sometimes before the intervention  of God there is an instruction to you.   I'm wondering, what is God calling you to  dig today? I thought about this sermon from   multiple levels. My buddy who wrote 300  songs who showed up and dug every day. My friend who sold a business  for over $100 million last year   who had to go back to being a substitute  teacher and was waking up at 5:00 in the   morning and going to sleep at 2:30 in the morning  to build his company in the beginning in order to   get to the point where he sold the company. When  I see somebody God did something great for, now   I've learned to ask a secondary question. Not only  what God did for them. That's my first question. The second question I ask is "I wonder  what they dug for God to do that.   I wonder what God dug for them to be  able to have that kind of relationship."   When I see families that are really happy… I don't  just mean happy in a picture. I mean families that   are really together, and they've survived some  tough seasons. One of their marriages ended,   and one of their kids is in a bad spot, but  they're praying for it and all coming back around. I don't just wonder what God did for them anymore.  I wonder, "What did they have to dig through   to get to this kind of family strength?" You do  yourself a real favor… When you see somebody God   did something great for and you want God  to do that for you, if you get a chance,   ask them, "What did you have to dig for God  to do that?" Because the water came suddenly. If you only showed up in the sunlight of the next  day, you would have mistakenly believed the water   just came when the word came. If you just think  everybody who's blessed and everybody who has   peace and everybody who's free and everybody  who's walking in a measure of the favor of God   and everybody who has influence… If you just  think God did it, then you miss the point. God did it when they dug it.  That's why I love this passage.   It means that God is sovereign. He did it. Nobody  else can make it rain. Nobody else can tell the   sun, "Come up now." Nobody else can drive back  the darkness but God. God did it, but they dug it. God didn't write 300 songs for Ingram. If he  did, all of them would have been smash hits.   They would have all been number one first day  out. Can you imagine God writing a song? It   would dominate the charts. You could dance  to it. You could sway to it. You could cry   to it. You could laugh to it. No. He wrote 300  songs. He dug it and God did it…in that order. It didn't flow the moment the prophet  spoke about it. "Thus says the Lord,   'Water, flow.'" No. Water  will flow when you dig. "Dig   where?" This valley. "Wait. A valley that's dry?  A valley that's low? A valley that's painful? A   feeling I can't shake?" Yes. The lower and the  deeper the valley the more water it can hold.   I am telling you that this is not your breaking;  this is your breakthrough. This is it! Thus says   the Lord. This is a valley,  but thus says the Lord. He is my shepherd. I shall not want. Thus  says the Lord. He's making a table right now.   Yeah! The only thing the Devil can do, since  he can't take the word of God away from you,   is to get you so weary and discouraged  you stop digging because it's dry.   "You can't dig. You're dry." "That's why  I'm digging: because I'm dry. That's why   I'm praising: because I'm dry. That's  why I'm doing it: because I'm dry."   Digging or drought. You will have to decide in  this moment of your life, digging or drought. I'll be digging, because I did  drought, and I didn't like it.   I threw a pity party. Nobody RSVPed.  They surely didn't bring presents. I   did bitterness. I got down to the bottom of  the bitterness, and guess what I found: dry.   Once I drank all that bitterness,  I was dry. I did blame. Do   you all want me to dig or do you all want me  to dance up here? I could just dance up here.   See, I noticed a lot of preaching  is like we're dancing around what's   really happening rather than digging  through what's really causing it. This happens in parts. The word comes suddenly.  The musicians started playing and the word came   suddenly. But since we talked last week about the  steady hand of the musician who played the harp,   we should also talk about the steady  hand of the diggers who held the shovels.   That's where sudden blessings  come from: constant digging. "Are you saying I have to work my  way into a relationship with God? I   got set free from that. I grew up in that  church, and that burned me out, man. So,   don't you start telling me I've got to  read 17 chapters of the Bible a day,   because I tried the '17 chapters of the Bible  a day' plan, and I hated the Bible because I   couldn't pronounce Methuselah and Melchizedek  and all of these people you had me reading   about. It got really boring in Leviticus."  I'm not talking about working your way to God.   I'm talking about digging your way to water  where the grace can flow, where the joy can flow. Let me tell you when it's going to flow:   when it's supposed to. Let me tell you when  they're going to take you off the secret tracks   and bring you to the stage:  when they're supposed to.   Let me tell you what you can do in the meantime  until it does. I think a lot of us are really   confused about what we need to surrender in our  lives. We don't need to surrender the desires God   has put in our hearts if God put them there. What  we need to surrender in this season of our lives   is the way we thought it was supposed to go. Let go of how you thought it was supposed to go.   While you're at it, let go of when you  thought it was supposed to get there.   The issue isn't will God; it's when God. It  doesn't just depend on what he wants to do;   it depends on what you are willing to do  until God does. I shared with one of the   people I mentored the other day… They were  needing clarity. I said, "The issue isn't   whether God will reveal this or not; the issue is  what you will do until God does give you clarity. Because if you flail right now and  thrash right now and act nasty right now,   and if you cope with stuff that's going  to put you in a cage later right now,   then when God gives you clarity, you won't  even be able to act on it because you will   be so constrained by the decisions  you made while you were waiting." The issue is not will God. The issue is not  his sovereignty; it's your "supposed to."   Let me ask you a question. When it flows, are  you going to be where you're supposed to be…in   the valley, digging ditches; in the valley,  transporting… That's a lot of times what   parenting is. It's just taking your kids  back and forth and back and forth and back   and forth. In certain seasons, they won't  talk to you. "How was your day?" "Fine." If you get a "Fine" out of them, that's a grade-A  response. That is a premium response in this   season I'm talking about. Then they're going  to be in your room at 12:30 in the morning. Now   they want to talk. You're asleep. Part of being  a parent is being able to flow with all of that.   If you pick them up and drop them off  enough, eventually they open up enough,   and you get to have the conversation, but  if you don't show up when they say nothing,   when they open up you won't be there. Everything is like that.  Everything God did in my life   was something I was digging in a dry place  when he was doing it. The same thing for Holly.   Usually, when we meet people, and we're meeting  them for the first time and they're a part of the   ministry, they'll go, "Oh, Pastor Steven.  Hey, Holly!" It doesn't bother me a bit. I'm like, "I like her more than I like me too.  Hey, trust me. I'm in her fan club. I'm the   president. Would you like a picture…of her?" I'm  exaggerating a little bit just to make a point.   I remember when Holly felt completely  useless in this ministry. I remember the   season when the kids were very little that  I would take them out on a Wednesday night,   and she would invite maybe 12 women… I don't  know if it would be smaller or larger than that. She would have them into our home, and she would  walk them through a Bible study. But it wasn't   just a Bible study, because she didn't really feel  like she had that much to teach from the Bible.   She would show them how to cook quick meals.  She would say, "When you have little kids, you   have to cook quick meals. So I'm going to show you  quick meals, stuff you can do really easily, stuff   that doesn't take much brain power, stuff that'll  take your husband's waist size from a 32 to a 38." That class should have been called "Project  38." So, I watched it expand, like my waistline,   from when she did the Bible study in our house  to then I watched… They said, "You need to do   that for all of the ladies of our church." She  made a little study called Mrs. Betterhalf. Do   you know how many people I have overheard (while  they're getting their selfie with her while I'm   standing over in the corner sucking my  thumb) say, "It saved our marriage"? It means more to me, because I saw where it  started really slowly. I saw that it was out of   her personal dryness of where she could have felt  sorry for herself. "What do I do? What's my job?   What's my value? Where's my Grammy?  Where's my Oscar for best supporting role?" I watched what she did, and I watched  how she did it at such a level it was   almost like a decimal. You know how you have  the number and then the decimal? It's almost   like I watched what was behind the decimal  move, and I watched God add zeroes to it,   where it was 10 women, and then it was 100  women, and then it was 1,000 women. I feel   God enlarging somebody's vision right  now. Not your waistline…your vision. Come on. Can you see it by the Spirit? You won't  see wind and you won't see rain. Nobody came to   her with a publishing advance and said, "Would  you make a study about wifedom?" She never got the   wifedom publishing advance, but when the pandemic  hit and everybody was trapped in their homes,   hating each other, hating each other  a little bit, on each other's nerves… We were taking a walk, and I  said, "Do you know what you have?   Betterhalf. I want you to release Betterhalf  into the world right now so we can help   families get through this challenging time."  And she did that. It wasn't 10 anymore. It   wasn't even 100. It wasn't 1,000. It wasn't  just our church. It was all over the world. I watched as women all over the world were  gathered, saying, "Can we drink some of that water   you started digging for a decade ago?" That's  why God did it: because you dug it. You dug it;   God did it. You dug it;   God did it. This is going to be your  testimony, so practice. "I dug it; God did it." You dug it; God did it. That's what you're going  to be telling people a little bit from now. "I had   a secret track after 300 songs. I had a secret  prayer life. I had a secret reading plan. I had   a secret ambition, but I surrendered it to him,  and I gave up on what others were going to think,   and I got serious about service. I dug it;  God did it." We're going to be looking back   on something not many days from now,  talking about, "I dug it; God did it." Now let's get into this a little bit. Say, "When  I dig it, God can fill it." Not when I feel it.   When I dig it, when I don't feel it, God will  fill it. This, my friend, is the word of the Lord.   "Why is it not here yet?" Imagine the  digging that took place with people who   were already dehydrated. They dug all night.  They waited all night. That's a long time to   dig with nothing to drink. Trust me. I've  dug. Come on. Take it from the gravedigger. I dug, and I wasn't filling a valley  with ditches, and I had better tools.   Digging while you're dry sounds so  inspirational, but it can be so difficult.   So, they need water right now. Why didn't  God make it flow the moment Elisha spoke it?   Why do we have to go all the way  to verse 20 for the water to come?   I'm going to tell you why: because the  sun wasn't up yet. Some of the things   that make you want to give up and think  it's never coming… The sun isn't up yet. Imagine them digging all night, and  they're dry, and they're desperate.   In many ways, they're defeated.  They've already expressed,   "The Lord has brought us here to hand us over,"  so they've completely lost their confidence,   but they're digging anyway. Verse 17 says,  "Thus says the Lord: 'You shall not see wind,   nor shall you see rain; yet that  valley shall be filled with water…'"   So, every time they checked to see, "Has  it happened yet?" somebody said, "No."   I want to talk for a moment about what  to do when you're navigating a "No." "Is there wind yet?" "No." "Do you feel the mist yet?" "No." "No, I'm not talking about a thunderstorm.  Do you even feel a drop yet?" "No." This is something people love to  ask me: "Are you ready to preach?" I never answer that with a complete "Yes," because  the truth of the matter is there's no real way to   be ready to release the Word of God. It flows  when it's supposed to. God gives me what I need   as I preach it. So shall it be in your life. I  want you to receive this. I don't know if you're   getting it. Every time they asked, "Did God do  it yet?" while they were digging, it was a "No."   Sometimes when you get enough "noes"  you make "no" your emotional home.   No wind. No rain. Nobody to talk to  about this. No one you really trust. No end in sight to this  battle. No good news lately.   I could make it really good. No deposits in  the account no matter how many times a day   you check it. Do you ever just check, wondering  if something happened overnight? Like, "Maybe.   I don't know. God is big. Maybe the bank  made an error. Maybe Y2K will be 23 years   late and it'll all get wiped out. Let  me just check this one more time. Nope."   I see you refreshing your phone. "No." "Maybe  they texted. No. Well, maybe they… No."   The way you negotiate that "No," which is a  type of valley of its own, is so important. Do you make that "No" your home or do you  dig through it to find what God will do   if you don't let the "No" that life has told  you become the final word over your life?   In verse 20, we get a very different word. What  we've basically done is we've gone from no wind…   The refreshing you wanted  didn't come. The momentum you   wanted didn't come. How many can relate to this? Just put a raised hand up in the room or  in the chat. Say, "Yeah, no wind. I don't   feel it right now." No rain. That's the resource  they need. Sometimes it's going to come in this   way. You are not going to get the feeling you  want or the resource you want, and it's going   to be a "No." Now, the way you negotiate this  "No" has everything connected to what is next. It does not just depend on what God can do.  It depends on what you will do until God does.   That's what it depends on right now. What will you  do until God does? I have another confession of   faith God gave me, and it might be for somebody.  I may have doubts, and I may have disappointments,   and I may have a lot of noes. There may  be 300 of them. There may be 300 more. There may be rejections in my future and  failures in my future. I'm sure there are. If   I keep living, there will be. There may be people  who don't like me. There may be people who turn   on me. There may be dryness in my future, and I  don't know exactly how God is going to do this,   but I'll tell you what I have decided in my  spirit. I'll be digging until God does it. That's all I can control. That's all I can do.   I can't make it rain. I can't make people change  their minds. I certainly can't control things that   are beyond the sphere of the domain God has  given me. I can't make that person love me. I   can't make that person like me. I can't make this  situation change. I can't make them see my value. But I know one thing. I'll  be digging until God does,   because he knows. I don't, but he knows. Jeremiah  29:11: "For I know the plans I have for you…"   He knows. He knows what he's going to do, who he's  going to do it through, and the exact time he's   going to do it. Until he shows me how it's going  to happen, I'll be digging until God does it. I believe he's going to give me the joy.  I believe he's going to give me the second   chance. I believe he's going to show me the next  chapter, but until he does, I'll be digging.   Because guess what. When they dug it,   God did it. So give me my next line. This is  what I mean. I'll be digging until God does.   That's why I dug: because he put something in  me. That's why I dug: because he had something   for me. Don't you get it? Eye has not seen and  ear has not heard and neither has it entered into   your heart what God can do! So, what are you  going to do? I'll be digging until God does. If it takes another night, and if it takes  another year, and if it takes another prayer,   and if it takes another song,  and if it takes another setback,   that's all right. I'm digging down deep.  I'm built up strong. I will not fall.   High-five everybody you feel like  high-fiving and say, "Dig till he does it."   You need water? All right. Weeping  may endure for a night but joy… Joy! You can dig a ditch right now. Open  your mouth and praise him. Joy is coming   and springs come suddenly!   Verse 20. We went from "No" to… Watch  this. "Now…" That's just no with   something after it. Now! I'm digging  now for what I will see later. Now! God said no is just now waiting for what's next.   When you get done digging, do you know  how strong your foundation is going to be?   When it gets there, you'll be ready for it. That's  why I'm getting my spending under control…so   when God wants to make me a steward to  bless more people than just my family… I started budgets when we were broke.   You didn't hear a word I just said for the last  hour. I started my budget when we were broke,   because if God moves the zero to the other side  of the decimal, what am I going to do with it?   That's a ditch. Now, there is a decision to  be made on your part, and   then there is a destiny that  has been created in God's heart.   The Bible said, "Now it happened…" When? "…in  the morning…" Why did God wait all night?   Why didn't God make it happen right when  you needed it? Well, the Bible said,   "Now it happened in the morning, when the  grain offering was offered, that suddenly…"   But it's not sudden. We've been digging all  night. It looked sudden if you were watching it,   but it was steady if you were  digging it. Isn't that the truth?   "…suddenly water came by way of Edom,  and the land was filled with water." I still don't know why God would wait  until the morning when they were about   to die through the night, but I read the next  verse. Watch what happened next. "And when all   the Moabites…" That's the enemy. "…heard that  the kings had come up to fight against them,   all who were able to bear arms and older were  gathered; and they stood at the border." They   thought they were about to kill the people  of God. Oh, by the way, Edom means red.   When the enemies saw the water on the other side,  they thought it was blood because it was red.   Why was it red? Because the sun came up. When the amber sun kissed the sudden flood, it  looked like blood to the enemy. So watch what they   did. "And they said, 'This is blood; the kings  have surely struck swords and have killed one   another; now therefore, Moab, to the spoil!'"  So, the enemy rushes in, but it wasn't blood.   It was the meeting of the flood  and the sun that came together. So, I picture God all night long… The prophet  spoke, "There will be a flood," and God is saying,   "Not yet, flood. The sun isn't up  yet." See, you can't flow just yet,   because when the sun comes up, the sun is  going to hit the flood in just the right   way at just the right time to confuse your enemy  at just the right place at just the right time. God says, "It will flow when it's supposed  to." You're right on schedule. God has not   abandoned you. The sun is coming up over your  life, and God says, "It's time for you to dig   again. It's time for you to sing again. It's  time for you to rejoice again." Let's take   20 seconds and do it now. Begin to praise him.  All of a sudden, like a flood. All of a sudden,   God said, "Sun, you can rise. Waters, you  can flow." I release healing in your life.   I release joy in your life. I  release freedom in your life. All of a sudden, all of a sudden, But even if it doesn't,  I'll be digging until he does it. All of a sudden,   all of a sudden, But even if it doesn't,  I'll still be digging until he does it. [Worship] hey thank you for watching the Elevation Church  YouTube I want you to subscribe that way you   can know when we go live and post new content  make sure to leave me a comment let me know   what spoke to you today where you're watching  from and what we can pray for you about and if   you'd like to support the ministry financially  you can click the give button now and help us   continue reaching people around the world for  Jesus Christ thanks again I'll see you next time
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Channel: Elevation Church
Views: 648,215
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: elevation church, steven furtick, dig until god does, digging, preparation, timing, perspective, faith, hope, peace, 2 Kings 3
Id: m0OoGuaQ-VM
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 66min 20sec (3980 seconds)
Published: Sun Jun 04 2023
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