It’s Always Been In You | Pastor Steven Furtick | Elevation Church

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
Welcome to all of our locations. We trust that  God's presence will be powerful wherever you are.   I really mean that. That's kind of  what my sermon is about today as well.   Listen to this in Genesis 34:30. "Then Jacob said to Simeon and Levi, 'You have  brought trouble on me by making me obnoxious   to the Canaanites and Perizzites, the people  living in this land. We are few in number,   and if they join forces against me and attack  me, I and my household will be destroyed.'"   Now go to Genesis 35:11. "And God  said to him, 'I am God Almighty;   be fruitful and increase in number. A nation and a community of nations will come from  you, and kings will be among your descendants.'"   The NIV '84 says: "…kings  will come from your body."   So, I want to preach for a moment on (and God  told me to tell you this) It's Always Been in You. God, what you showed me was so amazing, and I ask  for your help now that I could share it with them,   these people you love, this church you're  building. I pray, Lord, not that I might just   preach good but that they would hear good. Don't  just anoint me to preach; anoint them to listen   with their hearts. You have our attention, and  we are excited to see what the outcome will be. For the grass withers and the flower  fades, but your Word, Lord, stands forever.   We thank you that the ingrafted Word is able to  save our souls. As the rain falls from the heaven   and waters the earth and causes it to bud and  flourish, so shall your Word be that proceeds   from your mouth. It will not return to you void.  This time will not be wasted. It will accomplish   the purpose for which you sent it. We  agree together. In Jesus' name, amen. I'd like to show you something before we  get into all this deep theological stuff   from my oldest son's YouTube channel.   One reason I'm doing this is it makes me  the coolest dad in the world to be able to   give my son a YouTube shout-out for thousands of  people, so I'm going to take advantage of that. He has this YouTube channel "dothedash."  He's a beat maker, a producer. He's good.   One of my friends who's a producer said,  "You need to know his beats actually   slap." I grew up on rock music. I said,  "They do?" He said, "They actually do." I was proud of him, because recently he decided he  didn't just want to make beats, but he wanted to   do some tutorials. I thought, "That's cool."  You kind of wonder will he do it or not,   and he has been doing it. I'm so proud of you,  man. He has done two tutorials now, and I'm   proud of him. Check it out. I'll show you  just a little snippet of one of his tutorials. [Video] Amazing. That's "dothedash" on YouTube.   I have no idea what any of that he  said meant, and I'm a musical guy.   Different generation. We did find something the  other day. We had the best time from this YouTube   channel we didn't know existed where Holly,  10 years ago, used to post videos of the kids.   I don't know why we thought that was a  good idea for her to post some of these,   because some of them are kind of private.  It's just stuff that I'm like, "We posted this   publicly?" But we had the best time watching  it with the kids just to show them stuff. Here's one we found. I want to  show you this from 10 years ago. [Video] "And I went back into the beat for  another measure." He was making tutorials.   It's always been in you.   It was with you on that trash drum set just  like it's with you on these trap beats. That's the same kid who was whaling on this  cymbal, and now he's reverse polarizing a hi-hat,   or whatever the crap he said about the 808s.  I don't know. It's always been in you. I joke   a lot about having kids. "It's so hard, and I'm  trying not to kill them. When they are old they   will not depart from it, but that only happens if  I don't kill them first, Lord." You know, I joke. I love it. It's my main job. I'm a way better  dad than I am a pastor. I promise you. That's   my number one job. I showed you that because what  often happens that I think is one of my primary   responsibilities as a parent is to make sure  that what's in him that God put there gets out   and that nobody puts anything on him   that causes him to forget or  diminish what God put in him. The rhythm has always been in you, and what  you do with it is up to you. Getting to watch   the Bible character Jacob grow up… You get  to see (this is a rare thing) the sonogram   of the patriarch through which the whole nation  of Israel came. I think that's a real gift that   we get to see that Jacob was even wrestling in his  mother's womb. Then we get to see him at age 77   running from his brother Esau who he had  been in competition with his whole life. We get to see him reconcile with Esau at  age 97 after 20 years of hiding with his   uncle Laban and having a family. It's a  lot we get to see. He has finally made it   to Canaan. Let's clap for Jacob that after all  he went through, he finally made it to Canaan.   Oh, come on. You clap better for  somebody who lost five pounds.   He made it to Canaan. He made it to the  Promised Land. That's what Canaan is called. He made it all the way to Canaan, which is really  remarkable because of the fact that along the way   to Canaan, where God was bringing him back to,  he had to deal with so many… Talk about pressure.   Jacob is the grandson of Abraham.   Not like the son of a pastor…the son of the  progenitor of the faith of multiple religions. "Make something of yourself, kid." From the time  he comes out of the womb named Jacob… Jacob means   to grasp or to supplant, and he's trying to make  sure he gets out ahead of his hairy brother Esau,   his red brother Esau, this beet red beast of a  man Esau, who is trained in the ways of warfare,   but he can't quite do it, so he comes out  second, but he tricks his way into being first. I was watching Tim last night. He's  preaching a remix of some sermons I did   about Jacob back in 2013. It's so fun watching  you preach them. I love it. He's going through   all this stuff, how Jacob got Esau to give him  his birthright for a bowl of stew. There are no   beans in the world that delicious, but you'd be  surprised what you'll trade when you're tired. Esau, famished, came in from the  field one day, and as we like to say   in preaching terms, he gave up what  he wanted most for what he wanted now.   The only problem with Jacob's plan was  that Esau was good with weapons and Jacob   was good with an apron. The Bible says  he was a good cook but Esau was a killer. Let's do a rock paper scissors. Sword beats  spatula every time. Jacob's mother said to him,   "You've got to get up and go to Paddan Aram  and stay with my uncle. When Esau finds   out what you did, he's going to kill you."  Now, this is not the bowl of beans. This is   the blessing Jacob stole. Jacob went in to his  father Isaac, dressed up, pretending to be Esau,   and he got a blessing from his father. When he got the blessing from  his father pretending to be Esau,   it was the kind of blessing that can come  from people, but it leaves something internal   unsettled, and it sent him in the direction  of running for 20 years of his life.   While he was with his uncle Laban, some  interesting things happened. He tried to   marry a girl named Rachel, but Laban did, I guess  you would call it, a switcheroo and put Leah… Now, Leah is the sister of Rachel. She's the older  one, and she's the one with the good personality,   as we say in PC culture. Rachel is beautiful.   I'm not going to preach on this, because I've  already preached on this before, but I'm just   trying to give you some background of all that  Jacob has been through to get to this point. He worked seven years to have Rachel in marriage,   ended up with Leah on his wedding night, and  then had to work seven more years for Rachel.   And he did it. Then he stayed six more years.  So that's 20 years at his uncle's house.   Now God has called him back to the land of  Canaan, and against all odds, he made it.   Not only did he make it to Canaan, but check this  out. He has reconciled with his brother Esau. In Genesis 32, Jacob realizes that before he can  go back to Canaan and really settle, he has to   reconcile, or in his mind, he has to pacify  his brother Esau. But it's the craziest thing,   because when he finally meets up with  Esau, Esau isn't even mad about it anymore.   Esau is like, "Come on! Bring  it in. Let's hug it out. Jacob,   it's good to see you. Look at how blessed  I am. Look at how blessed you are." The real struggle of Jacob's  life was never with his brother.   Now let's put everything in context. He  escaped from Laban, who was chasing him,   because Laban was upset about Jacob outwitting  him. He has reconciled with Esau, and now   he has finally made it to Canaan, and  he arrives at this place called Shechem. When he gets there, he takes 100 pieces of silver   and pays for a plot of ground and puts up  a tent so he can stay in Shechem. No sooner   can he make it to Canaan than a tragedy strikes in  his own family. One day, his daughter Dinah, the   one he had with Leah, goes out exploring in the  town of Shechem, and one of the men of the town… It was actually the son of the leader. His name  was Hamor. This young man's name was Shechem.   He took her and raped her. When  the news of this reaches Jacob,   he doesn't know what to do  because he's in a strange place.   I feel for him in this moment, because he  has had to run from so much to get here. The Bible says he makes it safely to Canaan,   the place of the promise, only to be struck  by what I call a Promised Land problem.   The reason I call it that is because when  he arrives in Canaan where God has him,   something so terrible happens within his own  family. This is where I want to break away from   the narrative and preach to somebody. Often, you  get to a place, a place you imagined in your mind. Maybe it's an age, a stage of  life, a certain type of success,   a certain accomplishment, a certain achievement,  something you got to that you worked really hard   for. No sooner can you pay for it with  100 pieces of silver and put your tent up   than disaster strikes your very own family and  threatens to destroy what means the most to you. When Jacob's sons heard about it, particularly  his sons Simeon and Levi, they both decided to   take matters into their own hands because their  sister had been defiled. Because they were greatly   outnumbered, they decided the only way for them  to defeat their enemy was to make their enemy   vulnerable, so they used something that was a part  of their own covenant with God called circumcision   against their enemy. They told the men of  the city, "Okay, look. You can keep Dinah,   and we'll settle with you. We'll  intermarry with you." They were lying. "We'll share with you all the sheep and all the  flocks and herds, and you can marry our women,   but first you have to do the thing our  people do to signify our covenant with God   and be circumcised." And they did it, all of  the men of the city. I mean, Shechem must have   been very convincing, because he got all of the  males in the town to go through this procedure.   Come on, y'all. Y'all  wouldn't even join the church   if I made you take a class. They got circumcised.   On the third day during their recovery,  Simeon and Levi snuck in and killed   all of the males of the city. So now Jacob  is in Canaan, but he's still in danger. It's a tricky thing, because he's where God was  leading him all along, but he's not safe anymore.   Maybe we would say it this way  for our context: He's an adult,   but he doesn't feel very "adultish."   He's a leader, but he doesn't feel very certain  of his own direction. He's in the place where   God had promised not only him but his father and  his father's father, and he's in great danger. So then he says something to his sons. I want  to read it to you again now that you know the   context. Verse 30: "Then Jacob said to Simeon  and Levi, 'You have brought trouble on me…'"   On top of all the pressure Jacob has to  be the father of the tribes of Israel,   to be the one through which God would continue  the seed of his promise to bless the entire earth…   On top of all that, now he is dealing with  the consequences of somebody else's decision. He has a lot on him. In fact, he says,  "You have put all this trouble on   me." Have you ever had somebody download their  drama on you? This is tricky, because did his   sons do the right thing? Did his sons do the  wrong thing? Were they right to fight back   or were they dumb to attack somebody they  didn't have the strength to defend against? Jacob doesn't know, and he's in Canaan, but he's  not safe. He's in the place God promised him,   but he's now in the greatest danger of his life.  He doesn't know what to do, and he has a lot on   him. Not only is it the fear of the Canaanites,  that they might hear about him and attack him,   but it is the decision of what to do next.  I want you to see what God told him to do in   Genesis 35:1. I really want to start preaching my  sermon now, because this is what God said to do. "Then God said to Jacob, 'Go up to Bethel and  settle there, and build an altar there to God, who   appeared to you when you were fleeing from your  brother Esau.' So Jacob said to his household and   to all who were with him, 'Get rid of the foreign  gods you have with you, and purify yourselves   and change your clothes. Then come, let us go up  to Bethel, where I will build an altar to God,   who answered me in the day of my distress and  who has been with me wherever I have gone.' So they gave Jacob all the foreign gods  they had and the rings in their ears,   and Jacob buried them under the  oak at Shechem. Then they set out,   and the terror of God fell on the towns all  around them so that no one pursued them.   Jacob and all the people with him came to  Luz (that is, Bethel) in the land of Canaan. There he built an altar, and he called  the place El Bethel [the House of God],   because it was there that God revealed himself  to him when he was fleeing from his brother.   Now Deborah, Rebekah's nurse, died and was buried  under the oak outside Bethel. So it was named   Allon Bakuth. After Jacob returned from Paddan  Aram, God appeared to him again and blessed him. God said to him, 'Your name is Jacob,  but you will no longer be called Jacob;   your name will be Israel.' So he named him Israel.   And God said to him, 'I am God Almighty; be  fruitful and increase in number. A nation   and a community of nations will come from  you, and kings will [come from your body].'" What confused me about this passage was  that Jacob has been to Bethel before.   The first time he went to Bethel, he was running   from his brother. This time, he's going  back to Bethel at the instruction of God,   so it's different this time. We encourage you as  a pastor, "When you're in an uncertain situation,   go back and revisit all of the things God already  did for you in previous seasons of your life." Maybe God brings you back to Bethel sometimes  just to remind you of when you killed it when   you're struggling, and maybe God brings you back  to Bethel sometimes to remind you of things you   accomplished that really defy your educational  background or your pedigree or anything you were   taught or trained to do. Maybe God brings you  back to Bethel sometimes to remember all of the   ways you even surprised yourself. "Wow!  I didn't even know I could do that." But the more I meditated on it, I realized  that wasn't really what Bethel meant to Jacob,   because the first time he went to  Bethel, he was scared to death.   Now Jacob is in a place in his life  where he has never been more uncertain,   and God leads him back to a place  where he had never been more uncertain. When he is in need of the greatest faith, God  takes him back to the place of his greatest fear.   The first time Jacob went to Bethel, he had no  idea what would happen next. His brother wants   to kill him. His uncle is someone he has never  been exposed to, he has only heard about. Jacob   is 77 years old the first time he goes to Paddan  Aram and stops through a place called Bethel. Bethel was not a place where Jacob shouted  and danced. Jacob was not in Bethel feeling   goose bumps. Jacob was not in Bethel singing  praise songs. Jacob was in Bethel wondering,   "Will I make it?" So now God says in the season  of your life…I'm preaching to somebody…where   you have no idea how you have enough to defend  yourself from the attack that's happening… You have a lot on you right now. Some of  it is your fault, some of it is decisions   others have made, and none of it is anything  you have ever experienced, because you are   the oldest you've ever been and you have never  progressed through this season of your life,   this stage of your development. You have never  been through this emotional place before.   So now what does God do? He doesn't call you back  to the place where you felt the greatest faith. He calls you back to the place where you felt  the greatest fear, but you made it anyway,   to remind you what it really felt like  when God revealed himself to you. We   whitewash our understanding of what  it means to remember what God did.   I wonder, do you remember how it really  felt at certain stages in your life? Close your eyes. Let's go to Bethel. We can't  go to a place. We're not going to load up the   church vans or anything like that. There are  too many of y'all and you're too spread out. So   close your eyes. We have to go to Bethel, but we  have to go in our imagination. Remember the time,   anytime you want (I have enough to choose from; I  have an entire cafeteria of times to choose from),   when you thought you wouldn't make it.  "I'm not going to make it another day.   There's no way forward for this."  Remember "I'm not going to make it." Like, to me, "I'm not going to make it up to  the pulpit. I have nothing left to say. I'm not   going to make it through what I feel right now. I  think I'm losing…" All right. You got it? I know   that for some of us it's a hard place to visit,  but I want you to go there for just a moment.   "I'm not going to make it." That's how  Jacob felt the first time in Bethel. He saw a vision while he was asleep,  and he saw a ladder resting on the   earth and reaching to the heaven and the  angels of God ascending and descending.   Twenty years later, God calls  him back to that same place   called Bethel where he thought he wouldn't  make it. You thought you wouldn't make it.   On the inside, everything was telling  you, "You're not going to make it.   You're not going to make  it." Open your eyes. You did.   No, no, no. You did. Jacob is now instructed to build an  altar in the place of his greatest fear.   That's where God calls you to build an altar and   to believe him: in Bethel. In fact, one time  the Scripture calls God the God of Bethel.   I'm not sure if I like that, because Bethel  is scary. Bethel is when you don't know.   Bethel is the place where you can't  figure it out and all you have is faith.   God said, "I'm the God of Bethel. That's where  my house is. That's where my habitation is.   That's where I live. That's where I  reveal. That's where I show myself.   That's where you get to know  me. I'm the God of Bethel." Jacob is afraid, and God says, "I want you to go  back to the place you were most afraid and build   an altar there, because if you don't, what's on  you is going to cause you to forget what's in you.   I need you to go to the place where you  didn't think you would make it. I want   you to go to the place where you didn't know  what was next. I need you to go to the place   where you realized…" This is the crazy thing  about Bethel. This might be your Bethel right now. What you are going through right now might  be the place you go back to in the future   when your family needs to know that God  is a promise keeper and a way maker.   So, I need to teach you about a concept. This is  not a pop culture concept. It's the concept of   covenant. Jacob isn't just going off of a good  feeling. Jacob isn't just going off of a track   record. Jacob isn't going off of a fortune cookie.  Jacob isn't going off of an emotional high. Jacob isn't going off of something he  read in one Bible verse of the day.   He has a covenant. In the Bible, a covenant can  be… First of all, it can be with another person.   In the Bible, the context of marriage  was not convenience; it was covenant.   In the Bible, the context  of my relationship with God   was not my behavior; it was my covenant with him. Covenant. Jacob is moving, not in  certainty; he's moving in covenant with God.   The relationship I have with God is not based on  the same covenant Jacob had. Jacob had a covenant   with God that "God will be with me." That's  awesome. How many thank God that he's with you?   That's awesome. But look at what happens. On  our end of the bargain, we can't keep that up. Oh, so you followed God perfectly through  every season of your life? Of course in the   valley you faint. Of course in the hard times  you get led astray. Of course your heart is   drawn to other gods to worship things you  can see instead of the God you can't see or   figure out. God said in Jeremiah 31, "I'm  going to give you a different covenant." "'The days are coming,' declares the Lord,  'when I will make a new covenant with the   people of Israel and with the people of  Judah. It will not be like the covenant I   made with their ancestors [Jacob] when I took  them by the hand to lead them out of Egypt,   because they broke my covenant, though I  was a husband to them,' declares the Lord.   'This is the covenant I will make with the people  of Israel after that time,' declares the Lord.   'I will put my law in their minds and write  it on their hearts.'" That's the inside. "For what the law was powerless to do in that  it was weakened by the sinful nature, God did   by sending his Son Jesus in the likeness of  sinful man." I don't have the Jacob covenant.   I have the Jesus covenant. I have a  covenant that whatever you put on me,   God put something in me that is  greater than what you put on me. So, I know you have a lot on you,   but I came to preach. There's something  in you that has always been greater.   Are you getting this revelation?  It's in me. When Jacob said,   "God has always been with me…" I know why  he has been with you: because he's in you.   So, going back to the place means not  allowing anything that someone puts on you. Do you know what Jacob had them do before they  went back to Bethel? It's a very small detail,   and I don't know if we caught it, but it's  in Genesis 35:3. First of all, he said,   "Bring me everything you picked up in Shechem that  can't go with us into Bethel, all of the idols. Then I want you to bring me all of the  things… Even down to the gold earrings.   I don't even want you having gold you'll  be tempted to melt into an idol that will   remind you of what you depended on  that wasn't God. Down to the jewelry.   Let's bury that. But before we go to Bethel…"  Look at verse 2. He said, "Change your clothes."   (Don't worry. This is as  far down as I'm going to go.   It's just a limited illustration.) "I want that off you, because if you go  back to Bethel dressed like Shechem…"   This is what has to happen for you to realize and  really fulfill the purpose God has put in you.   Everything that has been put on you… Remember,  for Jacob's family, Shechem represented shame…the   shame of what had been done to Dinah, the shame  of what they had done in response. If you go into   what God has for you wearing the shame of what  was done to you… You have to get it off you. I realized a couple of years ago that what the  Enemy would do to shut down my gift God gave me   was to try to put layers of guilt on me. He would  want to use things that were imperfect about me or   others to keep me from ministering freely. I'll  tell you about one thing. Holly leaned over to   me one night. I was struggling with feelings of  resentment. People were criticizing our ministry   a lot in this particular season. I'm sure they  still do now. I just don't look as much because   I'm not as stupid as I was back in the day,  thinking God had prophets in the comments section. Listen to what happened. I began to think  everybody was like that, and I took it on me.   She looked at me one night and said,  "You can't keep preaching out of anger,   and you can't keep leading this defensively,  because you love people." Well, when she   said that, it contradicted exactly how I felt  about this species she mentioned called people. Even the look on my face… I remember her  rubbing my eyebrows a little bit because   they were so furrowed. Sometimes I have that RBF,  resting believer face, resentful believer face.   She was rubbing my eyebrows, and she  goes, "You've always loved people."   She said, "Do you remember in college  how everybody on that campus…?" We couldn't even go when we were dating… We went  to this strict school, this Baptist school. They   wouldn't let you go into each other's dorms, and  that was probably a good thing. Co-ed dorms… They   didn't let us do that, so we'd be trying to sit  outside on a bench or something. She said, "There   was always a receiving line of people who wanted  to talk to you, not because you had a title,   just because of what was in you.  You've always loved people." She said, "I was scared to go outside with you,  because I didn't feel like talking to them,   because I don't love people like you love people."   But there was a lot on me. Jacob said,  "You put a lot of trouble on me."   I was allowing what was on me to make me forget  what was in me. Have you ever done it before? She said, "You love people.  You had a secret handshake   with everybody on that campus." It's  really true. Then I was thinking,   "Well, you don't even know the half of it."  When my high school class was graduating,   280 people at Berkeley High School, I hugged  every one of them on our graduation night. I mean,   down to the last one of them, the people I  couldn't stand, and all of them. That was in me. Now I realize the pressures and the  problems of what life puts on you,   things like offense and bitterness, can  keep you from remembering what's in you,   but if you really go back to Bethel  and remember, it's always been in you. Tony, I had my best friend Eric come with me to  the recording we did in January, because he was   with me at the college when we had  a choir. My choir was not good, but   it was in me then. Then  through what God has given you…   It was amazing, because Eric said, "This is it.  This is what you were trying to do in college,   but you sucked at it, and that guy  did it, and now you took part." I said, "Yeah, it's always been in me."   It's always been in you. You were beating on  that… It sounded like a trash can, but it was in   you. The rhythm was in you. It's in you. What you  have to be so careful about is not to let people   put anything on you… I'm not just talking  about failure; I'm talking about success. Jacob's biggest issue is that he always  identified himself by something external.   So, when it came time to make peace  with Esau, he sent gifts ahead of him,   because he thought, "Maybe  my gift will bring me peace."   Some of us are like that. We always think we  have to make a good impression. We're always   living in an avatar. We're always living in some  version of ourselves that seems presentable. Or we're always identified (I talked to you about  this last week) by what we can do. In doing what   we can do, other people will identify you by what  you can do, and then they will limit you by what   you can do, and then you will begin to think you  are what you do, and then you will lose yourself   and gain the world, and Jesus said, "What good  is it?" Don't let anybody put anything on you   that will cause you to forget what God  put in you. That goes for your struggles. See, I think Jacob… His name means supplanter,   but his new name Israel is almost just  as bad. It means struggles with God.   So, he's trying to get him to see,  "You've never been fighting with Laban.   You've never been fighting with Esau.  The fight you have to win for your life   has not been with them. It's always been  in you. Because if you believe it's in you,   there's nothing anybody can put on you  that can cancel what I put in you." "Before you were born I appointed  you a prophet to the nations."   It's always been in you. That teaching gift has  always been in you. You just had to get past   what you had put on yourself, the idea that  "I'm not a preacher; I'm just a little girl.   I don't have anything to  say." That was always in you. It was in you when you were sitting at Life Action  revival listening to Steve Canfield six nights   a week and God was filling you with his Word.  It just took the right rain to bring the seed   out of the soil for what God put in you when  you were just a little girl. It's always been   in you. There's nobody who can leave my life who  can keep God from keeping his covenant with me. I'm not in covenant with a person. I'm  not in covenant with a political party.   I'm in covenant with God Almighty! "I am God  Almighty." Get that off you! That's not your   name. That's not your station. That's not your  end. It's in me! It is God who worketh in you!   It's always been in you. The struggle has  never been with someone else; the struggle   has been within yourself. God gave Jacob a new  name, Israel, but he still has to struggle.   Are y'all confused? I'm confused. God already gave  him his new name in Genesis 32. I'll show you. This is right before Jacob made peace with Esau,  and Esau had already made peace with Jacob.   Jacob had to make peace with Jacob.  It's in you. This is what the Lord said:   "Your name will no longer be Jacob,  but Israel, because you have struggled   with God and with humans and have overcome." Hold  on. Why is he telling him again in Genesis 35?   I'll tell y'all next week. Goodbye. If y'all want  to know now, call me back, because I already… I thought, "Well, God must have told  him something extra the second time   that he didn't tell him the first time," so  I compared the two. In Genesis 35:10 he says,   "Your name is Jacob, but you  will no longer be called Jacob;   your name will be Israel." God actually said  less the second time than he did the first time. Then I thought maybe it wasn't what God said,   it was what he didn't say that  would show me what we needed to know   about the struggle we find ourselves in right now.   See, the first time, God  focused on Jacob's struggle.   "I'll call you Israel because you've  struggled with God and men and have overcome."   The second time, God didn't mention  his struggle. He mentioned his seed.   Because Israel was more than a name. Look at verse 11. "I am God Almighty; be  fruitful and increase in number. A nation…"   Did you catch it? "A nation."  Israel wasn't just a name;   it was a nation. Simeon and Levi, the ones that  Jacob said, "You're bringing me all this trouble,"   who were teenagers at the time,  were the forefathers God would use   to birth a nation through which God would  extend his covenant with all peoples.   But you will never produce your  nation if you don't know your name. This word is for anyone who has had so much on  you. I'm talking about shame. I'm talking about   regret. I'm talking about pressure. I'm talking  about the things that make you anxious, questions,   that you've forgotten what's in you and how  God met you in your Bethels along the way.   This season of your life is going to be a  Bethel you will return to in future days. There are kings in you. There are  crowns in you. There's legacy in you.   There are dreams in you. There's ministry  in you. There is medicine in your leaves.   There is healing in you. There are things  God desires to release through your life   that will change the generations  that will share your last name. So, do not let what's on you kill what is in you.   You are Israel. There are nations  in you, and it's always been in you.   There was nothing you could do to change it. The  gift has always been in you, and so has the fear.   They both wrestle with each other in the same womb   until the day you die. But do not let anybody  or situation or setback put a name on you   by which you call yourself that will cause  you to forfeit what God had put in you.   I believe there are some things I need  to bury under the oak in Shechem today. I believe God wants me to turn this  church into a changing room today,   where you remember that it is not circumcision  or uncircumcision that counts. None of that   external stuff matters, not when it comes to  the heart of God. What matters to God has always   been in you. If you win this in you, there  is nothing that will happen around you   that can keep God from establishing  his covenant in the earth. You have a covenant with God.   Have you made your covenant with your struggle  greater than your covenant with your God?   You allowed the pressure of it, the fear of it,  and the terror of it… God was dealing with all   the external stuff. God was preventing  the enemies from even attacking Jacob. If you pay attention to what's in you,   God knows what's on you. He knows you've  been trying to manage and multitask.   He sees all of that, and he knows all  of that, and he knows you don't know   what's next. That's why he gave me the  Bethel revelation. "I'm the God of Bethel.   I'm the God of 'I don't know what's  next.' I'm the God of your new name,   and there are nations in you." And it's  always been in you. It's always been in you,   since you were a little girl,  since you were a young boy. God said, "Be fruitful and increase.  Bring forth what I planted. Don't let   anything stop you from it. For I am  God Almighty. I put a nation in you.   Those teenagers you stand with today are going to  be the heads of the nations." Stand to your feet. Father, in this moment, I don't know what  to say, so I'm going to ask you to say it.   There comes a point where  my message and my stories   and my points and my subpoints  can only take the hearer so far.   That's why we need your Holy  Spirit to write it on our hearts.   For just a moment, we're not focused on what's  around us, even what's on us, but what's in us. It is Christ in you, the hope of glory.   It is God that works in you both to will  and to do according to his pleasure. So,   let's bury those idols.  Let's change those clothes.   Let's go back to Bethel and build an  altar in the place of our anxiety,   build an altar in the place of our fear, and  build an altar in response to our questions.   Lift your hands to heaven. God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God  of Jacob, we call on you right now,   and we ask you to speak into each  Bethel that is represented in this room   and online around the world. I thank you, Lord, that the stages  of our lives do not surprise you   and the weakness of our flesh does not repel you.   I thank you, Lord, that you don't  just give us a name; you make us   a nation. So we're coming back to Bethel today  just to remember that we felt afraid before   and you saw us through. We were so  confused before, and you made it clear.   We felt too little then, but you were  more than enough, and you are right now.   O God of Bethel, I pray that belief  would rise up, supplanting doubt   and burying the idols of our false dependence. Your name is Israel, and greater is he that  is in you than he that is in the world.   We thank you for your presence,  Lord. In Jesus' name, amen. Everybody who receives this word,  give God a hand clap of praise.   I don't know who this is for,  but the Lord said one more thing.   He came back to Bethel, but the last time he  was there he was alone, and he wasn't anymore.   The difference between this time and last time  that you were here… You're not alone anymore. God, we thank you once again for this amazing  revelation that you do not wait for a place   of our full understanding and cooperation to  bless us with your presence. God of Bethel,   we praise you one more time for meeting us at  all points in between. In Jesus' name, amen.
Info
Channel: Elevation Church
Views: 603,092
Rating: 4.8674588 out of 5
Keywords: elevation church, steven furtick, it’s always been in you, elevation church sermons, pastor steven furtick, steven furtick sermons, 2021 sermons, preaching, preacher, gifting, identity, remembrance, impossible situations, victory, fear, covenant, in you, guilt, gifts, failure, success, sermons about gifting, sermons about identity
Id: YS9fStaTYXU
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 55min 7sec (3307 seconds)
Published: Sun May 02 2021
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.