Thursday, February 22, 2007

Wrestling with God

Wrestling with GodLabberton, Mark - Wrestling with God

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Wrestling with God
by Mark Labberton
Text: Genesis 32
Topic: How to receive God's blessing
Big Idea: Only God will wrestle with our old nature in order to bless us with a new one.
Keywords: Ambition; Blessings; Selfishness; Wrestling with God.

Introduction
  • Illustration: Labberton recounts an argument when he and his wife were newlyweds over the placement of a china plate.
  • The motive behind most arguments is just wanting our own way.
We all want our own way.
  • The story of Jacob is the story of a person we desperately wants his own way.
  • Like Jacob, we have learned how to insist on having our own way without sounding like it.
We are all seeking a blessing.
  • For Jacob, "getting my own way" looked like seeking a blessing.
  • The blessing in Jacob's family carried much higher stakes than most.
  • Jacob's coercive, conniving nature was reflected in his name.
  • There were consequences for Jacob's selfish striving—and there always are for us, too.
We all seek an identity
  • Illustration: After 40 years of service, a therapist was able to say that all his clients were asking the same question: "What must I do to be saved?"
  • As the second son, Jacob had to fight to get the inheritance.
  • The identity Jacob desired was not the blessing God had planned for him.
  • The stories of our lives are about struggling to find the people who will bless us.
  • Illustration: One man found it hard to believe that God might have something greater in store for him than the approval of his parents.
We must wrestle with God.
  • Jacob wrestled with a divinely appointed man, who may have been God himself.
  • The two men wrestled for the whole night—they were very much engaged with one another.
We must receive a new identity.
  • The man asked for Jacob's name and gave him a new one.
  • The new name gave Jacob a new set of values and an affirmation of who he really was.
  • Wrestling with God, and the reality of who we are, will change us.
  • God gave Jacob a physical reminder of the >encounter, demonstrating his power and blessing.
We must know God.
  • Jacob asked for the man's name but was blessed instead.
  • God is the only one who will stay with us, let alone bless us, in our selfish state.
  • Big Idea: Only God will wrestle with us, give us a new identity, and give us a reminder of the change worked in us.
  • God longs to bless us, and will do so when we encounter him.
Conclusion
  • Will we wrestle persistently with God to receive the blessing he alone can give?

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