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  • We're excited, because favor flows from strange places.

  • It really does.

  • One time, the children of Israel were in the desert and water came out of a rock.

  • That's weird.

  • Have you ever had God do something for you but not through the person you expected him

  • to do it through?

  • Have you ever had God be good to you through somebody you weren't even good to, and then

  • somebody you were good to wasn't good to you?

  • It's almost like God wants to challenge your attachments, so he'll keep on moving around

  • his supply and springing up from different places so you don't camp out where he called

  • you to pass through.

  • That's why sometimes you get frustrated, but favor can flow from frustration.

  • Sometimes you have to get down to the bottom of something to find God there.

  • My study has been like that.

  • It was kind of weird.

  • I did not want to do a Seven-Mile Miracle series.

  • I preached this sermon five or six years ago.

  • My publisher had the rights to the material, because we had them pay for the study guide

  • for our groups or whatever.

  • We had them pay the church, and they wanted to put out a book, and I didn't want to write

  • a book about Seven-Mile Miracle, because I typically like to preach something and move

  • on.

  • As a matter of fact, this is probably dysfunctional, but before I came out to preach to you I was

  • writing my sermon for the end of April because it started coming to me.

  • The way it flows to me

  • I've had to learn to get in the flow with God, because, for me, creativity and inspiration

  • doesn't always flow.

  • It's not always dependable.

  • One songwriter said creativity is like building your house from the sky down, especially when

  • you're depending on God to give it to you.

  • You feel kind of vulnerable when you're waiting on God to give you something.

  • It flows in strange places.

  • Sometimes I get sermons off of Gatorade commercials.

  • I just have to do it anywhere I can.

  • This year has been interesting.

  • God took some things I studied years ago, like this seven-mile walk on the Emmaus Road

  • We taught an Easter sermon on it, and then a whole series and a book flowed out of it,

  • but I was kind of done with it.

  • God took something I was done with, like a seed that I thought was gone, but it really

  • wasn't gone.

  • It was in the ground.

  • Some things in your life that you sowed in the last season are going to come up out of

  • the ground when you least expect it, because favor flows from strange places.

  • I've been going through these seven statements of Jesus slowly, and I don't like to go slow.

  • If it were up to me, we would study all seven of them in the introduction to the sermon

  • and move on.

  • I like to cover a lot of ground so you don't get bored.

  • Sometimes you have to slow down.

  • I started this series talking about Cleo.

  • He's walking along with a companion.

  • Here comes Jesus, this stranger, and out of this stranger's mouth comes a revelation that

  • reverses their disappointment.

  • They realize it when they get there, not while they're going.

  • It started to challenge the way I saw faith, because I thought faith meant I would know

  • why I was going through everything I went through while I went through it.

  • Now I'm thinking maybe faith means not knowing why I'm going through it, but trusting the

  • One who makes a way where there is no way to feed me what I need for the season I'm

  • in, because he's God and he knows what I need when I need it.

  • When we were preaching about "He broke the bread and gave it to them…"

  • We've kind of been breaking the bread.

  • The bread represents the Word of God, and each week I've been giving you a little piece.

  • I'm taking it from the last sayings Jesus spoke on the cross.

  • There are seven.

  • Seven is the number of completion in the Scripture.

  • When we say seven, we're eventually getting to resurrection, but to get there we're going

  • through crucifixion.

  • We're eventually getting to glory, but to get there we have to go through the sufferings

  • of this present time and believe that they are not worthy to be compared with the glory

  • that will be revealed, but it's in the ground right now.

  • It's on Saturday that our faith is proven, waiting for Sunday and the aftershock of Friday.

  • We walked through a couple of different sayings, and one was "Father, forgive them, for they

  • know not what they do."

  • That one challenged me, because it is the exact opposite of how I think when somebody

  • disappoints me or offends me.

  • See, you're different.

  • You're more sanctified than me, and you've arrived, but when somebody breaks my heart,

  • I don't say, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."

  • I say, "God, get them back.

  • Hurt them worse than I could ever hurt, because they knew exactly what they were doing."

  • I'm challenged.

  • Jesus says to a thief, "Today you will be with me in paradise."

  • I don't think like that.

  • I think if the guy is going to be in paradise, he needs to do some good deeds and help some

  • old ladies across the street and take a little membership class and get baptized at our Concord

  • Campus.

  • Then he can be in paradise.

  • He didn't do any of that.

  • Jesus saved him just because he asked.

  • Now I'm thinking this must be a gift you can't earn.

  • It must not have to do with my works at all.

  • It must be something God gives, not something I get.

  • All I have to do is receive it.

  • Then I'm a little convicted how he's on the cross and is thinking about his mom, because

  • I don't think about others while I'm going through good times, let alone hard times.

  • I don't even like to let people merge in traffic on 485, because I'm in a hurry.

  • Here's Jesus dying and thinking about somebody else.

  • All of this has been challenging me.

  • Wade gets up and says that God was forsaken by God, the Son by the Father, so that we

  • would never have to be abandoned.

  • Then I come to this little phrase, and I don't know what to do with it.

  • Jesus now says one of his last sayings on the cross.

  • This is mile five, commonly known as the word of distress.

  • It's called the word of distress, but after today you're going to see that it's actually

  • the word of destiny.

  • I'm going to show you.

  • He says something strange.

  • Let's look at it together.

  • He has been mocked.

  • He has been flogged.

  • He has been sentenced, handed over to die.

  • He's bleeding, he's suffocating, and he's hanging there.

  • John 19:28: "After this, Jesus, knowing that all was now finished…"

  • Finality.

  • Achievement would be the original language.

  • All was achieved that he was sent to do.

  • His assignment was achieved.

  • Now that he knew that, he said (to fulfill the Scripture), "I thirst," which is ironic

  • because this is the same voice that spoke the seas into existence, and now he needs

  • water.

  • Do you ever think about this?

  • How the same voice that told the Red Sea to part now needs a drink.

  • How can the voice that could command the sea, "Peace, be still" and it had to shut up so

  • he could get some sleep

  • Colossians tells us he is the one by whom, for whom, and through whom all things were

  • created that were created.

  • "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the Word was God."

  • That's Jesus.

  • Now he's wrapped in flesh, dying at the hands of sinful men a criminal's death, and he says,

  • "I thirst."

  • He's the one who said he was living water.

  • How can living water be thirsty?

  • He is the one who was Jacob's well.

  • How can Jacob's well be dry?

  • Do you see what I'm saying?

  • It's just strange to me.

  • On top of the fact that it's kind of crazy that the one who called the seas to be gathered

  • together so the dry land could appear, the one whose voice is above the waters, the one

  • who separated the water above the firmament and the water below the firmament, the one

  • who has a throne in heaven, by the way, in the book of Revelation, that he sits on, where

  • the streams of water flow and make glad the city of God, pure and brilliant as jasper

  • and diamond

  • Those waters flow from the throne, but here we see him thirsting.

  • How can God be thirsty?

  • How can water need a drink?

  • Y'all are looking at me confused, and you should be, because it's confusing.

  • I understand me being thirsty.

  • After all, I'm a thirsty man.

  • That's what Holly said one time.

  • She told a server that in a restaurant.

  • By the way, if you're a server in a restaurant, first of all, God bless you.

  • You are an unsung hero, especially on Sundays with hungry, cranky, non-tipping Christians

  • who put a Bible verse on the receipt instead of a tip.

  • Father, forgive them.

  • It's tough for me to admit this, but I am a server's worst nightmare, and it's not because

  • I'm rude, and I'm not rude because I'm Southern.

  • Since I'm Southern, if I'm going to be rude to you, I'm going to do it behind your back.

  • I watch people from other parts of the country who are so direct, and it's weird to me, because

  • I can feel my mom putting soap in my mouth.

  • We just weren't that direct.

  • I watch somebody in a restaurant.

  • They're done and they just go, "Check!"

  • I can't do it like that.

  • I wish I could.

  • I think it would be cool to just holler, "Check!"

  • I see it in movies.

  • I'm going to try it sometime.

  • I'm not rude like that.

  • I'm not even really that picky in a restaurant.

  • I'm really not.

  • I'm simple.

  • I'm basic.

  • I like what I like, but it's not that hard to fix it like I like it.

  • Here's what I'm trying to say.

  • I'm not Chunks Corbett.

  • Chunks Corbett is the most embarrassing person to be in a restaurant with because of the

  • specificity with which he demands his food be prepared.

  • His wife is nodding while I'm preaching this.

  • He'll walk in a restaurant

  • "I want a Bloomin' Onion, but no onion, and can you make it in the shape of an 8?

  • That's my favorite number, and when I was 8, I played baseball."

  • He has the craziest stuff.

  • I'm not really like that, but my thing is if you can keep up with me on the drinks

  • I drink Diet Coke.

  • Like I just said I shoot up heroin, you judgmental demon.

  • People will do it every time I say that.

  • They'll send me a link about aspartame, but it's all right.

  • I already read about it, and I want to go to heaven, and I'm kind of in a hurry to get

  • there.

  • I'm at peace with my mortal nature, and I want a sip of Diet Coke on the journey.

  • My thing is

  • I tip great, especially if you bring me an Elevation Church stolen pen to sign the tip

  • with.

  • That'll be our thing.

  • I'll bump it up at least 3 percent.

  • Spread the word.

  • But my thing is keeping my drink full is kind of hard, because I'll drink five, six, seven,

  • eight, nine, ten, eleven

  • I've been to twelve glasses before in a long meal.

  • I know it's horrible.

  • One time, this server came over, and she was kind of giggling about how many drinks I was

  • drinking.

  • This was years ago.

  • She looked like she was too young to be legally working at a restaurant.

  • She comes over to the table, and she's kind of giggling, and I'm apologizing.

  • I'm like, "I'm sorry I'm drinking so many drinks.

  • I just like to drink a lot of Diet Coke.

  • I'm sorry about that.

  • I promise I'll tip you good.

  • Thank you for trying to keep up with me."

  • She giggles.

  • Feeling the need to apologize, Holly goes, "He's just a thirsty man."

  • She started laughing when Holly said that, but she was laughing a little too hard.

  • You know how people can laugh a little too hard for what you said and you know they took

  • something different out of what you said?

  • She's laughing and laughing, and I said, "What?

  • What was funny about that?"

  • She said, "Your wife just said you're thirsty."

  • I said, "Yeah, I am.

  • You've seen it tonight here in the restaurant.

  • I like to drink."

  • She said, "No, no.

  • You don't know what thirsty means, do you?"

  • I said, "No, but tell me what thirsty means to you.

  • I need to know."

  • She said, "You don't want to know this.

  • You're a preacher."

  • I said, "No, tell me."

  • She said, "Well, it's kind of something younger people would say.

  • Say, maybe if a guy is a little too desperate, we would look at him and maybe roll our eyes

  • and say, 'Thirsty.'"

  • So now I knew why she was laughing.

  • She said, "When people post something on social media where they want to get attention and

  • they try a little too hard, we call that a thirst trap."

  • I want to preach to you today about The Thirst Trap.

  • I want to go all the way back from Bonefish Grill to John 19 and see if I can work it

  • together.

  • I have to admit sometimes I'm thirsty, like the guy who sends 12 text messages and none

  • of them get responded to.

  • Those long text messages.

  • Sometimes I need too much from the wrong place.

  • Sometimes I'm thirsty.

  • I love God, and I know he's my shepherd and I'm not supposed to be in need, and I have

  • his Spirit, but sometimes I have to admit to you I'm kind of thirsty.

  • Look at your neighbor and ask them, "Are you thirsty?"

  • Not you.

  • You're filled with the Spirit of God.

  • We get thirsty, and it's no surprise we get thirsty.

  • We're weak.

  • He knows our frame.

  • We're made of dust.

  • We came from the dust.

  • We get thirsty in the dust.

  • Dirty, thirsty people.

  • That makes sense, but for Jesus to say, "I thirst…"

  • When he said it, the Bible says the soldiers around the cross came to him.

  • He said, "I thirst," and there was a jar full of sour wine, cheap stuff, what the executioners

  • drank while they were waiting on the person to die.

  • This was the second drink Jesus was offered on the cross, but the first one he refused

  • when he was on his way to the cross.

  • When he got to the spot where they would drop the vertical beam and attach it to the horizontal

  • beam

  • Because the cross works both ways.

  • I taught you that two weeks ago.

  • When he got to that spot, they offered him a drink.

  • This drink was, the Bible says, mixed with myrrh, which was meant to drug the person

  • going to the cross.

  • The women would prepare it often as an act of compassion or kindness.

  • When they offered him this drink, perhaps in mockery, for he called himself a king

  • Mark tells us in Mark 15:23, "They offered him wine mixed with myrrh, but he did not

  • take it."

  • Maybe he saw it as a trap, because he was focused on finishing what God gave him to

  • do.

  • When he got to the cross, he refused to drink and said, "I don't need that."

  • I want you to do something for me.

  • Everybody do this.

  • I want you to get something in your mind that's trying to keep you from being on the path

  • of your purpose.

  • When I say "three," push it out of the way like Jesus pushed the cup of myrrh and say,

  • "I don't need it."

  • One, two, three.

  • "I don't need it."

  • He said, "I'm not drinking that.

  • I'm going somewhere."

  • With his gaze set on the glory of God, he went toward the cross.

  • Now it has been six hours since he first got to Golgotha, and he says, "I thirst."

  • Remember, this is the same voice of God that created the clouds and filled them with condensation.

  • This is the voice that has the power to flood the earth, and only Noah and every animal

  • on the boat gets out of it alive, and he thirsts.

  • We're surprised by it, or at least we should be.

  • We're surprised when they come to him and there's a jar of sour wine and they offer

  • to the Lamb of God who was slain before the foundation of the earth

  • You need to understand that what happened on the cross didn't start on the cross, and

  • it didn't end on the cross.

  • The cross was pointing at the prophetic fulfillment of the purpose of God that existed before

  • time began.

  • They take a hyssop branch, which was what they used on Passover back when they would

  • take the blood of a lamb and put it on a doorpost.

  • They took that branch that they would put the blood on, and now the Lamb of God is bleeding.

  • It's not the shadow anymore; it's the actuality, the revelation of God.

  • The fullness of God is hanging on a cross in the form of a man, and they give him vinegar

  • to drink for his thirst.

  • They put it to his mouth, the same mouth that spoke them into existence, and they gave him

  • vinegar to drink.

  • How could he be thirsty?

  • How could God struggle with a human sensation like thirst?

  • If you want to write something down, write down struggle.

  • To really understand why he said, "I thirst" on the cross, you have to start in the garden

  • of Gethsemane.

  • The garden of Gethsemane is where he went out to pray before he drank the cup of suffering.

  • It's one thing to come to church and talk about a calling.

  • Sometimes a calling is like a beautiful cup, but what's in it when it comes time to really

  • fulfill your calling

  • Let me break this down, because y'all are looking at me cross-eyed and stuff.

  • It's one thing to pick out a name for your baby; it's another thing to have to raise

  • them in middle school.

  • It still didn't work.

  • I'm trying really hard to bring this right where you are.

  • It is one thing to write down his last name with your first name and think about how awesome

  • it would be to be "Mrs. So-and-So," but it's another thing to deal with his bad breath

  • and his bad spending habits and realize that his mom didn't teach him how to put the seat

  • down on the toilet after he used it and work out the mechanics of marriage in the context

  • of the calling, not just the excitement of the concept of something.

  • Sometimes, while we are very excited about the concept of being used by God

  • Stay with me, because this sermon is about to do something deep down in your soul.

  • I feel the Spirit of God saying to somebody today, "What will you do with the cup?"

  • Jesus had a cup he didn't want to drink, and he prayed in the garden.

  • He prayed, "Father, if there's any other way to get this done, let this cup pass from me."

  • The cup that was full of the wrath of God, the just punishment our sin deserved.

  • He drank it, but he struggled to drink it.

  • Do you know how I know he struggled?

  • Because he prayed, "If there's any other way, let this cup pass, but if there's not, if

  • I have to drink it down, if I have to suffer, if I have to go to the cross, I'm going to

  • the cross.

  • If I have to be mocked, I'll be mocked.

  • If I have to be alone, I'll be alone.

  • If I have to cry, I'll cry.

  • If I have to struggle, I'll struggle.

  • Not my will but yours be done."

  • The Son of God is thirsty, and he's thirsty because he's trapped.

  • He's trapped in a place we're all familiar with.

  • He's trapped between what he wants and what God wills.

  • Have you ever been trapped?

  • Three honest people.

  • Three thirsty people.

  • All of the thirsty people make some noise.

  • Just be honest about it.

  • Remember, it's only those who hunger and thirst who can be filled.

  • It's only those who know what it's like.

  • He got down in that garden, and he prayed so hard about it, and he hurt so much about

  • it, while Peter, James, and John slept on the side, but Jesus prayed.

  • The Bible says he prayed to the point that his sweat was like drops of blood.

  • He struggled to surrender.

  • He was trapped in the garden between what God had spoken and what his flesh wanted.

  • "I'm thirsty."

  • Of course he's thirsty.

  • When you sweat like that, you're going to be thirsty.

  • I mean, if the Son of God sweated like that, what makes you think you're going to go through

  • life and never break one yourself?

  • We think we're just supposed to fulfill our calling and never drink the cup.

  • We think we're supposed to have a vision but no vinegar.

  • The Son of God is sweating drops of blood, and we're supposed to be able to sleep through

  • life?

  • It's a struggle.

  • He said, "I thirst" because he struggled.

  • I know he was thirsty.

  • He's fully God, yes, but he's also fully man.

  • In other words, he's trapped, because he's God, but he's wrapped in flesh; because he's

  • glory, but he's wrapped in frailty; because he's eternity, but he's trapped in time; because

  • he's spirit, but he's trapped in a body.

  • Sometimes I feel trapped, because what I want to do I can't do, and what I do I hate, and

  • what I want to do I don't have the will to do.

  • I'm trapped.

  • I'm thirsty.

  • I'm tired.

  • I'm weary.

  • He struggled.

  • See, I'm not very comfortable with this.

  • I don't like it.

  • I don't really want to see a God who struggled like I struggle.

  • I like that stuff where he opens his mouth and says, "Shut up!" to the wind and the waves.

  • I like that, because that makes me think he's just going to walk into my situation

  • "Ssh!"

  • Smooth sailing.

  • But when he says, "I thirst," now I see him identifying with my shame, and it causes me

  • to look at myself not as I wish to be but as I really am.

  • Now I have to picture him carrying my shame.

  • Shame will make you thirsty.

  • Shame will make you try to fill something with the words of people that can really only

  • be fulfilled by the Word of God.

  • Shame will make you forget who you really are.

  • Of course he was thirsty.

  • He was carrying your shame.

  • To an untrained eye it looked like he was carrying a beam that weighed 80 pounds, and

  • he carried it up a hill.

  • This is from Pilate's palace where Jesus was sentenced by the Roman prelate.

  • He had already been handed over by Caiaphas, the high priest.

  • He has been going back and forth all night.

  • He sweats in the garden.

  • He heads to the cross.

  • He gets there.

  • They offer him something to numb the pain.

  • He says, "No.

  • I'm focused.

  • No, not yet."

  • He pushes the drink aside, thirsty as he is, carrying my shame.

  • Eighty pounds.

  • It weighs a lot more than that when it's in your soul, a whole lot more than 80 pounds.

  • It'll weigh so much you can't even look people in the eye when it's in your soul.

  • He carried it the length of six and a half football fields from Pilate's palace to Golgotha.

  • Of course he was thirsty.

  • Come on, I can't even do a set of kettlebell swings and not take a sip.

  • Of course he was thirsty.

  • Of course he said, "I thirst."

  • You know what?

  • This isn't the first time Jesus said he was thirsty in John's gospel.

  • Can I tell you a story?

  • It's a Bible story from John, chapter 4.

  • It's interesting, because Jesus is going somewhere, but he goes around to get there, and the place

  • where he goes is called Samaria.

  • This is not a normal place for a Jew to go, so the fact that he went there was kind of

  • surprising, but nobody asked him why he was doing what he was doing, because by this time

  • his disciples knew that everything he did he did on purpose.

  • That's going to come back, and that's going to be very important when I finish this little

  • sermonette today.

  • Everything he did he did on purpose.

  • The Bible says he had to go to Samaria.

  • He had to go.

  • Why?

  • Why did he have to go to Samaria?

  • Why did he have to go to the cross?

  • Why would he go out of his way to Samaria where a Jewish person would not normally go?

  • Why would God go where he was least expected?

  • Do you ever wonder why God would bother with someone like you?

  • Have you ever asked that question, "Why me, God?"

  • Any parents who have ever asked God, "Why me?

  • Why would you call me to raise a kid when I feel like a little boy myself sometimes?"

  • The interesting thing to me about this little excursion Jesus takes is that he's going to

  • Samaria, he sits down when he gets there, and he waits by a well for a woman.

  • Let me tell you something about this woman.

  • She's coming out in the middle of the day.

  • The only reason you would go to the well in the middle of the day in a hot climate is

  • so nobody else would be there, because you're ashamed to be seen by people.

  • So she's going out in the middle of the day to get some water at a time when she doesn't

  • think anybody else will see her because she's thirsty.

  • She's not just thirsty for water.

  • She's thirsty.

  • She's thirsty in the Urban Dictionary kind of way.

  • Jesus sits by a well, waiting for a woman, and sets a trap for a thirsty woman.

  • She comes up and says, "Oh crap!

  • I thought nobody would be here.

  • I don't even know this guy."

  • Have you noticed how everything we've been studying in the Scriptures is Jesus showing

  • up to people who didn't even recognize him when he did?

  • Just showing up.

  • Then he does something unthinkable.

  • Talk about a thirst trap.

  • Jesus, the living water, sees this woman coming, knows what kind of life she has lived, and

  • yet he doesn't say anything about that.

  • He says, "Hey, girl."

  • A little modernization.

  • He said, "Give me a drink."

  • She didn't like that very much, so she got really deep.

  • Here's what you do when God speaks to a place in your life.

  • When God starts speaking to you, you get theoretical and abstract, because to be specific, to really

  • have to deal with the issue, is actually sometimes painful.

  • So she's like, "Hey, how is it that you, a Jew, ask for a drink from me, a woman from

  • Samaria?"

  • In other words, "I know you're not talking to me."

  • That's what the woman is saying.

  • "I know you're not talking to me."

  • You can feel that way sometimes.

  • Some of you sit here and listen to me preach, and you think it's for your wife.

  • I'm talking to you, buddy, thirsty self.

  • Everybody in here is thirsty.

  • Some of y'all get it through sex.

  • Some of y'all get it through success.

  • Some of y'all get it through religion, but I have to tell you something.

  • The person you're sitting next to is thirsty.

  • It's not a sin to be thirsty.

  • It's just where you go to get your fix that determines whether or not your soul will be

  • satisfied.

  • I found out there's only one well that has the water I need.

  • We talk about the satisfaction.

  • Jesus says, "Hey, I need a drink," and the woman thinks he's talking about water, but

  • he's not talking about water.

  • The woman is perhaps ashamed and offended, so she goes to push him away, because that's

  • what she has learned how to do.

  • She's thirsty, so she has learned how to get what she needs from who she thinks can give

  • it, but none of it lasts.

  • She has learned how to get what she needs, so she wakes up in the morning thirsty.

  • "Did they 'like' my picture?

  • Did they comment on my post?

  • Did they friend me back?

  • Did they follow me back?"

  • Thirsty.

  • Acting like that's going to fill you.

  • It might for a minute, but there's one problem with this well.

  • Jesus said, "If you drink of this water, woman, you're going to stay thirsty."

  • I want you to know that if you put your validation in other people's hands, you will have to

  • go back to them for it.

  • Jesus just lays it out there.

  • Jesus is like, "Hey, everyone who drinks of this water…"

  • "That's why I don't go on Facebook."

  • Yeah, but why do you go to the mall?

  • Everybody drinks somewhere.

  • Why do you eat Doritos?

  • Everybody drinks somewhere.

  • Why do you put so much pressure on your kids to do what you never did?

  • Everybody drinks somewhere.

  • Why are you texting her back?

  • He sits by a well, and he's like

  • I have to be honest.

  • On the surface it sounds like a pick-up line, but we know it's not, because Jesus.

  • He's not thirsty like that.

  • He's trying to give her something.

  • He's not trying to receive something from her; he's trying to release something to her,

  • because he knows she's thirsty.

  • He's like, "Hey, whoever drinks of the water I will give him will never be thirsty again."

  • That troubled me, because I was contrasting what he said 15 chapters earlier with what

  • he said in John 19 on the cross where he said, "I thirst."

  • I felt like I caught Jesus contradicting himself, because he said he had water and we would

  • never thirst if we drank it, but he said he thirsted on the cross.

  • But I noticed how he didn't say, "You'll never feel thirsty again."

  • He's saying you'll never be

  • He didn't say you will never thirst again.

  • You're going to thirst.

  • You're going to have days that you feel discouraged.

  • If you weren't, God wouldn't tell you not to be terrified or discouraged.

  • If you were naturally going to always be encouraged, if you were never going to be discouraged

  • and dehydrated

  • That's what the water is for.

  • What he's saying is, "You'll always have somewhere to drink from.

  • Not that you'll never have a need, but that I will meet all of your needs according to

  • my glorious riches."

  • That's the promise.

  • He tells the woman, "I have something for you, and it's not like what you've been drinking."

  • Watch this.

  • He traps this woman.

  • He totally traps this woman.

  • All through his ministry people were trying to trap Jesus.

  • The Sadducees and the Pharisees, and Judas trapped him in the garden, and the Roman officials

  • thought they had him trapped on the cross, but Jesus was always the one

  • Even when they thought they had him, they never really had him, because he was always

  • in control, even on the cross.

  • There were over 300 messianic prophecies Jesus fulfilled in his life and death, so Jesus

  • was never really trapped.

  • Here he is with this woman, and he says, "I want a drink," but he's not really thirsty

  • like that.

  • He's trying to give her something.

  • God doesn't really need anything from you.

  • He can have another you in a minute.

  • I don't mean to go back to 2002, but sometimes

  • God really isn't needing something from you.

  • When we talk about giving in the church, how dare you with your thirsty self get an attitude?

  • "They just want my money."

  • God doesn't need your money.

  • God wants to be in your heart.

  • He wants to set you free.

  • You're the one thirsty.

  • You're the one.

  • He says, "Give me a drink."

  • She says, "Well, we don't have a bucket."

  • He's trying to get her to see that she is the bucket and he is the water.

  • The woman said, "Sir, if there's some kind of water, if there's some bottomless well,

  • if there are free refills, give me this water so I won't have to be trapped, so I won't

  • have to keep coming back here.

  • So I won't have to keep texting Travis, so I won't have to keep performing, so I won't

  • have to keep being so thirsty."

  • Now Jesus has her.

  • He came to Samaria and sat by the well, and now she's trapped.

  • He goes, "All right, go get your husband."

  • She says, "What had happened was

  • I don't have a husband."

  • Which is true, but it's not the total truth.

  • You know how you do.

  • "I have no husband."

  • Jesus said, "You're right in saying, 'I have no husband,' for you have had five husbands,

  • and the one you have now is not your husband.

  • What you've said is true."

  • "You're thirsty, and you're trapped.

  • When I asked you for water, I was trying to release you from having to go all around to

  • people and things and stuff that doesn't satisfy.

  • I want to give you something that comes from within.

  • I want to give you something that doesn't depend on bank accounts, that doesn't diminish,

  • no matter how the biopsy comes back.

  • I want to give you something you can live off of, something that only gets stronger

  • in your struggle.

  • I want to give you unlimited supply."

  • She said, "Sir, I think you're on to something."

  • She goes back to Samaria, carrying living water that she didn't even expect to get.

  • She comes back to Jesus, and the Bible says that many in Samaria believed because of her

  • testimony.

  • It was a trap.

  • Jesus used a thirsty woman to transform an entire region.

  • I wonder how he could use your life if you would receive his grace today.

  • I want to talk about the setup, because that's what it was.

  • It was a setup.

  • That's why he went through Samaria.

  • He was setting this woman up.

  • That's why he asked for a drink: because she was thirsty.

  • That's why he went to the cross uphill 650 yards.

  • That's why he said, "I thirst."

  • I'm going to tell you how I found out.

  • I thought about that thing so long.

  • I thought, "Okay, how can living water be thirsty?

  • How can a well need water?

  • How can the one who spoke the oceans into existence now need water from the very same

  • source he created?

  • How could God, who reigns above the waters, need water?

  • How could it be possible that God could come down, condescend to the form of human man?

  • How could Christ be made flesh?

  • How could he die and suffer like that?

  • How could it be that there are seasons in my life when I call on him and nothing happens?

  • How could it be that I have divinity but I'm trapped sometimes in my desperation?

  • How could it be that I am full of the Spirit but sometimes I feel so dry?"

  • So I had to read again.

  • I read John 19:28 like 20 times.

  • I don't read Greek, although I took Greek.

  • I don't read Hebrew, although I took Hebrew.

  • I was not very effective in my language studies.

  • I don't even read Aramaic, which is what Jesus was probably speaking at the moment when he

  • said, "I thirst."

  • But what I do read really well is English, and I know my punctuation marks, so when I

  • read John 19:28…

  • It said, "After this…"

  • After all you've been through, after all they've accused you of, after all of the people who

  • walked away who should have been there.

  • After this.

  • After they counted you out and said you were nothing and mocked you.

  • After this.

  • After a crown of thorns was placed on his head, after the blood ran from his brow.

  • After this.

  • After they beat his back, after they released Barabbas.

  • After this.

  • After the cock crowed and Peter denied him thrice.

  • After this, knowing that now all things were finished, Jesus had one more thing to say,

  • one thing to do, because there were 300 prophecies and he was on 299.

  • Everybody standing around that day thought that death had trapped Jesus.

  • The cross was a setup.

  • But it wasn't set up by Judas, and it wasn't set up by the Sadducees, and it wasn't set

  • up by the Pharisees, and it wasn't set up by Herod.

  • It was set up by heaven.

  • Listen to me preach this sermon.

  • Listen to me preach on the parentheses in John 19:28.

  • I've preached on a lot of things in my little tenure preaching, but I've never preached

  • on a punctuation mark until today.

  • After this, knowing that all things had been fulfilled, knowing that he had drank down

  • the full cup of the wrath of God so you would never have to, after knowing that he suffered

  • like a criminal so he could reign like a king, after humbling himself, being obedient even

  • to the point of death on a cross

  • "Jesus said (to fulfill the Scripture)…"

  • I wonder why John put it in parentheses.

  • Probably because he didn't know that's why it was happening at the time.

  • When Jesus said, "I thirst," they thought he wanted water, so they gave him vinegar

  • to mock him.

  • The thing they used to mock him was actually the thing he used to finish the work God gave

  • him to do.

  • The thing they put on a sponge to shame him

  • I have to tell y'all something.

  • I have to show you one more thing.

  • When Jesus said, "I thirst" to fulfill the Scripture, parentheses

  • Have you ever had to live in the parentheses?

  • I mean, not understanding why you were going through what you were going through.

  • Please be real with me.

  • I cannot preach this sermon to closed hearts.

  • I'm trying to give you water today for your thirsty soul.

  • Sometimes you're in a wilderness and you don't know why.

  • Sometimes you're looking at a Red Sea and you feel trapped.

  • Jesus looked trapped up there on that cross, but John said, "No, he wasn't trapped."

  • Death didn't trap Jesus; Jesus trapped death.

  • Now I know why he said, "I thirst."

  • Now I know why the lips that spoke the waters into their place on the earth said, "I thirst."

  • To fulfill the Scripture.

  • God has a purpose for every thirst in your life.

  • Death didn't trap Jesus; Jesus trapped death.

  • One time David felt trapped, and in Psalm 69 he describes it in vivid detail.

  • He goes, "The deep waters have engulfed me.

  • I'm surrounded by enemies.

  • They hurl their insults at me."

  • Does this sound familiar, by the way?

  • It's a messianic psalm.

  • It's describing, centuries before the cross, what the cross would be like for Jesus.

  • Jesus is called the son of David.

  • It is David pointing to the one who now says, "I thirst."

  • David says that although he is surrounded by what he calls "deep waters of trial," he

  • says the reproach has broken his heart.

  • The shame has brought him so low to this place that he feels like he's drowning.

  • You can get to a place where you feel trapped in doubt, and you can have dysfunctions in

  • your life that have been there so long you feel trapped inside of yourself.

  • That's the worst place to feel trapped.

  • Not in a bad relationship.

  • You can always block that number.

  • But what do you do when you're trapped inside of your own broken heart?

  • David said, "It's so bad it has broken my heart, and I am in despair.

  • I am in distress."

  • He said, "I looked for pity, but there was none; for comforters, but I found none.

  • Nobody could help me.

  • I was trapped."

  • He said, "I got to the point where I asked my friends for food, and they gave me poison

  • for food.

  • The people who were supposed to help me hurt me.

  • They gave me poison for food.

  • I was thirsty, but for my thirst they gave me sour wine to drink."

  • Now I understand why Jesus said, "I thirst."

  • It was to fulfill the Scripture.

  • It wasn't about water.

  • Jesus was setting the trap for death.

  • This was the last thing he had to do before the Spirit could be released.

  • It's a setup.

  • If he didn't suffer, salvation could not spring up like a well.

  • If he did not suffer, it could not flow forth.

  • If he did not die, he could not rise.

  • Somebody shout, "It's a setup!"

  • It's not the end.

  • It's in the parentheses.

  • Sometimes you have to trust God in the parentheses, in the tight places, when it looks like you're

  • trapped, to know that the very Red Sea that feels like it's going to kill you is going

  • to drown your enemies behind you.

  • He said, "I thirsted, and they gave me vinegar."

  • But watch David praying.

  • This is what I'm praying over your life today.

  • Every evil thing the Enemy has done to you and every trial that feels like it's sweeping

  • over you and for everybody who feels trapped, listen to what he prayed.

  • "Let their own table before them…"

  • The thing they brought to destroy me.

  • "Let their own table become a snare, and when they are at peace…"

  • Just when the Devil thought he had Jesus trapped, just when he thought it was over, just when

  • he thought, "We got rid of that one," just when he thought it was the end, just when

  • they rolled the stone

  • "Let it become a trap."

  • God said, "I've got you."

  • He set the trap.

  • God brought you here into this garden so you could sweat out your insecurities.

  • God brought you here into this tight place so your doubts could die and your faith could

  • live.

  • And you will never thirst again.

  • He said, "I thirst," and they brought him vinegar.

  • He said, "Good.

  • I need that.

  • I needed that vinegar.

  • I needed that trial."

  • Sometimes victory doesn't look like victory.

  • Sometimes victory doesn't taste sweet.

  • When he said, "I thirst" and they gave him the vinegar for water

  • After he had received the sour wine, after he had set the trap on death, hell, and the

  • grave

  • I promise you we're going to have the best Easter ever this year.

  • I feel like Easter came early today.

  • I really do.

  • I really feel like resurrection came at an unexpected time for somebody who thought they

  • were trapped.

  • Hear the Word of the Lord!

  • It's not a trap; it's a triumph!

  • Shout unto God!

  • Friday's trap was Sunday's triumph.

  • He said, "I thirst."

  • He set the trap.

  • After he had received the sour wine, he said, "It's finished."

  • The trap became the triumph.

  • God is going to take the thing that looks

  • Ask the children of Israel.

  • They thought the Red Sea was going to be the end of them.

  • It was the end of their enemies.

  • You're not trapped; the Devil is.

  • You're not trapped.

  • I'm not trapped and I'm not thirsty.

  • Who the Son sets free

  • How many believe that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared

  • with the glory that will be revealed?

  • How many believe Christ is in you, the hope of glory?

  • Shout like you believe that!

  • I'm going to tell you one more thing.

  • I love to preach the Word to you, not because I like to hear myself talk.

  • I love to preach the Word of God to you because I know what this seed is going to do if you

  • get it down in your heart.

  • Watch this.

  • Favor flows from unexpected places.

  • Do you remember when we were writing the song "Resurrecting"?

  • It took about nine months to write the song.

  • Everybody on the team contributes in different ways.

  • My thing is I always like to write

  • Chris can tell you this, because we've been knowing each other forever.

  • I'm kind of weird, because when the song seems

  • like it should be over, I always like to put another verse.

  • So we wrote the song, and it was kind of done.

  • Not really done, but we thought it was done.

  • We finished the songwriting thing, and I started thinking I wanted to write this fourth verse

  • for the song.

  • You know, Chris is kind of lazy, because he's a worship leader.

  • (No, I'm just kidding.

  • He's the hardest-working man in the praise biz.)

  • It took six months to get the verse right, but we ended up writing a declaration for

  • our church.

  • Lift your hands.

  • Whatever has you trapped today

  • We ended up writing this verse to let you know that what looks like it has you locked

  • in is going to be the place

  • See, that's what the grave was.

  • The grave of Jesus Christ was a garden in disguise.

  • That's what your trials are.

  • That's what your weakness is.

  • So I want you to sing this fourth verse, because just when it seems like the song should be

  • over, just when it seems like your hope is gone, just when it seems like the Devil has

  • dehydrated your dream

  • They thought they had him.

  • They posted the guard right there.

  • If he robbed the grave of its power, if the guards couldn't keep his body in

  • Come on, church!

  • I'm talking about rivers of living water.

  • You never thirst again when you get this Spirit, and the same Spirit that raised him from the

  • dead

We're excited, because favor flows from strange places.

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口渴的陷阱|史蒂文-富迪克牧師 (The Thirst Trap | Pastor Steven Furtick)

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    Ping Huang 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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