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The Challenge
Rev. Tony Cooke 

Someone once said, “There are no great people in this world, only great challenges which ordinary people rise to meet.”  Many of the extraordinary achievements and accomplishments in history have followed bold challenges that were issued by resolute leaders.

When some think about challenges, they primarily think about spiritual attacks from the adversary or the multitude of problems in the world.  God has called us to resist the enemy and to rise above the difficulties we face in life.  These are challenges to which the believer shouts a defiant “No!”

But there are other challenges that come to us in life, and those are the challenges that God gives us.  These are not attacks that come to steal, kill, and destroy, but these are opportunities that push us to new limits, stretch us, move us from our comfort zone, and invite us to become more than we’ve ever been before.  These are the challenges to which we must declare an emphatic “Yes!”

All of these challenges not only resulted in obedience (for some, it was after initial reluctance), but also in creating a vehicle for blessing to come to others.  What are some of the challenges that God places before us today?

1.   God challenges us to go places we never thought He’d ask us to go.

The first thing that often comes to mind with the above statement has to do with missions and foreign countries.  However, most of us will never be asked by God to go to some remote part of the world.  We should, though, be willing to go wherever God says to go and to help those who are called to go to distant lands with the gospel.

Many think only of the “big things” that God asks a small percentage of people to do, and they overlook the seemingly “small things” that God asks of each one of us.  Where does God ask all of us to go?

Let’s talk for a moment about that last phrase: “Go home.”  Jesus made that same statement to a paralytic and to a demoniac who had both been healed.  While Jesus told His chosen apostles to go to the uttermost parts of the earth, He told others to simply go home.  Our relationship with God shouldn’t merely affect our life and work in the world, but it should profoundly affect who we are and how we act behind closed doors, around those closest to us.  Abraham Lincoln said, “I care not for a man’s religion whose dog and cat are not better off for it.”           

2.   God challenges us to give in ways we never thought He’d ask us to give.    

The point here is not about money, but about the totality of our lives.  In reality, there are only two things that God asks for: everything we are and everything we have.  Once we’ve truly given those to Him, everything else is easy. 

General William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army, was asked the secret of his amazing Christian life.  Booth answered, “I told the Lord that he could have all that there is of William Booth.”  That’s the kind of consecration Jesus desires.  In Luke 14:33, He said, “…any of you who does not give up everything he has cannot be my disciple.”  

Whatever giving we do in life—financial and otherwise—needs to flow from a heart and life that is first given to the Lord.  That’s exactly what Paul indicated relative to the gift received from the Corinthians (2 Cor. 8:5).  He said, “…they first gave themselves to the Lord, and then to us by the will of God.”

3.   God challenges us to grow in ways we never thought He’d ask us to grow.

This principle really builds upon the first two.  When we go to the places God wants us to go, and when we give in the ways God wants us to give, we end up growing in ways God wants us to grow.

Job is a tremendous example of someone who grew in ways he never thought he’d have to grow.  After all the horrific devastation Job faced in his life, God asked him to pray for the three men who had spoken so harshly and judgmentally against Him.  Job 42:10 says, “And the LORD restored Job's losses when he prayed for his friends. Indeed the LORD gave Job twice as much as he had before.”

Some have focused on the fact that Job got his stuff back, but the greatest miracle isn’t that his wallet grew; the real miracle is that his heart grew.  Job overcame incredible anger and was able to pray for his friends.  That’s growth!

Gideon is remembered as the man who led Israel in overcoming the Midianites, and that’s true.  But prior to that, Gideon was a man who had to overcome his own fears, doubts, and inferiority.  He had to go (the angel said to him, “Go in this thy might.”), but before the going he had to grow.

If you go without growing, you’ll fail when you get there.  If you give without growing, your giving can be in vain.  Paul said in 1 Corinthians 13:3, “And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, but have not love, it profits me nothing.”

God doesn’t just want us going and giving, He wants us growing.  God challenges us to go places we never thought He’d ask us to go, to give in ways we never thought He’d ask us to give, and to grow in ways we never thought He’d ask us to grow.  The only way for us to find genuine fulfillment in our journey is to obey God wholeheartedly in these areas.

 

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