Sunday, October 24th 2021 • Beau Bradberry
"The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress." — Psalm 46:11
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Well, good morning.
If you've got your Bibles, go ahead and open them up to Psalm 46.
That's where we're going to be this morning.
As you turn there, I want to give you an important date to put on your calendar that did not
make the slides for this week, but will be in there as we go forward.
I'd like for you to make a special note for November the 21st.
On Sunday, November 21st, that's the Sunday before Thanksgiving, we're going to gather
here like we always do in the morning.
We'll still be in our series on the Psalms, but we're going to come back on Sunday evening,
not for our regularly scheduled ministry activities, but we'll gather back together as a church family
at four o'clock for a special night of focus on missions and prayer.
And I'd like to ask each and every one of you to join us for this evening.
Now, we are going to have a special guest speaker that will be here with us that evening.
And because of where he has served, I cannot share details with you, a lot of details with
you right now because we're live streaming.
And for security reasons, they've asked us not to.
But I can tell you that we will have a missionary who has served for many years alongside his
wife in a very prominent war-torn country that many of us are aware of.
He's going to be with us that evening to share openly and honestly about what it's like to
live and do ministry in this country.
And also to share with us what God has been doing, and even in the midst of the crisis of
this country finds themselves, which caused him and his family to have to be evacuated,
what God is continuing to do.
After he shares, we're going to have a time where we'll take some time to pray for all of
our ministry, I'm sorry, all of our mission partners together as a church family.
And then like good Baptists, we'll have a time after that where we'll eat some sweets
together, okay?
But I want to make sure that you're there for the important part for that on Sunday, November
21st.
We'll get out more details as we can, but not on anything that's going to be on the internet
or social media or in those capacities, all right?
So please mark it on your calendar.
Be there.
It'll be a phenomenal night.
So as we're continuing on in our series in the Psalms, and the band is going to lead us
at the conclusion of this message in Psalm 46, but I want to kind of give some background
of what's going on in Psalm 46.
Now, this was probably written by King Hezekiah.
We aren't 100% sure, but that's what most theologians believe, that King Hezekiah wrote
this during the time when Jerusalem was held captive by the Assyrians.
And now you can read that story starting around 2 Kings chapter 18, and we're not going to
jump there and read all that, but that's kind of the background of what's there.
A lot of what's written during that section of 2 Kings is recorded also in the prophet Isaiah.
This is the time that the prophet Isaiah was being the mouthpiece for the Lord to Israel
during this time, and the emphasis of this passage is going to be the presence of the Lord with
His people.
It's an important thing for us.
It's an important thing for all of God's people.
A continual reminder in spite of everything that surrounds us, in spite of what our brain
says to us, in spite of what our emotions make us feel, the ever-steady presence of the Lord
with His people.
And we're going to see a beautiful, honest assessment of this from the hand of Hezekiah as we read
Psalm 46.
So let's go ahead and start.
We're going to read the first three verses.
He writes and he says,
God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.
Therefore, we will not fear, though the earth gives way and the mountains be moved into the
heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam, though the mountains tremble at its swelling.
And so here's what's happening during the reign and rule of King Hezekiah.
Jerusalem is being held captive by the Assyrians.
It's a time of chaos.
It's a time of war.
It's a time of fear in the life of King Hezekiah and a time for God's people in Jerusalem.
And so Hezekiah goes in the way that he can and begins to record what he is feeling in
line with the truth of who God is.
And I think that's important for us.
We all have our roller coasters of ups and downs, amen?
We all feel better on some days than others, amen?
Like, we walk through this.
It's the picture of life that's there.
But oftentimes, you and I get so lost in the roller coaster of emotion that we're facing,
and it's real, and it's honest, and we can forget in that the absolute truth of who God
is.
And what I love about Psalm 46 is Hezekiah is saying, man, this is what I'm feeling.
This is what we're going through.
But here's the truth of who God is, in the midst of that.
And so the first thing that we see, we're going to look at three different things that point
us to the Lord in this.
The first one that we see is that God is our strength.
God is our strength.
Verse 2 and 3 do not paint a very good picture, right?
From His words, He says, the earth gives way.
Now, let's be honest, how many of you have been to the state fair this year?
Raise your hand.
Let's just a little quick poll.
How many of you have been, all right?
How many of you, by show of hands, went for the food?
Let's be honest, all right?
That's me, right?
It's the only time that you're willing to pay $38 for a corn dog and french fries, right?
But we do it, and it is phenomenal, and it's all organic and healthy.
That's what I tell myself, all right?
It's good for us, right?
Adds years to your life, right?
So, I'm not a rides guy anymore.
I used to be a rides guy.
And somewhere around the age of 35, rides went from fun to miserable, like overnight, right?
We went to North Augusta to a thing that they have there.
It's kind of their local fair.
North Augusta is my hometown.
And it's called the Jack-o'-lantern Jubilee.
And my daughter, they have like three rides there.
It's real small, you know?
They're real small.
And they have like three rides.
And one of them was that ride, it's like the teacups at Disney World.
Y'all know what I'm talking about?
I think it's called like the Scramble or something like that.
And my daughter, she's like, Dad, ride this with me.
And I was like, all right, cool.
I can do this.
So, we get in there, and I'm excited, and she's nervous.
And I'm like, hey, hands up the whole time, right?
And she's like, all right, absolutely, hands up the whole time.
And so, I went from like hands up the whole time to like, please, get me off of this thing
as fast as you possibly can.
And like the rest of the day, I'm just walking around like I get hit by a Mack truck, all right?
So, the earth gives way.
When I was thinking about this, I thought of the fair.
And I thought to my life when I was a little kid and I would go to the fair,
and one of the things that I loved to do was to go to the funhouse.
And you'd walk through the funhouse, and there was the punching bags that you could run through,
and people were knocking them, and you'd fall all over.
There was the mirrors that you would walk through, and they would distort you
and show you look in different ways, or the maze of mirrors that you'd have to navigate through
and try to get the maze.
But my favorite one was when you would walk, and you would see the floor was moving, right?
Like, I'm not sure how this thing passes insurance, but it does, okay?
And it's there, and you walk on there, and as a little kid, it's just so funny
because you're falling down, and then you get back up, and you fall down again.
Hezekiah says, where we're at right now, as a people,
it literally feels like the earth is giving way.
He said that the mountains, it feels like they've moved into the sea.
What's around him, what's surrounding him that should be good and normal and stable
feels like it's crumbling and falling apart.
And he describes the waters.
He said the waters, they roar and they foam, and the scariest word of them all,
they're swelling, right?
Here's what Hezekiah is saying, like, everything that was stable is gone,
and what is there feels like it is consuming me.
And this is how he felt.
What should be stable is not.
What surrounds him is falling apart, and what is there is absolutely trying to consume him.
And when the Assyrians threatened Jerusalem, though, the prophet Isaiah told Hezekiah,
and he said, do not be afraid because of what you've heard.
Do not be afraid because of what you've seen.
The prophet Isaiah tells him, instead, what you need to do
is you need to trust in the covenant relationship of God.
That you are his people.
As Leslie and Amanda sang, you were chosen, not forsaken.
This is who you are, in spite of all that surrounds you.
In spite of where the earth begins to move and sway.
In spite of what's there.
And so what Hezekiah does is he speaks to the truth of God
in the midst of all that surrounds him.
He says, you know what?
In this, God is our refuge.
He's our place of protection.
And God is our strength in spite of all of this.
What we're going to see in verse 7 and verse 11,
there's three different times where Hezekiah says that God is our refuge.
In verse 1, when he uses that word, it's a picture in a piece of shelter.
A place that you would go in, in the midst of the storm.
Don't stand out there in what is happening, what is beating you up.
Instead, find your refuge in the Lord.
Go into Him.
Shelter into Him.
And in verse 7 and verse 11, it's the same concept,
but instead, the word of the fortress is used.
So when you are attacked, when the arrows come, when the fight is there,
make sure that you find your fortress.
Make sure that you find your shelter in the Lord and in Him.
Now, I don't know about you, but when I think of shelter,
when I think of fortress, it's a place that we go to wait until the battle's over.
We wait until this passes.
But Hezekiah gives us a different picture of what it means to shelter in,
to fortress in the Lord.
He says that when we do this, what we find is our purpose of where God has for us
is to find our strength as we're here.
And so he says, God is our refuge and strength,
a very pleasant help in trouble.
And so God shelters us so that He can strengthen us,
so that He can send us.
God shelters us so that He can strengthen us,
so that He can send us.
Now, I want to ask you this.
I saw some heads nodding just a few minutes ago
when we were beginning to talk about the circumstances and the things around you.
What do you need shelter from right now?
Where do you need to be fortressed right now?
What is going on in your life where it feels like the earth is moving,
the mountains are collapsing,
and the sea is rising and about to consume you right now?
What do you need to be brought in from?
What do you need to find strength in?
Right now, what I look at and what I see and what I experience,
even within myself and with others,
is, man, there's people that are struggling in their finances.
I need my finances to be strong.
So many marriages right now
are in the battle of the fight headed toward destruction.
I talk to parents who are broken because of the battle that they're facing with their kids
and what that looks like.
I talk to men and women with their careers of what God has for them
and say, you know what, I want strong finances.
I want strong marriages.
I want strong relationship with my kids or even some of us.
I want strong relationship with my parents.
I want a strong career that glorifies God.
But so many times we want strength in these places,
but we're just going to go to ourselves
instead of going into him,
into him, our refuge,
and doing it in his will.
I want you to picture you're somewhere and a storm comes up
and there's a shelter that's there
and the shelter's got a door.
But you say, no, I'll be okay because I can see the shelter.
I'll be okay because I'm standing near the shelter.
I'm good because I know where the shelter is.
None of those things work.
And you and I would be foolish if that's what we would do.
What do we do?
We go into them.
We go into them.
And we say, no, no, no.
This is where it's found is inside of it.
Right?
Instead of I know about it,
I can tell you about it.
I've seen it.
I've even experienced it in the past.
And instead of diving into it, right?
So what does it mean to be in the Lord?
What does it mean to be in his refuge?
What does it mean that he is our fortress?
And what I find as I read through this
and studied through this way
is that what you and I have to say,
what you and I have to agree to
is that going into God is going into his will.
Going into God is going into his presence.
And I want to be honest with you.
What I've noticed within my own life
and in the life of so many people
that we deal with on these four topics
that just seem to be standing out
more and more ever-present
in our society and in our church today
is let me tell you this.
Our finances struggle because we do it our way.
That's why finances struggle.
Let's admit that.
You and I, we're not good with it
when we do it our way.
But God says,
you want strength in your finances?
Give me your tithe,
give me your offering,
and watch me provide.
Refuge in me in your finances.
Do it in my will, do it my way.
You and I, you say,
man, our marriages struggle.
Well, they struggle because we do it our way.
They struggle because we do it as an individual.
They struggle because we do it with a goal
or with a heart to get right.
But God says,
you want your marriage to be strong?
Then do it my way.
Do it in my will.
So husbands,
love sacrificially.
I get this.
Think of her first and primary.
You are not there to be served.
It's not what God's word tells us.
But you are there to serve her well,
to love her well,
and to do so with an end goal,
not so that she'll serve you in return,
but with an end goal
so that she will grow and mature in Christ.
That's God's will for your marriage.
That's it.
So husbands,
get off your throne
and serve.
And so wives,
trust your husbands.
Trust them.
Follow them.
encourage them.
And love them in a way
that empowers them
to seek the will of God
for your family.
Understanding that both of these
demand a deep level of sacrifice
from the husband and the wife.
Right?
This is what God calls us to.
This is what it means to refuge in Him
so that our marriages can be strong.
How about your relationship
with your kids?
Right?
They struggle because we want it
to do them our way.
We want to beat into them
what we think.
We want to beat into them
what we think they should be,
what we have experienced
to learn from us
that we are the authority
instead of fighting
for their hearts.
Right?
Instead of fighting
the world
that's seeking
to capture their hearts.
God says to love,
shape,
nurture,
and release
all with an attitude
and a heart of peace.
But they are His
and we are stewards of them.
Right?
They are not our clone.
They are not to accomplish
what we couldn't
within ourselves.
They are the Lord's.
Right?
Our careers.
We want strength
in our careers
but we need to stop
doing them our way.
Right?
We work for our boss.
We work for our promotion.
We work for our ego.
We work for what we determine
is right.
But God says,
no, no.
Whatever you do,
you're doing it for me.
You're not doing it for him.
You're not doing it for her.
You're not doing it
for the paycheck.
The honor and the integrity
in which you are doing it with
is done in a way
to seek to glorify me
and to serve me.
So whatever you do,
do it all for the glory of God
in everything
of who we are.
So if you're miserable
in your career right now,
let me ask you,
who are you focused in on
in that?
And is it Jesus?
In where we find ourselves.
When we refuge in his will
and in his way,
what we find is the strength
to go and do
what he's called us to do.
But we've got to be in him.
Why would God give you his strength
so that you could do it his way?
It's been a hard lesson for me this week.
Why would God give you his strength
for you to turn around
and do it your way?
But he gives you his strength
so that you and I
can do it his way
in his will
for his name
for his glory.
Let's keep reading verses 4 and 7.
There is a river
who streams make glad
the city of God,
the holy habitation
of the Most High.
God is in the midst of her.
She shall not be moved.
God will help her
when morning dawns.
The nations rage.
The kingdoms totter.
He utters his voice.
The earth melts.
The Lord of hosts
is with us.
The God of Jacob
is our fortress.
And so not only do we see
in these times of trouble
that we're reminded
that God is our strength,
but we're also reminded
that God is our joy.
When the Assyrians
held Jerusalem captive,
they camped around the city.
And this was a technique
that was used
by most armies
during this time.
You'll even see
God's people
as God's leading them
to overtake the promised land.
What God would do
is he would call oftentimes
the people to camp
around the city.
And what would happen
in these cases
by doing that,
they would cut off
the supplies
that the people would need
in the city
in order to survive.
And one of these,
particularly in Jerusalem,
was water, right?
Like you can be
without a lot of things.
You cut people off
from water still today
and civilization
is not going to thrive.
And so the Assyrians thought,
man, if we can just cut them,
if we can cut
the people of Jerusalem
off from the water
that they desperately need,
then we'll be over
to overtake.
But Hezekiah
had done something different.
He'd done something
that the Assyrians
didn't know.
Hezekiah built
a water system
underneath Jerusalem
that connected Jerusalem
to an outside water source.
And so in this,
he says,
there is a river
whose streams
make glad
the city of God.
This could have been
a literal explanation
of what's happening, right?
He did this.
It's the city of God.
It's Jerusalem.
There's a river
who will bring this in
and make us glad,
but Hezekiah
has a spiritual implication
for this as well.
As the waters come,
so too does God,
and with it comes
the victory, right?
Where do you find joy?
Where do you find joy?
I had a pastor.
I had lunch with him
on Wednesday.
He asked me two questions.
As he was talking,
he's new
and we were having
a conversation.
He said,
where does your happiness
come from?
We talked a little bit
about that.
He says,
where does your joy
come from?
Two different questions.
So many of us
find our joy
in the circumstances.
And when our joy
is found
in the circumstances
of life,
so many of us
lose our joy
in the exact
same means.
For the people
of Jerusalem,
they look out
and they see
this army
surrounding them.
They see that
they are about
to take them
and take from them.
But instead,
they're called
to remember
who God is
and what God does
and that is not
in what surrounds them
where their joy,
where their hope,
where their peace
is found,
but it's found
in him
who flows
through them.
It's easy
to look around us
and think
that God has failed.
It's easy
to look in your life
and in my life
and to see situations
that didn't play out,
situations that we
would not have chosen
and to see
where God has failed.
And I imagine
if I'm Hezekiah,
if I'm a person
in Jerusalem right now,
I'm looking out,
I'm looking around
and I'm seeing
the army
that is around me
and the reality
of what's happening,
the reality
of what's taking place.
And in that
and in this situation,
it's easy to look
and say,
we've messed up,
this is what happened
to us,
but where are you,
God?
And have you ever
been there?
Have you ever been,
where are you, God?
Why God?
I don't understand God.
But God
will always
hold true
to His word
and true
to His promises.
That the Israelites
were chosen,
not forsaken,
and that you
and I
can cling
to the same truth
in spite of
what surrounds us,
in spite of
what comes
to consume us.
So God
rescued His people.
He rescued His people.
The Assyrians
would not take Him.
And God did it
in a miraculous way.
One night,
the angel
of the Lord
came and struck
down
185,000
Assyrians.
And the king
of Assyria
fled.
You and I
look for joy
in a lot of ways.
We look for joy
in our circumstances.
We look for joy
in our timing.
We look for
for joy
in the creation
that we've been
blessed with.
But instead,
we need to remember
that our joy
does not come
from our circumstances.
That our joy
does not come
from our timing.
That our joy
does not come
from creation.
But that our joy
comes from the one
who's over the circumstances.
That our joy
comes from the one
who is sovereign
over the timing.
That our joy
comes from the one
who created creation.
Right?
Romans 15,
13 tells us,
May the God
of hope
fill you
with all joy
and peace.
Comma,
as you trust
him.
As you trust
him.
Right?
Well,
I don't feel joy
right now.
Well,
I don't feel
peace.
Why are you
trusting the Lord?
You trust him.
You trust him
and watch
where the joy
comes from.
You trust him.
You trust him
and you watch
where the peace
comes from.
Joy comes from trust
and trust
comes from releasing.
So I want to ask you
this question.
What do you need
to release today?
What do you need
to release today?
What do you need
to say,
God,
it's 185,000
soldiers
and I can't do it.
And God's saying,
I know.
So stop trying.
What do you need
to release today
and trust
that God will do
as he wills.
That God will do
as he plans.
And that God
will bring the end
and we trust him
all the way through it.
Lastly,
verses 8 and 9.
Hezekiah writes
and he says,
come behold
the works of the Lord
how he has brought
desolations
on the earth.
He makes wars cease
to the end
of the earth.
He breaks the bow
and shatters
the spear.
He burns the chariots
with fire.
Be still
and know
that I am God.
I will be exalted
among the nations.
I will be exalted
in the earth
and the Lord
of hosts
is with us.
The God
of Jacob
is our fortress,
right?
And for so many of us,
we just heard
that verse,
right?
And went,
aha,
there it is.
Be still
and know
that I am God.
In the midst
of all of this,
this is the heart
and the posturing
of what God
is calling us to.
And in this,
what we will see
is that God
is glorified.
What we exist for,
what our purpose is,
where our meaning
is found
in the glory
and in the exaltation
of the one
and only God,
the living God.
And so right now,
you feel like you're surrounded.
Right now,
you feel like you lay in fear.
Right now,
you wake up
and that
in which has held you
in captivity
is gone.
And this is what happens
to Jerusalem.
They just wake up
one morning,
they look out the windows,
dead bodies.
They wake up one morning
and equipment
that's been walked away from,
tents that are empty.
They wake up one morning
and weapons
that were held
and challenged
to their life
are laid down.
But yet,
no battle
on this earth
amongst men
has taken place
and God
has won.
And God says,
in that,
what we do
is we give Him glory.
We give Him glory.
To give God glory
is to rightly acknowledge
and give praise.
Right?
And so this verse
that we've uttered,
this verse
that we've clinged to
begins to be more
and more real
as we see
and understand
of what's going on.
Be still
and know
that I am God
and I will be exalted
in the earth.
Right?
There's three phrases
that form one sentence
that give us so much hope
and purpose
and passion
for the gospel.
Right?
God says first,
be still.
Be still.
This phrase,
be still,
literally means
take your hands
off of it.
Right?
Take your hands
off
and relax.
And relax.
So what's going on
in your life,
what's going on
in those battles
is the reminder
right here
that you
in your ability,
that you
in your means,
that you
in your own power,
you do not have
the fight.
God does.
Be still.
Let it go.
Let it go.
But letting it go
acknowledges
that it's no longer
about your way.
Letting it go
means that you
let it go
and that you
let go of control.
And he says,
know that I am God.
Know that I am God.
Acknowledge him.
Stop taking credit
in the victory
and give God
the credit he deserves.
We do it all the time.
I do it all the time.
We do it in our mind.
We do it in our hearts.
We do it in our words
and our action.
God blesses.
God works.
And let me take
the credit for it.
Right?
But instead,
declare who he is
and what he's done.
So you gain victory
in your finances.
Let people know
it's because of the Lord.
You gain victory
in your marriage.
Let them know
that it's because of God
and let people know it.
You gain victory
in your relationship
with your kids,
at work,
with your neighbor.
Let everyone know
that it's not
by your doing,
that it's not
by your power,
that it's not
by your means,
but instead,
it's by the gracious
working of the hand
of God.
And we praise him for it.
We praise him for it.
And he says,
and I
will be exalted
in the earth.
I will be exalted
in the earth.
You know,
God's people then
and God's people today
continually look
to others
to help them
in the time of need.
God's people
during this time
thought about Egypt.
Well,
I wonder if the Egyptians
could come
and help us.
You remember
the Egyptians
that held us captive,
the Egyptians
that enslaved us,
the Egyptians
that brought us from
and that God saved us
and that God
redeemed us from.
Maybe they can be
the ones
that help us.
They can be the ones
to set us free.
But God says,
no, no, no,
it's about me
and what I'm gonna do.
So what does that
look like for us?
You ever been
in a financial trouble
and thought,
if I just have more money,
then I could fix it.
But if you did,
here's the truth,
then the money
would be what saved you
and not God.
Have you ever thought
if my spouse
would just change,
then my marriage
would be strong.
But then your spouse
would be what saved
your marriage
and not God.
Or maybe this is
even more like it,
if my spouse
would just listen to me,
but then you would be
your own savior
of your own marriage
and not God.
if my kids
would just change,
if my job
would just change.
And then in all of these,
the glory goes to you,
the glory goes to me,
the glory goes to others
instead of it
just being to God.
I'm gonna ask you this morning.
as you look out
into the battlefields
of your life,
what do you see?
Where's the battle
that's taking place?
Where do you see
that the struggle
is coming from?
Let me ask you this.
Are you finding
your strength
in God
and power
in his will?
Do you feel
that your joy
comes and goes
and flows
and in and out?
Well, maybe you're
looking for joy
in something
that was never created
to give you joy.
Right?
And when the victory comes,
when the battle is won,
who do you declare
is the victor?
Right?
What a great testimony
to those at work,
to those in your home,
to those that God
have given you.
Of, you know,
my marriage
was falling apart.
My finances
were struggling.
My kids
are in rebellion.
And it's not
because I read a book.
It's not because
I started doing things
differently.
It might have been used.
It might have been
a part of it.
But ultimately,
the glory
and credit
goes to the Lord.
Because he
is faithful.
Would you pray with me?
Lord God,
we praise you
that you are
our refuge
and our strength.
Lord,
as we look
at these words
that are found
in this scripture,
we're reminded
of the battles
that we face
on a daily basis.
A battle
that when we face
in our own power
and on our ability
is too much.
It feels like
185,000 soldiers
that have surrounded us.
And we need to run,
we need to flee,
we need to wave
the white flag.
We need to look at
someone else
to come and secure us
and rescue us.
Lord,
instead of
falling down
before you,
to be still,
to know
that you're God.
Lord,
and to release
and to give you glory
because of your faithfulness.
Lord,
I pray
that as we
go through the battles
and daily fights
that we face,
Lord,
I pray
for the depth
of trust
that you've
called us to.
The depth
of trust
to lean not in
on our own
understanding,
Lord,
but to know
that you
are sovereign
and holy
and in control.
To know
that the victory
is found
in a greater plan
and a greater purpose
than what we
could ride out.
Lord,
Lord,
we just need
to trust you.
Not in some,
but in all.
Lord,
I pray
as we got
our battles
that we face
through your grace
and your kindness,
Lord,
that we find
strength
in you
and in you alone.
Lord,
draw us to you
so that we can
refuge in you.
Know your will
and know your purpose
and know your plan.
Lord,
remind us
of your faithfulness,
of our joy
that is found
in you.
our hope
that is found
in you
and our peace
that's found
in you.
And that,
Lord,
for us to experience
that is to
trust you.
Not with a part,
but with a whole.
Not with a section,
but with all of it.
And, Lord,
may we be still
and know that you
are God
and see that your name
will be exalted
among the nations.
thanks again for listening
to the Willow Ridge Church
weekly podcast.
We hope that you enjoyed
listening to this week's message.
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