Overcoming Adversity - God's Way // Taking God at His Word, Part 3
Christianityworks Official Podcast
Release Date: 10/19/2025
Christianityworks Official Podcast
Sometimes we keep our faith and our day-to-day lives in separate boxes. But it turns out that “worship” is something that brings them back together again. Worship does just happen once a week when we sing a few songs. Worship as things turn out, was always meant to be, a way of life. Connecting Inside and Out Well, this is the second message in a series that I’ve called, "Living a Life of Worship". Something that we love to do and it seems to come naturally to us, is to have a disconnect between our faith in Christ and our lives. I mean, Sunday you may go to church – this kind...
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Worship means different things to different people. It’s a religious thing. It’s singing songs. It’s a concert with a light show. It’s well, who knows what. But the question we need to ask ourselves, is what exactly does worship mean to God? We All Worship Something Well it’s great to be with you again this week and we are starting a new series on the programme that I’ve called, "Worship as a Way of Life". When we hear the word "worship", well, what does it mean? And people who don’t have any particular faith in God, it’s something, well, those religious...
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It’s easy to drift along, day after day – not ever realising that we’re on a gentle, downward slope, until it’s too late. But the beauty of God’s grace is that it’s never, ever too late to change things. It’s never, ever too late to turn your life around. Same Old Same Old The thing about life is that it, well, it seems to just crank along, day after day – get up, have a shower, have breakfast, hit the commute, go to work, come home, do the TV, go to bed, get up ... isn’t that the routine? Ninety nine point nine percent of life seems to be everyday, mundane realities...
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Sometimes, we spend so much of our energy believing that God will give us a breakthrough in our time of need, that we miss the fact that he’s already provided us with everything we need to get through those tough times. So Easy to Miss Sometimes we can be looking forward to something ... something that God will do; some defining moment in life, without realising what He has already done for us in the past. Let me give you an example: you are going through a tough time, perhaps some difficulty at work or in bringing up our children or in our marriages – we all go through those times....
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If ever any one ever had an unfair life – it was Joseph back there in the old testament. One step forward, two steps back seems to be the story of so much of what he went through … sound familiar? Yet in the end, he came out in front. At the end of the day, what others meant for harm in his life, God meant for good in the lives of so many others. Hmm. It’s Not Fair One of my favourite sayings when I was a young lad growing up, was "It’s not fair!" I just hated things that weren’t fair. When my parents made a decision between my sister and me – whether I had to clean up or...
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Have you ever made one too many mistakes? You know, you get to a point where you think, That’s it! God must be done with me? Well, Abraham was a man of faith who made plenty of mistakes along the way. Yet God seemed to overlook, even o compensate for them. Why was that? Life Changing Moments As we travel through life we all kind of experience these moments and often they are seemingly insignificant events that in fact, turn out to change the whole course of our lives. It’s amazing when you think about it! We all have a plan for our lives but there are things just around the next...
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When Christmas is done and dusted – what do you do with it? Put it back in the cupboard with the decorations for next year – or let the message of Christian burn on in your heart? CHRISTMAS IN REVIEW So how have you gone, in those busy weeks leading up to Christmas? Did you enjoy yourself or was the stress just too much? Was it a kind of rich experience or did the cares of this world; all that stuff, you know, that we do leading up to Christmas, did it rob you of the Christmas you think that you should have had? Over these last few weeks on the programme we have been working our way...
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These days, having a child out of wedlock is pretty much a valid lifestyle choice in many cultures. I’m not saying that it’s right, just that that’s how it’s perceived. But back in Jesus’ day … man it was a huge scandal. Seriously. A MISCONCEPTION Well, here we are hurtling towards Christmas. You know, it’s interesting when you look at the candy cane – you know that simple little cane with the white and then the three small stripes and then the big stripe – and we think of it as a candy cane, but the confectioner who first created it, didn’t create it as a candy...
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Christmas – they talk about baby Jesus and Mary and Joseph – but this Jesus … is He who He says He is? Can Christmas really make a difference – I mean in your life and mine? WILL THE REAL MESSIAH PLEASE STAND UP? Well, welcome to the second message in a series that I have called, “Message in a Bottle” – in these weeks leading up to Christmas. We are going to take a look at this most amazing night – this Christmas story. You know that wonderful Christmas carol, O Holy Night, the stars, the stars are shining – the shepherds and the angels and Mary and Joseph...
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My hunch is that the whole Christmas thing began well before that starry night in Bethlehem. A long time before. Question is – how come God came up with it? IT’S HARD TO BELIEVE I have to tell you it Is hard to believe that we are on the home straight again – just turned that corner into December again – the end of another year. The shops are full of Christmas decorations. You know, it seems like just yesterday it was January and here we are, another one over – it’s hard to believe. As I sat down this year to think about messages for December, you know, the whole Christmas, New...
info_outlineSometimes, we head off in our own direction - and then we discover, at some point, that we’ve strayed so far away from God's plans for our lives. We’ve all done it. You have, I have. And yet the amazing thing is that God always, always provides us with a way back home. Always.
Israel’s Dilemma
Over these last few weeks on Christianityworks, we’ve been looking at what it means to take God at His Word. Sometimes it can seem that God’s promises are just too good to be true. An abundant life full of blessing and we think, “Oh, yea – right!” But it also seems that some people who meet Jesus end up living out this abundant life of blessing, and well, others don’t. Why is that? I believe that one of the key factors of living a victorious life through our relationship with Jesus Christ is taking God at His Word. Because when we see all the troubles of life; when we see the struggles of life, sometimes it’s just too good to be true.
Today we are going to look at overcoming adversity, by taking God at His Word and it’s a special kind of adversity – it’s an adversity that we bring on ourselves, because sometimes we go through tough times as a direct consequence of our own actions and choices and behaviours. Bad choices, wrong motives, wrong thoughts, wrong behaviour have consequences. If I spend too much money on my credit card there are going to be financial consequences. If my wife Jacqui and I don’t spend time together, there are going to be consequences in our relationship.
We have to live out those consequences and a number of times through the Bible we see this principal “as we sow, so shall we reap”. It’s a spiritual, emotional and physical principal that free choice has consequences and we have this good and loving Father who lets us bear the consequences of our sin. The sin of gluttony – if we eat too much, we put on weight, we get lethargic, we get disease. What we eat and how we eat has a direct impact on our lives. There’s a cause and effect relationship – as we sow so shall we reap. And sometimes our own choices and decisions bring us to a place of adversity. Now, please, it’s not always like that.
If you read the story of the blind man – the man who was blind from birth, in John’s Gospel, chapter 9. Here was this man who was blind from birth and the disciples said to Jesus, “Well, who sinned - this man, his parents? What sin caused this man to be blind?” And Jesus said, “It’s no one’s fault; there’s no sin. This guy is blind so that I could heal him.”
And as I look back on my life, it’s certainly true. Sometimes I have done things that have brought consequences on my life, and have brought times of adversity. Sometimes it wasn’t my fault at all but today we are going to look at that specific form of adversity that comes when we are living out the consequences of our own sin. And when we are in that place; when we are in that place of adversity, how do we get out of it, how do we deal with that? What is God’s way? What is God’s wisdom for us?
We are going to go to the last book of the Old Testament – the Book of Malachi, chapter 3 and we will be looking at specifically verses 6 through 12, so if you have a Bible, go and grab it, open it up – it’s the last book before Matthew’s Gospel. It’s a short book – only a few pages long, and we are going to see the relevance of how God provides us with the road back.
Now in this particular passage, (you may have heard this passage a lot of times in your church) we are going to read just right now, verses 8 through 12. And it says this:
Will anyone rob God, yet you are robbing me? But you say, “How are we robbing you?
And God answers:
“In your tithes and offerings. You’re accursed with a curse for you are robbing me; the whole nation on you. Bring the full tithe into the storehouse so that there may be food in my house and thus put me to the test,” says the Lord of Hosts. “See if I won’t open the windows of heaven for you and pour down for you an overflowing blessing. I’ll rebuke the locusts for you so that it will not destroy the produce of you’re soil and your vine in the field shall not be barren,” says the Lord of Hosts. “Then all the nations will count you happy for you will be a land of delight.” says the Lord of Hosts.
Now in a lot of churches you hear that particular verse quoted and it says something like this, “If you tithe your income; that is if you give a tenth of your income to church, then God will open the windows of heaven and bless you. Now there is truth in that because there is a spiritual principle that "as we sow, so shall we reap", and if we sow abundantly into God’s Kingdom then God will bless us abundantly. The problem is that we can take this verse on its own out of context, and all of a sudden God becomes like a slot machine. You know, we put a coin in and we pull the handle and the money flows out the bottom, and that’s not what God intended because this passage comes in a particular context; it comes in the context where Israel was supposed to be getting blessed.
You know, they started off with the promise of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, and Jacob had twelve boys and the whole of that family ended up in Egypt and they grew into a large nation and God took them out of slavery through the Red Sea, through the exodus of forty years in the desert into the Promised Land – the land that He had promised to Abraham. They went through a time where Judges ruled the land and then kings and then Israel split into two nations and because they were unfaithful.
In 586 BC, the Babylonian empire overran Jerusalem, destroyed them, took them into captivity for seventy years and then God brought them back after the seventy years. Now the exiles were turned back and you’d think they’d have it all sorted out by then, but they continued on with their failure to obey God.
There’s several wonderful pictures in the Books of Haggai and Zachariah, that once they come back from their Babylonian captivity that God will bless them - you know, God will pour out His blessing on this land, material prosperity. If you look at Zachariah chapter 8 verses 1 to 8, there’s this sense of the captives streaming back into this land of abundance. Yet, the completion of the temple – they rebuilt that – it hasn’t ushered in all this blessing. They had an expectation of blessing but instead of blessing, there’s Persian domination; there are hostile foreigners, there are plagues, there are droughts, there are locusts – it’s that like our Christian walk? God promises this enormous blessing and sometimes we turn around and say, “But, hang on a minute, this isn’t a blessing at all – this is hell – all these bad things are happening to me. God, why are these bad things happening? What’s going wrong? We are going to have a look at exactly what God tells Israel, next.
God’s Perspective
Well, there was Israel; they were back in the Promised Land again. They’d had prophesy after prophesy of blessing and all of a sudden they discover – they turn around and say, “Life is actually awful. Life is not going well at all.” Have a look what Malachi writes in chapter 3 verses 13 to 15:
You have spoken harsh words against me, says the Lord, yet you say, “How have we spoken against you? You’ve said it is vain to serve God, what do we profit by keeping His command or by going about as mourners before the Lord of Hosts? Now we count the arrogant happy; evil doers only prosper but when they put God to the test, they escape.
In other words, things were not going as well for Israel as they expected from the prophesies that they had been given.
Now Malachi is the last of the Minor Prophets, the last book of the Hebrew Canon – the Old Testament and it’s a monologue from God. It’s God’s perspective; God points them to the problem and He gives them the solution. And here’s the problem – let’s just move quickly through the Book of Malachi and have a look what God says. In chapter 1 verse 2, He says this:
“I’ve loved you,” says the Lord, “but you say, “How have you loved us?” “Is not Esau Jacob’s brother,” says the Lord, “Yet I have loved Jacob but I have hated Esau. I have made his hill country desolation and his heritage a desert for jackals.” God says ‘I have preferred you;’ when He says ‘I have loved Jacob,’ He is saying ‘I have loved you.’ God says, “I love you, yet you show contempt for God’s love.”
And then you look further down, in verse 6, and He says:
Look, a son honours his father, and servants their master. If I then am a Father, where is the honour due to me and if I am your master, where is the respect due to me? , says the Lord of Hosts, to you. O priest who despise my name. You say, “How have we despised you name?” By offering polluted food on your alter and you say, “How have we polluted it?" By thinking that the Lord’s Table may be despised. When you offer blind animals in sacrifice, isn’t that wrong? Oh, that someone among you would shut the temple doors so that you would not kindle the fire on my alter in vain.
They weren’t putting God first – they weren’t giving God their best. The whole sacrificial system was set up so that animals would be sacrificed – a blood sacrifice – to atone for sin. Now we don’t go through that any more because Jesus is our blood sacrifice; Jesus died for us. We are forgiven through that sacrifice but that wasn’t the case back then and God had commanded them to give their best – their first fruits, their best animals, their best food in sacrifice. And these people were giving God their second best or their third best and worse than that, the priests were bored. Look at verse 13:
“What a weariness this is,” you say and sniff at me, says the Lord. You bring what has been taken by violence or is lame or sick and this you bring as an offering?
And further down, in chapter 2:
And now, oh priest, this command is for you, if you will not listen, if you will not lay it to heart, to give glory to me, says the Lord of Hosts, then I will send a curse on you and I will curse your blessing and indeed, I have already cursed them because you do not lay it to heart.
They’re hearts weren’t in it. They were going through religious rituals without ever really thinking about it and the population followed them. In verses 8 and 9, it says this:
But you’ve turned aside from the way. You have caused many to stumble in your instruction; you’ve corrupted the promise of Levi, says the Lord of Hosts and so I make you despised and abased before all the people inasmuch as you have not kept my ways but you have shown partiality in your instruction.
So God’s people have been through this enormous thing as a nation, where Jerusalem was destroyed and burnt down; for seventy years they were in captivity; they come back.
Wouldn’t you think they would have learnt their lesson? Wouldn’t you think they’d have it all sorted out? No! No, no. they do the same thing over and over again and then look what happens – verse 13 of chapter 2:
And this you do as well: you cover the Lord’s alter with tears, with weeping and groaning because He no longer regards the offering or accepts it with favour at your hand and you ask, “Why doesn’t He?" Because the Lord was a witness between you and the wife of your youth, to whom you have been faithless, though she is your companion and your wife by covenant. Did not God make her? Both flesh and Spirit are His and what does God desire? Godly offspring. So look to yourselves and do not let anyone be faithless to the wife of his youth. For I hate divorce, says the Lord God of Israel, and covering one’s garments with violence, says the Lord of Hosts, so take heed to yourselves and do not be faithless.
He is talking to a faithless nation – people were getting divorced, they were being unfaithful to their wives, they weren’t honouring God, they weren’t putting Him first and surprise, surprise – God didn’t bless them!! Surprise, surprise, they were not living in the blessing that God had planned for them. The problem, according to God is sin and God says, “You wonder why you are not being blessed.” And they’re thinking, “Has God taken a holiday; can’t He cope with us? Doesn’t God want to bless me? Why are the locusts eating our food, what’s going on? And God says, “It’s not my faithfulness that’s at stake here, it’s yours. I chose you; I uphold you and I continue to bless you. I chose you, I uphold you and the only reason you are still alive is because I am the same.”
Look at what He says in chapter 3 verse 6.
For I the Lord your God do not change, therefore you, O children of Jacob, have not perished. The only reason I haven’t destroyed you is because I made a promise to Abraham and to Isaac – I promised to bless their offspring and you are their offspring. If I hadn‘t made that promise, I would have destroyed you by now. The problem is your sin; your imperfect offerings, not the best fruits, not the first fruits, the second, the third and the forth fruits.
You’re bored with me; you’re unfaithful and we do that sometimes in our Christian walk too. We’re a living sacrifice – we don’t give God our best, we get bored with God, we stop reading God’s Word, we stop praying, we stop enjoying His presence and we chase after other gods and we chase after worldly ideals and God says, “What’s the matter with you? Are you surprised that you are not being blessed? The most important thing for God is the relationship that we have – He takes it so seriously – His Son died to give us that and we race off and we do other things and we wonder why God isn’t blessing us. We are living through the consequences of our own sin, of our own rejection, of our own rebellion of God, and because the relationship is so important to God, He won’t let the blessing flow while we’re doing that. It’s His way of giving us a wakeup call; it’s His way of bringing us back home; it’s His way of saying, “I love you”, so when we’re living through the consequences of our sin, can I encourage you to hear those words in the middle of that – “I love you so much, I’ll let you live through those consequences.”
Well, God made a road back for Israel and we are now going to look at what that road looks like.
The Way Home
We are looking at this whole dilemma of what happens when we live out the consequences of our rebellion of God and this is where we pick up the answer. God looks at Israel through this Book of Malachi and says, “You people have forsaken me, despite every thing you’ve been through in the Babylonian captivity. You haven’t learned, you’re not putting me first, you’re not honouring me, you’re just going through a religious mumbo-jumbo and routine, but really, your hearts not in it and I want your heart, and until your hearts in it, well, you are not going to be blessed by me.” And the people rightly go, “well, what are we going to do about it?”
In fact they ask that question in the Book of Malachi. Let’s look at it – beginning at chapter 3 verse 7.
Ever since the days of your ancestors you have turned aside from my statutes and have not kept them, says the Lord. Return to me and I will return to you, says the Lord of Hosts, but you say, “How shall we return?”
This is the crux of this whole small Book of Malachi. They’ve left God and God says, “I want to be with you; I want to bless you; I want to spend time with you, come back to me and I will come back to you.”
God always, "always" wants to have a relationship with us. There’s never a time where God says, “Well, you know, I know this person believes in me but they’ve been so bad, I’m never going to spend any time with them again. I’m going to reject them.” NO! Because He sent Jesus to die for me; He sent Jesus to die for you. There is never a time where God rejects us in this life.
And here the people say, “Well, ok, ok! We know that we’ve done the wrong thing. We know we’ve failed. We know we’ve gone in the wrong direction. Um, but now what? How do we come back to you? You say, “How shall we return to you?” and in answer to that question, this is what God says. This passage about tithing that we read earlier on. He said, “Will any one rob God? Yet you are robbing me.” Isn’t it interesting? “How shall we return to you?” And God points to one thing that they are doing wrong. “Will anyone rob God? Yet you are robbing me. But you say, how are you robbing me? In your tithes and your offerings! You are cursed with a curse because you are robbing me - the whole nation of you.”
You see part of the Mosaic Law; part of the law of Israel; part of the law of what we call the Old Testament today, was that every one of God’s people had to give one tenth of their income to God’s work. It was called a tithe; a tenth; it was part of the law. It was almost ... well it was, it was exactly like, we have to pay taxes today and if I avoid my taxes, the Tax Office will come after me and ultimately I can be fined or put into jail – it’s against the law and Israel was breaking God’s law by not giving God the tenth; the tithe, that was due to Him and God said, “You’re robbing me.”
Now they were doing a whole bunch of other things wrong too – we read it before; they weren’t putting God first, their heart wasn’t in it, they were just going through the actions, they were being unfaithful, husbands and wives, but God just picks one thing out of that in answer to the question, “How shall we return?” God says, “This is the one thing I want you to do. I’m not going to get you to fix everything and all your mistakes and all your sin and all your rebellion at once, I’m just going to pick one thing. Start tithing again, bring the full tithe into the storehouse so that there may be food in my house. Sow seed while things aren’t going well, because things weren’t going well – locusts were eating their food. They didn’t have a lot to spare.
“Bring the full tithe into my storehouse, that there may be food in my house and thus put me to the test,” says the Lord of Hosts, “See if I will not open the windows of heaven for you and pour out for you an overflowing blessing.”
How can we come home? “Just do this one thing – just obey me because loving me is obedience – obedience that you can actually cope with.” Don’t you love that about God? We may have a problem in one area of our life but God knows who we are, what we can cope with, so He may choose something quite different, in another area, and says, “Be obedient in this area, that I know you can cope with and when you have been obedient there; when you’re working there, that bit that I have put my finger on through my Spirit and my Word, when that’s working, just watch and I’ll bless you. And then as I am blessing you, there are lots of other things that we are going to deal with too, but I know you can’t deal with those now, so just deal with this one issue.”
I think that’s awesome! And then God says, “I’ll rebuke the locusts, I’ll make sure they don’t destroy your food, I’ll make sure that the vine isn’t barren, that the windows of heaven will be open and my blessing will pour out. That’s God’s love - that’s God’s encouragement because God rewards our faithfulness. No father will bless a child that is not being faithful. Dad wants to bless us, but He wants more than that – a relationship with us. That is just so awesome and look what it says down in verse 16 of chapter 3, just finishing up this discussion of God’s blessing.
Then those who revered the Lord spoke with one another and the Lord took note and listened and a book of remembrance was written before Him of those who revered the Lord and thought on His name. They shall be mine, says the Lord of Hosts; my special possession on the day when I act and I will spare them as parents spare their children who serve them.
Wow! God wants to bless us but that blessing – that hand of blessing comes off our lives when we rebel against God, because more important than the blessing is the relationship. More that any thing, God wants to have a relationship with us and so if your traveling through a time in your life when you know that you are living the consequences of your own failures and your own sin, I would encourage you to do this - go to God and say, “Lord how shall I return?” And I promise that God will speak to you through His Spirit in the most amazing way and say, “Be obedient to me in just this one area of your life and put me to the test. See if I won’t open the windows of heaven and pour out all my blessings on you.” It’s time to take God at His Word.