Wrong direction? You need a turning point in your story.

In one of my favorite books, the author talks about editing your own story before it happens. It's an amazing concept.

If you feel stuck or you are going in a wrong or fruitless direction, God is why you can change your story. He can change your story.

If you feel stuck or you are going in a wrong or fruitless direction, God is why you can change your story. He can change your story.

It's an important way of thinking because it de-victimizes us. It fills life with possibility.

Turning points in a story and in our story are usually preceded by an event or series of events. But they also often occur when we meet someone. Meeting that person changes our lives. Not the moment we meet them, but looking back we see that the turning point started when we met.

This can be a new friend when we change schools. It can be a contact that leads to your best job ever. It can be meeting your spouse. Meeting that person is the turning point. 

God wants to be that person when we're headed in a wrong or fruitless direction.  

Last weekend we looked at how the building of the tabernacle in Exodus was a major turning point in the Story of God. It's often missed because of the details of the tabernacle. 

Through the tabernacle God was making a way to dwell once again with his people. He had not dwelt with his people, day by day, since Genesis 3. 

Approaching God through tabernacle worship was complex, and contact with God was mediated by priests. It was less than ideal.

But the difficulties approaching God were not God's fault. He is who he is; we are not who he created us to be. So coming near him without mediation and sacrifices would incinerate us. 

But God made it possible. Why? Because he wants to be with us. 

If you're a believer in Jesus, God is with you. You are his tabernacle. That means that if you feel stuck or you are going in a wrong or fruitless direction, he is why you can change your story. He can change your story. He can make your life into the great adventure he created you to live.  

The #1 Way We Sabotage our Spiritual Growth

There's a joke about Sherlock Holmes and Watson where they go camping. After a nice campfire, conversation, and a glass of wine, they retreat for the night.

“A great many people, and more all the time, live their entire lives without ever once sleeping out under the stars.” ― Alan S. Kesselheim

“A great many people, and more all the time, live their entire lives without ever once sleeping out under the stars.” ― Alan S. Kesselheim

Part way into their night of sleep, Holmes wakes up Watson. In his customary way, he asks Watson to observe and make some deductions. 

"Watson, look up into the sky. What do you deduce from what you see?" 

Watson replied, "I see millions of stars."

"What does that tell you?"

Watson pondered for a minute.

"Astronomically, it tells me that there are millions of galaxies and potentially billions of planets. Astrologically, I observe that Saturn is in Leo. Horologically, I deduce that the time is approximately a quarter past three. Theologically, I can see that God is all powerful and that we are small and insignificant. Meteorologically, I suspect that we will have a beautiful day tomorrow."

"What does it tell you, Holmes?"

Holmes response lets Watson and us know that, as usual, he missed the most important thing. I'll share it with you this weekend. (Don't Google it or you'll ruin the punch line for me when I deliver it!)

Why am I telling this joke as part of my sermon?

Because I love it!  

Well, not really. I'm telling it because missing the most important thing or the main thing is easy to do. We tend to miss the main thing when we focus entirely on the details. 

This week's sermon (in our Gospel Project series) is about the tabernacle, as we look at Exodus 25:1-9, 39:32-34, and 40:34-38. 

This whole section in Exodus is considered one of the most mind-numbing in the Bible. Detail after detail is offered for what goes into building the tabernacle. But the details are amazing when you look more deeply into them. One scholar notes how the details all come from God himself so it's unlikely any detail is unimportant.

But we're not going to look at many of the details this weekend.

What Watson observes is right, but he misses the main thing. And you can be right about the details of the tabernacle and get it all wrong if you miss the main thing.

We're going to look at the main thing. And the main thing is often missed. And, I believe, missing the main thing about the tabernacle is directly tied to the number one way we sabotage our spiritual growth and our relationship with God.

Don't miss the weekend. Invite someone who needs to know God or who needs find a community of fellow believers.