AN ALL NIGHT PRAYER SERMON ON DISAPPOINTMENT
Date: 25, January 2012
Text: Haggai
2:1-9
from the series All Night Prayer
OVERCOMING
THE MOUNTAIN OF DISAPPOINTMENT
Scripture
Let us together read Haggai 2:1-9
Scripture
Let us together read Haggai 2:1-9
In the second year of King Darius,1in the seventh month, on the twenty-first day of the month, the word of the Lord came by the prophet Haggai, saying: 2Speak now to Zerubbabel son of Shealtiel, governor of Judah, and to Joshua son of Jehozadak, the high priest, and to the remnant of the people, and say, 3Who is left among you that saw this house in its former glory? How does it look to you now? Is it not in your sight as nothing? 4Yet now take courage, O Zerubbabel, says the Lord; take courage, O Joshua, son of Jehozadak, the high priest; take courage, all you people of the land, says the Lord; work, for I am with you, says the Lord of hosts, 5according to the promise that I made you when you came out of Egypt. My spirit abides among you; do not fear. 6For thus says the Lord of hosts: Once again, in a little while, I will shake the heavens and the earth and the sea and the dry land; 7and I will shake all the nations, so that the treasure of all nations shall come, and I will fill this house with splendour, says the Lord of hosts. 8The silver is mine, and the gold is mine, says the Lord of hosts. 9The latter splendour of this house shall be greater than the former, says the Lord of hosts; and in this place I will give prosperity, says the Lord of hosts.
Introduction
On September 5, 1886, Charles Spurgeon began his sermon on our
text
with these incisive words:
“Satan
is
always doing his utmost to stay the work of God. He
hindered these
Jews from building the temple; and today he endeavors to
hinder the
people of God from spreading the gospel. A spiritual
temple is to be
builded for the Most High, and if by any means the evil
one can delay
its uprising he will stick at nothing: if he can take us
off from
working with faith and courage for the glory of God he
will be sure
to do it. He is very cunning, and knows how to change his
argument
and yet keep to his design: little cares he how he works,
so long as
he can hurt the cause of God.”i
Satan’s
only design is to hurt the cause of God. To do his infernal
work, he
has many weapons in his arsenal. He may at one time use greed,
another time use anger or malice or false accusation, still
another
time use lust, evil desires, or the temptation to revenge. But
of all
his weapons, none is sharper than the one called discouragement.
If
only he can get the saints of God to despair over their efforts,
then
his battle is already won.
Ill.
It was advertised that the devil was going to put his tools up
for
sale. On the date of the sale the tools were placed for public
inspection, each being marked with its sale price. There were a
treacherous lot of implements. Hatred, Envy, Jealousy, Doubt,
Lying,
Pride, and so on. Laid apart from the rest of the pile was a
harmless-looking tool, well-worn and priced very high.
“?The
name of the tool??”
asked one of the
purchasers.
“?Oh,?”
said the
adversary,
“?that’s
Discouragement.?”
“?Why
have you priced it so high??”
“?Because
it’s more useful to me than the others. I can pry open and
get
inside a person’s heart with that one, when I cannot get
near him
with other tools. Now once I get inside, I can make him do
what I
choose. It’s a badly worn tool, because I use it on almost
everyone
since few people know it belongs to me.?”
The
devil’s price for Discouragement was so high, he never sold it.
It’s still his major tool, and he still uses it on God’s people
today.ii
Disappointment
is the theme of this passage. The people in Israel during the
ministry of the prophet Haggai are disappointed and discouraged.
Many
years earlier, in 586 BC, the Babylonians had invaded Israel.
They
had taken the people away to Babylon as captives. The
Babylonians had
destroyed Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem.
After
50 years, some of the people were allowed to return to Israel.
When
they arrived, they began the process of rebuilding their Temple.
The
work stopped after just a short time because of opposition from
the
Samaritans. For 16 years the Temple remained unfinished. Then,
God
raised up the prophet Haggai to call the people back to their
task of
rebuilding the Temple.
The
people responded to the voice of God's man, and they began to
build
again. But after only a month, they became discouraged and again
they
wanted to quit. They were disappointed by the Temple they were
building and they were discouraged in the work they were doing.
Haggai
writes to them to challenge them and to encourage them to carry
on.
That is a message I think we could all use today.
Do
you ever get discouraged? Do you ever find yourself disappointed
in
your work for the Lord? We all do! There are times when
disappointment looms over us like an impossibly high, impassable
mountain. If we are not careful, our disappointments can derail
our
lives and cause us to lose faith and focus. If we are not
careful,
our disappointments can even cause us to quit on the Lord.
Sermon
I
want to take just a few moments to look into the words Haggai
shared
with Israel during their time of discouragement and
disappointment.
The lessons taught
here
can help us when we are overwhelmed by disappointment and want
to
quit. I want to talk to you about Overcoming
The
Mountain Of Disappointment.
I. THE CAUSES OF
DISAPPOINTMENT
(Ill.
The reasons for their disappointment are many, and most of them
revolve around a bad memory. Memory can be a blessing or a
curse. The
Jews were guilty of focusing on the negative, and forgetting all
about the positive. For these Jews memory was a heavy burden
that
hindered their progress.)
A. v. 3a The
Things
We Remember – Haggai asked the question, “Who
is left among you that saw this house in her first glory?”
Haggai prophesied in 520 BC. The Temple was
destroyed
in 586 BC. Thus, it had been 66 years since Solomon's Temple had
been
destroyed. Certainly, there were some people among the Jews who
had
seen the first Temple, the one built by Solomon. They remembered
its
glory, it's gold covered walls, said to have contained over
USD 200,000,000.00 worth of gold, its splendor, its size, and its
breathtaking beauty. They recalled the glory days, when the
Shekinah
glory of God filled the temple and the house of God reverberated
with
his praises.
The
same people looked at the Temple they were building now, and it
seemed to be an embarrassment to them. It seemed so small and so
shabby compared to the wonderful Temple that was destroyed by
Nebuchadnezzar. This scene is described in Ezra
3:9-13. These people looked back, and they
remembered
the past. Remembering the past is not always a bad thing, but
they
chose to live in the past, and that is never good! All they
could
consider with how things used to be, and they had no interest in
how
things were now.
I
have been saved and in the church for nearly 8 years. I am the
first
to admit that the church of 2011 is not the same at the church
of 2004. Many things have changed in the last 8 years. Some of you
have
been around a not longer than I have, and you have truly seen
many
changes in the church. Sometime, we are so tied to the past that
we
have no interest in the future. We just want things we way they
used
to be and we have no interest in things as they are now.
Memory
is a good thing if you remember the right things. For these Jews
memory became a curse because they not only remembered the past,
they
chose to live there! When we hold so tenaciously to the past
that we
refuse to serve God in the present, we are remembering the wrong
things!
B. v. 4-5 The
Things
We Forget – In this verses God reminds them
that He was with them in the past. He was there when they
crossed the
Red Sea. He was the Author of all the great miracles that
adorned
Israel's past. He had always been with them. He was there during
the
glory days of Solomon's Temple. He had always been there. And,
He
still remembered the promises and covenants He had made with
them 900
years earlier! He was standing by every promise He had ever made
to
His people.
They
had heard the stories about God. The problem was, the stories
from
their past had become just that, stories. They had ceased to
hold any
real meaning for the Jews. They were sure that the glory days of
the
past, and the God Who blessed them then, were gone!
Then,
God tells them that He is still there! He says, “My
Spirit remaineth among you.” God said, “I
am still here, just like I have always been!”
Think
about what the Lord is telling them. He is saying, “Abraham
is gone. Moses is gone. David is gone. Solomon is gone.
The first
Temple is gone. But, I am still here! Fear not!”
You
see, they looked at the Temple built by Solomon and they
remembered
its grandeur and majesty. They looked at the Temple they were
building and were discouraged by the differences. What they
could not
see was that God did not see a difference. He was not concerned
about
the external glory of the house. As far as He was concerned,
this
house was as much His house as the first house had been. He was
just
as prepared to dwell there, meet with His people there, and
bless
there as He had been in the first Temple. It wasn't about what
they
used to have, it was, and always had been, about the God Who
dwelled
in the Temple!
He
is telling them to forget about the past. Forget about who isn't
here. Forget about the things you don't have any longer. Those
things
are gone and they are gone forever! In spite of that, God is
here! He
has never left. His power is still the same. Therefore, keep
working!
Don't look back to the past. Don't worry about who isn't here,
focus
on Who is. Don't be intimidated by daunting circumstances, the
Lord
has never left us, and He never will, Heb.
13:5.
That
is a lesson they needed to hear, and it is a lesson we need to
hear
too. Far too often we get caught up in the same trap. We look at
how
things used to be, forgetting that the God of yesterday is still
here
and still able to bless. Our duty is to forget the past and
reach
forth into the future, Phil. 3:13.
This work is His work! He stands just as ready to bless today as
He
did years ago. He will not leave us, nor will He forsake us. He
will
meet with us, dwell among us and bless us for His glory. Our
primary
concern is that we remember what life is really about! It is
about
Him and His glory. As long as we keep our eyes fixed in His
direction, we will be fine, Heb.
12:1-2.
C. v. 3b The
Comparisons
We Make – God asks the people this
question: “and how do you see it
now?
Is it not in your eyes in comparison of it as nothing?”
The old people wept when they saw the new temple and as they
remembered the old one. In their eyes, the new Temple was less
than
nothing. It seemed that it was not worth their time, or their
energy.
They hated it and they wanted nothing to do with it.
If
we are not careful, we too will get caught up in the comparison
game.
When we do, it can be easy to get disappointed. We compare our
husbands, our wives and our children. We compare the way things
are
with the way they used to be. We compare what we have now with
what
we used to have. We compare the church with how we remember it
being.
We remember the past as being better
than
it was so the present seems worse than it is.
Ill.
In the 1930's one of the most famous race horses in America was
a
horse named Seabiscuit. Seabiscuit was an incredibly fast horse.
One
the right kind of track, he was almost uncatchable. When he was
training, his trainers had to be careful to properly choose the
other
horses he trained with. Some of the horses lost to Seabiscuit so
often that they refused to run. Seabiscuit would toy with other
horses, allowing them to come neck and neck with him, then he
would
unleash his speed and leave them in his dust. His training
partners
knew they were going to lose, and they refused to let Seabiscuit
beat
them again. Losing to such a fast horse, so often, caused those
horses to become discouraged and quit. The same thing can happen
to
us! Comparisons are always foolish, but they can be especially
harmful when we are constantly disappointed with the outcome of
our
comparisons, and we will be!
It
is foolish to play the comparison game because only God is
qualified
to make proper comparisons. Remember the story of Jesus and
Peter
from John 21? Three
times
Jesus asked Peter, “Do you love Me?”
Three times Peter responds in the affirmative. Then Jesus tells
Peter
to feed His sheep, and he even tells Peter something about how
he
will die. Then Peter looks at John and says, “What
about him?” (John
21:20-21) The Lord's responds by telling
Peter what
happens with John is none of his business, John
21:22.
This
just reminds us that God is not obligated to treat us like He
treats
others. He is not required to bless us, use us or anything else.
He
is certainly not obligated to do for us today what He did on the
past. He has the right to do as He pleases with us, and we are
foolish to make any comparisons. If we do, it will only lead to
disappointment!
When
we live in the past and downgrade the present, the
inevitable result
will be disappointment and discouragement.
We will
miss God's promises and plans for today and for tomorrow. We
will be
so trapped in what we feel and believe, that we will forget that
God
has some big things planned for the future, Ill. v.
9. If we are not careful, we might just
fail to see
that the greatest days of our lives, the greatest days of our
church,
the greatest days of our ministry, might be the days in front of
us,
not the days behind us!
If
we are not careful, we can become a source of discouragement for
others. Can't you hear some of the older folks in that days as
they
talked about the glories of Solomon's Temple and belittled the
humble
Temple that was rising from the ground before them? If we are
not
careful we can be so against everything that is new and
different,
that we end up discouraging others in their walk with God. We
can
kill their enthusiasm for the work of the Lord by being negative
towards anything that isn't the same as it was 50 years ago!
I. The Causes Of
Disappointment
II. THE CURE FOR
DISAPPOINTMENT
(Ill.
When we find ourselves looking at that high mountain of
disappointment, how do we get over it? This passage offers a
couple
of simple steps we can take to conquer disappointment in our
lives.)
A. We
Must
Let Go – The Jews had to let go of their
memories of the first Temple, v.
3-4.
This Temple would never be as grand as as the first, and they
had to
accept that. The past had to be relegated to the past, if they
were
going to accomplish anything in the present.
In
the spiritual sense, this is a truth we need to hear. It may be
that
you need to let go of some painful memory from the past. It may
mean
that you need to forgive someone even thought they won't admit
they
have done anything wrong. It may be that you need to let go of
some
dream that is always pulling you in the wrong direction.
Regardless
of what it is, if it is holding you back, you need to let it go!
Let
it go! (Ill. Give examples!)
As
hard as it may be for you, you must let go of the past. Until
you do,
you will never be able to move into the future!
Dr.
Park Tucker, former chaplain of the federal penitentiary in
Atlanta,
Georgia, told of walking down the street in a certain city,
feeling
low and depressed and worried about life in general. As he
walked
along, he lifted his eyes for a moment to the window of a
funeral
home across the street. He blinked his eyes a couple of times,
wondering whether his eyes were deceiving him. But sure enough,
he
saw in the window of that funeral home was this sign, in large,
bold
words: “Why walk around half-dead?
We
can bury you for $69.50. P.S. We also give green stamps.”
Dr. Tucker said the humor of it was good medicine for his soul.
Many
people are walking around half-dead because their circumstances
have
built a mountain of disappointment and discouragement over which
there is no path, and they have given up.iii
B. We
Must
Look Up - The people are called to look up,
v.
4. They are called to turn their eyes away
from their
pain, their problems and their disappointments to view the God
Who
was greater than anything they faced. Six times in these verses
God
is called “the LORD of hosts”.
The
word “hosts”
translates the word “sabaoth”.
It
speaks of “the armies of earth and
Heaven”. It literally means “the
Lord Almighty”. It is a military name for
God. This
name reminds us that God is greater than all the combined forces
of
Heaven and earth. No one can stand against Him. No one can
defeat His
purposes. No one can hinder Him in the least. As God says
several
times in Isaiah 45,
“I
am the LORD and there is none else!”
The
same God Who stood with David in the Valley of Elah when he
faced
mighty Goliath is the same God Who stands with you in all your
battles. (Ill. 1 Sam. 17:45-47)
When your God is big, your battles
will
be small! David's God was so big that even
Goliath
seemed small. To the Jews in Haggai's day God seemed small so
their
task appeared to be overwhelming. In the same way, your view of
God
radically affects how you approach life. Take a good look at the
God
you worship. Is He big enough to handle the challenges you face?
If
He isn't, you need to look up and get a new view of God. He is
the
LORD of Host! He is the LORD Almighty!
C. We
Must
Look Ahead – God
only
sends His people in one direction: forward.
He
never sends them back to the past. The Jews in Haggai's day had
romanticized the past and completely forgotten the future. What
was
that future?
1. v. 6-7 God
Would
Shake All Nations – This passage is quoted in Heb.
12:26-27 and there it is linked to the
coming of the
Messiah. Taken together it tells us that God shook the earth
when He
gave His Law and He will shake it again when the Messiah comes.
One
day, this world with its false religions, it dead works and it
ever
increasing iniquity will be shaken to pieces and it will fall at
the
feet of the Messiah! Right now, the world is in turmoil. This
has
been the way of the world for thousands of years. The Persians
toppled the Babylonians. The Greeks defeated the Persians. The
Romans
conquered the Greeks, and so on. The nations are in a constant
state
of agitation. The day will come when the Lord will shake this
world
system to its foundation! He will topple every king and earthly
power
and He will rule this world world that mocks and rejects Him
today!
What
will be left in that day? The things that cannot be shaken! Ill.
Heb.
12:28! His Kingdom will stand. The things
of the
Spirit will stand. The truth of the Word of God will stand. Your
soul
will stand! That is a future worth looking to!
2. v. 7 The
Desire
Of All Nations Will Come – This is a reference to
the Lord Jesus. It is just a reminder to the beleaguered,
discouraged
and dispirited people of God that Jesus is coming again! He will
take
us to be with Him in glory, John
14:1-3;
1 Thes. 4:16-18. He will set things right
in the
world! That is a future worth looking to!
3. v. 7, 9 The
Latter Glory Will Be Greater Than The Former Glory
– How could this be possible? Hope could this puny, pathetic
building ever possess a greater glory than the Temple build by
Solomon? God knew what these discouraged workers did not know.
He
knew that 500 years later, His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, the
very
glory of Heaven itself, would walk the very grounds upon which
they
worked. They did not know it, but they were building the Temple
that
would greet Jesus one day! This is just a reminder that we never
know
what we are doing and how God will use our efforts for His glory
in
the future.
My
friends, keep your hands on the plow and keep going for the
Lord! You
never know how the Lord will use you and your efforts.
Ill. Consider the discouragement
of
a young missionary named David Brainerd. In the 1700s David
Brainerd
felt called to bring the message of Christ to the native
Americans.
Brainerd faced constant discouragement, as he tried to share
Christ’s
love with the native Americans. You, see they’d seen too much
American greed and abuse to believe Brainerd’s message of grace.
Brainerd wrote in his journal, “My
heart sunk. It seemed to me that I’d never have any
success among
the Indians. My soul was weary of my life. I longed for
death.”
For two years nothing happened, as he constantly battled one
discouragement after another. Finally three and half years into
his
work he saw about 150 native Americans come to faith in Christ.
Not
much by today’s mass evangelism standards, but a real start.
Unfortunately, David Brainerd died a year later at the age of
29, and
his work seemed to stop completely.
But that’s not the end of the
story. Someone published the journals David Brainerd kept during
those times of discouragement. Those journals fell into the
hands of
a guy named William Carey. William Carey is widely known as the
father of modern missions, because he ignited the modern
missionary
movement that continues to this day. Carey’s efforts and
inspiration have been the impetus for literally millions and
millions
of people coming to faith in Christ. When someone asked William
Carey
what inspired him to devote his life to missions, he pointed to
the
journals of David Brainerd. God used David Brainerd beyond every
limit.
D. We
Must
Get To Work – In verse
4, God tells the people to “be
strong” and “to
work”.
We like to sit around and “stew in
our
juices.” When we get discouraged and
disappointed,
there is a tendency for us to want to quit on God. God says, “Get
up and get to work! Don't let anyone side track you,
derail you, or
stop you.” We all find ourselves
discouraged and
disappointed from time to time, but we should never allow that
to
distract us from the work God has given us to do. In fact, our
marching orders are found in Rom.
13:11-14.
Invitation and Challenge
Is there a mountain of disappointment looming in front of you?
Do you
find yourself looking back more often than you find yourself
looking
ahead? Do you ever find yourself making fruitless and foolish
comparisons? Do you ever find yourself asking, “What's
the use?” How will you get past that
mountain that
threatens to stop you?
Do
what these verses teach and “Let go,
Look up, Look Ahead, and Get to Work”. If
you can do
that, and God will help you, you will see mountain of
discouragement
and disappointment evaporate into nothing.
Someone
once said, “Disappointment to a
noble
soul is what cold water is to burning metal; it
strengthens, tempers,
intensifies, but never destroys it.” What
will you
do with your disappointments? Will you allow them to stop you.
Or,
will you allow God to use them to strengthen, temper and
intensify
your life?
Do
you need help? Come and get it!
Do
you need to be saved? Come to Jesus!
Do
you need to be encouraged? Come talk to Him about!
Foot notes
i The Abiding of the Spirit the Glory of the Church, September 5, 1886ii Swindoll, C. R. (2000, c1998). The tale of the tardy oxcart and 1501 other stories (electronic ed.). Logos Library System; Swindoll leadership library. Nashville: Word Publishers.
iii
Tan, P. L. (1996, c1979). Encyclopedia of 7700 illustrations
: A treasury of illustrations, anecdotes, facts and
quotations for pastors, teachers and Christian workers.
Garland TX: Bible Communications.
--
The Rev. Lenin Kumar
The Potter's Home International
The Christian Living
www.pottershomeinternational. in

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