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From Empty Jars to Overflowing Joy

February 18, 2026
00:00

At a wedding with no wine and hearts running on empty, Jesus steps in. Pastor Jeff Schreve shows how the first miracle at Cana reveals a Savior who cares about your everyday problems, fills emptiness to the brim, and turns shame into joy when we do what He says.

References: John 2:1-11

Dr. Jeff Schreve: There are lots of folks that feel so empty inside: empty in their marriage, empty in their job, empty in relationships, empty in their bank account. They just feel empty. You go to church, and you hope that something's going to happen that can somehow fill you up.

The sad truth is many people come to church Sunday after Sunday, come in empty, and leave empty. Is there an answer to emptiness, to our emptiness? Yes, there is an answer to your emptiness, to my emptiness, and the answer is Jesus because it's all about Jesus.

Guest (Male): Hello, and welcome to From His Heart with Pastor Jeff Schreve, who today will begin to explore the answer to filling up an empty life. If you're feeling empty, today's message is for you. It's from Pastor Jeff's series, It's All about Jesus.

The Bible teaches us that all the things under the sun that we will often busy ourselves are often in vain and meaningless. God created all of us to realize that we were created by Him and for Him and should seek to know Him and His purpose for our lives.

That's why when we make Jesus the center of all we do, we'll learn our real purpose for life, and the emptiness in life will be gone. Today, the lesson is rightfully called The Answer to an Empty Life from Pastor Jeff's series, It's All about Jesus. Let's get started. Open your Bible to the Gospel of John, chapter two. Here again is Pastor Jeff.

Dr. Jeff Schreve: Solomon is a guy who tried to find satisfaction, but the truth is, Solomon wasn't happy. He was miserable inside. He wrote in the book of Ecclesiastes, a weird kind of book, a book that uses the phrase 29 times, "under the sun." Solomon is a guy who tried to find satisfaction under the sun.

If I keep God out, if I keep heaven out, and I try all these things—wine and women and work and song—all these things that the world says if you have that, you'll be happy, then that's what I'm going to do. Solomon said that is what I'm going to find is happiness. He did it all, and he didn't find any happiness at all.

As a matter of fact, he said this: "But as I looked at everything I had worked so hard to accomplish, it was all so meaningless, like chasing the wind. There was nothing really worthwhile anywhere." Solomon is famous for saying these words: "Vanity of vanities, says the preacher. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity." It's all meaningless. It's all futile. It's all empty.

Did you know that there are a lot of people that can relate to Solomon? Not in terms of what he had, but in terms of feeling empty. I would dare say that in our congregation today, there are lots of folks that feel so empty inside: empty in their marriage, empty in their job, empty in relationships, empty in their bank account. They just feel empty.

You go to church, and you hope that something's going to happen that can somehow fill you up. The sad truth is many people come to church Sunday after Sunday, come in empty, and leave empty. Is there an answer to emptiness, to our emptiness? Yes, there is an answer to your emptiness, to my emptiness, and the answer is Jesus.

Because it's all about Jesus. The Scripture says in Psalm 107, verse 9, "For He has satisfied the thirsty soul, and the hungry soul He has filled with what is good." He does that. We're in a series, and it's simply titled It's All about Jesus. Our series is from the book of John. John starts off by telling you it's all about Jesus.

Jesus is God. In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth. Then, in John chapter two, John begins with a series of miracles.

He records seven miracles in the public ministry of Jesus. In this series, we're going to look at those miracles in the book of John, and we'll start with the first miracle. It's the first miracle Jesus ever performed. It was a miracle at a wedding in Cana of Galilee: the miracle of turning water into wine.

John chapter two, I'll begin reading in verse one. "And on the third day, there was a wedding in Cana of Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there. And Jesus also was invited, and His disciples to the wedding. And when the wine gave out, the mother of Jesus said to Him, 'They have no wine.'"

"And Jesus said to her, 'Woman, what do I have to do with you? My hour has not yet come.' His mother said to the servants, 'Whatever He says to you, do it.' Now, there were six stone waterpots set there for the Jewish custom of purification, containing 20 or 30 gallons each."

"Jesus said to them, 'Fill the waterpots with water,' and they filled them to the brim. And He said to them, 'Draw some out now and take it to the headwaiter,' and they took it to him. And when the headwaiter tasted the water which had become wine and did not know where it came from, but the servants who had drawn the water knew, the headwaiter called the bridegroom and said to him,"

"'Every man serves the good wine first, and when men have drunk freely, then that which is poorer. You have kept the good wine until now.' This beginning of His signs Jesus did in Cana of Galilee and manifested His glory, and His disciples believed in Him."

This is such a great story, the very first miracle that Jesus ever performed. Sometimes you'll hear people say, and they'll quote from apocryphal books, how when Jesus was a little boy, he was playing one day and making little clay pigeons, and then he just said, "Shoo," and they all became pigeons and they flew off.

People say Jesus did all that kind of stuff, he did all these little miracles when he was a little kid. No, he didn't. This was the first of his miracles. The very first miracle Jesus ever performed, he was 30 years old and he was beginning his public ministry. He was calling disciples to himself, and he chooses this place, Cana of Galilee, to do his first miracle.

As you read about it, one of the things that jumps out at you is there's emptiness here. There's no wine. The wine bottles are empty. There are some waterpots that will hold 20 or 30 gallons, but they're empty. So there are empty wine bottles, there are empty wine glasses, there are empty stone waterpots, and Jesus is the answer to the emptiness.

If you're empty today, this message is especially for you, so I want you to listen extra close. Three encouragements from this passage that will help you in your emptiness. Encouragement number one: Jesus cares about your emptiness. He really cares.

The background of this story is there's a wedding, and Mary is invited, Jesus' mother. The wedding is in Cana of Galilee. Cana, according to the map I looked at, is only about two or three miles from Nazareth. Jesus grew up in Nazareth. His family was from Nazareth. Nazareth wasn't a hotspot. It wasn't a great place to come from.

Remember they said of Jesus, "Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?" Nazareth was on the other side of the tracks. Cana is like a little suburb of Nazareth, and that's where this wedding is. Mary is invited to the wedding. The couple that are getting married, the Bible doesn't tell us their names, but most Bible commentators say this was either a friend of the family of Jesus or even a relative of Mary's.

Mary is invited and Jesus is invited and his disciples, the guys that he just called to himself in chapter one. They weren't all together, not all 12 yet, but he had some of the guys, and they're all invited to the wedding too. So it's probably a close friend or even a family member of Mary.

They go to this wedding. Weddings were big deals back then. It was the event of the times. If you wanted to have a big party, it was always associated with a wedding. People would go to a wedding feast; they would go for a week. They would leave the farm and say, "So-and-so is getting married, we're coming to the celebration," and they would celebrate for a week.

One of the things that they had at the wedding, that was a staple item at the wedding, was wine. It was a big deal if you ran out of wine. That was a social faux pas; you didn't do that. That's like going to lunch today at Tamolly's, and you sit down there and they say, "I'm sorry to tell you but we don't have chips and salsa. We ran out."

How do you run out? You're a Mexican restaurant! You did not want to run out of wine at a wedding. Remember this: wine in the New Testament is very different from wine today. They didn't have a purification system in New Testament times. So if you just drank water, you would often get sick because the water wasn't purified.

If you were just drawing it out of a spring or out of a well and you were just drinking water, oftentimes you would get sick. Paul told Timothy, "Stop drinking water exclusively; drink some wine for your stomach's sake" because Timothy was having constant dysentery because the water was like the water in different places.

When I would go to Mexico, that was one of the things I learned in Spanish, to ask all the waiters, "Agua es purificada?" Is the water purified? Then a friend of mine told me, "After you ask that question, then you ask this question: 'Seguro?'" I said, "What is seguro?" He said, "Are you certain?"

You want to make certain because you normally ask the guys, "Agua es purificada? Seguro?" Seguro was important because you didn't want to drink the water if it wasn't purified because you were going to get sick and it was going to ruin your trip. Back in New Testament times, they would drink wine and they would take wine and they would mix it with water.

In some instances, Homer talks about how they would take 20 parts water and one part wine and they would mix that together. The wine acted as a disinfectant. In the first century, Pliny, who wrote history in the first century, he said the common practice was eight parts water to one part wine.

Some of my studies said most Jews would do three parts water to one part wine, and they would mix that together. They never drank fermented grape juice straight; that was considered barbaric. You would always mix it. We get the idea that Jesus is making wine, they're drinking wine, everyone's having wine. If you have wine for seven days, you're just sloshed, right?

But that's not the way it was. The alcoholic content back then required you to drink a ton of that stuff. Some guy did a little study, and he said to be the equivalent of two martinis, you would have to drink 22 glasses of their wine. 22 glasses! That's a lot, right? You'd be running for the bathroom like crazy if you said, "I'm going to keep drinking this stuff."

It's very different. People say, "Is it okay to drink wine? Jeff, do you drink wine?" No. "Jeff, do you drink beer?" No. "Jeff, do you drink hard liquor?" No. I don't drink at all. Culturally, if I lived back then, I would have drunk the wine, and so would you have and so did everyone, and it wasn't considered something that was like, "Oh, we're not supposed to do that."

It wasn't like that. They didn't have much else to drink. I believe if Jesus were walking the earth today in his public ministry today in the United States of America, I don't think he'd touch wine. I don't think he'd touch beer. I don't think he'd touch alcohol at all because it wrecks and ruins a person's witness.

If you want your life to count all it can count for Christ, stay away from that stuff. If you want your marriage to be all that God wants it to be, stay away from that stuff. Have you ever talked to couples who have introduced wine and beer and alcohol into their home, and then one of the parties becomes an alcoholic, and you see how fun alcohol is for them? It's horrible. It's destructive.

Guest (Male): Of course, there is much more to avoiding an empty life, and Pastor Jeff will continue the lesson called The Answer to an Empty Life in just a moment. But first, he has a favor and an offer.

Dr. Jeff Schreve: The devil is working hard to deceive people with his lies. Surely you've noticed it happening in your family, friends, neighbors, workmates, classmates, and associates. So what are we going to do? What can you do? I've authored a new book that will help focus your attention on exactly how the devil distorts truth and how he can destroy your family and our nation.

The new book is called The Devil's Newsroom: Muting Satan's Fake News and Tuning In to God's Truth. In this book, I pull back the curtain on the enemy's deceptions, exposing his subtle lies, his blatant lies, and his twisted lies. I'd love to send you a copy of The Devil's Newsroom to say thanks for supporting From His Heart Ministries this month with your timely gift.

When you read it, you'll discover the truth that sets you free, the hope that anchors your soul, and the victory Jesus has already won. God bless you for helping us expose the lies of the enemy. Here is how to get your copy of this new book.

Guest (Male): To get your copy of The Devil's Newsroom: Muting Satan's Fake News and Tuning In to God's Truth, make your gift when you call 866-40-BIBLE, 866-402-4253, or go online to fromhisheart.org. God bless you for joining with us to share the good news of Jesus to a lost and a hurting world. Now, back to Pastor Jeff to conclude part one of this lesson entitled The Answer to an Empty Life.

Dr. Jeff Schreve: I talked to an alcoholic one day, and he told me, "Jeff, I wish I had never taken my first drink. It's ruined my life." In this situation, they had wine and they ran out of wine, and it was, "Uh-oh, we don't have any chips and salsa at Tamolly's," and this was going to be really embarrassing.

You know what is interesting? This is the very first miracle, and the miracle is turning water to wine. Is that life and death? Is that the same thing as healing a nobleman's son? Is that the same thing as raising Lazarus from the dead? Is that the same thing as healing the blind man? Is it really that big a deal if you run out of wine? It was to that couple.

It's not a big deal in the big scheme of things, but it was a big deal to that couple. You know what that tells me? It tells me Jesus cares. Your problems are not insignificant to Jesus. They're not. You might tell your problem to somebody else, and they'll say, "That's an insignificant problem." It's not insignificant to you, and it's not insignificant to Jesus.

Have you ever heard people talk about minor surgery? You know what minor surgery is? It's surgery that happens to someone else. If you have surgery, it's not minor surgery; it's me going under the knife. That's a major thing, fast and pray! That's the kind of deal because we don't have little problems. They may seem little, but when they're our problems, they're big problems.

When you're that couple, when you're that family, and you're getting ready to have no more wine and people are going to be talking about you in the little community of Cana and out in Nazareth, like, "They threw a wedding party, and it was really a bust. They ran out of wine. That's just terrible." The Lord knew it, and the Lord cared about that.

Here he is at an unnamed family's wedding in a boondock town called Cana next to the other town called Nazareth that's on the other side of the tracks. He came to that wedding and he did his first miracle there, and he cared about that problem. What problem do you have today? What emptiness do you have today? Jesus cares.

He cares about that problem in your marriage. He cares if you're here today and you say, "I wish I had a marriage to have a problem in. I wish there were someone on the radar, and I'm nervous about things passing me by and my biological clock is ticking like crazy and there's nobody on the horizon and I just feel so empty inside."

The Lord knows, and the Lord cares. He cares about that business problem you have. He cares about that physical problem you have. Your problems are not insignificant to Jesus. First Peter, chapter five, verse seven: "It matters to Him concerning you. Cast your cares upon Him because He cares for you."

Now, what do you do with your problems? You do exactly what Mary did. Verse three: "And when the wine gave out, the mother of Jesus said to Him, 'They have no wine.'" Jesus, here's the situation. These friends of mine, these relatives of mine, if they were relatives, they have no wine. This is bad news. Tamolly's has run out of chips. Lord, what are we going to do?

Jesus, what are we going to do? They have no wine. That's a good formula for what you do with your problems: you take them to Jesus. You tell Jesus about your problems. His response in verse four is really kind of weird. We read it, and we just think that just seems weird. "And Jesus said to her, 'Woman.'"

Right there: "Woman." It's like, wow, that's kind of abrupt. She's your mother, and you're calling her "Woman." We read that just right off the bat, and we bristle up a little bit. Why would you call her "Woman"? Back then, that wasn't like that. If you ask me a question and I say, "Woman," I don't do that with Debbie; she'd be liable to hit me.

But that wasn't like that back then. What that translation into today's terms would be is "Sweet lady." "Sweet lady." He doesn't call her mother because he's starting his public ministry, and he's no longer her son. He's God's son. It's not the same kind of relationship. He's breaking that tie. Jesus didn't need her; she needed him to be her savior and redeemer.

"Woman, what do I have to do with you? My hour has not yet come." "What do I have to do with you?" That just seems weird. Why did you say that? I don't understand that, Jesus. Well, that was an idiom of the day, and so it's hard to translate. Here are some different translations of that: "Woman, why do you involve me?" says the NIV.

"Woman, that's not our problem." "What has this concern of yours to do with me?" "Why are you coming to me with this? My hour has not yet come." I'm on the Father's timetable, so why are you involving me in this? Now, we read that, and we say, "Okay, he's getting ready to do a big miracle."

But based on verse four, it doesn't sound like he's going to do a miracle, does it? "Woman, what do I have to do with you? My hour has not yet come." It sounds like Jesus is saying, "Forget it." He's not saying forget it, but what he is doing in the need, he's putting up a little obstacle.

His response is a little bit of a test. It's an obstacle. Remember this: in your difficulties and in your problems and you're praying about it, God's initial response is often a test. It's a test. It's, "Woman, what do I have to do with you? My hour has not yet come." It's not that Jesus doesn't care.

What he wants to do is test you to see if you really care about this. Are you going to keep pressing on this issue? Don't give up in your prayers. Men ought always to pray and not to quit. Luke chapter 18, verse one. Some of you are here, and you know what you've done? You've thrown in the towel on your marriage.

You've thrown in the towel on your son or your daughter. Some of you kids who are praying for your mom or dad to be saved, you've thrown in the towel and said, "Well, they're never going to come to Christ. God is not answering my prayer." You've thrown in the towel that things are ever going to get better in your situation in life.

Pick the towel back up. It's always too early to quit. God's initial response that seems like a "no" is a test. The Lord cares. Jeremiah 29:13 says, "And you'll seek Me and find Me when you search for Me with all your heart."

Guest (Male): You're listening to From His Heart with Pastor Jeff Schreve. As we've learned, it's always too early to quit when you're waiting on an answer from God. That's only the first of three real encouragements we'll hear in this message from Pastor Jeff called The Answer to an Empty Life. We'll have the remaining two tomorrow on From His Heart.

From His Heart is here each day to help people with empty hearts get filled with the Holy Spirit and live lives that glorify God in everything. We do that by preparing and distributing these messages on radio and television and online. That only happens as people support this ministry from which Pastor Jeff receives no income at all.

When you give this month, we'll say thanks for helping us by sending you Pastor Jeff's new and incredibly timely book, The Devil's Newsroom: Muting Satan's Fake News and Tuning In to God's Truth. Just make your gift this month to From His Heart of any amount, and we'll send you the book.

Call 866-40-BIBLE, 866-402-4253, or go online to fromhisheart.org. God bless you for joining with us to share the good news of Jesus to a lost and a hurting world. Now, back to Pastor Jeff to conclude part one of this lesson entitled The Answer to an Empty Life.

I'm Larry Nobles, inviting you to join us tomorrow on From His Heart when Pastor Jeff will continue to explore the glorious truth from Scripture that Jesus is the answer to an empty life. Join Pastor Jeff Schreve on Thursday as he speaks truth, love, and hope to a lost and a hurting world and reminds us that God loves us so much and has a wonderful plan for our lives. Find out more at fromhisheart.org.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

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Elijah is known as the prophet of fire. He was bold and strong as he stood alone for the Lord. What can we learn from his life and ministry? In this powerful series, Pastor Jeff Schreve shares insights from the life of Elijah that will encourage you in your faith and witness for Jesus Christ.

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About From His Heart

From His Heart Ministries is the TV, Radio and Internet broadcast outreach of Dr. Jeff Schreve who believes that no matter how badly you have messed up in life, God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life. We’re on mission to help a new generation discover their creator through the preaching of the compassionate, relevant, yet uncompromised truth of the Gospel. Pastor Jeff speaks the truth in love with clear biblical content combined with engaging, personal stories. His messages are filled with life-giving principles for everyday living and eternal assurance.


On Television: From His Heart is seen each week on Lightsource and also around the world on The Hillsong Channel, NRBTV, The Walk TV, and hundreds of TV stations across America and around the world. Go to Click Here to find the station near you.


On Radio:Click Here to listen to the daily radio broadcast available on OnePlace.com as well as 720+ outlets across America.

About Dr. Jeff Schreve

Jeff's life has been radically changed by Jesus Christ.
Growing up in a church-going home, Jeff learned a lot about God, but he did not know God. He believed in Jesus in the same way he believed in George Washington: he knew Jesus was real, but had not personally met Him. All this changed one night after a Young Life meeting when he was alone in his bedroom. There Jeff saw his need for Christ and His forgiveness and surrendered his life to Jesus.

As a student at the University of Texas, Jeff grew in his Christian life. He graduated with a degree in business and moved back home to Houston, Texas to start a career in business. There he met his future wife, Debbie, at a single's group meeting at Champion Forest Baptist Church. They were married in 1986 and have been blessed with a wonderful relationship and three awesome daughters and two beautiful grandchildren.

A New Direction
After spending 13 years as a chemical salesman, God called Dr. Schreve to preach. He left his secure position and moved his family to North Carolina to attend Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. It was a scary and difficult move to make ... but it was one of the best decisions they have ever made. One year later, God called them to serve on staff at Champion Forest Baptist Church. In 2000, he completed his Master of Divinity degree graduating from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. He graduated with a Doctor of Ministry degree in 2014 from Southeastern Seminary.

Jeff Schreve has been the senior Pastor of First Baptist Texarkana in 2003, a growing and exciting church with 4500+ members.

Contact From His Heart with Dr. Jeff Schreve

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Texarkana, TX 75505
 
 

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