Boxing with God
When we are in days of doubt, it’s often because we lack patience. Enduring faith often begins with waiting and learning that to wait on God is to trust God. Join us for today’s PowerPoint as Pastor Jack Graham brings a message of encouragement for the times we struggle with uncertainty.
Jack Graham: Now, if you are alive, you will deal with doubt. We must all pass through this doorway of doubt. Faith will be tested.
Guest (Female): On today's PowerPoint, Dr. Graham brings a message about how God can help you move from doubt to confidence. Now, here's Dr. Graham with his message, Boxing with God.
Jack Graham: Take God's word and turn with me, please, to the book of Habakkuk. Habakkuk was a prophet of God who lived 2,600 years ago. He faced doubts and fears, but ultimately he overcame and discovered authentic and abounding faith. He was a man who knew how to super conquer.
And yet, there was a time in his life when he faced struggles and trials and difficulties. His name means "the one who embraces" or "one who is wrestling with God." Now, if we are going to take these steps of faith and to win, we have to take several steps through and the first step is what I'm going to call the doorway of doubt. And that's in Chapter 1, verses 1 through 3.
The prophet says, "O Lord, how long shall I cry, and you will not hear? Even cry out to you, 'Violence!' and you will not save. Why do you show me iniquity and cause me to see trouble? For plundering and violence are before me; and there is strife and contention arises. Therefore the law is powerless and justice never goes forth; for the wicked surround the righteous; therefore perverse judgment proceeds."
Habakkuk is wrestling with God. He's sparring with the Almighty. He speaks of his burden, for he is fighting for his faith. And when we first meet him in this passage, he is angry and argumentative and anxious. And he's asking God in Chapter 1, "Why, O God?" Three times he questions God: why, why, why? And, "Lord, how long?"
Now, what's the problem here? He is disillusioned because he cannot understand why God will not destroy the wicked. He's upset and angry with God because he was living in a terrible time of moral decay and spiritual decay. And he's asking, "God, how can you allow this evil to exist?" He realizes his life is not making sense. Nothing seems to be making sense. It's just not computing.
He could not believe that God was allowing these injustices to exist. And so, when we're introduced to this Old Testament prophet, he is a perplexed prophet, somewhat pouting, and he is the doubting disciple of the Old Testament. Now, perhaps you can identify with Habakkuk, because I'm speaking to many today who are grappling with God and you are questioning and fighting for your faith.
Maybe you're questioning the ways of God and even the will of God in your life and you're wondering and you're asking questions like these: "God, if you are God and if you are good, and Lord, if you love me, why are these things happening to me? Why am I facing suffering? Why am I dealing with evil in my life or the effects of evil?" And there seems to be no answer. And when that happens for some people, doubts like a fog begin to settle in, chilling our faith.
Now, if you are alive, you will deal with doubt. You show me a believer who says I've never doubted or I've never asked sincere questions and I will show you a person who is shallow and superficial in their faith. The fact is, we must all pass through this doorway of doubt. Faith will be tested. It will be challenged. We will deal with the fiery darts of the enemy.
So if you find yourself with questions and dealing with doubt, maybe you're even in the dungeon of doubt, please remember that you're in good company. Not only this prophet, along with other prophets of God, the psalmist, but you just simply read the biographies of Christians who have greatly influenced the world. And almost without exception, these great men and women of faith have dealt with trouble and tests to their faith and challenges to all that they believe, questions about God and about life.
Jesus said that John the Baptist was the greatest man born of woman who ever lived. It was John the Baptist who introduced Jesus to the world. He said, "Behold the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world." And yet, there came a time in John's life that he was imprisoned for his preaching, the preaching of repentance.
And because John was the kind of man who called sin by its first name and preached repentance to even the king, and he was thrown into jail, he was in the dungeon of doubt. And he became so afraid and confused that he sent word to Jesus asking, "Lord, are you the one who was promised? Jesus, are you truly the Messiah, or should we expect another?"
Even John, in all of his greatness, in all of the powerful personality of his life, felt the smog, the fog of doubt. Perhaps you are feeling it as well. But you know, Habakkuk did the right thing. Rather than talking about God, running to someone else with the questions, he went straight to the source. He went straight to God. And that's what we need to do if we have questions, is to bring our doubts, our fears, our anxieties, our questions to Him.
Because it is when we go to Him with our doubts and our fears that we find faith. You see, this is why I'm calling it the doorway of doubt, because doubt is like a doorway. If you move through the door and move into faith, you will find that the muscles of faith are stretched and strengthened and you will go on from faith unto faith, and that's good.
But on the other hand, doubt is a doorway if you turn away and go the other direction, you will move into failure and faithlessness. The fact is that I've known people whose faith was weak, but because of challenges to their faith, a crisis of faith, their faith is now strong because it was tested and proven to be God, proven to be faithful and faith authentic and real.
I have known people who had religious faith, but because they were challenged with their religious faith, they now have real faith, faith in Jesus Christ, moving from the doorway of doubt, maybe putting aside childish faith and immature faith for growing and developing faith. I know this: that the fruit of the spirit ripens in the darkness, and the fruit of the spirit among the fruit of the spirit is that of faith.
You know, the test of faith, the problems of life, the questions of life teach us many things about our faith and about our lives. For one, it teaches us the content of our faith. It also teaches us the character of our commitment. What is our commitment to Christ? It teaches us the caliber of our maturity, where we are in our Christian growth and our Christian maturing.
The challenges and the problems and the pressures and the perplexities of life teach us the condition of our attitude and the capacity of our teachability, because it brings us to a place of absolute dependence and trust. Now, the question is, how does that happen? How do we move through the doorway of doubt and into faith? That's what happened to Habakkuk, for now we see the wisdom of waiting.
The wisdom of waiting. Look in Chapter 2 of this same book of Habakkuk, verses 1 through 3. And here we see the next step from doubt to faith. He said, "I will stand my watch and set myself on the rampart, and watch to see what he will say to me, and what I will answer when I am corrected." Now, here's what is happening.
The prophet says, "God, why don't you do something about this evil, about our enemies, about all this injustice, the murdering, the treachery? Why don't you do something?" And God said, "All right, I'm going to do something. I'm going to send the Chaldeans or the Babylonians and use them like a rod of discipline upon my people Israel."
When Habakkuk heard that, he said, "Maybe I need to sit down and shut up for a while." And he said, "I'm going to go to a tower." And there are these watchtowers all over Israel; some of them remain today. And so he climbed up into this strategic place and he said, "I'm going to wait on God."
Then the Lord answered in verse 2 and said, "Write the vision and make it plain on tablets that he may run who reads it. For the vision is yet for an appointed time; but at the end it will speak, and it will not lie. Though it tarries, wait for it; because it will surely come, it will not tarry."
Guest (Female): You're listening to PowerPoint with Jack Graham and the message, Boxing with God. Easter is just around the corner, and we want to help you prepare your heart for the season. When you sign up, we will send you a video devotion every day beginning February 18th until Easter to remind you of the sacrifice Jesus made so that we can be forgiven of our sins and reconciled to God.
Dr. Graham will share a short devotion about the final words that Jesus spoke from the cross and what they mean to us today. To sign up, just text CROSS to 59789. Again, text CROSS to 59789.
Right now, you have the incredible opportunity to help others experience the unshakable hope and abundant life found only in Jesus Christ. Your support of PowerPoint Ministries makes a real and lasting difference, changing lives for eternity as people encounter God's word.
And because your partnership matters so deeply, we'd love to send you Dr. Graham's new book, *Living Hope in a Hostile World*, as our thanks for your gift of $10 or more. This book explores the bold truths of First Peter and offers strength, courage, and hope for whatever you may face. To give your gift, text FEB to 59789. Text F-E-B to 59789. Now, let's get back to today's message, Boxing with God.
Jack Graham: If we are going to move through the doorway of doubt and into authentic and enduring faith, it begins with waiting and listening to God. When God is silent, what are we to do? There is a key password for connecting with God. It's a password we all need to know: P-A-T-I-E-N-C-E. Patience.
So often, rather than waiting on God, we forge ahead. We do something, even if it's wrong. And when we do that, we find ourselves in a bigger mess than we started. Have you made the discovery that God is never in a hurry? But he's always on time. Some of us, if God doesn't answer our prayers in the next 15 minutes, we're ready to quit.
But when you find yourself in a struggle with doubt or uncertainty and you don't have a clue as to what to think or as to what to do, wait on God. When in doubt, don't. To wait on God is to trust God. It's not passivity. It's not just sitting back and doing nothing, but it is actively pursuing the heart, the will, the mind of God.
To wait on God is to hope in God, to put our trust and faith in God. And sometimes, and I emphasize the word "sometimes," God strips us of everything, bringing us to the end of ourselves and facing questions and issues that we cannot answer in order that we may discover that all we have is in him. And discovering that all that we have is in him, knowing that he is enough.
To wait on God is what the prophet did. He climbed up into this tower and stood and waited. He trusted God and listened for God to speak. He began to see from that elevated position life from a different perspective, God's perspective. And that's what the Bible calls "wisdom." You can't get wisdom on the run.
It is only by waiting on God and listening to him. And the promises of God and the plans of God give us a place to stand, a place of security. Now, this is not ignorant faith. This is informed faith. It is trusting God. It is tenacious faith. It is faith that perseveres and presses on through perplexities and problems. And it is in waiting on God that we move from doubt to belief.
Habakkuk 2:4 is the key that unlocks this doorway of doubt and opens to faith. "Behold the proud, his soul is not upright in him." But note these words: "but the just shall live by his faith." Seven monosyllables, but they've changed the world. "The just shall live by his faith." Simple words, but so profound. Repeated three times in the New Testament.
It became the cry of the Reformation: the just shall live by his faith. And many Bible commentators believe that it is most accurately interpreted, "the just shall live by his faithfulness." Now don't miss this. It's not a matter of my faith. So often we think we need great faith in order to survive. But we don't need so much great faith, but we need faith in the faithfulness of God and the greatness of God.
And what he is saying here is, we shall live by his faithfulness. Because God is faithful. Paul put it this way in Galatians 2:20. This is how to plug into the power. "I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ lives in me: and the life that I now live by faith, I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me."
It is our faith in him and his faithfulness that enables us to persevere and to press on. He's been so faithful to me. So often we think if I could just get the answers to these questions, then I would know what to do or what to think or how to believe. But so often if we had the answers, it wouldn't settle the issue. It might even complicate the issue.
One of these days we will see by sight and we will know even as we are known. And everything will be clear. That's when we get to heaven when he makes all things new. But until then, we live by faith. Faith of the Son of God. The faithfulness of Jesus in our lives who has been faithful, faithful. And in waiting upon him, trusting in him, hoping in him, we find our strength.
And that's when we move then to that next step, which is what I'm going to call the wonder of worship. From the doorway of doubt to the wisdom of waiting, now to the wonder of worship. Something happened to the heart of Habakkuk as he waited on God. His "whys" were turned to worship and his pain perplexities to praise.
Chapter 3 contains a beautiful expression of the worship of a believing heart, of enduring faith. He offers a prayer, a petition to God, and then he offers praise. Look at verse 1 of Chapter 3: "A prayer of Habakkuk. O Lord, I have heard your speech and was afraid. O Lord, revive your work in the midst of the years! In the midst of the years make it known; in wrath remember mercy."
Now just stop right there. Habakkuk is saying, "God, now I know. And you have every right to do exactly what you choose to do. And if your plan is judgment, Lord, you don't owe me an explanation. I may not understand it all. I might not even like it. But Lord, I'm trusting you.
I only ask that in the midst of the wrath that is going to come, revive your people, O God. And along with the judgment, send mercy and grace." And here we see something of the heart of the prophet for the people of God. And he calls upon a God whom he knows to be the God of mercy. He says, "God, I fear you. But now I'm willing to submit to your will and to offer myself to you.
I'm afraid, but you do what is best. Give us grace." And from the sighing, he now begins to sing and praise God. And this entire chapter is an expression of worship and praise to the mercy of God, to the might of God, to the majesty of God. But he concludes in verses 17 to the end of the chapter with a promise that he makes to God.
It's the same promise that we need to make this morning. "Though the fig tree may not blossom, no fruit be on the vines; though the labor of the olive may fail, and the fields yield no food; and though the flock may be cut off from the fold, and there is no herd in the stalls..."
In other words, God, if when it all falls apart, and if it all falls apart, and I lose everything, here is my promise to you: "Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation. The Lord God is my strength; and he will make my feet like deer's feet, and he will make me walk on my high hills."
What praise! What a promise! Now he's taken his gloves off because he now knows that his arms are too short to box with God. And he's taken the gloves off and now he's offering up holy hands of worship and praise to God. And he's saying, "God, no matter what, whatever you choose to do, God, you are sovereign and you are God and I'm not.
But I, Lord, promise to rely upon your strength, to rejoice in you, God my savior." You see, our joy is not in our circumstances, not in our possessions, not in our things, but our joy is in Jesus. Our joy is in him. "Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I say rejoice." I love this man, Habakkuk. There's nothing phony about him.
His faith is real. Sometimes raw, but it's real. It's genuine. And now his doubt has moved to a determination to trust in God no matter what. To rejoice. I love that phrase, "in God my salvation." Our hope is in him and only him. You see, a troubled faith is better than no faith. But growing faith is a rejoicing faith. And the key thing we need to remember today is that when your faith is troubled, when you are troubled, go to him. Run to him.
Guest (Female): You're listening to PowerPoint with Jack Graham and the message, Boxing with God. Your support of PowerPoint Ministries makes a profound impact, helping more people discover the truth and hope of Jesus Christ.
And to thank you for your generous gift today, we'd love to send you Dr. Jack Graham's new book, *Living Hope in a Hostile World*. It's a timely resource that reminds you how to stand firm in faith, cling to God's grace, and live with courage, even in your most challenging times. As you grow in your walk with the Lord through this resource, may you be encouraged to know that your generous support is helping others do the same. Text FEB to 59789. Again, text FEB, as in February, to 59789.
Easter is just around the corner, and we want to help you prepare your heart for the season. When you sign up, we will send you a video devotion every day beginning February 18th until Easter to remind you of the sacrifice Jesus made so that we can be forgiven of our sins and reconciled to God. Dr. Graham will share a short devotion about the final words that Jesus spoke from the cross and what they mean to us today. To sign up, just text CROSS to 59789. Again, text CROSS to 59789.
Guest (Male): Pastor, what is your PowerPoint for today?
Jack Graham: Well, so many people get frustrated when they look at the many injustices in the world. And because of this, they're tempted to argue with God just as our friend Habakkuk did. But the wonderful thing about this servant of God is that he learned some important lessons from his experience. He learned to keep moving forward in his faith, and that's just what we need to do.
When we first meet Habakkuk in the scripture, he is frustrated and angry and even arguing with God. He's telling God how bad things have gotten on earth. He's living in terrible times of moral decay and spiritual decay, and he's saying to God, "How can you allow this evil to exist?" Habakkuk was demanding answers to some very difficult, hard questions. But God was silent. And in that silence, Habakkuk learned something very important. He learned to be patient and to wait on God.
Now, you need to see this. Waiting on God is not passivity. It is not just sitting back and doing nothing. When you're waiting on God, you're living by faith and you're actively pursuing his heart, living in obedience to his will and seeking the mind of God. And Habakkuk's faith told him to trust God and to live therefore by his promises. You see, this is the kind of tenacious faith that perseveres through life's most challenging times.
And finally, we see in Habakkuk's example that something happened in his heart. As he moved beyond doubting God, he began actively waiting on God. His "whys" turned into worship and his pain into praise. Habakkuk, the man who was boxing with God, finally lays his gloves down and offers up holy hands of worship and rejoices in the presence of the Almighty.
So, when our world, when your world seems to be falling apart and you must resist the temptation to blame God and find faith in him, keep your hope alive. Keep looking to him. Keep trusting in him. Keep obeying him. Keep pursuing him. And with Habakkuk, you will be able to say in any of your circumstances in life, "Yet will I rejoice in the Lord."
Guest (Female): And that is today's PowerPoint. Remember, when you give a gift of $10 or more to PowerPoint, we will send you Dr. Graham's book, *Living Hope in a Hostile World*. Just text FEB to 59789. And join us again next time as Dr. Graham brings a message about how to survive seasons of suffering in your life. That's next time on PowerPoint with Jack Graham. PowerPoint with Jack Graham is sponsored by PowerPoint Ministries.
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Dr. Graham’s book 'Life According to Jesus' is packed with practical wisdom from Jesus’ life as recorded in the book of John. Get ‘Life According to Jesus’ when you give today.
About PowerPoint
PowerPoint Ministries is the radio and television broadcast ministry of Jack Graham, pastor of Prestonwood Baptist Church — a nearly 37,000-member church with three campuses in the Dallas and North Texas region. Through PowerPoint Ministries, Dr. Graham offers practical, biblical steps on how to tap into God's power for successful Christian living.
About Jack Graham
Dr. Jack Graham serves as Senior Pastor of Prestonwood Baptist Church, one of the nation’s largest, most dynamic congregations.
When Dr. Graham came to Prestonwood in 1989, the 8,000-member congregation responded enthusiastically to his straightforward message and powerful preaching style.
Now thriving with more than 57,000 members, Prestonwood continues to grow, reaching throughout the North Texas region. In 2006, the church launched a second location, the North Campus, in a burgeoning area 20 miles north of the Plano Campus. Prestonwood also has a flourishing Spanish-language ministry, Prestonwood en Español, which includes members from more than 20 nations. And Prestonwood.Live, the online community, draws worshippers from all over the world.
Dr. Graham is a noted author of numerous books, including the latest Reignite: Fresh Focus for an Enduring Faith. In this deeply personal book, Dr. Graham shares lessons he learned in the midst of crisis – offering insight on how to focus on Jesus even in the darkest days.
Other books include A Man of God: Essential Priorities for Every Man’s Life; Unseen: Angels, Satan, Heaven, Hell and Winning the Battle for Eternity; Angels: Who They Are, What They Do and Why It Matters; Powering Up: The Fulfillment and Fruit of a God-Fueled Life; and Courageous Parenting, written with his wife, Deb.
His passionate, biblical teaching is also seen and heard across the country and throughout the world on PowerPoint Ministries. Through broadcasts, online sermons and e-mail messages, Dr. Graham addresses relevant, everyday issues that are prevalent in our culture and strike a chord with audiences worldwide.
In October 2022, the Bible in a Year with Jack Graham podcast was launched in partnership with iHeartPodcasts and Pray.com, with a cinematic feel that brings the Bible to life. Within the first week of its release, the podcast reached the top spot on the Spotify religion list, and it has now surpassed 30 million downloads.
Dr. Graham has served as Honorary Chairman of the National Day of Prayer and has helped lead various national prayer initiatives. He served as President of the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in the country with more than 14 million members.
He and Deb have three married children and eight grandchildren.
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