Here are several recorded messages and sermons from one or both of us:

Links below are for download and/or transcript. (To download, right-click on a link and choose “save link as…”)

 Sharing in His Sufferings (8-26-2019 – YWAM Ozarks, Ozark, AR – Adam & Lora Willard)

'Sharing in His Sufferings' full notes transcript

How we got to Madagascar

>>>   ADAM   <<< 

Sunset on Nosy Mitsio

Sunset on Nosy Mitsio

  • [Opening slide](nice scenery)
  • Adam’s vision

    Madagascar is off the southeast coast of Africa

    Madagascar is off the southeast coast of Africa

  • thought I could quit high school, but God didn’t say that
  • went to school to get a degree in Missions and French
  • 3 yrs before first visit to Madagascar
  • met Lora and married after college
  • taught for 2 years in public schools
  • joined the Peace Corps and served in a rural village in South Africa for 2 1/2 years

    Us with our host family when we served as Peace Corps Volunteers in South Africa from 2008-2010

    Us with our host family when we served as Peace Corps Volunteers in South Africa from 2008-2010

  • then finally to Madagascar, 12 years after vision – thought things would go quickly
  • learned language for 6 months and did DTS there in Malagasy

    YWAM Tamatave DTS 2012

    YWAM Tamatave DTS 2012

  • Our DTS outreach team to the village of Antenina in 2012

    Our DTS outreach team to the village of Antenina in 2012

Moved to Nosy Mitsio

  • went to work with unreached people group, the Antakarana.

    The Antakarana homeland in Northern Madagascar.

    The Antakarana homeland in Northern Madagascar.

  • This is what it means to be unreached.

>>>   LORA   <<<

  • moved to the island of Nosy Mitsio.  
    Nosy Mitsio Panorama

    Nosy Mitsio Panorama

    Very rural setting. No electricity, no running water, no markets, and no roads, just walking from place to place

  • people live in small village communities scattered thoughout the island

    One of the small villages on Nosy Mitsio

    One of the small villages on Nosy Mitsio

  • Incarnational ministry
  • all transport it done by boat such as these across the ocean for 35 miles to get to the mainland

    A boat traveling out to Nosy Mitsio

    A boat traveling out to Nosy Mitsio

  •  
    everyone piles on and tries to find a spot among the dried fish and coconuts

    Riding a boat from Nosy Mitsio

    Riding a boat from Nosy Mitsio

  • completely dependent on the wind and the waves
  • because there are no markets on the island, people rely on subsistence farming of rice, their staple food

    Harvesting rice on Nosy Mitsio

    Harvesting rice on Nosy Mitsio

  • a lot of the materials needed to build our home and the rest of our team members’ homes came this way
  • this was rice storage hut we stayed in for a few months while our house was built

    The rice storage hut we stayed in for several months when we first moved to Nosy Mitsio

    The rice storage hut we stayed in for several months when we first moved to Nosy Mitsio

  • this was our finished home.  We wanted to live a similar lifestyle, to reduce the barriers between us and them

    Our finished home on Nosy Mitsio

    Our finished home on Nosy Mitsio

The Antakarana

  • [show video introducing Antakarana people]

  • bathing at the well story.
    The well we first used when arriving on Nosy Mitsio

    The well we first used when arriving on Nosy Mitsio

    emphasize how we couldn’t understand anything but the word “fady” – challenges of learning new language and belief system

  • explain what taboos are

>>>  ADAM   <<<

  • describe the 5 year cycle of rituals:  
    Nosy Mitsio,
    The "fijoroagna" ("sacrifice") 5-yr ritual on Nosy Mitsio

    The “fijoroagna” (“sacrifice”) 5-yr ritual on Nosy Mitsio

     Bridge into caves,

    The bridge to enter the cave every 5 years in the Ankarana reserve

    The bridge to enter the cave every 5 years in the Ankarana reserve

     Marching into caves – as many as possible,

    Marching into the caves

    Marching into the caves

     torchlight in caves – all the related taboos

    Torchlight in the ancestral caves

    Torchlight in the ancestral caves

  • – nominal Muslims

    Antakarana people practicing Islamic rituals at a funeral

    Antakarana people practicing Islamic rituals at a funeral

>>>   LORA   <<<

  • – spirit possession ceremonies – what “tromba” are, most women have them, many men

    A "tromba" (ancestral spirit possession) ceremony on Nosy Mitsio

    A “tromba” (ancestral spirit possession) ceremony on Nosy Mitsio

  • Mama Moana stories of possession and taboos

    Mamani'moana with David

    Mamani’moana with David

  • believe you’ll die if you cast the spirits out
  • Mama Sina’s response of “not yet”

    Mamani'Sina with David

    Mamani’Sina with David

Work we’ve done

>>>   ADAM   <<<

  • prayed for people
     Prayed for boy’s foot healing “mitsabo” – beginning ministry was difficult

    Ambahafao village

    Ambahafao village

  • Story of swordfish  

    Catching a sailfish near Nosy Mitsio

    Catching a sailfish near Nosy Mitsio

>>>   LORA   <<<

  • Bible translating  

    Translating Bible stories into the Antakarana language

    Translating Bible stories into the Antakarana language

  • storytelling in the villages

    Discovery Bible studies on Nosy Mitsio

    Discovery Bible studies on Nosy Mitsio

  • Medical  

    Community healthcare meeting on Nosy Mitsio

    Community healthcare meeting on Nosy Mitsio

Challenges

>>>   ADAM   <<<

  • Even from the beginning, the enemy found any way he could to attack the work and keep the gospel from going out.  We faced every sort of challenge in trying to do this work.  When we’re powerless in the face of these huge challenges, we tend to say to ourselves, this must not be what God wants.  We say “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me,” so if I can’t do this it must not be what Christ wants.  People say God will not give you more than you can handle.

    A boat we tried to rent

    A boat we tried to rent

  • There were physical challenges. Tell story of drifting at sea.  

>>>   LORA   <<<

  • Not only did we have physical challenges such as this, our team had constant physical ailments of all kinds throughout their time
  • The more effective attacks came through team relationships.
  • From the moment they arrived, there was frequent strife in the team.  
    Our team when they first arrived in Madagascar

    Our team when they first arrived in Madagascar

    There was bickering about who gets what seat on the taxi and who gets which hotel room, whose family gets to unload first from the boat.  There were even arguments about whether or not you should pray while fasting.

  • It even got to the point where we were told that the whole team was against us.

>>>   ADAM   <<<

  • There were challenges with community relationships.  
    Tell story of team members leaving.

    One of the villages on Nosy Mitsio

    One of the villages on Nosy Mitsio

  • All these attacks were spiritual in nature, but masqueraded as the mundane.
  • By the time we were able to start sharing the stories, then the spiritual attacks became much more direct.
  • Share Nosy Lava story
    Heading out to Nosy Lava in our team boat

    Heading out to Nosy Lava in our team boat

    – shared Jesus with them anyway

    Around the campfire on Nosy Lava

    Around the campfire on Nosy Lava

  • ending of public Bible story gatherings – dreams, spirit possessions (were they ready for exorcism?), etc.
  • Notorious witch moved into our village, conflict in our village and others

    Ancestral ruins in our village on Nosy Mitsio

    Ancestral ruins in our village on Nosy Mitsio

>>>   LORA   <<<

  • At that time we had teammates drifting into depression and suicidal thoughts.
  • Within a few months of that time, all but one other family had left the work there.  We were heading back to the US for furlough / home assignment.

Lessons

  • By this time, we’d spent nearly four years in continuous outreach to the Antakarana, and we certainly hadn’t achieved the results we’d expected.  We asked ourselves is this what God wanted?  When you find yourself in this place, you have to take it back to God.
  • For us it was clear: both God’s desires for the Antakarana people and his call for us to continue the work

>>>   ADAM   <<<

  • So what about all the teammates who weren’t continuing?  That’s a question I’ve often wrestled with, and ultimately, we just don’t know.  Everyone’s call has to be tested  [Bible verse slide]  – “Therefore, my brothers and sisters, make every effort to confirm your calling and election.” – 2 Peter 1:10
  • Most of the time this happens before they go to do what God’s calling them – certainly it’s best when it happens that way.
  • Callings are tested through patience, perseverance, and hardship.  Usually affirmed by others.
  • Don’t try to run ahead of God’s call.  Don’t try to achieve it on your own.  At best, you’re likely to face a lot more hardships than you would have otherwise, and at worst, you may very well disrupt what God is doing in your life and what he’s trying to do in others’ lives.
  • So you always have to take it back to God in prayer – HE has to sustain you, HE has to confirm that you’re where he wants you

>>>   LORA   <<<

  • But for us we had to ask ourselves the question: If this is where God wants us, why do we have so little to show for it?  Why is it taking so long?  We didn’t get a clear answer to those questions.  So then we asked ourselves, is it worth it?
  • We are reminded in 2 Peter 3:9  [Bible verse slide] – “The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.” – 2 Peter 3:9
  • We adopt the attitude in Hebrews 10  [Bible verse slide] – “Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful. And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds… So do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded. You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised.” – Hebrews 10:23-24, 35-36
  • We never started this work to accomplish something for ourselves, but out of faithfulness to Him, because of who he is, and his heart for all people in the world, even those far from him.  So we continue to turn to him and lean on his faithfulness.

Renewed hopes and difficulties

  • Last time we left the U.S. and returned to Madagascar, we brought renewed hopes and entered into renewed difficulties.
     

    Port St Louis - the main port for traveling to/from Nosy Mitsio

    Port St Louis – the main port for traveling to/from Nosy Mitsio

  • When we got back, we rejoined the one remaining family from the team, and were excited about how we were going to work together in new season of ministry there & we had the opportunity to have a national/Malagasy join our team.
  • Unfortunately, our teammates continued to have a number of personal struggles and the enemy attacked them heavily through those areas.
  • Less than a year after we returned, they decided they no longer wanted to continue in any sort of team ministry, and cut off all communication with us.
  • We prayed, God was clear that we couldn’t stay in disunity and build the church on a broken foundation.  We knew we’d have to leave soon before the work was ruined.  Prayed to ask God what we should do next, and for a long time he didn’t tell us.

>>>   ADAM   <<<

  • Meanwhile, the witness on Nosy Mitsio was being destroyed as badly as it could be, due to the way many of our former teammates’ actions were completely contradicting the Gospel we’d been sharing.  All of our hard work, our deliberate efforts to show Christ to them, all of our words that told who he was, his goodness, and truth, and love, the way he reconciles all men to himself and to each other: all of it seemed to be made futile.
  • We were devastated, ashamed, felt like utter failures, etc.
  • We knew we had to leave and finally felt God was encouraging us to make the decision with the wisdom and knowledge he’d given us.  
    At the markets in Ambilobe

    At the markets in Ambilobe

     So we moved to Ambilobe where there are new ministry opportunities-more accessible to Antakarana.

    Our rental home in Ambilobe

    Our rental home in Ambilobe

  • During this time, nearly all of our ministry support structures fell away, and we had very few people we could turn to.  We continued to suffer challenges from many directions.
  • This began the greatest season of doubt in our lives, and we wondered “why are we still here?” “should we still be here?”  “why don’t we just give up and go home and live a comfortable life for ourselves?”
  • But God was still speaking to us, reassuring us of his presence:
  • [Bible verse slide] “…Many of his disciples said, ‘This teaching is difficult; who can accept it?’… From this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him. So Jesus asked the twelve, ‘Do you also wish to go away?’ Simon Peter answered him, ‘Lord, where else shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.’” – John 6:60, 66-68
  • Though he didn’t explain all the details to us, didn’t yet help us understand the difficulties we faced, yet we know that he is Lord – we couldn’t deny it.  “To who else should we go?”

>>>   LORA   <<<

  • Lora shares sacrifice vision.  We had died and suffered all this loss, but God said it was pleasing to him.  Once again like when we were drifting in the boat, we were exactly where and how God wanted us, even in our complete brokenness and uselessness.
  • Around this time God had been speaking to us about taking a sabbatical and stepping back from the work for a season.  At first we resisted.  It didn’t fit well with our hopes and plans for that time, but we obeyed.
  • Since then and through all that’s come before, God has drawn us nearer to him than he ever has before.  He’s taught us lessons that he’s planted deep within us at the core of who we are.  He’s put us back together again, he’s transformed us, he’s resurrected us.

Conclusion

>>>   ADAM   <<<

  • When we left Nosy Mitsio, it felt like we were taking nothing with us, that all those years resulted in nothing but pain and suffering for us, and an unreached people whose view of Jesus was irrevocably tainted by the sins of his witnesses.
  • We don’t know how things will turn out in the long run for the people of Nosy Mitsio, for those whom we’ve come to love and cherish there, who we long to see enter the Kingdom of God together with us.
  • But God has shown us that we have taken a lot from those years in that place.  In all that happened, God drew us nearer to him.  He’s taught us things that we’ve learned deeply.  He’s humbled us and made us ever more reliant on him, ever more aware of the time we need to spend in prayer before him, ever more aware that this is his work, and in ourselves we’re powerless to accomplish it.  But HE is faithful.  His Kingdom will be established among the Antakarana.  And he’s graced us to continue working with him towards that end.
  • When God calls you to join him in his Kingdom work, you will  You’ll be attacked from every angle, everything possible will be done to make you quit and give up.
  • Jesus anticipated this, that’s why he said:  [Bible verse slide]: “Then Jesus told his disciples, ‘If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me’.” – Matthew 16:24
  • This is a hard teaching: to obediently take up the instrument of our own execution and to stumble along, following Jesus up the hill to Golgotha, where the certainty of pain and death awaits us.
  • The question isn’t whether you will struggle and fail, but what will you do about it?
  • Will you turn to Jesus or will you turn away?
  • If you turn to him, he will draw you ever further within him, growing in your likeness of him:
  • [Bible verse slide] “I want to know Christ – yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, attaining to the resurrection from the dead.” – Colossians 1:24 – Knowing Christ in sufferings and resurrection
  • Even if at the end, everything has failed and you have nothing to show for it, except that you’ve grown nearer to God, that’s enough.  That’s at the center of it.   The goal of all of it is for you to draw nearer to God and to help others do the same.
  • And it’s our motto in YWAM: to know God and to make him known.
  • Somehow as we suffer with Christ and take up our crosses to follow him, he uses even that suffering and death to draw more men to him.
  • [Bible verse slide] “’And when I am lifted up from the earth, I will draw all people to myself.’ He said this to indicate the kind of death he was going to die.” – John 12:32-33 – at the cross he’ll draw all men to himself
  • When we suffer like him, we know him better because we get a feel for what his life was like, we experience the mystery that defeated death itself.
  • But when we suffer in him, we also help others know him.  His act of crucifixion is played out again and again even in our own lives, and somehow this mystery draws to him those who are hurt and broken, the weak and the wounded, the least, the last, and the lost.  And in him, together we find new life.
  • [Bible verse slide]- “Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful. And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds… So do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded. You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised.” – Hebrews 10:23-24, 35-36
  • So next month we head back to Madagascar, to continue working with God as he draws all men to himself, in the hope of seeing the Antakarana enter into God’s⌡ Kingdom together with us.

>>>   LORA   <<<

Take this time to reflect on what you feel God is teaching you, and I want to challenge all of you:

Are you ready to surrender?  To take up your cross whenever he calls?

 Waiting Faithfully (7-9-2017 – Sacrament Church, Nashville, TN – Adam & Lora Willard)

'Waiting Faithfully' full transcript

Adam:  Hi, we’re Adam and Lora Willard and we’re missionaries to Madagascar.  [additional introduction based on place] – [opening slide]

In 1999, after having been a Christian for just one year, not yet 16 years old, God gave me a vision, an actual vision.  In this vision, he asked me to go to Madagascar – something totally unexpected for me.  Now this was the most amazing and impactful thing I had ever seen or experienced in my life and as I received this vision, I was full of a sense of urgency.  

One of my first thoughts, after I simply accepted that it actually happened, was: “Great!  Now I don’t have to finish high school!”  I thought that for God to call me to something so big, that surely it had to happen right away, and I was excited and thrilled about it, though I had no idea what it would really be like or what to do.  As I prayed to find out when I could go, all I knew was that it wasn’t time yet – that I wasn’t given permission to drop out of school and go.  God gave me no indication when this would happen.  Though I was full of a sense of urgency, always expecting the very next thing to be me going to Madagascar, yet year after year I felt from God that it wasn’t time yet.  Though God very vividly called me to Madagascar, with an actual vision, and it filled me with an urgent desire to get there right away, but very softly God was calling me to patience.

So, in 2011, 12 years after God gave me that vision, it was finally time for our family to move to Madagascar and begin the work God had called us to.  I just knew that exciting things would begin happening immediately, after all this waiting!

Lora:  But like always, it takes time.  In 2013, when we arrived on the island of Nosy Mitsio to reach out to the unreached Antakarana people, the people were not warm and friendly.  They were not welcoming and hospitable.  

  We couldn’t understand them and for the most part they couldn’t understand us.  After already spending six months learning the official Malagasy language, we now had to learn a whole new language, just to communicate in the most basic ways.

The people also didn’t believe that we would actually stick around.  They expected us to start some sort of business, to make money off of our relationships with them.  Even though we repeatedly told them that’s not what we’re doing, they didn’t trust us at our word.  The whole process of getting to the island and learning to live life with the Antakarana was slow and challenging.

After living on Nosy Mitsio for several months, one of our biggest challenges was transport.  We tried to go to and from mainland Madagascar by relying on local boat owners.  

  Well, there were only two of them on Nosy Mitsio at that time and their boats weren’t reliable.  We spent day after day getting in the boat, going halfway to the mainland, then having the wind switch directions and blow us back to Nosy Mitsio.  
  We were even running out of food supplies and there were none to be purchased on Nosy Mitsio.

After a year and a half of preparations for our team they finally arrived on the island and the people realized we were actually true to our word.  

  After all that time of day in and day out life with the Antakarana people, we were still there, and we were bringing others to join us.  Because of this they often commented on how happy we were to be living there.  We were no longer considered “visitors” or “passers-through” and we had finally gained their trust.

By now we’re widely known and well-respected throughout the area.  Our team is now trained in the work.  Together we started a healthcare and school ministry.  We’ve translated a Bible story set into the Antakarana language.  We started gathering in each of our villages to share the Bible stories.  

So now we’ll show you a short video on all that we’ve been doing the last four years.

[show video]  

 So as you see in the video, we’ve accomplished some good things.  But still there’s no fruit.  There’s not yet one believer among the Antakarana on Nosy Mitsio.  We’ve been faithful to God to this point, but after years of exhausting work, we still haven’t seen the results we’re looking for.

The Antakarana people are bound by fear of their ancestors.  

  Everything they do is done in such a way that it can satisfy their ancestors and hold away their anger and punishment.  This is so much a part of the Antakarana that they can’t even imagine a world without submission to their ancestors.  
 
Nearly half of the Antakarana people tell us that they’re possessed by the spirits of the ancestors, and they believe it’s impossible for the spirits to ever leave them.  One time I asked one of my closest friends if she had any spirits possessing her and her answer was simply, “not yet”.  The Antakarana have no hope of anything more.

In our village, those who used to gather to hear the Bible stories will no longer meet together because they say it’s the “land of their ancestors” and their ancestors don’t want them to hear about Jesus.  There are still individuals who ask us in private about Jesus but for fear of the ancestors’ curses they’re afraid to gather as a group.

Adam:  Sometimes it can be exasperating to put in all these efforts over so much time and seem to have so little to show for it, to still be so far from our goals.  It’s tempting to give up or to move on to something else.

Right now it’s the season of Pentecost in the Church, also sometimes called “Ordinary Time”.  To me this is a very interesting time in the church calendar because there’s a focus on both waiting and on empowerment – and those two aspects sometimes seem opposed to each other.  But it’s also a time I can really identify with well in the current stage of our ministry.

So let me backtrack for a moment to the time before Pentecost; I’m sure you read from these chapters in the last month or so.  Jesus was crucified, a devastating time for his disciples.  It seemed like it was a gruesome end to the years of their lives that they’d invested in Jesus.  Then there were a few reports of his resurrection.  But of course those reports were hard to believe, after so much disappointment from seeing him crucified before their own eyes.  Nonetheless, here and there Jesus appeared before them.  There was rejoicing!  But there were still questions:

”When are you actually going to do what you said you were going to do?”

Acts 1:6  So when they had come together, they asked him, “Lord, is this the time when you will restore the kingdom of Israel?”

The question foremost on their minds, no doubt.  After all, this was the ultimate goal.  And to this they received what must have been a fairly disappointing response:

Acts 1:7  He replied, “It is not for you to know the times or periods that the Father has set by his own authority.”

Probably not the answer they were looking for.  Though really they would have been used to these cryptic, and unfulfilling, responses from Jesus by now.  At least he did go on to say,

Acts 1:8  ”But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”

And then he left!  He just took off right in front of them without saying another word – totally leaving them hanging!  Here we have waiting and empowerment completely juxtaposed, side by side.

The question of the disciples, their concern, their hope was, “when are you going to do what you said you were going to do?  You said over and over that the Kingdom of God is near, but where is it?  When is it coming?”  This is what they were longing for!  And now they were left waiting for Jesus to return, to fulfill his promise.  And all he left them with was not a timeline, not a date they could put on their calendars, but instead another, different promise, that of empowerment by the Holy Spirit, and a statement of their role in God’s continuing work.

Lora:  See, we can relate to this because to us, our work among the Antakarana is completely tied up in Jesus’s return, in the fullness of his Kingdom coming to earth.  We know that the work we do among the Antakarana is not in vain because we know that on the final day, they will also be standing in the multitudinous crowd before Jesus’s throne:

”After this I looked, and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and before the Lamb.”  Revelation 7:9

So as we work, and we work hard and struggle towards this day, it can get despairing when it still seems so far off, when everything seems like it’s going on just as it always has – and not in a good way!  We can’t help but ask, together with Jesus’s disciples, “when is this day coming?”  Apparently that was also a common question among those associated with the early church.

2 Peter 3:4  “Where is the promise of his coming? For ever since our ancestors died, all things continue as they were from the beginning of creation!”

We can’t help but ask.  But we have to remember that Jesus’s response to all this wasn’t to give us a clear-cut date, like we would really appreciate, but instead to give us a promise of empowerment by the Holy Spirit.  

  And the result of that empowerment is that we’re a witness to his Kingdom and his Kingship, here where we are, in our surrounding communities, and even to the ends of the earth.

Adam:   Sometimes that Holy Spirit empowerment results in a witness like on the day of Pentecost, through signs and wonders – great big things with clear signs of the advance of God’s Kingdom.  And sometimes that Holy Spirit empowerment results in a much quieter witness – empowering us to wait faithfully, to live faithfully, as we look ahead to that promised day of the fullness of his Kingdom, even right now in “ordinary time”.  Because have no doubts: without the empowerment of the Holy Spirit in us, our waiting without seeing will quickly be overcome by despair.  While the early church was asking, together with us, “Where is the promise of his coming?” Paul and Peter and others constantly responded with reminders that we wait faithfully by the strength of the Holy Spirit.

Romans 8:24-26 “For in this hope we were saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what they already have?  But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently.  In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness.”

Because it’s by the Holy Spirit that we can have faith.  It’s by the Holy Spirit that we can be one of those of whom Jesus spoke to Thomas, “blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.”  It’s by the Holy Spirit that we can actually know God personally, that we can have faith in who he is and know that he’ll do what he’s said he’ll do.

Hebrews 10:23-24, 35-36  “Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful.  And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds… So do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded. You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised.”

”He who promised is faithful.”  These are the words that should give us strength, and it’s the Holy Spirit that makes them come alive in us.  We work and we wait patiently, not in the hope that our deeds and our efforts are enough, but that the one who promised, the one who led us to this place, he is faithful.  But for us to wait in faith, it’s not just sitting around twiddling our thumbs, waiting for God’s intervention – though God’s intervention is what we need.  But waiting faithfully also means that we act in faith.  As the author of Hebrews said, “let us spur one another on toward love and good deeds.”  “When you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised.”  So we act and we do, faithfully, but our hope is not in our actions, our hope is in he who brought us here, he who promised, he who told us to wait and who promised the power of the Holy Spirit.  He is faithful.  And waiting eagerly, actively, is what it means for us to have faith in him.

Lora:  As a missionary it’s sometimes very hard to “hold unswervingly to the hope we profess.”  We’re not “faith superheroes”!  We, like you, have simply been empowered by the Holy Spirit to persist, to persevere.  

  It was hard to get started in a new work like this when we didn’t even have a home to live in.  It can be a daily struggle to have unwavering faith on this remote island where there are still no other Christians.  Before our team arrived, we had no one to work alongside us.  Although we know that there are people around the world praying in support of the work we’re doing, it’s easy to feel completely alone there, as if we’re the only Christians in the world.

There were many times I wondered, “God, what are you doing?  Where are you in all this mess?  What is the point to all this effort when it seems like nothing and nobody is changing?  In fact, things seem to be getting worse.  God, when will you show your power?”

But the truth is, when we know God and turn to him, when we ask for his Holy Spirit to empower us to wait faithfully, he reminds us of his story throughout history, that he has always been and always will be faithful to fulfill his promises.  Because our faith is not based on what we can see, but on confidence in his promises.  So we press on in faithful obedience to the part he wants us to play in his story.  And even when we question, he returns us to hope in him.  Because “he who promised is faithful.”

Adam:  So empowerment by the Holy Spirit gives us faith in God, trust in his promises, and it allows us to persevere and overcome despair.  But what was the end result of this empowerment that Jesus spoke of?  Being witnesses to him!  

 We’re to be witnesses to him here in our Christian community, and witnesses to him outside these walls and among those who are far from Christ, both those nearby and even those at the ends of the earth.

I believe that all of you have some part to play, some role God’s given you, in all of these areas; that what Jesus spoke to his eager disciples at that time also applies equally to all of us today.  I believe that fulfilling your role is more than just waiting for Jesus’s return, for God’s Kingdom to come – though it certainly includes that – but that we’re each also active participants in his return, in the full coming of his Kingdom.  And the Holy Spirit empowers each of us for that as well.

Lora:  What has God called you to in your life?  I know most haven’t received a vision like my husband did.  I haven’t.  But for all of us, God puts something within us, some work of his Kingdom, some aspect of his recreation that he drops within our hearts or our minds, somewhere that he’s asking us to join him in his work.  What has he inspired you about?

Has he given you the dream of reaching your loved ones, your siblings or in-laws or someone else who’s not yet ready to commit to God?  Has he inspired you to take care of the needy, the homeless, foster kids, something like that?  Has he been convicting you to steward your resources wisely, to be freed from debt, and instead to use what he’s given you to bless others?  Has he given you a dream for some other kind of outreach, for church growth, for expanding the presence of his Christian community within the neighborhood or in another part of the world?  Or has he shown you some part of the church to be revived or reformed, some way it can closer resemble God’s coming Kingdom?

Adam:  Oftentimes, God will drop these ideas in us.  He will give us an idea of what can be or what should be.  Sometimes we simply don’t know where to start, so we let it fall to the wayside.  Other times we jump in eagerly, ready for this vision God’s given us to come to pass.  We put all our energy and effort, our enthusiasm into it for a while.  A short while.  Maybe a few weeks, maybe a few months.  Maybe even a few years.  But then, so often, nothing really changes.  Nothing happens.  We lose heart.  We lose faith.  We no longer look confidently towards that which we can’t yet see.

I can’t blame you for this.  We live in a culture of instant gratification.  We tend to expect things to happen quickly.  We don’t usually think “good things come to those who wait”, because advertisements and self-help articles tell us instead that if you put yourself out there, if you pursue what you want today, you’ll be rewarded right away!  But God didn’t give us a quick fix.  There’s no “Amazon Prime and free 2-day shipping” with the way God does things.

In God’s plan to redeem the world, in the promise of his return, he’s really taking his time.  Just look at the central aspect of it!  God himself stepped foot on this earth.  But rather than sharing his message and his truths from day one, instead he came as a helpless little baby.  He spent 30-odd years growing up and then he proclaimed the Kingdom of God.  He did that for a few years before he even performed the central work of it: his death and resurrection.  God takes his time.  That’s how he does things.

2 Peter 3:9  “The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.”

He’s not slow as some, as we, understand slowness.  He’s patient.  His plans are bigger than each of us.  What he’s doing in our lives isn’t intended simply to bless us, but through us to bless others!   Chances are good that if God has put something on your heart, something he’s asked you to do in participation with the work of his Kingdom, that he’s probably going to do it slowly.  Don’t lose heart!  Look forward to what you can’t yet see.  Let the Holy Spirit empower you, let him open your eyes to what God is doing and will do.  And look to him who has made the promise, because “he who has promised is faithful.”  Live out that faith, day in and day out, by pursuing what God has asked of you – even when it’s hard, even when you don’t see the results.

You know, early on when we moved to Nosy Mitsio, God took an opportunity to really strongly teach this lesson to me.  We were struggling with using local transport (the two boats on our island whose motors were broken) so we looked for another option.

We tried to find a local boat at the Port that we could rent.  We found only one lady willing to rent us a boat, and later we found out it was because her boat and motor wasn’t any good and she couldn’t very well use the boat herself.  

   After spending some time patching up most the holes in the boat and getting the motor to at least start up, we loaded up our boat with all our supplies, me, my wife, our 2-year-old son, Matimu, the boat driver, and one other passenger, and headed out.

The Port village where you leave the mainland to go to Nosy Mitsio is really just the mouth of a shallow river and boats can only come and go at high tide and when the wind is right.  So after getting our rental boat ready, we had to leave in the middle of the night, about 11pm or midnight that time.  The motor worked fairly well for the first six miles or so.  But then it suddenly died and nothing we did would get it to start up again.  We put up the sail in the hopes of sailing back to the Port for further repairs.  But there was no wind.  New leaks were springing up in the boat too, and water was streaming in from several small holes and we were constantly bailing it out with buckets.  Six miles from shore, in the middle of the night, my family and I were drifting in a leaking boat with no way to get to land.  We even tore a couple of rotten planks off of the boat in an attempt to paddle back to shore, but we weren’t making any progress.

This was a critical moment for me.  We’d spent several very difficult and tiring months just trying to pioneer this new work to the Antakarana and with little of anything to show for it.  Helpless to do anything, drifting at sea together with my family, I lay back in the boat and looked up at the stars.  I asked God, “is this really what you want from me?  Did you call me out here for this?  What about my family?  We’re just drifting here!”  And I wrestled over this with God, testing the call he’s given me.  He didn’t give me a big answer or another vision or anything like that.  But I just felt from God a reassuring affirmative, “yes”.  This is where he wants us.  Even if it means drifting at sea.  I had to once again release myself and my efforts into his control.  To do my best, but to wait patiently, to endure.

Over the night we drifted back towards shore and as the tide went down and the water became very shallow we used some sticks to push our boat back towards the mainland.  We made it back to dry land close to noon the next day.  And we kept pressing on.  We were where God wanted us.  Without any visible progress or any quick returns on our efforts, we were where God wanted us.  That quiet reminder was the Holy Spirit empowering us to keep pursuing him, to keep living faithfully, even as we wait patiently for God’s promises to be fulfilled.

Galatians 6:9  “Let us not grow weary in doing good.  For at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.”

We want to encourage you to have faith in God, even when things seem hard.  Be faithful to what he’s asked of you, even when it seems like you’re drifting at sea (or even if you really are drifting at sea).  Look into your hearts, look for those old convictions or dreams that God has given you, and pick it up again.  If he’s given you a vision of reaching your family or your neighbors for him, or even a distant people on the other side of the world – don’t lose hope!  He’s faithful.  If he’s inspired you towards some greater work of the church – don’t give up!  It takes time.  You have to commit to what God has asked of you and you have to commit to those who are involved.  He’s faithful.  As you struggle through this day to day, ask the Holy Spirit to empower you, not only for the signs and wonders, though those are always welcome, but also for the quiet strength to both wait and act faithfully as you look ahead to God’s coming Kingdom.  As we live now in “ordinary time”, let us remember that this is a time both of waiting and empowerment – we’re empowered by the Holy Spirit both to wait and act faithfully as we do our part and look ahead to the return of Jesus and the fullness of his coming Kingdom.

Pray

Let’s add a little something to our “liturgy” today to close us.  I want us to recite together from Psalm 117, a nice short Psalm that may have come from the time after Israel’s exile.  It would have certainly been a time of waiting for God’s promises to be fulfilled, and it hints at a time when people from all the earth will participate in his promises – just like our season of Pentecost or “Ordinary Time” now.  We praise him in expectation.  Let’s read it together from The Voice translation:

Praise the Eternal, all nations. Raise your voices, all people. For his unfailing love is great, and it is intended for us, And his faithfulness to his promises knows no end. Praise the Eternal! Psalm 117

 He Who Promised is Faithful (3-12-2017 – All Nations Vineyard Church, Tulsa, OK – Adam & Lora Willard)

'He Who Promised is Faithful' full transcript

Adam: Hi, we’re Adam and Lora Willard and we’re missionaries to Madagascar. [additional introduction] – [opening slide]

In 1999, after having been a Christian for just one year, not yet 16 years old, God gave me a vision, an actual vision. In this vision, he asked me to go to Madagascar – something totally unexpected for me. Now this was the most amazing and impactful thing I had ever seen or experienced in my life and as I received this vision, I was full of a sense of urgency.

One of my first thoughts, after I simply accepted that it actually happened, was: “Great! Now I don’t have to finish high school!” I thought that for God to call me to something so big, that surely it had to happen right away, and I was excited and thrilled about it, though I had no idea what it would really be like or what to do. As I prayed to find out when I could go, all I knew was that it wasn’t time yet – that I wasn’t given permission to drop out of school and go. God gave me no indication when this would happen. Though I was full of a sense of urgency, always expecting the very next thing to be me going to Madagascar, yet year after year I felt from God that it wasn’t time yet. Though God very vividly called me to Madagascar, with an actual vision, and it filled me with an urgent desire to get there right away, but very softly God was calling me to patience.

So, in 2011, 12 years after God gave me that vision, it was finally time for our family to move to Madagascar and begin the work God had called us to. I just knew that exciting things would begin happening immediately, after all this waiting!

Lora: But like always, it takes time. In 2013, when we arrived on the island of Nosy Mitsio to reach out to the unreached Antakarana people, the people were not warm and friendly. They were not welcoming and hospitable.

We couldn’t understand them and for the most part they couldn’t understand us. After already spending six months learning the official Malagasy language, we now had to learn a whole new language, just to communicate in the most basic ways.

The people also didn’t believe that we would actually stick around. They expected us to start some sort of business, to make money off of our relationships with them. Even though we repeatedly told them that’s not what we’re doing, they didn’t trust us at our word. The whole process of getting to the island and learning to live life with the Antakarana was slow and challenging.

Adam: After living on Nosy Mitsio for several months, one of our biggest challenges was transport. We tried to go to and from mainland Madagascar by relying on local boat owners.

Well, there were only two of them on Nosy Mitsio at that time and their boats weren’t reliable. We spent day after day getting in the boat, going halfway to the mainland, then having the wind switch directions and blow us back to Nosy Mitsio.
We were even running out of food supplies and there were none to be purchased on Nosy Mitsio.

So, we looked for a local boat that we could rent. We found only one lady willing to rent us a boat, and later we found out it was because her boat and motor wasn’t any good and she couldn’t very well use the boat herself. After spending some time patching up most the holes in the boat and getting the motor to at least start up, we loaded up our boat with all our supplies, me, my wife, our 2-year-old son, Matimu, the boat driver, and one other passenger, and headed out.

The Port village where you leave the mainland to go to Nosy Mitsio is really just the mouth of a shallow river and boats can only come and go at high tide and when the wind is right. So after getting our rental boat ready, we had to leave in the middle of the night, about 11pm or midnight that time. The motor worked fairly well for the first six miles or so. But then it suddenly died and nothing we did would get it to start up again. We put up the sail in the hopes of sailing back to the Port for further repairs. But there was no wind. New leaks were springing up in the boat too, and water was streaming in from several small holes and we were constantly bailing it out with buckets. Six miles from shore, in the middle of the night, my family and I were drifting in a leaking boat with no way to get to land. We even tore a couple of rotten planks off of the boat in an attempt to paddle back to shore, but we weren’t making any progress.

This was a critical moment for me. We’d spent several very difficult and tiring months just trying to pioneer this new work to the Antakarana and with little of anything to show for it. Helpless to do anything, drifting at sea together with my family, I lay back in the boat and looked up at the stars. I asked God, “is this really what you want from me? Did you call me out here for this? What about my family? We’re just drifting here!” And I wrestled over this with God, testing the call he’s given me. He didn’t give me a big answer or another vision or anything like that. But I just felt from God a reassuring affirmative, “yes”. This is where he wants us. Even if it means drifting at sea. I had to once again release myself and my efforts into his control. To do my best, but to wait patiently, to endure.

Over the night we drifted back towards shore and as the tide went down and the water became very shallow we used some sticks to push our boat back towards the mainland. We made it back to dry land close to noon the next day. And we kept pressing on. We were where God wanted us. Without any visible progress or any quick returns on our efforts, we were where God wanted us.

So, several years after that point, we’ve now gone through a lot and we have made some big progress in several significant areas. We want to show you a short video about what we’ve done during our last few years:

[show video]

Lora: After a year and a half of preparations for our team they finally arrived on the island and the people realized we were actually true to our word.

After all that time of day in and day out life with the Antakarana people, we were still there, and we were bringing others to join us. Because of this they often commented on how happy we were to be living there. We were no longer considered “visitors” or “passers-through” and we had finally gained their trust.

By now we’re widely known and well-respected throughout the area. Our team is now trained in the work. Together we started a healthcare and school ministry. We’ve translated a Bible story set into the Antakarana language. We started gathering in each of our villages to share the Bible stories. All of these are good things that we’ve accomplished, but still there’s no fruit. There’s not yet one believer among the Antakarana on Nosy Mitsio. We’ve been faithful to God to this point, but after years of exhausting work, we still haven’t seen the results we’re looking for.

The Antakarana people are bound by fear of their ancestors.

Everything they do is done in such a way that it can satisfy their ancestors and hold away their anger and punishment. This is so much a part of the Antakarana that they can’t even imagine a world without submission to their ancestors. Nearly half of the Antakarana people tell us that they’re possessed by the spirits of the ancestors, and they believe it’s impossible for the spirits to ever leave them. One time I asked one of my closest friends if she had any spirits possessing her and her answer was simply, “not yet”. The Antakarana have no hope of anything more.

In our village, those who used to gather to hear the Bible stories will no longer meet together because they say it’s the “land of their ancestors” and their ancestors don’t want them to hear about Jesus. There are still individuals who ask us in private about Jesus but for fear of the ancestors’ curses they’re afraid to gather as a group.

We often compare the work of God’s Kingdom to working in a field, how there need to be planters and harvesters. We often think about sowing the seed and expecting the harvest, but who ever thinks about what needs to happen before that? The ground needs to be cleared of sticks and rocks. Then, if the ground is hard, it needs to be broken up little by little. This is really hard work and it takes time! But we tend to overlook this time of preparation. God is always showing us that we need more patience, that we need to wait in hope and in faith.

Adam: Romans 5:2b-6 “And we boast in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us. You see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly.”

This passage encourages us that even when things aren’t working out the way we want, even when it includes trials and even suffering, that we still praise God in the midst of it. Because through this God produces perseverance in our lives, he builds our character, and he gives us hope. Our efforts, our successes, and our accomplishments, in and of themselves are powerless – always! But at just the right time, God acts and he brings it to fruition.

”At just the right time!” We need to keep that in our minds. That time is coming! But when is it? When will it be? We don’t know. But it is coming.

Hebrews 10:23-24, 35-36 “Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful. And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds… So do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded. You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised.”

”He who promised is faithful.” These are the words that should give us strength. We work and we wait patiently, not in the hope that our deeds and our efforts are enough, but that the one who promised, the one who led us to this place, he is faithful. But for us to wait in faith, it’s not just sitting around twiddling our thumbs, waiting for God’s intervention – though God’s intervention is what we need. But waiting faithfully also means that we act in faith. As the author of Hebrews said, “let us spur one another on toward love and good deeds.” “When you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised.” And at “just the right time” God will act. So we act and we do, faithfully, but our hope is not in our actions, our hope is in he who brought us here, he who promised. He is faithful. And waiting eagerly, actively, is what it means for us to have faith in him.

Romans 8:24-26 “For in this hope we were saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what they already have? But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently. In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness.”

Hebrews 11:1 “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.”

This is what we grasp onto: what we believe God is doing, what he will do, though we don’t yet see it. And we join him in that work – in the hope of the unseen that it still to come, and we do it confidently and with assurance, because he who promised is faithful.

Lora: As a missionary it’s sometimes very hard to “hold unswervingly to the hope we profess.” We’re not “faith superheroes”!

It can be a daily struggle to have unwavering faith on this remote island where there are still no other Christians. Before our team arrived, we had no one to work alongside us. Although we know that there are people around the world in support of the work we’re doing, it’s easy to feel completely alone there, as if we’re the only Christians in the world. At times when our financial support gets low, it leaves me asking questions.

There were many times I wondered, “God, what are you doing? Where are you in all this mess? What is the point to all this effort when it seems like nothing and nobody is changing? In fact, things seem to be getting worse. God, when will you show your power?”

But the truth is, when we know God and turn to him, he reminds us of his story throughout history, that he has always been and always will be faithful to fulfill his promises. And one promise we’ve been standing on is God’s ultimate redemption of all peoples:

”After this I looked, and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and before the Lamb.” Revelation 7:9

One day there will be Antakarana standing before God’s throne worshiping him. We haven’t seen any fruit yet and it’s possible we may never see it in our lifetime. But our faith is not based on what we can see, but on confidence in God’s promises. So we press on in faithful obedience to the part he wants us to play in his story. And even when we question, he returns us to hope in him. Because “he who promised is faithful.”

Adam: “Holding unswervingly to the hope we profess” isn’t just hard for us missionaries. It can be hard for anyone here trying to live a life faithful to God, year after year. Most of us are here today because we’ve caught a glimpse of God’s Kingdom, of what he’s bringing to the world, of his New Creation that’s still being remade.

Romans 8:22-23, “We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption to sonship, the redemption of our bodies.” But some of us have been waiting for a long time now. When will it happen? It’s not hard to lose motivation for the promises of God and instead we just start “showing up”. We’re present but we’re not really engaged. We’re not waiting eagerly. Sometimes we’re not even waiting faithfully. We’ve lost sight, confidence, in the unseen things of God, his promises that are still on their way – that have been a long time coming.

Lora: What has God called you to in your life? I know most haven’t received a vision like my husband did. I haven’t. But for all of us, God puts something within us, some work of his Kingdom, some aspect of his recreation that he drops within our hearts or our minds, somewhere that he’s asking us to join him in his work. What has he inspired you about?

Has he given you the dream of reaching your loved ones, your siblings or in-laws or someone else who’s not yet ready to commit to God? Has he inspired you to take care of the needy, the homeless, foster kids, something like that? Has he been convicting you to steward your resources wisely, to be freed from debt, and instead to use what he’s given you to bless others? Has he given you a dream for some other kind of outreach, for church growth, for expanding the presence of his Christian community within the neighborhood? Or has he shown you some part of the church to be revived or reformed, some way it can closer resemble God’s coming Kingdom?

Adam: Oftentimes, God will drop these ideas in us. He will give us an idea of what can be or what should be. Sometimes we simply don’t know where to start, so we let it fall to the wayside. Other times we jump in eagerly, ready for this vision God’s given us to come to pass. We put all our energy and effort, our enthusiasm into it for a while. A short while. Maybe a few weeks, maybe a few months. Maybe even a few years. But then, so often, nothing really changes. Nothing happens. We lose heart. We lose faith. We no longer look confidently towards that which we can’t yet see.

I can’t blame you for this. We live in a culture of instant gratification. We don’t usually think “good things come to those who wait”, because advertisements and self-help articles tell us instead that if you put yourself out there, if you pursue what you want today, you’ll be rewarded. But God didn’t give us a quick fix. There’s no “Amazon Prime and free 2-day shipping” with the way God does things.

In his plan to redeem the world, he’s really taking his time. Just look at the central aspect of it! God himself stepped foot on this earth. But rather than sharing his message and his truths from day one, instead he came as a helpless little baby. He spent 30-odd years growing up and then he proclaimed the Kingdom of God. He did that for a few years before he even performed the central work of it: his death and resurrection. God takes his time. That’s how he does things.

2 Peter 3:9 “The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.”

He’s not slow as some, as we, understand slowness. He’s patient. His plans are bigger than each of us. What he’s doing in our lives isn’t intended simply to bless us, but through us to bless others! Chances are good that if God has put something on your heart, something he’s asked you to do in participation with the work of his Kingdom, that he’s probably going to do it slowly. Don’t lose heart! Look forward to what you can’t yet see. And look to him who has made the promise, because “he who has promised is faithful.” Live out that faith, day in and day out, by pursuing what God has asked of you – even when it’s hard, even when you don’t see the results.

Galatians 6:9 “Let us not grow weary in doing good. For at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.”

We want to encourage you to look into your hearts, look for those old convictions or dreams that God has given you, and pick it up again. If he’s given you a vision of reaching your family or your neighbors for him – don’t lose hope! He’s faithful. If he’s inspired you towards some greater work of the church – don’t give up! It takes time. You have to commit to what God has asked of you and you have to commit to those who are involved. He’s faithful. Be diligent in the small details, to pursue God and what he’s asked of you with everything he’s given you. And as you’re faithful in the little, he’ll give you more he wants you to be faithful in. Just don’t give up. Because he is faithful. At “just the right time”, whether we see it with our eyes or not, he will accomplish his purposes. Our job is to wait eagerly, to wait faithfully, to persevere and do what he’s entrusted us to do.

Hebrews 10:23-24 “Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful. And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds.”

 The Kingdom of God (2-17-2013 – Life Connection Church, Blue Mountain, MS – Adam & Lora Willard)

Unfortunately, the first few minutes of this message was cut off. Click below to read the missing text before resuming with the audio:

Beginning of 'The Kingdom of God' sermon

Start with Lord’s prayer (Matthew 6:9-13) – pray together

You know, most of us have prayed that prayer a hundred times, a thousand times. Sometimes we think about it, but I think most of the time we don’t. And even when we do think about it, it seems we miss something incredibly huge, right there at the beginning of the prayer.

“Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”

We tend to think those are just flowery words, but those are words full of power! God’s name is holy, he’s the King of Kings, and as we repeat the prayer he gave us, we’re asking that God bring his kingdom and his will here on earth JUST as it is in heaven.

I think a lot of us don’t really think about what God’s Kingdom is. We think maybe it’s the same thing as heaven. Maybe we think we’re saved, so we’re waiting until we die, and then we go to heaven. And that’s God’s kingdom, right? NO!

God’s kingdom is already in heaven, his will is already being done there. This prayer that Jesus gave us is a LOT more than that, and it’s not just waiting. Jesus told us we should pray for God’s kingdom to come HERE, on EARTH, EXACTLY like it is in heaven. Everything else we pray in the prayer is stuff we believe God is doing now: he’s already holy, he’s giving us our daily bread, forgiving our debts, rescuing us from the evil one. Why would we think that only that one sentence out of all the rest, “your kingdom come, your will be done” is left for some far-off time in the future, after we die? It’s not, we’re praying that God would bring his Kingdom to EARTH, just as much as he gives us daily bread and forgives our debts. Our Christian lives should be in expectation of that Kingdom.

Some might say we’re just reading that into this. That’s not really what it’s saying. Well, look at everything Jesus said about bringing God’s Kingdom to earth.

Mark 1:15 – “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news.”

Luke 10:9 – “cure the sick who are there, and say to them, ‘The kingdom of God has come near to you.’ 10 But whenever you enter a town and they do not welcome you, go out into its streets and say, 11 ‘Even the dust of your town that clings to our feet, we wipe off in protest against you. Yet know this: the kingdom of God has come near.’

Matthew 10:7 – “As you go, proclaim the good news, ‘The kingdom of heaven has come near.

Matthew 12:28 – “But if it is by the Spirit of God that I cast out demons, then the kingdom of God has come to you.”

The sermon resumes with the audio in the playlist above

 The Road to Madagascar (3-26-2011 – Emmaus Road Church, Tulsa, OK – Adam & Lora Willard)

Incarnational Ministry (9-11-2011 – Oasis Church of All Nations, Oxford, MS – Adam & Lora Willard)

Reconciliation (7-16-2011 – Emmaus Road Church, Tulsa, OK – Adam Willard)