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God Won’t Give You More Than You Can Handle - Part B

Connect with Skip Heitzig / Skip Heitzig
The Truth Network Radio
March 5, 2026 5:00 am

God Won’t Give You More Than You Can Handle - Part B

Connect with Skip Heitzig / Skip Heitzig

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March 5, 2026 5:00 am

When faced with overwhelming trials, it's essential to turn inward and recognize our limitations, rather than relying on our own strength. Instead, we should turn upward, acknowledging God's power and ability to handle even the most challenging situations. By adopting an eternal perspective, we can see that our trials are but a momentary affliction, and that God's strength is made perfect in our weakness.

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This is Connect with Gib Heitzig. Thanks for joining us today. Here at Connect the Skip, our mission is to help you know God's Word and apply it to your life through clear, practical Bible teaching and real encouragement every day. And if you'd like to keep growing in your walk with Jesus, sign up for Pastor Skip's free weekly devotional. You'll receive biblical insight, teaching highlights, and exclusive resource offers straight to your inbox.

Plus, when you sign up today, we'll send you a free digital download of a chapter of Skip's book, Biography of God. It only takes a minute to sign up. Go to connectwithskiff.com and join the list today. That's connectwithskip.com.

Now, let's dive into today's teaching from Pastor Skip Heitzig.

Now, have you ever noticed something about suffering? It never like emails you or texts you to ask if you've got time for it. It never warns you in advance. It just sort of, here I come, ready or night. Right, just invade your life.

Never ask permission. And that's because there's never a good time for your life to be wrecked. That's why when your life is wrecked. By an overwhelming trial. You ask why.

Why this? Why me? Why now? The statement, God will never give you more than you can handle, does something. It turns you inward.

It turns you inward, and you think thoughts like, I must have what it takes. I must be pretty awesome. Because this is hard, and God must know that I can handle this. Because if God permits trials according to my ability. I must be like a A student in spiritual school.

because I can handle this or I am handling this. No, whatever God gives you to handle, it is not to highlight your power, it is to highlight his power, as we'll see in a minute. Psalm 46 says, God is our refuge in strength, a very present help in trouble. Isaiah 40, 29, He gives power to the faint and to him who has no might, He increases strength. They that wait on the LORD shall renew their strength.

You know the rest of that beautiful verse.

So the answer is not within, the answer is. Above, we shouldn't turn inward, we should turn upward. It's not according to our strength, it's according to his strength. And when we are overwhelmed by a trial we cannot handle, it's so that we realize. I don't have what it takes.

I don't have what it takes. Don't you love? Psalm 121, I lift my eyes to the hills. Where does my help come from? My help comes from the Lord who made heaven and earth.

So Beloved. God may give you more than you can handle. But it's never more than he can handle. And that's something we need to tap into.

So, what I'd like to do now is show you a missing perspective in all this. And I want you to turn to 2 Corinthians. Just make your way over to 2 Corinthians. um chapter one we're going to actually put some of these verses up on the screen but Here's what I want you to know about 2 Corinthians. You know, you look at 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, and go, I don't know what the difference is, except one has a 1, one has a 2.

Very different books. Second Corinthians is more like Paul's personal. Journal He's very honest in 2 Corinthians. He's very human. Um You see him in weakness.

You see him in humility. He's unvarnished. He's raw in Second Corinthians. In chapter one, he talks about despairing even of life. In chapter four, hard-pressed on every side and perplexed.

In chapter 6, he speaks about imprisonment. Distresses. and needs. One commentator, Homer Kent. Said, 2 Corinthians is the most personal and revealing document we have from the pen of the Apostle Paul.

In chapter one, He gives us perspective. And there's a couple of different lines of perspective I think we need to have about suffering and. living life more than we can handle. First is an internal perspective. The second is an eternal perspective.

Let's begin with the internal perspective. 2 Corinthians chapter 1. Verses 8 and 9 in the New International Version, we'll put them up on the screen. We do not want you to be uninformed, brothers and sisters, about the troubles we experienced. in the province of Asia.

We were under great pressure. Watch this. Watch this. Far beyond our ability to endure.

Sounds like he's saying God just gave him more than he can handle, right? Far beyond our ability to endure, so that we despaired of life itself. Indeed. We felt we had received the sentence of death. But this happened that we might not rely on ourselves, but on God who raises.

The dead.

Okay, that's That sounds pretty bad. Hey, Paul, how bad was it? It was so bad. that I thought I was going to die.

Next on the agenda was my death. I despaired even of life. I had the sentence of death in myself. You go on in this book, and he starts filling in some of the blanks. We won't turn to it.

But he will write in a couple of verses about this period in his life. He says, In labors more abundant, in stripes above measure, in prisons more frequently, from the Jews five times, I received forty stripes minus one. Anybody ever see Passion of the Christ? How Jesus was beaten to a pulp in that movie. Paul had that happen to him five times in his life.

This is the Apostle Paul. This is God's Number one guy. I was beaten three times with rods. Once I was stoned. That means stones were thrown at him, not he got stoned.

Three times I was shipwrecked. A night and day, I have been in the deep. What I want you to notice about What we just read together in 2 Corinthians chapter 1 is that Paul gives the reason God allowed him to have more than he can handle. And that is this, God stripped away from him. Everything every solution, every resource.

So that he realized I got nothing. I can't fix this. I cannot fix this. I have no resource to make this situation any better.

Next on the agenda. I die. We have a word for this. We call it brokenness. A person who is in a pit of despair, they're broken.

It drives them to a deeper dependence on God, the deepest possible dependence. But notice what it says in this verse. But this happened. Or in these verses, verses eight and nine, verse nine: this happened that we might not rely on ourselves. Hmm.

But on God who What does he do? Raises the dead. Would you agree it takes a lot of power to raise the dead? Takes a lot of juice to do that. And one of our problems, I think, is that we've never seen God raise the dead.

And what I mean by that is, we've never seen God take a hopeless situation and flip it. Because we haven't. We have a stunted perspective of God's ability. If you've ever been in a situation where there is no resource, no hope, no help, this is it. I'm a goner.

And then God flips it.

Well At that moment, God becomes so real to you. More real than any other time, more real than any Bible study could ever give you. Job, at the end of his book, after all that he suffered, said this: I have heard of you with the hearing of the ear. But now my eyes seize you. It's pretty easy to hear of God with the hearing of the ear.

We can do it every Sunday, every Wednesday. We can come and hear from the hearing of the ear who God is, what He does. But when you see God do something. That reality, that internal perspective where I have nothing in myself at all. God must raise the dead.

And let's talk about raising the dead. Remember Lazarus? Remember when Jesus said Was told your friend is sick. Right? And he knew that he was sick nigh unto death.

And Jesus said, okay, let's just stay here a few more days, make sure he's good and dead. I don't want to get there when he's sick. I want to get there when he's in the grave. And so he shows up. Mary and Martha, his sisters, are really bummed out at him.

If you'd have been here, my brother wouldn't have died. And Jesus said, Your brother will rise again. And they gave Jesus the correct. Hearing of the ear theological answer. I know that my brother will rise again at the last day.

Good, you get an A on the test. But what Jesus was about to do was blow their minds. And a resurrection We'll do that.

So, when you are in a hopeless situation and God flips it like a resurrection, Wow. Your faith is on fire after that. I don't know what situation you may be in. You may be in a really deep, bad situation. And you're not even six feet under, you're 16 feet under.

You're looking for a headstone at this point. Like Paul said, I've got the sentence of death in myself. God would say to you, Hold on. Hold on. I'm about to blow your minds.

This is Connect with Skip Heitzig. When you give to this ministry, you help reach thousands of people every day with God's life-changing truth, encouraging them to know him, trust him, and walk in his freedom. And this month, we want to thank you with a special resource package. You'll receive Skiff's book, Biography of God, which helps you explore God's nature, his power, the mystery of the Trinity, and the hope that comes from removing the false limitations we sometimes place on him. Plus, you'll get Skip's six-message CD series, Expound Galatians, where Skip unpacks the book of Galatians and the freedom believers have through grace, not works.

Your gift today helps bring the life-changing message of Jesus to people around the world through Connect with Skiff. Request your resources when you give $50 or more at connectwithskiff.com/slash offer. or by calling 800-922-8888.

Now, here's more from Pastor Skip.

Now, I want to give you some eternal perspective, not just internal perspective, eternal perspective.

So, we're going to put up a verse in a minute, but if you'd like to turn to 2 Corinthians 4, you don't have to. I'm going to put the verse up on the screen. I'm going to have you turn to another chapter in a minute. But in 2 Corinthians chapter 4. In Paul's personal journal, He frames for us how he's able to handle.

All this stuff. All this stuff that would be more than I can handle. How does he do it? These verses that we put up on the screen. 2 Corinthians 4:16 through 18.

Therefore We do not lose heart. Even though our outward man is perishing, yet the inward man is being renewed day by day. You with me so far?

Okay, what you're about to read should shock you. Watch this. For our light. Affliction. Wha what?

Our light Affliction. Which is but for a moment is working for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.

Well, we do not look at the things which are seen, but the things which are not seen, but the things which are seen are temporary, the things which are not seen are eternal.

Okay, time out. Paul, wait a minute. A couple chapters ago, you just said that this was beyond your ability to endure. And now you're just saying, yeah. Yeah.

It's a light affliction. It's a momentary light affliction. Why?

Well If you think of your trial. That you're going through now. Think of it in terms of a hundred years from now. A thousand years from now. A trillion years from now.

What is it? It's light. It's light. It's a light and momentary affliction. Why?

Because your trial doesn't have the last word. Jesus has the last word. The trial does not have the last word. The last line of your script is not going to read: God gave him more than he could handle, and he died. Doesn't say that, it won't say that.

The hardest thing to get. When you are suffering with overwhelming sorrow, the hardest thing to get is an eternal perspective. But we must. It makes all the difference between a bearable trial and a crushing trial.

Now, when Paul says it's a light affliction and you know what you're going through and you read this light affliction, you go, that doesn't help me all that much. He's not trying to minimize your trial, he's trying to maximize your perspective.

So we have an internal and an eternal perspective.

Now, I'd like to take you to our closing text. You're in 2 Corinthians. Go to chapter 12 with me, 2 Corinthians chapter 12. I want to give you an example now, a meaningful example in Paul's own life. You've heard from Paul's own words.

His own experiences, he's God's best apostle, greatest missionary in church history, went through overwhelming. hard to endure. more than he could handle stuff. And he talks in verse seven of Second Corinthians twelve. Actually, what do you Begins the chapter with is talking about all the revelations he's had from God.

And it's enough to puff anybody up. He was taken to heaven and he saw the throne room of God, but he didn't really describe it. He says it's unlawful to even utter. And you're thinking, Paul, tell me about it. Can't do it, it's against the law.

It's unlawful to utter. It defies description.

So he says this in verse 7: lest I should be exalted above measure. By the abundance of the revelations, a thorn in the flesh. Was given to me a messenger of Satan to buffet me. lest I be exalted above measure. He talks about a thorn in the flesh.

What is he talking about? What is he dealing with?

Well, we're not sure. He doesn't really tell us. No one really knows. A lot of people guess. I'm going to share with you some of the guesses that I found in many commentaries.

Some say it's a constant temptation. Others say it's an eye problem, ophthalmic. Issue. Others say epilepsy, others say migraines, others say malaria, others say speech disability, others say gallstones, others say gout. Others say rheumatism.

Others say intestinal disorder, others say speech impediment. Does anybody know? No, they're all over the map. Nobody knows what he had. One Scottish commentator said the thorn in the flesh was probably his wife.

Ha ha ha ha ha. I'm guessing that That commentator did not have a great marriage, do you think?

Now, when you read thorn in the flesh, you think of a little thorn, a little piece of wood. You know, you lift it up. That two by four, and you got a thorn or that rosebush, you got a little thorn in the flesh. The word isn't tiny thorn, it's the word for steak. An impaling stake.

where they would take and impale or torture people on. a stake in the flesh, a nagging, severe physical affliction.

Okay, so Paul had something. that he was dealing with.

So Paul thought, well, there's only one way to deal with this. I'm going to pray. that God will remove it. Right? That's what we do.

We pray that God will remove it. Why?

Because there's more than I can handle.

So verse 8, concerning this thing. I pleaded with the Lord how many times? Three times. that it might depart from Me. What that indicates to me is he prayed, no answer, prayed, no answer, prayed a third time.

And then he stopped. You stop asking God to remove. this unbearable burden. Because he came to discover by God revealing it to him that this pain had purpose. And the purpose was to keep him humble.

So verse 9. And he, that is the Lord, said to me, My grace. It's all you need. It is sufficient for you. It's enough.

My grace is sufficient for you. My strength is made perfect in weakness. Do you think that's the answer Paul was looking for? I don't. I think he was hoping God would say, Well, sure, you're Paul the Apostle.

I'll take the thorn away. I'll give you the ability to have freedom in your ministry. God said, No, Paul. Yeah. I'm not going to take it away.

My grace is all you need. I'm going to favor you with the ability to bear up under it.

Now, at this point, let me give you probably the briefest thumbnail sketch. of evil in the world. Here's a brief explanation of evil. We live in a fallen world. Ever since Adam and Eve introduced sin into the garden, every single person born after that was born with a fallen nature.

We experience the effects of that fall on a daily basis. God doesn't cause bad things to happen to his children. But he doesn't necessarily prevent them from happening either. As Jesus said, the sun shines on the just and the unjust, rainfalls on the just and the unjust.

So the world is free. And God rarely steps in to alter the effects. Of sin on his creation. He does it from time to time. We call them miracles, but usually he doesn't.

So he lets trials happen. to Christians. Like he lets trials happen to pagans. Why?

How come no special favours? I'm his child. I love him. I'm committed to him. I'm in covenant with him.

Why?

Here's the reason why.

So that The superiority of a life lived in God can be demonstrated to onlookers. We want to show unbelievers that following Christ is superior to whatever they're into. And if they can look at our lives and see how we suffer in grace. That might mean more to them than any tract. We give them, or Christian movie we ask them to see, or presentation, or skit.

that we give to them. The superiority of a life lived in God can be demonstrated. In other words, we showcase God's grace. We show unbelievers. These are God's resources that I am leaning on.

And so my question to you, it's a hard question. It's not an easy answer. But here it is. Are you willing? To embrace pain and suffering.

if it demonstrates God's grace. in your life to others. Are you willing to embrace it?

Well, let's see. Was Paul?

Well, but he says, My grace is sufficient for you. My strength is made perfect in weakness. Okay, that's what God said to him. What did Paul say back? Or what does he think?

Therefore, Most gladly I will rather boast in my infirmities. Who do you know that says that? That the power of Christ may rest upon me, therefore, I take pleasure in my infirmities, in reproaches, in needs, in persecution, in distress for Christ's sake. For when I am weak then I am strong. Brothers and sisters, I have yet to get there.

But I want to get there. For when I am weak, Then I am Strong.

Somebody asked C.S. Lewis, why did the righteous suffer? And he said back to them, why not? They're the only ones who can handle it. And when others see you, handle it in grace.

speaks volumes to them.

So will God give you? More than you can handle.

Well, there's gonna be times. quite candidly in your life. that I'll say yes. It's going to feel that way. It's going to seem that way.

And you cry out to God, and God is silent. And you cry out again and he's silent. And you cry out again, and it's like what? Is God like, he didn't, he's written me off? I mentioned Job.

I mentioned him again. Job experienced this exact situation. He says, I go to the east to find God. He's not there. I go to the west to find God.

He's not there. I go to the north, go to the south. I can't find God. Everywhere I look, I cannot Connect. But then he said this.

But he knows the way that I take. I can't find him, but he knows exactly where I am. He knows the way that I take, and when I am tested, I will come forth as gold. I will come forward as goal. The will of God will never lead you, where the grace of God cannot keep you.

The will of God will never lead you where the grace of God cannot keep you.

Some of you need to write that down. And put that in your Bible somewhere in the back. The grace of God will never lead you. Or the will of God will never lead you, or the grace of God cannot keep you. That sort of sums up what Paul is saying here.

Let me just conclude now. by saying, I don't know that God wants you to handle everything. I'm okay, I'm handling this. This is a lot for me to handle, but I'm hand. God didn't want you to handle it.

He want you to hand it. Over to him. Take your pain and hand it over to him. For that matter, take your life and hand it over to him. Thanks for joining us today on Connect with Skip Heitzig.

Before we go, remember, your generosity helps share God's word around the world, bringing truth and hope to people who need Jesus. And this month, we'd love to thank you for your support by sending you a special resource bundle, Skip's book, Biography of God, along with his six-message CD series, Expound, Galatians. Together, these resources help you explore who God really is and how to live in the spiritual freedom he offers. Give today at connectwithskip.com slash offer or call 800-922-1888. See you next time on Connect with Skip.

Make a connection Make a connection. Should Oh. Of the crossing. Castle burning. Yeah, so Connect with Skip Heitzig is a presentation of connection communications, connecting you to God's never-changing truth in ever-changing times.

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