Welcome to Connect with Skip Heitzig. We're glad you've joined us for today's program. Connect with Skip Heitzig exists to connect you to God's never changing truth in ever changing times through verse by verse teaching of His Word. That's why we make messages like this one today available to you and others on air and online. Before we kick off today's teaching, we want to let you know that you can stay in the know about what's happening at Connect with Skip Heitzig when you sign up for email updates. When you do, you'll also receive Skip's weekly devotional email to inspire you with God's Word each week. So sign up today at connectwithskip.com.
That's connectwithskip.com. Now let's get into today's teaching from Pastor Skip Heitzig. God doesn't give us all the information you want. God gives us all the information you need. Deuteronomy 29 29 says the secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children. God knows what you need to hear.
I know we'd like to know more. People ask you questions. Why would God do this? Why would God allow this? I don't know what you're answering. I don't know what your answer is, but let me tell you what the right answer is from you to them.
I don't know. The secret things belong to the Lord, not to me. God doesn't give me all the information I want. He doesn't give me all the information he has, but he gives me all the information I need. He gives me just enough information to act on that. Hey, how are you doing acting on the information he's given you so far? Let's just start there.
So John felt it wasn't important to give the details, but the ones he gave were important details. There's something else in that phrase. After these things.
Here's the principle, another principle. God's watch is more accurate than my watch. I wear a watch. I don't always remember to wind it. I have the kind that you have to wind every day or it'll tell you the wrong time.
So I wound it this morning and I think I have pretty good time. It's accurate. But God's watch is more accurate than my watch. God keeps perfect timing. God is never late. And one of the things we find over and over again in the gospels is just how accurate God was in his timing. Galatians chapter four, verse four, that in the fullness of the time, God sent forth his son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law at just the right time. And once Jesus hit planet Earth, boy, was he on a perfect timetable, right?
He gets to Canaan and his mom goes, come on, do this miracle. And Jesus said, my hour has not yet come. He wasn't just keeping the days. He was keeping the right hours.
His watch was accurate. Later on, when it is the time for the crucifixion, he prays to his father in John chapter 17. Father, the hour has come. Glorify your son that your son may glorify you. Jesus was moving to the exact timetable as set by the Father. So it was after these things.
The Apostle Peter is a part of this whole entourage. Later on, he will say this. For God is not slack concerning his promise, as some count slackness.
He's just long suffering, not willing that any should perish. Now, my earthly father was late. He was late for picking me up from school. He was late for dropping me off to school. He was late for doing just about anything that involved me. I remember well. That was my earthly father, but my heavenly father is never late.
Your heavenly father is right on time. So that's the first layer, after these things. That's the first phrase.
The second phrase in the second layer, it says, after these things, Jesus walked in Galilee. Hey, how did Jesus get around from place to place? Oh, he didn't take a car? Or a moped? Or a bus?
He walked out. I don't want to really belabor this, but I want you just to think about it. Some of us took a tour to Israel not long ago. Raise your hand if you were with us. Raise your hand if you went to Israel. If you've ever been to Israel, how's that? Raise your hand.
Okay. So when we all went to Israel, we had an air-conditioned bus that took us from place to place to place to place. The bus did all the work. The bus took us to about one one hundredth of all the places Jesus went to. The bus let us off. The bus picked us up. And we just walked a little bit around some of those places.
And even doing that, we all said, I'm tired. Hey, Jesus didn't just walk in Galilee. He walked to Galilee. He didn't just walk in Jerusalem. He walked to Jerusalem.
And all the places I just mentioned, he didn't just walk in them. He walked to them. There was a 16-year-old teenage boy who just got his driver's license, and he said to his dad, Dad, I'd like to talk to you sometime about my use of the family car. Dad said, tell you what, son, if you can bring your grades up, and if you start studying the Bible more, and if you cut your hair, then we'll discuss your use of the family car. Well, a month later, this kid brought his grades up. He'd been reading his Bible, and his dad said, Son, I'm so proud of you.
Your grades are up, almost straight A's. I noticed you've been reading your Bible every morning, but your hair, you still didn't cut it. And his son said, well, you know, Dad, I've been thinking about that, and I noticed in the Bible, Samson had long hair, and Absalom had long hair, and Moses had long hair, and even the Lord Jesus had long hair. And his father said, you're absolutely right, and they walked wherever they went. So listen, don't always pass these words up when you read them in the Scripture, and he walked in Galilee.
But here's what this means in particular. The word walked is the Greek word perapateo. Perapateo means to walk about, to walk around, and it's typically a metaphor for hanging out, staying in, or living at. The point is, Jesus hung out and stayed mostly around Galilee, living there as his base, his headquarters, for that period of six to seven months. It doesn't mean he didn't take a jaunt up north or a jaunt over to Mount Hermon, but he came back and mostly was teaching his disciples walking around Galilee. Have you ever wondered what it was like to be a disciple?
I don't even have to ask for a show of hands. I know some of you have thought, wouldn't it be cool to have been in that group of disciples and follow Jesus around? Now just think about that thought. How hard would it be to follow Jesus? Do you think it'd be hard? Do you think it'd be hard to walk all these places and all of the demands and crowds that Jesus constantly had around him?
I bet it would be very hard to follow the Lord Jesus Christ. First of all, let me tell you about Galilee in the summer. You think it's hot here? I checked the weather today and the next few days in Galilee, 101, 102, 103, with the kind of humidity that a lake affords. I've been to Galilee in the summer. I've gotten sick and dehydrated in Galilee for a few days.
They had to put me in bed. So I can just imagine what it would have been like to be these disciples following Jesus during that summer in the heat, walking to all these places. But what they saw, what they heard, what they experienced during that summer would last a lifetime.
It would be enough for a lifetime of memories and changed lives. What they saw, they would write about in the generations to come. Take the transfiguration, for example. Peter would write about that in 2 Peter, saying, We didn't follow cunningly devised fables when we made known to you the power and coming of the Lord Jesus Christ.
We were eyewitnesses of his majesty when that voice from God the Father came down from the excellent glory, saying, This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased. So following Jesus was hard, but what they learned would last them a lifetime. Here's the point I want to make.
Here's the principle in this layer. Following Jesus Christ, really following Jesus Christ, is hard. But it sure beats the alternative. Following Jesus is hard, but it beats the alternative.
Hey, you know what? The Lord has led me into places that are highly uncomfortable. He has led me into places that are even painful. But it's always been fruitful.
It's always been profitable. Not easy, but it beats the alternative. What's the alternative? Living a boring life. Living an unimaginative, boring life. And you know what? Last time I checked, everybody's doing that.
Everybody around that I see has got that pretty well covered. The things that Jesus said in John chapter 6, they were so shocking to people. Some of those disciples said, we're leaving.
We're not going to follow you anymore. They loved his works. They didn't like his words. They loved the miracles. They loved the food. They loved the healing. They didn't like what he said.
And so they turned and followed him no more. You're listening to Connect with Skip Heitzig. Before we return to Skip's teaching, we want to help you and the children in your life see the timeless story of Christ from cradle to cross with Nate Heitzig's new book, Christmas Under the Tree. Told through the eyes of an unlikely character and graced with illuminating illustrations, this gripping tale is rooted in the limitlessness of Christ's love and helps young readers understand why Jesus left heaven to be born under and die upon a tree. This exciting resource, along with a companion audio experience, are available to you now as our way of saying thanks for your gift of $25 or more to reach more people with God's love through Connect with Skip Heitzig.
Go to connectwithskip.com slash offer or call 800-922-1888 and request your copy when you give. Now, let's get back to Skip for more of today's teaching. So Jesus said to his inner circle of apostles, Will you also leave? You remember what Peter said? Do those words still ring in your memory from last time? Where else would we go, Lord?
You alone have the words of eternal life, and we are convinced that you are the Christ, the Son of God. Hey, you know, after all that I've experienced, as good as it's been, as hard as it's been, as difficult as it may be, where else would I go? Nowhere. It's the best life. Talk about an adventure. You want an adventure, follow Jesus. My wife, along with some of you, were on a little team over to Iraq last week.
How's that for an adventure? In Jordan and Iraq, five playgrounds were built with reload love from all of the finances that we've collected through your generous giving. Five playgrounds for children who've been impacted by terrorism. And so I was thinking, I don't think there's been a lot of people last week that I know who have been in Iraq. I think if I went to Starbucks and said, how many of you guys have been to Iraq building playgrounds?
I probably wouldn't get a single taker. But that group was there, and they were there because they followed Jesus who took them there. So two layers we've covered, the when and the what. After these things, Jesus walked in Galilee.
And when you follow that one, it's not boring, it's exciting. Now let's consider the where. It says after these things, Jesus walked in Galilee because he did not walk in Judea, for he did not walk in Judea. Now just let's think about that. He didn't walk in Judea.
Why? Did he not like Judea? Did he think that Judeans were just like second class citizens? I don't want to be around those Judeans.
That had nothing to do with it, right? I mean, wasn't Judea the heart of the Jewish nation? Who knows what city was in Judea?
Any takers? What city was in Judea, if you know it, shout it out. Jerusalem, capital city, place where all the action is. The temple is there. It's the epicenter of religious life for the nation. But Jesus walked in Galilee, he did not want to walk in Judea.
Now, a quick little thumbnail sketch of history. The reason it's called Judea, do you remember why? It wasn't always called Judea. The 12 tribes came in and settled the area, right? They settled the land, 12 tribes. It was one nation, but it was like 12 states.
The United States of Israel, 12 states, 12 tribal allotments. But there was a problem. They wanted a king. So they got a king, his name was Saul, didn't work out too well. The next was a man after God's own heart, that was David.
That worked out pretty well. But David had a son named Solomon, that didn't work out too well. Because he overtaxed the people so much that his taxation programs, just to pay for the government, broke the people's backs. So when his son comes into office named Rehoboam, the older men say, young man, young king, you need to ease the tax burden on these people or they're going to rebel. But some of his young men said, tax them more. Do you think my dad was bad?
Wait till you see what I've got planned for this country. When he said that, and he did, there was a split. There was a revolt of the northern 10 tribes called Israel, Israel, and the 10 two southern tribes called Judea, comprised of Benjamin and Judah. But it was always thereafter referred to, even in the New Testament times, as the area of Judea. So at Jesus' day, you had Judea, then you had further north, some area, and then just a little further north, Galilee, and then north of that, Syria. So Jesus did not want to go or walk in Judea.
Now I have a principle with this layer of this one verse. God will never go where God doesn't want to go. You can't force him. You can't make Jesus walk where he doesn't want to walk. He doesn't want to walk in Judea. He's not walking there. He will later on, but he doesn't want to go there now. You can never force God to do what God doesn't want to do.
And here's why. God has an attribute that you and I don't have. It's called sovereignty. Ever check what that word means, sovereign? We have a sovereign God. It means completely independent, totally autonomous, fiercely self-determining, and totally and always in control of everything.
That's what sovereign means. God is that. You and I are never that. He is always that. And he is the only one who is that. He is the only sovereign being in the universe. He's what theologians say. He is the only non-contingent being. We are contingent beings. That is, we depend on God giving us life and breath, and when God is done, we're done. We are contingent beings.
God is the only absolutely sovereign, non-contingent being in the universe. Jesus will say later on to Peter, his disciples, he'll say, you know, Peter, when you were young, you put your clothes on, and you walked wherever you wanted to walk. But when you are old, others will take you where you don't want to go. That's true of Peter. Never true of Jesus. God will never go where God does not want to go. God's sovereignty, according to Arthur Pink, who wrote a thick book called The Sovereignty of God, Arthur Pink says, God's sovereignty is the foundation of Christian theology. It is the center of gravity of the system of truth.
It is the sun around which all lesser orbs are fixed. I like the way he said that. So, when people say, why would God do this, and why would God allow that, and why would the Lord? Your answer is, I don't know, but God has an answer. You know what God's answer to those questions are?
It's simply this. Because I'm God, and you're not. That's God's answer.
Why would you? Because I'm God, and you're not. He is absolutely sovereign.
He acts according to his own perfect will. Corrie Ten Boom, some of you have heard her name. She was a survivor of the Nazi death camps.
She was in a concentration camp. And she said, don't bother to give God instructions, just report for duty. How's that for good theology? Don't bother to give God instructions, just show up for duty, yes sir. You're sovereign, you're God, and I'm not. The quicker you learn that, the happier you will become. Key to happiness, accepting this truth, adjusting to God's sovereignty is always better than suffering the consequences of your obstinacy. Just, yes Lord, yes Lord.
Compliance is always better than consequence. So after these things, that's the when. Jesus walked in Galilee, that's the what. He didn't walk in Judea, that's the where. Now the fourth phrase of that 23 word verse, verse one, gives us the why. Because the Jews sought to kill him.
Let's put it all together. After these things, Jesus walked in Galilee, for he did not walk in Judea because the Jews sought to kill him. Beginning in this section, and we'll pick it up when we begin again in the Gospel of John, and we'll cover the chapter next time, not one verse. This begins a whole new section of Jesus' ministry.
And here's the section. From this point onward, there is an intensity of hatred toward Jesus that will take him to the cross. In six months from now, he'll be dead. It's the Feast of Tabernacles, he'll eventually go up to that. Six months after that will be the Feast of Passover. That'll be the last time he spends in Jerusalem. He'll be arrested and put on a cross.
There is a growing hatred, a mounting animosity, a fomenting hate-filled course that they are set on. By the time we get to chapter 11, it says, from that day forward, they plotted to put him to death. And that all begins back here in chapter 7. Now, Jesus will go up to Jerusalem in chapter 7. He'll spend six to seven months in Galilee. He'll eventually go up to Jerusalem during Tabernacles. But listen, it says he goes secretly. He goes secretly. Six months after he comes for the Passover, he doesn't come secretly, he comes openly. Openly, he presents himself to the nation on a donkey fulfilling Scripture.
He presents himself to that nation. But why does he go up secretly now? Because it's not his time to die, that's why. Oh, he's going to die, and oh, they want him dead.
But it's not his time to die. By the time, in six months, Jesus gets to Jerusalem and it's Passover time, those leaders, those Pharisees, those scribes, they think they've trapped Jesus, and they used Roman jurisprudence to put him to death. What they don't realize is they're just pawns on God's chessboard to effect our salvation through his death.
Let me throw an interesting thought out at you. What the Pharisees and scribes, the Jewish nation at the time, what they wanted and what God wanted were the same thing. Did you hear that? What they wanted and what God wanted were the same thing.
You know what that is? The death of Jesus. They wanted him dead. God the Father wants him dead. But for totally different reasons. They want to take his life from him because they hate him. He wants to give his life for them because he loves them.
Big difference. No man takes my life from me, Jesus. I lay it down of myself. They want him dead, they want him buried, God wants him dead, God wants him buried, but God wants him resurrected. So this is perfectly, in the moment by moment, hour by hour, perfect plan and will of God. And so in one verse, we get a pretty clear picture from all that we've seen so far. That Jesus is the Messiah, the long awaited Deliverer predicted in the scripture. He is the sovereign Son of God.
He is God in a human body who walks with perfect timing according to his Father's timetable. Who lived and moved and walked around Galilee. And in so doing, the lives of the disciples were absolutely changed during that six and seven months and he is sovereignly waiting for the right time to give himself as a ransom for many. So that in the fullness of time, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those of us who were born under the law. The law which condemned us. The leaders wanted Jesus out of the way.
God the Father presented Jesus as the way, the truth and the life. So, hey, we didn't cover a lot of verses, we covered a single verse, but we drilled deep tonight. And I just thought sometimes it's better to meditate on less than a whole lot because sometimes, you know, less is more, isn't it?
If you just peel those layers and meditate on those layers and find out what they mean, there's a lot there. We're glad you've joined us today. Before you go, remember that when you give $25 or more to help reach more people with the gospel through Connect with Skip Heitzig, we'll send you Nate Heitzig's new children's book, Christmas Under the Tree, which includes a companion audio experience.
Just in time for Christmas, this book will help young readers understand why Jesus left heaven to be born under and die upon a tree. To request your copy, call 800-922-1888. That's 800-922-1888. Or visit connectwithskip.com slash donate. For more from Skip, be sure to download the Connect with Skip Heitzig app, where you can access messages and more content right at your fingertips. Come back next time for more verse-by-verse teaching of God's word here on Connect with Skip Heitzig. Make a connection. Make a connection at the foot of the cross. Cast your burdens on His word. Make a connection. Connection. 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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