How do you respond when life deals you a raw deal?
You're doing what's right, but everything turns out wrong. Today, from Psalm 73, I'm going to give you three timeless principles about how you can respond when life is unfair, when you really question, God, where are you? If you're there today, stay with me. Thanks for joining us for this Edition of Living on the Edge with Chip Ingram. Chip's our Bible teacher for this international teaching and discipleship ministry focused on helping Christians live like Christians. In just a minute, Chip picks up where he left off in his series, Finding God When You Need Him Most. Today, he'll remind us that no matter what life throws at us, difficulties and hardships are temporary, but God's presence is permanent. Let's learn more about that as Chip shares the remainder of his talk, Experiencing God When You Get a Raw Deal. As he teased a minute ago, he'll be back in Psalm 73, but he begins by looking at how one notable Bible character responded when his whole world fell apart.
Let's dive in. What did Job do? I mean, this is Job's whole life. Job does what's right, negative, negative, negative. So he does more what's right, negative, negative, negative. And you know, the book of Job would say, hey God, what is the deal? I'm up to here with this. And when God finally reproves Job, does he ever reprove him for being angry and sharing his heart?
Answer, no. He only reproves him for his arrogance, of defending himself. I was as angry with God as I've ever been in my life. And in response, God could not have manifested himself in my dorm room in a physical appearance and spoke in actual words and spoken more clearly than Psalm 73.
I had a sense literally of goosebumps on the back of my neck as I read that passage and as I would go through verse after verse, it was like a videotape in my mind was playing of pictures and things that were revealed right out of that passage. God was speaking to me. What I'm trying to tell you is pour out your heart. Get it out of your mouth. Share it.
Verses 2 through 14, we have one of the most godly men in all of Israel telling it like it is to God, venting his emotions with at least a significant amount of reverence. But he puts it out there. Have you ever done that? Or are you holding it in? You think it's more godly to hold it in? Now, by the way, don't go pour it out to everyone else. Pour it out to God. Tell him. Let him be your counselor. Don't go pour it out to everyone else. Pour it out to God. Tell him.
Let him be your counselor. A neat lady, she came up after the Saturday night service and we gave people some time to respond and to pray. She said this was one of the greatest nights of my life. She had a horrendous, you talk about unjust life, raw deal, a horrendous childhood. And her mother did and said things to her that no human being should ever do to any other human being.
And she's a mature Christian and she knows what's right and she knows that it is God's will to forgive her mother and she has never done it. And last night after the service, she said, I did it. I have never felt so. I felt like the world is finally off my shoulders.
I finally got it. I poured out my heart and I let it go and I forgave my mom tonight and she was beaming. That's principle number one if you want to overcome, if you want to experience God in the midst of your raw deal.
Principle number two, life lesson number two, is consider carefully your choices. When you get angry, when people do you in, I don't know about you, but injustice, it's like, you know, everybody has a button, it's one of mine. I mean, there's certain things I can endure and say, yeah, it's a fallen world and we'll work through it.
Injustice just makes me nuts. And it makes me nuts when it happens anywhere, but it makes me absolutely crazy when it happens to me. And so I'm tempted to do very stupid things when I get a raw deal, to say things, and to act in ways that will really, really be harmful to me and to others. I mean, I was ready to quit the whole Christian life because my girlfriend walks out the door with another guy. I mean, think that one through a little bit.
Yeah, ruin your whole life because of a 20-year-old girl that you've known for two years. Yeah, don't go there, Chip. Asaph realized his quitting would do what? Did you notice? Look at verse 15. He said, if I would have spoken thus, I would have betrayed your children. And I remember that night. I remember I was meeting with six guys in a Bible study. I had the privilege of leading about four or five of those guys to Christ. And as I sat there, what I realized, if I jump out of the Christian faith, if I quit because of this, what do I tell them? And then I thought of the closest friends I've ever had, the most vulnerable, open, loving relationships I've ever had was with God's people. And if I jump out of the Christian life, I lose all that.
And all of a sudden I realized, wait a second. Consider your choices carefully. When tempted to throw in the towel, we must weigh the impact it will have on others. When you get a raw deal, you can react and, boy, you can burn some bridges and hurt a lot of people. One elder really had some great wisdom about making wise choices. He said, you know, I was involved in business and we had six partners. And I was the principal partner. I owned 30% of the business. And he said, everything came to a standstill.
Cash flow came to a halt. And he said, I was the only one with the resources. I had a considerable amount of equity in my house.
I pulled out all the equity in my house and got a loan based on that as well to float the business. And we all made a business agreement, signed legal document that should this thing go in the tank, we would share. I was going to underwrite the business, but we would share the loss. He said, well, it went in the tank. And he said, it was like watching rats run off of a ship. They're gone. He said, I lost the business. I lost my home. I lost everything that I owned.
Everything. And then he said, you know, I had to work through. And he said, I'd walk with the Lord for some time. And in fact, he was an elder in a church at the time, another church, another location many years ago. And he said, I worked through the part where my goal wasn't vengeance and I had to make wise choices.
And then here was the balance. He said, I had one Christian partner and I had five non-Christian partners. The one Christian partner on a handshake, we agreed that we would do what God wanted us to do, that we would model, that we would not fight, that we would assume losses together, and whatever God would bring back, we would assume gains together. And he said then, under control, not out of malice, as I've worked it through in my heart, then at the same time, while submitting to and saying, God is sovereign and God is good, and this is what's happened, he said, I pursued justice through the legal system.
And he ended up going to court with all five of those, won a judgment, and got 65 cents on the dollar. See, here's what I want you to hear carefully. Two extremes happen. The extremes, when you get injustice, is to bury it or go irrational. Or to think, okay, God's a sovereign, I'm a doormat, you know, I guess life really stinks and God will make... There are times when you've been abused, when you've been lied to, when you've been cheated, under control, not out of malice, to pursue justice is a very right course to bring about righteousness in the world.
Do you get that? So the first step is what? Pour out your heart. Second step, really think through carefully your response.
Third step is get the big picture. Verse 17, it says, when he entered the sanctuary of the Lord, bang, then he understood therein. He worshipped, he got an eternal perspective.
When we see life through an eternal perspective, we then begin to realize what's important and what's not. That happens when you meet with God. See, Asaph's whole world turned around, my whole world turned around because I went back to my dorm room and I opened my Bible and I said, God, speak to me, speak to me.
I'm mad, I'm hurt, it's not fair, speak to me, and he did, and he'll speak to you. Verse 17, he enters the sanctuary. Notice then he gets eternal perspective. Verse 18 to 20, he says, you know, in the final analysis, the wicked don't prosper. And then verse 21, he says, 22, he says, wait a second, I was thinking irrationally.
I was depressed, I was into self-pity. And then he looks back and gets a big picture and says, wait a second, big picture, whom have I in heaven but you? And besides you, I don't desire anything else. You are my strength, you're my portion, you've been faithful.
You are my only real source of joy, you're the only one I could ever count on. You are eternal, you are good, and you are sovereign. You get it? Now here's the question, how do you get that?
How can you get an eternal perspective? How do you get the big picture instead of kind of getting your emotional radar locked into that person, that's what they did. Here's the consequences, I'm not dealing with this in a negative way. I don't have a problem, I'm not angry about this, I've dealt with it. And all the rest of us are saying, have you thought of a good counselor? I don't need any counseling, this isn't a problem.
Been there and done that, huh? Let me give you three ways to get God's perspective. Number one, focus on God's character. Read through the Psalms, buy A.W.
Tozer's book, Little Thin Book, The Knowledge of the Holy. Read or pray through the Ten Commandments and ask, what attribute of God does each commandment reflect? His justice, His goodness, His holiness.
But the three attributes you have to focus on, God is good, God is sovereign, and God is faithful. What you're experiencing did not catch God off guard. Oh my gosh, look what happened to poor little Chip Gabriel, did anybody know this was going to happen?
Oh my gosh, she ran out, he ran off, they cheated so and so. I mean, God didn't get surprised, He is sovereign, He's in control. That means not only does He know about it, but He will turn it around and use it for good if you don't bail out of His plan. He's good, He has your best interest in mind. People can try and do negative things to you, they can try and hurt you, He's bigger than they are. He's more powerful than they are, and He's faithful. Every promise He's made to you, He's going to come through.
In your timing, probably not. And in the process, as you struggle with it, He'll probably make you a lot more like Christ, which is the big plan anyway. So number one, focus on the attributes of God.
Number two, get into the Bible. Scripture will give you perspective. In fact, that's why I believe Joseph, I'm reading through the Old Testament right now, Joseph is the perfect example, isn't he? I mean, here's a righteous young man, and he does good, he gets bad. He does good, he gets more bad. He does more good, he does get more and more bad.
Open Genesis 37 and read it to chapter 50. And here's a guy who does what's right, and so they sell him into slavery. Here's a guy that, when he's a slave, he does everything right, so he rises to the head of Potiphar's household, and Potiphar's wife says, hey, man, I want to sleep with you. And he's righteous and runs away, and she lies, and he ends up in prison. He's in prison, he does what's right, and two people forget him.
Why? Because God had a bigger plan. For 12 to 14 years, Joseph does right, Joseph does right, Joseph does right, circumstances go bad, bad, worse, really bad. But there's a little phrase when you read through that. Every time something bad happens, this little phrase is after Joseph. And the Lord was with Joseph.
And the Lord is with you. And when you focus on Scripture, you get perspective. So by the end of his life, Joseph can see it through the eternal lens. He's got the big picture, and his brothers are shaking in their boots, and they're thinking, oh, Dad's died, now Joseph's going to take revenge. And I can see Joseph crossing his arms.
In fact, it says he weeps, and he turns to his brothers and says, guys, you still don't get it, do you? You meant it for evil, but God meant it for good, to bring about this present result to preserve many people alive. You guys did it for the wrong motives, the wrong reason, but God had a plan, and he was going to take the whole nation of Israel and put them in the incubator of Egypt in this lush land to multiply to fulfill his promises, and he allowed this evil to happen to Joseph to fulfill that. God has a Joseph plan for you.
Don't bail out. You want the big picture? Focus on God's attributes, number one. Two, focus on Scripture.
And three, get around God's people. One of the reasons I shared with the elders, and the biggest areas I've struggled with, with injustice, it has been my small group or the elders that I've been able to bounce that off of and get their perspective. And as they talk, it was really interesting. They got all their ups and downs like we do, but they've been around a while. That's why they call them elders.
The word means older. And they talked about some of the biggest hits they've taken, but now in the rearview mirror, as you know what, God's just used that. God's just used that. God's just used that.
So, you're struggling with a raw deal, and you want God to really help you. One, pour out your heart. Two, consider carefully the choices you make.
It's dangerous ground. Three, get the big picture. Get the eternal perspective. And four, reaffirm your relationship with God. Ultimately, God's presence.
Him. Ultimately, the final analysis, God's presence, is your only sure source of security and joy, both now and forever. There's a lot of good things in my life, but none of them have the power to be consistent day in, day out, and come through for me.
And the moment I begin to trust in them, they become an idol. And what he's saying here is, reaffirm your relationship with God. Turn the raw deal over to God. Verse 27, realize, you know what, people who've done wicked evil things, verse 27, you know what, God's big. Justice will happen.
They'll get their due. But as for me, let the nearness of God be your good. Make cultivating a relationship with Him your good. Make a choice. He said, I have made the Lord God my refuge. Make a choice today before you leave to take the raw deal, give it to God, and then say, God, I want you to work it for good. I'll stay in the game plan, and I want to walk with you. And the day will come when you will tell of His deeds, when you will say, this terrible thing happened in my life, and lo and behold, what a marvelous thing God did through it.
You're listening to Living on the Edge with Chip Ingram. Before we hear the rest of Chip's message, let me remind you that we are a listener-supported ministry. Your financial gifts help us create programs like this one, develop new resources, and encourage pastors globally. Prayerfully consider supporting us today. Then go to livingontheedge.org to give a gift.
Thanks so much for your help. Well, here again is Chip. Well, I've got a couple that I want to introduce to you. It's Jerry and Laurie Dietz. And they're going to come out and share, really, the testimony of the deeds that God has done in their life through some very, very difficult times.
And as they come out, let me give you a little background on them because I want you to hear more about how they've learned and how they've grown. Let me give you a little background on Jerry. An 18-year-old, he is quite an athlete, has a tremendous future in college and likely beyond in football, and he decides to do a good deed. And his good deed is there's a fight and he breaks up the fight. And one of the people fighting pull out a gun and a bullet goes through Jerry that paralyzes him.
And then the fella gets closer and at point-blank range puts two more rounds in his stomach. Jerry, since that time, at least since I've known him, has had three or four times of complications where he's almost lost his life and since that time has had over 30 major surgeries. Laurie has been through a little bit different scenario of talk about tough times, injustice. As a young woman in the military, she was raped and beaten and came out of the military a very hardened woman, angry with life and especially with men. She found herself in a relationship that was both physically and emotionally abusive to her for 10 years. And then since that time, she found Christ. And just to add sort of a little pain to what was already painful, you'll notice she has a cane here. And I don't know in the last five or six years that I've ever talked with Laurie where she didn't either have a cane, a crutch.
She has had 23 major operations in the last eight years. And so I don't know where you've been, but I think they have something to say to us about trusting God in the midst of difficulty and adversity and what at least seems very unjust. So let me ask you, Jerry and Laurie, how has God used what you've been through to change your life? Why don't you start first, Jerry?
Well, I think that who says we got a raw deal out of the deal? So that's my first thought on it. But God took me and when I first got hurt, I tried to use my strength, my physical ability, my mental toughness to overcome the disability. And as that went on, it got harder and it got harder because the reality of the disability got harder and harder. So Christ, when I accepted Christ, kind of jumped on the team with me. So the saying that He carries you through the sand and He takes all those hard times away is true. The hard times are still there, but with Him, the hard times don't seem so bad. So I can still take the mental toughness and the physical ability I have and just transfer them into a different arena. So He's given me the strength to know that no matter what happens, I know the end of the story.
So we all win. So no matter what happens in between, it's okay. How about you, Laurie? How has God used all that you've been through to change your life? Well, I started out after the military as a very bitter, angry person, ready to punch anybody that looked at me wrong. I was very, very deeply hurt. I was frightened.
I was like a rabbit that would quickly go in a hole, very, very self-protective. And God just had to take all that shell away and let me know that if I leaned on Him and looked to Him as the center of my life, He would take care of the other stuff. He would take care of the circumstances. So I just need to fully trust and fully lean on His strength. And that's not always such an easy proposition. I mean, it's good to say, I mean, the Bible's real clear, trust me and I'll be there and I'll be your strength. And let me follow up with one more question because I know you guys pretty well and we've spent some time together. And I know that when things get real tough, I know Jerry is one of the toughest-minded, highly focused guys I've ever met. He's a marathoner. And when he starts to get discouraged, he just says, I'm not going there.
But you've got a little bit different personality, emotional makeup. When you get to the point and you wake up in the morning and you just say, because there's a lot of people here unconvinced that are at the point where they want to say, I'm going to throw in the towel. This is too hard. This isn't fair. This stinks. What do you do when you get right to the edge and you just say, I can't take this anymore. I want to quit. Where do you go? What do you do?
It's a couple areas. I have a lot of physical pain and I have nightmares that I still have. And when I get full of anguish and anxiety, I have to remember that I have to go back to the source of my strength. So the first thing I do is I pray, and I pray really, really hard.
And it takes as long as it takes to get the peace in. I also go into the Bible and I have two verses that are my promise from God. The first one is Jeremiah 29, 11.
Sorry, guys. And that's, I know the plans that I have for you, declares the Lord. They're to prosper and not to harm you. They're to give you a hope and a future. And I never thought there was hope for any kind of life after what I'd been through, but God proved it different. And as long as we trust Him through it, we will succeed.
But it can't be our strength because I can't do it on my own because I'll drown in the circumstances if I look at them. And so you go to prayer, you go to God's Word, and then you shared with me too that this is when, this has really developed an intense relationship. You and Jerry talk very deeply. And you made a comment last night, is it okay to share, since you did, is that Jerry knows you in ways better than yourself and because when he sees you sinking, he can come in. And see, I want people to hear, there's times where we pray, we get in God's Word, but God has special people in our lives to give us perspective that we just can't get on our own.
Well, let me shift gears now because a lot of people are saying, yeah, Chip, thanks for the Joseph story, Genesis 37, a few thousand years ago. I'm glad it turned out better for him, but you don't know my deal. How has God used your situation for the good? What good has come out of all the stuff you've been through?
Well, I think that's the exciting part about it. We see it going on and we don't really see what's going on, but as I look back, I've been in wheelchair sports for 30 years. I've been a Christian for 25 years and I've traveled all over the world and I've been able to share with people what Christ has done in my life. Not only have I been able to compete and continue in that avenue of life, but I can take what God has done in my life because with a lot of disabled people, a lot of able-bodied people, and I have something that the able-bodied people can see, they think is a problem.
The disabled people realize, it could be a problem, it could not be a problem because we're all in the same boat. So what happens is I can share that Christ has come into my heart, come into my life, and taken what would appear to be a terrible situation and turned it around and made it a great situation. And so, as we've talked before, traveled all over the world in sports and been able to share the Lord. And so it doesn't get much better than that.
It's pretty exciting stuff. Do you think you have ever met Laurie if this wouldn't have happened? No way. Do you think you would have ever become a Christian? We never know, but with the kind of makeup and personality that says, I can do it myself, do you think you would have ever found Christ on your own apart from where you've been?
I don't think so. I always knew who Christ was, I knew who God was, but I didn't have a personal relationship, and I think that's the part that changed. When I accepted Christ into my life, it became a personal relationship.
I don't think that would have ever happened. Well, Jerry probably wouldn't tell you this, but it's kind of a great testimony of God. He's a world-class marathoner. He has a gold medal in the Olympics wheelchair basketball team. He was in 1996 at the Atlanta games in the pentathlon, and for all the world to see, his picture and his name came up in the final, I mean, final last race of the pentathlon, and that has opened doors for Jerry to travel the world and tell people about Christ.
God can take what was meant for evil and use it for good. Thank you, guys, for your courage, and thanks for just hanging in there, because we know it's a day-by-day tough deal. We love you, and we appreciate you.
Thank you. We want to give you a chance not to simply hear and say, that's great, you kind of know where I'm going, right? See, the goal of Scripture is not that we become more intelligent about the truth.
The goal of Scripture is we practice it. I'd like to give you some time, if you've never poured out your heart, if you have never taken that raw area of injustice and the pain, just sit quietly, bow your head, and you and God pour out your heart. Give him the raw deal.
Turn it over to him, and as a part of this, whoever hurts you, choose to forgive him. You're listening to Living on the Edge with Chip Ingram, and the message you just heard, Experiencing God When You Get a Raw Deal, is from our series, Finding God When You Need Him Most. Chip will join us in studio to share some insights from today's talk in just a minute. Through this study and the book of Psalms, Chip will help us develop a biblically grounded perspective toward our most difficult circumstances and experiences, hear what God wants us to know when things aren't going well, and why we can absolutely trust His promise to be there for us, again and again and again.
To catch up on this entire series, listen through the Chip Ingram app or at livingontheedge.org. Well, Chip's back in studio with me, and Chip, during the program, I was thinking about the countless people out there listening who have serious spiritual needs. And as we create new programs and develop resources to meet those needs, the expenses of the ministry are a monthly issue, aren't they? So take a minute, if you would, and talk to those who've considered partnering with us before but just haven't made that commitment. You know, Dave, really only about 2% of all the people that listen partner with us financially in any way. And I think sometimes it's because they just don't think what I could do would make a difference. But I just want to encourage some of you that feel like, boy, God's really using this in my life, but I'm just not in a position.
Maybe you could do something really small, but God could take your small gift and do something really big with it. So, you know, thanks so much and appreciate anything God leads you to do. Thanks, Chip. Well, if joining the Living on the Edge team is an idea that makes sense to you, let me encourage you to become a monthly partner. You can do that today by visiting livingonttheedge.org or by calling 888-333-6003. That's 888-333-6003 or go to livingonttheedge.org.
App listeners, tap donate. We'll hear again as Chip. Today we ended the program with some very specific application about what do you do when you've got a raw deal. And you know what the raw deal you've experienced or you're listening to me thinking of a very close friend, an employee, someone in the church or family member that's going through a raw deal and you're listening to this thinking, how do I help them? You know, when you see the big picture, that was the last point, it will redefine things. God is in control. God is good. This is why you need to see God accurately.
Even though people mean things for evil, let me redefine some key words and just have you think about these as a possible way to view life. Crisis, God's opportunity to redirect your life into positive pathways that you would never choose for yourself. In other words, that you got a raw deal, it's unfair, your emotions are that's wrong, that's bad, but if God is in control, if he's good, there might be short-term pain, but what if he would use this because he cares for you to redirect your life in a way that you would never choose for yourself. Or another common word you feel confused when this happens, confusion, a temporary suspension of the status quo designed by God to help you clarify your gifts and calling.
I mean, it's all cloudy, it's terrible, and she's walked out on me, or this job has been my life, and I've got seniority, and how can I get laid off? What if God would take this time of confusion to draw you closer than ever before and give a new and clear direction to your life? And then finally, chaos, external circumstances God uses to refocus our attention on him and his will for our lives. All I want you to hear is this, this is hard to hear right now, and you're in pain and you're angry, and we talked about the specific ways to respond. God will use this for good if you will surrender your expectations, release your anger, let him take care of the other person, he is a just God, and say, Lord, redirect me, use this for good, help me see what you want to do that I could have never done and I would have never chosen for myself that's far better than I would ever dream. I'm sitting here today and I'll just tell you personal testimony is that much of what I'm experiencing in my life that is the very, very best has been a result of things that have happened that I would have never chosen for myself.
And on the front end, my first response was angry, mad, betrayed, unfair, God, what are you doing? Hang in there, don't give up, and don't give in. Great encouragement, Chip. And the points he just reviewed come right from his message notes, a great resource to help you get the most out of every program. They include Chip's outline, the scripture he references, and lots of fill-ins to help you apply what you hear. So before you listen again, let me encourage you to download Chip's message notes at livingontheedge.org under the Broadcasts tab. App listeners, tap Fill In Notes. Well, for Chip and the entire team here, this is Dave Drouie thanking you for listening to this Edition of Living on the Edge, and I hope you'll join us next time.
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