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Zacchaeus: Significance Through Possessions

Moody Church Hour / Pastor Philip Miller
The Truth Network Radio
May 17, 2026 1:00 am

Zacchaeus: Significance Through Possessions

Moody Church Hour / Pastor Philip Miller

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May 17, 2026 1:00 am

Zacchaeus, a chief tax collector, sought significance through possessions, but ultimately found it in Jesus Christ. He realized that wealth and possessions cannot give him the significance his soul desperately needs, and that being treasured by his Father is better than all the treasures of the earth.

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Zacchaeus was a chief tax collector, one of the bad guys in the Bible. He was notoriously rich and everybody knew it. And that was his identity trap. Wealth was what he lived for. He cheated and defrauded his own people, and they hated him for it.

But then one day this rich man climbed a tree. Why? Stay with us. From Chicago, this is The Moody Church Hour, a weekly broadcast of worship and teaching with Pastor Philip Miller. Today, the fourth in a series of messages about identity traps.

Our Bible character to learn from will be Zacchaeus, a man who sought significance through possessions. Here now is Pastor Philip, along with worship leader Tim Stafford and Executive Pastor Bill Birchie.

Well, hey, everybody, and welcome to The Moody Church. We're so glad you're joining us today as we seek the Lord's face and open his word and respond in worship and awe and praise. Today, we're going to be looking at a character, a familiar character from the New Testament, Zacchaeus, the wee little man who learned to find his significance not in his possessions, but in the treasure that he found in Jesus Christ. As we begin, would you join me in prayer as we give this service to the Lord? Let's pray.

Heavenly Father, we thank you that you are the treasure that we ultimately need. You are the riches that make our life meaningful. We find significance in you and you alone. Help us to rediscover our deepest worth in the gospel of Jesus Christ today. We pray this in His matchless name.

Amen. One of the big problems of being human is that we think about ourselves too much. We're selfish people. Amen? I didn't hear enough amens for that.

It's true. You need to hear that. And so you need. A worship service. You need a gathering where the whole point of the service isn't about you.

It's about training our eyes, turning our focus toward the Lord. This is life-changing. Amen? Let's pray even as we begin. Turn your eyes upon him.

Look for it. In his wonderful face and the things of Earth will cross change thee in the light of his glory and grace. Oh, turn your eyes upon Jesus, look for in his wonderful face, and the things of earth will cross change thee in the light of his glory and grace. Be thou my vision, O Lord of my heart. Not me bore else to be saved.

Thou art thou my best thought by day, Lord thy mind with me or sleep thy presence by me thou thy grace when I'll bright through thy ever with me and thou In me, thou I made my crucible thou in the bed and I recollect for antiheritis heaven all the end thou knowest by heart thy heart my treasure. I keep on heaven, my big glory one. May I reach heaven joyful? I am my love, forever bear. Still be my vision, O Lord of God.

Still be my vision, O Lord. We loose in the Lord now and always sing it again, we rejoice. Delight in the love He has shown us, greatly lifted up your voice. His gentleness upon us, the joy of our hearts with praise. We gather in his goodness, a heavy of grace.

This breath is given. Praise the Lord in his time since we will praise the Lord through our end. I am sure we have every reason to praise the Lord. Rejoice in the Lord now and always tell of the good he has done. Worship the Lord to remember all the joyous fun.

The love that burns within us, dark cannot destroy. With his praise that's never ending. We say again, rejoice with his bread is given. Praise the Lord in this time singing, we will praise the Lord through our every season. I am sure we have every reason to praise the Lord in this praise He's given praise the Lord in this time singing We will praise the Lord through our every season I am sure we have every reason to praise the Lord We have every reason Praise Hall.

Oh, praise Hall. Are you ready to rejoice in the Lord today? Trust Him. The creation suddenly are together with a thousand tongues to lift one cry and from north through south and east to rest We dear Christ be bind with love for the echoing is evidence his name would burst from sea and sky forever To the mountain test, we dear Christ be magnified for Christ. Oh, Christ be magnified that His days arise.

Christ be magnified in me. Oh, Christ be magnified with the altar of thy life. Christ be magnified in me every creature finds its inmost felicity, every evil heart is staying right. One in reception in the faith will sing. Christ be magnified when His praise arise.

Christ be magnified in me. Oh, Christ be magnified the altar of my life. Christ be magnified in me. I won't bow down. I won't bow to idols.

I stand strong and worship you. If it puts me in the fire, I'll rejoice because you're there too. I won't be fooled by feelings. I'll hold fast to what is true. If the cross brings transformation, then I'll be crucified with you.

Cause death is just the doorway to resurrection life. If I'll join you in your suffering, then I'll join you when you rise. And when you return in glory, all the angels and the saints, my heart will be singing. My son will be the same. On Christ be magnified as days arise.

I see that you find in me. Oh, Christ be magnified, the ultimate of my life, Christ be magnified in me. Oh, Christ be magnified, let his praise rise. Christ be magnified, give me. Oh, Christ be magnified, the ultimate of my life, Christ be magnified in me.

Thank you, Jesus. Lord, we magnify you today. Amen. Let's pray. We do indeed magnify you, Lord.

May our lives show just how glorious you are. Magnify your glory. By how we respond to you in our daily lives, you are worthy. of nothing less. We pray in Jesus' precious name.

Amen. Amen. Please be seated. Oh Lord, your beautiful eyes are on this child, your grace abounds to me, oh Lord, your beautiful sea. And when your eyes are on this child, your grace to be O Lord, your beautiful face is all I see.

And when your eyes are on this child, your grace to be and when your eyes are on this child, your grace Think about how God knows you, personally, knows you, knows your name. We are no longer orphans, we are children of God. I have a May before my heart before even time began, my life was in His hand. He knows He knows my name He knows. He knows my heavenly form.

He knows each year when I call I have a Father He calls His Lord in everywhere I go, He knows my name, He knows my name, He knows my heavenly form, He sees me. He sees each other and hears me when I call He knows my name He knows my name He knows my every thought He sees each hear that falls He hears me when I call He knows my name He knows my name He knows my every thought He knows my every thought He sees me He sees each hear that Well, welcome back to Identity Traps. We're looking at nine ways we lose ourselves and how Jesus makes us whole. Each of us builds an identity. To gain three basic things, we need significance, we need to know we matter, we need security, we need to feel safe in life.

We need a sense of satisfaction that we're fulfilled and happy in life. And those deep identity needs. Were meant to be fulfilled ultimately in relationship with God as His children. But the reality of life is that we wake up in the universe estranged from God and so what we tend to do in our orphan-hearted living is we tend to try to get those deep identity needs met somewhere else. And there are three basic strategies that we can use, three places that we can look to get those deep identity needs met.

We can try to get them met through people, approval, acceptance, that sort of thing. We can try to get them met through power, control, and having our way, or through possessions, money, and stuff, and materialism. And I would suggest. in this series uh that for most of us One of those deep Identity needs is primary. In other words, what we most want is significance or security or satisfaction.

One of those three things is Dominant in our souls. And then one of the strategies: people, possessions, and power. is our primary way of trying to get that need met. And so what that means is it ends up being about nine different identity traps we can fall into. We can look for significance through people, power, or possessions.

We can look for security through people, power, or possessions. We can look for satisfaction through people, power, or possessions. And I would suggest that because each one of us wakes up in the universe estranged from God. Because of our sin, we learn to live in the world as orphans. And one of these identity traps, one of these nine permutations.

becomes for us kind of a habituated pattern of managing and coping our way. through life as orphans. And so then when the good news of the gospel drops in, That in Jesus Christ, God is reconciling us to Himself as His forever children, so that we no longer have to live as orphans, but we can now live as children of God. By grace, through faith, and the power of the Holy Spirit, we can live as children of God. But when it comes to the habits of our hearts, they're hard to break, aren't they?

Our orphan instincts run really deep. And so we need our Heavenly Father, we need Jesus, we need the Holy Spirit. to teach us how to live as children of God. To find the deep identity needs of our life for security, significance, satisfaction, to find those met in Him. alone.

And so in this series, it's our prayer. We're asking our Father. to remind us who he is.

so that we'll remember who we are.

So we can learn to act like ourselves, our real selves, not orphans, but. children of God. And to help us along our way, we're looking at nine different Bible characters, each who embody one of these nine identity traps. and we're watching their transformation. Into a new identity as children of God.

And hopefully, one of these characters resonates with you and your story, and you can learn the way that the Lord is calling you into true sonship, true daughtership, true child of God living, a transformed identity. That's our prayer. Today we're going to be looking at Zacchaeus' identity trap. He tried to find significance through possessions. And that's what we're going to look at this morning.

We're going to be primarily in Luke chapter 19. And to organize our thoughts this morning, we're going to see Zacchaeus lost. We're going to see Zacchaeus found, and we're going to see Zacchaeus free. Lost, found, and free this morning. Would you bow your heads?

Let's pray as we dive in. Heavenly Father, we pray this morning that you would free us. from the traps we find ourselves in. Father, for those Who have come this morning, that this message is for them. Father, I pray that you would.

do some real meaningful heart surgery this morning. that you would open our eyes, open our hearts. to the realities of what it means to live as a child. of a good father in this universe. And so we look to you in Jesus' name.

Amen. Amen. So first of all, Zacchaeus lost. Zacchaeus lost. Look with me at Luke chapter 19, verses 1 and 2.

He, this is Jesus, entered Jericho and was passing through. And behold, there was a man named Zacchaeus. He was a chief tax collector and was rich.

Okay, just pause for a moment. Zacchaeus' name means. pure or clear, transparent. Which is ironic because he's a tax collector. Tax collectors were obviously revenue agents for Rome.

Anyone like the tax man? Don't raise your hand. But you know, nobody really likes the tax man, right?

So they didn't like the tax guy. But it was a bigger deal for them because the Romans were oppressors of the Jewish people. And so these were Jewish sellouts to Rome.

So they were Jewish people who decided to become revenue agents for the overlord. Empire, right?

So the Jewish people were insiders. They knew where all the wealth was, right? And so they could help Rome find it. It's the problem. This is a pre-digital age, right?

You can hide wealth if you don't have digital footprints and all that kind of stuff. And so these were, the Jewish people hated these, these were turn codes, right? They turned their back on their own people. Think of like Robin Hood, the story of Robin Hood, right? Prince John is the real villain, but the sheriff of Nottingham is pretty bad, right?

Because he's the enforcer. He's the one collecting all the money.

So you hate him too. That's what the tax collectors were like. And not only that, they were cheats. They were cheats. They would line their own pockets.

They would inflate your tax bill. You had no recourse. You had to pay it, or they'd throw you in jail, and they would just keep the rest, line their own pockets. And they would grow wealthy at everyone else's expense.

So everybody hated them and despised them. These are the tax.

Now, immediately preceding in this context, in the preceding chapter in Luke 18, Jesus tells a story about two guys that go up to the temple to pray. One is a Pharisee, very honorable person, and one is a. Tax collector, okay, immediate context. The Pharisee says, God, I thank you, I'm not like other men. Extortioners, the unjust adulterers, or even a tax collector.

Okay? That just shows you how much disdain there is. And the tax collector said, God, have mercy on me, a sinner. And Jesus says, guess which one? went home forgiven.

the tax collector. And it was scandalous. Everyone goes, No, not that tax collector. He's the bad guy. He gets forgiven.

Yeah.

So, Zacchaeus is one of those bad guys. Not just one of the bad guys, he's the chief bad guy. He's the chief. Tax collector. He led the charge.

He ran the racket.

Okay? He was, and he was rich, filthy rich, not quietly rich. You know, just like one of these people that dies a millionaire and you're like, what? They had all that money? No.

He was publicly, obviously, notoriously rich. Everyone knew him to be one of the most wealthy people in Jericho and they hated him for it. That's that's Zacchaeus.

Now The Bible is full of warnings. about the dangers of wealth. Not because money and possessions are bad in and of themselves, but because they have a tendency to capture our hearts. Jesus put it this way in Matthew 6:21. Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.

And in fact, just a few chapters earlier, Jesus warns of the dangers of wealth with a story. This is Luke chapter 12, verses 16 to 21. And he told them a parable, saying, The land of a rich man produced plentifully. And he thought to himself, What shall I do? For I have nowhere to store my crops.

And he said, I'll do this. I will tear down my barns and build larger ones. And there I will store all my grain and my goods. And I will say to my soul, Soul. You have ample goods laid up for many years.

Relax, eat, drink, be merry. But God said to him, Fool, This night your soul is required of you. and the things you've prepared. Whose will they be?

So is the one who lays up treasure for himself and is not rich toward Gone. Jesus told this parable to illustrate the truth that he stated a few verses earlier in verse 15. One's life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions. That's a good line. One's life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.

And this really is the trap of the tax collectors. Wealth is what they live for. They sold out their own people to get wealth. They cheated and defrauded to get wealth. They lived with scorn every day of their lives.

for wealth. It was their fast track to wealth and affluence, the kind that they couldn't get any other way. This was the way they would be put on the map. People might impugn their character, but they were impressed by their wealth. And the tax collectors would make that trade all day long.

and Zacchaeus most of all. Zacchaeus was infamously rich in Jericho. He had all the trappings of wealth. He would have lived in the best part of town. He would have had the finest luxury goods.

He would have been adorned with status everywhere he went. He stood head and shoulders above the masses of Jericho in terms of his financial position. which was a big deal. because he turns out to be quite a short man. We're about to see that.

So he's a little man with a big bank account. and he wants you to know.

Okay. Little man with a big bank account.

So, in terms of an identity schema, if we were to map him on our little thing there, I would suggest that Zacchaeus' identity was built around gaining significance through possessions. That this is his orphan-hearted identity strategy. Zacchaeus, he's like, look, I'll be whoever I need to be. If I can get fabulously rich and have it all, and then I'll know I'm enough. I may be short in stature.

I may be short on honor. But I'll look down on all of them from the great mountain of wealth that I have possessed, built up for myself. It's an identity strategy. He's seeking significance. The significance his soul desperately needs through the possessions that he can amass for himself.

in this world. He's an orphan. Do you see? He's an orphan. He's lost.

in the universe.

So that's accheist lost. And let's look at Zacchaeus found. Luke 19, 3-5. And he was seeking to see who Jesus was. But on account of the crowd he could not, because he was small in stature.

So he ran on ahead and climbed up into a sycamore tree. to see him. for he was about to pass that way. And when Jesus came to the place, he looked up and said to him, Zacchaeus, hurry and come down, for I must stay at your house today. And just pause for a moment.

When I was a kid in Sunday school, we had a little song, a little ditty we would sing.

Some of you are nodding your heads. You know exactly what I'm talking about. Zacchaeus was a wee little man, and a wee little man was he. He climbed up in a sycamore tree for the Lord he wanted to see. And as the Savior passed that way, he looked up in the tree and he said, Zacchaeus, you come down, for I'm going to your house today, or I'm going to your house today, right?

Oh.

Now as a kid As a kid, my parents still like to tell this story. When I was like five years old, I came home from church singing this song, but I botched the lyrics. And I had Jesus saying, Zacchaeus, upside down. Anyway, I still kind of prefer those lyrics to this day. But as a kid, I could relate to Zacchaeus.

You know, it's a good kid's story. I understood feeling short in a crowd where you couldn't see. I understood the desire to climb a tree, I was into that. And the idea of Jesus coming over to my house, my house, for dinner, that's cool. That's cool, right?

But this is far more than a kid's story. In fact, I was in a seminary class. We were looking at this text in seminary, and one of my classmates was from Africa. And he asked a question I had never thought about. of this text.

He goes, why would a rich man climb a tree? Why would a rich that's a good question? Why would a rich man climb a tree? He said, Rich men don't climb trees. Rich men have people, servants, to climb trees for them.

Rich men don't climb trees. Why is he climbing a tree? I never thought about that. Zacchaeus was wealthy, he was dignified, he's a senior leader in the world of global finance. If you wanted to know more about Jesus, didn't he have people?

He had contacts. He could have asked people. He could have networked. He could have sent one of his, no doubt, many servants. to go figure out who Jesus is.

Why does he go personally? And why a tree? Why is he up a tree?

Now we know he's short, but this is a kind of risky choice. I mean, everyone back then wore robes. which are not at all conducive to tree climbing.

Okay? He would have, for decency, would have had to tuck his robe into his belt, exposing his legs and thighs and climbing up into the tree. It was undignified, embarrassing to show your legs as a mature man in this society was a taboo.

Something's going on here.

Something is driving Zacchaeus to throw caution to the wind. And whatever it is, it is very personal to him. He can't send anybody else in his stead. and it is worth risking his status. With people.

He's desperately reckless here. This is a humiliating move. He's risking the significance he has built up for himself through his wealth and status. In order to just see Jesus, to find out, to know who He is. And I imagine he's heard the rumors running around Israel.

Of a prophet, a healer, a teacher who might even be Messiah, the Lord and King and Savior of the people of God. This Jesus who is turning the world upside down, and people keep saying, I don't know who He is, but He changed my life forever. And even though Zacchaeus has everything, he's still searching for more. Do you see that? Even though he has everything, Zacchaeus is still searching for more.

He has it all. He has all the wealth, status, affluence he could possibly want, but deep down, he knows it's not enough. Zacchaeus still hasn't found what he's looking for. Because here's the thing about orphan-hearted identity strategies. They work.

Until they don't. They work until they don't. I'm sure with every socioeconomic status breakthrough moment, with every massive purchase, with every new property he acquired, with every new threshold of wealth he obtained, Zacchaeus got a little jolt. of significance and he felt like I did it I made it. I've arrived in life.

And then it wore off. And he needed more. He needed another jolt, another purchase, another pursuit, another acquisition. And after round and round of acquiring more wealth and more assets and more niceties, more luxuries. Zacchaeus began to realize over time that no amount of stuff will ever give me the significance I am longing for.

Remember John D. Rockefeller's famous statement? They asked him, how much is enough? And he said, one million more. Never ends.

So Zacchaeus no doubt is beginning to wonder. If significance isn't going to be found in my possessions, Perhaps. It can be found in a person. If significance isn't found in possessions, Perhaps it is found. in a person.

And so Zacchaeus, with this deep soul ache, desperately, recklessly, humbly climbs a tree. in desperate hope of catching a glimpse. Of the one who just might be able to give him the significance his soul is longing for. And don't you love this? Verse 5.

And when Jesus came to the place, the place where he's up in the tree, he looked up and said to him, Zacchaeus. Hurry, come on down, for I must stay at your house today. Don't you love this? Jesus sees him. Jesus knows him.

Jesus calls him by name. I don't know how Jesus knew his name, but he calls him by name. And he pursues him. I must stay at your house. Today.

The verb here for I must. is one that Jesus almost always uses. to convey the divine will of his Father. I must do this. This is, I'm on my father's orders.

Of all the people in town, Jesus singles out Zacchaeus, the outcast, the scorned, the despised, the guilty. And he invites himself over to stay as a guest in his home. Table fellowship. In this honor, shame culture of the first century was the primary way you established who was in and who was out of your social group. No self-respecting Jew.

would eat with tax collectors. Nobody. much less stay as a guest in the house. But Jesus did. Jesus did.

Now does Zacchaeus deserve this? Does he deserve it? Yeah.

This is grace. This is all grace. Grace has found Zacchaeus.

So we have Zacchaeus lost. Found And now free, now free. Luke 19:6 to 10.

So he hurried and came down and received him joyfully. And when they saw it, the crowd, they all grumbled. He's gone to be the guest of a man who is a sinner. And Zacchaeus stood and said to the Lord, Behold, Lord. The half of my goods I give to the poor.

And if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I restore it fourfold. And Jesus said to him, Today salvation has come to this house. since he also is a son of Abraham. Don't disown this man. For the Son of Man came.

So seek. and to save. The lost. What a remarkable transformation in Zacchaeus' character. Zacchaeus gives away half of his wealth.

Half of his wealth. Boom. Writes a check to the poor. And he pledges, I'm going to repay everybody I've ever cheated four times, not just with interest, fourfold. I'm going to pay him back.

How very different is this response from the way the rich young ruler responded to Jesus? in Mark chapter 10. This is what happens there, Mark chapter 10, 17 to 22. And as he was setting out on his journey, a man ran up and knelt before him, Jesus, and asked him, Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life? And Jesus said to him, Why do you call me good?

No one is good except God alone. You know the commandments. Do not murder, do not commit adultery, do not steal, do not bear false witness, do not defraud. Honor your father and mother. And he said to him, Teacher, all these I've kept from my youth.

And Jesus, looking at him, loved him. and said to him, You lack one thing, Go, sell all that you have and give to the poor. and you will have treasure in heaven. And come follow me. Disheartened by the saying, He went away sorrowful, for he had great.

Possessions. You see, our possessions have a tendency to possess us. We look to wealth to give us significant security or satisfaction in life. And then having built our identity around gaining those riches, they become a part of us. And we find ourselves holding on tightly.

We find ourselves unable to let go. And our possessions end up possessing us, you see? That's why the rich young ruler was disheartened here. He had great possessions, or more to the point. His great possessions had him.

Zacchaeus does here what the rich young ruler could not do. Zacchaeus lets go. of his great possessions. He grabs a hold of Jesus. He calls him Lord, you notice.

Instead of being mastered by his possessions, he is now freed by the master, you see. And Zacchaeus's liberality is evidence that he's found a greater treasure. and a richer significance. Do you see that? Zacchaeus' liberality is evidence that he's found a greater treasure and a richer significance.

It's interesting. Jesus says, today salvation has come to this house. When? When did it come? Have you ever asked that question, when did it come?

Was it before or after Zacchaeus gave away his stuff, his possessions? That's actually a really important timeline. That's very important. If his salvation came after his radical generosity, then he gained his salvation by his good works. Which is not the gospel, right?

Ephesians 2, 8, and 9. For it is by grace that you are saved through faith, and this not of yourselves. It is a gift of God, not by works, so that no one can boast. No, Zacchaeus' radical generosity here is the result. It's the overflow.

It is the fruit of the salvation that has already come into his life. He is giving from salvation, not for salvation.

So, when exactly did salvation come to Zacchaeus' house?

Well, we don't know for sure. But I suspect it happened. as he welcomed the grace of Jesus pursuing love.

Somewhere in there. Jesus saw him I knew him. and chose him and called to him by name. And invited himself over, and somewhere in that moment, Zacchaeus realized the significance he has always been longing for, to be seen, to be known, to be chosen, to be called, to be pursued, to be valued, to be loved, to be treasured by Jesus is better than all the treasures of the earth. At some point, it dawns on him.

This is what I was looking for. And salvation has come to Zacchaeus' house because salvation is not a contract. It's not a prayer you pray. It's a person, the person of Jesus Christ. And that's why, that's why Zacchaeus could suddenly let go.

Of all the things that he's held dear for so long, he finally is able to give it away because he's finally free. He finally realizes his significance wasn't in what belonged to him. His significance was in the one to whom he belonged. Friends, the significance our souls desperately need is found in being treasured by our Father. The significance our souls desperately need is found in being treasured by our.

Father, friends, do you realize? That you were loved into existence. by a God who made you in order to share himself with you forever. That in love Jesus came. to redeem and rescue you.

to offer up himself for you.

So that you can come home to the Father and live in this world not as an orphan fending for yourself, but as a child who belongs to a good Father. Friends, from eternity past. God has seen you. And he knows you. He has chosen you and called you by name.

Have you ever had someone of note of fame or whatever actually remember your name Do you know how much it would Do you realize the God of the universe knows you by name? He loves you and sent his son for you. And he calls you to himself. He pursues you in love. He has valued you from all eternity past.

He loves you more than you know. And to be treasured by your Father is better than all the treasures of this earth. Friends, that is a significance that is durable. and is strong. It's a treasure beyond measure.

It can never be shaken. It won't ever be taken. All the wealth in all the world. will never be able to give you the significance your soul desperately longs for. But it can keep you away.

from the one. who can give you that significance. Wealth is an awful rival. to the treasure. You have.

in relationship with God. Jesus said it this way in Matthew 16, 26. For what will it profit a man? if he gains the whole world. and forfeits his soul.

It is possible. to have everything. and actually have nothing. It is also possible. to have nothing.

And actually. Have everything. That's why Jesus says, Luke 6, 20, Blessed are you who are poor. For yours is the kingdom. of God.

There is no greater treasure. and to be treasured. by our Heavenly Father. Amen. Amen.

Let's pray. Father, how marvelous it is. That you would give up all All that you gave up. To love us. To give up.

Peace. We only make things worse. To give up innocence in the universe, we've only filled it with sin. to give up your son on the cross. That he would lay down his life to bring us home.

You laid down the treasures of heaven. to treasure us. Father, forgive us for grabbing hold of all the treasures of this earth. that were meant to be good gifts to point us back to you. for failing to treasure you.

as the ultimate value in our lives. and to realize that you have treasured us. beyond our wildest imagination. What greater worth? What greater significance, what greater value could there ever be?

Then that. And so, Father, we We grab a hold of you as your beloved children. remembering who we are. finding our significance in your love. in your affirmation.

surrendering to your watch care in our lives. and treasuring you above all. In Jesus' name. Amen. On today's Moody Church hour, we heard Pastor Philip Miller with the fourth message in a series he's calling Identity Traps.

We heard about Zacchaeus seeking significance through possessions.

Next time, join us to hear about Esther, who sought security through People. Plan to join us. Dory, the girl nobody loved. It's a heart-wrenching story of how God took a child abandoned in an orphanage and gave her a whole new life. Written by Erwin Lutzer, this book will demonstrate that there is hope even when no hope is visible.

Dory, the girl nobody loved, will be sent to you as our gift when you give a gift of any amount to support The Moody Church hour. Call us at 1-800-215-5001. That's one eight hundred. The first time I was in the middle of the 2020s. Online, go to MoodyChurchHour.com.

That's moodychurchhower.com. or write to us at Moody Church Media, 1635 North LaSalle Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois, six oh six one four. Ask about Dory, the girl nobody loved, when you write her call. Join us next week for another Moody Church Hour with Pastor Philip Miller and the congregation of historic Moody Church in Chicago. This broadcast is a ministry of The Moody Church.

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