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Courage in Babylon, Part 2

Summit Life / J.D. Greear
The Truth Network Radio
August 14, 2025 9:00 am

Courage in Babylon, Part 2

Summit Life / J.D. Greear

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August 14, 2025 9:00 am

God is bigger than your problems, and he's watching out for you. Christian courage believes that God can, expects that he will, and trusts him if he doesn't. It's about taking a dare on God's goodness and trusting that he'll deliver you, even in the face of adversity.

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Christian courage God's goodness faith trust Jesus Bible Daniel
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Today on Summit Life with J.D. Greer. Yeah, sometimes God will tell us no or tell us to wait. I'm simply saying that in this story, as you see multiple times throughout the Bible, God rewards those who take a dare on his goodness, he rewards those who expect that he will. Our God is able.

and he will deliver us. Welcome to Summit Life, the gospel-centered Bible-teaching ministry of Pastor J.D. Greer. As always, I'm your host, Molly Vitovich. If I were to distill today's entire message into a simple statement, it would be this: God is bigger.

We're going to talk about bold faith, faith both for when God delivers us and faith for when he chooses not to. Will we be bold enough to ask ourselves the question, is God enough? Will you follow him even when you think the answer is no? That type of courage takes a deep level of trust in God, something I know I need more of and I'm sure you do as well.

So grab your Bible and let's return to our teaching titled Courage in Babylon. It's a message we all need to be reminded of today.

So let's rejoin Pastor JD right now in Daniel chapter three. You can't bifurcate Jesus. He's either Lord or he is not. You've either fully surrendered to him or you're living in rebellion. And y'all, you understand.

That if God is the only God, then for us to say anything different is cruel. Not just wrong, it's cruel. Because you are obscuring the one way of Salvation. I feel here the sense to share with you what I call a classic story at the summit. It just means one I've shared about 18 times.

This takes place all the way back when I was in seminary.

So, many, many years ago. I was my first year of seminary. I just graduated from Campbell University, and I was on my way from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to Raleigh because I was serving as a youth pastor in Fort Lauderdale. And I took one of those red-eye flights where there, you know, hardly anybody on the plane. And I go into the waiting area, and there are only two people in the entire gate area.

There's a guy over here on my left who's like 194 years old. On the other side over here, was this again, I wasn't married, this just drop-dead, gorgeous Hispanic girl. And I was like, Lord, what do you want me?

Okay, you know, ice cream spinach. And so I, you know, I go over and I sit next to this girl. Turns out she was from.

Somewhere in South America, and she was on her way returning as a student to. Harvard University.

Okay, so immediately I felt like we had a connection because I just graduated from Campbell and I felt like, okay, we got a lot in common. And I started to share with her, her name was Barta. And so I started to share my testimony with Berta and I thought it was going really well. They called us to get on the plane. We sat next to each other.

I was telling her all about Jesus and how he changed my life and I was going to go into law, but God had called me into the ministry and was just sharing with her. And she just sat there and just was soaking it up. She was nodding her head and she said, you know, I said, she got to be honest with you. She said, I'm up there at Harvard University, and the smartest, most driven men on the planet, they say, go to that university. But I don't hear anybody talk with the conviction that articulates what they believe and where they're going.

I don't know if I've ever seen anybody there that talks as clearly as you. And she said, that's just very, very attractive. I was like, heck yeah. Like, you're going to get saved. We're going to get married.

This is going to be an awesome story one day.

So I just keep sharing my testimony with her. I guess somewhere, probably, I don't know, you know, over Atlanta, I would suppose. I started to share with her, like, you know, just walk her through Bible verses about how Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life. And I was like, you know, Buddhata, have you ever received Jesus? She's like, oh, no, it's not me.

She says, that's just not my thing. She says, I'm really glad it works for you. I know it works for a lot of people, but it's just not really my thing. And I was like, I was like, But I don't think you understand. I don't feel like it's a my thing or your thing.

I feel like it's a, you know, everybody's thing because Jesus said, no one comes to the Father except through me. And she said, no, I'm telling you, it just doesn't work for me. I'm glad it works for you. And I was like, but I don't think you understand. I was like, why don't you read this verse right here?

And I have my Bible. I was like, read John 14, 6. And she looks at me and she says, Are you trying to tell me? And all of a sudden, like her attitude just totally flipped. She looked at me and she said, You're trying to tell me that if I don't come to Jesus the way that you're saying the Bible tells me that you're saying that there's no possibility that if there is a heaven, that I will not go?

And I said, Barata, I'm not telling you that. I think the Bible's telling you that. And she said, I think you might be the most closed-minded, arrogant, bigoted person I've ever talked to. I can't believe somebody in the 21st century would actually say this. I don't want to have this conversation anymore.

And she sat back. And I was like, all right, wedding's off.

Okay, let me see if I can salvage that situation. And I sat there sort of in stunned silence for like a minute or two. And then a pilot comes on the old PA system and he's like, hey, we're initial approach to Raleigh-Durham. I remember hearing somebody say, I leaned over to him and I was like, hey. Just right, I know this conversation's done.

And you don't want to talk to me anymore, but I just want to tell you that I'm really glad the pilot of this airplane doesn't look at the runway the same way that you do, Heaven. She said, What do you mean? I was like, let's just say that he comes on and says, you know what? I am sick and tired of that arrogant little control tower telling me where and how I gotta land this plane. I'm a free-thinking, open-minded pilot, and I prefer to land upside down in the Walmart parking lot.

I wanna try to nose tip on the top of the PNC building in downtown Riley. I was like, no, he's just gonna go on that little narrow runway because that's what the control tower says he's gotta do in order to bring this plane and you and me to safety. And I'm glad that he looks at the runway different than you do, truth. She said, that's not fair. I said, yes, it is.

That's Campbell 1, Harvard 0, by the way, if you're keeping score. The point is, you maintain the confession is the only way because if God is the only God, it would be cruel to not do it otherwise. You understand, listen. that this generation depends on us telling the truth about it. Just like the generation of Shadrach, Misha, and Abednego, they needed these three guys to stand, not just to worship God in private, but to do it in public and say, I can't bow.

Because of their courage, an entire generation right there, including Nebuchadnezzar, got to see that there is only one savior. And by the way, scholars say that the faith of the wise men who came to see Jesus can ultimately be traced back to this encounter. It is because they stood in that moment and said, we can't bow. He's not just my savior, he's everybody's savior. I'm not talking about not letting people be free.

Of course not. We live in a free country. We value that. I'm just saying that our confession is there is one Lord and one Savior. And there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.

And if I don't tell you the truth about that, if I bow along to the statue of pluralism like everybody else does, then my generation perishes because I didn't have the courage. The substance. of Christian courage. The confession. Is that Jesus is the only Lord, the only Savior, and I can only bow to him.

Here is the second thing, encourages conviction. I believe that God can. I expect that He will. But I trust him if he doesn't. Let's unpack.

Those phrases one at a time, okay? Christian courage. believes that God can. Y'all, the first thing I notice... From the three Hebrew teenagers answer.

Is that they were in no doubt about who the biggest daddy was in this little drama. Verse 17. Our God. whom we serve. is bigger than you.

He's bigger than your fiery furnace. And so you can jabber on all you want. Ultimately, he's in charge, not you. Everybody else, all other million people out there on the plane, are thinking, look how small and pathetic those three teenagers look next to Nebuchadnezzar and all his mighty soldiers. But they're standing there thinking, look how puny little old Meb looks next to God.

That's where Christian courage begins. And it's so simple that a child can get it right. God is bigger. God is bigger. He's bigger than your problems.

I learned this as a kid, and so did you. Remember one of my favorite hymns when I grew up as a kid? Help me, help me sleep safely at night and not be afraid. God is bigger than the boogeyman. He's bigger than the monsters and the monsters on TV.

Come on, nobody else. God is bigger than the boogeyman, and he's watching out for you. And it's like you learned it as a kid. And essentially, I've got some version of that in every situation I go into. It's the most basic principle of faith.

God's bigger than your problem. All of them. He's bigger than cancer. He's bigger than a lost job. He's bigger than a broken marriage.

He's bigger than your friends. He's bigger than your sin. He's bigger than your shame. He is bigger than the grave. And if you are his child, there's nothing that happens to you without his permission.

Not even a hair falls from your head, he said, without his knowledge and express permission.

So why, the hymn writer says, why should I be discouraged? Why should the shadows come? Jesus is my portion. My constant friend is he. If his eyes on the sparrow, well, I know he watches me.

Christian courage believes that he can. That's all it is. I believe that he can. Our God is able, and he's bigger than you. All right, Christian courage believes that he can.

Number two. Christian courage expects that he will. Don't you believe that he can't expect any will? Watch this. This is sort of subtle, but it's...

Crazy important. And he will. Deliver us. Out of your handle, King. How did they know that?

Probably not. Little secret, they didn't. Can we prove it to you? Look at the next phrase, verse 18, but if not. They didn't know how this was going to turn out.

They did not know. There had been no little huddle where God pulled Messiah and was like, hey, this is how it's going to go down. This won't you say it? Then this is none of that. They just had this suspicion in their heart.

That God would deliver them because they understood God's goodness. They understood God's willingness to showcase the glory of his name. Can I tell you a little Bible secret? Many of the greatest feats of faith in your Bible were not done in response to a direct command of God or with any kind of promised guarantee of how it was all going to turn out. I'll give you just one example.

First name of 14. The Philistines, the enemies of Israel, they're oppressing Israel, and they've taken away all the swords in Israel. There's only two swords in the whole country. And Jonathan, who is King Saul's son, David's best friend, has one of those two swords. When he comes upon a garrison of twenty Philistines, And it's just him and his armor bearer.

Two guys, one sword, 20 armed Philistine soldiers on the little cliff above them. 1 Samuel 14, 6. And Jonathan says to his young armor-bearer, come. Let us go over. the outpost the outpost of these uncircumcised men.

Perhaps the Lord will act on our behalf. Perhaps? If I'm that armor bearer without a sword, I'm like, bro, if you're trying to persuade me to attack 20 men and I even got a sword, You're going to have to do better than perhaps. Right? Jonathan just expected.

He didn't know, but he just expected that God would show up and glorify his name. Hey, doesn't Jonathan's words sound like what his best friend David said in Psalm 27, 13? I'm convinced that I will see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living. In other words, I know that one day when we get to heaven, everything's going to be awesome. And I know that there he'll wipe away every tear.

And I know I don't have a lot of direct promises about how this or that situation is gonna work out, but I just expect that a good God will actually do something in this situation. And I'm gonna take a chance on boldly asking him to actually do it. Because, yes, I'm willing to wait to heaven to see the goodness of God, but I wanna see it right now in the lives of my children. I wanna see it in my marriage. I wanna see it in the life of my friends.

I wanna see it in our community, and I wanna see it in our church. And so perhaps the Lord will respond, and I'm just going to take a chance on it because I expect that He will. You're listening to Summit Life with Pastor JD Greer. For more information about this ministry, visit us online at jdgreer.com. You know, every day Summit Life shares the transformative power of the gospel with people across the country and around the world.

Through radio broadcasts, devotionals, blogs, and podcasts, we aim to make solid biblical teaching both accessible and practical for everyday life. Our mission is to help people go deeper into their relationship with God and then to share his love wider with the world. Deep and wide is at the core of this vision. But we can't do it alone, and that's why we invite you to join us as a gospel partner. Whether through prayer or a financial gift, your support enables us to produce and distribute these resources.

In fact, hearing this program right now is the result of someone else joining with us with their treasure. More than 500 gospel partners have already committed to advancing this mission. Will you join the team today? Together, we can bring the message of hope to even more lives in need. Visit jdgreer.com to learn how you can partner with us today.

Now let's finish up our teaching for the day. Once again, here's Pastor JD. Think about the miracles of Jesus. Have you ever thought about how many of the miracles of Jesus came about because somebody, without a promise, without a guarantee, just took a dare on Jesus' goodness? Maybe the easiest one to think about is the woman with the blood disease who comes up behind Jesus thinking that if she could just touch his garment.

then she'd be healed. Luke, the writer who records this story, makes it very clear that Jesus was not planning, he was not expecting this. He was actually on his way somewhere else. And this woman was the farthest thing from his earthly mind. And then unexpectedly, she just kind of reaches out, audaciously taking a dare on his goodness.

And Jesus stops and says, scarcely have I seen faith like this anywhere. Daughter, your boldness in taking a dare on my goodness is rewarded, and he healed her. Bold faith doesn't just believe that he can. Bold faith expects that he will because they understand the goodness of God. And of course, that is not to say that God's like some magic genie lamp that if you rub him just the right way, he's going to give you what you want.

I'm just saying sometimes God in his goodness Yes, sometimes God will tell us no or tell us to wait. I'm simply saying that in this story, as you see multiple times throughout the Bible, God rewards those who take a dare on his goodness. He rewards those who expect that he will. Our God is able. And he will deliver us.

I don't know that for sure, but he will do it.

So my question for you is, where do you need to take a day on God? Where is it right now that you need to take a day on God? Maybe it's just reaching out to share your faith at work or at school, even though it's super awkward. And even though you're like, I don't know what everybody's gonna say about me, but the Holy Spirit is putting it in my heart, and I'm just gonna take a dare on him that maybe he'll show up and work in this person's heart. Maybe it's in you taking a courageous stand at work, even though it looks like it's gonna cost you big in the short run.

Or maybe if you serve in politics, maybe it's just standing for what's right, even though the media and sometimes your own party is gonna throw you in the fiery furnace every time you do. Maybe it's you persevering in a prayer request and not giving up, but continuing to come back to God's throne and say, God, I believe that you're good enough to do something here, and I want to see your goodness in the land of the living. And perhaps you're going to do this, and I'm not going to go away until you do. Maybe it's submitting that application to be a foster parent. even though you are scared about how it's going to change your life.

You're like, I'm just perhaps God's going to show up and do something in somebody and in us. Or, how about boldly choosing to keep the kid, even though you're young and pregnant and you feel all alone, or maybe choosing to keep pressing on in the marriage, even though it's difficult? Maybe it's you calling that a strange family member today. Even though you aren't sure how they're gonna respond to your offer of forgiveness, maybe it's just confessing that pornography habit to a trusted friend. Even though you'd rather keep it concealed, you're like, I just want to put it out there.

And I want to put it out there so that God can work in this. Maybe it's starting a ministry. You've been sitting here, and there's something God's putting in your heart, and you're like, I don't know if it's going to work. You're not going to get a guarantee. But maybe you just say, God, I believe you'll be good here.

I expect that you're going to work. Finally, Christian courage. Trust him if he doesn't. Christian courage, trust him if you've done the greatest words in the story, verse 18, but if not. Be it known to you, O king, that we will not serve your gods.

We will not worship the golden image that you have set up. Like I said, these are some of my favorite words in the Old Testament. Even if he doesn't deliver us. And he might let us die in the furnace. We still want you to be clear, Old Nebuchadnezzar, that we would rather die in the flames with just him than we would live in a palace with just you.

They believed that God was not only big enough to protect them from Nebuchadnezzar. They believed that knowing God was better than anything they would have to give up. without it. You want to write stuff down? Courage believes not only that God is bigger than the opposition, Courage also believes that God is better than the alternatives.

You see, listen.

Sometimes God is glorified when sick people get well, and God shows that He's bigger than the cancer. But sometimes God is glorified because sick people die well. And they show that God is better than even life itself.

Sometimes you take a stand and God delivers like Jonathan, like David.

Sometimes you take a stand and he lets you suffer like Jesus. The question you got to ask is, if he lets you go through the fire, is he enough for you? You see, the only way that you're going to have the courage to suffer for what is right is if you know that Jesus is enough. If you know he's enough. Can I show you real quick from this story why he's enough?

You see, in this story is a depromise. That is directly for you. Wasn't just about them. This is about me and you. Watch this verse 19.

That Nebuchadnezzar was filled with fury. The expression of his face was changed. He gets Shadrah, Mashad, and Abednego. He ordered the furnace heated seven times more than it was usually heated. They threw him in.

It was so hot, the next verse says, that the heat coming from the furnace's mouth actually killed the soldiers who were carrying the bound teenagers up to throw them in.

So Nebuchadnezzar naturally expects to see them burst into flames. Verse 24, but King Nebuchadnezzar was astonished. And he rose up in haste. And he declared to his counselors: hey, did we cast in three men into the fire? And they answered and said, Oh yea, true, O king.

He replied, but I see father. Four men unbound. Not bound, unbound, and they're all walking in the midst of the fire, and none of them are hurt. Another thing, in other words, the only thing that burned on them were the ropes that bound them. And the appearance, he says, the appearance of the fourth is like a son of the gods.

Hey, from our perspective, after the New Testament, it's pretty safe to say that was the Son of God. Verse 26, then Nebuchadnezzar came near to the door of the burning fiery furnace. And he declared, Shadrach, Meshad, and Abednego, servants of the Most High God, come out and come here. And they came out. And the king's counselors gathered together.

And they saw that the fire had not had any power over the bodies of those men. The hair of their heads was not singed. Their cloaks were not harmed. Not even the smell of smoke had come upon them. Stay with me.

This whole scene prefigures Jesus going to the cross. Jesus, watch this. Jesus was thrown into the fires of judgment with us. We're the three Hebrew teenagers. Jesus gets thrown in with us.

And because Jesus got thrown in there with us, we came through judgment totally unharmed. There is no condemnation for those of us who are in Christ Jesus. That means the hair on my head has not been singed by judgment. My clothes have not been burned. He took the flame so I could emerge from it in safety with not a trace or smell of judgment anywhere on my body, even on my clothes.

It was only the chains of my bondage that were burned away. You see? And what that means, friend, what that means is this, listen. What that means is this: that the God who went through the fire for me is the God who can keep me in the fire. If he went into the ultimate fires of judgment for you, if he went to the cross and he kept you totally safe and free from harm there, don't you think he'll keep you in whatever lesser fire you're going to go into now?

The God who died for you in the fire is the God who will keep you in the fire. Like a friend of mine says, don't search for a faith. That'll keep you from the fire. No, no, no. Search for a God that will keep you in the fire.

So if you come to church looking for a God that'll keep you out of the fire. It's not gonna happen. But there is a God who will keep you in the fire. Because he went into the fire of judgment for you. The presence of Jesus was with these three Hebrew teenagers in their furnace.

And that means his presence will be with you in any furnace into which he puts you also. The God who died for you in the fire is the God who can keep you now in the fire. Let me show you how this whole thing ends. Verse 28. Nebuchadnezzar answered.

Blessed be the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, who has sent his angel and delivered his servants who trusted in him. And set aside the king's command and yielded up their bodies rather than serve and worship any God except their own God. Therefore I make a decree. Any people, nation, language that speaks anything against the God of Shadrach, Meshat, and Abednego shall be torn limb from limb and their houses laid in ruins, for there is no other God who is able to save, to rescue in this way. This story ends with Nebuchadnezzar commanding all peoples, nations, and languages to gather in unified worship of God's power to save.

It is a picture of the future. It is a picture of what happens at the end of time. And I looked, the Apostle John said, and there, there before me was a great multitude that no man couldn't account. People from every tribe and people and nation and language under heaven standing before the throne and before the Lamb. They were wearing white robes, which meant they were unsinged and unharmed by the fires of judgment.

And they were holding palm branches of peace in their hands. And they cried out in a loud voice, Salvation belongs to our God and to the Lamb. God who sits on the throne is worshiped, not Nebuchadnezzar. The world is gonna be unified not by the greatness of some earthly sovereign. Babylon or Great Britain or America or the UN or otherwise is going to be unified by a savior who went into the flame of judgment for his people and kept them 100% safe from all harm in that flame.

And you and I are going to help move the world to that worship by determining that we're going to bow only to Jesus as Lord and by getting up every single day, believing that he can, expecting that he will, but trusting him if he doesn't. That's courage.

So, did you identify that place of courage in your life? Pray for your moment of courage to be a reality, that you'll be able to represent your God, who is always enough. You know, here at Summit Life, we pray daily that these messages aren't just nice inspirational quotes or feel-good sound bites for you, but that true life change happens as a result of God's word being preached.

So, Pastor JD, we've spent about a week in the book of Daniel now. As we continue on with this teaching, we'll see Daniel's life is full of tension between faith and culture. How can our new resource this month help Christians today navigate those same pressures? You know, one of the interesting things about Daniel is that he didn't withdraw from culture, but he also didn't conform to it. He didn't just become Babylonian.

He lived as an exile. One of the things we talk about in the series is that you can, when you're in a new country like this, you can try to be an immigrant, which means to become a citizen. You can stay perpetually a tourist where, you know, you live in your hotel and you go to Starbucks and try to find a McDonald's, and that's kind of your interaction with the culture. But what the Bible calls us is just something different, a third thing, and that is to live as an exile. That's good.

Where you actually make the new country, you make it in many ways your home. I mean, it's where you live. It's where you raise your family, but you do so recognizing that your true home and your true kingdom is somewhere else and your real allegiance goes toward another kingdom altogether. This study draws out the practical implications for how to live like that. What's it mean in Babylon to serve Jesus faithfully?

You're going to get some great reminders in here of how God is in control, how he has you here for a reason, and how he intends to use you like he did Daniel. I would love to give you this study. Take a look and allow us to get this to you. Just go to jdgreer.com. Thank you, JD.

Don't miss out on getting your copy today. Call 866-335-5220. That's 866-335-5220 or give online at jdgreer.com and we'll immediately email you a copy of this Bible study. I'm Molly Vitovich. Be sure to listen tomorrow when Pastor JD discusses the problem of pride, something I'm sure we could all use a refresher on.

See you Friday on Summit Life with JD Greer. Today's program was produced and sponsored by JD Greer Ministries.

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