Pastor Sherry’s message for June 22, 2025,
Scriptures: 1 Kings 19:1-15a; Ps 42, Gal 3:23-29; Lk 8:26-39
I believe I shared this story with you some years back, but I have decided to bring it to your attention once again:
“It was advertised that the devil was going to put his tools up for sale. On the date of the sale the tools were placed for public inspection, each being marked with its sale price. There werh a treacherous lot of implements. Hatred, Envy, Jealousy, Doubt, Lying, Pride, and so on. Laid apart from the rest of the pile was a harmless-looking tool, well-worn and priced very high.
“’The name of the tool?’ asked one of the purchasers.
“’Oh,’ said the adversary, “that’s Discouragement.’
“’Why have you priced it so high?’
“’Because it’s more useful to me than the others. I can pry open and get inside a person’s heart with that one, when I cannot get near him with other tools. Now once I get inside, I can make him do whatever I choose. It’s a badly worn tool, because I use it on almost everyone since few people know it belongs to me.’
“The devil’s price for Discouragement was so high, he never sold it. It’s still his major tool, and he still uses it on God’s people today.”
(Chuck Swindoll, The Tale of the Tardy Oxcart, Word Publishing, 1998, p.164.)
The point, of course, is that Satan uses discouragement to pull us away from trusting in God. In this, as in so many of life’s crises, we cannot give him the victory. We want to continue to trust in God despite any and all discouraging circumstances: Failing physical health; Money or employment problems; Family problems; Struggles with acute anxiety or deep depression; Threats of hurricanes; Threats of wars. Remember, the Bible says (Hebrews 11:1, NLT)—Faith shows the reality of what we hope for; it is the evidence of things we cannot see. Our faith in Jesus helps us to cling to Him when things in our lives are not going well.
All of our Scripture passages today remind us to hold on to our faith in the face of discouragement. They show us why it doesn’t have to be this way:
A. Our Psalm (42), a teaching psalm (maschil), provides wise advice to all of us: In verses 5 and 11, the author writes—Why am I discouraged? Why is my heart so sad? I will put my hope in God! I will praise Him again—my Savior and my God! Scholars believe this psalm was penned when the Israelites found themselves taken captive by the Babylonians (586BC). They were of course distraught that God allowed them to be captured and exiled to a pagan land. The faithful remnant who still believed in the Lord realized the nation was being punished for its spiritual adultery—idolatry. The faithful and faith-filled reminded themselves, “It doesn’t have to be this way,” realizing that God could also rescue and redeem them (which He did 70 years later).
B. Our Old Testament lesson from 1 Kings 19:1-15a, gives us the example of the great prophet Elijah, so discouraged that he asked God to let him die. Think of this, through Elijah God had showed His superiority over the Canaanite god of nature, Baal, as well as the pagan fertility goddess, Ashtoreth. God had used Elijah to call down heavenly fire on the altar he had made. The 450 prophets of Baal and the 400 prophets of Ashtoreth had pled for their gods to do the same on their altar, but with no result. Elijah had just scored a huge and miraculous victory over the false prophets of Baal. But then word comes to him that Queen Jezebel, a Baal worshiper—an probably the most evil woman in Scripture–has sworn to kill him for showing up her pagan priests. Realizing she is a nasty, powerful, and vindictive woman, Elijah temporarily “loses his Jesus” (though he predates Christ by many years) and runs for his life.
Without consulting the God he serves—Elijah, where is your faith?–he then spends sometime in the wilderness, so discouraged about his situation, so burned out—that he decides (without talking to the Lord) he has had it with being a prophet. True, the life of a prophet is a difficult one. Later on, Jesus will famously say of the religious leaders of Jerusalem (Matthew 23:37)—O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you….If you have ever been the truth speaker into a corrupt system, a badly run enterprise, or a vindictive clique, you know that truth-tellers (we call them “whistle-blowers”) suffer. So Elijah is burnt out, depressed, and done in, afraid for his life, and at the give up point.
Here it’s important to realize that we often hear two messages after a significant move of God: (1) The first is usually from the evil one. Satan has used his tool of discouragement on Elijah. Elijah surprisingly doesn’t even recognize it. He just wants to give up, hand in his prophet ID badge, empty out his desk, and die. (2) But our gracious Lord also always counters Satan’s spin with compassion and truth: He sends him supernatural bread (manna) and fresh, restorative water; He also blesses him with deep,recuperative sleep. The divine menu is simple but so nutritious, and the rest so restorative, that he is able to obey God and travel to Mt.Sinai 40 days’ distant.
God meets him there and curiously—since God knows everything—asks him (v.9)—What are you doing here, Elijah? The Lord appears to want Elijah to figure it out for himself. Elijah asserts he has been zealous in doing God’s work, but realizes he is afraid because the angry, evil Jezebel has put out a contract on him. God then reveals Himself to him, not in the great things (ferocious wind, earthquake, and fire, signs of God’s judgment) but in a still, small whisper. Following this, God asks the same question again, (v.13)—What are you doing here, Elijah? Notice, the Lord really doesn’t respond to Elijah’s litany of troubles. Instead, He wants Elijah to refocus on his lifetime calling. God reconfirms this calling, and sends Elijah back to do the work of a prophet: [1] Anoint two kings, Hazael (over Syria), and Jehu (in Ahab’s place, over Israel); later, Jehu will be told to destroy Ahab’s dynasty (2 Kings 9:1-16), though Elijah will not be there to see it take place. [2] And anoint his prophet successor, Elisha. So, the Lord appears to accept Elijah’s resignation, and reminds the prophet that He has reserved in Israel a remnant of 7,000 who love and worship Him. Elijah was never really alone. It was never really as hopeless as he had mistakenly believed.
C. A truly hopeless case was the Gedarene demoniac in today’s Gospel (Luke 8:26-39). Remember, the tribe of Gad never crossed the Jordan but liked the land they saw and settled in the Transjordan (east of the Jordan River). This had the unexpected consequence of separating them, over time, from their Jewish brothers. With this separation, they also drifted away from their faith to the point that they were now raising pigs—unclean! Jesus encounters a man of Gad who was tormented by 6,000 demons. He lived in misery and discouragement among the tombs. The demons within him recognized Jesus’ power and were horrified. Jesus knew it didn’t have to be this way—He only spoke a word and cast the entire legion out of the man. The guy was completely restored into who he had been meant to be. But in what was probably a judgment on the pig industry—or even the descendants of Gad–Jesus allowed the demons to inhabit a nearby herd of hogs, who then rushed off to drown themselves Meanwhile the previously hopeless man became a Jesus-follower and an evangelist.
D. Why would Jesus go to this trouble? Because, as Paul asserts (Galatians 3:23-29), this man’s faith in Christ made him a child of the Father. All we who believe in Jesus are adopted children of God. There is no national or racial barrier (Jew nor Greek) to our status; there is no economic barrier to our status (slave nor free); and there is no gender barrier (male nor female) to hinder us from becoming beloved children of God.
We cannot allow Satan the victory in our lives. When we are discouraged, we need to remind ourselves that “It doesn’t have to be this way.” We serve an awesome God who is only a prayer away. He holds the antidote to our poor health, financial struggles, family dissension, any struggle with anxiety or depression we are undergoing; also our fears of wars and storms.
We have the whole counsel of Scripture to…
1. remind us to put our trust in God, no matter what discourages us (Psalm 42);
2. remember that even famous prophets like Elijah got discouraged, but God superintended his recovery (1 Kings 19);
3. recall how Jesus rescued and restored the demoniac, a massively discouraged person (Luke 8:26-39);
4. And focus on the fact that we are God’s beloved children, as per Paul in Galatians 3:23-29, due to our faith in His Son, Jesus Christ.
The next time you find yourself struggling, grab onto your faith with both fists, and tell yourself that discouragement is a tool of the devil and that you do not have to fall for it. In truth, “It Doesn’t have to be this way!” Thanks be to God who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Alleluia! Alleluia!
©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams