Scripture References
- 1 Kings 18
- Hebrews 12
- Romans 12:1
- Acts 2
- Isaiah 44
- Philippians 4:13
- Ephesians 1
Introduction
- The message moves us from being spiritual consumers to people completely consumed by God.
- Using the fiery showdown between Elijah and the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel, the pastor contrasts the silence of idols with the blazing presence of the living God.
- The central invitation is surrender–laying our lives on God’s altar so His power, not our preferences, defines us.
- “How long will you waver?” becomes the piercing question that demands a decision today.
Key Points / Exposition
1. Our Consumer Reflex vs. God’s Call to Be Consumed
- Culture trains us to ask, “What’s in it for me?” about everything–food, tech, entertainment, even church (“great music, hold the challenge, free coffee for my kids”).
- We often treat God like a drive-through order and then rate Him with 1-star or 5-star reviews.
- Scripture insists we were created for the opposite: lives that are God-centered, others-centered, difference-making, and en fuego with divine purpose.
2. The Nature of the One We Approach: “Our God Is a Consuming Fire” (Hebrews 12)
- God’s holiness burns away impurity; His presence changes everything yet never changes Himself.
- Biblical snapshots of His fire: burning bush (Moses), pillar of fire (wilderness), tongues of fire (Acts 2).
- Because His love “never burns out,” He wants to ignite us–not merely satisfy us.
3. Showdown on Mount Carmel: 1 Kings 18
- Setup
- Israel, once rescued and devoted, has slid into idol worship under King Ahab and Queen Jezebel, who feed 850 false prophets.
- Elijah, often a lone voice living “in a cave down by the river,” confronts the king and calls for a public contest.
- The Contest
- Two bulls, two altars, no pre-set fire. The God who answers by fire is the true God.
- Prophets of Baal spend hours shouting, dancing, even cutting themselves–“but there was no response.”
- Elijah mocks: “Maybe he’s traveling… maybe he’s in the bathroom.”
- Elijah rebuilds a ruined altar with 12 stones, soaks the sacrifice and wood three times, and prays a simple 33-word prayer.
- Divine Response
- “Then the fire of the Lord fell”–consumes sacrifice, wood, stones, soil, and water.
- Crowd falls facedown: “The Lord–He is God!”
4. The Futility of Idols, Ancient and Modern (Isaiah 44)
- Isaiah pictures a craftsman who burns half a log for heat and bows to the rest–“such stupidity and ignorance.”
- Modern equivalents: image, status, possessions, comfort, pleasure, success.
- Idols promise rescue but answer only with silence; they cannot forgive, empower, or give eternal life.
5. From Consumer to Living Sacrifice (Romans 12:1)
- True worship is offering our bodies as “living and holy sacrifices,” allowing God to transform our thinking.
- Surrender is uncomfortable–plans shift, priorities reorder–yet Jesus says we find life by losing it.
6. Real Strength Flows From Surrender
- Father’s Day application: toughness is admitting need and yielding to God’s power.
- Nine marks of Spirit-formed strength: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.
- Paul’s secret: “I can do everything through Christ who gives me strength” (Philippians 4:13).
- The same power that raised Jesus (Ephesians 1) is available to those who stop wavering and lay ego on the altar.
Major Lessons & Revelations
- You were not created to consume God’s blessings but to be consumed by God’s presence.
- Idols–ancient or modern–always promise fire but deliver silence.
- God still answers by fire, consuming what we surrender and revealing Himself to the watching world.
- A life placed on God’s altar is the only life that truly discovers purpose, power, and freedom.
- The measure of a person’s greatness is directly proportional to the depth of their surrender.
Practical Application
- Acknowledge and abandon the “what’s-in-it-for-me” approach to faith.
- Rebuild the altar: set aside deliberate time and space for wholehearted worship.
- Identify the modern idols you chase and renounce them before God.
- Offer your whole self to God daily–plans, possessions, relationships, identity.
- Depend on Christ’s power, not willpower, for every task and temptation.
- Pour into others instead of waiting to be served.
Conclusion & Call to Response
- Elijah’s ancient question still burns: “How long will you waver between two opinions? If the Lord is God, follow Him.”
- Today the choice is clear–silence from powerless idols or the blazing, life-giving presence of the all-consuming God. Lay your life on His altar, and let Him set it ablaze.
Prayer
- The pastor invited listeners to surrender, praying that God would consume their self-focused lives with His love, wisdom, strength, and holiness, and empower them to follow Jesus without wavering.
Insights
- Stop rating church like Yelp; let God’s presence consume your comfort zone.
- Identity isn’t built by what you buy, but by the fire you surrender to daily.
- Every counterfeit promise goes silent, but Jesus still whispers, I am the roar.
- Consumer faith asks, ‘Feed me’; surrendered faith prays, ‘Set me on fire.’
- Your soul stays lukewarm until you answer Elijah’s question: Who really gets your yes?
- Powerlessness becomes strength the moment your plans hit the altar’s unrelenting refining flame.
- Freedom isn’t found in more options; it’s found in one blazing allegiance.
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