Is God Worth It? Faithfulness in the Silence

Scripture References Malachi 3 Malachi 4 Matthew 12 Psalm 74 Revelation 21 Introduction The study closed the “Completely” series in Malachi by merging the final two lessons into one question: “Is following God even worth it when life doesn’t seem to pay off?” Malachi 3:13-4:6 exposes Israel’s cynical complaints, contrasts them with a small faithful remnant, and then lifts the group’s eyes to the coming “day when I act,” when God will separate the righteous from the wicked and bring healing. The night pressed us to examine our own temptations to treat God transactionally and to remember that His apparent silence never equals His absence. Key Points / Exposition 1. The Cynical Complaint (Malachi 3:13-15) God accuses His people of “harsh” words: they say serving Him is futile. Their logic: “We obey, yet life feels hard; the arrogant ignore You and prosper.” Modern parallels: promoting cheaters at work, businesses thriving while cutting corners, prayers that seem unanswered. Underneath: belief in God’s existence remains, but confidence in His worth slips. 2. Transaction vs. Relationship Illustration: an investment guaranteed to lose money for five years–no one buys in unless year six is guaranteed to triple. We judge worth by visible payoff. Story: 15-year marriage that felt one-sided–chores done, sacrifices made, yet personal needs unmet. Seeing marriage as a transaction (I do X, I should get Y) bred bitterness. The same distortion creeps into discipleship. Key distinction raised to the group: Promise vs. guarantee–our promises can break; God’s guarantees cannot. 3. A Faithful Remnant (Malachi 3:16-18) While many complain, “those who feared the Lord talked with each other.” Community: faithful people stay in conversation and mutual encouragement. God listens; their names are written in a “scroll of remembrance.” Future assurance: He will publicly distinguish between those who serve Him and those who do not. 4. The Coming Day (Malachi 4:1-3) Picture of judgment: evildoers become stubble in a furnace–total, final. Picture of reward: “Sun of righteousness” rises with healing. God’s people leap like well-fed calves released from a winter stall–image of unrestrained freedom and joy. Perspective shift: we measure by today’s scoreboard; God measures by that day’s scoreboard. 5. Last Words Before 400 Years of Silence (Malachi 4:4-6) “Remember the law of Moses” – obey what you already know; no new information needed. Promise of Elijah’s coming to turn hearts before the “great and dreadful day.” (Identified later by Jesus as John the Baptist, Matthew 12.) After this prophecy God goes silent for four centuries, yet history shows He was at work: Roman roads, common Greek language, synagogue system–all prepared the world for the gospel. Takeaway: God’s silence is not God’s absence. Major Lessons & Revelations Doubt often grows when we confuse today’s results with God’s ultimate scoreboard. Treating God as a transaction (“If I obey, He owes me”) inevitably produces bitterness and comparison. Faithful people stay in community, fear the Lord, and honor His name even when outcomes lag. God guarantees a decisive day of justice and healing; His promises are as certain as His character. Obedience usually requires practicing what we already know, not waiting for something new. Practical Application Examine where you’re secretly asking, “What’s in it for me?” and repent of transactional thinking. Stay connected: initiate honest, faith-filled conversation with other believers this week. Obey the next clear instruction you already have from Scripture, even if results feel delayed. When tempted to compare, rehearse God’s guarantee of the coming day and thank Him for writing your name in His “scroll of remembrance.” Celebrate small acts of faithfulness as seeds God sees and will one day honor. Conclusion & Call to Response Malachi ends by confronting weary worshippers who believe service to God has become futile. The prophet’s answer is not a quick fix but a bigger horizon: a guaranteed day of righteous healing and final justice. Until then, God calls His people to remember His law, stay in reverent community, and trust that the silent seasons are never wasted. The question is no longer “Is it worth it?” but “Is He worthy?” The answer, then and now, is completely. Insights Don’t confuse God’s silence with His absence; He’s building roads you can’t see for your coming breakthrough. Worship turns toxic when it goes transactional–God stays worthy even after another unanswered voicemail. Stop staring at today’s scoreboard; eternity already crowned you, so play with a fearless patience. Comparison is spiritual quicksand; every wiggle sinks you further from God’s custom timeline. Faith isn’t flashy–it’s choosing obedience when outcomes blur and applause feels permanently on mute. We weren’t saved to survive; we burst out like calves tasting the dawn’s freedom. Isolation is the enemy’s playground; stay in community until doubt melts into a contagious shared courage.

June 27, 2026 · 4 min

The Greatest Reversal

Scripture References Luke 24:1-8 Luke 9:22; Luke 9:24 Luke 18:31-33 John 14:6 Romans 8:11 Introduction Pastor Josh welcomes the Lake Pointe family and guests on Easter, emphasizing worldwide celebration of Christ’s resurrection. Explains annual Easter survey card that shapes future teaching series and campus expansion. Frames the day around humanity’s love for comeback stories, preparing hearts to see Jesus’ resurrection as history’s ultimate reversal. Key Points / Exposition 1. The Greatest Comeback in History Illustrates cultural love for reversals (Rose Bowl, Robert Downey Jr., Duke basketball upset). Declares: “If the tomb is empty, anything is possible.” Jesus’ resurrection has generated more songs, books, paintings, and even the AD/BC calendar divide. 2. Witnesses at the Empty Tomb (Luke 24:1-8) Women (“original Spice Girls”) arrive with spices, find stone rolled away. Angels’ question: “Why do you look for the living among the dead?” Application: People still seek life in dead places–sex, success, status. Reminder that Jesus repeatedly foretold His death and resurrection (Luke 9 & 18) yet disciples missed it–warning believers not to miss the main thing. 3. Doubt Addressed with Demonstration Disciples initially dismiss women’s report as “nonsense.” Jesus doesn’t ignore doubt; He invites investigation (stone rolled away for doubters to see). Three historical evidences for resurrection: All original apostles (12 of 12) willingly died for their eyewitness testimony. Jesus’ brothers (James, Jude) worshiped Him as God and were martyred. Empty tomb–every other religious leader’s remains are enshrined; Christ’s is famously vacant. 4. Crucified for Us–and Instead of Us Detailed historical explanation of Roman crucifixion: scourging, cat-o-nine tails, carrying the cross-beam, nails through nerve centers, public humiliation, asphyxiation. Jesus endured nakedness, scourging, mockery with a Tersorium (sour wine on a latrine sponge), and prayed, “Father, forgive them.” The cross satisfies God’s justice (payment for sin) and reveals God’s love (He paid it Himself). Jesus’ last cry “It is finished,” not “I am finished”–payment completed, mission ongoing. 5. Resurrection Power for Today (Romans 8:11) Frederick Buechner quote: “The worst thing is never the last thing.” Four “last words” the resurrection overturns: Guilt–no condemnation remains. Addiction–power that raised Jesus now breaks chains. Pain–suffering temporary; a resurrection will heal all. Death–believers will rise bodily as Christ did. Personal illustration: Pastor’s 96-year-old grandfather’s passing; hope in reunion. 6. Call to Respond – The ABCD Card A: Already a Christian. B: Begin a relationship with Christ today. C: Considering; need more time. D: Don’t intend to decide. Emphasizes honest self-assessment; leads B-responders in a salvation prayer. Major Lessons & Revelations Centrality of Jesus’ death and resurrection–nothing else in church life matters more. Doubt is not disqualification; bring questions to the empty tomb. Historical, rational grounds bolster faith; Christianity is fact, not fable. Resurrection guarantees ultimate victory over sin, suffering, and death. Practical Application Examine personal standing with Christ (A-B-C-D). Stop seeking life “among the dead”–redirect desires to Jesus. Share resurrection evidence with skeptical friends. Trust resurrection power to confront specific guilt, habits, or pains this week. Complete survey card to shape future ministry and campuses. Conclusion & Call to Response Resurrection invites every listener into the greatest reversal of all–new life in Christ. Listeners encouraged to mark decision, lift hands publicly, and begin discipleship journey. Church celebrates visible responses as heaven rejoices. Prayer “God, I admit I’ve lived for other things, but I believe Jesus died for my sin and rose again. From this day forward, I put You first. Thank You for adopting me as Your child. Empower me by the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead. Amen.” ...

April 3, 2026 · 4 min