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A Different Perspective Official Podcast

Berni Dymet
A Different Perspective Official Podcast
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  • But is it God's Dream // Living Your Dreams, Part 5
    I was asked recently by a woman – if I have a big dream for my life, how do I know it’s from God?  How do I know if it’s real?  Isn’t this whole living your dream thing just a bit dangerous?  Now – she asks some very, very good questions. It’s just great to be with you again on another Friday heading to another weekend. This week we’ve been looking at the subject of living out the dreams that God puts in our hearts. It’s an exciting time because I believe that God puts a dream in everybody’s heart. God gifts us and creates us and makes us for a certain thing in life. And that dream often burns so deeply in our hearts. What I think is really sad is when people get to the end of their lives and they look back on their lives and they realise that they missed the one opportunity that they had to live the dream that God has given them. I was lecturing about this at a Bible college recently. A woman came up to me afterwards and she asked a question. It went something like this, “What is a dream? I mean, how do you know that it’s real? What if it’s just something that I dreamed up and it’s not God’s dream for me? Isn’t that dangerous?” Now, I think that’s an excellent bunch of questions. I heard someone say recently that God is a bit like your American Express card. You should never leave home without Him. I like that. You know, it’s interesting, all sorts of people dream dreams and some of them achieve greatness without ever once believing in Jesus Christ. I believe that’s because we’re all made in God’s image. We are made to be creative. We are made to dream. We are made as ordinary people to do extraordinary things. Is it possible to achieve a dream without believing in Jesus? Absolutely. You just look at some of the great artists and some of the great adventurers and some of the great business leaders down through history and even today. Many of them don’t believe in Jesus. But, if we want a dream that satisfies us, I mean really deeply satisfies us, if we want to be God’s man or woman in the place where He’s called us doing the things that He’s gifted us to do, then the questions that woman asked me about dreaming are very, very good questions. The world is full of successful people who are unsatisfied by what they do. They get to success, whatever success is, and they discover that it’s empty. They discover that when they buy into sweet success, it tastes bitter and sour The only way that we can find fulfilment is in the Person of Jesus Christ. God gifts us, God creates us, God calls us to be ordinary people who do extraordinary things. The questions that woman asked me are these - “What is a dream? I mean, how do I know if it’s real and what if it’s just something that I dreamed up and it’s not God’s dream at all? That’s dangerous,” she said. I think she’s right. So there are four markers that, for me, point to whether a dream is from God or whether it’s something that we dreamed up. I mean, for fifteen or sixteen years of my life I lived my own dream. I was very successful at my dream. It’s just that it never satisfied me. The first marker is this: I believe the Bible teaches us that it is normal for us to dream God’s dreams. In Acts, chapter 2, we read about Pentecost. Pentecost was an amazing time because just as God had promised way back in the Old Testament, that was the day that He poured His Holy Spirit out on all believers. In the past the only people who had the Holy Spirit were certain prophets and certain leaders. And then Jesus came and those who were close to Jesus had a close relationship with God. But this day, after Jesus had risen from the dead and after He’d ascended into heaven, this day of Pentecost is when Jesus poured His Holy Spirit out on all the believers. The people watching saw the believers speak in other tongues, they heard the believers talking in all different languages, they could hear the gospel, the good news, in their own language and they thought the believers were drunk. But Peter the apostle, the one who had stood against Jesus and said, “Lord, You can’t possibly go to the cross.” Jesus had also filled Peter with the Holy Spirit on that day. And the very first sermon that was preached on Pentecost went like this, it was from Peter. And remember Peter is preaching to the Jews in Jerusalem. These are the same people who lynched Jesus, who caused Jesus to be crucified. So this is a gutsy sermon to preach a few weeks after Jesus was crucified. This is how the sermon went - “But Peter, standing with the eleven, raised his voice and addressed the men of Judea and all who live in Jerusalem. ‘Let this me known to you and listen to what I say. Indeed these are not drunk, as you suppose, for it is only 9 o’clock in the morning. “No, this is what was spoken through the prophet Joel. In the last days it will be, God declares, that I will pour My Spirit upon all flesh and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy. And your young men shall see visions and your old men shall dream dreams. Even upon my slaves, both men and women, in those days I will pour out My Spirit.” In other words, the dreaming of dreams and the seeing of visions is a normal manifestation of the presence of the Holy Spirit in us. It is normal to dream dreams, the dreams that God has for us. The dreams that God has for the people around us. Sometimes when we talk about dreaming dreams, people who believe in Jesus say, “Well, hold on a minute. I don’t that that’s biblical. I don’t think I should be dreaming dreams.” A normal manifestation of the Holy Spirit, here it is in Acts, chapter 2, is that we should dream dreams. Let’s not be afraid of that. God has made us as creative people in His image. We’re people made to dream, we’re people made to achieve extraordinary things. We’re people made with certain gifts. To dream a dream and believe that it’s from God is a step of faith. And without faith we cannot please God. That’s the first marker. It’s normal for us to dream dreams. The second issue is: what are my gifts? Normally our dreams are things that really make us tick, are related to the things we’re good at. It’s often other people who can tell us what we’re good at. It’s often really hard for us to judge what we’re good at. Different people are good at different things. I think of the financial director in our ministry, David Green. David is just the best financial director, the best accountant that I have ever met. And I say to this guy, “I need a cash flow, a need a spread sheet, I need a budget, I need you to do this.” And David loves to do that and he’s so good at it. I could never do what he does. He is gifted to do that. I think of Max Harding, the guy that sits in the studio with me day after day, week after week, recording and putting these programs together. I could never do what Max does. But he’s so good at what he does. You know the problem is sometimes we think of something that we’re good at and we think this doesn’t sound very spiritual. I mean Berni talked about having a dream and his dream is to teach the Bible. That’s pretty spiritual. My dream isn’t spiritual. It can’t possibly be a dream from God. I remember speaking to a woman who was in her 40s and I said to her, “What’s your dream?” And she said, “I really don’t know what my dream is.” And I said, “What do you enjoy doing?” And she said, “Well, I enjoy having coffee with people. Doesn’t sound very spiritual, does it?” And I sort of joked and laughed and said, “Maybe God has a coffee ministry planned for you.” Guess what she’s doing? She’s living out her life caring for people, meeting with them one on one and she laughs to this day saying, “I’m doing my coffee ministry.” It may seem radical. I remember speaking to a young woman when I was a student at Bible college. I said, “What’s your dream?” And she said, “I want to work at a holistic medical center. And when I do that and help people, I want to see healing come to their lives and I want God to use me in that area.” Doesn’t sound very conventional does it? Another man that I was talking to just recently, this man is a very, very successful entrepreneur. And over the years he has poured millions of dollars into God’s work. Just given the money so that God’s work can be done across this world. It may not sound very spiritual to say I think my dream is to be an entrepreneur, but look how powerfully God has used this man. The third point is that your dream will always burn in your heart. It will never leave you, it will never forsake you, it will just burn. And the fourth one, when we start walking as we must do, our dream lies where God opens the doors. God opens some amazing doors for us to live out our dreams. We serve an awesome God.
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  • Walking in the Wasteland // Living Your Dreams, Part 4
    Each one of us has some big dream for our lives – woven into our DNA by God.  Some of us actually step out of our comfort zones to live the dream.  But inevitably when we do, the hard times come.  We find ourselves in a wasteland. I’m so excited to be with you again today because this week and next week we’re talking about the subject of dreaming dreams and living out the big dreams that God has put in our heart for our lives. Maybe your dream is to be a nurse or a teacher or wife or a mother or a scientist or a physicist. Whatever that dream is, it tends to revolve around the things that we just love to do. It burns inside us like a fire that we can’t quench. Sometimes people take a risk and step out but they find themselves in a wasteland, in a desert, where it looks as though the dream has evaporated. Woodrow Wilson was the 28th President of the USA. He was a progressive reformer and the son of a Presbyterian minister. He said this, “We grow by dreams. All big men and women are dreamers. Some of us let the dream die but others nourish them through the bad days ‘til the sunshine and the light which always come.” During the week I’ve mentioned a couple of times the book called The Dream Giver by Bruce Wilkinson and David Kopp it is just an outstanding book. I would encourage you to think about buying it. It’s only $14 or $15 but an outstanding book. The first half of the book is a parable about a man called, “Ordinary” and it’s the story of when Ordinary left the land of Familiar to follow his big dream. He walked through that invisible wall of fear and where he expected to find himself in the middle of his dream, in the middle of the place where he would be satisfied, he found himself in the inevitable wasteland. I’d just like to read to you a short part of that parable from Bruce Wilkinson’s book. Again and again Ordinary lost his way. Again and again he cried out for the Dream Giver to show him the way, but no answer came. Why had he ever trusted the Dream Giver to guide him in the first place? The day came when Ordinary finally gave up. He sat on his suitcase and refused to move until the Dream Giver showed up with a plan. But the Dream Giver didn’t show up that day or the next day. Ordinary had never felt so lost and alone before. He became angry. He got angrier and angrier and then a hard, hot wind began to blow. The wind blew all day and all the next and sand blew into Ordinary’s eyes. It blew into his teeth and ears. When the wind finally stopped, Ordinary stood to his feet but as far as he could see there was only sand. The path to his dream had disappeared completely. Obviously his entire trip through the wasteland had been a waste. Hot tears coursed down his dirty cheeks. ‘You’re not a Dream Giver,’ he shouted. ‘You’re a Dream Taker. I trusted you, you promised to be with me and help me and you didn’t.’ “Then Ordinary stumbled in despair across the sandy waste, dragging his empty suitcase behind him. His dream was dead and now he wanted to die too. Weak, under a scraggly tree, he lay down in it’s scraggly patch of shade and closed his eyes. That night he slept the sleep of a dreamless dreamer. The next morning Ordinary heard something. Startled he peered up to see a shimmering somebody sitting in the branches of the tree. ‘Who are you?’ he asked as she climbed down to the ground. ‘My name is Faith’ she said. ‘The Dream Giver sent me to help you.’ ‘But it’s too late,’ cried Ordinary. ‘My dream is dead. When I needed the Dream Giver most, he was nowhere in sight.’ ‘What do you need that you haven’t received?’ asked Faith. ‘Well if it weren’t for those few springs of water I found,’ answered Ordinary, ‘I’d be dead of thirst by now.’ ‘Yes, and...’ she asked. ‘And if it weren’t for the fruit I found, I’d be a walking skeleton. Wait! I am a walking skeleton. I could die of starvation any minute.’ “‘Oh, my,’ Faith murmured. This parable is closely linked to the story of Israel. Israel was oppressed in Egypt. They were slaves. Hundreds of thousands, maybe even millions of them. And God sent Moses, through a series of ten amazing miracles, to convince Pharaoh to set Israel free. “Let My people go” was the cry. Eventually, after the last devastating miracle, where each of the firstborn children of the Egyptians, right across the country, died under God’s hand. Pharaoh changed his mind and let them go. But no sooner had Israel left Egypt than he sent his army after them to destroy them because he was so angry. God protected Israel. God put a pillar of His presence between Egypt’s army and His fleeing Israelites. And then God parted the Red Sea and Moses led the people through the Red Sea on the other side. And as the Egyptian army followed them, God let the Sea fall back into place and they were all drowned. But no more than a few days had gone by. Remember Israel has seen miracle after miracle. The ten plagues that God sent on Israel. The presence of God in the pillar of fire, which stood between them and the Egyptian army. Moses, parting the Red Sea, for goodness sake, so that they could walk through. They’d seen amazing miracles, but a couple of days in the desert, listen to what the Bible says, this comes from Exodus, chapter 16, verse 3. The whole of Israel complained to Moses in the wilderness. ‘If only we’d died in Egypt where at least we had enough food to eat, you brought us into the wilderness to kill us all with starvation.’ Isn’t that the way? We decide to step out and follow the dream that God’s put on our hearts ... I remember when I stepped out to follow the dream that God had put in my heart and I lived that dream for a time. Then all of a sudden I found myself in a wasteland. It was a wasteland that lived on for two, long years. Two years may not seem a long time, but when you’re walking around in a wasteland, when the path to your dream has been obscured by the hot wind blowing and the sand, and you look in every direction and you don’t see your dream anywhere. You feel like complaining. I’ve got to tell you, you feel like having a big winge to God. But God is faithful. Just as in that story that Bruce Wilkinson wrote, God sends faith and faith, the Bible says, is a gift from God. Faith isn’t something that we muster up. Faith is a gift that God gives us to trust in Him when everything seems lost. Sometimes it seems like our dream is gone. Sometimes, in fact inevitably, when we step out to follow the dream that God has put in our heart, it looks as though it has totally evaporated. And the miracles that God has done along the way for us, well we kind of forget that it was God. Just like Ordinary. You know, he said, “Oh, if it hadn’t have been for the water I’d have died.” Well, Ordinary, who put the water there? If it hadn’t been for those few bits of fruit that I found, I would have starved. Well, Ordinary, who do you think put the fruit there? God is a faithful God and when He calls us to a dream, a dream which plugs into His big dream, a dream which meets a need out in the world, God needs to make sure that we’re ready for that dream. And we need to be sure that we’re ready for that dream. And that’s why, when we follow that dream, when we follow God’s call, we need to expect that we will spend a time in the wilderness. It is part of God’s plan. Jesus, when He was baptised and He was filled with the Holy Spirit just before He began His public ministry, it says that God took Him and threw Him out into the desert for forty days and forty nights after which time He was tempted by the devil. When God tests us when, we feel lost and hungry and alone and betrayed and angry, just like Ordinary did, all that time God is in that place with us. All that time He is there and by the power of His Holy Spirit, if we’ll reach out to His Son, Jesus, and say, “Lord, I cannot do this on my own,” He will send His Spirit to fill us with faith. With faith in the One Who called us to the dream in the first place. With faith to stand in that place, and believing God no matter what comes, no matter what life throws at us, no matter what the devil throws at us, to stand in that place and say, “Lord, I will stand in this place for you even if I die here.” God blesses that. God takes that and God uses that. Not for us. Not to give us a career, but to pour His love out to other people through us. We serve an awesome God.
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  • Encountering Bullies // Living Your Dreams, Part 3
    Each one of us has some big dream for our lives – woven into our DNA by God.  But sometimes, when we expect those closest to us to be excited and supportive, they’re anything but!  Why is that? It's great to be with you again today. You know, this week and next week we are doing something that's really exciting. I'm excited by the teaching that we are having on the program over these next two weeks. We are looking at the dreams in our lives. What's the dream that God has planted in your life? Are you living that dream or is it, maybe, a lost and forgotten dream? Or is it maybe a dream your heart burns after but, somehow, you are stuck in a rut-you are stuck in a comfort zone. Sometimes, we have a dream; we step out of our comfort zone through an invisible wall of fear (that often accompanies our dream) and on the other side, in that zone between our comfort zone and our dream, in that border land, we can find bullies, people who don't want us to live out God's big dream for our lives. Bruce Wilkinson in his book, The Dream Giver, calls them border bullies. I wonder who are the border bullies in your life? Jesus knew what dream God had put in his heart; He knew that He was on this earth to love people, to show people what God is like through His words and through His actions. But Jesus also knew that He was put on this earth to die on a cross to pay for our sins. He was telling His disciples about that second part one day. You can read about it in Matthew's Gospel, Chapter 16. It goes like this: Jesus began to show His disciples that He would have to go to Jerusalem and undergo great suffering at the hands of the elders and chief priests and the scribes and be killed and on the third day rise again. And Peter took him aside and began to rebuke Him saying, "Lord, God forbid that this should happen to You." Isn't that interesting? Jesus, the Son of God has a dream that God has put in His heart. For as long as Jesus can remember, He has been the Son of God. And for as long as Jesus can remember, Jesus the boy, Jesus the teenager, Jesus the young man, for as long as He can remember, He knew that He would have to go to the cross to die a grizzly and ugly death to pay for my sins and for your sins. Now, we have the benefit of looking back on 2,000 years of history and looking back and saying, "I understand why Jesus had to go and do that; I understand that my sins are forgiven because Jesus paid the price for me on the cross." Peter, on the other hand, Peter did not have that benefit. Peter was living a life where he was following Jesus around in ministry. And he saw Jesus Christ do some amazing things. He saw Him bring people back to life. He saw Him heal lepers. He saw Him heal blind people. He saw Jesus rebuke the religious establishment for their hypocrisy. He saw Jesus teach people with the amazing power of God's Word. So, why does Peter take Jesus aside and say, "Lord, I'm going to rebuke You; You can't be talking like this, this is not positive words coming out of Your mouth. This is not the way I expected it?" Why does Peter take Jesus aside and rebuke His Lord? Is it that Peter doesn't want Jesus to do God's will? I don't think that's what motivates Peter's here. The thing that motivates Peter is that Jesus' dream of going to a cross is a radical one. And you know something? It's threatens Peter's own comfort zone. All of Peter's hopes and dreams for the future are wrapped up is this Jesus. Peter's like us. We never want to take a step backwards to go three steps forward. We never want to suffer pain. We never want to struggle. And so when Jesus is talking about suffering and dying and rising again on the third day, Peter is thinking, Well, if that happens to Jesus, what is going to happen to me? What is going to happen to my comfort zone? I have all these plans. I have plans to be with Jesus all the time. If one of these things happens, what is going to happen to me? Isn’t that often the way with those who are closest to us? We have a dream; we have a dream to do something that's radical, that's different, that doesn't fit with other people's concept of who we are or what their relationship is with us. And we talk about our dream. We talk about the dream to become a teacher. We talk about the dream to become a nurse. When I was a little kid, I talked to my mother about the dream that I had to become a minister. I didn't quite know what a minister was, but I had that dream. And she said to me, "Ah, Berni, you won't become a minister. You wouldn't be able to get married" because I grew up in a Catholic household. Now, it wasn't that she wanted to push me down; it wasn't that she wanted to pour cold water on me. But it didn't fit with her concept of what her son would grow up to be. So, when we share our dreams and our hopes for the future with those we love, and when those we love don't exactly jump up in support; but, on the other hand, they point out the risks and they stand and they try and stop us, it really helps to understand a couple things because we really expect those who love us, those who are our closest friends, our closest allies, we expect them to support us. And when they don't, it hurts. So, we need to understand a couple of things. The first thing is this: What's their motivation? Why is it they stand against our dream? If anyone is going to bully us, if anyone is going to oppose our dream, shouldn't it be someone we don't know?, shouldn't it be someone out there somewhere. It certainly shouldn't be my wife; it certainly shouldn't be my parents; it shouldn't be my best friend. But sometimes it is. What motivates them? Well, I believe that it's the same as with Peter. They look at you and your dream doesn't fit with their concept. When we talk about stepping out of our comfort zone, it rattles other people's comfort zones. That's the point Wilkinson makes in his book, The Dream Giver. People get uncomfortable when they see someone close to them walking out of their comfort zone. Just like Peter. Jesus was talking about doing something out of his comfort zone; it was more than that, it actually threatened Peter's own life and existence because he was afraid that he would be persecuted. He was afraid that he would be crucified too. So, the first thing is, when the people closest to us don't support us in our dream, it's not because they don't love us. Most of the time, it's not that at all. It's because when we talk about leaving our comfort zones, it shakes their comfort zones up. The second point that Wilkinson makes in his book The Dream Giver, which I totally agree with is this: Some of their concerns will help us along our way. They see the things that we can't see. They point out the risks that we can't see. You know what we can do? We can take their wisdom; we can take their insight; and we can put them in our travel bag to use later. Often other people's criticism can be used to sharpen our focus, to shape our dream. Isn't that wonderful? When we are talking about border bullies, there is one person in my life and, perhaps, in your life, that stands in a class of their own. If you are married, as I am, then your husband or wife stands in a class of their own. When I was dreaming the dream of leaving a high paying consulting job for the risk of a ministry which involved radio and Internet and media, we were excited my wife and I. And, some days, we were scared. And you know what happened? One day she was excited. And that same day I might be scared. And the next week, I might be excited, and she's scared. It was really interesting to see how we went through the excitement and the fear thing at different times. You know what happens? Sometimes the enemy uses that to pull us apart. Sometimes the enemy tries to use that to stop us from following our dreams. But we came to a decision: This was a dream for both of us. We both had to be a part of this. So, we decided to let God bring us closer rather than let the devil pull us apart. Husband and wife is God's smallest fighting formation. It is a team.
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  • Leaving Your Comfort Zone // Living Your Dreams, Part 2
    Each one of us has some big dream for our lives – woven into our DNA by God.  But most people realise that to live out that dream they’re going to have to leave their comfort zone.  And that … that’s scary. We all have a dream, something that we really want to do. It’s not only something we’re good at, it’s not only something that really excites us. Sometimes we had the dream a long time ago and through the pressures of life we’ve forgotten them. But God weaves those dreams, His purposes, into our DNA. The things we’re really good at, that we really enjoy doing. We all have the dreams, but there’s something that stops us sometimes from living them. And that something is fear. Our big dream in life is scary because it’s about leaving the familiar. It’s about leaving our comfort zone. Leaving your comfort zone can be really scary. If you know someone who’s living out their dream, you know, someone in whom God has planted something and they’re out there living it and loving it, and you go and ask them and you say, “What were the early days like? What was it like at the beginning?” You’re likely to get an answer something like this: “Before I stepped out into my dream every time I thought about the dream it made me whistle. Every time I thought about the dream it made me soar like an eagle. But when I took my first step, all I felt was fear. And then I took a few extra steps and it didn’t feel like a dream any more and I started to focus on the things that really scared me.” But if we could go to the end of our life, a life lived with a dream in our hearts that we never pursued, how would we feel? How would we feel if we looked back on that life and said, “Man, I know God planted that dream in my life. Why didn’t I ever chase it? Why did I waste my life?” The words I am about to read you were written by an elderly woman looking back on her life and she says this: “If I had my life to live over I’d dare to make more mistakes next time. I’d relax, I’d limber up, I’d be sillier than I’ve been this trip, I’d take fewer things seriously, I’d take more chances, I’d climb more mountains and swim more rivers, I’d eat more ice cream and less beans. I’d perhaps have more actual troubles and fewer imaginary ones. “You see I’m one of those people who lived sensibly and sanely hour after hour, day after day. I’ve had my moments and if I had it to do all over again, I’d have more of them. In fact, I’d try to do nothing else. Just moments one after the other instead of living so many years ahead of time. “I’ve been one of those people who never goes anywhere without a thermometer, hot water bottle, raincoat and parachute. If I had it to do again, I’d travel lighter next time. “I’d start barefoot earlier in the spring and stay that way later in the autumn. I’d go to more dinners, I’d ride more merry-go-rounds, I’d pick more daisies.” Isn’t it interesting how someone can look back on their life and say, “I let the fear of chasing my dreams override that dream. And so I lived a very measured life, a very ordered life, but I have a sense that I didn’t live the life that God wanted me to live. What about you? Let me ask you really plainly and directly, but in love. Has God put a dream in your heart? Is there something eating away at you that you’ve always been too scared to try? Maybe it’s a career thing. Maybe it’s a vocation thing. I don’t know. Maybe it’s a ministry thing. But there’s a dream there that you’ve always wanted to find. But you’ve just been too scared to go. If you looked at the Lord straight in the eye and said, “Lord, what’s the dream that you have for my life? What would that be? What would that look like? Maybe your dream is to become a nurse. Maybe your dream is to travel overseas and minister to the poor. Maybe that dream is to be a tennis player. There are so many dreams and not all of them look spiritual. Not all of them look conventional. Joshua had a dream. After Moses died, his dream was to take God’s people into the Promised Land. Listen to what God said about him and listen especially to what God said about fear. This comes from the first chapter of Joshua’s dream. After the death of Moses, the servant of the Lord, the Lord spoke to Joshua, son of Nun, Moses’ assistant saying, "My servant, Moses, is now dead. Now proceed across the Jordan, you and all the people, into the land that I am giving to them, to the Israelites. Every place the sole of your foot will tread upon I have given to you as I promised to Moses from the wilderness and the Lebanon as far as the great river, the River Euphrates, all the land of the Hittites to the Great Sea in the west shall be your territory. No one shall be able to stand against you all the days of your life. As I was with Moses, so I will be with you. I will not fail you or forsake you but be strong and courageous. For you shall put this people in possession of the land that I swore to their ancestors to give them. Only be strong and very courageous, being careful to act in accordance with the law that my servants commanded you. Don’t turn from right or to the left so that you may be successful wherever you go. I hereby command you, be strong and courageous. Do not be frightened or dismayed for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go." How many times does God say to Joshua, “Be strong and courageous? Be strong and very courageous? Only I say again to you, be strong and courageous and do not fear?" Why do you think God had to tell him that? My hunch is Josh was afraid - because Joshua had to go and take this people across the Jordan, into the Promised Land and fight a whole bunch of other peoples to bring them into possession of the thing that God had promised them. But God said to Joshua, “Every place that the sole of your foot will tread upon I have already given to you.” Do you notice the tense? When you go, if this dream is God’s dream, it is already done for us. And when we walk out there sometimes, it looks really scary. Last year we bought a cat. This beautiful, little kitten, her name is “Dog”. Now you might say that’s a silly name for a cat. But that’s the name the cat had, so we call her “Dog”. And as she’s grown up (she’s almost a year old now) she plays in the house and she plays in our back yard. We live in a terrace house, that’s a very small block and a very small back yard and we leave the front door open all the time. But do you think that cat will go out that front door? Absolutely no way, because her territory in her mind, stops at the door. There is an invisible wall of fear between her and the front yard. She cannot bear to even go near that front door. It’s funny, isn’t it? She has this view in her head, in her little head, of what her territory is and she ain’t going beyond that view. How often are we like that with our comfort zones? How often are we afraid to step through that invisible wall of fear? In following the dream that God’s put on my heart, I’ve had to step through that invisible wall. What I discovered when I took that one step is I was still alive on the other side. If it’s God’s dream “No weapon formed against us will prosper or stand” and we know it’s God’s dream. As we dream dreams in our hearts, it burns so strongly. It might be hard to leave our comfort zones, but you know something? I think it’s harder to forsake our dreams. Sometimes we just don’t feel worthy but God says, “Take courage, take courage because I have gone before you. Take courage because it’s my dream too. Take courage because no one will be able to stand against you for all your life. “When you experience setbacks, when you’re afraid, when you’re alone, take courage, because I am with you in that dream.” My big dream was on the other side of that invisible wall of fear. So is your big dream. What’s holding you back from living God’s big dream-filled life? Is it fear? Are you like our kitten, afraid to step through the front door? We don’t have to be afraid. How many times does God say in the Bible, “Fear not?” How many times did God say to Joshua, “Don’t be afraid. My dream. I am with you. No one, no one will be able to stand against you.”
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  • Embracing Your Dreams // Living Your Dreams, Part 1
    Each of us has a big dream for our lives.  Sometimes it’s forgotten.  Sometimes we’re afraid of it.  And sometimes we’re just too busy for it.  But that God-given dream is woven into our DNA. It’s great to have your company with us today. I want to begin by asking you three distinct questions. The first question is this: how many people do you know who are living out their dream? When they’ve discovered who they are and what they’re good at and what God made them for and they’re out there, living it and loving it. Second question: how many people do you know who get up every morning, go to a job that they hate, come home, have dinner, watch the box, go to bed, just to do it all again tomorrow? And the third question is: which one are you? A dreamer living out your dream or someone in a life that you just don’t like. Now that’s a very good question. It never ceases to amaze me how many people end up in the wrong job or the wrong career. But I guess, when you think about it, we tend to make those choices when we’re young. Often we make those choices when we’re teenagers or in our early twenties and it’s probably a time when we’re ill-equipped because we don’t have the maturity. We don’t have the level of understanding of ourselves to make those choices. If I look back, in my case, I had a choice of three basic careers when I left school. One was to do medicine and become a doctor. The other was to do computer science at the Royal Military College. And the other one was a career as a Lawyer and to do law at a particular university. I chose the middle one. The second one would have been fine too but, with the benefit of hindsight, I now look at the medicine choice and I think what an absolute disaster that would have been. I hate the sight of blood, the notion of cutting people up or listening to their ills and woes in the doctor’s surgery. I mean, I can’t imagine doing that. So we make those choices and sometimes they become like prison walls. We feel as though we‘re locked into them. Yet, when we are young, sometimes we had dreams. We had dreams about what we wanted to be and what we wanted to do, but we forget those dreams as we grow up. We grow up and the dream becomes lost, it becomes - oh, well, I could never do that. Funnily enough, when I was 11 or 12 I had a dream to become a minister. Now I didn’t know exactly what that meant. But that was my dream. I remember it lit up my life for a time because for a short time when I was young God had an impact on my life. I then grew up and went completely in an opposite direction for the next 25 years. Forgotten dreams, though, have a way of nagging us. They have a way of coming back. Somehow, even though they’re forgotten, they’re there. The great Australian poet, “Banjo” Paterson wrote an evocative and famous poem about a man who followed his dream and another man who didn’t. It’s a beautiful picture. The poem is called, “Clancy of the Overflow”. Now if you’re an Australian, you’ll know that poem really well. If not, have a listen. It paints a really beautiful picture, a beautiful contrast that we’re going to come back to between one man who wishes he’d followed his dream and another man who actually did. Here it is, “Clancy of the Overflow”: I had written him a letter which I had, for want of better knowledge, sent to where I’d met him on the Lachlan, years ago. He was shearing when I knew him, so I sent the letter to him Just on spec, addressed as follows, “Clancy of the Overflow”. And an answer came directed in a writing unexpected, (And I think the same was written with a thumbnail dipped in tar). T’was his shearing mate who wrote it, and verbatim I will quote it: “Clancy’s gone to Queensland droving and we don’t know where he are.” In my wild erratic fancy visions come to me of Clancy Gone a-droving “down the Cooper” where Western drovers go; As the stock is slowly stringing, Clancy rides behind them singing, For the drover’s life has pleasures that the townsfolk never know. And the bush hath friends to meet him, and their kindly voices greet him In the murmur of the breezes and the river on its bars, And he sees the vision splendid of the sunlit plains extended, And at night the wondrous glory of the everlasting stars. I am sitting in my dingy, little office where a stingy ray of sunlight struggles feebly down between the houses tall, And the foetid air and gritty of the dusty, dirty city Through the open window floating, spreads its foulness over all. And in place of lowing cattle, I can hear the fiendish rattle Of the tramways, the buses making hurry down the street, And the language uninviting of the gutter children fighting, Comes fitfully and faintly through the ceaseless tramp of feet. And the hurrying people daunt me, and their pallid faces haunt me As they shoulder one another in their rush and nervous haste With their eager eyes and greedy, and their stunted forms and weedy, For townsfolk have no time to grow, they have no time to waste. And I somehow rather fancy that I’d like to change with Clancy, Like to take a turn at droving where the seasons come and go, While he faced the round eternal and the cash-book and the journal -- But I doubt he’d suit the office, Clancy, of the Overflow.* It’s a great poem, isn’t it? It’s beautiful. It’s this contrast of a man sitting in his nasty office that he obviously doesn’t enjoy, thinking about another man, Clancy of the Overflow, out there following his dreams. What’s your dream? You do have one? You know. Psalm 139 says this of God: It says, “He created our innermost being. He knit us together in our mother’s womb. We’re fearfully and wonderfully made. We weren’t hidden from Him when we were made in that secret place. When we were woven together in the depths of the earth. His eyes saw our unformed bodies and all the days were deigned for us were already written in His book of life before even one of them existed.” When we were being made in that secret place, God created our DNA. He created the things that we would be good at. I believe as we were born He planted dreams in our hearts. I was listening to one woman recently and she said, “Ah, Berni, I don’t have a dream. I just want to be a mum.” I thought, how sad. I said, “Don’t you understand that is your dream. What a fabulous dream to want to bring children in this world and nurture them and see them grow and see them become powerful Christians living their lives out for Christ.” Billy Graham had a mum. The apostle Paul had a mum. Jesus had a mum. So maybe your dream is to be a mother, a wife. Maybe your dream is to be a business man, maybe it’s to be a doctor or a minister or to be a tennis star or to work with the poor. We all have such different dreams. What’s the dream that God has woven into your DNA when you were in your mother’s womb? What’s the dream that you dream for your life when you were a child, when you were a teenager? Are you like Clancy? Do you see the vision splendid of the sunlit plains extended? And at the night wondrous glory of the everlasting stars? Are you someone who is living out your dream or are you sitting in your dingy little office where a stingy ray of sunlight struggles feebly between the houses tall? Over these next couple of weeks, on A Different Perspective, we’re going to be looking at the subject of Living Your Dreams. Imagine getting to the end of life. Imagine being old and sitting and looking back at life and remembering a dream that God placed in our hearts when we were young and realising that we hadn’t lived it. Yet so many people go through life dissatisfied, doing things that they don’t enjoy, struggling with who they are and not living out their dream. There’s a wonderful book called, “The Dream Giver” written by David Kopp and Bruce Wilkinson. If you go to our website to this program, you will see a link so that you can purchase that book. It is about living your dreams. It is one of the best books I’ve ever read and we’ll be referring to that over the next couple of weeks. Whatever you do, stick with us because we are going to be talking about you and me living out the dreams that God has put in our hearts. What does it look like? What are some of the oppositions that we’re going to come across here on A Different Perspective. *"Clancy of the Overflow” by A.B. “Banjo” Paterson
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God has a habit of wanting to speak right into the circumstances that we’re travelling through here and now; the very issues that we each face in our everyday lives. Everything from dealing with difficult people … to discovering how God speaks to us; from overcoming stress … to discovering your God-given gifts and walking in the calling that God has placed on your life And that’s what these daily 10 minute A Different Perspective messages are all about.
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