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Focus

Topic: #4 of 376 for Sermons on Worship: Definition
Scripture: Acts 16:16-16:40
Sermon Series: Wired for Worship
Date Added: September 2005
Audience: General Young Adults (19 - 30)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
Wired for Worship: Focus
09.27.05
Pastor Mark Batterson

This evotional continues the Wired for Worship series. If you want to subscribe to the Theaterchurch.com podcast, there is a podcast link on the Theaterchurch.com homepage. It’s free and it’s automatically downloaded onto your computer or MP3 player each week.

If you want to watch this week’s video, check out my blog entry (www.evotional.com) from Friday, September 23. Let’s just say that I got a nice surprise—a deep dish Lou Malnatti’s pizza delivered to my door!

Bronze Medalists

This week I read about a fascinating research study done by Vicki Medvec, a professor at Northwestern University. She studied Olympic medalists and she discovered that Bronze medalists were happier than Silver medalists. Here’s why. Medvec found that Silver medalists tended to focus on how close they came to winning gold so they weren’t satisfied with silver. Bronze medalists tended to focus on how close they came to not winning a medal at all so they were just happy to be on the medal stand at all.

I think that study reveals a fascinating facet of human nature: your focus determines your reality. How we feel isn’t determined by objective circumstances. If that was the case, Silver Medalists would be happier than Bronze medalists because they had an objectively better result. But how we feel isn’t determined by our objective circumstances. How we feel is determined by our subjective focus.

Here’s another way of saying it: your internal attitudes are more important than your external circumstances.

John Milton said it best: “The mind is its own place, and in itself, can make a Heaven out of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.”

That’s so true isn’t it? All of us know people who can find something good to focus on even in the worst of circumstances. And all of us know someone who can find something bad to focus on even in the best of circumstances.

There is a universal principle I need to share with you right out of the gate: we tend to see what we’re looking for. I think there are two basic types of people in the world: complainers and worshippers. Complainers can always find something to complain about. Worshippers can always find something to praise God about.

Please read what I’m about to write.

All of us develop hypotheses about everything all the time. Then we look for evidence to support our hypotheses and ignore evidence to the contrary.

For example, if you decide you don’t like someone you’ll notice everything that is wrong with that person. And you’ll probably ignore anything you could potentially like about them. The flipside is true as well. If you’re head-over-heels in love with someone you tend to only notice those things you love about them.

We see what we’re looking for.

What does that have to do with worship? A worshipper makes a pre-decision to look for something to praise God about even in the direst of circumstances.

Acts 16 is exhibit A.

Bad Day

In Acts 16, Paul and Silas are in a prison cell in Philippi. I’d encourage you to read the entire chapter yourself, but let me set the scene. Paul casts a demon out of a fortune-teller. Her master doesn’t like it because she loses the ability to predict the future so he has Paul and Silas arrested.

Acts 16:22 says, “A mob quickly formed against Paul and
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Comments

October 31, 2006

2. Larry McCall says...

Excellent message. Jerry Cook in his book, The Monday Morning Church says that if we are in Christ, then we are the temple in which we worship and worship is not in a building on Sundays at 11:00 am but it happens when our focus is on Christ within us. Larry McCall

October 23, 2006

1. Reji Thomas says...

This sermon is powerful as it teaches one to be free from the chains that we are bond and loose them in worship. Teaches worship as an attitude.

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