Sermons

Summary: This sermon will seek strategies to living a life of faithfulness from the life of Joseph

I have read that William Carey land of India from England is buried in the Mission Burial Ground in Serampore, West Bengal. One his tombstone these words are inscribed.

William Carey

born 17th Aug. 1761, died 9th June 1834

"A wretched, poor, and helpless worm on thy kind arms I fall."

What a statement! What a summary of life!

When we hire people for a job we review their resume or bio-data. This is to make sure that they qualify for the position that we have for them. I want to examine the resume of William Carey here. Not much is there but let us look. Prior to coming to India. Pre-1793

• Financially – poor

• Education- only grammar school, no degrees

• Experience- shoemaker

• Reference- a band of country preachers half a world away

• Accomplishments up to 1793- nothing of significance

But as a 32 year old in 1793 he sailed to India with a weapon of life and a strategy to proclaim “by life, lips, and letters the unsearchable riches of Christ” (George, 93).

Let us look at Carey’s post 1793 resume

• Founder of Serampore College in West Bengal, India

• Translated the Bible into many Indian languages and dialects.

• Started other schools and mission stations all over India.

• Laid the ground work that resulted in many social reforms in India.

• Referred as the “the father of the modern missions movement.”

Poor, uneducated, inexperienced man became the father of the modern missionary movement. Shall we agree here that William Carey left a legacy of faithfulness.

I realize that I am speaking to a unique audience here. Majority of you are young men and women starting your life. Others moving towards the end. Then there are people in between. For the young one may I say this, wandering through the wilderness with a bunch of sheep is part of David’s legacy as the wars that he had won as the King of Israel. Christ’s legacy as the incarnate Son of God started with an announcement to a rural teenage girl by the name of Mary. His birth is just as important as his death. To summarize, you have already started a legacy. And to the rest of us who have many years under our belt, understand that we have already written many chapters of this book. I hope that it is all good.

Friends, we need to leave a legacy of faithfulness for the next generation.

Now I want to ask a very crucial question. This is a very personal question. For this may I request your undivided attention. The question is this, if you remain on the path that you are on right now, will you be able to finish well and leave a legacy of faithfulness for the next generation. All of us have selected a track to run on and we are running. Unquestionably you are on a path right now. Do you need some adjustments? do you need to change tracks? Do you need to reassess your strategies? Will this path lead you to the destination God has for you? In Christian life, how you finish really matters. Fisherman, prostitutes, tax collectors and a former terrorist against Christians, they all came to Christ and finished well.

I. In order to leave a legacy of faithfulness, make sure that you are content with where God has placed you. 39:1-6

• Joseph was sold as a slave to an Egyptian officer by his own brothers.

• Instead of murmuring, being angry with God and his family, he decided in his heart to make the best out of the situation.

• Joseph’s contentment is seen in the statements like, “The LORD was with Joseph, and he became a successful man, and he was in the house of his Egyptian master.” (39:2). Potiphar made him overseer of his house.

• You may in a horrible situation. If you are there because of your own sins that is another matter. But if you find yourself in a tough spot for reasons beyond your control, please get used to it. Accept the reality and be content. Joseph did that.

o Abraham was asked to sacrifice his own son.

o Job had to conduct 10 funerals of his own children in one day.

o Samuel was rejected by the people.

o Peter, Paul and John left their professions, families and passions to follow the Lord and ended up in jail, beaten up, exiled.

o In each situation these people aligned themselves with the situation and accepted the reality. They dealt with the incongruities of life.

Joseph started from his own home, thrown into a pit by his own brothers and sold into slavery, became the servant of a high official in Egypt and eventually worked his way up to a Managerial position within that house, then into a prison for a long time then promoted as the most powerful man next to Pharaoh in Egypt. Up and down up and down. We may call this the oddness of life.

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