Summary: The Bible is a book about change. It is a book that tells us how to change so that we can become mature; complete; holy servants of Jesus Christ. Until we are completely free of all; the hurts, habits and hang-ups of this life.

“Keep the Change”

Matthew 5:9 and Romans 12:1-2

I think we call all agree today that the Bible is an amazing book. 66 books, not written by one man, but 39 written over a period of 1500 years. And there is a thread that runs through the scripture from Genesis to Revelation that carries a common theme---Jesus Christ has come to be the Savior of the World.

We go all the way back to the book of Genesis ad we see that man was created; placed in a garden and then everything began to change. And from that point forward there is this thread; this scarlet thread of redemption that leads us to Jesus Christ. He is called author and the finisher of our faith. And if we trace it all the way to the end of the Bible in the final chapter we find ourselves in the garden again.

It is a book about change. It is a book that tells us how to change so that we can become mature; complete; holy servants of Jesus Christ. Until we are completely free of all; the hurts, habits and hang-ups of this life. Jesus said, “Happy are those whose greatest desire is to do what God requires. Paul said, I beseech you therefore brethren by the mercies of God that you present yourself as living sacrifices, holy, acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service and be ye not conformed to this world but be ye transformed by the renewing of your minds so that you may know what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.” Romans 12:1-2

When we talk about real changer, we are talking about transformation. Like a sculptor who takes a large rock and makes something amazing out of it; like an artists who takes a blank palette and paints a beautiful picture—the end product in no way resembles the original one. Only God can do that. I want us to consider 3 questions this morning.

1. How did we get in this current condition? Well we can blame some of it on our parents.

1. Our heritage. Did you know that your parents contributed 46,000 chromosomes to make you who you are today? 23,000 apiece. It is the reason you look like you do and may be the reason you do many of the things you do.

2. Our circumstances. The circumstances of how you were raised and what you saw as you grew up.-these things mater—they contribute to your character. To the person you are today. Much of what you learned—both good and bad ---you learned from your parents. As you grew up you learned from watching others---your friends and your teachers. Our circumstances can hurt us or they can help us but know for sure they will impact you in a huge way.

3. Our choices. This is especially important because this is the one area you CAN control. You can’t change who your parents were. You can’t go back and change the environment of your childhood. But you can, with God’s help change the choices you make.

You see we develop some of these hang-ups we have in life by constantly repeating bad choices. You have heard the definition of insanity ---doing the same thing over and over but expecting different results. We have to stop doing that. If you do it long enough it becomes a habit.

2. Now we see how we got in our current condition…now, why does it take so long to turn all of that around?

1. Some of us want to hold on to what is familiar. Even if it’s painful. From my brief work in Child Protection I saw children who were scared and hurting and experiencing abuse yet they would defend the ones who were abusing them. Because it was like an old pair of shoes. They were comfortable. They may have big holes in their soles---our feet get wet but we are used to them. And we have a hard time throwing them away.

2. Some of us have confused our flaws with our identity. We say I can’t help it. It’s just the way I am. Now this is one of the differences in CR and other programs that are out there. In AA for instance when individuals open up they begin by saying, “Hi, I’m David and I’m an alcoholic.” In CR we will say Hi I’m David and I and a believer who struggles with alcohol. Do you see the difference? Your primary identity is that you are a believer…a child of God who has been changed. Never allow a character defect to become who you are.

3. 3rd question. How do we change? How do we become the person God intended us to be? Before we answer that let me show you where we are in this process this week.

Realize we are not God.

Earnestly believe that God is alive.

Commit our lives to His control.

Openly examine and confess our faults to myself, to God and to someone I trust.

Voluntarily submit to every change God wants to make in my life.

Let me give you four things to focus on.

1. Focus on changing one thing at a time. You may have 10 different things that you know need to be changed but you can’t tackle all ten of them at once. Focus on one at a time.

2. Focus on victory one day at a time. When Jesus taught His disciples to pray He said give us TODAY our daily bread. In the OT the Israelites tried to store up manna for the week and God allowed it to go bad. The only reason I can see for that was to teach His people to live life one day at a time. 2 reasons for that. One, He wants us to learn to lean on Him day by day. Two, He knows we cannot handle everything at once.

• Just for today, Lord---I want to be patient and not become angry.

• Just for today Lord I don’t want to smoke a cigarette.

• Just for today I don’t want to visit certain sites on the internet.

• Just for today I want to stay away from those magazine racks.

My Dad drank whiskey right out of the bottle for over 20 years…..every day until he passed out. That’s a lot to overcome. For anyone. But he put it away at the age of 50 and never touched it again. When he would wake up in the morning he would sit up on the side of the bed and look up and say, Lord, you and I aren’t going to take a drink today are we? One day at a time. That’s how we do it. Focus on victory one day at a time.

3. Focus on the people who help you, not the ones who hinder you. When you begin to make real change you will begin to notice that some of the friends you have in your life are actually obstacles to your progress. They are in the way. Just as you can no longer hang out in some of the places where you used to, you can no longer hang out with the people you used to. Proverbs says “do not be fooled; bad friends will ruin good habits.” If you’re struggling with alcohol---you can’t say I think I’ll go t the bar with some of my buddies---I’m just gonna sit there and eat some peanuts. If you have an addiction to food don’t hang out at the Golden Corral. You need to find some friends who will encourage you and some places that will help you in this journey of recovery.

4. Focus on God’s power, not yours. You see will power is not enough. If it was you would have already changed, right? Listen to this. “Can a leopard take away its (own) spots? Neither can you start doing good for you have always done evil. Now this is the good news…Paul tells us…”I can do all things through Christ who gives me the strength.” That’s how we change. When we realize that there is no limit at all to what God can do in our lives. Recognize that He not only has the power, he also has the desire. Turn it over to Him. You may have seen that bumper sticker a lot of people display. Says, God is my copilot. Sounds great. But hopefully He’s not your copilot. Hopefully He is the actual pilot. You and me…..we’re just passengers and we must turn everything over to Him.