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The Overflowing Life
John Van Gelderen
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0:00 1:05:08
John Van Gelderen

The Overflowing Life

John Van Gelderen · 1:05:08

The sermon emphasizes the need for the presence of God in our lives and the promise of the overflowing life, which is made possible through faith in Christ's divine life in us.
The video is a sermon on the topic of the overflowing life. The speaker begins by referencing a verse from the Bible where Jesus invites anyone who is thirsty to come to him and drink, promising that rivers of living water will flow from within them. The speaker explains that this refers to the Holy Spirit, who provides the power for a life of holiness and service. He emphasizes the need for the reviving presence of God and the ongoing experience of his presence in order to live a truly fulfilling and abundant life.

Full Transcript

John chapter 7, in the Word of God tonight, you know there is a spiritual tasting, there's a spiritual hearing, there's a spiritual touch and thus feel, that's not physical, it's spiritual, and a spiritual scene, as my wife just sang about, and it is dealing with the presence of the Lord. And that is the very heart of the outpouring of the Spirit, it's the manifestation of the presence of God. And so, to know the presence of the Lord, that is our need.

That song, by the way, is on that revival CD that I mentioned earlier, but that is, I trust, the heart cry of all of our hearts, to know the presence of the Lord. Well, before we continue further, let me just say, it's been a joy to be back here at Fellowship Baptist Church, and I can't believe we're to Friday night, but we are, and it has been a blessing to have hungry hearts in the audience, night after night after night. And that speaks well to the ongoing ministry that's taking place here, and I'll be honest with you, as we have the privilege of coming back, you can see that God is maturing a people, and there's growth in the Lord, and it's very apparent, and it's just a wonderful thing.

And I will say that your pastor is just a deep blessing for me to be around. You know, when somebody is hungry for revival, an evangelist just gets spurred on, I'm telling you. And just to have conversations like we have during the day, and just a passion for revival has just been a blessing to me.

You know, you can go to some audiences, and you can still preach the truth, but you know, it's bouncing off the back wall or whatever. But when there's hungry hearts, and a pastor who's leading the way with a passion for revival, it is a deep blessing. And I thank God for what He's doing here.

God is working. There's no doubt about it. It's very, very apparent.

I could tell it on Sunday. And God answering your prayers, and it's just been a privilege to be back here. I appreciate Brother John helping with the music for Mary Lynn, and I appreciate how many of you have been here every night, others every night that you possibly could.

And we thank the Lord for this church, and for what He's doing here. As the Lord does bring us to mind, we do appreciate your prayer. I'll be headed out, the Lord willing, to the St. Louis area tomorrow, and on with the schedule here this fall.

But we certainly do appreciate the privilege of being here in these days. Well, last night we focused on a symphony of prayer, which really deals with the presence of God in the corporate prayer meeting, because it said, there am I in the midst of them. And I was delighted last night to hear reference among several that you recognize that God was here.

God wants us to recognize it. He was here last night, and He's been here night after night. But in that prayer meeting, it was apparent that He was here.

Now, there can be greater measures of intensity, and all those kinds of things, but we need to acknowledge when God moves, and He's been moving. And so that's a wonderful thing. And I am thrilled that God is raising up an awareness of His presence, and a need for more of His presence.

That is the need of our land. And I was reading an account by the historian J. Edwin Orr, who wrote the song, Search Me, O God, that we sing. It's in our hymnals.

A revival historian from the 20th century, now with the Lord. He has written several tremendous accounts of revival. He goes into the origins as well.

But when he talked about the 1857-58 revival here in America, often known for what it did to the big cities, and it was massive in what God did in New York City, and Philadelphia, and Chicago, and Atlanta, and Denver, and across the nation. But it goes into detail. It didn't just touch the cities.

It touched the towns. It touched the villages. He said, yea, the country hamlets.

All across the nation there was an awareness of the presence of God. Now friends, that is our need. And God is raising up prayer groups.

I mentioned that earlier this week. And prayer groups within churches, just like this, as well as prayer groups between churches and preachers in various parts of the country. And I trust that where God burdens you, find others of like burden, and have symphonies, and let's look to the Lord to meet the need of our day.

We are in definite need. And sometimes when God sends big revival, it changes everything even politically. Other times it prepares the people of God for persecution.

There was massive revival in the 30s and 40s in China, preparing them for 1950. And that church has mushroomed as a result of that, even under the oppression and persecution of the last 60 years. In fact, there are more believers in China than there are in the USA because of that.

But the bottom line is we need the reviving presence of God. Now when you have special touches, like we had even last night, there is sometimes a desire to stay on the mountaintop and build three tabernacles. And yes, we need repeated visitations from the Lord, no doubt about that.

But there is a truth that we're going to look at tonight that is necessary for the whole thing to fit together and then to be repeated over and over again as seasons of refreshing from the presence of the Lord. So let's look tonight at John chapter 7, as we'll focus in on an aspect of the truth, a facet of the diamond that we have not yet focused on thus far. John 7 verse 37, In the last day, that great day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, I'll let him come unto me and drink.

He that believeth on me, as the scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water. But this spake he of the Spirit, which they that believe on him should receive. For the Holy Ghost was not yet given, because that Jesus was not yet glorified.

From his innermost being shall flow rivers of living water. The title of the message tonight is The Overflowing Life. Shall we bow our heads? Will you join me in asking the Spirit of God to open our understanding tonight? Blessed Holy Spirit, we do thank you for what you've been doing.

We thank you for lifting up Jesus and taking of what is his and showing him unto us in these days. Oh, Lord, tonight would you meet with us once again. Lord, tonight would you open our eyes to the grand reality of truth, the privilege and the responsibility of this text.

Lord, would you give us understanding to this overflowing life. And Lord, tonight may it become the experience of our lives over and over again. Lord, I plead the blood, would you protect us from the enemy who seeks again to hinder us in this, to thwart us, to hide this powerful truth.

So, Lord Jesus, I claim our position in you at the throne far above all principality and power. I claim our protection in you there and hold up your blood and in your name, exercise your authority over the powers of darkness that would seek to hinder tonight, trusting you that that simply not be allowed. Now, Lord Jesus, may you be manifested to our hearts tonight.

May you be honored. May we properly respond in faith and in absolute surrender. We trust you for this and, Lord, we thank you for it in Jesus' name.

Amen. When I was 15 years of age, my father took me on one of his trips to the Bible lands. What an amazing thing for a 15-year-old to walk where Jesus walked, even in his physical body.

But the first part of that trip was fascinating. We went to the land of Egypt. That's one of the lands.

And it was fascinating to look at the pyramids and see sites that Moses saw. Now, that's going back a few millenniums. That's amazing.

Absolutely amazing. We even went to the museum in Cairo. And while there, there's a particular room where they don't just have mummies.

It's the mummies of the pharaohs. And my father had to pay a little extra money, but he got me into that room. My father knew the history.

And they have these pharaohs in incubators. And they have many of them, their faces are uncovered, sometimes their feet. And my father took me to the pharaoh that he believed was the pharaoh of the Exodus.

And I'm looking at him. That's amazing. And you know, his neck was still hard.

But at any rate, we finished our time in Egypt, and we began to make our way across the Sinai Peninsula over to Israel. And we stopped at a given point there on the Sinai Peninsula, where there was the wilderness wanderings of the children of Israel in the book of Numbers. And they took us to a spot where there's a rock that is split.

And out of that split flows to this day, pure water. Now, I don't know if it's the spot where Moses struck the rock and water came. But it could be.

It very well could be. The water is still clean, very pure. We all bent over, most of us did, and took a drink.

Fascinating. You know, in 1 Corinthians chapter 10, you have some references to the wilderness wanderings. And we're told there that they, the children of Israel, drank of that spiritual rock that followed them.

And that rock was Christ. So the actual water from the rock was a picture of much greater truth of Jesus. That's why Moses wasn't supposed to strike the rock twice.

Jesus was smitten once at the cross, and so forth. But there's that beautiful imagery. Now that is what is referred to in a part of the Feast of Tabernacles, which is taking place in John chapter 7. In the wilderness, they dwelt in tents.

The Feast of Tents, the Feast of Tabernacles, sometimes the word booth is used, but I don't like the sound of that when you pluralize it. The Feast of Booths. Sounds too close to the Feast of Booths.

So we won't say it that way. It's the Feast of Tabernacles. The tents reminding them of what happened there in the wilderness.

But a part of what took place in that feast was they would have a ceremony where water was poured out, commemorating very specifically the provision of water that God gave his children in the wilderness. Now that's the backdrop to our text. On the last day, it says there in verse 37, that great day, this was the special day of the feast, Jesus stands up and he lifts his voice and he cries out saying, if any man thirst, let him come unto me.

See, he's the spiritual rock. There it is. It's all coming together.

That's what the whole thing was picturing. Let him come unto me and drink. He that believeth on me, as the scripture has said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.

But this spake he of the spirit. Now when we talk about the spirit for life, often you'll find in revival literature, the spirit for life for holiness and service. Now what is meant by that is the spirit for life for being right, holiness, and the spirit for life for doing right, service.

Okay. When it comes to being right, we have the provision of Christ in us. We focused on this a bit on Tuesday night on the way of escape.

And we have his divine life in us, which we can take. We don't have to ask for it. It already is.

We have to take it by faith because it's a fact. It's a reality. It's not a potentiality.

It's a reality. Christ lives in every one of his children. Depend on it.

Take it by faith and you'll find his life to be imparted to you. And his victorious life will be the life that you will experience. That's holiness.

But the verses of scripture that use the future tense, such as our text, shall flow rivers of living water are going beyond the

Sermon Outline

  1. The Need for the Presence of God
  2. The Promise of the Overflowing Life
  3. The Reality of the Overflowing Life
  4. Taking the Overflowing Life by Faith
  5. Dependence on Christ's life in us
  6. Imparting Christ's life to us through faith

Key Quotes

“If any man thirst, let him come unto me and drink.” — John Van Gelderen
“He that believeth on me, as the scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.” — John Van Gelderen
“Christ lives in every one of his children. Depend on it.” — John Van Gelderen

Application Points

  • We need to recognize and acknowledge the presence of God in our lives, just as He was present in the corporate prayer meeting.
  • We must depend on Christ's life in us and impart it to us through faith, recognizing that Christ lives in every one of His children.
  • We should take the overflowing life by faith, trusting in God's promise to provide living water for those who thirst for Him.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the spiritual tasting, hearing, touch, and feeling of God's presence?
The spiritual tasting, hearing, touch, and feeling of God's presence refers to the awareness and experience of God's presence in our lives, which is not physical but spiritual.
What is the manifestation of God's presence in our lives?
The manifestation of God's presence in our lives is the visible and tangible expression of His power and love, which can be seen in various ways, such as answered prayers, miracles, and spiritual growth.
What is the promise of the overflowing life?
The promise of the overflowing life is that those who thirst for God will receive living water, which is the spiritual rock that provides Christ's divine life in us.
How do we take the overflowing life by faith?
We take the overflowing life by faith by depending on Christ's life in us and imparting it to us through faith, recognizing that Christ lives in every one of His children.

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