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(Clip) If I Don't Have It Today I Don't Need It Today
Michael Durham
0:00
0:00 4:58
Michael Durham

(Clip) If I Don't Have It Today I Don't Need It Today

Michael Durham · 4:58

Michael Durham teaches that trusting God to provide only what is needed each day liberates believers from anxiety and self-righteousness, emphasizing true abiding in Christ.
This sermon emphasizes the concept of abiding in Christ, trusting in God's provision, and understanding that our needs will be met according to His will. It highlights the danger of self-righteousness in trying to manipulate faith for personal gain and the importance of surrendering to God's plan. The message encourages a deep-seated confidence in God's will and the belief that He knows what is best for us, leading to true faith and contentment.

Full Transcript

Jesus is saying, listen to Jesus, in this illustration divine, the branch, the branch gets what is given to it and expects nothing different. It gets what it needs. I have a saying that I preach to myself. If I don't have it today, I don't need it today. It has so liberated me because I know my God is good and if I needed it today, I'd have it today. But since I didn't get it today, I didn't really need it today because he promised to meet my needs, all of my needs, all of my needs. I don't want to make this about us, but when we were transitioning away from the pastorate into itinerant ministry, we knew that that meant no regular income, no health insurance, no place to live because we lived in the Parsonage, but we knew this was what God wanted and I was preaching in the state of Texas a few weeks before my last Sunday in my church and unbeknownst to me, they had a business meeting and they voted, the church voted to extend my salary and all benefits and we could live in the Parsonage for one year to help us transition into this ministry. What a blessing. Now it's the fall of the year. December is coming quickly. My wife asked me one day, she said, sweetheart, what are we going to do when Oak Grove is no longer our resource? And I said to her, well, sweetheart, Oak Grove's never been our resource. It's been God all along and if he won't use Oak Grove, he'll find some other resource. But what she didn't know, I had the same question myself. I was just trying to act brave and I remember that fall, that a few weeks later, after trying, trying to elevate my faith, trying to raise my faith to a certain level that I can believe God to financially keep us and meet our needs, the Lord convicted me and showed me my heart that I wasn't abiding, wasn't abiding. He said to me that that spirit is the same spirit of the Pharisee. It's self-righteous. I'm looking at my faith and I'm leaving it up to me to somehow ratchet it up, get it up to appropriate level and when God sees that level of faith, then he'll provide my needs because he'll see my faith because that's all he responds to, right? Without faith it's impossible to please God. So if I could get my faith to a certain level, God will see it, he'll be pleased and he'll take care of us. And that is self-righteousness. Who am I to think that I could, I could raise my faith, that I have such power to increase my faith to certain levels that God is now obligated to me. Do you see the sin that was in that? The wickedness? And the Lord showed that to me. Here's the application. If you need a miracle tonight and it's in the vine's will for you to have one, you'll have one. You'll have one if you trust the vine for all you need. If you don't need a miracle, you'll not get one and you ought to be able to rejoice with great contentment because you trust the vine for all you need. You don't worry for one reason. Why? You're abiding. You're trusting to get only what you need and you're so confident in him that you trust he will not fail. Now some of you are thinking people and you've already come to the conclusion that that sounds like fatalism. Que sera sera. Whatever will be will be. No, it's not fatalism. Listen closely. The reason it isn't fatalism is because if it were God's will to display his power and grant you a great deliverance but you did not ask in faith, you will not receive it. Don't forget the words you have not because you do not ask. This is not fatalism but a deep seated confidence that God's will is best and that his will is your will. That is faith at its best. This is the Everest of faith. This excerpt was taken from the full sermon, How to Abide in Christ Part 1 by Michael Durham from the 2020 men's retreat.

Sermon Outline

  1. I. The Illustration of the Vine and Branches
    • The branch receives only what is given
    • Believers should expect only what God provides
    • Trust in God's provision daily
  2. II. Personal Testimony of Trust and Provision
    • Transition from pastorate to itinerant ministry
    • God's provision through unexpected church support
    • Learning to rely on God, not resources
  3. III. The Danger of Self-Righteous Faith
    • Trying to elevate faith to earn God's provision
    • Recognizing self-righteousness as sin
    • True faith is trusting God without self-effort
  4. IV. Application of Abiding Faith
    • Trusting God for miracles only if needed
    • Rejoicing in God's perfect provision
    • Faith is confidence in God's will, not fatalism

Key Quotes

“If I don't have it today, I don't need it today.” — Michael Durham
“That spirit is the same spirit of the Pharisee. It's self-righteous.” — Michael Durham
“If you need a miracle tonight and it's in the vine's will for you to have one, you'll have one.” — Michael Durham

Application Points

  • Trust God daily to provide exactly what you need without anxiety.
  • Avoid trying to 'raise' your faith as a way to earn God's provision.
  • Rejoice in God's perfect will and timing, even when miracles do not come immediately.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to abide in Christ?
Abiding in Christ means trusting and depending on Him daily for all your needs, just as a branch depends on the vine.
Is trusting God to provide only what I need a form of fatalism?
No, it is not fatalism but a confident faith that God's will is best and that He will provide according to His perfect plan.
How can I avoid self-righteousness in my faith?
By recognizing that faith is a gift from God and not something to be earned or increased by our own efforts.
What if I need a miracle but don’t receive one?
If it is God's will and you ask in faith, you will receive; otherwise, trusting His will is the highest form of faith.
How does this teaching help with anxiety about provision?
It liberates believers by encouraging them to trust God daily for their needs, removing worry about what is not yet provided.

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