I want to talk to you today about miracles out of mistakes. We’ve all made wrong choices and done things that we knew were not the best, and it’s one thing when other people do us wrong. We had a bad break, and it wasn’t our fault. We can have faith that God will restore and he’ll pay us back. But when we bring the trouble on ourselves, when we blow it, it’s easy to live in regrets, thinking that God’s not going to help us, but here’s the beauty. God knew you would mess up before he called you. He knew we would get off course, at times give into temptation. He didn’t base his plan for your life on you making perfect decisions. God has a plan even for your mistakes, and what you think is a failure, you blew it, nothing good could come out of that, God has a way of making miracles out of mistakes. He can take what should have left you lonely, disappointed, what should have limited your career.
Paul said it this way, “All things work together for good when you love the Lord”. All things means even our mistakes, the times we blew it, got off course. God knows how to work it for our good you may be a problem that seems like it’ll never work out. There are other people involved, different personalities, legal circumstances. It seems too complex. But God has it all figured out. He can see things you can’t see. His ways are better than our ways, and you may have brought the trouble on yourself, God is saying, “I’m going to correct those complications. I’m going to resolve complex issues. I’m going to make things work out that you could have never made mistakes.
Now, there was strife and division in their home. Sarah was upset with Abraham, saying, “What in the world were you thinking, sleeping with my maid”? He said, “What do you mean? You’re the one who told me to do it”. She said, “You shouldn’t have listened to me. You should have known better”. Every time Sarah saw Hagar, she became more and more upset. Finally, she gave Abraham the ultimatum, “Either that lady and her son leaves, or I’m leaving. I’m not staying in the house with that woman”.
Abraham was in a complicated situation. Two women mad at him, he’s trying to please both of them. He needed divine intervention. He has to send his son away out into the desert. Looked like that would be the end of Ishmael. The problem was he loved Ishmael. He was conflicted, thinking, “I love Sarah, and I love Ishmael. How did I get myself into this mess”?
God could have said, “Abraham, if you’d have listened to me, you wouldn’t have this mess. Should have waited, should have been more patient. It was your own fault”. Instead, God said in effect, “Yes, Abraham, it’s complicated. Yes, it’s dysfunctional, there’s strife and division. But I wouldn’t have let you get in this mess if I didn’t know how to bring you out of this mess,” and God told Abraham, “I’m going to bring out of your son Ishmael a great nation. I’m going to multiply his descendants and make him extremely fruitful”.
And even though Ishmael was considered a mistake, born out of what the scripture calls works of the flesh, trying to make it happen on our own, God in his mercy said, “I’m going to take that mistake and make a miracle. I’m going to bring something significant out of him, Abraham, in spite of your failures, in spite of how you blew it,” and like Abraham, we all have some Ishmaels, times we blew it, tried to make it happen on our own, got involved in things we shouldn’t have. Now, it’s a mess, and the accuser constantly whispers, “God’s not going to bless you. You knew better. Just sit on the don’t believe those lies. God has mercy for every mistake, and God loves to make the enemy pay for bringing that trouble.
If it had not been for the Ishmaelites, Joseph would have died there in the pit. He would have never made it to the palace, never been in charge of the food supply. During the famine, the Israelites years later wouldn’t have had what they needed to survive.
What am I saying? The mistake of Abraham became the miracle of his great great grandson, Joseph. This is how amazing God is. He has a plan even for our mistakes. Even when we blow it, the scripture says God is going to work all things for our good. He can not only correct a complicated situation, but he can somehow use it years later to bless your descendants.
Some of you are thinking, “My descendants are going to really be blessed, all the mistakes I’ve made”. Mistakes like Abraham when we’re trying to do the right thing. Our heart is in the right place, but we miss it, and we believe God will help us because he’s merciful and we were doing our best. Other times, we know what the right thing is, we know what we should do, but we do just the opposite. This is when we think, “I don’t deserve God’s goodness. I knew I shouldn’t hang around these friends. I did it anyway, now I’m in trouble, now I have this addiction. I knew I should control my temper. I knew I should bite my tongue, but I kept giving in. Now, I don’t have my job. Now, I lost a relationship”.
When we bring trouble on ourselves, thoughts of guilt and condemnation bombard our mind, saying, “God’s not going to help you. You knew better. Just sit on the sidelines of life”.
He’s not going to let you go year after year on the wrong course and never get your attention, and sometimes, it’s the enemy fighting us, trying to keep us from our destiny. That’s why we have storms, difficulties. Other times we’re bringing the trouble on ourselves. If we’d just get back on the right course, do what we know we should do, those winds would calm down. The people sailing with Jonah said, “Who’s responsible for causing all this trouble”? Jonah said, “It’s me. I’m a Hebrew. I worship God. I know where I’m supposed to be going, but I’m running from the Lord,” and when you’re running from the Lord, you’re running from your destiny. It’s not only going to cause you trouble, it’s going to bring trouble to the people around you.
When they threw Jonah overboard, the winds died down, the storm stopped. Our decisions don’t just affect us, they affect our family, they affect our children. If you don’t do the right thing for yourself, at least do it for your children, at least do it for your family. Jonah was big enough to admit, “I’m the cause”. That’s the first step to victory. As long as you’re making excuses, thinking it doesn’t matter, then the winds, the storms, the difficulty are Jonah was out in the ocean, thrown overboard. I’m sure he thought, “I’m done, and I have nobody to blame. It was all my fault”.
All of a sudden, a huge fish swallowed Jonah. God, in his great mercy, was saying, “Jonah, you can run, but you can’t hide. I’m not finished with you. I have a destiny for you to fulfill”. The psalmist said if you go down to the depths in the heavens, God will be right there. You can’t get away from him. You haven’t made too many mistakes. You haven’t blown it too many times. God’s calling on your life is irrevocable. That means God is not going to change his mind because you got off-course. He’s not going to leave you alone until you get back on the right path. The sooner you do that, the better off you’re going to be.
Jonah was sitting in the belly of the whale. It was dark, uncomfortable, it stunk. Most people would have complained. Not Jonah. He was grateful to be alive. He knew it was the mercy of God having that fish there waiting for him, and God will allow storms when we get off course. He may allow something to get our attention, but he’s not going to let those difficulties take your life.
Three days later, that whale spit Jonah up on dry ground, and the scripture says the word of the Lord came a second time to Jonah. God gave him another chance. What did God say this time? “Go to the city of Nineveh,” same thing he said the first time.
God is not asking you to be perfect. He’s not asking you to never make a mistake. But he is asking us to deal with the things that are holding us back, to not let the same areas of compromise keep us down year after year. He has some Ninevehs for you to go to, some people for you to impact, new levels of your destiny.
David said it this way. “The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord. Though he fall, he will not be destroyed, for the Lord will be there to pick him up”. This is saying even though God is directing our steps, there will be times that we fall. We make mistakes, we get off course, God doesn’t say, “That’s it, I’m done with you”. Just like with Jonah, God will be right there to help pick you up. He’ll help you get back on the right course. It’s like the navigation system you may have in your car. Most of us have a GPS system even on our cell phone. You type in the address, and the computer calculates then it starts telling you where to go, things like, “Turn right in 300 feet. Stay to the left and enter the freeway”.
The other day, I was driving to a friend of mine’s house. He lives about 30 miles away, and the lady on the GPS came on and said, “Exit in a quarter of a mile”. Well, Victoria and I were talking, and there was a lot of traffic, and accidentally I passed up that exit, and if you miss a turn or you don’t obey what the lady’s telling you to do, she doesn’t come back on and say, “You missed your exit, go back and try again”. She says, “Recalculating route”.
The navigation system is designed for people who make mistakes. It doesn’t give you one way, and if you miss it, that’s it. As long as you have gas in your car or battery in your cell phone, it’s going to tell you how to get to your destination. I have never missed a turn and had the lady come on and say, “I’m sorry, you can’t get there from here. You’re just too lost”. Never once has she said, “You’ve disobeyed too many of my commands. I’m done with you, you’re finished”.
If the GPS lady can continually recalculate when we get off course, how much more will the Creator of the Universe recalculate our route when we make mistakes? If she doesn’t give up on us, why do we think our Heavenly Father is going to give up on us? “Well, Joel, it’s because I got so far off course. I shouldn’t have given in to this addiction. I should have raised my children better. I should have stayed in church, kept God first place”. The good news is you haven’t made too many wrong turns. You haven’t missed too many exits. Your Heavenly Father is not mad at you. He’s saying, “Recalculating route. I still have a way to get you to your destiny. That mistake didn’t stop my plan. That delay didn’t cancel your purpose”.
Why don’t you quit beating yourself up, quit reliving your failures and all the time you’ve missed it, and get back on the right path? It’s not too late. God’s mercy is bigger than any mistake you’ve made. Unlike the GPS lady, God knows the end from the beginning. He knew every mistake you would make. He has already recalculated your route. You can still fulfill the best plan God has for your life.
Abraham and Sarah did. They made that mistake. Abraham had a baby out of wedlock. At one point, Abraham lied and told everyone Sarah, his wife, God didn’t say, “I’m done with you. You are one dysfunctional family. You lie, you’re impatient”. God kept recalculating the route, kept giving them another chance. Saw the promise come to pass. Isaac was born, the promised child, and you may have made decisions that have delayed things. You got off course, but you’re not stuck. God has a new route, and if you’ll get your passion back, shake off the guilt, God will get you to where you’re supposed to be. Not some secondary place, but to the best plan that he has for your life.
When the Israelites were in the desert, headed toward the Promised Land, they got tired and started complaining, and the scripture says even though they were stubborn and refused to obey God’s commands, he was still good to them. That was God they wouldn’t obey his commands. God didn’t say, “I’m done with you”. He kept giving them water when they were thirsty, food when they were hungry. At one point, they made an idol and said, “This is the God who brought us out of slavery”. After all God had done for them, parted the Red Sea, brought them out of Pharaoh’s hand, you would think God would say, “I am done with you. You are on your own”. But the scripture says, “In his mercy, God did not abandon them. He is a God of forgiveness, slow to become angry, full of unfailing love and kindness”.
When we make mistakes, when we get off course, we don’t obey his commands, he doesn’t write us off. You can turn your back on God, but God’s not going to turn his back on you, and you may be off course, you made poor decisions, but God has already recalculated your route. He already has a new way to get you to your destination.
My father was married at a very early age. Unfortunately, that marriage didn’t work out, and daddy was devastated. He resigned from his church. Denominational leaders told him that he would never pastor again. He thought his days of ministry was over, and didn’t think he’d ever have a family. He left the ministry and started selling insurance. Every thought told him, “You’re a failure. You blew it. Nothing good is in your future”.
What he couldn’t hear was God saying, “Recalculating route. I still have a way. I make miracles out of mistakes”. God didn’t abandon him when he got off course. He failed, but like David said, God was right there to help pick him back up, and eventually, my father shook off the guilt. He quit listening to the accusing voices.
Two years later, he got back in the ministry, and one day, he was at the hospital, visiting some of his members, when he noticed a beautiful young nurse. It was my mother. He was so taken by her, any opportunity he could find to go up to that hospital. He would visit your great uncle’s second cousin’s next door neighbor if you asked him to. He was almost hoping some of his members would get sick so he could go to the hospital. My mother didn’t know what was going on. She told a friend, “That pastor has the sickest congregation I’ve ever seen”.
Finally dawned to see her. Long story short, they fell in love, got married, had five children. I’m glad God recalculated the route or I wouldn’t be here today. But my father went on to have a ministry, touched the world, married to my mother for over 44 years.
What am I saying? No mistake you made is too much for the mercy of God. He knows how to reroute. Quit beating yourself up, living guilty, thinking you’ve seen your best days. You wouldn’t be alive unless God had something greater in your future.
This is what happened with Moses. He made a mistake. Had called him to deliver the Israelites from slavery. But like Abraham and Sarah, he got in a hurry and tried to do it in his own strength. He saw a Hebrew slave being mistreated. He didn’t think anyone was watching, so he killed the man who was mistreating him. The next day, somebody told the Pharaoh, and Moses he spent years on the backside of the desert in hiding.
This is not what he had planned. It looked like he had missed his destiny. It was nobody’s fault except his own. But God didn’t write him off. God didn’t say, “Moses, you knew better. Why didn’t you wait”? God simply said, “Recalculating route”.
Forty years later, Moses was still in the desert, thinking he was forgotten, giving up on his dreams. Suddenly, a bush exploded in front of him. Like spontaneous combustion, it burned and burned. Strange thing was the bush didn’t burn up. Intrigued, Moses walked over to see what was going on. A voice boomed out, “Moses, Moses, take off your sandals. You are standing on holy ground”.
Moses was confused, thinking, “I failed. I’ve made mistakes. I thought I was done, but I hear him calling my name. Not once, but twice, “Moses, Moses”. If God would have said it once, he would have thought, “I’m hearing things. This sun is getting to me”. God said it twice on purpose so there would be no doubt about it, and at the age of 80, after a 40-year detour, God recalculated the route. Moses went on to deliver the Israelites. He fulfilled his purpose.
I believe today, God is recalculating some routes. You may have made mistakes. You think you’ve blown it too many times. You need to get ready. Like Moses, a burning bush is coming your way. You messed up, but if you’ll listen, you’ll hear God calling your name. He’s saying, “Get your passion back. Shake off the guilt. Get ready to take new ground”. You can still become all God’s created you to be. He’s not finished with you, and if you will do this, I believe and declare God is going to make miracles out of your mistakes. He’s going to correct complicated situations, restore what the enemy’s stolen, and take you into in Jesus’ name.