Dangerous Prayers
Break me
Pastor John Talcott
Christ's Community Church
Read Part
1
(3/8)
Welcome to
Christ’s
Community
Church. It’s
good to have
all of you
with us this
morning and
those of you
watching
online this
week
welcome. We
are in part
two of a
three-part
message
series
entitled
"Dangerous
Prayers."
And last
week, we
talked about
David’s
prayer in
Psalm
chapter 139,
"Search me,
Oh God, and
know my
heart." And
some of you
committed to
praying that
every day
and I’m
believing
that your
preparation
will bear
fruit and
have a
significant
impact on
your
receptiveness
to today’s
message.
You see that
prayer was
crucial
because
today is
going to be
the most
difficult
and probably
the most
dangerous of
all three
prayers we
are going to
discuss. In
fact, this
prayer has
the
potential to
open your
heart to the
work of God
like nothing
else. And
so, this
message
today is
going to be
deep and the
title of
this message
and the
prayer I
want to ask
you to pray
is "Break
me," because
if you want
to be whole
in God’s
kingdom you
must be
willing to
be broken.
Jeremiah
said, "I
know, O
Lord, that a
man’s life
is not his
own…"
(Jeremiah
10:23).
And so, we
must
acknowledge
that if
Jesus Christ
is the vine,
and we are
the
branches,
then apart
from him we
can do
nothing.
Therefore,
it’s in that
place of
brokenness,
offering
ourselves as
living
sacrifices,
that we all
must come to
Jesus. He
said,
"If anyone
would come
after me, he
must deny
himself and
take up his
cross daily
and follow
me. For
whoever
wants to
save his
life will
lose it, but
whoever
loses his
life for me
will save
it" (Luke
9:23-24).
And so,
Jesus
invites
anyone who
wants to
follow him
to deny
themselves,
to lose
their lives,
and to
experience
the blessing
of
brokenness.
Now, I know
"God, break
me," is a
difficult
prayer, but
the reality
is that
brokenness
is all
around us.
In fact, the
apostle Paul
tells us in
Romans
chapter 8,
that all of
creation has
been
groaning as
in the pains
of
childbirth
right up to
the present
time (Romans
8:22). And
so, Paul
tells us
that even
the earth is
crying out,
groaning in
its
brokenness
and he says,
"Not only
so, but we
ourselves,
who have the
firstfruits
of the
Spirit,
groan
inwardly as
we wait
eagerly for
our adoption
as sons and
daughters,
the
redemption
of our
bodies"
(Romans
8:23).
We too are
groaning
inwardly,
because we
want to be
closer to
God, we want
to be in his
presence, we
want all the
distractions
removed from
our lives,
but
honestly, we
just don’t
feel
comfortable
praying,
"God, break
me." It’s a
scary
prayer, we
don’t really
want to pray
that prayer,
because it’s
a dangerous
prayer, it
requires us
to trust God
more than we
ever have
before. But
I want to
encourage
you to give
God
permission
to break you
because of
the blessing
of intimacy
with him
that you’ll
discover on
the other
side of that
experience.
You see, the
Bible tells
us that,
"The Lord is
close to the
brokenhearted
and saves
those who
are crushed
in spirit"
(Psalms
34:18).
And so, I’ve
been praying
for
enlightenment,
that we’d
welcome some
crushing,
some
brokenness,
because I
believe that
through that
experience
God will
make us a
fruitful
church. As
we pray this
prayer,
"Break me,"
God is going
to take you
and I, these
fruitful
branches
laden with
ripe grapes,
and he’s
going to
crush us and
make sweet
wine. And
yet, even
now some of
you feel
like you’re
failing,
that you
haven’t been
fruitful,
and many of
you don’t
know your
potential,
but the
apostle Paul
said it this
way,
"What you
sow does not
come to life
unless it
dies" (1
Corinthians
15:36).
You see,
fruitfulness
is not
always based
upon what
you can see
on the
surface,
because at
the moment a
seed goes
into the
ground it
starts doing
what it was
created to
do. And so,
Paul says,
"When you
sow, you do
not plant
the body
that will
be, but just
a seed…"
It’s just a
seed, but it
dies, and it
begins to
break apart
and changes
form so that
it can
produce
what’s in it
"…perhaps of
wheat or of
something
else" (1
Corinthians
15:37). And
it’s in that
moment, at
that very
instant of
realizing
its great
potential,
that the
seed is both
broken and
hidden from
sight. But
God, verse
38 says,
"Gives it a
body just as
he has
determined…"
(1
Corinthians
15:38).
And so,
sometimes in
our lives
when God is
growing us
the most,
when we’re
maturing the
most, and
he’s making
a difference
through us
that there
are going to
be moments,
days, even
seasons,
when we feel
like we’re
breaking,
like we’re
hidden, but
what really
matters is
that you
know what’s
inside of
you.
The apostle
Paul
understood
this, and he
welcomed
this process
saying,
"Even if I
am being
poured out
like a drink
offering,"
it’s just a
little bit
of
suffering.
And he
recognized
in second
Corinthians,
chapter 4,
"Our light
and
momentary
troubles are
achieving
for us an
eternal
glory that
far
outweighs
them all" (2
Corinthians
4:17).
And I know
"break me"
is a
dangerous
prayer, but
I wonder if
some of us
don’t need
to put on a
little bit
of weight,
maybe a
little bit
of glory.
You see,
it’s in this
hope, the
Bible says,
"In this
hope we were
saved…"
(Romans
8:24).
It’s in this
hope that we
eagerly wait
for our
adoption.
It’s in this
hope that we
long for the
redemption
of our
bodies. But
the problem
is that for
some of you,
the moment
something
goes wrong
you start
praying for
God to take
it away. You
see,
sometimes
you need a
little bit
of
brokenness,
you need to
go through
something,
and so God
will allow
the pressure
to increase
so that you
have a
testimony to
his
faithfulness.
He’ll allow
you to carry
some weight,
you’ll feel
that
crushing,
that
pressing
down, and it
might become
uncomfortable,
but he’s
making
something
new in you,
and it comes
number one
through
brokenness.
1. Broken
In first
Samuel we
find the
story about
the prayer
of a woman
in her
brokenness.
This woman
of God whose
name means
"favored"
didn’t feel
very favored
at all. In
fact, Hannah
felt broken
due to her
inability to
have
children and
the Bible
says in
verse 10,
"In
bitterness
of soul
Hannah wept
much and
prayed to
the Lord" (1
Samuel
1:10).
In other
words, these
were prayers
of anguish
and
brokenness
made to the
only one who
could meet
her most
desperate
need. And
God did, he
met Hannah
at the point
of her
brokenness,
he heard her
whispered
prayers, he
heard her
prayers
expressed in
groanings
too deep for
words, and
in her
brokenness,
he not only
blessed her,
but he
blessed all
generations.
Out of her
prayer, it
was her son
Samuel who
was born
that would
eventually
anoint King
David from
whose
lineage our
Lord Jesus
Christ was
born.
There’s
another
story of
brokenness
in the New
Testament,
this one
about a
different
kind of
woman, a
woman who
had
experienced
a different
kind of
brokenness.
We find her
story in
Mark’s
gospel and
beginning in
chapter 14,
the Bible
tells us
that while
Jesus was in
Bethany,
reclining at
the table in
the home of
Simon the
leper,
"A woman
came with an
alabaster
jar of very
expensive
perfume,
made of pure
nard…" (Mark
14:3).
Now, we know
that this
was a
different
kind of
woman from
Hannah who
we found
worshiping,
because Luke
tells us
that this
woman had
"lived a
sinful life"
which
explains why
she would
have this
very
expensive
perfume. You
could say it
was her
calling
card, her
smell said
that she was
available,
but now she
no longer
had a use
for it
because one
day she met
Jesus and
for the
first time
maybe ever
she was
loved
appropriately
and treated
with
dignity. And
it was that
encounter
with Jesus
that had
broken her
and totally
transformed
her, and so
when she
heard that
Jesus was in
town, she
honored him
in the most
sacrificial
and
extravagant
way that she
knew.
Verse three
said, "she
broke the
jar and
poured the
perfume on
his head."
It was this
simple act
of worship,
this
breaking and
pouring,
that was so
much more
extravagant
than any of
those
present
could
understand.
Mark tells
us in verse
four,
"Some of
those
present were
saying
indignantly
to one
another,
"Why this
waste of
perfume? It
could have
been sold
for more
than a
year's wages
and the
money given
to the poor"
(Mark
14:4-5).
They didn’t
understand
the meaning
of this,
that the
breaking and
the pouring
out of this
most
valuable
possession
was her
literally
giving Jesus
her whole
life. Not
only was she
prophetically
preparing
his body for
burial, but
number two,
the pouring
out of that
perfume
represented
her leaving
her past
behind.
2. Pouring
And so, she
broke that
alabaster
jar
signifying
that there
was no going
back, she
was all in,
and so she
worshiped
Jesus in
this one
selfless
extravagant
moment of
worship. In
verse six,
Jesus said
to those who
were
gathered,
"Leave her
alone," said
Jesus. "Why
are you
bothering
her? She has
done a
beautiful
thing to me"
(Mark 14:6).
He praised
her, because
she had done
a wonderful
thing. In
her
brokenness,
in this act
of worship,
she had
poured out
everything
she had much
like Jesus
was about to
do.
In fact,
Matthew
tells us
that just
before Jesus
died, as he
was
celebrating
the Passover
meal with
his
disciples,
"While they
were eating,
Jesus took
bread, gave
thanks and
broke it,
and gave it
to his
disciples,
saying,
"Take and
eat; this is
my body."
Then he took
the cup,
gave thanks
and offered
it to them,
saying,
"Drink from
it, all of
you. This is
my blood of
the
covenant,
which is
poured out
for many for
the
forgiveness
of sins"
(Matthew
26:26-28).
Jesus was
poured out
as he gave
his body,
spilling his
blood for
the
forgiveness
of our sins,
so that we
too could be
poured out
in
surrender.
You see,
just like
Hannah was
broken in
her
infertility
and
continually
poured out
her prayers
seeking the
favor of
God. Or the
sinful woman
breaking the
alabaster
jar and
pouring out
the
expensive
perfume on
Jesus in
worship,
recognizing
that she had
been saved
from her
broken
situation.
We too need
to be broken
and poured
out, and yet
too many of
us are
consumed
with
entertaining
ourselves,
content with
what we’ve
got, and
we’re
oblivious to
the world
around us
that is
groaning in
anguish. The
Bible says
that there’s
an
emergency,
"the whole
creation has
been
groaning as
in the pains
of
childbirth
right up to
the present
time"
(Romans
8:22). And
yet, we are
sitting here
watching our
clocks,
worried
about what
time the
game comes
on, when we
should be
broken over
the lost
souls around
us.
I’m so
thankful for
Jesus,
because he
felt that
burden, and
the Bible
tells us in
Romans
chapter 6,
"At just the
right time,
when we were
still
powerless,
Christ died
for the
ungodly.
Very rarely
will anyone
die for a
righteous
man, though
for a good
man someone
might
possibly
dare to die.
But God
demonstrates
his own love
for us in
this: While
we were
still
sinners,
Christ died
for us"
(Romans
5:6-8).
Christ died
for us, not
for those
who have it
all
together,
not for
those who
think
they’re
better than
others. No,
the Bible
says he died
for the
ungodly, he
didn’t die
because of
what he did,
but he died
because of
what you and
I did. And
yet, here we
are watching
the clock,
worried
about
whatever,
busy
entertaining
ourselves,
when there’s
never been a
more urgent
time in the
history of
the world.
The Bible
tells us in
first Peter,
"The end of
all things
is near.
Therefore,
be clear
minded and
self-controlled
so that you
can pray" (1
Peter 4:7).
I’m
believing
that it’s
time to rise
up and pray
some
dangerous
prayers. You
know, we
need to pray
like Jesus
did. In
fact, on
Thursday
night when
he went into
the garden
to pray,
knowing that
the next day
they were
going to
take his
life, he
lifted his
eyes to
heaven and
prayed,
"Father, if
you are
willing,
take this
cup from me;
yet not my
will, but
yours be
done" (Luke
22:42).
Jesus prayed
a dangerous
prayer,
because he
was
committed,
he was all
in. And so,
when they
laid that
cross on his
shoulders,
when he
climbed that
hill to
Golgotha, he
was willing
to go the
extra mile
for the same
people who’d
shouted,
"Crucify
him, crucify
him" (Luke
23:21). And
so, Jesus
was willing
to fight for
those who
unfollowed
him, those
who tried to
block him,
and those
who refused
to believe
in him. And
in the same
way, number
three, we’ve
got to be
willing.
3. Willing
It’s time
for us to
pray a
dangerous
prayer; to
be willing
to pray
"break me,"
because the
time is
short. We
don’t have
time for
games, it
doesn’t
matter what
people say
about you or
think about
you, it’s
time to get
real because
the Bible
says, is
"This is the
last hour…."
(1 John
2:18). This
is
important,
because you
and I are
living in
the end
times, this
is the last
hour, and
we’re in a
season of
unfolding
judgment. In
fact, the
Bible says,
"It is time
for judgment
to begin
with the
family of
God; and if
it begins
with us,
what will
the outcome
be for those
who do not
obey the
gospel of
God?" (1
Peter 4:17).
In other
words, it’s
time for you
and I to get
serious
about the
gospel
because
there are
people all
around us
that are
going to
hell. In
fact, some
of you need
to repent
because the
kingdom of
heaven is
near, you
can see it
in the news,
it’s
happening
all around
us. God is
beginning to
stir things,
but it is
going to
begin in
here, in the
church,
within the
family of
God.
You see, out
there in the
world, it’s
just like
Jesus said,
"In the days
before the
flood,
people were
eating and
drinking,
marrying and
giving in
marriage, up
to the day
Noah entered
the ark; and
they knew
nothing
about what
would happen
until the
flood came
and took
them all
away. That
is how it
will be at
the coming
of the Son
of Man"
(Matthew
24:38-39).
Today,
people are
eating and
drinking,
marrying and
giving in
marriage,
running
around like
God is okay
with
everything,
but he’s not
okay with
everything,
because if
he was okay
with
everything
Jesus
wouldn’t’ve
had to
suffer and
die. And so,
all around
us people
are dying
and going to
an eternal
hell and
we’re
sitting here
looking at
our watches,
worried
about
something
that doesn’t
even matter,
and so we
need to
repent and
we must be
willing to
be broken.
Over the
past 34
years, my
wife Dana
and I have
been through
so much
together,
we’ve been
broken in
countless
ways, and
yet we’ve
never been
more
unified. In
fact, this
church began
in the midst
of our
struggle
with cancer
and it was
out of that
brokenness,
in that
season of
pruning,
that God was
preparing us
for a
greater
season of
fruitfulness.
I don’t know
what it is
that you’re
dealing with
today, but
if you want
to be whole,
if you want
to be useful
in God’s
kingdom, you
must be
willing to
be broken.
I believe
God is
preparing
this church
for a great
harvest of
souls and so
I want to
encourage
your
dangerous
prayer, your
invitation
for God to
break you,
because we
connect with
others more
deeply
through our
brokenness.
Therefore,
we want God
to do that
work in us,
remembering
that he was
poured out,
and being
willing to
respond to
his
invitation
so that we
might be
broken and
poured out
too.
One thing I
always found
fascinating
is that
Peter was
there that
night when
Jesus
celebrated
the Last
Supper with
his
followers.
In fact, not
only was he
gathered
around that
table with
the others,
but he
boasted that
he would
never deny
Jesus. He
said, "I am
ready to go
with you to
prison and
to death"
but it was
just hours
later that
he denied
Jesus, not
just once,
but three
times. And
the Bible
tells us, at
that moment,
the third
time he
denied
Jesus,
"Just as he
was
speaking,
the rooster
crowed. The
Lord turned
and looked
straight at
Peter. Then
Peter
remembered
the word the
Lord had
spoken to
him: "Before
the rooster
crows today,
you will
disown me
three
times." And
he went
outside and
wept
bitterly"
(Luke
22:60-62).
Peter was
broken and
there are
some of you
here that
are hurting
right now,
you’re in
the middle
of something
right now.
Others of
you are
going to get
to that
place where
your
breaking and
everything
seems to be
falling
apart around
you. That’s
where Peter
was, but
that wasn’t
the end of
the story,
because
after the
resurrection
Jesus came
to Peter and
forgave him.
He restored
him to a
position of
leadership
because he
knows that
those who
have been
broken will
become so
much more
useful to
his kingdom.
As we close,
I would
encourage
you to pray
a dangerous
prayer like
Jesus did,
"Father, not
my will, but
yours be
done" (Luke
22:42).
Because when
you are in
that place
of
brokenness,
you’ll learn
to fully
depend on
God, and
you’ll see
him do a
healing work
in you that
you’ll never
discover any
other way.
When the
woman broke
open the
alabaster
jar and
poured it
all out, she
was
symbolizing
giving her
whole life
to Jesus.
Would you
consider
praying a
very
dangerous
prayer?
"God, break
me so that I
could know
you
intimately,
break me of
my pride, my
self-righteousness,
whatever sin
there is,
but break it
all so that
I can serve
you with all
of my life."
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