3/7/26

The Primacy of God's Presence — Bill Johnson on Psalm 27

Enjoying Rooted at Grace and Stop in the Name of God at Teen Challenge. On the way this morning I heard this encouraging word from Bill Johnson's The Priority of the Presence of God. Our study in rooted was on the gifts we are given are meant to be put into practice to build up others (Love God, Love People). The sermon emphasis that Biblical waiting is not passive. We want to "ambush" God and meet him where he's going to be. Like running down the field and knowing that when I get to where we're going I can catch the "hail Mary" pass. 

Here's some of the highlights.

The central conviction of the sermon: nothing the believer has access to (power, strategy, resources, relationships) compares to the value of God's presence. David's declaration in Psalm 27:4 sets the tone. With a kingdom at his disposal, his singular ask was to dwell in the house of the Lord and gaze on His beauty. That priority, Johnson argues, is the organizing principle of a stable and fruitful life.

Intimacy over achievement. The biblical witness is consistent that God Himself is the reward, not merely what He provides. David writes in Psalm 16:11 that fullness of joy is in His presence. Moses, in Exodus 33:15, refuses to advance without God accompanying Israel — a remarkable posture given the urgency of leading a nation. Jeremiah 9:23–24 reinforces this by declaring that the only worthy boast is knowing God. Presence is the inheritance, not a means to something else.

Scripture as the believer's refuge in crisis. Johnson emphasizes an immediate turn to God's Word during difficulty, not as a last resort but as a first instinct. Psalm 119:105 describes the Word as a lamp to the feet. Joshua 1:8 connects courage and success directly to meditating on Scripture. Romans 10:17 reminds us that faith itself is generated by hearing the Word. The Word doesn't just comfort — it recalibrates perspective.

Devotion survives conflict. David's life proves that intimacy with God is not a luxury reserved for peaceful seasons. Hunted by Saul (1 Samuel 23:14–16), betrayed by Absalom (2 Samuel 15), and surrounded by enemies, David continued to seek the Lord before acting. Psalm 34:4 records his testimony: "I sought the Lord and He answered me." Psalm 57, written while hiding in a cave, opens with trust and ends in praise. Circumstances do not determine devotion — they reveal it.

Presence produces practical stability. This is not mysticism disconnected from daily life. Isaiah 26:3 promises perfect peace for the mind stayed on God. Philippians 4:6–7 describes the peace of God as a garrison — a military term — guarding hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Proverbs 3:5–6 adds that trusting God with the whole heart, rather than leaning on human understanding, results in directed paths. The inner life becomes ordered when God is the center.

Waiting is weaponized expectation. Biblical waiting is not passivity. Isaiah 40:31 describes those who wait on the Lord as those who mount up with wings like eagles — an image of ascending strength, not stagnation. Lamentations 3:25–26 frames waiting as rooted in God's faithful character. Psalm 130:5–6 compares it to a watchman's alert, patient vigilance through the night. Waiting is active faith directed toward a trustworthy God.

Believers carry and host His presence. The New Testament transforms the temple metaphor. 1 Corinthians 6:19 declares that the body of the believer is a temple of the Holy Spirit. John 15:4–5 calls believers to abide in Christ as branches in a vine — presence is the condition for fruitfulness. 2 Corinthians 3:18 adds that beholding God's glory progressively transforms believers into that same image. Hosting presence is both a privilege and a calling.


Core takeaway: Every biblical category of blessing — peace, strength, wisdom, fruitfulness, influence — traces back to the same root. A life arranged around seeking and dwelling in God's presence doesn't merely receive benefits; it becomes a demonstration of what that presence produces. As Matthew 6:33 frames it, seek first the kingdom, and everything else finds its proper place.

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3/6/26

Nehemiah’s prayerful actions led the people to rebuild Jerusalem’s wall (Nehemiah 1-3)

 I. Nehemiah prayed in response to distressing news about Jerusalem. (Nehemiah 1)

II. Nehemiah requested and received authority to rebuild the wall. (Nehemiah 2) 

III. Nehemiah delegated the work to a people unified in purpose. (Nehemiah 3)

Aim: God rebuilds and transforms His people, unifying them in prayerful obedience. 

Applications: 

1. How does God help you respond in the midst of a crisis? 

2. What holds you back from expressing appropriate yet bold requests in prayer? 

3. How do you weave together prayer, planning, preparation, and delegation in your work for God’s glory?

1:1-3) Nehemiah learns survivors of exile are in trouble, disgrace, Jerusalem broken

4-11) Mourned and fasted for days (4) then praised LORD God for covenant of love (5), confessed sins and disobedience (6-7) unfaithful scattered, yet return and obey are redeemed by God's strength (8-10) give servant success/favor from king (11)

2:1-4) King Artaxerxes noticed his Nehemiah's sad heart, he fearfully tells king Jerusalem destroyed, the king ask what Nehemiah wants

4-5) Praying first Nehemiah asked to rebuild the city of Judah

6-9) king asks how long, so he set a time and asked for letters to governors safety, timbers and army officers and cavalry

10) Sanballat Horonite and Tobiah Ammonie disturded by welfare

11-12) Jerusalem 3 days, at night, kept God's desire in heart

13-16) examined the whole city at night, without anyone knowing

17-18) see trouble, Jerusalem ruins, rebuild the wall, God's gracious hand, they began good work

19-20) mocked, accused of rebelling, "God of heaven will give us success, servants not you

1. Sheep Gate (vv.1–2):

High priest Eliashib leads. Priests rebuild and dedicate the gate, extending to two towers. Jericho men and Zakkur repair nearby sections.

2. Fish Gate (vv.3–5):
Sons of Hassenaah rebuild the gate structure. Several families repair adjoining walls. The men of Tekoa work, but their nobles refuse.

3. Jeshanah Gate to Broad Wall (vv.6–12):
Joiada and Meshullam repair the gate. Builders include officials, craftsmen, and residents. Shallum leads with the help of his daughters.

4. Valley Gate to Dung Gate (vv.13–14):
Hanun and Zanoah rebuild the Valley Gate and repair 1,000 cubits of wall. Malkijah repairs the Dung Gate.

5. Fountain Gate to House of the Heroes (vv.15–16):
Shallun repairs the Fountain Gate and walls near the Pool of Siloam and King’s Garden. Work continues past David’s tombs.

6. Levite Sections (vv.17–19):
Levites lead major repairs by district. Rehum, Hashabiah, and Binnui organize the work. Ezer repairs near the armory ascent.

7. Angle to High Priest’s House (vv.20–21):
Baruch works “with zeal.” Meremoth completes another section near Eliashib’s house.

8. Homes and Local Sections (vv.22–25):
Priests and residents repair sections near their own homes. The work extends toward the palace tower.

9. Ophel to Water Gate (vv.26–27):
Temple servants repair near Ophel. The men of Tekoa return and complete a second assignment.

10. Horse Gate to Sheep Gate (vv.28–32):
Priests, guards, craftsmen, and merchants repair sections near their homes and trades. The wall closes where it began at the Sheep Gate.

  • The phrase "next to him / next to them" recurs ~30 times — creating a chain-link structure. No gap. No break in the line.
  • The wall is described moving counterclockwise around Jerusalem, creating a sense of encirclement and completion.
  • Several workers repair "in front of his own house" (vv. 10, 23, 28–29) — proximity creates ownership.
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    Called to Hard Things The Doctrine of the Cross for a Believer

    Burden begins the work of faith. Nehemiah did not ignore Jerusalem’s ruin. He mourned, prayed, then acted (Nehemiah 1:3–4; 2:4–5). The burden was not an obstacle. It was the assignment. God often begins His work by placing a weight on the heart of a willing servant (Galatians 6:2; Isaiah 6:8).

    The cross defines true discipleship. Jesus set the standard. “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me” (Luke 9:23). This is not advanced Christianity. It is the baseline. A life centered on Christ cannot also be centered on self (Luke 14:27; Galatians 2:20).

    Nehemiah 1–3 shows a man holding multiple legitimate obligations simultaneously, his professional role, his people, his king, his God and navigating them without abandoning any carelessly. He did not use one as an excuse to avoid another. He prayed before he planned, surveyed before he spoke, organized before he built, and trusted God's provision at every stage.

    For men whose burdens overlap, where work identity, marital faithfulness, and physical limitation all press at once, the call is the same as Nehemiah's: not to resolve the tension before acting, but to bring the whole weight of it to God in prayer, and then move in the direction He opens. The burden does not disqualify. It is the context in which God demonstrates His power through surrendered, cross-bearing men.

    God’s strength makes the burden bearable. Kingdom work cannot be sustained by human effort alone. Christ calls the weary to Himself and promises rest for those who take His yoke (Matthew 11:28–30). God’s power accomplishes what human strength cannot (2 Corinthians 12:9–10; Ephesians 3:20–21).

    Prayer comes before planning and action. Nehemiah prayed before he approached the king and before he rebuilt the wall (Nehemiah 1:5–11; 2:4). Jesus modeled the same pattern throughout His ministry (Mark 1:35; Luke 5:16). Prayer aligns the servant with the will of God before the work begins.

    Following Christ means dying to self. Scripture draws a clear line. Those who belong to Christ crucify the desires of the flesh (Galatians 5:24). Jesus taught that losing life for His sake is the path to finding it (Matthew 16:24–25; John 12:24–25). Self-rule and Christ-rule cannot coexist.

    God’s purposes are larger than our plans. Nehemiah’s mission was part of God’s covenant story for His people. Scripture reminds believers that God “works all things according to the counsel of his will” (Ephesians 1:11). What He accomplishes through His people always exceeds human imagination (Ephesians 3:20; Proverbs 19:21).

    Suffering often confirms obedience. Hardship does not signal failure in God’s work. Scripture repeatedly frames suffering as refinement and growth (James 1:2–4; Romans 5:3–5; 1 Peter 4:12–13). The cost of following Christ carries eternal reward (2 Corinthians 4:16–18).

    The cross for a believer calls for complete devotion to God. God desires and deserves to be the top priority in a believer’s life. The sin of idolatry involves putting anything ahead of God. What do you prioritize more than God?

    The cross for a believer includes selfless service to others. Selflessness allows a believer to flourish and experience immeasurable joy. How have selfish thoughts, attitudes, and actions stunted your spiritual health and joy? In what ways do you reflect the selflessness Jesus has exercised toward you?

    Biblical themes that shape the message

    • Cross-bearing discipleship: The cross is real weight, yet Christ’s yoke is light when carried in His strength (Luke 9:23; Matthew 11:28–30).
    • Prayer as the posture of faith: Burden must lead first to prayer (Nehemiah 1:4; Philippians 4:6–7).
    • Faithful suffering across history: God’s servants consistently carried burdens for His purposes (Daniel 9:3; Esther 4:14; Hebrews 11:32–38).
    • Dying to self and living for God: The self-centered life is idolatry (Colossians 3:5), while Christ calls believers to His pattern of humility (Philippians 2:5–8).
    • Kingdom priorities: Seek first the kingdom of God rather than personal gain (Matthew 6:33).
    • God’s surpassing power: The work succeeds because God acts through surrendered people (Ephesians 3:20–21; Zechariah 4:6).
    • Joy through endurance: The believer can endure hardship with hope because Christ sustains them (James 1:12; Philippians 4:11–13).
    • A life built on the right foundation: Obedience to Christ builds on rock, not sand (Matthew 7:24–27).

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    3/3/26

    Fear God’s eternal authority with awe, confidence, obedience, and bold trust.

    The three most important attributes of God are Holy, Creator, Lord. He is distinct from everything (Holy), has beginning authority (Creator) and ending authority (Lord). The biblical teaching on the fear of the Lord establishes a foundational distinction between improper fear of temporal human threats and proper reverential awe of God's eternal authority. These passages reveal that while humans can only harm the physical body, God alone possesses authority over eternal destinies, both soul and body. Yet this "fear" is not servile terror but rather a healthy recognition of God's holiness and justice that exists within the security of His loving providence.

    Servile terror means being afraid of God like a slave who's terrified of a cruel master.

    It's the kind of fear where you:

    • Cower and tremble, just trying not to get punished
    • Obey only to avoid getting hurt, not out of love or respect
    • Want to run and hide rather than draw close
    • See God as an angry tyrant ready to strike you down
    • Have no trust, no relationship, just dread

    In contrast, the biblical "fear of the Lord" is more like:

    • Deep respect mixed with love (like healthy respect for a loving but just parent)
    • Awe at His greatness and holiness
    • Awareness that He's incredibly powerful and judges sin, but also trustworthy and loving
    • Reverence that draws you closer, not pushes you away

    Think of it this way: servile terror makes you want to avoid God; proper fear of the Lord makes you want to worship God and live in a way that honors Him. One is the fear of a beaten slave; the other is the respectful awe of a beloved child toward a good but holy Father.

    The same God who can cast into hell also numbers the hairs on our heads and notices every sparrow that falls. This dual reality (sovereign Judge and tender Father) produces transformative results: believers gain eternal perspective that prioritizes soul over body, develop boldness against human opposition, pursue obedience rooted in reverence rather than manipulation, and worship God with appropriate awe. 

    Ultimately, the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom (Proverbs 9:10) and encompasses the whole duty of humanity (Ecclesiastes 12:13). It redirects our anxieties from horizontal human threats to vertical divine accountability, while paradoxically providing confident assurance that nothing can separate us from God's love in Christ (Romans 8:38-39). This "perfect love" doesn't eliminate fear but rather perfects it, transforming dread into devoted reverence and producing lives marked by courageous faithfulness in the face of opposition.

    These passages redirect fear. They warn against fearing people with temporary power and call us to fear God who holds eternal authority. This fear is not panic. It is reverent awe before the One who judges, protects, and rules forever.

    1. Proper vs. Improper Fear
    Jesus draws a sharp line. Do not fear those who can kill the body. Fear the One who determines eternal destiny (Matthew 10:28. Luke 12:4-5). True fear shifts our attention upward, not outward.

    Additional references: Proverbs 29:25. Isaiah 51:7-8. Ezekiel 2:6. Jeremiah 1:8.

    2. God the Judge and Protector
    Scripture holds both truths. He judges sin with final authority (Hebrews 10:31. Revelation 20:11-15). Yet He guards His people with intimate care (Luke 12:6-7. Psalm 139:13-16). Fear and trust coexist in proper proportion.

    Additional references: Psalm 103:11-17. Malachi 3:16-17. Romans 8:28.

    3. Eternal Over Temporal
    Physical death is not the final threat. Eternal judgment is (2 Corinthians 5:10. Ecclesiastes 12:14). The Bible reframes fear by lifting our sight to the age to come. Present pressure becomes small in comparison (Romans 8:18. Revelation 14:7).

    Additional references: Matthew 16:26. Luke 16:19-31. Acts 17:31.

    4. Fear Produces Wisdom
    Fearing God leads to knowledge, wisdom, and obedience (Proverbs 1:7. Proverbs 9:10. Deuteronomy 10:12). It is the starting point of a life aligned with His will.

    Additional references: Proverbs 14:26-27. Ecclesiastes 12:13. Revelation 14:7.

    5. Love Perfects Fear
    Believers do not fear punishment. God’s perfect love removes dread (1 John 4:18). His love holds us so securely that nothing can separate us from Him (Romans 8:38-39). The fear that remains is reverent awe, not terror.


    Practical Implications

    Persecution: Do not compromise truth because of pressure or threats.
    Evangelism: Eternal stakes outweigh temporary discomfort.
    Priorities: Align values with what lasts forever, not what fades.
    Worship: Approach God with awe, not casual indifference.
    Obedience: Respond to the God who commands with holy authority.
    Confidence: Trust His care for every detail of life even as He rules with justice.


    Summary
    The fear of the Lord is reverent awe rooted in His holiness, authority, justice, and love. It produces obedience, courage, and trust. It frees us from fearing man and fixes our eyes on eternal reality.

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    3/2/26

    The Final Debrief: What We Carry Into Glory

    Every believer stands on the same foundation, Jesus Christ. But what each one builds upon that foundation is tested by fire at the Bema seat of Christ. Paul's warning in 1 Corinthians 3 is not about salvation but about legacy: wood, hay, and stubble represent the self-serving, the superficial, and the temporally motivated, while gold, silver, and precious stones represent faithful obedience built for God's glory. The judgment seat described in 2 Corinthians 5 is not a courtroom of condemnation but an accounting of stewardship. every deed done in the body examined not for guilt, but for faithfulness. The reward of that faithfulness is heard in the simplest words imaginable: "Well done, good and faithful servant" (Matthew 25:21). But the teaching does not end with the reward, it ends with worship. Revelation 4 reveals that the crowns given to the elders are not kept as trophies; they are cast before the throne of the One who alone is worthy to receive glory, honor, and power. The whole arc of the teaching presses a single question: What are you building, and for whom? What survives the fire will be laid at His feet and that changes everything about how we live today.

    Works That Follow Us: What we do in this life has eternal weight.

    • Revelation 14:13: our works follow us beyond death.
    • 1 Corinthians 3:10–15: Christ tests the quality of our work; only what is fireproof remains.
    • 2 Corinthians 5:10: every believer appears before Christ for reward.
    • Colossians 3:23–24: work done “unto the Lord” becomes inheritance.
    • Ephesians 6:7–8: the Lord repays the good we do.
    • Hebrews 6:10: God is not unjust to forget faithful labor.

    Character That Carries Forward: Sanctification is not discarded at death. It is completed.

    • Romans 8:29–30: God’s endgame is Christlikeness.
    • 1 John 3:2: we will be like Him when we see Him.
    • 2 Corinthians 3:18: the transformation happening now continues into what is revealed then.
    • Philippians 1:6: He finishes what He starts.
    • Colossians 3:10: renewed into the image of the Creator.
    • Jude 24: He keeps us and presents us blameless with joy.

    Souls Won and Discipled: People, not possessions, cross into eternity.

    • 1 Thessalonians 2:19–20: believers Paul invested in are his crown.
    • Philippians 4:1: people are lasting fruit.
    • Daniel 12:3: leading many to righteousness shines forever.
    • John 4:36: the sower and reaper rejoice together.
    • Proverbs 11:30: the one who wins souls is wise.

    Rewards, Faithfulness, and Stewardship

    The Parable Framework: Jesus ties eternal reward to faithfulness in ordinary responsibility.

    • Matthew 25:14–30: talents judged; reward proportional to faithfulness.
    • Luke 19:11–27: faithfulness over “very little” leads to authority over cities.
    • Matthew 25:34–40: serving “the least of these” is serving Christ.

    Crowns as Specific Rewards

    • 2 Timothy 4:8: crown of righteousness for loving His appearing.
    • James 1:12 / Revelation 2:10: crown of life for endurance.
    • 1 Peter 5:4: crown of glory for faithful shepherds.
    • 1 Corinthians 9:24–27: imperishable crown for disciplined service.
    • Revelation 3:11: hold fast so no one takes your crown.

    Stewardship Principles

    • Luke 16:10–12: faithfulness with what is small reveals readiness for true riches.
    • Matthew 6:19–21: treasure in heaven, not on earth.
    • Luke 12:42–48: much given, much required.
    • Romans 14:12: each gives an account to God.
    • Hebrews 4:13: nothing hidden before Him.

    Accounting for Time and Gifts

    • Ephesians 5:15–16: redeem the time.
    • 1 Peter 4:10: steward spiritual gifts for others.
    • Matthew 12:36: account even for careless words.
    • Ecclesiastes 12:13–14: every deed brought into judgment.

    Hearing “Well Done”

    The Direct Words

    • Matthew 25:21, 23: “Well done… enter the joy of your Master.”
    • Luke 19:17: faithfulness in little brings kingdom authority.

    Approval From God, Not Men

    • 2 Timothy 2:15: present yourself to God as one approved.
    • 1 Corinthians 4:3–5: the Lord examines motives.
    • Galatians 1:10: seek His approval, not applause.
    • John 5:44: desire the glory that comes from God.

    The Joy of the Master

    • Matthew 25:21: reward includes shared joy.
    • Hebrews 12:2: Jesus endured for the joy ahead; we follow that pattern.
    • Zephaniah 3:17: God rejoices over His people.

    Standing Before the Judge-King

    • Revelation 22:12: Christ returns with rewards in hand.
    • Isaiah 40:10: His recompense is with Him.
    • Hebrews 11:6: He rewards diligent seekers.
    • Romans 2:6–7: He renders according to works.

    The Crown Returned in Worship

    • Revelation 4:10–11: every crown is cast at His feet. Reward becomes worship.

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