In the Meantime (5) – Believe It or Not

Welcome to CROLCC, we are so glad you are here worshiping with us. We are closing in on our series In the Meantime and if you weren’t here last week I really want to encourage you to online to listen to last week’s message. Christa encouraged us through her personal story of “in the meantime” moments that you can still have faith to trust God. It’s amazing how others’ in the meantime stories encourage our faith. So, if you allow yourself to pause and think about this, God could probably use your in the meantime story to encourage others’ faith. I know you might not feel that at the moment, but I pray you will see his faithfulness comes through your life.

Jesus told his followers that unavoidable trials aren’t aberrations; they are expectations. They can actually serve a beneficial purpose. Why? Because God can redeem, use, or work through the undeserved, unavoidable, circumstantial trials in our lives. But in order for that to happen, we have to believe and persevere.

Moving Forward

Everyone deals with unexpected, unresolvable tensions in life. But God brings purpose to pain . . . if we cooperate. When you’re “in the meantime,” ask him for wisdom. Ask him for direction. Pray like this:

Heavenly Father, I believe you will use this until you choose to remove this. Give me wisdom to see as you see and strength to do as you say.

Changing Your Mind

Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.
James 1:4

Discussion Questions

1. How do you usually handle sudden changes in your schedule? Do you go with the flow or does the unexpected stress you out?

2. Talk about a time in your own life or the life of someone you know when good eventually came from adversity. How did that event influence your faith?

3. Read James 1:1–8. Do you think it’s realistic to be able to consider your trials “pure joy”? Why or why not? How would a perspective like that change your relationship with God? How might it change the way you deal with your circumstances?

4. Do you agree with the idea that spiritual maturity has less to do with what you know and more with how you trust God and persevere in the face of adversity? Why or why not?

5. As you think about the adversity you face right now, what is one thing you can do to “let perseverance finish its work”? If you choose to “endure to mature,” how might your current circumstances grow your faith? What can this group do to support you?

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