KJV Sermon Outlines
Essential
Equipment: Purpose
TEXT: Ecclesiastes 2:1 – 26 & Phil. 3:7-14
QUESTION: Do you know what your purpose is? What is it that drives
you, what motivates you?
OPEN: One of the most challenging courses at the University of Denver
was a business law class in which the professor gave difficult true &
false tests. During one of the more exasperating exams, the professor
noticed another student flipping a coin. The professor approached him.
"Son are you guessing on this test?" he asked.
"No sir," replied the student. "I’m just checking my answers."
APPLY: There are people who seem to live their whole lives that way.
They have no direction, no purpose, no goals. They live their lives by
flipping coin, drifting along aimlessly in life.
Yogi Berra: “If you don’t know where you’re going, you’re likely to
end up someplace else.”
ILLUS: In preparation for a similar sermon, a large church went out
onto the street and asked that question: “What is your purpose is
life?” Here were some of the responses:
One person answered: "I can’t say I know the purpose… I think after I die
I’ll find out what the purpose of life is."
Another: "My purpose? I think my purpose is… I don’t know."
Some did have an idea of their purpose in life and their answers
indicated their purpose in life centered around themselves:
• to have fun
• be happy
• to have a good time and enjoy my life
• to have as much fun as possible in as short a time as possible
Now, there’s nothing wrong with enjoying life. But if that’s your
WHOLE purpose in life, there’s an emptiness to it. It’s like Cotton
Candy - all taste, but no substance.
Others had pretty good answers, ones even Christians might give:
* to live a moral life
* to raise a good family
* to raise up kids to have a good future.
But I suggest to you that all of those “purpose statements” were short
sighted. In essence not big enough for the Christian. Ecclesiastes
tells us that God put “eternity in our hearts.” A big God calls on us
to have a big purpose in our lives.
I. In the book of Ecclesiastes,
Solomon examined the things that commonly motivate us in life…
Pleasure… Accomplishments… Pursuit of wisdom… learning… power…
position… riches… security. But he finishes each of his evaluations by
declaring that these things are not what it’s cracked up to be. It’s
all empty, worthless, dissatisfying.
II. Nearly 1000 years later, Paul
writes the words of our text today: Phil. 3:7-14
Paul had had everything. He was a leader, looked up to, an up & comer.
He was going places. Yet now he held that it was all rubbish, excess
debris, worthless junk.
Paul summed his purpose statement in vs. 13-14:
III. Paul realized the things of
this world would not last.
Pleasure wasn’t going to last:
Ecclesiastes 2:10-11 And whatsoever mine eyes desired I kept not from
them, I withheld not my heart from any joy; for my heart rejoiced in
all my labour: and this was my portion of all my labour. 11Then I
looked on all the works that my hands had wrought, and on the labour
that I had laboured to do: and, behold, all was vanity and vexation of
spirit, and there was no profit under the sun.
Possessions weren’t gonna last:
1 Timothy 6:7 says "For we brought nothing into this world, and it is
certain we can carry nothing out."
Or as a famous t shirt once said: He who dies with the most toys…
still dies.
Prestige won’t last:
Jesus said: "Many who are first will be last and the last will be
first"
“Many people who seem important now will be the least important in
eternity.”
By contrast Jesus said: For what shall it profit a man, if he shall
gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? Or what shall a man give
in exchange for his soul? (Mark 8:36)
I John 2:17 tells us: And the world passeth away, and the lust
thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.
IV. You see – we that are
Christians. We who understand the emptiness of life HAVE AN ADVANTAGE.
We have the ultimate reason to live. Ephesians 2:10 tells us: " For we
are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which
God hath before ordained that we should walk in them." In other words,
we have a purpose. We have a divine destiny.
And it doesn’t center around us & OUR needs, OUR family, OUR personal
fulfillment. It centers around Jesus Christ.
NOW, let me clarify this: I’m not saying that we should abandon all
that people regard as important in this world:
• taking care of our families,
• taking care of our needs
• having dreams for the future…
What I am saying is: as good and worthy as these aspects of our lives
may be – they are not what should ultimately motivate us. Those goals
are NOT BIG ENOUGH for us.
OUR Goal should be the same as Paul – (vs. 13-14).
That means: the reason I take care of my family – I’ve centered myself
around Jesus.
The reason I love my wife – because I’ve centered my life around
Jesus.
The reason I love my children - I’ve centered my family around Jesus.
It means I want to build my needs and my dreams around Jesus.
THE ONLY MOTIVATION WORTHY & FULFILLING ENOUGH
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