Sunday, February 24, 2013

2-24-13 Sermon

To listen to today's sermon, click here. If you prefer to read it or want the outline to follow along, the manuscript appears below. Blessings!

HOW TO PREVENT BURNOUT
Patience, Persistence and Peace of Mind  -  Part 3 of 6
1 Kings 19:1-16, James 5:17
02-24-13 Sermon
 
Now Ahab told Jezebel everything Elijah had done and how he had killed all the prophets with the sword.  So Jezebel sent a messenger to Elijah to say, “May the gods deal with me, be it ever so severely, if by this time tomorrow I do not make your life like that of one of them.”  Elijah was afraid and ran for his life.  When he came to Beersheba in Judah he left his servant there, while he himself went a day’s journey into the desert.  He came to a broom tree, sat down under it and prayed that he might die.  “I have had enough, Lord,” he said.  “Take my life; I am no better than my ancestors.”  Then he lay down under the tree and fell asleep.  All at once an angel touched him and said, “Get up and eat.”  He looked around, and there by his head was a cake of bread baked over hot coals, and a jar of water.  He ate and drank and then lay down again.  The angel of the Lord came back a second time and touched him and said, “Get up and eat, for the journey is too much for you.”  So he got up and ate and drank.  Strengthened by the food, he traveled forty days and forty nights until he reached Horeb, the mountain of God.  There he went into a cave and spent the night.  And the word of the Lord came to him:  “What are you doing here, Elijah?”  He replied, “I have been very zealous for the Lord God Almighty.  The Israelites have rejected your covenant, broken down your altars, and put your prophets to death with the sword.  I am the only one left, and now they are trying to kill me too.”  The Lord said, “Go out and stand on the mountain in the presence of the Lord, for the Lord is about to pass by.”  Then a great and powerful wind tore the mountains apart and shattered rocks before the Lord, but the Lord was not in the wind.  After the wind there was an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake.  After the earthquake came a fire, but the Lord was not in the fire.  And after the fire came a gentle whisper.  When Elijah heard it, he pulled his cloak over his face and went out and stood at the mouth of the cave.  Then a voice said to him, “What are you doing here, Elijah?”  He replied, “I have been very zealous for the Lord God Almighty.  The Israelites have rejected your covenant, broken down your altars, and put your prophets to death with the sword.  I am the only one left, and they are trying to kill me too.”  The Lord said to him, “Go back the way you came, and go to the Desert of Damascus.  When you get there, anoint Hazael king over Aram.  Also, anoint Jehu son of Nimshi king over Israel, and anoint Elisha son of Shaphat from Abel Meholah to succeed you as prophet.  Jesus will put to death any who escape the sword of Hazael, and Elisha will put to death any who escape the sword of Jehu.  Yet I reserve seven thousand in Israel—all whose knees have not bowed down to Baal and all whose mouths have not kissed him.”   1 Kings 19:1-18. 
 
"Elijah was a person just like us. . ."  James 5:17
 
 
1.  THE CONSEQUENCES OF BURNOUT
 
 
            a.  We depreciate ______________________________
 
               "Elijah came to a broom tree, sat down under it, and prayed . . . `Take my life.  I'm no better than my ancestors."  vs. 4
 
            b.  We underrate ______________________________
 
               "I have worked very hard for the Lord of the heavens; but the people of Israel have broken their covenant with You and have torn down Your altars. . ."  vs. 10 (LB)
 
            c.  We exaggerate ______________________________
 
                        "I am the only one left -- and they are trying to kill me!"  vs 10b
 
            d.  We abdicate ______________________________
 
                        ". . . he prayed that he might die.  `I have had enough, Lord!' he said."
 
2.  THE CURE FOR BURNOUT
 
            a.  ______________________________ your body.
 
               "He laid down. . . and fell asleep . . . Then the angel said, `Get up and eat.' . . . He ate and drank and then laid down again. . . Then the angel said `Get up and eat (again) for the journey is too much for you."  vs. 5-8
 
            b.  ______________________________ your frustrations.
 
               "There he went into a cave and spent the night.  (God said) `What are you doing here, Elijah?'  He replied, `I've been very zealous for the Lord, (but) . . . " vs. 9-10a
 
 
            Elijah's Frustrations:
 
                                    *          Fear (vs. 3)     Resentment (vs. 4)  Low self-esteem (vs. 4b)  Anger (vs. 10)
                                    *          Loneliness (vs. 10b)  Worry (vs. 10c)
 
                        "Cast all your cares on Him, because He cares for you." 1 Peter 5:7
 
            c.  ______________________________ on God.
 
                        "Go out and stand before Me on the mountain,' the Lord told him."  vs. 11
 
                        "Reverence for God gives a man deep strength."  Pr. 14:16 (LB)
 
 
            d.  ______________________________ serving others.
 
               "Go back the way you came. . . to the desert of Damascus.  When you get there, anoint Hazael. . . and Jehu. . . Elisha . . . "  vs. 15-16
 
               "Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up!"  Gal. 6:9

HOW TO PREVENT BURNOUT
Patience, Persistence and Peace of Mind  -  Part 3 of 6
1 Kings 19:1-16, James 5:17
02-24-13 Sermon
 
1 Kings 19.  Recently I saw an article in Success magazine that begins this way, "As the head of a small business, Bob Dacha was particularly vulnerable.  He had been the part owner and manager of a San Francisco travel agency for eight years.  Now he had to admit that he was in bad shape.  Depressed and listless, he couldn't motivate himself.  `I was short tempered with clients on the phone and I took out my frustrations on the people I worked with.'  Diagnosis:  burnout."
 
It's a scenario familiar to anyone in the business work.  A recent cartoon depicts a gloomy, tensed up executive at a cocktail party wearing a name tag that reads, "Contents under pressure."  How true it is for so many executives.  Stress is costing American business one hundred million dollars a year in illness and lowered productivity.  That doesn't even begin to take into account the price executives pay in personal terms -- confidence eroded, marriages strained or broken, red hot careers left in ashes.  The culprit every time:  burnout.  
 
What in the world is burnout?  It's more than fatigue.  It's basically unfulfilled expectations and the fatigue that comes from that.  Dr. Herbert Fruetenberger defined it this way: "A state of emotional frustration brought about by a devotion to a cause, a lifestyle or a relationship that failed to produce the expected reward." 
 
Today we want to look at burnout for just a minute.  We want to look at the causes and the cures.  We're going to try to look at burnout before we burn out.  Burnout is not a new problem.  It's as old as the Bible.  Three thousand years ago, a man named Elijah had it.  The Bible tells us Elijah was just like us.  He had a spiritual victory on Mt. Carmel -- a god contest which he won against 400 prophets of an idol.  Right after that, the queen of Israel, put a price on his head.  He runs across the country, hides in a cave in the desert, and says, "God, kill me!"  One minute he's the hero, the next minute he's the zero.  One minute he's on the mountain top the next minute he's in the valley.  One minute he's at the pinnacle of success, the next minute he's in the valley of stress.  How did he handle it?  We're going to look at that today.
 
What are the consequences of burnout?  There are four things that happen when people burn out emotionally.  Some of you really need this today.  Some of you say, "I don't need it."  Take notes anyway because you'll need it some day.  Some of you know someone who's right on the verge of burnout and you need to know how to help them. 
 
 
FOUR CONSEQUENCES OF BURNOUT:
 
1.  We depreciate our worth. 
 
We devalue ourselves.  We put ourselves down.  We become hyper critical of ourselves.  v. 4 "Elijah came to a broom tree, sat down under it and prayed, "Take my life.  I'm no better than my ancestors."  He says "My life is worthless!" 
 
The first consequence of burnout is low self esteem.  Circle "better".  The cause of burnout is often comparison.  He says "I'm no better than my ancestors."  The Bible warns us over and over not to compare ourselves to others.  It says don't do it.  You're setting yourself up to be depressed.  You are unique.  You're one in six billion people.  There's nobody ever like you in the world.  When you get to heaven, God isn't going to say, "Why weren't you more like Billy Graham" or "Why weren't you more like Moses".  He's going to say, "Why weren't you more like you?" 
 
God made you to be you and if you don't be you, nobody else is going to be you.  We tend to depreciate our worth when we burn out because we compare ourselves to others.  We compare our weaknesses with other people's strengths and forget their weaknesses.  We try to motivate ourselves through criticism and it just doesn't work.
 
2.  We underrate our work. 
 
Elijah said, "I have worked very hard for the Lord God of heavens, but the people of Israel have broken their covenants with You and have torn down Your altars."  Elijah's blaming himself for things that weren't his fault.  The nation was falling apart and Elijah takes it personally.  He says. "It's all my fault." 
 
This is the Atlas syndrome.  The whole world is resting on my shoulders.  I've got to be the answer for everything.  A Messiah complex.  Everything depends on me.  I've got to make sure everything turns out all right.  If you've got that attitude that's a sure pathway to burnout. 
 
If I had time today we'd talk about the fact that many thing are out of your control.  One of the things that is out of control in your life is you are not responsible for the response of other people.  You can influence other people but you can't control them.  Parents have to learn this or as a parent you'll burn out. Every time you take responsibility for someone, you take it away from that person.  That keeps them from growing up.  As your kids are growing up there are factors in life you just can't control ‑- who their friends will be, what they'll read, experiences they'll have.  You must learn that you are responsible to other people but you're not responsible for other people.  The prodigal son's father was not responsible for the fact that the prodigal went off and blew his life.  God was a perfect father and yet Adam sinned.  We need to learn that we're not responsible for other people's response in life.  Otherwise we burn out. 
 
3.  We exaggerate our problems.
 
We focus only on the negative.  v. 10 Elijah says, "I am the only one left and they are trying to kill me too!"  This guy's having a Grade A pity party.  It's like the mother that walked into the room and said, "Bob, you've got to get up.  You've got to go to church."  Bob said, "I don't want to go, Mom."  She said, "You've got to go.  You're just having a pity party.  You've got to go for two reasons:  One, you're 35 years old and two, you're the pastor."
 
The truth is, Elijah wasn't the only one left.  There were at least 7000 other people who hadn't bowed to Baal.  And not everybody was against him.  Just one woman -- the queen.  She sent a messenger to say, "I'm going to kill you!"  If Elijah had been smart, if he hadn't been burned out, he'd realized if Jezebel really wanted to kill him, she would have sent a hit man not a messenger.  She was warning him.  She was bluffing. 
 
The problem we have here is what's called emotional reasoning, focusing on feelings instead of facts.  I feel it must be true, therefore it must be true.  Athletes, performers, musicians often feel discouraged -- feelings of failure at the end of a performance.  You just have to learn to ignore it.  Feelings are highly unreliable.  Your feelings may just be the result of a bad pizza you ate last night. 
 
Why am I saying all this?  Because some of you may have come here today saying, "I don't feel close to God.  I don't feel God's working in my life.  I don't feel that He loves me.  I don't feel like He knows me."  It doesn't matter what you feel.  It matter what the truth is.  A lot of therapists today say, "Get in touch with your feelings."  That's a good thing to do.  But more important than getting in touch with your feelings is get in touch with the truth.  The Bible does not say, "and you will know your feelings and they will set you free."  It says, "You will know the truth..."  The truth will set you free.  You say you're in a hopeless situation.  Is that what you say or is that what God says about it?  God says "All things are possible to him who believes." 
 
We depreciate our worth, we under rate our work, we exaggerate our problems.
 
4.  We abdicate our dreams.
 
This is the most serious of all.  We want to give up.  We say it's just not worth it.  I'm throwing in the towel.  We tend to give up on our goals and lose our vision.  We tend to settle for second best.  This is what Elijah did in verse 4.  "He prayed that he might die.  I have had enough, Lord! he said.  I've had enough!"  Some of you are at this point this morning.  You're saying you're ready to kick it off, throw in the towel.  You want to leave.  Leave your job, leave your marriage, leave school. You're burned out, tired, frustrated.  What do you do?
 
CURE FOR BURNOUT
 
You do what God told Elijah to do.  He did four things.  God's road for recovery for burn out.  If you don't need this now, you're going to need it later or you'll need it to help somebody else. 
 
1.  Rest your body
 
v. 5-8 "He laid down.  He fell asleep.  Then the angel said, `Get up and eat.'  He ate and he drank and then laid down again.  Then the angel said, `Get up and eat again for the journey is too much for you.'" 
 
That sounds like a pretty good antidote to me.  He says this is God's antidote for depression.  God says, You're burned out. First we've got to take care of your physical health.  When you're emotionally stressed out it affects your body, it makes you physically tired.  The very first step in burnout, God says get control of your physical situation. 
 
God's antidote for Elijah's depression and burnout was eat and sleep, eat and sleep.  Sometimes the most spiritual thing you can do is go home and go to bed.  God did not criticize Elijah.  He didn't give him a sermon.  He didn't give him a lecture.  "Snap out of it!  You're burned out.  Act like a man!"  He didn't criticize him for being burnt out.  He didn't chastise him.  He said, First, we need to take care of this physical situation. Eat, sleep, eat, sleep.  God's answer was food, rest, relaxation.
 
When you get out of balance and you don't do those things you're going to burn out.  I told the men and ladies at the pastor's conference this week, If you burn the candle at both ends, you're not as bright as you think you are.  You can have so many irons in the fire, you put out the fire. 
 
Psalm 127:2 (Living Bible) "God wants His loved ones to get their proper rest."  Vince Lombardi once said, "Fatigue makes cowards of all of us."  That's what was happening here.  Elijah was physically worn out.  He had just had a major emotional victory up on Mt. Carmel.  He was completely drained.  Spiritually, emotionally, physically -- in every sense.  He needed some rest. He needed some relaxation.
 
God says take care of your body.  That's the first thing you've got to do.  Rest your body.  It's amazing how much better things look after a good night's sleep. 
 
After you've taken care of that, then He says, Now we've got to take care of your emotions.  First we took care of your physical aspect, now we take care of your emotional aspect.
 
2.  Release your frustrations
 
Tell God how you feel.  v. 9 & 10 "Then he went into a cave and spent the night.  God said `What are you doing here, Elijah?'  He replied, `I've been very zealous for the Lord but..."  and then he starts unloading.  What's happening?
 
God takes him to this cave and says, "Ok, Elijah, just get it off your chest.  Tell Me.  What's bugging you?  What's got you irritated?  What are you uptight about?  Vent your frustrations." Psychology calls it catharsis. 
 
So Elijah does.  At this point in Elijah's life he's a fruit basket of emotions.  In v. 3 he says he's afraid; resentful in v. 4 and low self-esteem; v. 10 he talks about he's angry and lonely and he was worried.  Don't you think if you had all of those bundled up in your life wouldn't you be a candidate for burnout? Elijah was.  God says, vent it, what's bugging you?
 
Here's the point:  God is not shocked when you complain to Him. When you say, "God, life stinks!  I'm ticked off!  I'm miserable. I'm depressed!"  He's not shocked, worried.  He's not blown away when you say, "I don't know what I believe."  He knows exactly how you feel even before you tell Him.  What He wants you to do is get it off your chest.  When I swallow my emotions, my stomach keeps score.  You've got to get it out. 
 
So God says, Vent, release your frustrations.  Relax your body and release your frustration.  He allowed Elijah to go on and on until he ran out of words.  God did the same thing with David in the Psalms.  Have you ever read those Psalms where David is angry at everybody and wondered why they're in the Bible?  Places where he says, "God, I don't like it!  Kill all my enemies.  Bash their babies.  Knock their teeth out!"  You think, "Why is this in the Holy Bible?" 
 
Every single emotion known to man is contained in the book of Psalms.  It's a very honest book.  In many of the Psalms, David is unloading to God.  They're there in the Bible to say it's ok for you to do that.  God's not going to walk out on you.  He wants you to unload so you can be healed emotionally.
 
Some of you just need to spill your heart go God.  He's not going to get angry at you.  1 Peter 5:7 "Cast all your cares on Him, because He cares for you."  He says take all those burdens, those stresses, those pressures that you're feeling and dump them on the Lord.  Cast all your cares on God.  "Here God, I can't handle it!"  God says, "I knew that!" 
 
Rest your body, you release your frustrations.  Sometimes it helps to have a Christian friend to listen to you.  Elijah, at this point, didn't have a friend that he could unload on. 
 
If you're not in a small group, you need to get in a small group. In small groups is where you meet people and get close to them and then when you're needing some support, you call them up and say, "I'm having a tough time" and they'll hear you out and vice‑ versa.
 
After you've got the physical aspect taken care of and you've got the emotional aspect taken care of, step three in the recovery is spiritual recovery.
 
3.  Refocus on God.
 
Get your eyes off the problem, get your eyes on God.  Get a fresh awareness of His power, His presence.  If you look at the world, you'll be distressed; if you look within, you'll be depressed; if you look at Christ, you'll be at rest.
 
v. 11 God says "`Go out and stand before Me on the mountain,' the Lord told him."  God says, I've got something for you to see. God puts on this spectacular light show for Elijah.  First He causes a great wind to come by.  Elijah's standing here on the mountain and sees the huge wind come by.  Then God causes an earthquake and the earth rumbles.  Then He sends a great fire down and watches all these spectacular fireworks.  Then God speaks in this gentle whisper.
 
You say, "What's the point of all this?  Why is God demonstrating all His power like this to Elijah when he's burned out?"  God's saying, "Elijah, I'm in control.  I've got the power to handle any situation.  Don't worry about some lady trying to kill you. You can resign as general manager of the universe and it's not going to fall apart.  I'm God.  You're not." 
 
The root problem of burnout is you're trying to be God.  You're trying to be Superman.  You're trying to do more than God intended for you to do.  You're accepting responsibility God never intended for you to have.  God never puts more on you than He puts in you to bear up under it.  But sometimes you take on more than you ought to take on.  So God says, "I'm God and you're not.  Watch this!"  And He does this big power display." 
 
You refocus on God's power and then your problems are a whole lot smaller.
 
Proverbs 14:16 (Living Bible) "Reverence for God gives a man deep strength."  In today's high stress, irritating world -- especially here in Orange County -- I don't know how you're going to make it without a daily time with God.  A daily quiet time with God is a decompression chamber.  It's time to get alone with God, sort out your thoughts, read some of the Bible, talk to Him in prayer, set in His presence in silence and decompress from all of the stress that's in our society.  Reverence for the Lord gives a person great strength.  Refocus on God.
 
God says, I've taken care of the physical and I've taken care of the emotional and I've taken care of your spiritual.  But there's one more step you need in the road to recovery if you're burned out.
 
4.  Resume serving others.
 
Get the focus off yourself.  Notice God gave Elijah a new assignment.  v. 15-16 "Go back the way you came to the desert of Damascus.  When you get there anoint Hazael and Jehu and Elisha." He says, "I want you to get back involved in ministry and do the things that prophets are supposed to do."  One of these three guys -- Elisha -- was to become his best friend.  Every burned out person needs a close friend.  From then on, Elijah would minister with a buddy, not by himself.  He wouldn't be the Lone Ranger. This man became his protege. 
 
He says, "Elijah I've got something for you to do."  Why did He do that?  Why is it important for burned out people to get back in some kind of service and ministry?  God did this for Elijah's self esteem.  He says, You need to get involved in ministry.  You need to get your eyes off yourself.  When you're burned out you tend to become very introspective.  You can become morbid about it.  All you see is "Oh, me!  My problems.  My needs.  My hurts. How tired I am!"  All you see is you're looking at yourself.
 
God says, "You need to get your eyes off yourself, Elijah.  You need to get yourself out in helping other people, serving again. Quit moping around.  Get a purpose for life."
 
The point is:  The quickest way to get rid of depression is to get your eyes off yourself and get involved in giving your life away to help other people.  When you look at yourself you're just going to get down and down.  Jesus said it like this, "You lose your life to find it."  As you give your life away, you become a receptacle of God's love.  The more you give out the more God gives to you. 
 
God says, You've taken care of the physical, you've taken care of the spiritual, you've taken care of the emotional.  There's one other thing.  You need the relational.  Lose your life to find it.
                                             
Elijah thought God was through with him.  He was depressed, discouraged, down in the dumps.  He's one of the two guys in the Bible that said, "God, kill me!"  He was that depressed.  But God was not through with Elijah.  Not by any sense of the word. 
 
Some of you can identify with this.  You're down in the dumps. God's not through with you.  He's got a plan for your life.  My guess that in a group this size, some of you can say, "I can really relate to this guy."  You say, "There are some mornings I just don't want to get out of bed.  I feel like everything is piling up on my life.  I'm emotionally tired and physically tired.  I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired." 
 
One of the warning signs when you're getting ready to burn out is you've got a short fuse.  Everything irritates you.  You have a glass that's filled to the brim with so many emotions that when somebody comes along and just bumps you slightly, it spills out all over.  You're like a champainge bottle that's been corked and shaken.  It's about to explode.  Some of you feel like checking out.  You feel like Elijah:  "Life isn't worth living.  I want to quit my job.  I want to run out on my marriage.  I want to leave my responsibilities.  I want to quit school.  I want to chuck it all!" 
 
To those of you I've got some good news.  In the first place, God knows exactly how you feel.  He really does.  And number two, He cares.  He cares about how you feel.  Not only does He care but I care and so does this church, the people sitting around you. This is a caring church.  You're not alone.  God wants to work in your life.  He's not finished with your life.  You will come through this. 
 
Some of you say,"I've got all kinds of aches and pains in my life."  I read this recently in the newspaper, "As everyday stress increases, so do aches and pains."  It talks about how a group of psychiatrists and M.D.s produced a list of factors that cause pain in people's lives.  They called it the Hassles Scale. Twenty two items were tested in the Hassles Scale and they found out the average adult suffers from 4.3 of them.  It causes, as a result, headaches, muscle pains, stomach pains and all kinds of other stuff.  Those are warning lights that God's saying, "It's not the way I want you to live. 
 
Remember the definition of burnout from a 1980 book on Burnout by Dr. Herbert Fruetenberger:  "A state of emotional frustration brought about by a devotion to a cause, a lifestyle, a relationship that has failed to produce the expected rewards."
 
The root then of burnout is when you're looking to something besides God to fulfill your life.  When you look to a lifestyle that some of you have (that's going to burn out) or a relationship that some of you are expecting to fulfill every need (and it's going to cause you to burn out) or a commitment to a cause (like "I'm going to make a million bucks!" -- and you're going to burn out) -- you need to find the true source of life. You were not made to live outside of God's will.  You were made to know Him personally, to be loved by Him and to love Him and have a relationship with Him.  When you make that the priority in your life, it gives stability and strength.
 
Do any of these warning signs click with you?  Do you depreciate your worth?  Do you say "I don't feel like what I'm doing is worth anything.  It's meaningless."  Do you underrate your work? Do You say "I'm just running in circles!"  Do you tend to exaggerate your problems?  Always see the negative instead of the positive?  Do you feel like you're about to give up on your dreams?
 
If so, what do you do?
 
First, you open your life to Jesus Christ.  You develop a relationship with Christ.  He loves you.  He wants you to know Him.  He made you for a purpose.  He has a plan for your life. Say, "Christ, come into my life and give me the power to do these four things:  rest my body, release my frustrations, refocus on God, resume serving others and find a place of ministry where I can give out."
 
Prayer:
 
      You need to take these four steps as preventative steps in dealing with burnout in a very high stress society.  If you've never said Yes to Jesus Christ say, "Christ, would You come into my life today?  I don't understand it all.  I haven't got all the theology figured out.  But I recognize the need for You in my life.  Jesus Christ, come into my mind and my heart.  Put Your spirit within me.  I want to follow You."
 
      Many of you have already done that.  Would you follow with these doing it today and say, "Next, would You help me to rest my body, to get the exercise and diet and rest that I need to maintain this body?  Help me to release my frustrations -- not to hold them in but to let You know how I feel, to spend time with You in prayer every day, listening to You and listening to Your word and talking to You about how I feel -- casting all my cares on You.  Help me to refocus on You, Lord.  You've said that reverence for God gives a man and woman great strength.  Help me to find a place where I can give out in service to others, find a ministry so I can get my eyes off myself and onto others."
 
      The Bible says, "Let us not become weary in doing good for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up."  Father, I pray for those who are here today that would be on the verge of giving up, that they would not, but that they would take these steps on the road to recovery for physical, emotional, spiritual, relational balance in their lives.  We thank You for those who today for the very first time are opening their heart to You.  We pray Your blessing on them.  In Jesus' name.  Amen.

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