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“Get Ready, Get Ready, Get Ready” – Crossing the Jordan
I. Introduction

II. Two Extremes in the Life of Faith

  1. Extreme #1: People who think everything depends on God alone.

    • Passive faith; no personal effort (e.g., expecting blessings without action).

  2. Extreme #2: People who think everything depends on themselves.

    • Self-striving faith; no prayer or reliance on God.

  3. Balanced truth (Joshua 3:5):

    • Human responsibility → “Sanctify yourselves.”

    • Divine power → “The Lord will do wonders.”

    • A biblical tension: God acts, but we prepare.

III. Historical and Scriptural Context

  1. Israel at the Jordan River.

    • On the threshold of the Promised Land after 40 years of wandering.

    • Consequence of earlier unbelief and disobedience.

  2. The Ark of the Covenant.

    • Symbol of God's presence and holiness.

    • Instructions: follow it at a distance — reverence before a holy God.

  3. The Crossing.

    • Jordan River in flood (½ mile wide); an impossible situation needing a miracle.

  4. Spiritual parallel for 2026.

    • Represents transition into a new season filled with both blessings and unknowns.

IV. Our Part: “Sanctify Yourselves”

  1. Meaning of consecration.

    • To set apart, make holy, dedicate to God's purposes.

    • Synonyms: sanctify, purify, make acceptable to God.

  2. Illustration: The church drums.

    • Ordinary objects made sacred through dedicated purpose.

    • Believers are called to the same — living for God’s glory.

  3. Practical applications of consecration.

    • Self-examination and repentance of sin.

    • Renew commitment to God and His house.

    • Live holy lives — avoid spiritual compromise.

    • Commitment to consistent church involvement and ministry.

    • Stop gossip, negativity, and complaining; unity and obedience bring blessings.

    • Financial consecration: honor God with firstfruits.

    • Lifestyle consecration: avoid ungodly influences; guard media and relationships.

    • Relational accountability and transparency (illustrated through phone example).

    • Personal humility and ongoing sanctification — asking God to search the heart.

  4. Examples of sacrifice and faith.

    • Pastor’s story about his wife leaving a high-paying law job to serve in ministry.

    • Lesson: Consecration often means sacrifice, but God multiplies what’s surrendered.

V. God’s Part: “The Lord Will Do Wonders”

  1. Nature of God's wonders.

    • Miracles, provisions, and supernatural acts demonstrating His glory.

    • Miracles reveal who God is, not just what He does.

  2. Hope from Scripture (Romans 15:4).

    • Old Testament lessons written for our learning and to build hope.

    • The same God who parted the Jordan acts today.

  3. Faith declaration for 2026.

    • God calls what is not as though it were — the promises are already in motion.

    • Prophetic declarations for the year:

      • Growth in intimacy with God.

      • Healing and restoration (“this sickness is not unto death”).

      • A rising young generation with holy passion.

      • God will rebuke the devourer.

      • Restoration of faith to believe again.

VI. Conclusion and Call to Response