Hey, this is Stephen Ferdick. I'm the pastor of Elevation Church, and this is our podcast and I wanted to thank you for joining us today. Hope this inspires you. Hope it builds your faith. Hope it gives your perspective to see God has moving in your life. Enjoy the message. I'm so excited to preach to you guys today. You can have a seat if you're here with us. It's been several months since I've been on stage and gotten to speak to you all. But in that time, our
pastor has been preaching his heart out. Not only has he preached almost every weekend for the first half of this year, but what you don't see is that in the meantime he's writing songs in his spare time, and he's producing albums that we're playing in our headphones and in our cars and in our homes on repeat. And we got to hear all those songs first here at Elevation.
Well most of them of them were like surprises. But in the sermons of just Been, we are so spoiled type it in the chat, let me know where you're watching from, and this type spoiled, rotten, And I know My husband already said this, but I want to say Happy Mother's Day in the United States. But you know you're at elevation. We take this day as an opportunity to celebrate all of the women who have impacted our lives.
I know that Mother's Day isn't always the easiest day for a lot of us, but on this day, I want us to come and be able to celebrate the women who have quietly led and prayed and modeled their own faith while they were nurturing hours. And I was actually talking to a woman this week, and she was telling me her story how she was raised in foster care and how she came to know Christ as an adult because someone brought her to church. A woman brought
her to church. And then years later, in another town, she met another woman who said, oh, you know God here, you need to come to my church. And then when she went to that church, the pastor's wife, she said, she just took me under her wing, and she taught
me about what faith looks like in everyday life. These are the mothers that we celebrate today, the grandmothers who prayed for us, the moms who dragged us to church, the youth pastor's wife, or the small group leader who said the same things that our moms were saying to us, but we thought it was so much better when they said it. The woman who showed you how to be a godly mom, or the college Bible study leader, the prank coworker, like all of these women who had shaped
our faith. That's who we celebrate today. So it was invited to a gathering for women in ministry back in March. And while we were in the middle of worship, and we were singing, and it was it wasn't a lot of people, but we were worshiping, and I just all of a sudden, I felt like the Lord said to me, I want you to preach on the widow with the jars. And so I was, well, okay. And the song wasn't about anything, and I was like, okay. So I got off my phone and I made myself a note Widow
with the Jars Mother's Day. And so later when I was remembering that, I thought, well, let me look, where is that story the woman with the jars? And so we got out my Bible and when I saw that it was in Second King's four, I remembered all of the amazing sermons that Pastor Steven has preached on this passage.
And I was like, good, really, are you sure? And so I just said a prayer and it went something like this, Dear Lord, please give all the people this weekend temporary amnesia and let them forget every sermon that Stephen Verdick has preached on this passage. Amen, like you've never prayed for a parking space or a test that you didn't study for. It's all right. God hears. He doesn't always say yes, but he hears. He hears our cry. So let's get to the scripture and let's read Second
Kings chapter four. Let's look at this woman, Second Kings chapter four. You know, she doesn't even have a name. The Bible just calls her the widow. She's also a mom, and I'm praying today that this will inspire not just the moms, but the women and the men, all of us. Let's read it together. The wife of a man from the company of the Prophets cried out to Elijah, your husband, my servant is dead, and you know that he revered the Lord, but now his credit is coming to take
my two boys as his slaves. Alisha replied, to her, How can I help you? Tell me? What do you have in your house? Your servant has nothing there at all, she said, except a little jar of olive oil. Lord, we come to you on this Mother's Day and we just want to take a minute first, God, to just thank you for all of the faith filled mothers that you have brought along our paths. Without them, we would not know you. Without their faith, we would not have
our own. Thank you, God that you provide exactly who we need at every single stage of our lives. We open up our hearts. We want to hear from you today. Open up our eyes, let us see the things that you want to speak to us. Holy Spirit, Come speak to us in that intimate personal way that you always do. It's in Jesus name. I pray Amen. So my mom's here today, Happy mothers, say, Mom, I love you. I'm
about to talk about you. Have you ever thought about all the weird things that you picked up from your mom, things that seem to be like embedded in your psyche that you can never change. Like okay, so here's when my mom never pays full price for anything, Like she's that woman that shops the sale cart at the grocery store, and she just taught me how to find a good bargain. Now, this could be a good or a bad thing, depending on how many bargains you find. But that's just one
of the things that my mom taught me. Another thing that my mom taught me was how to rationalize my fears. We grew up in Florida, and in Florida there's really bad storms all the time, and I remember, even during a hurricane, feeling like my mom was not afraid. I felt safe because my mom was not afraid. She might have been afraid, I don't know, but she didn't show it. And she taught me how to handle my fear and how to really think through practically about the things that
I was afraid of. But there's one thing that I got from my mom that's caused a little bit of friction in my marriage, and that is my inability to notice when my gas tank is getting low. You see, Stephen never lets his gas tank drop below a corter of a tank, and really he never lets his phone drop below fifty percent. I don't know how he does it, but he just likes a full tank of gas and he just loves it. And every single time that I have been with him getting gas in the twenty plus
years that I have known this man. He gets back in the car, he shuts the door, and he takes a breath, and he goes there's nothing like a full tank of gas. And he's not trying to make me laugh. I mean, he just really it's just extremely satisfying to him. Am I joking? He says it every single time. So then me, on the other hand, I just I don't get it. I'm just perfectly fine with driving after the gaslight comes on. I get it from my mom. I have a picture to show you of the van that
my mom drove when I was a kid. Anybody else did your parents have a family car like this? There are so many great things about this picture. Okay, I just want to leave it up here just so we can soak everything in. Here. Are my parents looking actually quite stylish, and your tennis shoes are really white. It's about nineteen ninety and we are on one of our
epic camping vacations. Okay. On this particular family vacation, we drove from Miami, Florida to Glacier National Park in Montana, pulling not pictured a pop up camper that my dad bought for a couple hundred dollars. And they also thought it was a good idea to bring along our family dog. You can't really see her at start, but she's even in the picture. But this van, it's all about the van. This van was epic. Inside of the van, there were
two captain's chairs. There were curtains in this van, and in the back there was a table, not a table, a bench that folded down into a bed. But the really special thing about this van and had two gas tanks. Why do you need to put two gas tanks in a vehicle, I'm not sure, but this car had two gas tanks. And I have vivid memories. My sister's in here. Both my sisters are here today. They will attest to this of my mom driving in city traffic and saying, oh, shoot, girls,
we're on empty. And then she would say, let me switch over to the other table, and she would pull this lever. It would go good, and and but that take was always empty too, and she and so then she would she would she would turn off the AC and we would have to roll down the windows and just pray that we made it to the nearest gas station, but I do the same thing. Recently, my gas light came on, but I was running late. Another thing I
think my sorry mom. I was running late to take one of our kids to a game, and I was like, we ain't got time to get gas, and so I kept driving and the field was like way out in the middle of nowhere, and so I dropped the cand I was like, you got to get out. So I dropped them off and and I kid you not, I turned off the A C. I don't even know if the AC uses gas, but that's what my mom did. So I turned off the AC and I just prayed
that I would make it to the nearest gas stations. Today, I want to talk to you about running on m D. Have you ever prayed your way to the end of a day and then just felt like you have to do that all over again. If you ever felt like you cannot be everything that everyone needs you to be, like you just have nothing left to give. And it's not just moms who feel this way. We all have
people in our lives who need us. Some of the people in our lives need us to meet their physical needs, some of them need us to meet their emotional needs. Some people depend on us to bring energy. Some people depend on us to bring that spiritual insight. Some of the people in our lives need food and transportation, and sometimes they need us to do all of that and
provide financially at the same time. And meanwhile, we're fighting our own battles and we're wondering how we can make ends meet, and we are I'm on that doing enough? Am I enough? And all of these feelings can be really overwhelming, and you can just feel drained. There are
days where I feel empty. I feel like I've spent the day leading and working and trying to be creative, and then I pick up my kids from school and I have to figure out what we're gonna eat and who has what activities, and if Steven takes Abby to softball, then I can take the boys to their e groups and I'll take Graham first, and then I'll get Elijah, and then tomorrow we have this and this and this, and at the end of the day, I'm just I'm
just shot. That's one kind of empty. But then there's another kind of empty, and that's the kind where on top of all of those things, you're carrying an extra weight. Maybe you have a health issue, and you just you have migraines. You have to just push through all the time.
Maybe you're grieving, maybe you're going through a divorce, and you just wake up every morning and you open your eyes and you remember the pain of the season that you're in and you can pretend that everything's okay for a little while, but you're just not sure how much longer you can even do that, and the emptiness suddenly makes you aware of your loneliness. That's where our widow is. Her husband, a good man, is dead, and she has become the thing that women of this period of history
dreaded the most. She's a widow. Becoming a widow meant the loss of your livelihood, and your best hope was for one of your sons to care for you. Her sons were too young to care for her, and now she's going to lose them too because she can't pay her debts. These boys needed her and she was failing. Have you ever felt the weight of other people needing you. She's out of money, she's out of ideas, she's out of time, And then, not to mention a long time ago,
she ran out of joy and hope and strengthen. My heart just goes out to this woman. This was not the way she thought her life would go. She married a prophet, a man who had devoted his life to God. And when you give your life to God, bad things are not supposed to happen to you, right. I don't know if she was angry, but I'm angry for her. She was faithful, but she was suffering, and she knew things were about to get a lot worse. Have you ever been faithful to God and felt like you were
still just coming up empty? How do you keep going when you feel like you have nothing left? And this is what I've been wrestling with God this week. What do I do when I feel empty? Maybe your situation isn't life or death like hers, but you know what it feels like to be a the end of yourself and to have people depending on you. You know what it feels like to have tried everything, but your life feels like a never ending loop of wake, work, sleep, and you have no joy and you have no hope left.
And I want you to know this today. God does some of his best work when I feel the most empty. So today, if you're like me and you feel empty, I want to walk you through these seven little verses and share with you what the Lord showed me to do when I feel like I'm running on empty and here they are. I'm going to give you all three up front. Cry out, reach out, pour out, cry out,
reach out, pour out. Let's look back. The first verse, the wife of the man from the company of the Prophets cried out to Elisha, your servant, my husband is dead, and you know that he revered the Lord, but now his creditor is coming to take my two boys as his slaves. When you feel empty, first thing you have to do is cry out to God. Seems really simple, but for some reason, this is not the first thing that we do. I'm just gonna be honest with you, guys.
Sometimes when I feel empty, I don't cry out to God because I'm too too busy pretending like everything's okay. And at first I'm like, I'm pretending to myself. You know, it's fine, it's fine, everything's good, everything's good. And I think subconsciously, I make my life more full so I don't have to feel the emptiness. You ever done this, And so I say yes to the extra sports team, and I say yes to the wedding shower, I say yes to organizing the neighborhood garage sale. But the thing is,
busyness does not remedy emptiness. It might mask it for a little while, but in the end I only feel more empty. And now I'm also over committed and tired and irritable and feeling like no one wants to help me with all the dumb stuff that I said yes to, And then everything everyone else says just gets on my nerves and so I isolate myself even more. Am I alone up here? Let me know? Because now I'm isolated and I'm pretending like everything is awesome because I just
I just I just don't. I don't want to, I don't wanna, just don't want to deal with everything. And so when somebody sees me and they're like, how are you guys doing, I'm like, oh, we're great, because deep down I don't really even think that they care that or maybe maybe just not that they don't care, but they maybe they can't. I don't think they can relate. But then I start believing that no one cares, and
now I feel empty and alone. I don't know, I just wonder if this, if this woman tried to pretend like everything was okay. How long did she keep that up? Everyone knew that she was struggling. Her husband had died, so they all knew that, But at least for a little while, she had been able to meet make ends meet. We know she had debt. Maybe she borrowed money after her husband died, thinking that somehow, some way she would
make it up. We can even infer that she sold off everything of value in her home, but maybe she was able to do that and hide that too, because she's trying to protect her family from shame, trying to protect her children from fear, and she's carrying everything on her own two shoulder. She's trying to be a mom and a dad and failing at both. And so one day she comes to the end of her rope and she cries out to the prophet Elijah. And so many times in the Bible we see this phrase, cry out
to God. And Peter was walking on water and he began to think. The Bible tells us that he cried out to Jesus when the blind man wanted to get healed, he cried out to Jesus. And every single time what happens Jesus responds Psalm thirty four. David said, the poor man cried out, and the Lord saved him out of all his troubles. But why is it that crying out to God is the last resort instead of my first resort.
I think one of the reasons that we don't cry out to God is maybe at our court we don't believe that he can or maybe not can, but we don't believe that he will do anything for us. And maybe you prayed before and things got worse. Maybe you ask God to change the situation and it is still the same, and because things didn't turn out the way that you had hoped this time, maybe you'll you know what this, I'm just gonna do it myself. I'm just gonna muscle this situation. I hate it when I do this.
I hate it because I end up becoming that manipulative, controlling, complaining woman. And then I wonder why nobody wants to be around me, and nobody wants to listen to me, and nobody understands me. The problem with me trying to find in people what I'm supposed to find in God is that it just makes me more disappointed in the people in my life and it's not their fault. So now I'm frustrated with my situation and I'm disappointed with the people around me because they don't understand me. And
then I wonder why I feel lonely. It's because people were not meant to take the place of God in our lives. There's a space in your life that only God can fill when you cry out to him. I told you one of the verses in Psalm thirty four. But Psalm thirty four seventeen says the righteous cry out, and the Lord hears them and delivers them from all their troubles. The Lord is close to the broken hearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit. God hears your cry. Just let that sink in for a minute.
He hears you. He's not ignoring you, and He is going to deliver you. It may not be the way that you imagine, it may not be when you want it to happen, but He will deliver you. And sometimes I think that I prolonged my deliverance simply because I just I'm just being stubborn and I don't cry out to God. He hears you. He stands by waiting to deliver you. You know why. Because he's close. What did to say? He's close to the brokenhearted? Here's you. Because
he's close, he hears you, because he's with you. You may feel alone, but you are not alone. A couple of years ago, we were going through a struggle within our family, and people knew that we were struggling, but they didn't really know how painful it was. And I remember sitting in our living room on the couch crying, not crying out to God, just crying. And I started journaling about it. And I got out that journal the other day and I wrote some things in that journal
that were really wrong. I told God that I was disappointed. I told God that I was scared. But also in those pages, I would get a verse and I would write it down and I would pray it over the situation. And I said things in that journal to God that I didn't say to anyone else. And then I just got up and went about my day, drive my tears and kept going. And in the middle of the valley, it didn't necessarily feel like God was with me. I
didn't necessarily feel his presence. But this week, when I was reading through the journal, I was just flooded with gratefulness and the realization that he was right there with me in that darkness. He was listening to me. I was poor, bring out my heart. He was giving me those verses. And he's with you too. He's close. If you're broken hearted today, he's close. Look at verse two. Elijhah replied to her, how can I help you? Tell me?
What do you have in your house? Your servant has nothing at all, she said, except a small jar of olive oil. When she cried out to the prophet. He asked her two questions. Did you see them? The first one, I like, how can I help you? Well, God, it's like I said, my husband's dead. They're coming to take my sons away. I need help. I need provision. More specifically, I need to pay off my creditors. You know what.
It's okay, And actually it's important to get really specific with God because sometimes I think we cry out to him and we don't even you know what we want. What can I do for you? He said? Second question, I don't like as much, what do you have in your house? I think one of the hardest lessons that I've had to learn in my walk with God is that when I do cry out to him. The first thing he wants me to work on is me. And the craziest thing is when I work on me slowly,
I start to see my situation change. I learned this in my marriage. When I change me, I change us. And then I found out it works in all my relationships. It works in my job. When I change me, I change us. But most of the time I'm lazy and I just want God to fix my problems. I don't want to participate in the process. God just fix him, fix her. I need a new boss. That's just not how God works, not in my experience. This widow, she
cried out she needed provision, provision vision. God wanted her to see what she already had, even if it was something that seemed insignificant to her. You are always a part of your solution. What do you have in your house? Elijah said, go around and ask all of your neighbors for empty jars. Don't just ask for a few. Okay, So she cried out to God. Then then she reached out to others. Some of us are really great at reaching out, but we forget to cry out to God first.
Others of us will cry out to God all day long, but reach out none of your business. Now. I want to qualify what reaching out actually means because we live in a very strange world and social media has gotten us a little mixed up. Don't don't don't hear me say the wrong thing. Okay, you can put your prayer updates on your page, but the real people who love you, who for you and support you and ask you how
your appointment went. Those are the people that are with you on your journey and they are a part of your healing. People will comment on your post, but comments do not replace conversation. I don't believe that this woman went out into the streets of her neighborhood and shouted any jars, give me all your jars. How do you think she got those jars? She went around and she knocked on each door. Maybe she made up a speech and said the same thing to every single person. That's okay, Hi, guys,
I know this seems kind of odd. You know, my husband died and you might imagine I'm having a hard time anyway, the Elijah Elisha asked me to go around and ask for any extra jars that you might have. I know this seems weird, but do you have any lying around that you don't want. Reaching out means sharing something, Yes, even if you say the exact same thing to everyone who asks. Reaching out does not mean sharing everything. When
you cry out, you say everything. She told the prophet, everything down to the fact that she had the only thing of value that she had in the whole world was a little bit of jar, a little bit of oil in a jar. But she went around to her neighbors. She reached out, and she asked for some jars. I think one of the things that the enemy has tried to steal from us during this last year is community. One year ago, we went inside our houses, we shut the doors, and the only thing that we had to
connect with people were glass screens. But you cannot stay there. If you stay on screens, you're just shouting for jars. Affirm me, compliment me, agree with me. That's not reaching out. Earlier this week, I ran into a really really good friend of mine that I hadn't seen since Christmas, and we've been friends for fifteen years, and I knew through Instagram that they were going through a really tough season.
This couple has three biological children and three and two foster children, and I knew that recently the husband's mom had been diagnosed with ALS, and I knew that they were helping care for the mom. So this past weekend, we run into each other at our kids' sporting events and we hugged and I looked her in the eyes and I said, how was it going? And she looked at me and she said, well, mom has moved in
with us. She needs round the clock care. And honestly, this is the hardest thing that I have ever gone through. But we're good. And you know I didn't I didn't offer any words of wisdom. I just listened to her. I told her that she was one of the strongest people I know. And now I know how to pray for them, and now I know I need to check on them, bring them dinner, send them door dash, whatever floats your boat. We need face to face interaction with others.
There is no substitute for that. And you might not need it now, but have you ever thought that maybe somebody else might need it from you right now? And also, there will come a time in your life because into every life the rainfalls at some point and you're going to need to lean on the support of others. They don't need to know everything. But if they don't know anything, how can they offer support? And then you're just going to feel alone. Do not let the enemy tell you
that you're alone. You're not a one that's a lie. What do you have that's a little bit of oil and some neighbors? Verse four. Then go inside and shut the door behind you and your son's pour oil into all the jars, and as each is filled, put it to one side. You see, it's important to reach out and ask for jars. But there comes a time in your life and in your healing process where you have to shut the door and let God work a miracle. The neighbors knew what they didn't know. You know, you
can be vulnerable with people and still have privacy. I get it. Not everyone needs to know everything. Some of you need to hear that. Not everyone needs to know everything. But there are some people in your life that you can't hide from. Who was with her when she shut the door, her sons, her boys, And I wonder how much her boys knew about their situation. I wonder how
much she tried to keep from them. But the thing is, the people close to us, the people who are closest to us who are watching us fight a battle, what looks you know, what feels like weakness to us, it looks like strength to them. In her weakest moment, she was building their faith. She left him the prophet, and shut the door behind her and her son's They brought her the jars. They brought the jars to her, and she kept pouring. I thought I would have my boys
come up here and illustrate this. Guys, bring me my jars, cry out, reach out. Now it's time to pour out. Let's live in this for a second. All she had was a little bit of oil, and if you think about it, it wasn't enough to do anything with. But it was all she had. And when you're in survival mode, your instinct is to hoard everything you have, every resource, every dollar, every minute, every word. You keep it to yourself. But the prophet said, poor. Okay, So this is my
son Elijah. He's almost sixteen, yeah, taller than me. This is our middle child, Graham, he's thirteen and also taller than me. I have heels on, but I think you're still taller than me. Okay, such a weird thing when your children get taller than you. I just can't explain. So Elijah, you're gonna stand here and you're gonna hand me the jars. Graham, you're gonna stand here and you're gonna take the jars from me and put them on
the shelf. I love these boys, I love them more than I ever thought possible, and I would do anything for them. But pouring out is scary. What if I pour out and I have nothing left for myself? What if no one recognizes me? What if no one appreciates me. If you're waiting for to be appreciated, you're gonna be waiting a long time. The prophet said, keep pouring. And sometimes when we feel empty, it's because we feel lost.
We feel like maybe we have nothing to contribute. A couple of years ago, ten years ago, to be exact, I was feeling lost. We had planted our church fifteen years ago, and when we did that, I involved in every single detail. We didn't have enough people, so it was all hands on deck. I was a worship leader, believe it or not, I was a teacher and e kids. And in the very early days of our church we had stopped meeting at my kitchen table. I knew everything
that was going on. At our church. But as the church grew and we were able to hire more people who could sing, and you know, we were able to buy a table and get an office space for our staff, and our family started to grow. I gradually began to step away and take care of our family, and I love being at home with our toddlers. But I felt left out. I felt like everyone else was having a blast without me, and like I didn't know anything that
was going on anymore. And I just felt like I had nothing to contribute, and I wanted to be asked to do something like lead something, or organize something, or maybe be on the worship team again, which never happened. And I started to have a pity party because no one was picking up on the hints that I was dropping.
I've never been there before, and I remember one day just realizing, wait a minute, I mean, I don't really have that much time anyway, But I could do what we're asking everyone else in the church to do right now, which was lead an EE group. I did have a lot of time, but I had one evening a week, so I started an EE group for young married women here Graham and I started to pour every day. I was wiping noses, and I was cutting food into tiny
little pieces. But every Tuesday night, I was pouring into the women in my homes. You got two and we talked about how to be a godly wife, and we read books together, and we memorized scripture together. It was just a little thing, but I kept pouring. And that group came to an end. So I started another group and I poured into them. And then I started another
group and I poured into them. And then what I had been teaching all those years, I turned it into a little Bible study for the women of our church. That one was a little bit more. And you know, sometimes we go through seasons with the emptiness. So it's more than just it's more than just the feeling that we don't have purpose. Sometimes it is the feeling that you don't have enough to make it. And I know that some of you un the sound of my voice.
You're like my friend, and you're going through the hardest thing you've ever been through. You're fighting for your life and the word of the Lord for you today. Just keep pouring. You have to keep pouring, because the miracle only happens when you move, because it's while you pour oh, I'm out of jars. It's while you pour that you experience God's strength and his grace and the joy that only comes while you pour, because now you're pouring with a purpose. She was pouring for those boys, but she
was never pouring from a full jar. She was pouring from a jar that only had a little bit of oil. And if you wait, thanks, guys, if you wait until you feel full to pour, you will never experience the power of God in your life, and you'll never experience the miracle a feeling my God is just pouring through you. Sometimes when you pour, it does feel like a sacrifice, a sacrifice that no one will ever see. You know
what Jesus said in Luke six point thirty eight. He said, give and it will be given unto you a good measure. Press it down, shaken together, Get that jar full, because it will be running over into your lap. Jesus said, you just keep giving and I will pour into you. Our instinct says, hold on tightly to everything you have, But Jesus says, just keep giving. Be generous with your love, be generous with your time, be generous with your encouragement.
When you feel empty, just keep pouring. So here's how the story ends. When all the jars were full, she said to her sons, bring me another one, but he replied, there's not a jar left. Then the oil stopped flowing. She went and told the Man of God, and he said, go and sell the oil and pay off your debts. You and your sons can live on what's left. Can I give you a bonus point? Live on what's left?
See when you're in a pouring season, that season where you're fighting for your life and you just keep your head down and you keep pouring. You pour when you're tired. You pour when you feel like no one notices. You pour when everyone else's kids are acting right, but yours. You poor when your friend gets pregnant by accident, but you still can't get pregnant on purpose. You pour when someone else gets the promotions. You pour when you need a healing in your own body. And the next thing
you know, you made it through another day. You don't know how, but you did. And one day you turn around and you've got a pantry full of oil to live on. Live on what's lest. Remember Remember that Bible study that I wrote for the women of our church when we were in the pandemic. My husband and I were just praying about how we could help people during this time, Like what else could we do? I said, well,
I have this little Bible study. So we sent out a message on Facebook and thousands of women from all over the world responded and for eight weeks, every Tuesday night they joined me live and we studied how to be a godly wife. Somehow you made it through those dark days. But now you see all along, through the pain and the confusion and the heartache you've been stockpiling. She lost her husband. She's not going to get her husband back, but she had something left to live on.
Oh oh, here's that friendship that I made sitting in chemo treatments. And here's the verse that God gave me when I was crying on the couch. And here's here's the song that I listened to every single day for months. And every time I hear that song, it just reminds me of the faithfulness of God. And oh oh, here's that gratitude journal where I learned how to look for the little blessings. Now I get to live on what's
left a million little miracles. Don't be afraid of the empty spaces, because empty is where God does his best work. When I look back at the times when I felt the most empty, those were the times when my faith grew the most. And we get so afraid of being empty that we failed to realize that that's exactly where God wants us to be. God's like, oh, you feel empty, Let's get to work. What do you have now? We can work with that. There's a song on the new album.
You might not have gotten to it yet because it's after talking to Jesus and wait on You and shall not Want, so you maybe haven't gotten that far in the album yet. It's called come Again, and I ask our team to come and sing it because I have literally had it on repeat for the last two weeks because there's this line in the song that says, this empty space is what you want it all along, So I thought this song might minister to you too. God wants to fill that space in your heart today that
only he can fill. He's here, He's right here in this moment. Starts with just crying out. He hears our cries. He's with us in our most desperate and our most broken, in our most disappointed moments. He doesn't need you to get it together for him. Does it need you to have a full jar of oil? He wants to comfort you where you are right now. He wants to restore your joy. He wants to heal your heart. It starts
when you cry out thank you for joining us. Special thanks to those of you who give generously to this ministry. Is because of you that this ministry is possible. You can click the link in the description to give now, or visit Elevationchurch dot org slash podcast for more information and if you enjoyed the podcast, you can subscribe. You can share it with your friends. You can click the share button, take a screenshot and share it on your
social stories and tag us at Elevation Church. Thanks again for listening. God bless you