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Restless: Because You Were Made For More

Jennie Allen author chat on FaithGateway Tuesday January 28th,quote by jennie allen from restless you were made for more

Do you feel restless? What if this feeling weren’t a bad thing?

This feeling could be a longing, a restlessness for more of God. It could push us to move forward, to live epic lives that were designed before the foundations of earth were laid.

But a lot of us, if we’re honest, are afraid. We hold close to our chest new and scary dreams that may just be from God to play a small part in something bigger. God wants to take the seemingly mundane messy threads of your life to weave something beautiful.

What would happen if God got bigger than your fear and insecurity, and you spent the rest of your life running after his purposes for you?

Jennie is an award-winning and bestselling author and Bible study teacher who will walk you through a practical plan to identify the threads of your life and how to intentionally weave them together for God’s glory and purposes.

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Watch Restless Session 1: God’s Story

The place where you restless soul meets God is the place where nothing ever feels small again.

Restless is about God. It’s a book about us and God. And it is a book about the moment we close our eyes and see God. Restless is a book about facing the God of the universe and answering to Him about the life and the resources that he gave us while we were here.

And because I think we all want that moment to go well, Restless is about discovering ourselves and getting over ourselves all at the same time, being brave enough to imagine a better world and how we may be used to make it that way.

I’m not good with catchy titles. I just name projects based on how I feel… so here it is – here is what I feel and I have a hunch I am not the only one:

RESTLESS… because you were made for more

I believe this is from Him and I pray it will spark something in you… a vision perhaps of the unique reason God keeps issuing you breath.

We have a call to dream.

The Old Testament described a day in the future about which God said:

I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams,
your young men will see visions. — Joel 2:28

God promised a day would come when His people would be filled with his own Spirit. And when they were full of God, God himself would give His people dreams and visions.

Dreams and visions.

This day has happened. The Holy Spirit flooded the earth at Pentecost, and immediately after, Peter reminded them of the promise of that day:

No, this is what was spoken by the prophet Joel: In the last days, God says, ‘I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your young men will see visions, your old men will dream dreams.’ — Acts 2:16-17

We live in the last days. We are filled with the Spirit of God, and we’re living on this earth for relatively few days to accomplish the will and work and wonders of God. Why do we do this? So that “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved” (Joel 2:32).

Our creative God has an infinite number of creative plans to make himself known through us, his image bearers, so he sent his Spirit to give unique visions to unique people to reach the world in unique and beautiful ways.

The Spirit of God has dreams for you.

And he has given you an abundance of gifts, resources, people, and vision to accomplish his dreams for you. If you do not feel that way yet, you will.

What if?

What if the things you love to do collided with the plans God has laid out for you from before the foundations of the earth?

What if the random relationships and activities in your life all of the sudden had a focus and felt intentional and meaningful?

What if the things that have caused the most hurt in your life became the birthplaces of your deepest passions?

What if you could get past your fears and insecurities and spend the rest of your life running your guts out after his purposes for you?

May this be the place where your restless soul meets God and where dirty beige sofas become beautiful and where no life or minute or breath ever feels small again.

SESSION 1: GOD’S STORY

My son Cooper was born and lived three and a half years of his life in Africa. He is five now and is wrestling with the fact that his skin color is a few — strike that — many shades darker than the rest of his family’s. He keeps running his hand up and down my arm and asking me, “Where can we go, so I can get skin like this?”

He’s not speaking with knowledge of the painful history of his skin color in our country yet. Right now he just wants to be like his family. His identity is unique in our family. He has a heritage that each of us appreciates deeply, but we do not share it. So he quietly asks me as we lay in bed before prayers:

“Why did God make me born in Africa?”

“Why did God put me in another mommy’s tummy?”

“Why did God make me?”

I can’t deny that the answers to many of my son’s questions are painful. Abandonment usually undergirds the beautiful tragedy of adoption. Even though he finds himself in a loving family now, we can never make that painful truth go away.

It’s usually dark as we lay in bed to pray and talk. Cooper doesn’t know that every time he asks me these questions, I have tears running down my face as I preach my guts out in his bottom bunk:

“Not one part of you is by accident, Cooper. God made you and placed you in your African mama’s tummy. He knew even then that I would be your forever mama and we would be your forever family. We were made for you and you were made for us.

“Cooper, you were made to show the world God. Everything that God gives you, your Africa, your America, your dark skin and your strong legs, your hurts, your words, your blessings, your smart mind… everything you have is to use for God while you are here.

“And God will show you how. Soon we will be in heaven with God forever, but while we are here now, we have to use all we have for God.”

My five-year-old needs to know his life was on purpose and for a purpose. He wants to know he wasn’t an accident. I can’t take away the pain of his story, but I can tell him there is purpose. We all want to know we are not accidents. We all want to know our stories are going somewhere on purpose.

Something deep down inside us is made to live for a story bigger than ourselves—the story of the one who made us. Any other version of this story will consistently feel shallow and empty.

Cooper will never make sense of his life until he understands that eternal story, and the God who made him and placed him in his spot. It’s a big earth, and when Cooper studies it, he sees countries separated by a huge ocean and he feels lost and small in it.

I think a lot of us feel lost and small.

And because of that we desperately want to find “God’s will for me.” We want to know that we exist on purpose and for a purpose. We often try to fi nd “God’s will for me” without simply first understanding God’s will. But we will only ever discover his will for us within God’s will for this earth, for eternity, and for his people. We were made for this story—his story. And yes, he wrote little parts for each of us in his story. Or else we wouldn’t exist.

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STUDY

Read Hebrews 10:36-12:3

Answer the following questions in your personal journal or the Restless Study Guide.

RESPOND

  • In your own words summarize the story of God’s work on earth as told in Hebrews 10:36-12:3.
  • What was the most defining thing about these men and women?
  • Define faith. (Hebrews 11:1)
  • In what different ways did the people in those verses live out their faith?
  • Describe the actions of someone without faith. (Hebrews 10:38-39)
  • Describe some of the things that happen because of faith in these lives. (Hebrews 11)
  • The author of Hebrews has a goal for the readers. He wants them to understand the history of God on earth for a reason. what is his goal in sharing this history of faith? (Hebrews 12:1-3)
  • What do you think was the main thing God was accomplishing on earth through these generations of people?

WHAT IS GOD AFTER?

My little Cooper, Rahab, Lance Armstrong, Abraham Lincoln, Alexander the Great, and every other single human on the face of the earth has found his or her story in the confines of God’s story. The history of the world fits in a small crevice of the history of God. And throughout that history, God is after one great purpose. And every one of our unique callings will fit into this one.

God is most after his glory.

Glory is the visible expression of God’s character on this earth.

So just as Abraham in faith followed God into the wilderness, bringing God glory, when you bravely obey or sacrifice or risk in faith to follow God, you bring him glory.

God’s chief pursuit is that his glory, through us, would fill the earth. Everyone of our unique callings will display hints of the glory of
our God.

THE PROBLEM

We ache to be a part of something great, and it makes us nervous at the same time. We were built for this, but we all fight hundreds of mixed motives and fears.

Jesus said of us, “Whoever believes in me . . . they will do even greater things than these” (John 14:12). It almost sounds blasphemous to do even greater things than Jesus. We rarely say it, but often when we start to have great thoughts or visions, we quickly dismiss them, afraid that we may become arrogant or prideful. Or much worse, simply that we would appear prideful.

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God gave man two commands: be fruitful and fill the earth. He kept repeating this phrase in history in a beautiful effort to fill the earth with his image through us—an earth full of the glory of God.

Instead of filling the earth with God’s glory, humans they came together to build a tower and to make a name for themselves (Genesis 11). John Piper says of this tower and of our souls, “Man was made to rely on God and give him glory. Instead man chose to rely on himself and seek his own glory—to make a name for himself.” (John Piper, “God Created Us for His Glory,” Desiring God)

We all will have to fight this. Perhaps it is the biggest hurdle we must cross to living our purposes. At the base of our souls, are we building for God or us?

Take just a minute and pray. Ask God to reveal your motives.

What is the driving force of your life?

Whatever you just wrote, within this great story, God provided the remedy to our souls. To overcome us, God would make a great sacrifice.

(Christ) is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature, and he upholds the universe by the word of his power. After making purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high. – Hebrews 1:3 ESV

Christ in us would be the hope of glory (Colossians 1:27). For the joy set before him, he endured the cross. It is a joy that we share. The joy of a forever with a God who is entirely good and who chose us to become his children. The whole earth will be full of his glory; evil will be crushed. Until then we run, showing God to the world and not growing weary.

This history of faith we read about in Hebrews is there because God wants us to see we have a part in his story. He wants us to live motivated by faith in the unseen, and to run.

So we fight the desire to build our own towers. When we do the great things he prepared in advance for us to do (Ephesians 2:10), but we do them in and through and for the name and glory of God.

GREATER THINGS

We were made to do great things, but we cannot live with motives unchecked. If our motives are the glory of God, we have tremendous freedom to dream with hearts that are completely his.

I want to have a faith that God can move through.

I want Cooper to understand he isn’t just made for a purpose; he was placed in this time and space for the greatest imaginable purpose. He will show God to a world that doesn’t know him, in his beautiful and unique way. He will bring light to darkness. He will assemble the pieces of his life not into a tower for his name that would only crumble, but he will assemble them for the name and glory of the one God Almighty.

Well, he’s five, and currently we are working on not throwing rocks, but that’s the hope. That’s the prayer. That’s the sermon he’s going to keep hearing.

Our hearts must be completely his before we can start to dream.

For the eyes of the Lord move to and fro throughout the earth that He may strongly support those whose heart is completely His. – 2 Chronicles 16:9 NASB

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Your Turn

Jesus said, “I have brought you glory on earth by finishing the work you gave me to do.” (John 17:4). Jesus said this before he died. I want to say that before I die too. Will you join me on this journey?