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God Won't Put More On You Than You Can Bear

by "Carl" <saints@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 29, 2008 at 12:42 PM

The following sermon by David Dykes is from a series entitled "No, that's 
NOT in the Bible!" In this sermon David Dykes shows us that sometimes God 
brings us things we feel we cannot handle to bring us closer to Him and to

be changed in the manner He wants us to be.

May God bless,
Carl
my website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
my blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/

---

God Won't Put More On You Than You Can Bear
by David O. Dykes

The phrase "God helps those who help themselves" is often uttered with a 
harsh tone of condescension, but not so with the statement, "God won't put

more on you than you can bear."1 These words are usually spoken out of
deep 
concern and compassion. There is no criticism implied in this statement, 
only kindness.

Join me down at the funeral home for a minute. Joan is standing beside the

casket of her husband of 45 years. It is visitation time and friends are 
dropping by to share their condolences. A caring friend approaches her and

hugs her and asks, "How are you doing, Joan?" Joan chokes out her
response, 
"Not too good, Betty, I really think I'm losing it. I don't think I'm
going 
to be able to stand this pain. It's just too much!"

Betty feels she needs to say something to help her friend so she says, "Oh

honey, I'm so sorry. I really am. Just remember, God won't put more on you

than you can bear." Joan nods mutely. Now, Betty isn't trying to mislead
her 
friend. She's just trying to encourage her to hang in there and not give
up.

After Betty leaves Joan ponders those words. She thinks, "If God won't put

more on us than we can bear, then what's wrong with me? Because I don't 
think I can bear this pain." Hours earlier she stood in her husband's
closet 
and when she caught a whiff of the unique fragrance of his clothes, she
fell 
to the floor and curled into a fetal position and cried until her tear
ducts 
were dehydrated.

No, she realizes she isn't doing a good job of enduring this pain. She 
thinks she must not be very close to God, or maybe her faith is just so
weak 
she can't trust God enough. So, she pulls herself together to speak to the

other friends. She thinks she's doing better, but then as she's driving
home 
later that night, a song comes on the radio that reminds her of a special 
memory with Jim and suddenly she's blubbering again. No, she's definitely 
not bearing it well. So she wonders, "What's wrong with me?"

The problem is that Betty expressed a theological maxim-she made a 
categorical statement about the character and nature of God. It's like 
saying, "God is holy." Or "God is love." Or "God has promised He will
never 
leave us nor forsake us." All of those statements are found in the Bible. 
But as you search the pages of scripture, you never find the statement:
God 
will never put more on you than you can bear.

So, I want to say to Joan, and all the other folks who have passed the 
breaking point, "There's nothing wrong with you. Betty meant well, and she

really cares for you, but she's no theologian. Your pain IS more than you 
can endure alone. And God didn't put it there, by the way.

One reason Bible believing Christians think the Bible says "God won't put 
more on you than you can bear" is because there is a scripture that almost

says that. The Bible does say in I Corinthians 10:13, "No temptation has 
seized you except what is common to man. And God is faithful; he will not 
let you be TEMPTED beyond what you can bear. But when you are tempted he 
will also provide a way out so you can stand up under it." God is faithful

and He will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you can bear. I can 
assure you when you are tempted to cheat, steal, commit adultery, worry,
or 
murder, you can never say, "Sorry, God, that temptation was just more than
I 
could endure." God always makes a way to escape temptation. But can you
say 
"God won't put more temptation on you than you can bear?" No, because the 
Bible clearly says God never tempts us. "When tempted, no one should say, 
'God is tempting me.' For God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does he tempt

anyone." (James 1:13)

So if you have a friend who struggles with lust, and he's leaving on a 
business trip it is appropriate to say, "Just remember, friend, God won't 
allow you to be TEMPTED beyond what you can bear, so resist the
temptation!" 
If you ever hear anyone say they gave into temptation because it was more 
than they could bear, you know they're lying.

But I've never heard people share this psuedo-scripture when someone is 
facing temptation. It's usually quoted when someone is in the midst of 
painful trouble. That trouble may be in the form of emotional, physical, 
spiritual, or relational pain. Let's carefully consider this question
"Will 
you ever experience trouble, stress, or pressure that is more than you can

bear?" I'd like to offer four observations about the statement, "God won't

put more on you than you can bear."

I. FOLLOWERS OF JESUS MAY EXPERIENCE UNBEARABLE PRESSURE

Most of us would agree Paul was a true follower of Jesus. But we learn
this 
man who was "in Christ" sometimes faced trouble and pressure so severe he 
couldn't bear it-or at least he couldn't bear it alone. Here is his
amazing 
confession found in II Corinthians 1:8-10, We do not want you to be 
uninformed, brothers, about the hard****ps (thilipsis) we suffered in the 
province of Asia. We were under great pressure, far beyond our ability to 
endure, so that we despaired even of life. Indeed, in our hearts we felt
the 
sentence of death. But this happened that we might not rely on ourselves
but 
on God, who raises the dead. He has delivered us from such a deadly peril,

and he will deliver us. On him we have set our hope that he will continue
to 
deliver us, as you help us with your prayers."

Paul could stand here today and say, "I've faced so much pain, so much 
pressure and hard****p in my life as a Christian that I finally had to
admit 
that as a sufferer I was powerless to help myself. I once heard the 
expression 'God won't put more on you than you can bear.' That's not true.

There have been times I've been so burdened down with the weight of
problems 
and despair I couldn't bear it. I wouldn't even be here today if God
hadn't 
delivered me." In II Corinthians 11:24-28 he recounts some of the troubles

he faced: Five times I received from the Jews the forty lashes minus one. 
Three times I was beaten with rods, once I was stoned, three times I was 
****pwrecked, I spent a night and a day in the open sea, I have been 
constantly on the move. I have been in danger from rivers, in danger from 
bandits, in danger from my own countrymen, in danger from Gentiles, in 
danger in the city, in danger in the country, in danger at sea, and in 
danger from false brothers. I have labored and toiled and have often gone 
without sleep; I have known hunger and thirst have often gone without
food; 
I have been cold and ****d. Besides everything else, I face daily the 
pressure of my concern for all the churches."

Can we use Paul as an example of a Spirit-filled Christian? He told us to 
follow his example. And you can't deny the fact he bore pressure beyond
his 
ability to endure. So, the first point is to understand sometimes
Christians 
hurt so deeply that it is more than they can bear. A few weeks ago, Dr. 
Howard Hendricks made an observation I haven't forgotten. He said, 
"Sometimes life gets so tough that you don't just hit rock bottom-you
crash 
through it!" So, welcome to suffering. Now, let's move on the second 
observation about this misquote.

II. THIS MISQUOTE HAS CREATED UNNECESSARY CONFUSION AND GUILT

This misquote is usually spoken out of kindness, but it can cause great 
confusion and guilt.

1. Theological confusion: Does God put adversity on me?

It can create confusion about God because it suggests it is God who put 
adversity and trouble in our lives. Is God a malevolent deity who weighs
His 
children down with pain and suffering? No, the Bible teaches He is a
loving 
Father who has plans for good, not to harm His children. I'm a dad, and as

imperfect as I am, I would never burden my children with suffering. The
only 
time I ever intentionally caused pain to my children was when I had to 
discipline them. And as we discussed in the message on "Spare the Rod;
Spoil 
the Child" God sometimes disciplines His children to bring them back to
His 
heart.

The vast majority of suffering in the world comes from the devil and from 
the consequences of living in a fallen world full on sin. God doesn't put 
this suffering on us, but He allows suffering to happen. God usually gets 
blamed for every disaster and accident. How many times have you heard 
someone ask, "How could God allow those children to die in that tornado?" 
More than a few times, I've heard someone say something like, "I just
can't 
believe in a God who allows all those people to die in an earthquake in 
Peru."

The purpose of this message is not to fully develop this topic. (See March

29, 2002 message entitled, "Why do Good People Suffer?" for more
information 
on this topic) But in a nutshell, the reason sickness and natural
disasters 
are present in this world is because we are living in a messed-up fallen 
world. It's part of the consequences of cor****ate sin. Suffering exists in

this world like nuclear fallout after an atom bomb. We all suffer from the

"fall-out from the fall." In a way, it's like a person who smoked two
packs 
of cigarettes a day for twenty years asking, "God, how you allow me to get

lung cancer?" Blame sin, blame Satan, blame our bad choices, but don't
blame 
God for putting trouble in your life. Life isn't fair, but God IS good.

2. Emotional guilt: Why am I falling apart?

This misquote causes guilt because it can make broken people think they
are 
second-class Christians if they pass the breaking point. There are
thousands 
of Christians who have mental and emotional problems-perhaps they have a 
chemical imbalance causing them to suffer from clinical depression.
They've 
heard this theological platitude so many times they may avoid seeking 
professional help. They presume if they are truly right with God they
don't 
need to see a doctor. And if it is true God won't put more on them than
they 
can bear, then it stands to reason they shouldn't have to take medicine to

deal with their emotional pressure. So instead of admitting they may need 
professional help, or taking medicine to correct a chemical imbalance,
they 
continue to press on thinking they ought to be able to handle the stress
and 
pain.

I recently read the about a woman named Ellie Petersen who found herself 
suddenly facing a terrible nightmare of adversity. Ellie's four-year-old 
granddaughter came over to her house to play while her mother ran some 
errands. They were out in the yard playing catch with an inflatable ball. 
Ellie accidentally threw the ball over Ashley's head and she watched in 
horror as Ashley ran between two cars parked in the curb toward the
street. 
Ellie screamed for her to stop, but Ashley never heard her-she ran into
the 
street and never saw the car that hit her.

Ellie was sitting in the ER waiting for Ashley's parents to arrive. Her
good 
friend from church, Rebecca, heard the bad news and rushed to the hospital

to console her. In her desire to say something to help, Rebecca said,
"Pull 
yourself together, Ellie, remember, God won't put more on you than you can

bear."

The article observed: "The words hit Ellie like a sledgehammer. Instantly,

thoughts and feelings swirled around her brain until she thought she would

pass out. Was she supposed to bear this? Was she less of a Christian
because 
she couldn't? How dare Rebecca speak so smugly and sanctimoniously to 
her...it wasn't HER granddaughter who was lying here, broken. Shame was 
added to her guilt and despair, grief was multiplied as condemnation was 
heaped upon her shoulders, all in the name of kindness."

That's the danger of this spurious theological statement. There are 
multitudes of people under unbearable pressure, and they have passed by
the 
breaking point. They're struggling with the death of a spouse, or the
death 
of a child, or a divorce, or a job loss, or a cancer diagnosis, or an 
unfaithful spouse, or a teenager arrested on drug charges, or a parent
with 
Alzheimer's. I could go on endlessly. We are surrounded by people with 
broken hearts, broken hopes, or broken homes. When these broken people
hear 
the statement, "God won't put more on you than you can bear" they think, 
"Uh, oh. What's wrong with me?"

Okay, then, why does God allow me to experience unbearable pressure? We
won't 
know all the reasons until we see Jesus face to face, but I believe one of

the reasons God allows us to pass the breaking point is because:

III. UNBEARABLE PRESSURE TEACHES ME THAT I CAN'T MAKE IT ALONE

Paul wrote in II Corinthians 1:9-11, "But this happened that we might not 
rely on ourselves but on God, who raises the dead. He has delivered us
from 
such a deadly peril, and he will deliver us. On him we have set our hope 
that he will continue to deliver us, as you help us with your prayers."
Paul 
basically said two im****tant things we all must learn:

1. I can't make it without God

Paul confessed it got so bad he "despaired even unto death." His pain and 
despair was so deep he just knew he was going to die. But then he turned
to 
his heart to God, and thought, "Hey, even if I do die, my God raises the 
dead, so I'm going to hang on to Him."

I do a great deal of my research online using the search engine Google.
The 
good thing about the Internet is that it provides an unlimited source of 
information. The bad thing about the Internet is that it provides an 
unlimited source of information. A few weeks ago, I simply plugged in the 
phrase "God won't put more on you than you can bear" (in quotation marks
to 
refine the search) There were more links than I could trace, but one of
the 
links took me to a message board. And when I read what one struggling
mother 
wrote, I wept. Her are her exact words:

Where do i start? i need a new place to live. i need a new job. i need to
be 
able to sup****t myself and the boys without counting on johnny, who is in 
self-destruct mode. (two tickets gone to warrant, his Mack truck 
unregistered for two years, probably on drugs--grey skin, wild eyes...) 
people don't want to rent to a single mother with two boys and a cat.
people 
don't want to rent to a woman with bad credit. people don't want to rent
to 
a crisis magnet. to summon the energy to look for yet another job (third
in 
two years), and look for another home (third in two years), look for other

childcare (fifth in two years) is more than i can bear. the bible says god

won't give you more than you can bear. okay, god, i can't bear this. i
need 
help.

I have never used instant messaging or posted on a web board, but when I 
read those words I composed a reply telling her the Bible never says that,

and that God will help her. I gave her some scriptures and told her to
seek 
help from of God's people. I don't know if the response ever got back to
her 
or not. I gave her my email address and if she writes, I'll connect her to

one of the ladies in our Women in Motion ministry. But how many more
people 
like her do you think are out there? They may be in your office, or your 
apartment complex or they may be living in your home. Our message to them 
is, "YES, God does sometimes allow you to bear more pressure than you can 
endure-so you will seek Him."

2. I can't make it without your prayers

When people reach the breaking point, they first think they can tough it
out 
alone. When they can't, then they call upon the Lord, but part of trusting

the Lord with your pain is to seek the help and prayers of fellow 
strugglers. That's why the Bible says we are to "Bear one another burdens,

and so fulfill the law of Christ." (Galatians 6:2) The law of Christ is to

love your neighbor as yourself. One way you show your love to others is by

helping them carry their burdens. You may think, "I've got enough burdens
of 
my own, I don't want to carry anyone else's!" You'll find when you carry 
others burdens, yours gets lighter, too. And we should take all our
worries 
and cares and do as God directs us: "Cast all your cares upon Him for He 
cares for you." (I Peter 5:7)

Hurting people need the love and prayers of other people who have gone 
through some of the same pain. We have a Grief Share ministry here that 
allows grieving people to share their burdens with others-and I've heard 
countless testimonies from people who have told me our Grief Share
ministry 
literally saved their life. We have a Divorce Recovery ministry here
because 
people who go through the tragedy of divorce need the sup****t and care of 
people who know just how recently divorced people are feeling.

IV. GOD SUPPLIES HIS GRACE TO SUSTAIN ME IN TOUGH TIMES

I confess I used to believe God won't put more on you than you can bear. I

used to say it to people as if it came right from the scriptures. I
remember 
saying it once to a lady who lost her husband unexpectedly. When I said, 
"God won't put more on you than you can bear." She smiled and proceeded to

teach me a lesson I never got in seminary. She said, "Oh, I've heard that 
before. But I've never found it in the Bible. And I've found the opposite
to 
be true. I've found at times God WILL allow us to suffer more than we can 
bear-it makes us depend on Him. I have found that God will never put more
on 
you than God can bear, however."

That's true! Using Paul again as an example, he had one chronic problem
that 
never seemed to leave him. It's often called his "thorn in the flesh."
This 
is what Paul wrote about it in II Corinthians 12:7-10, "To keep from 
becoming conceited because of these surpassingly great revelations, there 
was given to me a thorn in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to torment me. 
Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But he said
to 
me, 'My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in 
weakness.' Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses,

so that Christ's power may rest on me. That is why for Christ's sake, I 
delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hard****ps, in persecutions, in 
difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong."

Through the years, scholars tried to guess what Paul's "thorn" problem
was. 
The theories range from epilepsy to ***ual temptation, to eye problems.
I'm 
glad we don't know what his thorn was. It's like men's socks: One size
fits 
all. Whatever his thorn was, the principle applies to whatever point of
pain 
we face. Three times Paul begged God in prayer to take it away. But God 
allowed Him to suffer this thorn for a reason. It made Paul depend on God 
instead of himself. And Paul just learned to live with the thorn.

Christians sometimes go through tough times. Robert Schuller once wrote a 
book entitled Tough Times Never Last But Tough People Do. I never really 
liked that title because it suggests if you're just tough enough, you can 
endure through tem****ary tough times. But for some people tough times do 
last. What about the inmate serving a life sentence? Try telling him tough

times don't last. What about those parents who have a severely mentally or

physically handicapped child? Try telling them tough times don't last.

The truth is sometimes tough times go on and on and none of us are tough 
enough on our own to handle it. So I'm thinking about writing a book 
entitled "Tough Times Seem to Go on Forever But Weak People Cry Out to God

for Help."

CONCLUSION

For the first twenty years of my Christian life I thought since I was a 
Spirit-filled Christian I should never display any kind of weakness or
need 
in my life. When I was 29, I was under a lot of stress and didn't even
know 
it. We recently built our first home and had done a lot of the work 
ourselves. In addition, I was fini****ng my doctoral work at Southern 
Seminary. To top it off, my mother was living with us and was dying from 
breast cancer. All the time I was also pastoring a growing, active church.

Looking back, I thought I had it all together, but I wasn't willing to
admit 
the amount of stress in my life. The way I dealt with it was to just work 
harder. After all, if I "broke down" and shared my pain with someone else,

it would prove either I wasn't strong enough or that God wasn't doing his 
job. I started losing weight, without trying to. I went to a doctor and he

ran tests including a Colonoscopy, but they couldn't find anything 
physically wrong with me.

I was leading a MasterLife group with five couples, and during one session

toward the end of the cycle we were sharing prayer requests and I was 
mentioning my mother, and my doctoral work when suddenly out of the blue,
I 
started weeping. I had never been much of a crier because my dad subtly 
taught me that real men don't cry. As I wept, these precious friends
(they're 
still my friends) gathered around me and hugged me and prayed for me.

It was my first of several "break downs" I've had since. In fact, Cindy
can 
tell you now I cry at anything. We were watching the movie "Seabiscuit"
the 
other night and during the big race as Seabiscuit pulls ahead she was 
clapping and I was sitting there crying like a baby.

As I look back, I think God did a powerful work in my life when I was 28.
He 
introduced me to the experience of brokenness. To us, a broken dish is 
worthless, or a broken television is no good, but to God, brokenness makes
a 
vessel more usable. God uses broken things. The little boy brought the
five 
loaves and two fish to Jesus and He broke them in order to feed thousands.

When Mary brought the spikenard of perfume to anoint Jesus, the vessel had

to be broken before the fragrance filled the room. And the body of Jesus
had 
to be broken before we could be forgiven. My personal prayer continues to
be 
that God will use my life to give Him glory, and I realize I must be
broken 
for Him to do that. I don't know where I'd be today, if God hadn't broken
me 
in 1983. I suspect that if I had "toughed it out" and said, "Shake it off,

David, remember, God won't lay more on you than you can bear," that I 
probably wouldn't be here sharing this message with you.

So remember, God will sometimes allow you to suffer more than you can 
bear-but that's okay, because His grace is sufficient!
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
God Won't Put More On You Than You Can Bear
"Carl" <sain  2008-04-29 12:42:48 

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tan13V112 Wed Jul 23 23:07:19 CDT 2008.