
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Joseph was a child loved by
One would expect that that level
Psalms 105 tells
When we consider
o You are a factor into your journey. For e.g. what really annoyed Joseph’s brothers was probably how he taunted them daily. You are a factor in your growth process. How you interact and respond determines how long your growth process will take.
o As Joseph navigated his journey, he was careful to purge himself of things not consistent with God i.e. pride, a sense of haste, unforgiveness, revenge, and a sense of entitlement. He needed to displace them so he could access his heights in God. However, the children of Israel couldn’t. If you don't displace it, it would dispose and depose you in the agenda of God and design of God for your destiny.
o You can’t step into the promise land with mixed sound. The older generation of the children of Israel wanted to enter into the promise land with an old wine skin - complaints, and a faulty mix of Christianity and worldliness.
o Joseph adopted selective remembrance. Two things happened in Joseph's past. All of the slight of hand I mentioned, but then in the same past, was the vision of the future that God gave to him. Knowing that all of these things were used by God to exalt him to save his nation, he only chose to focus on the dream and forget the slight. What you choose to remember reinforces either faulty dysfunctions in your life or launches you into the picture God showed you. Choosing to forget is not denial that those events happened, it is removing the power of those events to determine the future in front of you. You have the power of remembrance. Take away the shame, allow yourself a new lease of life. Your age in your experience is not an exclusion criteria in your emergence in the scheme of things. Those events didn't happen to you to disqualify you but actually to prepare you. The intent of the enemy is to make you think your story is your disqualifier but if you will look at it from a redemptive lens, see it as a preparatory pathway for the glorious destiny He has designed for you and the emancipation of others
By Powerpoint TribeJoseph was a child loved by
One would expect that that level
Psalms 105 tells
When we consider
o You are a factor into your journey. For e.g. what really annoyed Joseph’s brothers was probably how he taunted them daily. You are a factor in your growth process. How you interact and respond determines how long your growth process will take.
o As Joseph navigated his journey, he was careful to purge himself of things not consistent with God i.e. pride, a sense of haste, unforgiveness, revenge, and a sense of entitlement. He needed to displace them so he could access his heights in God. However, the children of Israel couldn’t. If you don't displace it, it would dispose and depose you in the agenda of God and design of God for your destiny.
o You can’t step into the promise land with mixed sound. The older generation of the children of Israel wanted to enter into the promise land with an old wine skin - complaints, and a faulty mix of Christianity and worldliness.
o Joseph adopted selective remembrance. Two things happened in Joseph's past. All of the slight of hand I mentioned, but then in the same past, was the vision of the future that God gave to him. Knowing that all of these things were used by God to exalt him to save his nation, he only chose to focus on the dream and forget the slight. What you choose to remember reinforces either faulty dysfunctions in your life or launches you into the picture God showed you. Choosing to forget is not denial that those events happened, it is removing the power of those events to determine the future in front of you. You have the power of remembrance. Take away the shame, allow yourself a new lease of life. Your age in your experience is not an exclusion criteria in your emergence in the scheme of things. Those events didn't happen to you to disqualify you but actually to prepare you. The intent of the enemy is to make you think your story is your disqualifier but if you will look at it from a redemptive lens, see it as a preparatory pathway for the glorious destiny He has designed for you and the emancipation of others