* Ambition is a great follower, but a terrible leader.
* Letting ambition in the driver’s seat will cause you to arrive at a place God did not intend for you to be.
* Waiting on God gives you:
* Purity - purifies your ambition so you want what God wants you to want.
* Presence - like waiting to eat until the person you’ve invited shows up.
* Power - “those who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength…”
* The result of not waiting - you forfeit what was supposed to be you...
* Ambition is a great follower, but a terrible leader.
* Letting ambition in the driver’s seat will cause you to arrive at a place God did not intend for you to be.
* Waiting on God gives you:
* Purity - purifies your ambition so you want what God wants you to want.
* Presence - like waiting to eat until the person you’ve invited shows up.
* Power - “those who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength…”
* The result of not waiting - you forfeit what was supposed to be yours.
* Backstory - the Philistines had the Israelites in a pinch, so they needed God’s help.
* They waited for Samuel to show up and sacrifice the animals, but he didn’t show for a week.
* Vs 7-13 - Saul took matters into his own hands.
* The king jumped ahead of the priest.
* He “felt compelled” - he put his thing ahead of God’s thing and therefore he had a false peace about doing something that was wrong.
* Saul’s ambition to win field his decision to move forward when he should’ve held back.
* His “feeling” should have been weighed by Scripture.
* Vs 14 - Saul was replaced by a man who would be “after God’s heart.”
* This is the first mention of that phrase, which shows that Saul was after his own heart and not God’s.
* Going after someone’s heart is about pursuit, like a server at a restaurant. They want to win your affection.
* From “Rescuing Ambition” - waiting cultivates patience and redefines our definition of productivity.
* “For God, productivity is wrapped up in transformation - it’s about who we are becoming, not what we are accomplishing.”
* What do we do? Two Keys:
* 1) The “state” of waiting - your mindset where you let the priest lead the king.
* Don’t take matters into your own hands. Don’t bust doors open. It’s a faith “walk,” not run.
* 2) The “service” of waiting - your method where you actively serve while you wait.
* Be busy about your task at hand. Don’t focus on the next big thing. Cultivate faithfulness.
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