01-07-2026 PART 2: From Bad to Rad: When God Says “That’s Enough”
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
-
ナレーター:
-
著者:
このコンテンツについて
Section 1
This teaching centers on a powerful biblical pattern: God allows hardship only up to the point necessary to fulfill His purpose, and then He intervenes. Using the account of Joseph in Genesis, the message highlights how human reasoning often fails because it lacks the full picture. Joseph’s life appeared to be a chain of injustices—betrayed by his brothers, sold into slavery, falsely accused, and forgotten in prison. Yet Joseph himself frames the entire ordeal with one defining truth: what others intended for harm, God intended for good. The suffering was real, the injustice undeniable, but God was actively working toward the saving of many lives. This reframes pain not as abandonment, but as part of a divine design that only God can see from beginning to end.
Section 2
A parallel example is drawn from the book of Esther, where Haman’s plot against Mordecai is allowed to advance only until God declares it finished. Haman builds the very instrument meant to destroy Mordecai, only to be destroyed by it himself. This reinforces the principle that God remains sovereign over evil intentions, permitting them only within His limits. The message then becomes personal, illustrating how God sometimes allows destructive patterns to continue until the exact moment He says, “That’s enough.” When God speaks that boundary, no force in heaven or earth can override it. What follows is not just rescue, but transformation—what was meant to destroy becomes the very place where God’s mercy, authority, and redirection are revealed.
Section 3
Isaiah 54:16–17 anchors the teaching by affirming God’s ultimate control over every weapon, every accusation, and every destructive force. God alone determines how far adversity may go, and no weapon formed against His servants will ultimately succeed. This does not mean believers never fall or struggle, but it does mean they are never defeated. The refining of faith, though painful, is declared more valuable than gold, and God personally guards that process. Whether hardship is past, present, or future, the assurance remains the same: God has a stopping point. When He declares, “That’s enough,” grace rushes in, purposes are revealed, and what once looked devastating becomes radically redemptive