(Un)Qualified: How God Uses Broken People to Do Big Things Audiobook
(Un)Qualified: How God Uses Broken People to Do Big Things Audiobook
- Kaleo Griffith
- Random House (Audio)
- 2016-03-01
- 6 h 2 min
Summary:
Who you imagine you are is not as important as who God says you are…
Many of us wrestle with the space between our weaknesses and our dreams, between who we are and who God says we are designed to be. We feel unqualified to accomplish God’s work or to live out the phoning we imagine. But God includes a method of using our weaknesses for good. Actually, God loves unqualified people.
In (Un)Qualified, Pastor Steven Furtick helps you peel back the assumptions you’ve produced about yourself and find out about (El)Qualified: How God Uses Broken People to Do Big Things yourself as God sees you. Because true peace and self-confidence come not from worldly excellence but from acceptance: God’s approval of you, your approval of yourself, as well as your approval of God’s procedure for change.
This is a book about understanding your identity in light of who God is. It’s a reserve about coming to terms with the nice, the bad, and the unmentionable in your daily life and understanding how to allow God make use of you. It’s about charging into the gap in the middle of your present as well as your hopes and meeting God there. In the end, God can’t bless who you pretend to become. But he longs to bless who you really are; a flawed and damaged person. Positive thing for all of us that God is normally available of using broken people to perform big things.
Being unqualified is God’s favorite qualification…
Our culture tells all of us that the answer to our failures is to repair them. The answer to our weaknesses is to cover them. The secret to our success is to appear as flawless as is possible. But God’s qualifying system is different compared to the world’s. So is definitely his view of our weaknesses, our purpose, and our true selves.
In (Un)Qualified, Steven Furtick explores who God is really as the great “I AM,” and assists us discover our very own identity. Delving in to the story of Jacob, Furtick invites us to recognize our weaknesses and ask God to sort out them.
The simple truth is, God has created us to become more, to perform more, and to love life a lot more than we ever thought possible. But to become who he has called us to be, we must embrace who we are right now. (Un)Qualified equips us to handle road blocks and failures without shedding a feeling of purpose. We are able to have a flourishing sense of hope that God is definitely employed in us and through us, not really regardless of our weaknesses but often as the result of them.