The God of the Night Before – Video Sermon by Bishop TD Jakes

The fact, the Bible says, “Forgetting those things which are behind and reaching to those things which are before. We press toward the mark of the prize of the high calling of God”. It’s marked. It is where it is, and the devil can’t keep movin’ it back, but it does feel like that sometimes. It feels like every time you’re on the verge of finally gettin’ your hands around the thing you believe that God to do, that the devil said, “Uh-uh, no, I’m movin’ it back. Now, keep comin’. I’m movin’ it back”. He can’t move it back. He can’t move it back. He can’t move it back, and it’s not far. In fact, it really wasn’t far to go from Egypt to the Promised Land. It wasn’t far. It should’ve taken a few days, about three days to get there. The three days. It ended up 40 years. Isn’t it amazing how somethin’ that should’ve happened quick can take a long time? It’s not like they kept movin’ the Promised Land. Hah-hah, no, come on, no, come on, come on. Ha-ha, no, you’re not there yet for 40 year, hm. It was always where it was supposed to be.

The problem with most people when they read the Bible, it said they’re reading from the other side of the story. We’re reading about Jesus and Mary and Joseph, 2.000 years later. We know how the story ends. We know everything works out okay. We also know who he is to us, everything, but imagine if you were Joseph, and you had found a beautiful young lady that you had been seeing for some time and announced to all of your friends that she was gonna be your bride, and you had begun to set in place the things that were necessary to endow her and to give her a dowry and to honor her, and to recognize her, but before you could get to the wedding, she started pickin’ up weight, I mean, a lot of weight, all in the middle.

And being a gentleman, you didn’t wanna say anything about it ’cause, you know, you notice things, but you don’t say anything at first, but after a while, it will force some conversation. “Baby, you gettin’ kind of thick”. She says, “Joey, I’ve been meanin’ to tell you. I got some circumstances have come up”. “Circumstances? What do you mean”? “And you’re not gon’ believe this. I’ve been waitin’ on a good time to tell ya. I didn’t know how to tell you this because you’re… uh, I’m expectin'”. “Expectin’ what”? “I’m expectin'”. “A baby”? “Yeah, but wait now. Don’t get this wrong. Don’t get this wrong. Now, I know this, never been through that like that before, but, um, um, this is the Lord’s doin'”. “Yeah, right”.

Joseph walked away from her and and said, “Now gotta live with this. Everybody knows about it too”. Have you ever loved and been angry at the same time? Isn’t that a feelin’? The kind of feelin’ where you wanna slap somebody down the stairs, but then, you love ’em so bad, you got to run down there and catch ’em? So Joseph said, “Okay, uh, I’mma put you away privately”. He said, “I’mma get out of this privately”. In the Bible, an engagement was like a marriage. It required a bill of divorcement to get out of it. So he said, “We’re gon’ discreetly go down to the lawyer and just sign the papers, and we’ll get out of this”. And then, when he’s gettin’ ready to go down to sign the papers to put her away, and she’s distraught because she told him the truth and he doesn’t believe her, and you know how it is when a woman tells you the truth, and you don’t believe her?

Can you imagine what Joseph’s friends must’ve been tellin’ him? “You ain’t gotta do this, man”. Conflicted. Can you imagine what it’d be like to be Mary and be tellin’ somebody the truth, and them not truly believe you, and now they’re tryin’ to go along with it, but they’ve already exposed the fact that they was gon’ get rid of you? How comfortable are you with a guy who’s told you that he was get ready to get riding you? And here they are, goin’ down the road, tryin’ to deal with this issue, and now, on top of all of this, a new tax has come out, and in order to deal with the taxation, you have to go back to the city that the groom is from, to pay the bill. “Now we got a debt we weren’t expectin’. We got a baby we weren’t lookin’ for. We got a crisis that makes me look like a fool, and we got to walk to Bethlehem.

They’re walkin’ down there by foot with a pregnant woman in the heat of the Middle East, no air-conditioning, no fan, no music, no padded seats. She’s pregnant on a donkey, in the heat, travelin’ through the hot sands, inconvenienced with somebody that you at odds with on the night before Christmas, and all in the back of her mind, she’s hearin’ God sayin’, “Hail, Mary, you’ve been highly favored amongst women”. “I got a man who don’t believe in me. I got a donkey who’s knockin’ me all over the place. My feet are swollen. I got a mask on my face. I got to stop and throw up every so-many miles. I’m still miles away from getting to the destination. My back hurts. My feet hurts. I feel like I’m about to go into labor. I don’t have any confidence in this guy ’cause he was gettin’ ready to get rid of me, and you’re tellin’ me that I am highly favored”.

And David warned us about this. He told us specifically, “Weeping may endure for a night”. Lord, I wish he done told me how long the night can be. Lord, have mercy. That’s another thing I didn’t picture right. I thought he was just talkin’ to me about, you know, about six to eight hours or somethin’ like that, but that’s not the kind of night. He’s talkin’ that this is a long night. This can be months and months and months of night, like you’re in Alaska, your “night”. This can be in the hospital for months and months and months, “night”. The night can be so long, you could lose your car and your house and your credit rating. It can be a long night. And he says, “Weeping may endure for a night”. I can picture Joseph and Mary and a couple of goats and a chicken, and a donkey, traveling down the road, she half-talkin’, he half-talkin’, and now they finally got to a place to stay, and the innkeeper comin’ out, talkin’ about, “I sure would love to help you. I really would love to help ya, but there’s no room, but just go down. Go down”.

“Look, I’ve been walking”. “No, it’s not that much further, but just, just, oh, oh, I don’t know, maybe about a week down the road, and, uh, to the left, there’s another inn over there, and I know him. He’ll be glad to take care of you”. And he walks on down there, and they say, “Well, you know, if you’d have just got here sooner”. Have you ever had somebody tell you, “If you’d just get here sooner”? After about three hotels, or four, rejected him, now he got to go back and say, “Look, Mary, it is really tough to”… You know, that’s how you do when you’re gettin’ ready to say it. The thing that amazed me, ’cause I’m into families and tryin’ to understand families and building the strength of families and all of that, I would’ve thought that the Lord would’ve came into a very functional, happy, robust, loving relationship, but the Lord picked a couple of folks who probably wasn’t even speakin’.

Can Christ be born in a dysfunctional situation? Can Christ be born into a family that’s backed up in payments to the IRS? And can he be born in a relationship where communication has withered, and can he be born into a situation where the bills are high, and can he be born into a situation where the provisions are not what you wanted them to be? He handpicked those circumstances. He handpicked them. Let’s talk about where he could’ve been born. He could’ve been born in a cathedral. He could’ve been born in the synagogue. He could’ve been born in a mansion. He could’ve been born to rich people. He could’ve been born with servants and maids and attendants. He could’ve had 10.000 angels to take care of him, but, no, he is born without a physician, without a midwife, without a nanny, without a bottle, without anything. He is born out there with nothing and nobody, on a dirty, dusty road, where either Joseph or Mary got to bend over and cut the cord, and he says, “Jehovah-Shammah”.

Touch somebody and tell ’em, “He’s the God of the night before. He’s the God of the night before. He’s the God of the night before”. I find that anybody’ll get with you in the morning. Anybody’ll be there when things get right. Anybody’ll show up when you get the breakthrough. Anybody’ll be there when you get the car. Anybody’ll be there when you get the house, but I need a God who will walk down a dirty, dusty, lonely, frustrated, aggravating, irritating wrongs with me. When I was workin’, sometimes, 50 hours a week and pastorin’ after work and doin’ funerals on the weekend and travelin’ for miles and tryin’ to get gas money and takin’ pop bottles and sellin’ ’em to get gas to go teach Bible class, if I would’ve known that it was gon’… if I’d have had any idea that it was gon’ end up in Dallas, Texas, at The Potter’s House, with 30.000 members and 350 people on staff, it wouldn’t have been so bad, but the problem with the night is that, when you’re in the night, you cannot see the morning.

“Weeping may endure for a night”. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha. I just wonder what God has in store for you in the morning. Hold on, hold on. Oh, I better quit ’cause I feel something. I feel something down in my soul. I feel something tellin’ to somebody “hold on”! Touch three people. Don’t say nothin’. Just say, “Just down the road, just down the road, just down the road, there’s a blessin’ waitin’ on you. Just down the road, there’s a miracle waitin’ on ya. Just down the road, there’s a testimony waitin’ on ya. Just down the road, there’s a victory waiting on you. Just down the road, hah, there’s deliverance waitin’ on ya. Just down the road, there’s a brand-new job waitin’ on ya. Just down the road, there’s a wife that will appreciate ya. Just down the road, there’s a husband that will love you. Just down the road”.

And the Lord sent me here to tell ya that the the night is almost over. I don’t know what you’ve been walkin’ through. I don’t know how heavy you are. I don’t know how many burdens you’ve been carryin’. I don’t know how long you cryin’. I don’t know what you suffer, but I do know that “Weeping may endure for a night”. Shake somebody’s hand like you gon’ shake it off, and tell ’em, “This is my night before”. I better quit ’cause I’m about to mess up and feel like preaching. Slap somebody and say, “Joy is coming. Joy is coming. Joy is coming”. You see, while Joseph and Mary was knockin’ on hotels, looking for their blessing, there were three wise men comin’ with gold and precious ointment, and they were looking for them, and I wanna tell somebody who’s been lookin’ for your blessing, if ya just stand still, your blessing is looking for you.