When God Whispers Your Name

When God Whispers Your Name

by Max Lucado
When God Whispers Your Name

When God Whispers Your Name

by Max Lucado

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Overview

These days, bad news often outpaces the good. Problems outnumber solutions. You may turn and ask, "Where is God at a time like this?" Friend, he's right here. And he's whispering your name.

You really want to do what is right. But sometimes life turns south. You're anxious, you're busy, you're cautious because you've been hurt before--or maybe you're all of the above. But pastor and New York Times bestselling author Max Lucado is here to share some good news: in the Bible and in the circumstances of your life, God whispers your name lovingly, tenderly, patiently, and persistently.

Somewhere between the pages of this book and the pages of your heart, God is speaking. And he is calling you by name. Maybe that's hard to believe. Maybe you just can't imagine that the One who made it all thinks of you that personally--that he keeps your name on his heart and lips.

In When God Whispers Your Name, Max will help you:

  • See yourself in the stories of hardship and redemption in Scripture
  • Understand that you are uniquely known by God
  • Grasp the great and daring love of the One who calls your name

Each copy of When God Whispers Your Name also includes a discussion guide designed to let you dive deeper into the timeless scripture that underlies each of these lessons of hope, encouragement, and redemption.

Max knows that we all need a reminder every now and then--not a sermon, but a simple reminder that God knows our names. Today, listen carefully. Hear that? God is whispering your name.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781418519360
Publisher: Nelson, Thomas, Inc.
Publication date: 04/15/1999
Series: Bestseller Collection
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishing
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
Sales rank: 307,218
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

About The Author

Since entering the ministry in 1978, Max Lucado has served churches in Miami, Florida; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; and San Antonio, Texas. He currently serves as the teaching minister of Oak Hills Church in San Antonio. He is the recipient of the 2021 ECPA Pinnacle Award for his outstanding contribution to the publishing industry and society at large. He is America's bestselling inspirational author with more than 150 million products in print.

Visit his website at MaxLucado.com

Facebook.com/MaxLucado

Instagram.com/MaxLucado

Twitter.com/MaxLucado

Youtube.com/MaxLucadoOfficial

The Max Lucado Encouraging Word Podcast

Read an Excerpt




Chapter One


The Voice from the
Mop Bucket


    THE HALLWAY is silent except for the wheels of the mop bucket and the shuffle of the old man's feet. Both sound tired.

    Both know these floors. How many nights has Hank cleaned them? Always careful to get in the corners. Always careful to set up his yellow caution sign warning of wet floors. Always chuckling as he does. "Be careful everyone," he laughs to himself, knowing no one is near.

    Not at three A.M.

    Hank's health isn't what it used to be. Gout keeps him awake. Arthritis makes him limp. His glasses are so thick his eyeballs look twice their size. Shoulders stoop. But he does his work. Slopping soapy water on linoleum. Scrubbing the heel marks left by the well-heeled lawyers. He'll be finished an hour before quitting time. Always finishes early. Has for twenty years.

    When finished he'll put away his bucket and take a seat outside the office of the senior partner and wait. Never leaves early. Could. No one would know. But he doesn't.

    He broke the rules once. Never again.

    Sometimes, if the door is open, he'll enter the office. Not for long. Just to look. The suite is larger than his apartment. He'll run his finger over the desk. He'll stroke the soft leather couch. He'll stand at the window and watch the gray sky turn gold. And he'll remember.

    He once had such an office.

    Back when Hank was Henry. Back when the custodian was an executive.Long ago. Before the night shift. Before the mop bucket. Before the maintenance uniform. Before the scandal.

    Hank doesn't think about it much now. No reason to. Got in trouble, got fired, and got out. That's it. Not many people know about it. Better that way. No need to tell them.

    It's his secret.

    Hank's story, by the way, is true. I changed the name and a detail or two. I gave him a different job and put him in a different century. But the story is factual. You've heard it. You know it. When I give you his real name, you'll remember.

    But more than a true story, it's a common story. It's a story of a derailed dream. It's a story of high hopes colliding with harsh realities.

    Happens to all dreamers. And since all have dreamed, it happens to us all.

    In Hank's case, it was a mistake he could never forget. A grave mistake. Hank killed someone. He came upon a thug beating up an innocent man, and Hank lost control. He killed the mugger. When word got out, Hank got out.

    Hank would rather hide than go to jail. So he ran. The executive became a fugitive.

    True story. Common story. Most stories aren't as extreme as Hank's. Few spend their lives running from the law. Many, however, live with regrets.

    "I could have gone to college on a golf scholarship," a fellow told me just last week on the fourth tee box. "Had an offer right out of school. But I joined a rock-and-roll band. Ended up never going. Now I'm stuck fixing garage doors."

    "Now I'm stuck." Epitaph of a derailed dream.

    Pick up a high school yearbook and read the "What I want to do" sentence under each picture. You'll get dizzy breathing the thin air of mountaintop visions:


"Ivy league school." "Write books and live in Switzerland." "Physician in a Third World country." "Teach inner-city kids."


    Yet, take the yearbook to a twentieth-year reunion and read the next chapter. Some dreams have come true, but many haven't. Not that all should, mind you. I hope the little guy who dreamed of being a sumo wrestler came to his senses. And I hope he didn't lose his passion in the process. Changing direction in life is not tragic. Losing passion in life is.

    Something happens to us along the way. Convictions to change the world downgrade to commitments to pay the bills. Rather than make a difference, we make a salary. Rather than look forward, we look back. Rather than look outward, we look inward.

    And we don't like what we see.

    Hank didn't. Hank saw a man who'd settled for the mediocre. Trained in the finest institutions of the world, yet working the night shift in a minimum-wage job so he wouldn't be seen in the day.

    But all that changed when he heard the voice from the mop bucket. (Did I mention that his story is true?)


    At first he thought the voice was a joke. Some of the fellows on the third floor play these kinds of tricks.

    "Henry, Henry," the voice called.

    Hank turned. No one called him Henry anymore.

    "Henry, Henry."

    He turned toward the pail. It was glowing. Bright red. Hot red. He could feel the heat ten feet away. He stepped closer and looked in. The water wasn't boiling.

    "This is strange," Hank mumbled to himself as he took another step to get a closer look. But the voice stopped him.

    "Don't come any closer. Take off your shoes. You are on holy tile."

    Suddenly Hank knew who was speaking. "God?"

    I'm not making this up. I know you think I am. Sounds crazy. Almost irreverent. God speaking from a hot mop bucket to a janitor named Hank? Would it be believable if I said God was speaking from a burning bush to a shepherd named Moses?

    Maybe that one's easier to handle—because you've heard it before. But just because it's Moses and a bush rather than Hank and a bucket, it's no less spectacular.

    It sure shocked the sandals off Moses. We wonder what amazed the old fellow more: that God spoke in a bush or that God spoke at all.

    Moses, like Hank, had made a mistake.

    You remember his story. Adopted nobility. An Israelite reared in an Egyptian palace. His countrymen were slaves, but Moses was privileged. Ate at the royal table. Educated in the finest schools.

    But his most influential teacher had no degree. She was his mother. A Jewess who was hired to be his nanny. "Moses," you can almost hear her whisper to her young son, "God has put you here on purpose. Someday you will set your people free. Never forget, Moses. Never forget."

    Moses didn't. The flame of justice grew hotter until it blazed. Moses saw an Egyptian beating a Hebrew slave. Just like Hank killed the mugger, Moses killed the Egyptian.

    The next day Moses saw the Hebrew. You'd think the slave would say thanks. He didn't. Rather than express gratitude, he expressed anger. "Will you kill me too?" he asked (see Exod. 2:14).


    Moses knew he was in trouble. He fled Egypt and hid in the wilderness. Call it a career shift. He went from dining with the heads of state to counting heads of sheep.

    Hardly an upward move.

    And so it happened that a bright, promising Hebrew began herding sheep in the hills. From the Ivy League to the cotton patch. From the Oval Office to a taxicab. From swinging a golf club to digging a ditch.

    Moses thought the move was permanent. There is no indication he ever intended to go back to Egypt. In fact, there is every indication he wanted to stay with his sheep. Standing barefoot before the bush, he confessed, "I am not a great man! How can I go to the king and lead the Israelites out of Egypt?" (Exod. 3:11).

    I'm glad Moses asked that question. It's a good one. Why Moses? Or, more specifically, why eighty-year-old Moses?

    The forty-year-old version was more appealing. The Moses we saw in Egypt was brash and confident. But the Moses we find four decades later is reluctant and weather-beaten.

    Had you or I looked at Moses back in Egypt, we would have said, "This man is ready for battle." Educated in the finest system in the world. Trained by the ablest soldiers. Instant access to the inner circle of the Pharaoh. Moses spoke their language and knew their habits. He was the perfect man for the job.

    Moses at forty we like. But Moses at eighty? No way. Too old. Too tired. Smells like a shepherd. Speaks like a foreigner. What impact would he have on Pharaoh? He's the wrong man for the job.

    And Moses would have agreed. "Tried that once before," he would say. "Those people don't want to be helped. Just leave me here to tend my sheep. They're easier to lead."

    Moses wouldn't have gone. You wouldn't have sent him. I wouldn't have sent him.

    But God did. How do you figure? Benched at forty and suited up at eighty. Why? What does he know now that he didn't know then? What did he learn in the desert that he didn't learn in Egypt?

    The ways of the desert, for one. Forty-year-old Moses was a city boy. Octogenarian Moses knows the name of every snake and the location of every watering hole. If he's going to lead thousands of Hebrews into the wilderness, he better know the basics of desert life 101.

    Family dynamics, for another. If he's going to be traveling with families for forty years, it might help to understand how they work. He marries a woman of faith, the daughter of a Midianite priest, and establishes his own family.

    But more than the ways of the desert and the people, Moses needed to learn something about himself.

    Apparently he has learned it. God says Moses is ready.

    And to convince him, God speaks through a bush. (Had to do something dramatic to get Moses' attention.)

    "School's out," God tells him. "Now it's time to get to work." Poor Moses. He didn't even know he was enrolled.

    But he was. And, guess what. So are you. The voice from the bush is the voice that whispers to you. It reminds you that God is not finished with you yet. Oh, you may think he is. You may think you've peaked. You may think he's got someone else to do the job.

    If so, think again.

    "God began doing a good work in you, and I am sure he will continue it until it is finished when Jesus Christ comes again."

    Did you see what God is doing? A good work in you.

    Did you see when he will be finished? When Jesus comes again.

    May I spell out the message? God ain't finished with you yet.

    Your Father wants you to know that. And to convince you, he may surprise you. He may speak through a bush, a mop bucket, or stranger still, he may speak through this book.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
Introduction1
PART ONE THE SONG OF THE MINSTREL
1 The Voice from the Mop Bucket11
2 Why Jesus Went to Parties19
3 Hidden Heroes27
4 You Might've Been in the Bible35
5 Maxims41
6 God's Christmas Cards45
7 Behind the Shower Curtain51
8 Gabriel's Questions55
9 What Is Your Price?61
10 Groceries and Grace71
11 The Choice73
12 The Prophet77
PART TWO THE TOUCH OF THE MASTER
13 When Crickets Make You Cranky87
14 Seeing What Eyes Can't97
15 Overcoming Your Heritage103
16 The Sweet Sound of the Second Fiddle111
17 Your Sack of Stones117
18 Of Oz and God123
19 An Inside Job129
20 Late-Night Good News135
21Healthy Habits141
22 DFW and the Holy Spirit147
23 The God Who Fights for You153
PART THREE THE GUEST OF THE MAESTRO
24 The Gift of Unhappiness171
25 On Seeing God177
26 Orphans at the Gate185
27 View of the High Country191
28 The Name Only God Knows197
Notes201
Discussion Guide205
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