Sermons

Summary: Introduction: “Faith is not holding on to a feeling; it is holding on to a promise.” — Elisabeth Elliot

Title: “Holding On When You Feel Like Letting Go”

Text: “Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for He who promised is faithful.” (Hebrews 10:23)

Introduction: “Faith is not holding on to a feeling; it is holding on to a promise.” — Elisabeth Elliot

There are moments in every life when continuing forward feels harder than quitting. Discouragement settles in quietly. Prayers feel unanswered. Strength feels spent. In those moments, letting go can seem like relief. Yet Scripture consistently calls God’s people to hold on—not because it is easy, but because God is faithful.

I. What is True About Not Giving Up?

1. The Urge to Let Go Is Not Failure

A young pianist once dreamed of playing at Carnegie Hall. From childhood, she practiced faithfully. Her fingers stumbled often, but her passion never faded. Finally, after years of discipline, she auditioned for a prestigious conservatory.

She was rejected.

The letter was brief. Cold. Final.

She folded it slowly and placed it on her desk. For the first time in her life, she wondered if she should quit. She stopped practicing. The piano sat silent.

Weeks later, her former teacher visited. He noticed the untouched piano and asked why she had stopped.

She handed him the rejection letter.

He read it, then looked at her and said something she never forgot:

“You were not rejected because you failed. You were rejected because you are still becoming.”

He sat down at the piano and played a simple scale.

“Do you hear that?” he asked.

“It’s not perfect—but it’s alive. And as long as it’s alive, it can grow.”

She returned to practicing—not because she knew she would succeed, but because she knew quitting would guarantee failure.

Years later, she did play at Carnegie Hall.

But the turning point was not the performance.

It was the moment she chose not to give up.

Gospel Connection

The Christian life is not defined by never struggling, but by never abandoning Christ.

Peter is the clearest example.

On the night Jesus needed him most, Peter denied Him three times (Luke 22:61–62). In that moment, Peter must have felt like a complete failure. He had sworn loyalty—and then collapsed under pressure.

But here is the key: Peter’s denial was not his end.

After the resurrection, Jesus sought Peter out. He did not shame him. He restored him (John 21:15–17).

Peter’s temptation to give up was real. But his story did not end in failure—it ended in restoration.

Failure is not falling down. Failure is refusing to get back up.

Proverbs 24:16 says:

“Though the righteous fall seven times, they rise again.”

The righteous are not those who never fall. They are those who rise again by grace.

Key Insight:

The presence of struggle does not mean the absence of faith. In fact, struggle is often the place where faith is being strengthened.

You are not defined by the moment you wanted to quit.

You are defined by the Savior who refused to quit on you.

Christ did not go to the cross because you were strong.

He went because you were weak.

And because He finished His work, your story is never finished when you feel like giving up.

Feeling like giving up does not mean you lack faith; it means you are human. Even great men and women of Scripture reached points of exhaustion and despair.

• Elijah asked God to take his life (1 Kings 19).

• David cried out from caves of fear and loneliness.

• Paul admitted to being burdened beyond his strength (2 Corinthians 1:8).

God met each of them not with condemnation, but with presence, provision, and renewed purpose.

2. Holding On Often Looks Ordinary

Holding on does not always mean bold declarations or dramatic victories. Often it looks like quiet obedience—getting up one more day, praying one more prayer, choosing faith over feelings. God honors persistence, even when it feels unimpressive.

A man once applied for a job as a night watchman at a small factory. His job was not glamorous. He walked the same path every night, checked the same doors, tested the same locks, and watched the same quiet hallways. Most nights, nothing happened.

After many years, a new manager arrived. He reviewed the watchman’s record and noticed something unusual.

For twenty-two years, there had never been a break-in.

Curious, the manager asked him, “What did you do differently from other watchmen?”

The man smiled and said, “Nothing differently. I just showed up every night and did the ordinary things faithfully.”

The manager later discovered that in nearby factories, break-ins were common—but not here. The watchman’s quiet persistence had prevented countless problems that never made headlines.

His success was not seen in dramatic action—but in faithful consistency.

Spiritual Application

The Christian life is built the same way—not on dramatic moments, but on daily persistence in ordinary faithfulness.

Copy Sermon to Clipboard with PRO Download Sermon with PRO
Talk about it...

Nobody has commented yet. Be the first!

Join the discussion
;