When You Want to Give Up
Scripture References
Overview
We all start projects, relationships, ministries, or goals with excitement, yet many of us hit resistance and feel like quitting. Today’s final message in the “Pre-Decide” series calls us to settle the issue before the pressure hits: “When I commit, I don’t quit—I am a finisher.” Drawing on Paul’s farewell to Timothy, Jesus’ warning to the church in Sardis, and Paul’s own life mission in Acts 20:24, the sermon shows why perseverance—not talent, intelligence, or opportunity—separates the fulfilled from the frustrated.
Main Points
Easy to Start, Rare to Finish
- Enthusiasm is common; endurance is rare (Angela Duckworth, “grit”).
- Intelligence, appearance, education, or connections are not the divider—perseverance is.
- Natural drift: we choose the path of least resistance unless we pre-decide otherwise.
Pre-Decide: “When I Commit, I Don’t Quit”
- Series review: I am Ready, Consistent, Devoted, Generous, Faithful, and a Finisher.
- Congregational declaration:
“When I commit, I don’t quit—I am a finisher.”
Paul’s Example of Finishing
- Written from a Roman sewer-like dungeon awaiting beheading, Paul urges Timothy to “carry out the ministry fully.”
- He looks back: “I have fought the good fight, finished the race, remained faithful.”
- Application: If you’re not dead, you’re not done—God still has assignments, love, ministries, and breakthroughs ahead.
Unfinished Business
- Jesus to Sardis (Revelation 3): “I have found your deeds unfinished.”
- Question for prayer: What has God prompted that I started but never finished?
Restore a relationship, share Christ, give, complete a degree, launch a ministry, lose weight, apologize, join a group, serve, etc.
- Paul to the Corinthians: “It would be good for you to finish what you started.”
Every Decision Is a Vote
- Quitting tells yourself, “I don’t have what it takes.”
- Finishing votes, “I’m a finisher, empowered by God.”
- Story: Coach drives 90 minutes to confront Craig after a tennis meltdown—“Today you decide what kind of person you are.” That confrontation birthed a lifelong resolve never to quit.
How to Finish the Race
- Run for God, not self (Acts 20:24): “I consider my life worth nothing… my only aim is to finish the race.”
- Take the next step—you don’t have to finish today, just move forward today.
- Depend on the Father’s strength.
- Illustration: 1992 Barcelona Olympics—Derek Redmond’s father carries him across the line; when we can’t go on, our Father carries us.
- Remove “quit” as an option—covenant mindset in marriage, ministry, and calling.
Key Truths
- Perseverance, not potential, determines whether we fulfill God’s assignments.
- God still has work for every living believer: “If you’re not dead, you’re not done.”
- Unfinished obedience is disobedience; identify and complete your unfinished deeds.
- We never run alone—the God who began the work will complete it.
- Pre-deciding to finish transforms stressful overload into focused faithfulness.
Response
- Identify your unfinished assignment in prayer this week.
- Declare daily: “When I commit, I don’t quit—I am a finisher.”
- Take one measurable next step toward completing what God prompted.
- Ask a trusted friend or mentor to hold you accountable for finishing.
- Lean on God’s strength through Scripture and prayer each time you feel like quitting.
Closing
Finishing is not about our comfort, net worth, or reputation; it’s about honoring the One who authored our race. The devil will urge you to quit, but disciples of Jesus echo their Lord: “It is finished.” You may struggle, but you will not quit—because the Finisher of your faith lives in you.
“When I commit, I don’t quit—I am a finisher.”
Prayer
“Heavenly Father, I surrender to You.
Jesus, forgive my sins, save me, be my Savior and Lord.
Help me start following You, doing Your will, showing Your love.
My life is not mine; I give it all to You.
Thank You for new life—I give You mine. In Jesus’ name, Amen.”
Resources
- Angela Duckworth, “Grit”
- David Allen, “Getting Things Done”