Your Trouble is Temporary - Joel Osteen

Updated December 21 2024 In Joel Osteen

Joel Osteen - Sermon: Your Trouble is Temporary.  If you want to experience breakthrough, you have to live with a “soon” mentality. What you’re up against may look permanent in the natural, but we serve a supernatural God. In a moment, He can make things shift in your favor.

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God bless you! It's great to be with you today. I hope you'll stay connected with us throughout the week. We have a daily podcast that you can download. You can go to our YouTube channel and listen to the messages anytime, or you can follow us on social media. I promise you, we'll keep you encouraged and inspired. Thanks for tuning in. Thanks again for coming out today.

I like to start with something funny. I heard about these three men that were traveling together: a Hindu priest, a Jewish rabbi, and a televangelist. They stopped at a farmhouse for lodging. The farmer said, "I only have room for two of you in the house. Somebody will have to stay in the barn." The Hindu priest said, "I'll do it." In a few minutes, there was a knock on the door. He said, "I can't stay out there. There's a cow, and cows are sacred in our religion." The Jewish rabbi said, "I'll do it." A few minutes later, a knock on the door. He said, "I can't stay out there. There's a pig, and that wouldn't be kosher." The televangelist finally said, "All right, I'll do it." In a few minutes, there was a knock on the door. It was the cow and the pig. (Laughter) I'm the only one that got it.

Here we go. Ready?

This is my Bible. I am what it says I am. I have what it says I have. I can do what it says I can do. Today, I will be taught the Word of God. I boldly confess: my mind is alert, my heart is receptive. I will never be the same. In Jesus' name, God bless you.

I want to talk to you today about how trouble is temporary. We all face difficulties that don't look like they'll ever change. It seems like the more we pray, the worse it gets. We don't see any sign of things improving. It's easy to live discouraged and accept that it's not meant to be. But Paul said in 2 Corinthians, "Our present troubles are small and won't last very long. These troubles will soon be over, but the joy to come will last forever."

What you're up against may look permanent. It seems like it's going to take years to get well, years to get out of debt, years to meet the right person. Don't be fooled by what you see. God is saying the trouble is only temporary. It's not going to last very long. Soon it's going to be over. Soon you're going to see the breakthrough. Soon your health is going to turn around. Soon you're going to meet the person of your dreams.

You may not see how this can happen. Everything in your reasoning says it's not possible. You're looking at it in the natural, but we serve a supernatural God. He can make things happen that you can't make happen. Instead of thinking of all the reasons why it's not going to work out, how it's going to take forever, try a different approach: "Father, thank You that this difficulty will soon be over. Thank You that this sickness, this depression, this family problem will not last very long."

"Joel, it's already been a long time." That means you are very close to seeing it turn around. You're on the verge of a breakthrough. You're about to see freedom, promotion, problems suddenly resolve, and dreams suddenly come to pass. Not in the sweet by and by, but soon things are going to change. Soon that child is going to get back on course. Soon that new door is going to open. Soon the right person is going to show up. Soon you're going to come into overflow.

Now, you have to get in agreement with God and have a "soon" mentality. As long as you think it's going to take years, that's going to stop God from working. When you have this "soon" mentality, you get up each morning with expectancy, knowing that this could be the day that God shows out in your life.

When is your health going to turn around? "I don't know, Joel. This medical report doesn't look very good at all." That's one report. I'm giving you another report: soon, things are going to change in your favor.

When are you going to get out of debt? "It looks like it's going to take me 112 years to pay everything off." You're going to be in heaven by then. How about, "Soon I'm coming out of debt. Soon I'm going to lend and not borrow."

How can that happen? God owns it all. One touch of His favor, and you'll have more than enough. One good break, one idea, one contract, and everything will change.

When are you going to overcome that addiction? Soon.
When are you going to meet the right person? Soon.
When is that legal issue going to resolve? Soon.
When are you going to sell that property? Soon.
When are you going to start your business? Soon.

Your mind will tell you all the reasons it's not going to happen: "Your problem is too big. The people that you're up against are too powerful. It's been this way too long." Don't believe those lies. Receive this into your spirit: the problem will soon be over. The loneliness will soon be gone. The anxiety, the grief, the barrenness—not being able to have a child—is coming to an end soon. These present troubles will not last very long.

Job went through a great difficulty. He was doing the right thing, honoring God, and the bottom fell out. He lost his business, lost his children, lost his health. He had boils all over his body. Just because we're people of faith doesn't mean we won't have difficulties. You can be doing the right thing and come into trouble.

The Scripture says rain falls on the just and the unjust. When it rains at my house, my property gets wet, my next-door neighbor's, the people across the street—everyone in the neighborhood. The rain doesn't discriminate.

Don't get discouraged by difficulties; it's just life. The promise we have is not that trouble won't come but that the trouble is not going to last. Soon, the trouble will be over.

When you're in difficulties, things happen like with Job that you don't understand. You came down with an illness. People at work turned on you. You had a setback in your business. It's easy to live worried, thinking that it's never going to work out. You have to remind yourself it is not permanent. It is not going to last long. Soon it will resolve.

All through the day, you need to keep this in your heart: "Father, thank You that this trouble is only temporary. It didn't come to stay; it came to pass. Thank You that it will soon be over."

When Job looked at all his circumstances, everything that went wrong, all that he'd lost, he got depressed. He sat down in the ashes and wanted to die. One reason he was so discouraged is that he saw the trouble as permanent; he didn't see any way he could get out.

As long as he had this "forever" mentality—"This is how my life is always going to be"—he felt overwhelmed. When you have a setback, thoughts will tell you, "It's permanent. You'll never get well. You'll never be happy again. You'll never meet someone."

If you believe those "forever" lies, you'll get discouraged and lose your passion. God won't let you get in a situation that He can't bring you out of. If the trouble was too much, the sickness too great, the opposition too strong, He wouldn't have allowed it.

It's a test. What are you going to do? Get discouraged, give up on your dreams, live defeated? Or are you going to believe God is on the throne, that He's bigger than what you're facing, that the trouble is temporary, that it's not going to last long?

What you believe in times of trouble will determine whether you come out or whether you get stuck there.

At one point, Job changed his attitude. Instead of sitting around defeated, he got up out of the ashes, looked up toward the heavens, and said, "I know my Redeemer lives." He was saying, "I know God is still on the throne. I know this difficulty can't stop my destiny. What He has purposed for my life will come to pass."

He shifted to an attitude of faith. God let us see both sides of Job—him discouraged, despondent, then him switching over to faith—to let us know it's okay to feel things. It's okay to have times when you feel discouraged, when you don't see how it can work out.

It's okay to start there, but don't finish there. Don't stay in the ashes. Don't stay defeated. At some point, you have to do like Job and say, "I know my Redeemer lives. I know God didn't bring me this far to leave me. I know this problem is not permanent. Lord, thank You that it will soon be over."

Do you know what that does to the enemy? When he hits you with his best shot, but you don't start complaining, you don't stay in the ashes. You start declaring, "Soon, it's going to turn around. Soon, I'm going to get well. Soon, I'm going to meet someone new. Soon, my business is going to take off. Soon, I'm going to laugh again, love again, lead again, run again."

When you live with this "soon" mentality, all the forces of darkness cannot keep you down. Job's situation looked permanent. It looked like he had seen his best days. But God not only turned it around; Job came out with twice what he had before. The Scripture says he had twice the cattle, twice the sheep. He got his business back. God never brings you out the same. He makes the enemy pay for bringing the trouble.

We hear a lot about the suffering of Job and all he went through; it seems like that was his whole life. The entire book of Job is about his struggle. You would think it went on for forty years—trouble, heartache, pain. But some commentaries believe the whole struggle was only nine months. All the sickness, all the trouble, didn’t last years; it was months.

What you think is going to take years, what looks like it’s going to be a long time to resolve, like with Job, it’s going to happen sooner than you think. That trouble looks permanent, but God is saying it’s not going to last very long. You’re about to see His hand bring healing, restoration, divine connections, and promotion. It’s not by your might, not by your power, but by the Spirit of the living God.

In 2003, the Houston City Council voted for us to have the Compaq Center. This was a city-owned building. We had worked for two years, presenting our case and trying to convince council members. When we won the vote, we were so excited. It was like God opened a door that we never dreamed would open. The next day, a company that owns all the high-rises around this property filed a federal lawsuit to try to keep us from moving in. They were the largest taxpayer in Texas, a huge real estate company with property all over the state. It was like David versus Goliath.

Our attorneys told us that it could be tied up in the courts for ten years, how these kinds of legal proceedings can be extremely slow. That meant we couldn’t move in; we couldn’t start our renovations. Our future concerning this building was on hold. The problem was I had already presented the Compaq Center to the church. People had already given to support it. Everyone was excited, asking, “When are we moving in?”

I would wake up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat, thoughts telling me, “You’re going to look like a fool. What are you going to do if you don’t win the lawsuit?” I was tempted to live worried, stressed, but I did what I’m asking you to do. Despite what the experts were saying, despite how permanent it looked, I said, “Father, I want to thank You that this trouble is only temporary, that it won’t last very long. Lord, I know You’re working behind the scenes, fighting our battles, making our crooked places straight, shining down Your favor on us.”

I would check with the attorneys every week, looking for some sign of hope. “Is there anything new?”
“Nothing, we haven’t heard from them.” They didn’t want to negotiate. They were going to sit back and wait, drag it out for years, until we had to do something else.

I could hear that promise, that still small voice saying, “Joel, trust Me. This trouble is only temporary; soon it will be over.” But my mind would say, “Are you kidding? Nothing is improving; you’re years away from even finding out if it’s going to be yours.”

The battle is taking place in our thinking. Don’t accept the lies that it’s permanent and it’s going to take a long, long time. You have to turn it around and say, “Father, thank You that this will resolve sooner than it looks.”

About eight months after the lawsuit was filed, we received a call from the other side saying they wanted to meet. I was excited. I believed it was the hand of God. Our attorneys were more skeptical. They said it was a ploy—they were just trying to complicate things.

We met with them, and not only did they agree to let us have this building, but they also agreed to lease us nine thousand covered parking spaces. They dropped the lawsuit, and the facility was ours free and clear. What looked like it would take years to happen took place in a few months.

God is saying to you, what you’re up against is going to resolve much sooner than it looks. That trouble is not going to last long. That addiction is not going to hinder you your whole life. The sickness, depression, and anxiety are not going to stop your destiny. Soon it’s going to be over—not years, but months.

Why don’t you get in agreement with God? You may not see how. The giant looks too big, the sickness too great, the opposition too strong. But you’re not in this by yourself. The Most High God is fighting for you. He knows how to move people out of the way. He can do what medicine cannot do. He can restore what’s been stolen.

Sooner than later, you’re going to see the hand of God making things happen that you couldn’t make happen, opening doors that no person can shut, turning situations around that look impossible.

It’s easy to live with this forever mindset: “It’s never going to work out,” or “Maybe years down the road, maybe one day, Joel, I’ll get a good break.” Switch over to a “soon” mentality. I know some things take time, but God promises us in this verse: soon the trouble will be over. He’s about to do something out of a normal time frame, something unusual, sooner than you think.

“What if I believe and this doesn’t happen?” What if you believe and it does happen? It probably won’t happen if you’ve already accepted that it’s going to be a long time to get out of this trouble, a long time to get well, to meet the right person, to accomplish that dream. That’s limiting what God will do.

I’m asking you to believe for sooner than later. Even if it doesn’t happen as soon as you like—yes, we all have to wait—I’ve made up my mind, I’m going to live with a “soon” mentality. I’m going to keep releasing my faith, reminding God what He promised: that this difficulty will soon be over.

There are forty-two chapters in the book of Job. All forty-two talk about what he went through. It seems like this struggle was his whole life. But the last two verses of the book of Job are very significant. After describing the trouble, the heartache, the loss, for forty-two chapters, the last thing written says, “After this, Job lived a hundred and forty years and saw his children and grandchildren for four generations. Then he died, an old man, having lived a long, good life.”

Job’s struggle was approximately nine months. But after that struggle, he lived a hundred and forty good years—happy years, healthy years, years where he enjoyed his children, years where there was great joy and laughter in his house.

God was showing us: the trouble is temporary. The trouble is not going to last forever.

You may be in a difficult time, but that’s not how your story ends. That loss is not going to define you. That sickness is not going to ruin the rest of your life. That person that walked away, that bad break, the unfair situation—it’s not going to stop your purpose.

God has an "after this" for you. After the trouble, there’s going to be great joy in your life. After the loss, after the sickness, after the legal battle, you’re going to see new friendships, new opportunities, new growth.

Don’t be discouraged by the trouble. It’s not stopping anything God has for you. God is storing up all the joy, all the good breaks, the favor, the resources that have been put on hold because of this temporary trouble.

You’re not losing anything. What belongs to you is still coming your way. Your latter days will be better than your former days. Your story doesn’t end in defeat. It doesn’t end in failure, injustice, or sorrow. Those are temporary seasons.

Your story ends in victory. God has already lined up an “after this” for you. He said what was meant for harm, He’s turning to your advantage.

Even now, God is turning some things. He’s turning the trouble, turning the sickness, turning the people that are against you. You’re about to step into an advantage—step into favor that God has already lined up for you.

When we walked into that meeting, the CEO of the company had already changed his mind. God had already turned his heart. He was against us, but no person can stand against our God. No bad break, no sickness, no trouble. God controls the universe. He said, "Weeping may endure for a night, but joy is coming in the morning."

You may be in a night season. Can I encourage you? It's temporary. Joy is on the way. God is going to turn your mourning into dancing, your sorrow into joy. What's holding you back is not going to last much longer. Soon it will be over.

One time, I was flying to India with my father. It was a fifteen-hour flight. Everything was going fine, cruising along very smoothly. But about twelve hours in, the plane hit turbulence and started bouncing around like a roller coaster—up and down. Everything started flying, laptops hitting the ceiling. Some of the flight attendants went up in the air and landed on top of other passengers. People were screaming, panicking. For about ten minutes, it was chaos. You had to hold on for dear life.

Eventually, it all calmed down. Thankfully, nobody was injured, and it went back to smooth sailing. The last several hours were as peaceful as can be. This is how it is in life. We're going along fine—everyone is healthy, we're getting good breaks—then we hit some turbulence. An unexpected challenge, a sickness, a layoff, a friend betrays you. You didn't see it coming.

It's easy to panic: "God, what's happening?" Can I encourage you? It's just a part of your ten minutes of turbulence. It's not going to last. It may be chaotic, it may feel stressful, but it's going to calm down. There's going to be an "after this" for you. After the turbulence, you're going to come out just fine.

I've discovered we're all going to have about ten minutes of turbulence—not all at once, but a minute here, a minute there. Our mind will tell us, "It's permanent. I'll never get through this difficulty. It's bumpier than I've ever felt." But God is still in control. He's not only flying your plane, but He also controls the weather. He speaks to storms, and they calm down.

A friend of mine recently lost his job. He'd been there for many years. It wasn’t about his performance; they just didn’t have the funds to pay him. He was tempted to panic and be upset. I told him what I’m telling you: this is not how your story ends. The trouble is going to pass, and the rest of your flight is going to be smooth. God has it already figured out. There’s another position already lined up, and it has your name on it.

If you’ll stay in faith and keep being your best, you’re going to come into your "after this." You’ll say, "After the layoff, I got a better position. After they walked away, I met someone better. After the sickness, I came out stronger."

What’s interesting is that ten minutes of turbulence felt like ten hours to me. I was sweating, holding on for dear life, praying the sinner’s prayer forty-two times: “God, please forgive me. I’m about to come see You.” I was afraid, stressed out. If I had known it was temporary, I would have enjoyed the ride. I pay a lot of money to go to Disneyland to ride a ride like that.

If I had known it wasn’t going to last very long, if I had known everything was going to be all right, I would have stayed in peace. I would have said, “Lord, thank You. I know this too shall pass. I know this temporary problem is not going to stop Your plan for my life.” I could have relaxed and saved myself a lot of heartache if I had only remembered that the trouble was temporary.

Maybe you’re in part of your ten minutes of turbulence now. It feels like it’s going to be ten years. You’re worried, losing sleep, trying to figure it all out. Come back to a place of peace. It’s not permanent. Things are going to work out. God is going to get you to your destiny.

You may not see how—the winds are strong, the plane is bouncing around—but God controls the winds. That cancer is not bigger than our God. That breakup didn’t stop your purpose. That trouble at work is not going to last. God is behind the scenes right now, working in your life.

Your time is coming. It’s going to happen sooner than you think.

In the book of Genesis, God told Noah there was going to be a great flood. He was to build an ark, a huge boat, and take two of every kind of animal on it. While he was building, I’m sure people made fun of him. They thought, “What’s this crazy man doing? There’s no water around here.” At that time, it had never rained. The dew came up from the ground and watered the earth. You can imagine how odd that seemed.

But the Scripture says, “Noah did exactly what God asked him to do.” He was obedient. The rain came for forty days, and the whole earth was flooded. Noah and his family were on the boat. Months and months went by. Noah didn’t know if he was going to be like that the rest of his life. He sent a bird out to see if the waters were receding, but the bird came back; it couldn’t land. This happened again and again. It looked like this was permanent.

But chapter 8 says, “God remembered Noah. He sent a wind to blow across the waters, and the floods began to disappear.” God remembers your faithfulness. He remembers your obedience. The times, like Noah, when you did the right thing even when it was hard. You kept giving, serving, being good to people—not seeing anything change, nothing getting any better. Don’t worry, your time is coming.

God sent a wind, and the waters began to disappear. A year later, Noah and his family were able to get off the boat. I believe, like with him, God is about to breathe on your life, and problems that look permanent are about to disappear. That sickness you’ve been dealing with, the child you’re so concerned about, the trouble at work that’s hindering you—by faith, I can see the wind of God’s Spirit causing it to disappear.

Addictions disappearing. Depression disappearing. Lack—not having enough—disappearing. This is a new day. God is breathing His favor, His blessing, His healing on your life right now.

The next verse says, “The underground water sources ceased their gushing; the torrential rains stopped flowing.” There are things that you can’t see—they’re underground, so to speak—but they’re about to cease in your life. God is going to cut off the source of what’s limiting you, the source of what’s holding you back. The sickness is about to cease, the addiction is about to cease, the trouble is about to cease.

When those waters ceased, it took a few months before Noah could come off the boat. You may not see anything happening yet, but that doesn’t mean things haven’t changed. It’s just a matter of time before you see what God was up to.

Now keep the right perspective. The trouble is temporary. It’s not going to last as long as it looks. Live with this “soon” mentality—not, “It’s way off in the future,” but soon things are going to change in my favor.

If you’ll do this, I believe and declare: healing is coming, freedom is coming, breakthroughs are coming. Soon you’re going to get well. Soon you’re going to meet the right person. Soon that problem is going to turn around. Soon you’re going to see God’s favor in new ways.

In Jesus’ name.

If you receive it, can you say amen today? (Amen)

I’d like to give you an opportunity to make Jesus the Lord of your life. Would you pray with me? Just say, “Lord Jesus, I repent of my sins. Come into my heart. I make You my Lord and Savior.”

If you prayed that simple prayer, we believe you got born again. We’d love to send you some free information. Text the number on the screen or go to the website. I hope you’ll get planted in a good Bible-based church and keep God first place.

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6 comments

  • Tammy Moseley September 15 2021 posted by Tammy Moseley

    Thank you for your serum today I rediadated my life to the Lord today. I'm in a bad relationship and have anxiety and depression my mom died of covid in January been having a hard time. But I feel the Lord is pulling me out of all of this. Thank you Joel Osteen for for wonderful serums. God bless you.

  • Terry Brown February 22 2021 posted by Terry Brown

    Brother Joel it’s always awesome ? to here the word Jesus gives you I be so much in peace to here you

  • Jacqueline Franklin February 22 2021 posted by Jacqueline Franklin

    I praise God for messages and books. I went to one of your concerts at Hershey . I look forward to seeing you in Philadelphia

  • Doris Hummel February 22 2021 posted by Doris Hummel

    I love your programs they are so uplifting and such a blessing

  • Lisa M Rivera February 22 2021 posted by Lisa M Rivera

    Joel, my name is Lisa Eivera. In 2010 I suffered with a spinal stroke. Now in 2020 I am now suffering with a broken pelvic and my spine came apart from it. The doctors did surgery. I am now doing rehab. I am suffering from depression because this is twice now that I have to get myself back to myself. And deal with being different but walking and alive. I feel bad because I lost my myself from God for 2 weeks or so. But I don't mean it. I just don't know what more my body can take. I'm alone most of the time. My family has there own thing going on. I recently getting separated because I married a man at 19 who I loved and loved me but he just didn't know how to say away from the attention from other women when he drank. This went on for 40 years. I just want to live a life to help women and people out there that tried to commit suicide. I want to do what God wants me to do. Please help me

  • joel e. valderama February 21 2021 posted by joel e. valderama

    AMEN!
    KEEP THE FAITH !

Written by
Joel Osteen

Joel Osteen Ministries Joel Osteen is a preacher who gives inspiration! And that’s true, he is positive, his sermons are positive, his ministry is positive. The parishioners of his church are very successful people, as a result! How does he inspire millions of people around the world? Let's find out! Joel Austen began preaching in 1999, but his ministry began long before: in 1982, Osteen, left his studies, returned from Houston and invited his father to create a television ministry in LakeWood Church. He became the leader and inspirer of this ministry.  Father preached, the son made video reports that everyone would like. Joel helped his father in organizing the ministry: he prepared his father for the scene; picked up suit and tie; worked with lighting and video equipment in the hall, for best results. Some details He became the best assistant for his father, but throughout this time he…

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