FACING THE GIANTS Receives Just 4 Kids Magazine's
Outstanding Movie Award for 2006.

    FACING THE GIANTS caught our attention last summer when it made national headlines because it was rated PG for religious content. Read article HERE. Just 4 Kids Magazine joined thousands of other Christians in protesting the rating. We read that Sherwood Baptist Church had already produced a movie called "Fly Wheel", and Just 4 Kids Magazine gave a 5 star review on this movie in the September 2006 Issue. So we expected to watch another awesome family movie.

    FACING THE GIANTS exceeded our expectations! Seventeen year old Jonathan said it was THE BEST MOVIE that he has ever seen. Our whole family laughed, cheered, cried, and applaud this outstanding movie. We pray that God's annointing will continue over this movie to inspire parents, teachers and coaches across the country.

    STORY: "In his six years of coaching, Grant Taylor has never had a winning season. Even the hope of a new season is squelched when the best player on his Shiloh Eagles decides to transfer schools. After losing their first three games of the season, the coach discovers a group of fathers are plotting to have him fired. Combined with pressures at home, Coach Taylor has lost hope in his battle against fear and failure. Grant turns to the bible for help, but does not think God is listening until a minister comes into the Coaches office to give him a special word from God. However, an unexpected challenge helps him find a purpose bigger than just victories. Daring to trust God to do the impossible, Coach Taylor and the Eagles discover how faith plays out on the field … and off. With God, all things are possible …"

    Alex Kendrick plays Coach Grant Taylor and serves as Associate Pastor of Media for Sherwood Baptist Church and teaches a televised Bible study seen in Southwest Georgia. The assistant Coach Brady Owens is played by Tracy Goode who serves as associate media director at Sherwood Baptist Church and is a radio announcer for local high school football teams. Alex starred as the leading actor in Fly Wheel as a Used Car Owner/Salesman, and Tracy was a salesman that decided to leave the dealership when his boss turned to trusting God and being honorable in his business. We were glad to see that Tracy played a character that made the right choice this time. Acting is fantastic. You would never have guessed that they used ordinary Church going members of Sherwood Baptist. Most of the football players were played by the real football players of Sherwood Baptist School.

    Both movies were written and produced by Alex and Stephen Kendrick, brothers and associate pastors at Sherwood Baptist Church. Their goals were to produce a family friendly movie that could be affordably shot in Albany, would be fun to watch, impactful to viewers, and glorifying to God. We can not wait to see the next awesome movie idea God gives Sherwood Production.

    Resources and Downloads

    Whole Hearted Study Series by Stephen Kendrick

    Can't find FACING THE GIANTS at a local Christian Bookstore? ClickStar is making the movie available at their website, and when you purchase the film, you receive a free download of the 28-minute making-of-the-movie feature. ClickStar even provides you with a forum to talk with others about the film. To find out more, or to download FACING THE GIANTS, click the button below:

    More than 2,000 church, school, and ministry groups have hosted highly successful FACING THE GIANTS Movie Events. If you'd like to host an outreach event featuring the film, or as a way to rally your group, be sure to get your official Site License. With this specially licensed DVD, you will be able to host public screenings of FACING THE GIANTS throughout the course of the year. Click Here For More Information

    Are you a Coach? "www.Coaches Ministry.com" has a wonderful ministry designed just 4 you.

    CLICK HERE for more resources for the movie. Read the Sample below.

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    Facing the Giants: Faith to Face Your Impossibilities (Joshua 3:1-17) Written by Michael Catt

    Jesus knew the power of using stories to touch hearts and give people a glimpse of heaven. "Facing the Giants" is a modern-day parable on fear and faith told in a language that our culture speaks fluently -- media.

    This movie, produced by a church on a shoestring budget, is a modern day David vs. Goliath project on screen and behind the scenes. It has defied the odds and has played to audiences in more than 650 theaters, earned national news, thousands of testimonies, and over 1 million ticket buyers in the box office. However, millions more have yet to experience the movie.

    Learn how you can show Facing the Giants in your church or school

    The following free downloads are available for this sermon:

    Sermon Handout for Facing the Giants (62 kb PDF)
    PowerPoint for Faith to Face Your Impossibilities sermon (2 MB PowerPoint file)
    Introduction: During WWII, my dad’s brother was in the Seabees, the naval construction battalion. He did a lot of work in the Pacific. After the marines would come in and land on an island. They would build roads and they would build camps. I love the slogan for the Seabees. It says, “The difficult we will do immediately; the impossible may take a little longer.”

    The great thing about our God is the impossible doesn’t take him any longer. There is no difference in the eyes of God between the difficult and the impossible. However, there are some reasons why we get to the edge, but then quit and fall short of walking in the life that God intends for us.

    Facing the Giants Resource/Promotion Pack

    In the movie, Facing the Giants, the team thought the playoffs were impossible, but Coach Taylor challenged them to believe God.

    What causes us to give up on the seemingly impossible?

    1. We trust in fleshly wisdom rather than in the Word of God. In other words, when we begin to say, “I think,” instead of, “God says,” we’ll fall short. What we think can be challenged, refuted and argued about, but what God says is forever. And God’s word is true forever. Ten of the twelve spies in Numbers chapter 13 got the grasshopper complex, and they missed God’s blessing because they got to thinking instead of trusting.

    2. We get a word from God and then go ask somebody what they think about it. I’m not talking about seeking godly counsel because that’s a biblical directive. However, if God gives you a promise from his Word, you need to stand on it. It really doesn’t matter whether or not everyone agrees with you. You’ll always find someone who says, “Well, I don’t think you’re believing it enough,” or “You’re believing it too much.” Just take God at his word.

    3. We hold onto traditions rather than truth. Sometimes we have a hard time believing God can operate outside of our experiences or outside of our denomination. We can get caught up in our traditions and think God has to do it “the way it’s always been done.” Unfortunately, we’ll fall short because God is not going to stay in the box we try to put Him in. He’s going to keep pushing us to get beyond what feels comfortable and keep stretching us to be where He wants us to be.

    4. Fear grips us at the moment of decision. We get right to the edge, and all of a sudden we become afraid and focus on the problem rather than the on Lord. We start to worry: What are people going to think? What about my reputation? What if God doesn’t come through? I’d rather step out, believing God told me to do something than never step out and never see anything happen. I would rather risk failing than never take a risk at all. A. B. Simpson said, “Be afraid of your fears…they will pierce your heart and hinder your advancement.”

    5. We focus on ourselves. We allow the devil to bring up something from our past, and we forget that God has covered us with His blood, that He forgives and that He casts our sin into a sea of forgetfulness and remembers it no more.

    6. Just a total lack of faith. We’re just not willing to believe God.

    Joshua started early the next morning and left Acacia Grove with all the Israelites. They went as far as the Jordan and stayed there before crossing. After three days the officers went through the camp and commanded the people: “When you see the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God carried by the Levitical priests, you must break camp and follow it. But keep a distance of about 1,000 yards between yourselves and the ark. Don’t go near it, so that you can see the way to go, for you haven’t traveled this way before.” Joshua told the people, “Consecrate yourselves, because the Lord will do wonders among you tomorrow.” Then he said to the priests, “Take the ark of the covenant and go on ahead of the people.” So they carried the ark of the covenant and went ahead of them. (Joshua 3:1-6 HCSB)

    Appropriating faith means taking what God says in His Word and applying it to your life and living according to it. How do we appropriate faith?

    PREPARATION
    John Bisango once said, “God will never do what He can do before we do as much as we can. His opportunity awaits at the end of our extremity. Never will He act until we have been faithful to do what we can.” That’s faith and works. In the passage above, the priests had to move closer to the river. They were seven miles away, so first Joshua had to get them in a position to cross the river. We can stand back at a safe distance from all that God has for us and say, “I know it’s out there, but I’m not going to take any steps of faith. I’m not going to move closer. I’m not going to do anything differently.” In the movie, the team had to prepare themselves for the impossible. They didn’t just stand on the sidelines and conduct business as usual.

    CONSECRATION
    Joshua told the people to consecrate themselves in verse 5. Why? The preparation was spiritual because the task was impossible. They had to prepare themselves for a manifestation of God’s power in their midst.

    Today, we often want the power of God, but we don’t want to consecrate ourselves. We want revival or a great work of God, but we don’t want to be set apart and uniquely different. Coach Taylor not only prepared his team physically, but he also prepared them spiritually. He knew they were also fighting a spiritual battle, so he challenged the guys to be set apart.

    At the Jordan River, we die. Canaan is a picture of walking in victory and abundance—the spirit-filled life. But to get to Canaan you have to die. We don’t walk in the fullness of the Spirit because we think we can get there without dying to self. You can’t get to Canaan on a bridge that goes over dying to self. You get to Canaan by walking through the Jordan, a river at flood stage. It’s coming to the end of yourself where you find the sufficiency in Christ that is yours. The God who takes you through the Jordan equips you and empowers you not to wallow in the Jordan or on the wrong side, but to get across. The Scriptures say that He brought us out so He could bring us in. God did not bring us out of our Egypt to die in the wilderness of an unfulfilled, unsatisfying life. God brought us out so He could bring us in.

    THE FIRST STEP
    When the feet of the priests who carry the ark of the Lord, the Lord of all the earth, come to rest in the Jordan’s waters, its waters will be cut off. The water flowing downstream will stand up in a mass.” When the people broke camp to cross the Jordan, the priests carried the ark of the covenant ahead of the people.

    Now the Jordan overflows its banks throughout the harvest season. But as soon as the priests carrying the ark reached the Jordan, their feet touched the water at its edge and the water flowing downstream stood still, rising up in a mass that extended as far as Adam, a city next to Zarethan. The water flowing downstream into the Sea of the Arabah (the Dead Sea) was completely cut off, and the people crossed opposite Jericho.

    The priests carrying the ark of the Lord’s covenant stood firmly on dry ground in the middle of the Jordan, while all Israel crossed on dry ground until the entire nation had finished crossing the Jordan. (Joshua 3:13-17 HCSB)

    Dry ground. The priests took the first step. They stepped in, and when their feet touched that water, God pushed those waters back into a heap. In fact, God pushed the waters all the way back to the city of Adam, sixteen miles away! God doesn’t lead you to step out in faith for you to get bogged down in the muddy middle. He intends for you to cross over. The miracle was a result of obeying God.

    They crossed at the appointed time. Walking by faith is not according to your agenda, your calendar or your clock; it’s according to God’s timetable. When you and I walk by faith; we don’t do it when we feel like it; we do it when God says to do it. It’s an appointed time.

    They crossed at an impossible time. Don’t think that walking by faith means God is always going to make it easy for you. Why? God doesn’t always want it to make sense to you because if it did, God wouldn’t get all the glory.

    The water was held in place until everyone crossed. The people in the back were probably thinking, “This isn’t going to last long. They’ll get all the dry ground, and we’ll get soaked. This is going to be a bad situation.” It stayed dry until all Israel of crossed. Now how long do you think it took millions of men, women, children, cows and sheep to get across that river? Nobody got trampled. Nobody panicked. Everybody got across.

    But now, thus says the Lord, your Creator, O Jacob, and He who formed you, O Israel, “Do not fear, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name; you are Mine! When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they will not overflow you; when you walk through the fire, you will not be scorched, nor will the flame burn you.” - Isaiah 43:1-2, NASB

    Between your impossibility and your life of victory God is calling you across. He’s not calling you to victory; He’s actually calling you to the Victor, to the one who is your victory. We aren’t to glory in our faith or in our victory. We’re to glory in Him and who He is and what He has done.

    When fear and faith collide, which side of the river are you on? Are you on the wilderness side, wondering if God will come through for you? Or are you on the Canaan side? God wants us to get to the point where we trust him, die to ourselves, step in, cross over and decide the only way to go the rest of life is forward. Die falling forward, not retreating.

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    Dr. Michael C. Catt is the Sr. Pastor of Sherwood Baptist Church, Albany, Georgia. Sherwood Baptist is a multi-cultural, multi-generational church drawing members from 29 surrounding communities in Southwest Georgia.