I saw a post by a well known
speaker this morning that caused me to think quite a bit. It had to do with our attitude toward trials. I’m offering my thinking process to you. I have been through more than some and less
than others. I’ve prayed, then sat
quietly and believed at times. Other
times, I’ve cried, screamed, thrown a fit or despaired. I’ve learned a powerfull lesson. “This too shall pass.”
I believe in asking God for
help with our struggles. I don’t think
God is offended by our cries to get us out of trouble, but I also believe that
sometimes he does not deliver us at the time or in the way that we would
expect.
I think that struggles and
difficulties have two main purposes in our lives: 1- to teach us valuable lessons and bring
patience, maturity and understanding, 2 - to purge sinful acts, bad habits and
wrong attitudes from our lives thereby precluding a greater ill in the future. Beyond that, I would say that these increase
faith and stamina.
The pages of life turn
quickly or slowly, but they do turn. If you
are going through a trial, go through it.
Don’t take up residence. The
nation of Israel went through the desert. It took them 40 years because of unbelief and
disobedience -which boils down to unbelief, but their wanderings did come to an
end. They pitched tents, but they didn’t
build houses in the wilderness. Keep
moving through it; don’t give up.
Don’t let the trial define
you; let it refine you. A diamond is
only a rock until it has been cut. A
piece of gold has only potential value until it goes through fire. You will come out the other side of
this. Faith looks to the future while
living in the present. Know who you are
before God. Meekness understands our
strength and our weakness, our success and our failure, our abilities and our
shortcomings and keeps these in perspective to the power, the will and the purpose
of God. Our value is seen through the
truth of God, not in relation to the will or expectations of people. We are weak but God is great and we are
loved.
Grumbling brings defeat;
self-pity brings bitterness and separation.
Faith says “With God all things are possible,” prays, gives thanks and
waits for the answer.
When faced with one
particularly difficult battle situation the leader of God’s people was told to
put musicians and singers in front of the army and to go out with the praise of
God. Paul and Silas sang praises and the
doors of their prison unlocked. Then
they were allowed to win the jailer and his family to Christ. Praise changes us first, then it changes our perception, and then it changes the dynamic of the problem.
We do not praise God because
of the battle; we praise him because we know he brings victory and cares deeply
for us in spite of the battle. We are
not thankful for the illness or hardship. We are thankful for God’s unfailing love and
care and for the times we have seen him work in our life and the lives of
others, bringing assurance that he is the answer to the hardship. God doesn’t want fake praise. We all have reasons to praise if we search
for them. I’ve found praise to bring more
change than all my other efforts.
One last note: If you are seeing others in a trial, pray for
them, encourage them and lend a hand if you can. You may be the strength God will use to get him
or her through it.
Blessings
I believe some trials just happen in spite of our connection with God. I don't think they are always tests as such, but they certainly refine us. I seldom know if a trial is a consequence of personal sin, or the problems of living in a fallen world.
ReplyDeleteIt seems that the only real job I am given in the midst of a trial is to not let a root of bitterness toward Him spring up. Job certainly was blameless, and really didn’t seem all that patient to me, but the attitude that seemed to excuse him was he didn’t curse God.
That idea helps me when the heavens are as brass, and I cannot sing psalms of praise. I don’t think I have risen to Apostle hood yet where I can take delight in misery as proof of His love! Maybe someday.
Enjoyed the thoughts, the words and your conclusions!
I do not see misery as proof of God's love. To me God has shown his love over and over and my doubt of it is probably not impressive to anyone. Misery is a result of a fallen world in my estimation-sometimes my fallen state and sometimes that of the world about me. I do believe God uses the misery that is produced for our benefit and I do believe he can stop it. The problems rise in my maturity and carnality which he has promised to redeem - and in the maturity and carnality of those I love deeply. Yet as with Israel redeemed from Egypt, it's not always a pleasant or easy process.
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