Dealing With Trouble
Pastor Bill Lobbs Pastor Bill's Nuggets of Truth
Theme: Handling trouble
before trouble handles us.
Introductory Remarks
Wouldn't it be wonderful if we always
felt as though we were always on "top of the world?" That we
would always be in a positive mood, with circumstances involving us
always to our liking. That people would always treat us with the respect
we feel is due us, and give us all the affirmation and love that we
desire and need.
This sounds good when we let our thoughts
dwell on it, but all of us know from our own personal experiences in
everyday living that life doesn't come to us neatly packaged like that.
Life does have its days of sunshine filled with laughter and
expectancy. But it also has its days of storms that are filled with anxiety
and uncertainty. Storms filled with the fierce winds of conflict,
challenge, and change. Storms that bring troubles into our life that we
must learn to deal with before they shipwreck us on the sea of life.
Today/tonight, I want to share with you
some practical biblical truths that will help us weather the storm of
trouble when it blows into our life. I've labeled this teaching "
How to Deal With Trouble." It's based on an incident in the life of
the Apostle Paul that's recorded in the twentieth seventh chapter of the
book of Acts. It's the story of Paul's encounter with a storm on the
Mediterranean Sea on his way to Rome as a prisoner to be tried before Caesar.
From this incident, I believe we can learn how to stay calm and maintain
our confidence and courage when we are encountering storms (troubles) in
our life no matter how fierce they may be.
Point 1
:
As you turn in
your bibles to Acts 27, I mention three things about trouble you need to
know.
-
You have
just gotten out of it
-
You're in
it right now
-
You are
headed for it
Trouble is something that belongs to the
human race. I've yet to meet anyone who can boast of being totally free
from it. It is one of those common denominators that links everyone who
has lived, who is now living, or who will live on this earth. Job, who
had his share of troubles, tells us "man is born unto trouble"
(Job 5:7) and again "Man that is born of a woman is of few days,
and full of trouble." Job 14:1. Troubles plagues the human race.
Troubles
produce "tough days." We've all experienced them and we know
that some seem to be worse than others. I've had days "pop up"
in my life and no doubt you have too, when you wonder why you
ever crawled out of bed that morning, and then you wonder if you're
going to make it back to bed that night. In the comic strip Peanuts,
Charlie Brown is saying to Lucy, "I've got so many troubles that if
anything happens to me today it will be two weeks before I can worry
about it." Can you identify with Charlie? Here's a fact about life
that you can count on happening no matter who you are. Trouble, in one
or more of its various forms, is going to come knocking unexpectedly at
your door one day. Don't spend your time looking for it - for it
will find you. Trouble knows your address. Prepare yourself in advance
to deal with whatever your "it" may be.
Christians
encounter "tough days" too. We really do a great injustice to
others if we leave the impression in our preaching and witnessing that
becoming a Christian will automatically exempt a person from
experiencing any troubles or difficulties in life. When Job said,
"A man is born unto trouble," he stated a truth that applies
to all mankind. Not even Christian "super faith" can change
that truth. Christ brings many gifts into our life when we are born
again, but a state of perpetual tranquility free from troubles is not
one of them. In this life, there are no utopias for us to live in. There
are no cities, neighborhoods, nor churches that are ideal or free from
troubles or does not need change or improvement in some way. There are
no jobs that doesn't have its share of frustrations, discouragement or
disappointments. Some have more than others. It's unrealistic to believe
that every venture we endeavor will be successful or that we will be
perfect in all we attempt to do. Sometimes for various reasons we may
fail to achieve the goal we have set. But we shouldn't let that failure
become fatal to us. Jesus told the disciples, "In this world you
will have troubles, but take heart, I have overcome the
world." John 16:33 Although none of us has
immunity from the troubles of life that come our way, God gives us a
message of encouragement in His Word when He promises to help us when
those troubles come.
Psalms 50:15, "Call upon me in the day of
trouble and I will deliver thee."
Psalms 46:1, "God is our refuge and our strength, a
very present help in the time of trouble."
(Amplified) "A very present and well proved help in trouble."
Point 2:
Trouble and the Apostle Paul
Very few people today have experienced
as many difficulties in their life as
Paul did. He was on a first name basis with trouble. In II
Corinthians 11: 23-28, Paul shares some of his experiences with
trouble. He is not complaining about them, but he's just letting us know
that he understands what trouble is all about.
"Five times I have received at
the hands of the Jews forth stripes save one. Three times I have been
beaten with rods. Once I was stoned. Three times I have been
shipwrecked. A night and a day I have been adrift at sea. On my journeys
I have often been in danger from rivers, robbers, my own people the
Jews, the Gentiles, false brethern and the sea. I have been in constant
toil and hardship with many sleepless nights. Often in hunger and thirst
without food. Often in cold and exposure without warm clothes to protect
me from the elements, and always upon me there is the pressure of the
care of the church." (Amplified Bible)
But troubles couldn't put Paul down. He
refused to be defeated by them. They failed in detouring him from
serving God. II Corinthians 4:8, has Paul saying, "We are
pressed on every side by trouble, because we don't know why things
happen as they do, but we don't give up and quit." (Living
Bible) J. B. Phillips translates it this way. "We may be knocked
down but we are not knocked out."
Acts 27 describes one of Paul's
experiences with trouble and how he responded to it. Because the story
is quite lengthy, I want to give you a short version of it and then
point
out some selected verses that will give us three principles to
observe in handling the difficulties that come into our life.
- Paul had been arrested by the Jews and
brought before King Agrippa. Paul had appealed his case before
Caesar.
- He was placed on board a ship sailing
for Rome.
- They enjoyed fair weather during the
first part of the voyage but contrary weather forced them to stop at
a place called Fair Havens.
- They purposed to resume their journey,
but God warned Paul of an approaching hurricane force storm that
they would encounter causing much loss.
- Paul warned the crew, but the ship's
captain and the owner overrode Paul's words of warning and they
sailed out of the harbor.
- They soon encountered the storm which
was furious in strength and which lasted for many days.
- God told Paul through angelic ministry
for no one to leave the ship and no lives would be lost.
- Although no lives were lost, the ship
ran aground and was broken up by the rocks and waves with the loss
of the cargo.
With this story in mind, here are three
principles to follow when you find yourself facing a storm in your
life, (a time of trouble.)
Point 3:
Principle #1 - Determine
the reason for the storm.
Until we first determine the reason for
our trouble, we cannot successfully deal with it. Until we know the
reason for it, we cannot respond to it appropriately. If we don't
respond appropriately to it - the trouble will defeat us. God does not
want the trouble to defeat us, but to develop us. If we have difficulty
identifying the reason for the trouble we are facing, take it to the
Lord. Seek His insight and ask for His input into the matter. David did
in Psalm 73:16, "I tried to think this problem through,
but it was too difficult for me, until I went into your temple."
There are three types of storms that come into our lives.
- Storms that we bring on ourselves.
- Storms that are caused by others.
- Storms that are allowed by God.
We need to ask ourselves in times of
difficulty, which kind of storm (trouble) is this we are encountering.
Is this trouble of my own making? Be honest when examining the trouble.
Most of our troubles usually start with us because many of them are
home
made. Troubles that we bring on ourselves are usually the hardest to
bear because we know that our own ignorance, or willfulness or stubbornness
has caused it. Troubles that others cause is the hardest to handle
because others initiate it. Troubles that God allows is the hardest to
understand because we don't understand God's purpose in it for us at the
time.
Jonah is a good example of bringing
trouble on oneself and also bringing trouble on someone else (the crew.)
Joseph is a good example of God allowing trouble to come into ones life.
In Joseph's case, trouble was allowed for a purpose. In every storm God
allows, He is either in the ship with us or He is walking the waves
close by. Our ship cannot sink. We are safe. Every difficulty that God
allows into our life - He is at the same time working the solution to
that problem into our life.
There are three reasons given to us in
Acts 27 as to why and how people get themselves into
trouble.
- Verse 11, We listen to bad
advice from others.
"However the centurion paid greater attention to the pilot
and to the owner of the ship than to what Paul said..."
God had said to them, through Paul, "Don't sail." They
set sail anyway and sailed into a storm. When you don't listen and
give heed to what God says, you are going to encounter storms. We
need to know those who advise us. Do they really understand the
problem? Have they got the whole picture about what's going on? Are
they themselves successful in the area they are advising us in?
- Verse 12, We sometimes follow
the crowd.
"The majority favored the plan of putting to sea
again."
Listen - just because the majority go for it does not mean
that they are right. The Israelites of Kadesh-Barnea would say,
"amen" to that statement. They accepted the majority
report of the ten spies and invited trouble into the camp. The
phrase "everybody's doing it" just doesn't get it unless
God is doing it too. You have a mind - use it and don't let others
make your decisions for you. They could be wrong just as the
pilot and ship's owner were wrong in our story.
- Verse 13, We rely on
circumstances many times.
"So when the south wind blew softly, supposing they were
gaining their object, they weighed anchor and sailed."
The weather seemed favorable, but God had said no. The
weather circumstance seemed to say, "Go for it," but God
had said no. Circumstances always aren't what they seem.
Sometimes they give us the wrong picture. How can it be wrong when
it feels so right can be a very dangerous attitude to be guided and
controlled by. Feelings are fickle and tricky and you
can't always trust them. It's really unwise for us to ignore what
God has said even if circumstances at the time seems to contradict
what God is saying. We are opening the door for trouble to
walk into our live.
Point 4:
Principle #2 - Determine your
response to the storm.
Ask: What is the best way to respond to this trouble?
If we don't respond appropriately, the
trouble will defeat us. It must be addressed but in a constructive way.
Troubles are usually only temporary, but our lack of responding it could
have a permanent effect for a long time.
Here are three wrong ways
given to us in Acts 27.
- Verse 15, Don't drift.
"And when the ship was caught and was unable to head against
the wind, we gave up and letting her drift, we were borne
along."
One of first things storms (troubles) tend to do in our lives is
to unanchor us. We start to lose our bearings and begin to drift
and we lose sight of everything but the problem. We get our eye on
the problem and not the problem solver. Our attitude
becomes one of, why try - what's the use, but it's at
this point we need to determine a course of action and then do it.
If we surrender to the storm, we'll wind up on the rocks.
- Verse 18, Don't discard.
"As we were being dangerously tossed about by the
violence of the storm: the next day they began to throw the freight
overboard."
Have you also noticed that when a crisis comes into our life, we
are often tempted to cast off the very things that were important to
us when things were better? Common sense and reasoning seem to be
the first things to go - followed in time by faith, friends
family and the list goes on. Troubles have a way too, of warping our
thinking abilities and we find ourselves saying and doing stupid
things that we would never say or do in normal times. Troubles have
a way of causing us to become so sensitive that we become edgy and
defensive to others and eventually they avoid us and we find
ourselves alone in the storm.
- Verse 20, Don't despair.
"And when neither sun nor stars were visible for many
days, and no small tempest kept raging about us, all hope of our
being saved was finally abandoned."
Trouble is not disastrous until we surrender to it in despair.
At this point, we could go under and many do. They give up all hope.
Some commit suicide or drop out of life altogether. Some
turn to drugs or alcohol to cope. Despairing in times of trouble is
a wrong response. Help is only a prayer away. Remember in
Matthew
14, the story of Jesus walking on the water while the disciples
were in the boat being beaten by the winds and waves? Peter, seeing
Jesus walking on the water, stepped out of the boat to walk on the
water to Jesus. But when he looked at the huge waves and felt the
fierce wind, his faith faltered and he began to
sink. He cried out to Jesus to save him, and Jesus reached out and
lifted Peter into the boat. The truth that this incident teaches us
is this; whatever is over our head is under His feet. In the
midst of the storm, don't despair. Call on the Sea Walker. He's only
a prayer away.
Here are three right ways to
respond to storms.
- Confess that there is a
problem.
Listen to me carefully. We cannot deal with a problem until we
admit there is a problem. Don't pretend it's not there. Everyone
else knows it's there. Some don't want to admit there is a problem
because they are trying to confess only a "positive
confession." Quit trying to be super saint to others and
to the Lord. Admit the problem and ask for help.
- Confront the problem.
Don't fear the storm but face up to it. Ignoring it will not
make it go away, but it will grow. A person has to confront the
storm head on. Decide that there are some things that can and must
be done on your part to face trouble. A person can't overcome it if
one has a "I'll just have to learn to live with it"
attitude. Address the problem. It's there and it must be dealt with.
So quit procrastinating and confront it. God didn't say it would be
easy, but He did say, He would be a very present help when
trouble comes.
- Claim a promise. Verses
22-25,
"But take courage! None of you will lose your lives, even
though the ship will go down. For last night an angel of the God to
whom I belong and whom I serve stood before me, and he said,
"Don't be afraid, Paul, for you will surely stand trial before
Caesar! What's more, God in His goodness, has granted safety
to everyone traveling with you. So take courage! For I believe
God."
Paul claimed victory over the storm
because he had a promise from God. He had a word from God. He is calm
and he is confident in the storm. He has courage in the crisis.
God's Word to you and I in these verses is; if you face a problem, find
a promise in God's Word pertaining to it. Claim it, confess
it, cling to it. The promise will keep one encouraged until the
storm in our life passes.
Point:
5
Principle #3, Determine the
resources available in the midst of the storm.
Why was the Apostle Paul so confident in
the midst of the storm and the sailors weren't? What did Paul know that
the sailors didn't know? Paul was encouraged by four great
resources that serve as anchors of the soul in times of storms. These
anchors will stabilize us and help us ride out any storm we may
encounter.
- Anchor #1 - The presence of
God.
Verse 23, "For this very night there stood by my side
an angel of God."
Difficulties cannot hide us from God. Jesus said, "Lo, I
am with you even to the end of the world." He also said, "I'll
never leave you nor forsake you." There is a general sense
of God being present everywhere at the same time. We call it
omnipresence. To the believer, there is the knowledge given that God
is present with them in a very personal way. God makes Himself very
real to His people in times of crisis. He whispers to us, "My
child, I'm right here." Remember the story, Footprints in
the Sand? A man and the Lord were traveling back over the road
the man had traveled in his life. The man said, "Lord, I've
noticed two sets of prints most of the way, but when times of great
trouble came, I noticed only one set of prints. Why is that? The
Lord replied, "My Son, that one set was mine, for in those
times of trouble, I carried you."
- Anchor #2 - The purpose of God
Verse 24, "And the angel said, "'Do
not be frightened Paul, it is necessary for you to stand before
Caesar.' "Knowing that God had put purpose into his life
enabled Paul to face the storm that now threatened him. Settle it
forever in your mind. When God allowed you to be born into this
world, you entered it with purpose for being here. As a believer,
God is moving in all things that touch your life (even
trouble) to help you fulfill that purpose. Anchor yourself to God's
purpose, knowing that God is at work, working that purpose into your
life.
- Anchor #3 - The promise of God.
Verse 23, "But take courage, none of you will lose
your lives, even though the ship will go down."
In times of storm, we may lose the cargo. We may lose the ship
and we may even get wet, but we are going to make it because of the
promises of God to us. I like the Amplified version of John 16:33,
It has often been an anchor to my faith when I've encountered a
storm in my life. "I have told you these things so that in
Me you may have perfect peace and confidence. In the world, you will
have tribulation and trials, distress and frustration, but be of
good cheer, be confident, certain, undaunted, for I have overcome
the world. I have deprived it of power to harm you. I have conquered
it (for you)." My friend, you are going to make it because
of the promises of God working for you.
- Anchor #4 - Prayer to God.
Verse 29, "They dropped anchors off the stern and
kept wishing for daybreak to come." Luke 18:1, tells
us that "Men ought always to pray and not to faint (lose
heart and give-up)." When the early church faced storms,
they prayed. Acts 4:31, "And when they had prayed,
the place was shaken and they continued to speak the Word of God
with freedom and boldness and courage." God moves in
response to prayer. Answers come. James 5:16, "The
earnest prayer of a righteous person has great power and wonderful
results." ( TNLT)
- Cornelius and his household were saved
because he prayed.
- Peter was delivered from prison in
answer to prayer.
- Hezekiah was healed and fifteen years
was added to his life because he prayed.
In times of storm, the prayer closet is
the safest place one can be.
Closing thoughts
What does God want us to learn from this story?
- Storms come into our lives to develop
us.
- Every storm is a school.
- Every trial is a teacher.
- Every experience is an education
When storms (troubles) come:
- Determine the reason for the
trouble.
- Determine your response to the
trouble.
- Determine the resources
available to you in facing the trouble.
- Do these three and you will determine
the results of your trouble.
A collection of timely, in depth sermons by Pastor Bill Lobbs. Also contains
pages for the PCW women's organization.
The purpose of About-Him.Com is to glorify the Lord Jesus
Christ whom we preach as the Almighty God manifest in the flesh.
It is our desire that everything presented on these pages increases your
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Last modified: 08-05-2007
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