Romans 5:3-4 (NLT)
3 We can rejoice, too, when we run into problems and
trials, for we know that they help us develop endurance. 4 And endurance
develops strength of character, and character strengthens our confident hope of
salvation.
Dare say any of us enjoy running into the problems and
trials of life. However when we do we have the choice to face them or run from
them. Running serves no purpose other than to delay the inevitable. Facing a
problem means we trust God for leadership as we press on to correct the
problems and issues. Sometimes we might not find the answer we want, but we
find a way to build character and strength by listening to God.
in his book The Pressure's Off, psychologist Larry Crabb
uses a story from his childhood to illustrate our need to delight in God
through adversity:
One Saturday afternoon, I decided I was a big boy and
could use the bathroom without anyone's help. So I climbed the stairs, closed
and locked the door behind me, and for the next few minutes felt very
self-sufficient.
Then it was time to leave. I couldn't unlock the door. I
tried with every ounce of my three-year-old strength, but I couldn't do it. I
panicked. I felt again like a very little boy as the thought went through my
head, "I might spend the rest of my life in this bathroom."
My parents—and likely the neighbors—heard my desperate
scream.
"Are you okay?" Mother shouted through the door
she couldn't open from the outside. "Did you fall? Have you hit your
head?"
"I can't unlock the door!" I yelled. "Get
me out of here!"
I wasn't aware of it right then, but Dad raced down the
stairs, ran to the garage to find the ladder, hauled it off the hooks, and
leaned it against the side of the house just beneath the bedroom window. With
adult strength, he pried it open, then climbed into my prison, walked past me,
and with that same strength, turned the lock and opened the door.
"Thanks, Dad," I said—and ran out to play.
That's how I thought the Christian life was supposed to
work. When I get stuck in a tight place, I should do all I can to free myself.
When I can't, I should pray. Then God shows up. He hears my cry—"Get me
out of here! I want to play!"—and unlocks the door to the blessings I
desire.
Sometimes he does. But now, no longer three years old and
approaching sixty, I'm realizing the Christian life doesn't work that way. And
I wonder, are any of us content with God? Do we even like him when he doesn't
open the door we most want opened—when a marriage doesn't heal, when rebellious
kids still rebel, when friends betray, when financial reverses threaten our
comfortable way of life, when the prospect of terrorism looms, when health
worsens despite much prayer, when loneliness intensifies and depression
deepens, when ministries die?
God has climbed through the small window into my dark
room. But he doesn't walk by me to turn the lock that I couldn't budge.
Instead, he sits down on the bathroom floor and says, "Come sit with
me!" He seems to think that climbing into the room to be with me matters
more than letting me out to play.
I don't always see it that way. "Get me out of
here!" I scream. "If you love me, unlock the door!"
Dear friend, the choice is ours. Either we can keep
asking him to give us what we think will make us happy—to escape our dark room
and run to the playground of blessings—or we can accept his invitation to sit
with him, for now, perhaps, in darkness, and to seize the opportunity to know
him better and represent him well in this difficult world.
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