The Glendale Star
22
November 11, 2021
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Problems, problems, why are there problems? Two men were shipwrecked on an island. One started screaming and yelling, “We’re going to die. We’re going to die! There’s no food, no water! We’re going to die!” The second man leaned up against a palm tree so calmly that it drove the first man crazy. “Don’t you understand? We’re going to die! We’re going to die!” The second man replied, “You don’t understand. I make $100,000 a week.” The first man looked at him quite dumbfounded and asked, “What difference does that make? We got shipwrecked on an island with no food and no water. We’re going to die! We’re going to die!” The second man answered, “You just don’t get it. I make $100,000 a week, and I tithe on those $100,000 a week to my church. My pastor will find me!” Now, that’s what I call peace. You might be saying, “But I don’t make $100,000 a week.” I hear you, readers. Me neither. But I’ve been on that island, haven’t you? Yet, here we are. We’ve made it somehow. So far, we have survived 100% of our worst days. I have found that through the good times and the notso-good times, God is always with me. Maybe you think it was a coincidence that finally got you out of your mess. However, could it be that coincidence is when God chooses to remain anonymous? Have you ever thought to yourself, “Problems, problems, why so many problems?” Did you ever
CHURCH COMMUNITY CONNECTION Pastor Ed Delph Glendale Star Columnist
think your problems and tough times could bring you closer to God and resources you would have never discovered any other way? Here are a few quotes from sage leaders that might help you with your views concerning problems: “Problems can break up our self-sufficiency like a sledgehammer can break up concrete.” “Amid the thorns, you discover the rose.” “When you’re at the end of your rope, you discover God lives there.” Proverbs 14:4 says, “Where no oxen are, the manger is clean, but much increase comes by the strength of the ox.” In other words, oxen make a mess, but that is much better than having clean stalls with no oxen. In that day and rural culture, oxen were like gold. Oxen get things done, plow the fields, produce milk, haul the crop to market — the list is long. One
trip to India will convince you of the value of oxen. Where there is life, there will be unwanted “stuff” from time to time. But if there is no manure, there’s no milk. It’s a fact of life. The only place where everything is perfect and in order is a graveyard. You’ve seen that bumper sticker with the four-letter word that starts with “s” and ends in “t”? Well, that “stuff happens.” But it also means that “life happens.” Why not use the manure for growing, not groaning? Too many of us think the light at the end of the tunnel is a train! Some of us, after so many manure experiences, feel like the guy who went to get his brakes fixed, and the mechanic said, “I couldn’t repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder!” Pain in life is inevitable, but misery is optional. The key to life is to enjoy the good times and learn to grow during those not-so-good times. The bad times in life may produce something extraordinary, even miraculous, later. That manure grows the grass that the oxen eat to produce — milk! Yes, manure happens, stalls get dirty, but at least you’re alive, and most likely, this too shall pass. Got milk? There’s a way to go from pieces to peace in the shipwrecked-on-anisland times of your life. Here it is. Mastered by God, you can control how you react to circumstances, people and calamity. Mastered by anything less than God, you are a vic-
tim or a puppet of circumstances, people or calamity. Amid my tough times, I like to say to myself, “I will, by my life’s choices, prove that the Word of God is true.” That brings God into the picture. When you’re up against something big, face it head on with God by your side. That’s what mentally tough David did with his Goliath. He picked up his only resource, a slingshot and five stones. The first stone he threw hit the giant Philistine right in the head, and down he went. Afterward, David said, “Goliath was easier to defeat than when I killed the lion and the bear. He was so big I couldn’t miss him.” Then David explained, “I was only trying to get ahead in life.” You see, you can go to pieces or have peace. But life’s not fair. Life was never meant to be. There will be manure times and milk times in life. Deal with it or it will deal with you. The only thing worse than dealing with manure is wishing you had. My life’s experience reveals that God is a very present help in times of trouble — and you don’t have to make $100,000 a week to secure God’s services. Ed Delph is a noted author of 10 books, as well as a pastor, teacher, former business owner and speaker. He has traveled extensively, having been to more than 100 countries. He is president of NationStrategy, a nonprofit organization involved in uplifting and transforming communities worldwide. For more information, see nationstrategy.com. He may be contacted at nationstrategy@cs.com.
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