Taken from StanleyonBible.
Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)
was one of the most godly and successful American Presidents. He had a
difficult childhood. His formal schooling was for less than a year. He
failed in business in 1831 and was defeated for the legislature in
1832. The
next year he again failed in business. His fiancee died in 1835. He was
defeated for speaker in 1838. When he got married, his wife became a
burden for him. Only one of his four sons lived past age 18. He was
defeated for congress, Senate and vice-presidency. But he was elected as
President in 1860!
There
is no one without failures in this world. For those who love God no
failure is final. Failures, crises, suffering, losses, disappointments and
such things belong to the same category. In the providence of God, all
these can be redemptively used to learn obedience.
Why
does God take us through difficult and depressing situations? Hebrews 12:9
seems to give the most satisfying answer: "We have had human fathers
who corrected us, and we paid them respect. Shall we not much more readily
be in subjection to the Father of Spirits and live?" Jesus was not
exempted from this experience except that in His case there was and could
be no failure but only suffering. The Son of God as the Son of Man
graduated with honours in the School of Suffering, with obedience as the
major (Heb 5:8).
Except
in very rare circumstances, failures in life are due to disobedience to
the Word of God and His revealed will. Failures are God's
attention-getters. Failures bring us to knees. Repeated failures make us
prostrate before God. If we don't learn from failures, we are only
learning to fail. Henry Ford forgot to put a reverse gear in his first
car. No one repeated that mistake. Hear the testimony of the Psalmist:
"Before I was afflicted, I went astray, but now I keep Your Word...
It is good for me that I have been afflicted, that I may learn Your
statutes" (Psa 119:67,71). Failures break our arrogance and make
obedience easy.
Some
failures are beyond us, but we are responsible for most of them. An
objective analysis of these failures would teach us how we can avoid them
by watchfulness and diligence.
Not
to the strong is the battle, not to the swift is the race;
Yet
to the true and the faithful victory is promised thro' grace!
(S.
Martin)
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