Trusting in the Storms
Opening Prayer
Father, You are gentle yet powerful, lowly yet almighty, shepherd yet king. I bow to worship You now.
Read ACTS 27:13-26
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Scripture taken from the THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION, NIV Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Reflect
“Faith means sitting down serenely, remembering that God has helped us in the past, and trusting that he will see us through the problems troubling us now” (A. Leonard Griffith). Important, but sometimes difficult to do in the midst of a storm.
Luke, the historian, brings his chilling eyewitness account of the storm at sea. “There is no such detailed record of the working of an ancient ship in the whole of classical literature” (Thomas Walker, 1784-1836). Here are 276 people in a wooden sailing ship with no benefits of modern navigation, no weather forecast, compass or sextant, valiantly battling the elements using every possible means to stay afloat and somehow preserve their lives. If they didn’t sink in the open sea there always remained the notorious quicksand and shoals of Syrtis, North Africa, and the graveyard of many. Their fear was palpable, while the storm raged unabated for 14 days. No wonder all hope was lost and they didn’t eat! Finally God spoke to Paul, calming his fear and promising that he would go before Caesar and that the lives of all on board would be saved, though the ship would be lost.
With strong faith in God’s promise Paul encouraged his fellows, speaking confidently to them of the God he served and who could be trusted implicitly. Given that the ship would be wrecked Paul concluded that they would reach some island. To arrive at the tiny island of Malta was a miracle, the only island in 250 miles of open sea between Tunisia and Sicily.
God’s presence may not have been obvious throughout the fortnight of trauma, but he was there with Paul and all those on board–though they didn’t even know his name. As Christians we are not spared the consequences of evil in our world and many times when storms are raging God seems absent. Sometimes we wait a long time before we know his guiding hand, but we can trust that he is working for good for us and also for those who do not yet know his name.
Apply
Describe your life in terms of a weather report. How can Paul’s example and the principles you have learned from his experience help you in the storms of life?
Closing prayer
Lord, thank You that in the storms of life, You are my eternal hope and my eternal home. I know You are watching over me today.
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