Acts 27:27-44
God’s care, plan, and providence are by no means a promise we will not face trouble, struggle, and hardship. Sometimes that trouble is the result of our own doing; sometimes it is the result of those around us. God‘s plan was for Paul to speak in Rome to the emperor and there present the gospel message. God would see Paul through to that end. But just because Paul was ordained to make this presentation did not insulate him from the consequences of the decisions he or others would make. The shipwreck was going to be a miserable and terrifying experience, which was a consequence of the decision to sail from Fair Havens back in verse 13. Misery is sometimes a result of our own bad decisions; other times it is a result of the bad decisions of those around us. We can be doing exactly what we are called to do, and we can be in the right walk with God, and still be in a shipwreck figuratively or literally.
So why didn’t Paul perform a miracle and call the seas to calm down like Jesus did? Why didn’t Paul name and claim the storm away and replace it with a placid sea and a gentle breeze? God‘s providence uses all things, even storms, to His purpose and end. Hanging onto a tossing ship, exhausted, battered, and bruised was an opportunity for good to be accomplished. We have difficulty understanding hard times as beneficial, but they are. There are some things in our hearts that will never be extracted by any other means than hard times. We can never walk away from some distractions; so those distractions must be wrecked like a ship on a reef.
We must, contrary to our wishes, let go of control of circumstances. We like to think we control circumstances, but more often than not that ‘control’ isn’t really there. At best we have a delusion or an illusion of control. The control of history and events belongs to God. What belongs to us is duty. Results cannot be controlled; sometimes the results are far less than our efforts, and sometimes results are disproportionately large compared to our efforts. We don’t know if the seed will produce no tree, a weak tree, or a great tree. It is our duty to plant the seed. In this passage, we see no miracles; we see duty, and that choice is in our control.
“Lord, I surrender control to You, and ask You to help me be faithful in my duty. AMEN”
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