John
Wooden, the famous former basketball coach, is credited with saying,
”Things turn out best for those who make the best of the way things
turn out.” This is really another way of saying what Paul taught
us so many years ago. He said, ”I have learned, in whatsoever state
I am, therewith to be content.” It is interesting to notice that
Paul had to learn this for it seems natural to always want something
we do not have, to be discontented with our present lot.
Certainly
neither Paul nor John Wooden ever advocated a ”do nothing” attitude.
They both believed in using their talents and abilities to the full,
but they also realized that we need to accept what is and make the
best of it. There is another little saying we like which goes like
this: ”When life hands you a lemon, make lemonade.” This is also
another way of saying ”make the best of what you have, to be content
right where you are.”
This
is a great lesson that many have found hard to learn. Paul gives
us some examples of how to do it in his own life. When he was in
prison, his situation caused some to preach the gospel because of
his good example. Others wanted to ”add affliction to his bonds”
and so preached Christ insincerely as they hoped to cause Paul additional
pain. Paul didn’t care; he made the best of. the situation and rejoiced
that Christ was being preached ”whether in pretence, or in truth.”
After Paul’s arrest, Paul is brought before the council to be interrogated.
When he realized that part of the council were Sadducees and part
were Pharisees, he cried out, ”Men and brethren, I am a Pharisee,
the son of a Pharisee; of the hope and resurrection of the dead
I am called in question.” This immediately divided his audience
and now half of them were for him whereas before they were all against
him. This is a good example of making the best of the way things
turn out. He had not planned to be arrested, but when he was, he
seized the opportunity to turn it to his advantage.
No
basketball player makes every basket he shoots, no team wins every
game they play. John Wooden taught his young men to play to win
but to learn from their defeats and keep trying. This philosophy
helped him to build championship teams year after year. Solomon
taught us that ”a just man falleth seven times, and riseth up again;
but the wicked shall fall into mischief.”
There
is another saying that ties in with this point. ”When the going
gets tough, the tough get going.” How many have given up just because
they experienced a little opposition along the way? How many no
longer try to teach the Truth because they tried it once and nothing
happened? How many times did Noah fail to reach those who eventually
drowned? He preached for 120 years.
The
lesson we all need to remember is to keep on keeping on, to get
going when things are tough, to make the best of the way things
turn out, to try our best and realize that God is in control and
He will make everything work out for our ultimate good.
This
was the thinking of Paul and because he thought this way he was
able to say, ”I know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound;
every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and
to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need. I can do all things
through Christ which strengtheneth me.”
Yes,
Paul could do all things through Christ. The Christ that Paul served
is the same Christ we serve. He is just as capable of making all
things work for our good today as he was in Paul’s day. Let us then
believe it and live like we believe it.
”I
can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.”
|