Philippians 1:1-11 · Thanksgiving and Prayer
When Life Seems to Be Going in the Wrong Direction
Philippians 1:1-11
Sermon
by Eric Ritz
Loading...

When he was 88 years old, the late Supreme Court Justice Oliver Holmes once found himself on a train. When the conductor came by, Justice Homes couldn't find his ticket; he seemed terribly upset. He searched all of his pockets and fumbled through his wallet but to no avail. The conductor tried to ease his anxiety. He said, "Don''t worry, Mr. Holmes, the Pennsylvania Railroad will be happy to trust the Supreme Court Justice. After you reach your destination, you''ll find your ticket and you can mail it to us."

The conductor''s kindness did not put Mr. Holmes at ease. Still agitated he said, "My dear man, my problem is not Where is my ticket?'' The problem is Where am I going?''"

I don''t know about you, but there certainly have been moments in my journey of faith when I have asked myself, "How in the world did I get myself in this mess?" "What wrong turn did I make?" "Where am I supposed to be going?"

The colors we choose to paint the picture of our lives in those moments when we are unsure of our direction determine whether we will be a victim or a victor. The colors we choose determine whether we will quit when the first roadblock and detour of life comes upon us or whether we have the courage and commitment to go the extra mile and distance to reach our destination.

Yes, how indebted we are to those radiant individuals like Joni Erickson and Chuck Colson, who brought a perspective of hope and courage into the difficult circumstances they found themselves suddenly emersed.

What will grab our attention and help us focus our life''s direction? Will it be energy and enthusiasm or will it be discouragement and disillusionment? Will it be faith fueled by the Holy Spirit or the flames of fear and futility?

It seems that so many people who start the faith journey with a great bolt of lightening fade as quickly as the headlines in the morning newspaper. What happens to these fellow pilgrims on the road of life? What happens is that they run head-on into unexpected detours, dead-end alleys, and rugged roadblocks. They become disappointed, disillusioned, depressed and defeated. They raise their hands in despair, turn around, and go home.

They experience hardships or are ridiculed or receive unwarranted criticisms and attacks which turn their dreams into nightmares. Can you identify with any of these circumstances I have mentioned today? How have you allowed them to "color" your life? Now you find yourself in church and in the silence of these few moments your soul cries out with anguish and hurt, "Is there any word from the Lord for me?"

I am very glad that you asked that question! For our Bible is packed full with pages of those faithful Biblical characters who traveled the road of life before us and who also experienced broken dreams, crippling roadblocks and major disappointments that seemed to have the tenacity of a junk-yard dog. DO NOT GIVE IN OR GIVE UP.

There is hope for our lives. Today I want to share with you the story of one of God''s finest servants and role models, who could overcome broken dreams, difficult moments, and numerous times in life when it seemed he was going in the wrong direction.

I think you could safely say that Paul is certainly no stranger when it comes to life''s setbacks, detours, and dead-end alleys.

This scripture lesson was not written from the Hilton Tower in Rome, but from a dingy cell. It might both shock and surprise you today that about one-third of the New Testament was written from various jail cells. Imagine how these various moments of great difficulty could have "colored" Paul''s life in the most detrimental of ways. However, instead of quitting, like many people do when life deals a harsh hand, Paul declares, "I count it all joy." He knew he might be down but never "counted out."

The difference between an admirer of Jesus Christ and a faith-filled servant of Jesus Christ is how we handle the pressures of life and how we allow them "to color" our lives. Christians are those who can cope with the changing circumstances of life because of the constant presence of the Lord Jesus Christ in our lives.

I want to give you three ways to respond when you seem to be going in the wrong direction in life.

First, keep the dream alive.

The word "dream" is in Webster''s dictionary. One of the many meanings of "dream" is to have a "fond hope" or "aspiration" or to think of something noble in life.

Yes, dreams are hopes and ideas that inspire us and motivate.us. Dreams can be the most powerful and pervasive force at work in our world. Dreams of freedom and religious liberties propel countless persons to move across oceans and unknown lands. As long as the dream is alive, so are the people who pursue them. Never underestimate the power of an idea. I can''t believe you can explain the recent changes in our world without the power of dreams and the people who were claimed and shaped by them.

How else can you explain how an unknown shipyard electrician in Poland could begin and sustain a movement of reformation in his native land--a movement they tried to crush and control but without success. You look at Lech Walesa and you see a dreamer.

For years they tried to beat down and even imprison the dreams of Lech Walesa. The Polish regime soon learned that you cannot imprison dreams behind locked doors and iron bars. If dreams are from God, they are too powerful "to be caged and shackled."

God takes a nun from the safe environment of a school teacher and uses her dreams and visions to be the leading spokesperson for the cause of the helpless, hopeless, and homeless persons in the world. Mother Teresa is a dreamer. Her dreams propelled her into the world to be salt and light and leaven for the Kingdom of God. Her dreams are what fuel the flames of her witness.

What kind of ideas and dreams do you entertain in your very being today? How do these ideas and dreams move and inspire your activities today and in the future? How do these dreams and ideas measure up to God''s dreams and visions for our world and for our shared life as a community of faith?

The dreams of our forefathers and foremothers propelled them across oceans and continents. How will we respond to the dreams and visions that God is placing upon our hearts to claim new territory for the King of Kings? According to recent census statistics, fifty-seven percent of the population in any given area is unchurched. As the church, we need to respond to the cries of God''s people when they ask, "Is there any word from the Lord today?" As God''s people, we are always pilgrims on a journey to answer the call of God.

Yes, God always offers a larger, greater, and grander dream and hope for the fellowship of the redeemed than the secular world will ever offer. God has promised that if we are faithful to His leading, He will guarantee a harvest in due time, even when the weeds grow side by side with the wheat. All we need is the faith to respond.

Yes, please keep on dreaming even when your dreams have been shattered, broken, or temporarily put on hold by the roadblocks of life. Remember the words from Oscar Hammerstein and Richard Rodgers, who penned these famous words:

Climb every mountain, search high and low,
Follow every by-way, every path you know,
Climb every mountain, ford every stream,
Follow every rainbow, til you find your dream.

KEEP YOUR DREAM ALIVE! This is one key when it seems you have lost direction in your journey.

Second, don''t allow the detours of life to prevent you from making the full journey of life. Do not be afraid of the longer way!

God sometimes leads us the longer way. The obvious way to go to the Promised Land from Egypt was the way by the sea. Instead, God sent the people south when they needed to go northeast. God often sends His people the longer way. David went the longer way to the throne. Paul went the longer way to Rome. Why does God lead the longer way? The longer way is sometimes the safer way. Sometimes God has to teach us to say "NO" to some lesser dreams in order to say "YES" to a greater and more challenging dream.

Often when we fail, God is just beginning to do his finest work with us. When we fail, God doesn't throw us in a junk heap, but now is ready to mold us and shape us for a greater work than we could ever imagine. The church is for the broken.

Isn't it amazing that detours can be one way that a sovereign God leads us, guides us, and provides for us? There is no part or effort in our lives that can''t be used by God. That''s good news for those of us gathered here today. If the church is founded on Peter, it is founded on the second choice.

Third, to follow our dreams, we must have the determination to run the good race.

I love the story about a 10-year-old baseball player who went to summer camp to improve his skills for the game he loved. He came home and was quite eager to show his Dad how much his hitting had improved. He took his Dad to the playground. He threw the ball up in the air and took a mighty swing. His Dad felt the breeze, but the ball landed on the ground. He had missed it. He smiled at his Dad and repeated the same routine with the same results. He did it the third time but the ball still fell to the ground. The boy smiled and said, "Dad, at camp I made the decision to be the greatest pitcher in the world, and see how good I am doing." I like the spirit of that young fella. He would not allow any roadblocks, failures, or detours to prevent him from being a great baseball player.

I believe that the question before us today is not whether we will have roadblocks in life, but how will we react when they do come? Will we run away from them, quit, or will we become more determined to reach for our dreams and goals?

Once a man heard that 80 percent of all traffic accidents happen within a mile of home. So he moved. Roadblocks come into every life. (2)

In a book titled Death Comes to the Archbishop, a young priest scolds an older priest for going out in bad weather on an errand of mercy without his warm clothing. The young man says, "You will catch your death of cold," and the old priest smiling replies, "When I die, it will not be of a cold, but it will be from having lived." (3)

That captures perfectly the spirit of determination that we need as we labor, laugh, love and live for our Lord in the 1990''s.

I have been amazed at the various people who have been imprisoned in history and how they used their experiences. Adolph Hitler used his time in prison to write his famous book in which he espoused the radical hatred and violence that resulted in great human destruction around the world. John Bunyan imprisoned in England wrote the famous Christian classic, The Pilgrim''s Progress, in which he so beautifully described his experience of the grace of God.

Finally, we have the sacred writing of the Apostle Paul. In jail, he used his time as a "sabbatical leave" and wrote a letter to a church that he founded and dearly loved. He writes the letter to express his thanks and joy for their remembrance of him and the gift brought to him by Epaphroditus. He sends Epaphroditus back with this letter of thanks which we know as the Letters to the Philippians. It is called "The Joy Book of the Bible."

Yes, Paul found a joy which not even iron bars and Roman chains could deter or imprison. The impact of that joy produces a determination for life which results in Paul''s great declaration, "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me." That is not the cry of a Victim, but a Victor!

The apostle knew that there is nothing one can do to prevent the advent of adversity and detour. A servant is never above his master. We can, however through the presence of our Master, control completely what adversity does to us. It can do almost anything to us that we allow it to do. It can wreck us or enable us. We are called to keep our eyes on Him.

We do not know about tomorrow, but we can know Him. He who holds all tomorrows in His Hands!

Dr. Charles F. Stanley, Senior Minister of the First Baptist Church of Atlanta, Georgia, often calls to his memory an incident in his life in which an unlikely person shared a biblical truth and principle that he has never forgotten. It still provides bread for the journey! Dr. Stanley was in a time of great turmoil and opposition in one of the churches he served. A dear lady, who only had a small apartment, invited him to lunch. It wasn't the head of the Deacon Board, or the President of the Fortune 500 Company but an elderly woman who later turned out to be a living saint. He reluctantly went--expecting her to give him an old-fashioned tongue-lashing. She said, "Pastor, look at this picture and tell me what you see."

He looked at the picture and saw it was the famous picture of Daniel standing in the lion''s den. He described a few other details and became quiet.

She then said, "Anything else, Pastor?"

He said, "No."

She lovingly placed her arm around his waist and said, "Pastor, what I wanted you to see and never forget is this: Daniel does not have his eyes on the lion, his eyes are focused in on Jesus Christ."

Paul knew his eyes in that prison cell should not be focused in on the cell wall but on Jesus Christ.

Yes, when life''s direction seems to be wrong, remember:

1) Do not become bitter, but do get better!

2) Be a victor, not a victim!

3) Don''t let your dreams fade, keep them alive.

4) Don''t quit, you keep on-keeping on, run the good race.

5) Keep your eyes focused and fixed on the Lord Jesus Christ!

Amen and Amen.


1. Dr. Albert C. Outler, John Wesley (Oxford University Press, Inc., 1964), page 44.

2. Thanks to Zelma Pattillo, found in July-August, 1990 edition of Preaching, page 33.

3. Thanks to Donald J. Shelby for this illustration.

Dynamic Preaching, The Ritz Collection, by Eric Ritz