Quantcast
You Are Here
  HOME  RESOURCES  SERMONS
SERMONS SEARCH
X
 SERMONS ARCHIVE
Page   1  2  3  4  5  >
Page   1  2  3  4  5  >
When God Doesn’t Make Sense
AVERAGE RATING
RATE THIS SERMON
When God Doesn’t Make Sense
By Chuck Sackett

You’d think if you were doing things for God, everything would turn out right.

There was a young medical student in Great Britain.  Her name was Helen Roseveare.  She sensed a call from God to go to Africa, to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (it was called then) as a medical missionary.  She went.  She established a hospital.  She was doing work among the Congolese people when, in 1960, civil war broke out.  It wasn’t long until her particular missionary compound and hospital was overtaken by rebels.  She was held captive for nearly a year, during which she was repeatedly, brutally raped by the soldiers.  After nearly a year, she went back to England.

Advertisement

Sometimes the ways of God don’t make a lot of sense.  You would think that if you were doing the right things, things would turn out right.

But we don’t see that in Acts.  At least not as clearly as we might want to see it.  Here the apostle Paul is under arrest.  There is a group of Jewish dissenters who hate him because he stands for Jesus and the resurrection and the new covenant and they make a vow that they’re not going to eat or drink until they murder him.  His nephew, providentially, overhears this conversation and reports it to Paul who sends him to the centurion.  He’s convinced by the lad’s story and so there is a cohort of soldiers who transport him from Jerusalem to Caesarea.  There, he sits in prison for two full years awaiting trial.  The ruler in charge is Felix.  And Felix takes some delight in hearing the story.  In Acts 24 we hear how Felix responds (verse 24): “Several days later Felix came with his wife Drusilla, who was a Jewess.  He sent for Paul and listened to him as he spoke about faith in Christ Jesus.  As Paul discoursed on righteousness, self-control and the judgment to come, Felix was afraid and said, ‘That’s enough for now!  You may leave.  When I find it convenient, I will send for you.’  At the same time he was hoping that Paul would offer him a bribe, so he sent for him frequently and talked with him.”

Sometimes the ways of God are hard to understand and yet Felix seems to have understood them pretty clearly.  He knew what he was supposed to do and yet, decided that he would just simply play the game, hoping that he would get something out of it.  He hoped if kept listening Paul would eventually bribe him in order to turn him loose.  Paul was not about to do that.  He simply took every opportunity he had to preach the gospel to him.  This man, apparently, repeatedly said “NO” to the gospel and as far as we know never did respond positively.

Page   1  2  3  4  5  >
NEWSLETTERSmore...
  •  PreachingNOW
     Culture Connection
IN THIS ISSUE
BIBLE STUDY TOOLS - SEARCH
Salem Publishing
Preaching.com is a proud member of the Salem Publishing family of sites providing content and resources such as: