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Closed Door Stories: Looking Back on God’s Love

 

God just closed a door. That’s because (A) He loves me, (B) He doesn’t love me.

 

We posed that question yesterday, and the reader response on Facebook confirmed that many of us are dealing with confusing and frustrating “closed doors.” Closed doors might make some of us wonder if God is really up to something good in our lives — maybe He’s judging us, or maybe He isn’t even paying attention!

My Zondervan teammates and I can relate to those struggles, and we hope to encourage you. Below you’ll find a couple of our personal stories that share how God has used closed doors to reveal his faithfulness and goodness to us. We pray that you will know God’s loving presence in your struggle, too.

First, if you missed the Daily Inspiration email that kicked off this conversation, here’s the excerpt from Max Lucado’s God’s Story, Your Story.

When God locks a door, it needs to be locked. When he blocks a path, it needs to be blocked. When he stuck Paul and Silas in prison, God had a plan for the prison jailer. As Paul and Silas sang, God shook the prison. “At once all the prison doors flew open, and everyone’s chains came loose” (Acts 16:26).

There God goes again, blasting open the most secure doors in town. When the jailer realized what had happened, he assumed all the prisoners had escaped. He drew his sword to take his life. When Paul told him otherwise, the jailer brought the two missionaries out and asked, “What must I do to be saved?” (Acts 16:30). Paul told him to believe. He did, and he and all his family were baptized. The jailer washed their wounds, and Jesus washed his sins. God shut the door of the jail cell so that he could open the heart of the jailer.    

God uses closed doors to advance his cause.

  • He closed the womb of a young Sarah so he could display his power to the elderly one.
  • He shut the palace door on Moses the prince so he could open shackles through Moses the liberator.
  • He marched Daniel out of Jerusalem so he could use Daniel in Babylon.
  • And Jesus. Yes, even Jesus knew the challenge of a blocked door. When he requested a path that bypassed the cross, God said no. He said no to Jesus in the garden of Gethsemane so he could say yes to us at the gates of heaven…

Your blocked door doesn’t mean God doesn’t love you. Quite the opposite. It’s proof that he does.

 

“Closed Door” Stories from the Zondervan Crew

First, Jonathan shares:

One of the first tangible “closed door” experiences in my adult life was when my wife miscarried our first child. We had been married less than a year, and it wasn’t a planned pregnancy. The unexpected joy of the pregnancy was almost immediately contrasted with the shock of its loss. We were struck with life’s big questions: Why does God bring these experiences into our lives? What’s the purpose of pain? Why is life created, only to be snuffed out? Does God display his power over us occasionally, just to remind us who’s boss?

Those kinds of questions can’t be answered in a day or by the sing-songy clichés of a greeting card. Through the support of others, prayer, grieving, and the comfort of the Holy Spirit, we were able to find rest in the truth that God does love us and the child we never got to meet. Pain and struggle in this world are the result of sin, but God is faithful to use even those experiences to bring us closer to him. Our hope was deferred for a moment. About a year later, we welcomed our second child, James, into the world.  

-Jonathan

 

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Hear Margaret Feinberg’s “Pursuing God’s Beauty” Bible Study on Midday Connection

Last Tuesday (Sept. 20, 2011), Moody Radio's Midday Connection kicked off their Fall Bible Study with the first session of Margaret Feinberg's Pursuing God's Beauty: Stories from the Gospel of John. Midday Connection will go through the remaining sessions each Tuesday over the next five weeks. You can listen to the the first session now, and visit  www.middayconnection.org to hear the other sessions as they're posted.

 

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In the show's discussion of Pursuing God's Beauty Session 1, host Anita Lustrea asks Margaret Feinberg (@mafeinberg) why pursuing God is important. Margaret responds,  "I think that there are times when we hit that dry canyon, and we have to make a choice. Do [I] sit? … Or do I keep on going … keep on reading, keep on studying, keep on praying. [Do I say] I'm going to keep on talking to You, even through this difficult and dry season."

It's no coincidence that Margaret's study on pursuing God's beauty is centered on the Gospel of John. "I believe the beauty of God radiates in the person of Jesus Christ," Margaret says, and of all the Gospel writers, John "makes Jesus the most real to me." After Margaret discusses why she loves the Gospel of John, the discussion of Session 1 begins earnest (at 14:50 in the show).

I was especially interested in the hosts' contrast between inviting someone to chuch and inviting someone to meet Jesus. This also elicited a thought-provoking disagreement about Margaret's favorite spiritual conversation starter, "What do you love about Jesus?" Some of the hosts found this a compelling question, but others found it threatening.

 

Find Margaret Feinberg on Facebook
Find Margaret on Facebook

Midday Connection's discussion of Session 2 is coming up on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2011, and you can hear it at www.middayconnection.org. Margaret Feinberg will join the show again to dig into John chapters 4-8, and to discuss the facades we present to others; what it's like for God to see through to the real us; and how this can change the way we live.


Learn more
about the Pursuing God's Beauty Bible Study.


Does the Gospel of John make Jesus "the most real" for you, as it does for Margaret? I'm also curious, would you feel comfortable asking a new acquaintance "What do you love about Jesus?"


(-Adam Forrest, Zondervan Internet Team)



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