Tag Archives: when plans fail

Rerouted, Wrecked And Redirected

In the early 1900’s, a lady named Lillian Trasher was about ten days away from getting married when she heard a missionary to India tell stories that wrecked her. She left that service crying knowing God had called her to be a missionary. Her soon to be husband felt called to be an evangelist and not a missionary. They called off the wedding and she boarded a ship headed for Egypt. Not long after arriving, a dying mom handed her a baby to care for. Word quickly spread that a woman took in orphans. Less than 50 years later she became known as the “Mother of the Nile” and had cared for over 25,000 children. Her orphanage is still caring for children over a hundred years later.

In Acts 27, Paul was on a ship headed for Rome to be tried by Caesar. They began to face strong winds that made it hard to keep the ship on course. Then a storm brewed that threatened the lives of everyone on board and the ship itself. The storm lasted for days. Finally an angel visited Paul to tell him he would still stand before Caesar, but the ship would be lost. They ran aground, the ship broke apart and everyone made it to shore on the island of Malta. Paul didn’t plan on going through a terrible storm or being rerouted to the island, but when he arrived, he preached the Gospel. To this day, the island celebrates the day Paul’s ship wrecked and over 90% of the people who live there are beliers today.

Paul penned these words in 2 Corinthians 4:8-9, “We are pressed on every side by troubles, but we are not crushed. We are perplexed, but not driven to despair. We are hunted down, but never abandoned by God. We get knocked down, but we are not destroyed” (NLT). Every one of us will face reroutes, divine wrecks and redirection on our way to fulfilling our calling. What seems like defeat, loss or delay may be God doing something you would have never done without the circumstance. You may be pressed, perplexed, knocked down and not understanding in the moment, but God has never abandoned you and has a divine purpose for every set back. His divine intervention can be inconvenient, but it is never wasted. Failed plans and closed doors are often God’s means of redirecting us to where He wants us. Instead of despairing, ask God to help you find the reason for the reroute.

Photo by Alexandra Nicolae on Unsplash

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Refocusing On God

How do you respond when life doesn’t go according to your plan? How do you handle it when things go wrong? I usually complain, get mad and let my outward demeanor show it. I then start trying to fix it, figure out what I need to cut to get back on track and go faster. When that doesn’t work, the previous response get elevated and I try going faster. It’s my wife who usually has to bring me back to reality. She’ll say something like, “Remember this may not be part of your plan, but it could be part of God’s. Have you tried praying yet?” Most of the time that works. It helps me refocus on God’s plan instead of my own. When it doesn’t work, she starts praying out loud for the situation and me.

Job was the model person for how to respond when our plans go wrong. Things were going great in his life until one day when a storm knocked down the house his kids were in. Then his property was raided and the people stole his livestock and killed his shepherds. All he had worked for was gone in an instant. Instead of getting angry or blaming God, Job 1:20 says, “Then Job arose and tore his robe and shaved his head and fell on the ground and worshiped” (ESV). He didn’t run to his vice. He didn’t go try to fix things or make a new plan. He mourned for his losses and found a way to return his focus to God.

I love the prayer in Habakkuk 3. Verses 17-18 say, “Though the fig tree should not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines, the produce of the olive fail and the fields yield no food, the flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord; I will take joy in the God of my salvation.” When everything is going wrong in your life, it’s time turn towards God and try things his way. When the enemy comes to steal, kill and destroy, find a way to worship and rejoice in the God of your salvation. I know this is easier said than done, but it takes a conscious effort to refocus and recognize that it’s not God destroying your life or taking things away from you. That’s not who He is. When we worship like Job in difficult times, it gets our focus back on the only one who can sustain us and help us. Remember, His plan is greater than ours and He can restore what was taken from you.

Photo by Rainier Ridao on Unsplash

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