In a recent visit to Malta, a European island in the Mediterranean Sea, I was amazed at how the old ancient parts of yesterday met the new buildings and structures of today. The book of Acts (chapter 27) records a very detailed journey when the Apostle Paul was being transported to Rome. While enroute they encountered a fierce hurricane that shipwrecked them on Malta.

Upon landing, the vessel was destroyed but all men alive and highly aware that God had saved them. In fact, everything that skilled sailors would normally use to have a successful journey had been useless this time. Eventually they had to toss everything overboard, including their food, in order to survive. I had been studying about this event in Scripture prior to setting sail on a cruise, completely oblivious that we would visiting this very island! I learned God will go to extreme links to reveal Himself and further emphasize what He is communicating. HA!

The chasm of time has not taken away the commonality’s humans share over thousands of centuries. The ancient text offers a candid view of real life, teaching us how God interweaves Himself through celebrations, hardships and struggles. The men and women faced many challenges where they had to learn how to seek God and trust Him. They were flawed just like us, enduring seasons of pure delight and others of intense darkness and depression.
“When neither sun nor stars appeared for many days and the storm continued raging, we finally gave up all hope of being saved.” Acts 27:20
During my praying, reading and picking apart this event in Acts, God revealed to me that in my current season of life, I would feel as if what usually worked in my self-sufficient manner of solving problems would no longer work. There would be a time of enduring where I would have to surrender my ability to control or fix the situation, and I would have to quietly lean on Him for guidance and strength. I would have to take one day at a time without total certainty of when this season would be over, but He wanted me to be certain that He was fully aware and in charge.
“For everything that was written in the past was written to teach us, so that through endurance and the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope.” Romans 15:4
Hope.
Hope is not always defined as the promise to an end of “something” hard, but rather the rest that accompanies the release of “that something” into the hands of a holy and good God who has made Himself known to you. It’s trusting in and remaining certain of what He communicated in the Scriptures as you endure the “storm.”
Enduring difficult seasons and waiting on, while trusting, God can sometimes feel like trying to cut grass with a pair of scissors in one hundred degree heat! Can anyone relate?
In studying this very event in Scripture, God encouraged me that just like for the Apostle Paul, He would see me through and accompany me safely to the shores of hope. What was my responsibility? I must seek Him for His perspective. Humanly speaking it would be easy to let fear swallow me up in its vortex like force and high-pitched winds of “what if’s.” Seeking a mindset that is firm in God’s desire for goodness would be absolutely critical. Knowing the journey through is where the miraculous heart changes occur, would help keep me anchored. This was not simply something happening to me, but for me.
The only way we grow in confidence in the living God is through trusting the very Words He speaks and letting them not only prove Him true, but prove us true.
“Every word of God proves true; He is a shield to those who take refuge in Him.” Proverbs 30:5
What current waves might you be facing? Is your usual manner of solving problems working for you at this time? If not, might it possible that He is calling you to trust Him by shifting your perspective to align with His truth. Reject the human (fear based) catastrophic “what if’s” and lean into the journey.

There is no question God is directing you to specific Scriptures. Which one is providing an anchor of hope for you?
As I meditated on the Scriptures He was giving me, I began to experience hope that moved from my heart to my head. I wasn’t “out of the storm,” but I was very aware that He was sustaining me through it. I found myself desiring to share with others the hardship and the help. No life is intended to be a pretense of perfection, but an authentic display of growing in grace and a more purified portrait of our Savior.
Love you all,
td