They Meant it For Harm; God Intended it For Good
I know that You can do everything, and that no purpose of Yours can be withheld from You (Job 42:2 NKJV).
It will make a world of difference in your life if you truly believe that God reigns. No man has influenced my life more profoundly than Samuel Logan Brengle, a commissioner for the Salvation Army. In my teen years I found some little books he wrote, and they influenced me profoundly: Heart Talks on Holiness, The Way of Holiness, and When the Holy Ghost Is Come.
These little books have a very interesting history that I only came to know years after I had first read them. Brengle was a brilliant young preacher whom God led into the Salvation Army. He became the Salvation Army’s great spokesman for the message of personal holiness.
One night a drunken man continually interrupted a service Brengle was leading. Finally, Brengle put the man outside the service.
After the meeting was over, Brengle was the last one to leave, so he turned the lights off and stepped into the street. The drunken man was waiting for him. He struck one side of Brengle’s head with a paving stone and smashed the other side against the building. Samuel Brengle was in the hospital for an extended period, hovering between life and death.
When he finally began to recover, it was a long time before he could resume his former activities, so the editor of the Salvation Army’s magazine asked him to write some articles while he was recuperating in the hospital. Those little books, which have profoundly shaped many Christian leaders, were the fruit of that accident.
We must believe that God is running our lives. The devil can create minor complications, but God is in control whether you are in a hospital bed like Brengle, in a prison like Paul, or anywhere else. God can and will use your circumstances to accomplish his purposes. He is the only one who can produce fruit out of an apparent disaster.
—Dennis Kinslaw
This Day with the Master
I’m struck by Joseph’s story in the Bible as I read this devotion. Joseph’s brothers, as you recall, sold him into slavery … only to find out, in the end, that what they had intended for Joseph’s harm, God had purposed for all of their ultimate good. It’s so hard to see the end and what good might come when you’re, say, as Joseph was, rotting away in Pharoah’s prison, or as Brengle was in the passage above, recovering from a vicious attack in a hospital ward. This is where the rubber really meets the road in our faith. So many patients who come to Sanctuary Clinic can offer testimonies like this—they’d been in the deepest, darkest of sufferings, pain unimaginable, only to see God bring some kind of new picture to the forefront; a beautiful redemptive picture, better than they’d ever imagined. This is the wonder-working promise of our God. Where are you today? Are you willing to believe His promise to bring good of all things for those of us who love Him? —DH
—David Hoskins, Founder & Care Guide, Sanctuary Clinics