Devotion: Responding to Disappointment
Responding to Disappointment
By Dr. Charles Stanley
(Matthew 1:18-25)
To find examples of wise, godly reactions to disappointment, youÔÇÖre more likely to turn to Psalms than to Matthew. But the very first chapter in the New Testament tells the story of an upright manÔÇÖs reaction to painful and disheartening news.
JosephÔÇöJesusÔÇÖ earthly fatherÔÇöwas a righteous person. A godly man wants a wife who shares his desire to honor and obey the Lord, and Scripture indicates that Mary was exactly that sort of woman (Luke 1:45-55). So imagine how stunned Joseph must have been when Mary returned from a long visit with her relative Elizabeth and told him that she was pregnant. Moreover, she was claiming no man had touched her.
Any way Joseph looked at the situation, it appeared grim. And yet (Matthew 1:20) says that he ÔÇ£consideredÔÇØÔÇöin other words, he sought a wise, righteous response. God entered JosephÔÇÖs life in a dramatic way to confirm MaryÔÇÖs story and put a stop to his ÔÇ£quiet annulmentÔÇØ plans.
The Lord turned JosephÔÇÖs mourning into joy. Mary had told the truthÔÇöstrange and startling as it was. The couple would bear the intense public censure of an early pregnancy, but Joseph stopped thinking about what others would say. God had blessed work for him: to raise the Messiah alongside a faithful woman.
Followers of Christ should seek a godly response to disappointments they face. Since the Lord always has a plan, the wisest reaction is to anticipate the good He can do and await His timing. God certainly blessed Joseph for his willingness to ÔÇ£seek first His kingdomÔÇØ (Matthew 6:33).
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1 Timothy 3:16
16 And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness:
God was manifested in the flesh,
Justified in the Spirit,
Seen by angels,
Preached among the Gentiles,
Believed on in the world,
Received up in glory.
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