
Scripture Reference: Philippians 1:12-25
During life’s daylight hours, when we are lighthearted and full of life, we don’t take time to listen. But when the sunlight fades in some sorrow or difficult experience, God gets our attention and in the darkness He teaches us some lessons we need to learn.
The shadows had fallen upon Paul. He was a prisoner of the Roman government. He knew the Philippians loved him and were praying for him because Epaphroditus had told him so. For Paul the sunlight had faded, temporarily, yet the darkness had descended, and nightfall had come.
However, the darkness will not defeat God Almighty. He would work even in it and teach Paul some lessons that would bless not only the Philippians but all believers in the ages to come.
Life will not always be sweet and joyous. But as we walk with faith in God, life’s dark hours will not defeat us. There are some lessons that God will teach us even in the darkness.
God Can Put a Silver Lining in Every Dark Cloud
Read Philippians 1:12-13 for insight into this section.
In her poem “Keep the Home Fires Burning,” Lena Guilbert Ford has an interesting thought: “There’s a silver lining / Through the dark clouds shining.”
Though Paul was a prisoner surrounded by dark, uncertain clouds, he found the silver lining God had put on the dark clouds.
After carefully thinking through his problems, Paul came to the steadfast conclusion that “the things which happened” to him was producing good fruit. “The things which happened” could literally be translated, “the things dominating me.” Nothing ever “just happens” to the believer. Things either come directly from God or in His permissive will He permits them to come. As believers, we are most definitely not controlled either by fate or luck.
Paul wanted the Philippians to understand that the things dominating his life, namely his imprisonment at that time, would not curtail his ministry or hinder the spread of the gospel. Rather, his dark cloud had a silver lining and his imprisonment had really served to advance the gospel.
Paul’s imprisonment, which Satan planned to use to short-circuit Paul’s preaching ministry, was instead being used by God to spread the gospel of redemption.
For months Paul lived in his own rented quarters in Rome. He was chained to a Roman soldier day and night. The guards were changed every few hours, and these pagan guards couldn’t help but hear the gospel of Jesus from the lips of the apostle they were bound to.
History tells us also that the soldiers who guarded the apostle were not just ordinary soldiers. They were the Praetorian Guard. During the reign of Emperor Tiberius there were approximately 10,000 of these handpicked soldiers. It’s be stated that they had double pay and special privileges and they became so powerful in their own right that the emperors had to court their favor. Paul had contact with one after another of these highly esteemed soldiers.
Chained to these palace guards, Paul had opportunity to witness to Rome’s most elite soldiers, many of whom would be saved and, in turn, become missionaries to the ends of the earth where they would be stationed.
To Be Continued






















