
Scripture Reference: Philippians 1:12-25
God Can Use Our Problems to Encourage Others – Continued
Read Philippians 1:14-18 for insight into this section.
The lesson here is clear: God often uses the problems that envelop us to encourage others in life’s struggles. Most assuredly, He uses the problems Christians face victoriously to encourage other Christians to live courageously and victoriously.
What we owe to the encouragement of others can never truly be calculated. All of us have been encouraged in some difficult experience of life, by the encouragement of others, to press on and not give up.
A. J. Cronin was one of these. Born in Scotland in 1896, he took his medical degree from the University of Glasgow and served as a surgeon in World War I. When Cronin was a medical student, his surgical skills were severely criticized by one of his professors. Because of the severity of being criticized Cronin had a hard time getting over it.
“You do not have the skills to become a surgeon,” the teacher told Cronin. “You would be well advised to give up the idea of being a surgeon and settle for being a general practitioner.”
Cronin believed what his professor said, and in discouragement he gave up the idea of becoming a surgeon. After completing medical school at Glasgow, he went to a remote village in the Highlands of Scotland and there, as the only doctor for many miles around, he opened his office.
Physician A. Dudley Dennison, Jr. wrote in his book Windows, Ladders, and Bridges, that one cold winter day a pastor in the area was seriously injured when a tree fell on him. Cronin knew that unless a delicate surgical procedure was done immediately, the pastor would be paralyzed. But he also remembered what his professor in medical school had told him: “You do not have the skills to be surgeon.”
Cronin wrestled with what he should do. He knew that one mistake could mean complete paralysis or maybe even instant death for the pastor. But the pastor encouraged the young doctor to perform the needed surgery. “I will pray as you operate,” the pastor said. Encouraged by the pastor, Cronin performed the surgery and the pastor recovered. It was the pastor’s encouragement that made the difference for Cronin, and his confidence was restored.
Often we have been encouraged by the way others have handled their problems. We have learned from them.
Napoleon’s military tactics have been studied for generations by military strategists. But Napoleon came from humble, poor people and his early years were a terrible struggle.
Millions have been encouraged by the struggles of fellow sufferers: Daniel Defoe wrote Robinson Crusoe while in prison. John Bunyan produced The Pilgrim’s Progress because of prison. Sir Walter Raleigh wrote The History of the World during thirteen years in jail. Luther translated the Bible while imprisoned in the castle at Wartburg. Dante wrote magnificently during his twenty years in prison, part of the time under a death sentence.
Who has not found encouragement in John Milton? Blind, sick, poor, he refused to give up. “Who best can suffer, best can do,” Milton said.
One of the lessons God teaches us when the darkness falls upon us is that He can use our problems to encourage others. Didn’t He greatly use Paul in that capacity?
To Be Continued






















