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The Big End
Of Trouble

I once
saw in a paper some verses the first lines of which were
something like the following:
"Trouble has away of coming Big end
first; And when seen at its appearing, Looks its very
worst."
Many people are always seeing trouble. They are
"troubled on ever side." When they talk, it is generally to
tell of their trouble. There are others who, though they have
troubles, seem able to put them in the background, and say but
little about them. They talk of victory, of the Lord's help,
and of the joys of salvation. We all have our troubles; for
man is "of few days, and full of trouble," but the greatest
troubles any of us have, I think, are the ones that never
come. How truly the poet has spoken in the above-quoted lines!
Just as he says, trouble comes big end first and fills us with
forebodings.
How easy it
is to worry over the troubles that loom up in the future. "Oh,
how shall we meet them!" we exclaim. "Oh, I do not see what I
shall do!" and we fear and tremble before them. Nearly all the
joy is excluded from some people's lives by the shadow of
coming troubles; but when those troubles come upon us, we
someway, somehow, pass through them. Many of them, and
sometimes very threatening ones, disappear entirely before we
reach them; and the others, when they do come, are usually not
nearly so bad as we had thought they were going to be. We
always find a way through them. Many times we are surprised at
the ease with which we overcome them. One brother who had been
troubled all his life was finally enabled to see that the Lord
always made a way through for him, and in speaking of it he
said, "Things nearly always turn out better than I think they
are going to."
A young
brother and I once had an experience that well illustrates how
trouble works. We were going to meeting one night. There was
such a heavy fog, that we could see only a few feet ahead of
us. Suddenly there loomed before us what appeared to be a
great giant. He came striding toward us through the fog with
legs twenty feet long and body towering up out of sight. It
was an awe-inspiring spectacle and at first sight startled us.
There it was, coming right toward us in a most threatening
manner. If we had been frightened and had run away, we might
have had a great story to tell; but we continued walking on
toward it, when suddenly we came face to face with one of our
neighbors. He was only an ordinary-sized man, and there was
nothing terrible about him; but he was carrying a lantern,
which swung partly behind him, and as he walked threw that
gigantic shadow forward into the fog. The giant that we saw
was not the real man; it was only his shadow.
That Is
just the way trouble comes. The thing we see is not really the
approaching trouble in its true size and shape; it is only the
shadow of it that we see. Our imagination pictures it as
something terrible, and we worry and live in its shadow for
days and weeks, only to find at last that we have been scared
by a shadow and that the real trouble is only a fraction of
what we supposed it would be.
When
Alexander the Great was a youth, his father had a war-horse
that no one could ride. The youthful prince made up his mind
to conquer the animal. When he tried it, he discovered that
the horse was afraid of its shadow, so he turned its head
toward the sun and soon had it conquered. Let us learn a
lesson from this, and when we become afraid of the shadows of
trouble, let us turn our faces toward the Sun of
Righteousness, thus leaving the shadows behind us. The
Scripture says: "The Lord also will be a refuge for the
oppressed, a refuge in times of trouble. And they that know
thy name will put their trust in thee: for thou, Lord, hast
not forsaken them that seek thee: (Psa. 9:9, 10).
David said:
"Though an host should encamp against me, my heart shall not
fear. For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his
pavilion: in the secret of his tabernacle shall he hide me; he
shall set me up upon a rock. And now shall mine head be lifted
up above mine enemies round about me" (Psa. 27:3, 5, 6).
O troubled
soul, instead of looking at your troubles, look to Jesus. The
more you look at your troubles, the worse they will appear,
the more you will be troubled, and the less you will see of
God and his help. Do you not know that God loves you? Do you
not know that he sees the trouble? Do you not know that he
knows the best way to meet it, and just exactly how much grace
you will need? Instead of worrying, try trusting; you will
find it works much better. Cultivate the habit of casting your
care upon Jesus. Face your troubles boldly. Assert in your
soul: "The Lord will make a way. The Lord will help me
through."
Continue
repeating it until it becomes real to you, and you will be
surprised how simple trust will take you through to
victory.
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