An Attitude of Praise – Acts 16
Attitude of Praise Acts 16
(Based on a sermon by: Mark Batterson)
This week I read about a fascinating
research study done by Vicki Medvec, a professor at Northwestern
University. She studied Olympic medalists and she discovered that Bronze
medalists were happier than Silver medalists. Here’s why. She found
that Silver medalists tended to focus on how close they came to winning
the gold so they weren’t satisfied with silver. Bronze medalists tended
to focus on how close they came to not winning a medal at all so they
were just happy to be on the medal stand at all. I think that study reveals a fascinating facet of human nature: Your focus determines your reality. How
we feel isn’t necessarily determined by circumstances. If that was the
case, the Silver Medalists would be happier than Bronze medalists
because they had a better result. Even though how we feel isn’t
necessarily determined by our circumstances, how we feel is determined
by what we are more focused on.
Here’s another way of saying it: Your internal attitudes are more important than your external circumstances. Someone by the name of John Milton said it best: “The mind is its own place, and in itself, can make a Heaven out of Hell, and a Hell out of Heaven.” That’s so true isn’t it? All of us know
people who can find something good to focus on even in the worst of
circumstances. And all of us know someone who can find something bad to
focus on even in the best of circumstances.
There is a universal principle I need to share with you here: We tend to see what we want to see.
Someone once said, ‘There are
two basic types of people in the church: complainers and praisers.
Complainers can always find something to complain about. And the
praisers can always find something to praise and worship God about.’
All of us seem to make judgments about
things all the time. Then we seem to look for evidence to support our
judgments and many times ignore evidence to the contrary. For example, if you decide you don’t like
someone you’ll notice everything that is wrong with that person. And
you’ll probably ignore anything you could potentially like about them.
The flipside is true as well. If you’re head-over-heels in love with
someone you tend to only notice those things you love about them.
We see what we want to see. What does that have to do with praise and worship? A worshipper makes a decision beforehand to look for something to praise God about even in the direst of circumstances. That’s what we are going to see in our text today.
Read Acts 16:16-34 (Click on link to read) http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%2016:16-34&version=NIV1984
In Acts 16, Paul and Silas are in a prison
cell in Philippi. Paul had cast a demon out of a fortune-teller. Her
master doesn’t like it because she loses the ability to predict the
future, which was a source of income for him, so he has Paul and Silas
arrested.
In the NLT version Acts 16:22 it says, “A mob quickly formed against Paul and Silas, and the city officials ordered them stripped and beaten with wooden rods.” The text says:
“They were severely beaten, and then they were thrown into prison. The
jailer was ordered to make sure they didn’t escape. So the jailer put
them into the inner dungeon and clamped their feet in the stocks.”
I think as we read a story like this it’s hard to put ourselves in their shoes. I’ve had bad days before, but nothing like this. If I was Paul or Silas I would have been
emotionally, physically and spiritually spent. I’d be drained to the
last drop. I’d have nothing left to give. Their backs are bleeding from their
beating. They are black and blue all over. If it was me I would not have
been very happy rather I’d probably be ticked off. And to top it off
they land in the maximum security cell in stocks! It just doesn’t get much worse than that. And that’s why this next verse is so amazing to me.
Acts 16:25 says, “Around midnight, Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the other prisoners were listening.”
Today I want to show you that there is something we can do to help us get out a a spiritual or emotional slump:
#1. Zoom Out Let me share something I’ve learned from personal experience. When I get into a spiritual or emotional slump,
it’s usually because I’ve ‘zoomed in’ on a problem. I’m fixating on
something that is wrong. I’m really focused on the wrong thing. Nine
times out of ten, the solution is zooming out so I can get some
perspective. Sometimes you’ve got to zoom out and look at the big picture. That’s what the following college student did in writing this letter to her mom and dad, She wrote:
Dear Mom and Dad,
I have so much to tell you. Because of the fire in my dorm set by the student riots here, I experienced temporary lung damage and had to go to the hospital. While I was there, I fell in love with an orderly, and we have moved in together. I dropped out of school when I found out I was pregnant, but he got fired because of his drinking problem, so we’re going to move to Alaska, where we might get married after the birth of our baby.
I have so much to tell you. Because of the fire in my dorm set by the student riots here, I experienced temporary lung damage and had to go to the hospital. While I was there, I fell in love with an orderly, and we have moved in together. I dropped out of school when I found out I was pregnant, but he got fired because of his drinking problem, so we’re going to move to Alaska, where we might get married after the birth of our baby.
Your loving daughter
PS: None of this really happened, but I did flunk my chemistry class and I wanted you to keep it in perspective.
Sometimes you need to zoom out and look at
the big picture. You fail a chemistry exam and it feels like the end of
the world. But it’s not. A piece of machinery breaks down on your farm
and it seems like such a big deal, but in the grand scheme of things,
it’s not. Somebody wrecks your car, or you loose a tooth, or you can’t
get the job you want… and it seems like the end of the world, but in all
reality, it’s not. We just need to stand back and zoom out!
So what can help us ‘zoom out?’ Let me give you a two words answer: worship and praise.
In doing so we take our eyes off of our
external circumstances and focusing on God. We stop focusing on what’s
wrong with us or with our circumstances. We start focus on what’s right
with God and we start seeing the bigger picture.
Paul and Silas could have zoomed in and complained about their circumstances.
‘God,
we cast out a demon and this is what we get? We’re on a missionary
journey and we get beaten and thrown in jail? Instead of “watching our
back” our backs are bleeding from a beating!‘ They could
have complained till the cows came home. But they made a choice to
worship God in spite of their external circumstances.
Here’s what worship and praising God does.
It restores our spiritual equilibrium. It helps you regain your
perspective. It enables you to find something right to praise God about
even when everything seems to be going wrong. This kind of Worship and
praise is zooming out and refocusing on the big picture. Rather than bringing out the problem, we can focus on
the fact that two thousand years ago, Jesus was beat for us and died on
the cross to pay the penalty for our sin. It’s refocusing on the fact
that God loves me when I least expect it and least deserve it. It’s
refocusing on the fact that God is going to get me where God wants me to
go. It’s refocusing on the fact that I have eternity with God to look
forward to in a place where there is no trouble, mourning, sorrow or
pain.
Worship like this helps us refocus on the fundamentals of our faith. And here is what happens: God
restores the joy of our salvation. We regain our spiritual equilibrium.
Paul and Silas were in a bad place and their bodies probably hurt real
bad, but despite that, they almost seem happy. Happy because
they were focused on the Lord and worshipped Him even in this dungeon.
Is it that easy? Absolutely not! Nothing is
more difficult than praising God when everything seems to be going
wrong. It seems like we like to focus on our troubles, or even brag
about them. But one of the purest forms of worship is praising God even
when you don’t feel like it because it shows God that your worship isn’t
based on your circumstances, rather our Worship and praise is based on His character and your trust in Him.
Another problem is, many of us are so out
of tune with God. We hardly even think about Him all week long. So when
trouble hits, He is the last one we think about. Putting
on an attitude of worship and praise will manipulate our circumstances
and redirects our thought process into something positive. Look at what
it did for Paul and Silas.
Victor Frankl was a Holocaust survivor who
wrote about his experiences in a Nazi concentration camp. He wrote that
every thing was taken away from the prisoners. They were stripped of
their clothing, their pictures, and their personal belongings. They even
took away their names and gave them numbers. Frankl was number 119,104.
He said, “Everything can be
taken from a man but one thing: the last human freedoms—to choose one’s
attitude in any given set of circumstances.”
I’m absolutely convinced that the most important choice you make every day is choosing your attitude. Your
internal attitudes are more important than your external
circumstances. The outcome of your life and state of being will be
strongly determined by your outlook on life. If you have a critical or complaining
spirit you’ll complain till the day you die. Your life will get worse
and worse because you’ll accumulate more and more negative experiences.
But if you have a praiseful and worshipful spirit, life will get better
and better. Why? Because you accumulate positive memories. At the end of the day, one way or the
other, your focus will determine your reality! Paul and Silas were in
prison. Their bodies were chained. But you can’t chain the human spirit.
That’s what Victor Frankl discovered in the concentration camp. That’s
what Paul and Silas modeled two thousand years ago. Their bodies were
chained and in stocks, but their spirits soared. I would have loved to hear to hear their
prayers and songs that night. I can’t help but believe that they sang
with a conviction which caused their fellow prisoners to listen as they
praised God with their voices! And that choice to worship set off a
chain reaction which led to conversions.
Albert Einstein said, “You can’t solve a problem on the level it was created.”
I think problems created on a human plane there were solved on the
supernatural plane. That’s what happens when we praise and worship God.
It changes the spiritual atmosphere. It charges the spiritual
atmosphere.
I don’t think Paul could have planned this
miraculous jailbreak. To make a long story short, there is an
earthquake. The prisoners are set free, but they don’t leave! The jailer
who is about to kill himself gets saved and his entire family is
baptized in the middle of the night. You can’t script that kind of thing.. But
when you worship God like this in the worst of Circumstances you never
know what is going to happen. Worship and this kind of praise sets the
stage for God’s intervention. This kind of praise and Worship causes
spiritual earthquakes that can change the topography of your life and
others. It may not change your circumstances. But it will change your
life.
Napoleon Hill said, “Every negative event contains within it the seed of an equal or greater benefit.” Praise
and Worship is a way we stay positive in negative circumstances. And
it’s not a placebo! A Band-Aid, it’s reality! No matter how bad things
get, as a follower of Christ, I stil have eternity in heaven to look
forward to! My pain may be real, but so is heaven.
The good news is that this reality is temporary. That reality will last forever! The key is focusing on the right reality!
What I hope you learn from this Lesson:
1. That people like Paul and Silas who sing in prison are men who cannot be imprisoned. It was impossible to imprison Paul and Silas’ heart. Their bodies may be in jail – but they weren’t.
Later Paul would write saying, “To
keep me from becoming proud, I was given a thorn in my flesh, a
messenger from Satan to torment me and keep me from becoming proud.
Three different times I begged the Lord to take it away. Each time he
said, “My grace is all you need. My power works best in weakness.” So
now I am glad to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ
can work through me. That’s why I take pleasure in my weaknesses, and in
the insults, hardships, persecutions, and troubles that I suffer for
Christ. For when I am weak, then I am strong.” 2 Corinthians 12:7-10
2. We can learn that men who worship and
sing at midnight like this are men who see beyond their circumstances.
They realize that they are citizens of a land that has no night, no
pain, no trouble. The Lord is their light and they’ll always be free
even in chains.
3. We can also learn that men who sing and
worship when they go through difficult trials can make a huge impact on
others. No one seems to like people who whine complain all the time.
Rather they are drawn to people with a happy positive attitude, like a
moth to light on a dark night.