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When God Shuts One Door, He Opens Another

by "Carl" <saints@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 4, 2008 at 02:11 AM

In this installment of the sermon series "No, that's NOT in the Bible", 
David Dykes addresses the phrase "when God shuts one door, He opens
another" 
which, of course, isn't found in the Bible. However he uses this 
misconception to teach about the op****tunities one receives from God and 
also recognizing God's Will and His guidance in our lives.

May God bless,
Carl
my website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
my blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/

---

When God Shuts One Door, He Opens Another
by David O. Dykes

Acts 16:6-10
6 Paul and his companions traveled throughout the region of Phrygia and 
Galatia, having been kept by the Holy Spirit from preaching the word in
the 
province of Asia. 7 When they came to the border of Mysia, they tried to 
enter Bithynia, but the Spirit of Jesus would not allow them to. 8 So they

passed by Mysia and went down to Troas. 9 During the night Paul had a
vision 
of a man of Macedonia standing and begging him, "Come over to Macedonia
and 
help us." 10 After Paul had seen the vision, we got ready at once to leave

for Macedonia, concluding that God had called us to preach the gospel to 
them.

It seems doors of op****tunity open and close before us in life. Is it God 
opening and closing these doors? For many years I've heard the saying,
"When 
God shuts one door, He opens another!" Well, no, those exact words are not

found in the Bible anywhere. However, of all the phrases we'll examine in 
this series this statement is closer to the truth. I haven't found the 
original source of the saying, but it sounds similar to a famous quote by 
Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone. He said: "When one 
door closes, another opens; but we often look so long and so regretfully 
upon the closed door that we do not see the one which has opened for us."

The best example of open and closed doors is found in Acts 16:6-12. Paul
and 
his friends launched their second missionary journey from Antioch. Along
the 
way, they encountered some closed doors and then an open door.

"Paul and his companions traveled throughout the region of Phrygia and 
Galatia, having been KEPT BY THE HOLY SPIRIT from preaching the word in
the 
province of Asia. When they came to the border of Mysia, they tried to
enter 
Bithynia, but the SPIRIT OF JESUS WOULD NOT ALLOW THEM TO. So thy passed
by 
Mysia and went down to Troas. During the night, Paul had a vision of a man

of Macedonia standing and begging him, 'Come over to Macedonia and help
us.' 
After Paul had seen the vision, we got ready at once to leave for
Macedonia, 
concluding ["knit together"] that God had called us to preach the gospel
to 
them. From Troas we put out to sea and sailed straight for Samothrace and 
the next day to Neapolis. From there we traveled to Philippi, a Roman
colony 
and the leading city of that district of Macedonia."

God called Paul to take the gospel to the Gentiles and he was obeying God.

As he was traveling, he decided to try to go northeast into Asia Minor,
but 
Holy Spirit said "no." God shut the door. Then he traveled on and tried to

go north into Bithynia toward Russia, and once again God shut the door. It

must have been a puzzling time for Paul. He was on mission for God and the

doors kept shutting in his face. But he didn't go back, and he didn't camp

out, he kept moving west. When he came to Troas, God opened the door for
him 
to go over into Macedonia, which is modern-day Greece. He had a vision of
a 
man standing in front of him saying, "Come help us!" Paul understood this
to 
be God's directive, so he took the gospel into Greece instead of Asia
Minor. 
That was the first time the gospel penetrated the European continent, and 
many of us have a European heritage. We should be glad Paul paid attention

to God's closed and opened doors. As we consider open and closed doors,
let's 
learn four things about finding and following God's will.

1. GOD WILL GUIDE YOU IF YOU'LL TRUST HIM

You aren't just placed on this earth to stumble around in the dark trying
to 
find out what you should do. The God of the Universe is interested in you.

He has a plan for you; He has a pathway for you. The Bible says in
Proverbs 
3:5-6 "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own 
understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him, and he will direct your 
paths."

God wants to guide you, but there is a lot of confusion about finding
God's 
will. As you seek to follow God, it will be helpful to understand two very

im****tant guiding principles:

(1) The wrong question: What is God's will for my life?

You may be surprised and wonder what's wrong with that question. Here's
the 
right question: "What is God's will?" On the surface, the difference
between 
those two questions may seem minor-but they are as different as a
lightning 
bug and lightning. In the first question the focus is on me. What's God's 
will for ME? In the second question, the focus is on God and what He is 
already doing in the world. I'll quote Henry Blackaby later in this
message, 
but in his book Experiencing God, he points out that God is already active

in this world and our job is to find out what God is doing and to join Him

in His work.

In Acts 16, God was at work saving the Gentiles. God was in the process of

taking the gospel to the Roman Empire, and Paul found closed doors until
he 
got in on God's plan. So, stop asking God to show you His will for your
life 
and ask Him to show you what He is doing, and then join Him!

(2) God often reveals His will in segments

When God first called Paul to take the good news to the Gentiles, He
didn't 
tell him all the details. God didn't say, "Paul, go to Philippi, then to 
Athens, then to Corinth." God just said, "Go!" And Paul went. As Paul 
traveled, God revealed each step. That's the same thing God told Abraham
in 
the Old Testament. He didn't say, "Abraham, I have a land for you and your

descendants." God simply said, "Go." And Abraham went.

Many young people want God to show them the full picture of His plan for 
them. Wouldn't it be nice if God would say, "This is where I want you to
go 
to college, these are the cl***** I want you to take, this is who I want
you 
to marry, this is where I want you to live, this is the job I want you to 
work at, and here's where I want you to retire, and here's where I want
you 
to die and be buried!" But it doesn't work that way. Following God isn't 
about the destination; it's all about the journey. It's like that song by 
Caedmon's Call, "Step by Step" which says, "Oh, God you are my God, and I 
will every praise you. I will seek you in the morning, and I will learn to

walk in your ways, and STEP by STEP You'll lead me; and I will follow You 
all of my days."

2. DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED BY CLOSED DOORS

As Paul followed God, he encountered a closed door into Asian Minor. Then 
when he tried to head north toward the Black Sea, God shut the door again.

Sometimes a child of God can become frustrated because it seems as if
doors 
of service and op****tunity are constantly being closed.

When you look in the Bible for references to opened and closed doors,
you'll 
find there are six or seven times it speaks of God "opening a door of 
op****tunity." However, there is only one verse that infers God "closes 
doors." In Revelation 3:7-8 Jesus is speaking to the church at
Philadelphia. 
He identifies Himself by saying, "These are the words of him who is holy
and 
true...what he opens, no one can shut; and what he shuts, no one can open.

See, I have placed before you an open door that no one can shut." So, it
is 
true that God shuts doors, but He isn't the only one who shuts doors. When

you are trying to serve God and you encounter a closed door you first 
question should be, "Did God close this door?" Sometimes other people 
 "close" the door, and sometimes the devil and his demonic forces will try

to place obstacles in the way of your service and devotion. So just
because 
you encounter resistance or difficulty, it doesn't necessarily mean God
has 
shut the door. If God has clearly sent you in a certain direction and the 
devil tries to close the door-then knock it down!

There's a funny story about a gospel singing group invited to a country 
church. As they were singing, the members of the church started bringing
out 
s****s and handling them. The lead singer took one look at the s****s on
the 
stage with him and asked the pastor, "Where is the back door?" The pastor 
said, "We don't have a back door." The terrified singer said, "Well, where

would you like one?" He was out of there! When Satan, our adversary, tries

to block out way, knock through his resistance!

But if you are certain that God closed a certain door, don't be
discouraged, 
just start looking for the door that He has open for you. Henry Blackaby 
wrote: "When you begin to follow God and cir***stances seem to close doors

of op****tunity, go back to the Lord and clarify what God said. He most
often 
is not calling you to a TASK, but to a RELATION****P. Through that 
relation****p He is going to do something through your life. (Experiencing 
God, p. 159)

When God said, "no" to Paul it was because he was going to say "yes" to 
something better. Sometimes our disappointments in life can become God's 
appointments, so don't let closed doors bother you. The things we think of

as failures and problems can often end up being blessings in disguise.

In the late 19th century, cotton was king in South Alabama. Cotton was the

sole crop and brought prosperity to that part of the country. In the early

20th century a natural disaster occurred. The Mexican Boll Weevil crossed 
into Texas and spread from here. Those little boll weevils loved cotton
and 
by 1915, the farmers in South Alabama were broke. One farmer decided to
try 
growing peanuts and in the first year produced over 6,000 bushels. Other 
farmers planted peanuts and other crops, and prosperity soon returned.

What was first seen as a disaster-a closed door for cotton-actually became
a 
tremendous blessing because the farmers were forced to diversify. In 1919 
the city of Enterprise, Alabama erected a monument to the Boll Weevil.
That's 
a great attitude: When one door is shut, don't be disappointed! That leads

to the next principle about doors and God's will.

3. BE ACTIVE AS YOU LOOK FOR GOD'S OPEN DOOR

When Paul encountered the closed doors at Galatia and Mysia, he didn't
give 
up and return to Antioch. Nor did he sulk and complain. The worst thing he

could have done would have been to sit still and say, "Okay, God I'm not 
moving until you show me which way to go." Instead, he kept on moving; he 
took another direction-West. And as he was moving West, God directed him
to 
take the gospel into Europe.

Have you ever been excited about an op****tunity and suddenly found the
door 
closed? The worst thing you can do is to camp out at that closed door.
Don't 
quit-keep on moving, and God will direct your paths. Do may object, "But 
what about 'waiting on the Lord?'" Waiting is not a passive experience. 
"Waiting on the Lord" is acting like the waiter or server in a restaurant 
who takes your order and brings your food. Waiting on the Lord is asking 
God, "May I take Your order? Is there anything else You need?" God doesn't

tip-but His retirement benefits are out of this world!

There is an im****tant principle I call "spiritual momentum." It's easier
for 
God to direct a person if he or she is already in motion serving Him. A
boat 
sitting dead still in the water can't be turned by the rudder. That vessel

is "dead in the water." It has to have forward motion in order for the 
rudder to be effective. In the same way, if you are seeking God's
direction, 
don't sit still-if you do, you're "dead in the water." If you are active
in 
serving God anywhere you can, it's easier for Him to direct you into 
different paths of service.

You can walk through God's open door of op****tunity, and you'll often be 
confronted by angry people who oppose you. Paul had an open door in
Ephesus, 
but He also faced great opposition. He wrote: "But I will stay on at
Ephesus 
until Pentecost, because a GREAT DOOR FOR EFFECTIVE WORK has opened to me,

and there are many who oppose me." (I Corinthians 16:9) When you are 
actively looking for God's open doors, you may face opposition, and it may

not feel right-but go through the door anyway. The most im****tant 
consideration is not whether is seems right to you-but will God be
glorified 
if you proceed.

When you find God's direction, move immediately. Acts 16:10 says they 
"sailed immediately." As they headed west they made a "straight line" to
the 
coast-in other words, they had a heavenly tail wind. When you are going in

the right direction, there may be human opposition, and it may not feel 
right, but you'll have a tailwind from heaven!

4. DON'T DEPEND ON "DOORS" ALONE TO FIND GOD'S WILL

Cir***stances aren't the best way to discern God's direction. I remember 
speaking with a couple in Alabama who met when they worked together at the

post office. They were both already married, but they became romantically 
involved. The result was two divorces and two broken families-and when I 
spoke to them, their new marriage was unraveling. Both of them claimed to
be 
Christians. I'll never forget a question the man asked me: "If God hadn't 
wanted us to be together, why did He open door for us to meet each other? 
And if He didn't want us to proceed into a romantic relation****p, why
didn't 
He close the door?" Whew! I politely suggested to him that perhaps it
wasn't 
God who opened the door, and it doesn't do any good to lock your door
after 
the thief is already inside!

Using opened and closed doors to find God's will can be risky business. 
Cir***stances can be deceiving when you look at them from the wrong 
perspective. Henry Blackaby wrote: "Be very careful how you interpret 
cir***stances. Many times we jump to a conclusion too quickly...A whole
lot 
of wrong things can happen if you try to look at God from the middle of 
cir***stances. When you face difficult or confusing cir***stances, the 
Spirit of God will take the Word of God and help you understand your 
cir***stances from God's perspective." (from Experiencing God, pp. 97)

The old Sears and Roebuck Catalog we got when I was a kid often listed
three 
levels of quality for the same product. For instance, you could order a 
basic lawn mower-it was good. Or you could order one with more
horsepower-it 
was labeled better. Or you could opt for the most expensive one that was 
self-propelled-it was listed as best. When it comes to finding God's will,
I 
think there is a good way, a better way, and the best way. Let me give you

three sources for finding God's Will.

Three sources for finding God's Will:

(1) Good: Cir***stances

Cir***stances can often be God's external guide for us. This is often
called 
God's providential guidance. Sometimes you can determine God's will by 
looking at cir***stances that seem to reveal open and closed doors. God
has 
promised in Psalm 32:8-9: "I will instruct you and teach you in the way
you 
should go; I will counsel you and watch over you. (KJV: "I will guide thee

with mine eye') Do not be like the horse or the mule, which have no 
understanding but must be controlled by bit and bridle, or they will not 
come to you."

The key is to have such an intimate walk with the Lord that He can guide
you 
with His eye. When my girls were little, if they misbehaved in a public 
setting, all I had to do was give them the old "raised eyebrow" look, and 
they knew that I meant, "Settle down, or you're going to get it!" It
worked 
for them, but it doesn't work for other kids.see.because they aren't as 
close to me as my kids.

(2) Better: Holy Spirit

God's Spirit dwells inside His children, so this is His internal guide.
It's 
interesting in Acts 16 that Luke writes the Holy Spirit prevented Paul
from 
going into Asia Minor. Then he writes that Paul was prevented by the
Spirit 
of Jesus Christ. Those are two and the same. The Holy Spirit IS the Spirit

of Jesus as well as the Spirit of the Living God. In John 14-16 Jesus 
promised He would send the Holy Spirit who would "guide the disciples." As

He spoke about the Holy Spirit in John 14:18, He said, "You know Him for
he 
lives WITH you (that was Jesus in the flesh); and will be IN you (that's
the 
Spirit of Jesus). It means we need to be listening for that still small 
voice. If we are seeking God's guidance, He will speak to us. In Isaiah 
30:21 God says, "Whether you turn to the right or the left, your ears will

hear a voice behind you saying, 'this is the way; walk in it.'" Have you 
ever heard God's still small voice? When God speaks to your heart, He 
usually doesn't employ an audible voice: It's louder than that. The
problem 
with many of us is that God IS speaking, we just aren't listening very 
carefully.

In 1898, Frances Barraud was an artist living in Liverpool, England. His 
brother gave him a dog named "Nipper" because of his tendency to nip at
the 
heels of visitors. Frances Barraud was fascinated with the revolutionary 
gramophones which played back recorded voices. He had his voice put on a 
gramophone roll and as he was playing it, Nipper cocked his head and
barked 
at the sound. So Barraud painted a picture that later became the logo of
RCA 
Victor entitled "Listening for his master's voice." He sold the picture
and 
the rights for a total of £100 (more than $6,300 today)! Are you listening

intently to what God is saying to you? Are you tuned in to hear the
Master's 
voice? If you are child of God, you will learn to recognize His voice.

In Bible times many flocks of sheep were placed in a central sheepfold.
When 
a shepherd entered the sheepfold, he could call out, and only those sheep 
belonging to him would follow. They recognized his voice. If you belong to

Jesus, you will recognize his voice. Jesus said, "My sheep listen to my 
voice; I know them, and they follow me." (John 10:27)

(3) Best: God's Word

Cir***stantial guidance is good, the inner voice of God's Spirit is
better, 
but the very best is to read and study the Bible. It is God's eternal
guide. 
The way you find God's will in the Bible is not to flop the Bible open and

randomly point at a verse or two. One man tried that and his finger
pointed 
to, "and Judas went out and hanged himself." He didn't like that, so he 
tried again. This time his finger came to rest on a verse that said, "Go 
thou, and do likewise."

But if you are a serious and consistent student of God's Word, you will
find 
the Word of God will light your pathway. Psalm 119:104-105 says, "I gain 
understanding from your precepts; therefore I hate every wrong path. Your 
Word is a lamp unto my feet; and a light unto my path." Reading God's Word

will teach you the wrong paths. You start walking on wrong paths when you 
enter the wrong doors. God's Word teaches you what not to do as much as it

teaches how to live. As you regularly devour God's Word, you'll find God 
will use a phrase, or verse, or passage and apply it your current life 
situation. It's as if the words literally jump off the page and grab you
by 
the throat. I'll illustrate that in a minute.

There is a harbor in Italy that can only be reached by sailing through a 
narrow channel filled with dangerous rocks. Through the years, many ****ps 
were wrecked when they tried to enter the harbor at night. Before Loran
and 
GPS, they erected three lights on tall poles. One light was in the harbor 
and the other two were on the shore. When the three lights were perfectly 
lined up, the ****p could proceed safely into the harbor. If only two were 
lined up, the captain knew he was off course. Just so, God has provided 
three lights for us, and when you line up cir***stances, the voice of the 
Holy Spirit, and His Word, you know you can proceed safely.

CONCLUSION

Thirteen years ago, I was serving as pastor of a wonderful church in 
Alabama. We were very happy, and then I started getting phone calls from
the 
Pastor Search Committee for a church in Tyler called Green Acres-I thought

Green Acres was a television show! As we struggled with determining God's 
will about coming to serve at Green Acres, God used cir***stances, the
voice 
of the Holy Spirit, and scripture. The cir***stances would be that while I

was serving as a pastor in Birmingham, I was contacted by the Pastor 
Selection Committee. But the cir***stances were confusing, because I was 
very happy where I was and God was blessing our church. My brother lived
in 
Alabama and my sister lived just over the Alabama line in Georgia. Cindy's

parents and brother lived in Montgomery, and we didn't want to move away 
from them. We recently moved into a beautiful new home and were very 
happy-settled and content that we were in God's Will.

We knew nothing about Tyler, and thought it was like West Texas, flat and 
dry, but after the committee started visiting with us, Cindy opened her 
latest issue of Southern Living and found an entire article on the roses
of 
Tyler-was God trying to tell us something? When I came in January to
preach 
in view of a call, I did not receive a unanimous vote; it was something
like 
94%. The other three churches I served had all been a unanimous vote so I 
wondered if God was using cir***stances to tell us not to come. Basically
we 
were confused.

That Sunday evening we were at the staying at the Residence Inn down the 
road, and had pretty much decided we would go back to our friends and
family 
in Alabama, and to the church that had given us a unanimous call! We
decided 
we weren't supposed to leave our house, friends, and family and come here 
where we didn't know anyone.

Late that night Cindy was reading her Bible as she does every day, and she

yelled to me when she read a particular verse. It was Mark 10:29-30 and
she 
was reading it out of the Bible she still uses. It says, "Assuredly, I say

to you, there is no one who has left house or brothers, or sisters or
father 
or mother or wife or children or lands, for My sake and the gospel's, who 
shall not receive a hundredfold now in this time-houses and brothers and 
sisters and mothers and children and lands-with persecution-and in the age

to come, eternal life."

We were pretty blown away by that verse, but I still wasn't convinced. On 
Monday morning, some of the men asked if we could have a prayer meeting in

what used to be our chapel. I really didn't want to pray about it, because
I 
was fairly certain we weren't coming, but it looks bad if you refuse to 
pray, so I reluctantly agreed. During that prayer meeting as some of those

guys were weeping and praying, God broke my heart, and He spoke to me with

that inner voice. His message was simple: "David, I want you here in
Tyler, 
if you don't obey me, I'll take my hand of blessing off of you." That did 
it. I got up crying, the other men were crying, and we were hugging. I
drove 
back to the Residence Inn, and when Cindy saw my tear swollen eyes, she 
said, "Well, I guess we're staying." It didn't feel right, and there was 
plenty of opposition, but today, I am convinced it was God's will. When I 
lined up the three lights of cir***stances, the voice of the Holy Spirit, 
and His Word-I knew this was His direction for us.

So when you face a shut door, first make sure God shut it. Then look for
His 
open door but make sure you depend on His voice and His Word before you
walk 
through any door.

There is another door in scripture God can't open-the door to your heart.
In 
Revelation 3:20 Jesus says, "Here I am! I stand at the door and knock
(it's 
the door of your heart). If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I
will 
go in and eat with him, and he with me." In Holman Hunt's famous painting,

"The Light of the World" Jesus is standing at a door knocking. Art critics

pointed out that Hunt had made a mistake because there is no doorknob.
Hunt 
corrected them by explaining that the door was the door to a person's
heart, 
and the only doorknob is on the inside. Jesus won't force His way through 
the door of your heart. He is standing there, knocking, waiting, and
asking 
to come into your life. Will you open your life to Him?
 




 3 Posts in Topic:
When God Shuts One Door, He Opens Another
"Carl" <sain  2008-05-04 02:11:51 
Re: When God Shuts One Door, He Opens Another
bob young <alaspectrum  2008-05-04 04:15:01 
Re: When God Shuts One Door, He slams it in your face
"SheBlewHimDidYouBlo  2008-05-04 09:34:36 

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tan13V112 Fri Jul 25 6:58:36 CDT 2008.