THE FREEDOM NO ONE CAN TAKE

Some of the ugliest scenes from the 20th Century come from the Nazi Holocaust 
during World War II.
And some pretty inspiring scenes come from that as well.
One of the most famous accounts of those awful years was written by a Jewish 
psychiatrist named
Victor Frankl - a survivor of the concentration camps.
Frankl told of how the Jews there had almost every freedom stripped from them: 
they were imprisoned,
they were awakened any hour of the day or night, treated
like slave labor, humiliated, always facing the specter of death. But he lived 
to tell us about the
one freedom they learned no one could take away from
them - the freedom he saw in many of those who survived the horror. It's the 
one freedom that could
make you a survivor.

Twenty centuries ago another Jewish man wrote about his suffering, from a Roman 
prison and the
attitude that sustained him through it all. It's that one
freedom that nothing can take away from you: no tragedy, no treatment by 
others, no divorce, no
disease, no loss. It's the freedom to choose your attitude.
Dr. Frankl said that that was the freedom he and others exercised in that 
concentration camp; a
freedom beyond the reach of their Nazi guards. It was a
freedom the Apostle Paul found in Jesus Christ.

He had lost all his other freedoms as a prisoner chained to a guard 24 hours a 
day. But the prison
didn't choose his attitude. Your prison, your pain doesn't
have to choose yours either. Paul chose joy. You can, too.

What's the secret of choosing joy when everything else is falling apart? From 
his prison, Paul gives
us our word for today from the Word of God, Philippians
1:3-4, "I thank my God every time I remember you. In all my prayers for you, I 
always pray with
joy." Secret number one of choosing joy...focusing on others
instead of yourself. Paul would have sunk to despair if he concentrated on his 
misery. Instead, he
concentrated on the people he loved, praying for them,
thinking about them, reaching out to them. It's one way you can choose joy, too.

And then in Philippians he says, "I want you to know, brothers, that what has 
happened to me has
really served to advance the Gospel" (Philippians 2:12).
Because Paul was out of commission, many others had gone out preaching the Good 
News. He goes on to
say, "The important thing is that...Christ is preached"
(v. 18). Secret number two of choosing joy: focusing on the good that's coming 
out of this bad
situation. Ask God for that kind of insight, to look beyond
the obvious losses in your situation to the ways He's using, or can use, this 
situation to bring
about something good.

One other way Paul shows us to choose joy in a depressing situation: focus on 
your Savior who's your
anchor. In Philippians 3:10, he says, "I want to know
Christ." Almost everything else has been taken from him, but nothing can stop 
Paul from pursuing his
lifelong passion for knowing Jesus a little bit better
every day. The fact is that when a lot of other things are taken from you, you 
may be able to pursue
your Savior as never before, if you make that choice.
So many people have discovered in hurting times that you never know Jesus is 
all you need until
Jesus is all you've got.

You may be in a hurting time right now and you didn't get to choose your 
situation. But, like the
man in the concentration camp and the apostle in the prison
cell, you can choose your attitude. You don't ever have to say you're doing 
pretty well "under the
circumstances." What are you doing under those?

Being on top of your circumstances is a choice! To focus on the people you 
love, on the good that's
coming from this situation, on the Savior you want to
know better. That's why the prisoner Paul calls you in his joyful prison letter 
to "rejoice in the
Lord always! I will say it again, rejoice!" (Philippians
4:4).


O. Addison Gethers
e-mail address : [EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
window live messenger: [EMAIL PROTECTED] aim: durangoadd64 skype: cowboys62 
yahoo messenger: OADDISONGETHERS
 
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