“WHEN GOD CLOSES A DOOR, HE OPENS ANOTHER!”

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SERIES:                      OH NO!  THAT’S NOT IN THE BIBLE

TEXT: Acts 16:6-12

INTRODUCTION:

It seems doors of opportunity 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 closes a door, He opens another!” Well, no, those exact words are not found in the Bible anywhere. However, of all the phrases we examined 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 they 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. 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 WILL 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 important guiding principles:

  1. a. Don’t ask 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. Henry Blackaby said 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!

b. 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 classes 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 opportunity 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 opportunity.” 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!

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 circumstances seem to close doors of opportunity, go back to the Lord and clarify what God said. He most often is not calling you to a TASK, but to a RELATIONSHIP. Through that relationship 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.

Illustration:

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!

Have you ever wondered why God closes some doors and opens others? In God’s sovereign wisdom, grace and love He is able to lead us to what is best. No person, organization or group is able to know what is best for us in the short run and for eternity except the Lord.

Do not get discouraged when you get a rejected for a special job, a certain relationship or a promotion. Trust God in the process of opening up a better opportunity for you.

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 opportunity 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 important 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 opportunity, 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 important consideration is not whether it 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

Circumstances aren’t the best way to discern God’s direction.

Illustration:

I remember speaking with a couple in a church who met when they worked together at a certain office. They were both already married, but they became romantically involved. The result was two annulments 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 relationship, 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. Circumstances can be deceiving when you look at them from the wrong perspective. Henry Blackaby wrote: “Be very careful how you interpret circumstances. 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 circumstances. When you face difficult or confusing circumstances, the Spirit of God will take the Word of God and help you understand your circumstances from God’s perspective.” (from Experiencing God, pp. 97)

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:

  • Good: Circumstances

Circumstances 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 circumstances 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.

  • 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.

Illustration:

The story is told of an American tourist who was traveling in the Mid East. He came upon several shepherds whose flocks had intermingled while drinking water from a brook. After an exchange of greetings, one of the shepherds turned toward the sheep and called out, “Manah. Manah. Manah.” (Manah means “follow me” in Arabic). Immediately his sheep separated themselves from the rest and followed him.

Then one of the two remaining shepherds called out, “Manah. Manah.” And his sheep left the common flock to follow him. The traveler then said to the third shepherd, “I would like to try that. Let me put on your cloak and turban and see if I can get the rest of the sheep to follow me.”

The shepherd smiled knowingly as the traveler wrapped himself in the cloak, put the turban on his head and called out, “Manah. Manah.” The sheep did not respond to the stranger’s voice. Not one of them moved toward him. “Will the sheep ever follow someone other than you?” The traveler asked.

“Oh yes,” the shepherd replied, “sometimes a sheep gets sick, and then it will follow anyone.”

We live in a world where a lot of different “voices” are calling us to follow. Materialism cries out for us to follow. Power and prestige call out. Sensual pleasure makes its plea. It’s easy to be pulled in a lot of different directions. That is, unless we have Jesus Christ as our shepherd. A sheep in His flock will ignore all other voices and listen for the voice of its Master.

“To him the doorkeeper opens, and the sheep hear his voice; and he calls his own sheep by name and leads them out. And when he brings out his own sheep, he goes before them; and the sheep follow him, for they know his voice. Yet they will by no means follow a stranger, but will flee from him, for they do not know the voice of strangers.” (John 10:3-5)

Whose voice are you listening to? 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.

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)

  • Best: God’s Word

Circumstantial 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. (Personal testimonies in the ministry…little thinking, poverty thinking…)

Because without God’s Word, we’ll all be lost.

Illustration: (Going to Holy Cross Academy at Nova)

When I realized that I must write down the direction that the secretary was telling me, I grab a pen and a paper, then one by one I wrote down every street names, turns, etc…It was evident that without them, I would not ever have found my way, because there were some tricky little turns that were not marked.

Life’s like that too. Without direction, we flounder. We need to heed the direction given by our parents and teachers, etc…Most of all, we need the direction and guidance of God’s Word. Even if we stray, when we go back to the beginning, back to the basic teachings of His Word, we find ourselves heading in the right direction.

CONCLUSION

Closing Illustration:

In 1858 the Illinois legislature–using an obscure statute–sent Stephen A. Douglas to the U.S. Senate instead of Abraham Lincoln, although Lincoln had won the popular vote. When a sympathetic friend asked Lincoln how he felt, he said, “Like the boy who stubbed his toe: I am too big to cry and too badly hurt to laugh. God uses closed doors to open up bigger and better ones for us down the road.”

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?

13 thoughts on ““WHEN GOD CLOSES A DOOR, HE OPENS ANOTHER!”

  1. amervis

    God has yet to close a door in my life without opening a much more glorious door. When one door is shut, don’t be disappointed!

    Have you ever wondered why God closes some doors and opens others? In God’s sovereign wisdom, grace and love He is able to lead us to what is best. No person, organization or group is able to know what is best for us in the short run and for eternity except the Lord. 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 opportunity.” 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!

    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 circumstances seem to close doors of opportunity, go back to the Lord and clarify what God said. He most often is not calling you to a TASK, but to a RELATIONSHIP. Through that relationship 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.

    Do not get discouraged when you get a rejected for a special job, a certain relationship or a promotion. Trust God in the process of opening up a better opportunity for you.

  2. roy

    It is sad to see how the impatience of people cause them to imagine God closes a door. They expect something and it is not there today so they say the door is closed by God.
    People are in a hurry and want God’s solution to be at hand now.

    i thank God for teaching me to wait as he unfolds things for me and my heart’s desires. he expects obedience. And his will is always that which is done, not ours.

    He had Paul write, I have learned to be content in all situations. So what does that have to do with rthings vbeing closed. Keep moving, and watch how he opens opportunities. And praise Him for it.

    • bleu oleson

      something that came to mind while reading about Paul’s destination being changed enroute was that he may have already been walking for days in one direction and may have had to back-track. I don’t know if that’s the case or not, but it seems like sometimes our role changes and even though we may have been doing what we believed God had lined up for us, He may call us to change gears, and go an entirely different direction. And it might feel like maybe we mis-interpreted His previous call, or that we had been wasting our time, but I think that’s not necessarily the case. We’ll know the whole story when we get to heaven, but in the mean time, as long as we’re tuned-in to God’s voice, and studying His character to know how to recognize His lead, even if we find ourselves starting and stopping a bit here and there, I don’t think we need to look at it as an unstable resume, we’re just running errands for the Boss.

  3. Isaiah 22:22 I believe is where most have taken hold of the opening one door and closing another…however, it doesn’t say that when one closes another opens in respect to one another, nor does it say that because one opens the other shuts. IT DOES say that when He opens one, no one can shut it; and when He closes one, no one can open it. Just wanted to add this verse into the thought process going on here. Be blessed and continually seek Him!

  4. linsaleealpi

    God never ceases to keep me awestruck with His faithfulness and He constantly shows me that He is a personal God and always meets me in my deepest needs. I recently stepped down from from children’s ministry after 20yr. This past year has been a wrestling match with God I had been stirred in my heart to leave but was afraid of disappointing leadership but through a series of GOD events I became sure and confident. This article really encouraged me; actually I just wrote my official resignation letter before I came upon this teaching. I do not know what God has for me next so I am in that ‘Be still and know that I am God’ place in my life Psalm 27:14 tells me to Wait for the LORD; be strong and take heart and wait. Also Psalm 62:5 Let all that I am wait quietly before
    God, for my hope, my expectation is from Him”; so I am waiting expectantly.
    Blessing lindalee

  5. Debbie

    I will trust the word of God to direct my path and praise him for giving me a chance to do more and better to help others than before in Jesus Name, AMEN!

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