The Power of Getting Back Up (Part Three)
“For though the righteous fall seven times, they rise again, but the wicked stumble when calamity strikes.” Proverbs 24:16 (NIV)
There’s something powerful about a person who refuses to stay down after a fall. Thomas Edison failed 14,000 times before he invented the light bulb. When asked about his failures, he said, “I just found 14,000 ways that didn’t work.” But what shaped his greatness was not only his persistence, it was the faith of his mother. When the school sent home a cruel letter calling him “mentally deficient,” she refused to read those words to her son. Instead, she spoke life over him, saying he was too brilliant for the school to teach. Years later, when Edison found the real letter, he wept, realizing that his mother’s faith had built the foundation for his destiny.
Vincent van Gogh, whose art is now priceless, was called a failure his entire life. Critics mocked him until he burned hundreds of his own paintings. He sold only one before he died, broken and believing he was worthless. Yet the same work the world rejected became some of the most celebrated art ever created. How many masterpieces have we burned in moments of doubt because we listened to the wrong voices?
Abraham Lincoln lost nearly every election he entered, battled deep loss, and faced heartbreak after heartbreak. But every failure was forming endurance, every disappointment shaping his destiny. At 52, he became president of the United States and changed the course of history. His story reminds us that rejection doesn’t mean God is finished with us. It often means He’s preparing us for something greater.
Albert Einstein didn’t speak until he was five. His teachers labeled him “slow.” Yet God’s design for him defied every label. The same was true for Dr. Seuss, who was told 27 times that his books were too strange to publish. The 28th publisher said yes, and the world was changed by a man who refused to quit.
Even Colonel Sanders, broke and 65 years old, faced 1,000 rejections before one restaurant said yes to his fried chicken recipe. His life didn’t just build a global brand; it ended with redemption. After meeting Jesus, he became a generous believer who gave to build God’s house.
Your failures are not final. God’s story for you doesn’t end in rejection or regret. Every “no” is just another step toward the “yes” He’s already written.
You may have fallen, but by His grace, you can always get back up.
Prayer: Lord, thank You that failure is not final with You. When I fall, help me rise again with renewed strength and faith. Remind me that Your plans for me are good, and my story is not over. Use my tears to bring new life. In Jesus’ name. Amen.
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