Text: Romans 5:3-10; 8:18
Key Verse: “Not only so, but we
also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces
perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not
put us to shame, because God's love has been poured out into our hearts through
the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us” (Romans 5:3-5 NIV)
It is clear from this that
Christians are expected to experience suffering. Those who think that becoming
a Christian will remove them from suffering have been seriously misled, for the
Scriptures themselves teach that we are to expect suffering.
The Greek word for suffering is
translated as tribulation, something that causes distress. It can range from
minor annoyances that we go through every day, to major disasters that come
sweeping down out of the blue and leave us stricken and smitten. These are the
sufferings that we might go through, the tribulations.
According to Romans 5, the
Christian response to suffering is to rejoice: Not only so, but we rejoice in
our sufferings. Here is where many people balk. They say, I can't buy that! Do
you mean to say that God is telling me that when I am hurting and in pain, I am
expected to be glad and rejoice in that? That is not human, not natural!
How do you get to the place where
you can rejoice in suffering? The apostle's answer is, We rejoice in suffering
because we know... We rejoice because we know something. It isn't just because
it's such a great feeling to be hurt, it is because we know something about it.
It is something our faith enables us to know, a kind of inside information that
others do not share.
What do we know? Paul says,
Knowing that suffering produces... Suffering does something, accomplishes
something. It is productive. We know it works, and that is what makes us
rejoice. Watch a woman in labor. If you have any empathy in you, you can't help
but feel deeply hurt with her because she is going through such pain. And yet,
there usually is joy in the midst of it because she knows that childbirth
produces children. There are many women who will gladly go through childbirth
because they want a child. Suffering produces something worthwhile.
Then what does suffering produce?
The apostle says there are three things that suffering produces: First,
suffering produces perseverance. In some versions the word may be patience. The
Greek word literally means to abide under, to stay under the pressure. Pressure
is something we want to get out from under, but suffering teaches us to stay under,
to stick in there and hang with it. The best translation I can think of is the
English word steadiness. Suffering produces steadiness.
Second, steadiness produces
character. The Greek word for character carries with it the idea of being put
to the test and approved. It is the idea of being shown to be reliable. You
finally learn that you are not going to be destroyed, that things will work
out. People start counting on you. They see strength in you, and you become a
more reliable person.
Third, we find that reliability
produces something. Reliability produces hope. The hope is that we will share
the glory of God, which is God's character. We have the hope that God is
producing the image of Christ in us. This hope is a certainty, not just a
possibility. We are being changed. We are becoming more like Jesus. We can see
that we are more thoughtful, more compassionate, more loving. We are being
mellowed. We are becoming like Christ — stronger, wiser, purer, more patient.
He is transforming us into the image of his Son.
*** Culled from Ray Stedman
Ministries | www.raystedman.org ***
THE TRUTH MEDIA
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