Sufficient Grace for
Humbling Circumstances, Part 1
by
John MacArthur
Copyright 2005-2008,
Grace to You.
All rights reserved. Used by permission.
For an audio copy of this file: please contact
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To You (1-800-55-GRACE)
2 Corinthians
12:7-10 GC
90-344
I want you to open
your Bible to 2 Corinthians chapter
12, and I want to read a passage to
you that is going to be the focus of
our discussion together...2
Corinthians chapter 12 and verses 7
through 10.
We begin in verse 7, as the Apostle
Paul writes, “And because of the
surpassing greatness of the
revelations, for this reason to keep
me from exalting myself, there was
given me a thorn in the flesh, a
messenger of Satan to buffet me, to
keep me from exalting myself.
Concerning this I entreated the Lord
three times that it might depart
from me. And He has said to me on
each of those three occasions, by
the way, ‘My grace is sufficient for
you, for power is perfected in
weakness.’ Most gladly therefore, I
will rather boast about my
weaknesses that the power of Christ
may dwell in me. Therefore, I am
well content with weaknesses, with
insults, with distresses, with
persecutions, with difficulties for
Christ’s sake for when I am weak,
then I am strong.”
Now if ever there was a passage in
direct opposition to the prosperity
message, that’s it. There is nothing
here about success and wealth and
comfort and ease and having it your
way and seeing the fulfillment of
all your dreams and desires and
longings. This is about suffering
and suffering is the path to
spiritual victory.
I want you to focus on the very
familiar statement in verse 9, and
that’s where we’re going to begin.
“My grace is sufficient for you.” My
grace is enough, My grace is all you
need no matter how difficult the
issue you face. We’re very familiar
with the concept of grace, very,
very familiar. We talk about it, we
sing about it, we use it repeatedly
in our prayers and in our Christian
conversation and we even go to a
church named Grace Community Church.
This is perhaps the most used
theological term in the New
Testament. It is a magnificent word
that appears 155 times, as a matter
of fact, in the New Testament. This
Greek term, grace, the word is
charis, it means basically a
generous benefit given, a favor
bestowed. And in the sense of the
New Testament and New Testament
theology, it is a generous benefit
given, a favor bestowed to someone
who could never earn it. This
defines our relationship to God. We
are awakened from our spiritual
sleep and our spiritual death by a
work of God that could only be
called a work of grace, undeserved
favor. We are redeemed, regenerated,
adopted, justified, converted, born
again, pick whatever term you want
in the panoply of terms related to
salvation and you will always be
able to attach by grace because we
have no merit by which to earn any
of God’s favors given to us in our
salvation. We are even sanctified by
grace because we are now no more
able to earn our way to spiritual
maturity than we were to earn our
way to salvation, that too is a work
of grace. And our glorification in
the future is a work of grace so
that throughout all eternity the
great wonder of all wonders is that
we will be in heaven where God will
pour out the fullness of His grace
upon us forever and ever and ever
and ever and we will never get over
the fact that all of this is by
grace. It is favor, it is benefit,
it is blessing unearned and
undeserved.
Now the New Testament talks about
this. As I said, you have the word
155 times and it tells us so much
about grace, we are familiar with it
in the general sense. Let me help
you get a little more specifically
familiar with it as we look at this
passage.
It needs to be said, as we
contemplate the big picture of God’s
grace, that God does not skimp on
His grace. In fact, we are reminded
in Ephesians chapter 2 that God
blesses us according to the
surpassing riches of His grace.
God’s grace, you might say, is
superabundant. Every benefit that we
experience spiritually is by grace.
One of the most wonderful statements
made about our Lord was that
inspired word from John in John 1:14
who said of Jesus Christ, “He was
full of grace.” The wondrous fact of
His being full of grace was followed
in John’s gospel by an even more
thrilling reality, “For of His
fullness have all we received and
grace upon grace.”
It is basic to say God is a God of
grace, that God is gracious, that
Christ is gracious, being full of
grace and bestowing that fullness on
us, grace upon grace, or grace after
grace after grace after grace. As
long as we live and it will be
forever, as long as we live in the
realm of grace and salvation, we
will accumulate grace upon grace
upon grace upon grace forever. Luke
said about the early Christians that
they were experiencing abundant
grace, Acts 4:33. Paul informs us in
Romans 5:2 that we all stand in
grace. We live in the environment of
grace. It’s the atmosphere that we
breathe spiritually. And in Romans
5:17 he adds that God bestows upon
us as we stand in the realm of grace
an abundance of grace. No matter
what you might think of that grace,
no matter how great you think it is,
no matter how grand you think it is,
no matter how lavish you think it
is, no matter how superabundant you
think it is, James adds, “He gives a
greater grace.” It is greater than
you think, it is greater than you
can comprehend.
Peter chimes in, not wanting to be
left out, and in 1 Peter 4:10 he
says, “We have all received...what
he calls...the manifold, or
multi-faceted, or multi-colored
grace of God.” It is lavish. It is
rich. It is unending and God’s
supply is undiminished and He gives
it to us in such a way as to be
defined by grace upon grace, upon
grace, upon grace, manifold and
multi-faceted. God is not stingy
when He gives out His grace, He is
lavish. He delights to give us
abundant grace, it brings Him joy,
it brings Him satisfaction and it
brings Him honor and worship and
praise from those who are the
recipients of that grace.
And when you think about the grace
of God, typically, you probably
think about the grace of God related
to salvation. But that’s a very
limited view. In 2 Corinthians
chapter 9 and verse 8, this is what
Paul writes: “And God is able to
make all grace abound to you,” all
grace, meaning stretching across all
categories. It’s not just saving
grace. Of course it all fits into
the realm of saving grace, but it
can be more narrowly defined. God is
able to make all grace abound to
you. Again, the language is always
extravagant when it comes to grace.
“So that always you will have all
sufficiency in all things.” In fact,
you will have an abundance for every
good deed.
This pulls all the superlatives
together. God gives all grace, God
makes all grace abound so that you
always have all sufficiency for all
things and an abundance for all good
deeds. This is lavish grace. This is
profuse grace. We’re given grace to
repent, we’re given grace to
believe, grace to be saved. We are
given grace to understand the Word
of God. We’re given grace to wisely
apply the Word of God. We’re given
grace to overcome sin. We’re given
grace to defeat temptation. We’re
given grace to endure suffering,
disappointment, pain. We’re given
grace to obey the Lord. We’re given
grace to serve Him. We’re given
grace to use our spiritual gifts
which are gifts of grace. This Paul
calls in 2 Corinthians 9:14, the
surpassing grace of God that
operates in you. What an amazing
gift God has given us in this grace.
And it is always grace which means
it is not the result of our own
efforts and earning.
Job was correct when he said, “Man
is born unto trouble as the sparks
fly upward.” Life is trouble,
trouble, trouble, trouble. You need
grace. Even as a believer you need
grace for every issue in life.
Paul said in 2 Corinthians 3:5, “Our
sufficiency is from God.” That’s
true. God is the only sufficient
source of power that can come to our
aid in every single situation we
will ever face in life and He does
that by dispensing grace. We all
know that life is filled with
trouble, life is filled with
disaster. And if we’re not in the
disaster, we’re on the edge of it.
Life is filled with strong
temptation. Life is filled with
attractions to sinful things. Life
is filled with struggles to cope
with the disappointments and the
pain and the suffering that comes
into all of our experience. Life is
filled with all of these things,
including our efforts at evangelism,
our efforts at Christian ministry
that are often met with resistance
and lack of understanding, lack of
interest. We live in a fallen,
decadent, corrupt world and we live
in fallen, decadent, corrupt flesh.
So we face incessant trouble, even
in endeavoring to serve the Lord. We
need grace for everything. The
question is, is such grace
available? Is there a source of
sufficient grace to help us in every
situation?
You know, there are some benefits to
being old. There really are. One of
the benefits to being old is you’ve
been around long enough to see the
right things die. And one of the
things that I’ve been so pleased to
see disappear is the encroachment on
the church from the realm of human
psychology. It wasn’t too many years
ago when the church was being
consistently being told and was
buying into the lie that if you
really wanted to solve your
problems, you needed the help of
psychology and psychiatry. This
was...this was a massive invasion
into the life of the church. I’ve
lived long enough to see it fade
away. It was a dry well. It was
bankrupt. It was unnecessary. It is
fast proving to be so not only
inside the church but even outside
the church. It’s not necessary to
use human ingenuity, human
methodology, and human technique to
change God’s people. God does that
by means of His Spirit and grace.
And you can’t change the people who
aren’t God’s people because
psychology can’t do a heart
transplant in the spiritual realm.
But for many years the church bought
into the lie that the problems of
Christians are beyond the realm of
the spiritual and call for
psychological techniques that have
been developed for decades.
Thankfully that all has gone away,
tucked its tail and stolen off into
the night. And we come back to the
great reality of 2 Corinthians 3:5,
“Our sufficiency for everything is
from God.”
Everything comes to us from God.
Everything comes to us by grace.
That’s why whenever you go to God to
pray, you’re going to what the Bible
calls, the book of Hebrews, the
throne of grace. You can’t ever go
to God and say, “I’m going through a
problem, give me, God, give me
deliverance because I’ve earned it.
I’m ill, I’m struggling, I have a
disease. God, take it away because I
deserve to have it taken away. Lord,
look, bless my ministry, may it have
a great impact, may I be highly
honored and revered by all who hear
me because I deserve it.” That’s
just absolutely bizarre. When you
come to ask the Lord for anything,
you come always to a throne of grace
where God pours out benefits and
blessings and people who don’t
deserve them. But it is,
nonetheless, the place of power.
Now with that in mind, let’s go back
to the text. And I want to help you
to understand what’s in this text
and there is a lot here...a lot.
This is, I think, one of the most
potent texts in the whole New
Testament. This entire section from
chapter 10 to chapter 13 in this
epistle may be the most emotionally
charged section in all the writings
of the great Apostle Paul. It is
powerful stuff. It is penetrating.
It is personal. It is filled with
passion. It is heart-wrenching
because in 2 Corinthians chapters 10
to 13, he lays his heart open, wide
open. He is in the middle of being
assaulted and attacked in the very
domain where he had sacrificially
given his life and preached the
gospel. His integrity has been
called into question by his enemies.
His loyalty has been attacked. His
ability to lead has been demeaned.
His decisions have been questioned.
He has been accused of having a
secret life of shame, of lying about
his apostolic credentials, of lying
and falsifying the record of his
ministry. His love is doubted and
even denied. He is being reinvented
in some kind of revisionist history
being conducted in Corinth by false
teachers so that he is emerging as
an anti-hero, a bad guy, a
hypocrite, a deceiver. This on top
of all the other things he suffered.
Go back to chapter 11 and let’s get
a running start on this text. He
says in verse 23, “Are they servants
of Christ?” Talking about his
accusers who claim to be the true
prophets of God and are accusing him
of being a false prophet, false
apostle. “Are they servants of
Christ? I speak as if insane,” I’m
making this concession for the sake
of argument. “Let’s compare
credentials. Are they apostles of
Christ? Are they servants of Christ?
Slaves of Christ? I more so. Here’s
my proof. In far more labors, in far
more imprisonments, beaten times
without number, often in danger of
death, five times I received from
the Jews 39 lashes, three times I
was beaten with rods, once I was
stoned, three times I was
shipwrecked, a night and a day I
spent in the deep. I have been on
frequent journeys and dangers from
rivers, robbers, countrymen,
Gentiles, in the city, in the
wilderness, on the sea and among
false brethren. I have been in labor
and hardship through many sleepless
nights, in hunger and thirst often
without food in cold and exposure.
And apart or beyond and above, more
painful than all of that, that’s
external, is the internal pain, the
daily pressure upon me of concern
for all the churches. Who is weak
without my being weak? Who is led
into sin without my intense
concern?” He knows the terrible,
terrible heart-wrenching experience
of his people in whom he has made
such a great investment, falling
into weakness and sin. So he has the
external suffering all through his
life, he has the internal suffering
of people that he’s invested in
defecting and showing up sinful.
He knew about suffering. He knew
about shipwrecks, floggings,
beatings with rods, narrow escapes
for his life, terrors of all kind,
pain in stocks, in prison, filthy
stinking jails with foul food,
torture, all of it. And he knew what
agonies were basically part of being
connected to people. It was
intrinsic in your life if you
invested in people that they would
disappoint you, reject you, fail,
wound you, betray you, misunderstand
you and even turn on you. All of
which the Corinthians have done.
Now I think this takes us to the
deepest point of pain in Paul’s
life. And it really comes out in
this whole letter. He even says in
chapter 7 that he was depressed. He
had reached a point of personal
depression, so depressed was he, he
says in chapter 2, that when a door
was open to preach the gospel in
Troas, he had no heart for it and no
interest in it even though the Lord
had opened the door because he was
just too broken hearted. People had
finally broken him, he was
crushed...he was crushed.
You can take a lot of shipwrecks.
You can take a lot of beatings. You
can take a lot of scourging. You can
take a lot of danger. The severest
pain comes from what people do to
you and especially the people in
whom you’ve made the greatest
investment of your life. The deepest
pain, the greatest trouble in human
experience, apart from your own
personal sin and personal guilt is
the pain that is inflicted on you by
other people. Read the biography of
Jonathan Edwards, maybe the greatest
mind in the history of America.
Pastoring twenty years in North
Hampton, and for 20 years of the
most erudite, profound, God-honoring
preaching, his congregation voted
him out as pastor. They voted him
out, they turned on him. Why?
Because he insisted that before you
take the Lord’s table, you should
have made a public confession of
faith in Christ. Not exactly a
fringe doctrine. After 20 years of
the Great Awakening, the greatest
revival in American history, twenty
years of profound preaching, they
turned on him. They not only threw
him out of the church, they did
everything they could to destroy his
reputation so that no other church
would take him. And he wound up for
a brief time ministering with
fifteen Indians way beneath his
capability, but he ministered to
them faithfully and humbly.
Finally the College of New Jersey
called, tried to pull him out of the
pit that he was in and invited him
to come and be the president, the
College of New Jersey eventually
became Princeton University. He
denied them his presence at first,
saying that it was too great a task
for one such as him. Eventually he
agreed to go, went, was there a
brief time and died. And you ask,
how could people do that to Jonathan
Edwards?
Hey, I remember many years ago and
I’m nobody, walking into my office
up there one day and I had a staff
of five men that I had invested my
life in and I walked in and said, “I
want to tell you how much I love you
and how grateful I am that you
minister alongside of me.” To which
one of them said, “If you think
we’re your friends, you’ve got
another think coming.” And the
mutiny was on. They had a plan to
remove me from this church. By the
grace of God that never came to
fruition. It shocked me. It jolted
me. I couldn’t comprehend how it
could happen.
I went one time to preach at the
Moody Bible Institute, founders
week, seats four thousand and it’s
always full and it’s a great
opportunity to preach there. And as
I was coming up to the Moody Church
and it was dark at night, it’s
always in the winter and it’s cold
and dark. I was brought in from a
car...by a car down at the Holiday
Inn where I was staying and came up
to the front, got out with a
borrowed overcoat and made my way
toward the great Moody church for
this great event. And a man handed
me a piece of paper and he was
handing paper...there were people
all around passing out these sheets
of paper to everyone who came in,
about four thousand-plus people.
When I got into the light, I looked
at it and it basically...the title
of it was, “The Heresies of John
MacArthur,” and it was single spaced
because I have a lot of heresies,
single-spaced on both sides. And, of
course, by the time I got in there,
everyone was reading all my
heresies. It made for a very
volatile and interesting evening.
I went on to preach the Word of God
without commenting on it, only later
to find out that this was all
printed up and distributed by a man,
a father, of a young man to whom I
had given a scholarship to the
Master’s College. You scratch your
head and you say, “So that’s the
gratitude you get?” Look, you learn
not to expect too much and then
you’re not really too disappointed
in life. It’s not easy.
Look at the Apostle Paul who stands
head and shoulders far above us and
ask how a congregation of people
could be brought to faith in Jesus
Christ, taught, instructed, nurtured
by this man, and then turn on him?
They did. There’s no external
punishment. There’s no persecution.
That is as painful as rejection,
false accusation, misrepresentation,
betrayal by the people who are the
ones in whom you’ve invested the
most. It’s a Judas kind of thing,
isn’t it? Betrayed by your own
friends. The wounding of our souls
by other people exceeds the wounding
of our bodies.
And so, we come to Paul in chapter
12 at the deepest point, I think, of
his trouble. This is the worst time
for him. He is feeling the greatest
attack, the most violent assault,
the deepest pain of his ministry.
He’s suffering through rejection by
the Corinthian church. He is unloved
by many in that church. He is
unappreciated. He is not trusted.
His ministry is maligned. His
affection is unrequited. His
integrity is questioned. His
fruitfulness denied. His honesty is
regaled. His sacrificial service
rejected. His credentials scoffed
at. And his authority disregarded.
And all of this was being led by
some false teachers who had come in
to the Corinthian church and done
everything they could to destroy
people’s confidence in him. They
said things about him, he’s
unimpressive, his speech is
contemptible. They said he is below
the acceptable level of those who
speak publicly.
They mocked him, this dear,
sacrificial, humble, selfless
Apostle who had already been
battered and beaten physically and
emotionally as well. Given almost
two years of his life to this church
and this is the gratitude that he
gets?
And when you pour your life into
people and when you make this level
of investment in people’s lives and
they turn on you, when you’ve been
unselfish, when you’ve been
sacrificial and you get hatred in
return and betrayal in return, it is
a kind of pain for which there is
little balm in this life. The wounds
are too deep. No stocks that he was
ever in were this painful.
That’s how we find him when we come
to this text. And he’s dealing with
this issue. As we approach this
text, here’s what I want you to see.
How Paul dealt with the deepest pain
of his own ministry...the deepest
trouble of his life because how he
did it is how we can do it as well.
I don’t know where your pain is
coming from, but we all have those
physical things that come upon us,
but I am sure the deepest most
wrenching pain in your life comes in
relationships, it comes because
people disappoint you, people turn
on you, people reject you, people
don’t return your life, people
misrepresent you, lie about you,
gossip about you, give false reports
about you, turn on you, try to
undermine you. That’s where Paul
was. How are we to approach the
deepest pain of life, the pain
inflicted on us by people,
especially those we care about? I’m
going to give you some lessons you
can learn from Paul.
Lesson number one, God uses
suffering at its deepest level to
humble His children. He uses
suffering at its deepest level to
humble His children. Verse 7, “And
because of the surpassing greatness
of the revelations, for this reason
to keep me from exalting myself
there was given me a thorn in the
flesh, a messenger of Satan to
buffet me, to keep me from exalting
myself.” Twice he says it. God’s
purpose in this is to humble me. He
had surpassing revelations.
What does this mean? Is he talking
about the revelation of the gospel
that was given to him after his
conversion of which he speaks in
Galatians chapter 1? Is that what
he’s talking about? No. Certainly he
did receive the revelation of the
gospel given to him by God directly,
not through any other teacher after
his conversion. He spent fourteen
years in Nabatea and Arabia, having
that revelation refined and
confirmed to him. Then he came
forth, exposed himself to the
Apostles and went on to preach to
the Gentiles. We remember reading
that.
He also had thirteen revelations
that make up the thirteen epistles
of the New Testament that he wrote.
But it is not those of which he
speaks. These are surpassingly great
revelations. These are revelations
that are unique and uncommon and
absolutely extraordinary. And, in
fact, the Apostle Paul had personal
appearances of Jesus Christ in his
life on four occasions. Wow! Plus,
one trip to heaven.
Go back to verse 1 of chapter 12.
“Boasting is necessary although it’s
not profitable.” He says I hate
being put in this position. You are
forcing me to defend myself by your
attacks. You are forcing me to
defend my credentials by your
assaults. The false teachers were
forcing Paul to defend himself. He
had to defend himself not for his
own sake but he had to defend
himself as the true Apostle of
Christ, the true representative of
the Word of God because if the
people turned from him to the false
prophets, they would be turning from
the truth to lies. And so for their
sake he defends himself though he
hates to do it. He says, “But let me
go on to visions and revelations of
the Lord. I know a man...he’s
referring to himself...in Christ who
fourteen years ago,” and we don’t
have any indication in the book of
Acts as to what this occasion was,
all we know is what he says here. We
don’t know when he happened, but it
was fourteen years before this. “I
know a man in Christ who fourteen
years ago whether in the body, I
don’t know, or out of the body, I do
not know, God knows, such a man was
caught up to the third heaven.”
Wow! There were four personal
appearances to him in his life by
Jesus Christ. The first one on the
road to Damascus. There were three
after that. One of them in
particular happened in Corinth when
he went there originally to preach
the gospel. It’s recorded in the
eighteenth chapter of Acts verses 9
and 10. Another one of them happened
when he was in prison. He says, “I
actually was caught up to the third
heaven,” that’s the heaven where God
lives. The first heaven is the
heaven of the air we breathe. The
second is the stellar heaven in a
simple sense. And the third heaven
is the domain of God where God
lives. I was caught up to the third
heaven and I know how such a man
whether in the body or apart from
the body,” for the second time he
says it, “I don’t know, I can’t
define it, don’t ask me the details,
I don’t know whether it was physical
or spiritual, I don’t know that. I
know I was caught up into paradise
and I heard inexpressible words
which a man is not permitted to
speak.” Don’t ask me what I heard
because I couldn’t understand it and
it’s not for human proclamation, I
went to heaven, that’s all I know.
This is not repeatable. This is not
verifiable. This is not defensible.
So it’s really not helpful for me to
talk about it, I’ll just leave it at
that. Suffice it to say, if you’re
wondering whether I have a special
relationship to God or not, I’m just
going to tell you, I’ve been to the
third heaven.
Wow! That could give you some
leverage, couldn’t it? Whew...you’re
in a committee meeting with Timothy
and Titus and Timothy says, “I’ve
got a great idea for an evangelistic
strategy.” Titus says, “Hey, I’ve
got a great idea for an evangelistic
strategy too.” And Paul says, “I
don’t think either of those will
work, here is what I feel we need to
do.” And Timothy and Titus say,
“Hey, we think you’re wrong,” to
which Paul replies, “Really. Either
of you been to heaven?” It’s a lot
of leverage...a lot of leverage. You
could even become so proud that that
would become your trademark. You
would bill yourself as the man whose
been to heaven and back. Oh how many
false testimonies to that effect
have paraded themselves through the
Charismatic Movement. People have
been to heaven and back, been to
hell and back, none of which, of
course, is true. This is. And when
you have had the revelation that he
had, the revelation of the gospel
after his conversion, the revelation
of the epistles that the Lord was in
the process of giving him in the New
Testament, more importantly the four
personal appearances of Jesus who
came to you individually, not that
you were in a room when He showed up
but it was only you and Him. And
then you had your own private trip
to heaven. That could make you
proud, could it not? “For this
reason...he says...to keep me from
exalting myself.”
God wants His servants
humble...humble. Humility is the
number one Christian virtue. It’s so
hard to achieve. I remember a young
seminary student said to me, one
time, “Dr. MacArthur, how did you
finally overcome pride?”
“Oh,” I said, “it happened years
ago. I haven’t worried about that
for a long, long time.”
That’s a naive question, isn’t it?
How do I...I have to deal with pride
just like you every day. Paul can’t
even imagine what a temptation to
his flesh all these revelations,
personal appearances of Jesus, trip
to heaven, humility is what God
seeks.
So, let’s go back to the text.
“Because of the surpassing greatness
of the revelations, for this reason
to keep me from exalting myself,
there was given me.” Now stop right
there for a moment.
The object here is the thorn in the
flesh. The verb is “there was
given.” The subject is implied and
the subject is God. “There was given
me by God because only God is
concerned about my humility. Satan
would like me to be...what?...proud
and the prouder the better.” What
defines Satan himself is pride, is
that not true? Was not he lifted up
as the anointed cherub? And did not
he say, “I will, I will, I will, I
will, I will,” five times as the Old
Testament prophets said? And it was
his self-will and pride that got him
thrown out of heaven.
“There was given me by God a
gift...if you will...to humble me.”
By the way, it was a gift
unsolicited. Paul didn’t ask for it
and when it came he didn’t want it.
In fact, he wanted to get rid of it.
It is a gift that Satan wouldn’t
want him to have since it produced
humility, not pride.
What was this that God gave him?
Look at it. “It was given me a thorn
in the flesh.” And when you read the
word “thorn” I know exactly what you
think of, a rose bush...right?
Exactly what you think of, this
little tiny needle that sticks you
in the finger when you’re trying to
cut the roses for the dining room
table. That’s not the idea.
The Greek word here for thorn is
stake...stake, a shaft of wood
sharpened at one end to be used in
battle to impale someone...a
sharpened wooden shaft to impale
someone. This is not a minor little
oops, look what happened to me. This
is a stake to be driven through
someone. There was given a stake for
the flesh...for the flesh, to
control the fleshly tendency to be
proud, to control the fleshly
tendency to boast. The Lord is going
to humble him by driving a stake
right through his otherwise proud
flesh.
What is the stake? What is this
thorn? He tells you what it is...a
messenger of Satan. That’s not a
further adjectival description,
that’s the substantive statement.
What is the thorn in the flesh?
That’s the metaphor, that’s the
symbol, the reality is a messenger
of Satan. It’s simple to understand
this. What is a messenger of Satan?
The word messenger is angelos,
angel...angel, always means a
person...always means a
person...either a human or an angel.
It can be a human messenger, can be
an angel if it’s intended in the
context.
So, the Lord gave Paul to drive a
stake through his otherwise proud
flesh, a satanic angel. What’s
another name for a satanic angel?
Demon. You say, “Wait a minute, you
telling me Paul was
demon-possessed?” Not hardly. No.
Well what in the world is he saying
here? The explanation of this, the
one that makes sense in the context
is pretty simple. False teachers had
invaded the Corinthian church. They
were a huge part of his life. Only
in Ephesus had he spent more time
than he spent in Corinth. That it is
to the Corinthians that he writes
these two long letters because they
occupy so much of his mind and
heart. And there are two other
letters, one before 1 Corinthians
and one between 1 and 2 Corinthians
that he also wrote and refers to
that are not in the Scripture, four
letters nearly two years massive
occupation of his mind and his
heart. It is into that church that
he loved and which he invested so
much of his soul that false teachers
have come and false teachers are
always led by demons because they
always advocate, 1 Timothy 4,
doctrines of demons. They are the
hypocritical liars who spout demon
doctrine.
I think what Paul is talking about
here is the demonic leadership of
the Corinthian false preachers. Go
back to chapter 11 for a moment. In
verse 13 he identifies them. He says
they are false apostles, they are
deceitful workers, disguising
themselves as apostles of Christ and
no wonder, for even Satan disguises
himself as an angel of light,
therefore it’s not surprising if his
servants also disguise themselves as
serpents of righteousness whose end
shall be according to their deeds.
False teachers always represent
Satan. They are disguised as angels
of light. They are, however,
motivated by, driven by Satan and
demons.
The ringleaders of the Corinthian
conspiracy against the Apostle Paul,
the attempt to undermine the church
and undermine the gospel in that
needy city was being led by a demon.
But the work of the demon in the
Corinthian church was killing Paul’s
pride. Now if you’re a minister of a
church and a pastor of a church and
you’ve made this great investment,
you want to be able to say, “Look, I
gave my life, I gave almost two
years there, all the thought since
then, all the prayer, all of the
anxiety, the letters, the
correspondence, the agony in waiting
when I send Titus with a letter
waiting for him to come back and
give me a report, all of the
experiences that were tied up with
that Corinthian group from the time
first ever he went there and
preached the gospel, all of that was
important to Paul because he didn’t
want to labor in vain. In fact, he
expresses this fear in this very
letter. At the end of chapter 12,
verse 20 he says, “I’m afraid that
perhaps when I come I may find you
to be not what I wish.” How sad.
“And you’ll find me not to be what
you wish either. I’m afraid I’m
going to come and find strife and
jealousy and angry tempers and
disputes and slanders and gossip and
arrogance and disturbances.” That’s
heart-breaking to one whose invested
so much.
Verse 21, “I’m afraid that when I
come, again my God may humiliate me
before you and that I may mourn over
many of those who have sinned in the
past and not repented of the
impurity and immorality and
sensuality which they’ve practiced.”
Wow, you’re really cutting in to his
heart. He’s afraid that he’s going
to come back and find sins of
disunity and find sins of impurity.
In fact, it was such a deep-seeded
fear that he didn’t even want to go
there. He says in chapter 2, “I’m
afraid to come, I don’t know if I
can take the sorrow.”
If you’ve poured your whole life
into people, you don’t want to look
back and say, “It was all for
naught, it was all for nothing, it
was all in vain.” And to have these
demonized false teachers come in and
wreak havoc in your church, drives a
stake through your otherwise proud
flesh. It’s a humbling thing. It’s a
humbling thing.
But do you know what? Think of it.
The Lord is so concerned that His
servants be humble that if need be
He will turn a demon loose in their
church. Wow. That’s what makes
chasing demons so foolish. People do
that today. They tell Satan to leave
their church. Really, how do you
know God didn’t send them?
Furthermore, what makes you think
you can tell him what to do and
he’ll do it? You mean to tell me
that the humbling of a servant of
God like Paul is so important to God
that He would allow demonized false
teachers to disrupt for a period of
time the ministry of that church for
no other reason than to humble that
man? The answer to that question is,
Paul was not finished serving the
Lord, there was much work that
needed to be done and it needed to
be done by a man who was
humble...who was humble. And God
always gives grace to the humble.
“So, there was given me by God a
thorn in the flesh, a messenger of
Satan to buffet me.” That’s a
strange English word, isn’t it? Same
as buffet...big difference. How did
they ever put those together? Unless
you overdo the buffet and become
buffeted by it, I suppose. But
buffet is an interesting word. I
don’t know what that word conjures
to you, just the idea of buff sounds
kind of soft, doesn’t it? Like puff.
It would be better, instead of using
buffet, buffet me, it might be lash
me, or shattered me, or devastated
me. But the word actually in the
Greek means torment...torment in a
very physical way. The word is used
in Matthew 26:67, it’s used in Mark
14:65 of the soldiers beating Christ
in the face with their fists. This
thing that’s going on in my beloved
church in Corinth is crushing me,
it’s driving a stake through my
otherwise proud flesh, it’s like
taking blows in my face. Paul uses
the same word, 1 Corinthians 4:11,
to speak of being physically abused.
There’s a stake being driven through
his otherwise proud flesh. It’s as
if God has allowed the enemy to
smash him in the face. And by the
way, the word in its root is derived
from a Greek term meaning knuckles,
the hardest part of the hand that
can deliver the most devastating
blow.
Why? Why does God allow this? “To
keep me from exalting myself.” It
has a humbling purpose. And,
beloved, I need to tell you this
because this is what Paul is saying.
That’s the first place you always go
when you come into the midst of a
trial. Trials have many, many
purposes....many. Before you think
about running to fix it, before you
blame God for letting things
deteriorate to this level,
understand this that if you want to
share His holiness, you must share
His suffering. That the path of
spiritual maturity is the path to
humility and the way to humility is
paved by suffering. Sure trials have
all kinds of purposes. They test our
strength, they wean us from worldly
things, they enliven our eternal
hope of heaven. They reveal what we
really love. They teach us to value
the good times. They enable us to
help others who suffer. They produce
endurance. But mainly, trials humble
us...they humble us. And God wants
His people humble to the degree that
God would even allow Satan to
torment His children if it assisted
in their humiliation.
It’s Peter...we’re going to get to
that in Luke 22...Jesus says to
Peter, “Satan desires to have you
that he might sift you like wheat.”
If I was Peter, “Well You told him
no, right?” The Lord says, “No, I
told him yes because when you’re
converted you’re going to be a
different man.” The Lord let Satan
go after Job. The Lord let Satan go
after Peter. And the Lord let a
messenger of Satan go after Paul, in
the end, to humble that man to make
him even more useful.
You know, when we get into trouble,
the first thing we want to do is get
out as fast as possible. You want to
run to somebody to fix it. Run to
the pastor, get some quick counsel.
You know, run to the bookstore, get
a book on how do I get out of this,
right? How to solve all my problems,
how to eliminate trouble from my
life. Turn on one of those TV
prosperity preachers and start
thinking good thoughts and maybe you
could create a good world in your
imagination. Instead of doing that,
bless God for what humbles you.
Bless God for what humbles you. And
know that He gives grace to the
humble.
Well, that’s one point. There are
many more for next time.
Lord, what a wonderful evening we
have shared tonight, singing simple
songs of praise and thanks and
hearing again testimonies of Your
power, fellowshiping, giving. And
again the Word being open to us
produces such blessing. Whatever it
takes, Lord, to humble us, do it.
Whatever it takes to humble me, do
it. Whatever suffering is necessary,
bring it on. Whatever disappointment
is necessary, let it happen in order
that sufficient grace may be
displayed and power perfected in
weakness. We embrace the suffering,
we embrace the humbling, just as
Paul did. We know that our good is
Your goal and part of getting us to
that place where we honor You,
living righteously is pouring us
through the crucible of suffering
that we not be crushed and broken
and disappointed at the most
intimate level. We’ve all been
wounded by the ones we love the
most. We’ve all been hurt deeply by
the ones in whom we have invested
the most defection and the most
concern and the most effort. And we
would see it as a bad thing and yet
we now have a different view. Even
the worst imaginable thing, demons
as it were, running loose trying to
undo our efforts could be from You
as You humble us for greater
usefulness. Satan is Your devil,
he’s Your Satan, he only does what
You let him do. No demon can step
one step out of the realm of
sovereign will, they can only do
what You let them do. And even the
demons serve Your purposes,
sometimes for the humbling of Your
people.
We have been singularly blessed here
in this church. We have had, as it
were, in some sense, many
revelations, exposed to so much
truth, so much blessing. We could
easily be proud, we need to be
humbled. Humblest us all, whatever
it takes, that we might be more
useful to You, that we might be
delivered from the disabling power
of pride. And we’ll thank You in the
Savior’s name, who humbled Himself
and we want to follow His example.
Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "MacArthur's Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
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