Sufficient Grace for
Humbling Circumstances, Part 2
by
John MacArthur
Copyright 2005-2008,
Grace to You.
All rights reserved. Used by permission.
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To You (1-800-55-GRACE)
2 Corinthians
12:7-10 GC
90-345
As we come back to the Word of God,
we really are finishing up what we
started last Lord’s day. I didn’t
want to divide this message in to
two because I knew this would be a
weekend when a lot of folks would be
gone, but that’s kind of the way it
worked out and I can’t always
overcome the spiritual moment and
make changes on the fly. So we’ll go
back to the passage before us that
we started last Sunday night.
If you will, open your Bible to 2
Corinthians chapter 12...2
Corinthians chapter 12. Here is a
portion of Scripture that is
somewhat familiar to most students
of the Bible, although it is a
controversial one and I think
needlessly so. And we’re attempting
to make it simple and clear and
straightforward in its meaning. Let
me read it to you, 2 Corinthians 12
verses 7 through 10. “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, ‘My
grace is sufficient for you, for
power is perfected in weakness.’
Most gladly therefore I would 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 as we began our discussion last
week, I mentioned to you something
we all understand, I think, if we’ve
lived very long in this world and it
is that life is painful, life is
filled with that kind of list that
you find in verse 10, weaknesses,
insults, distresses, persecutions
and difficulties. I suppose at the
broadest point we could divide those
troubles that come to us into two
categories. There are those things
that come upon us because of our sin
and there are those things that come
upon us to keep us from sin. And in
the broadest sense, that is true.
There are troubles that come to us
because God is disciplining us.
Hebrews chapter 12 says that
everyone who is truly a child of God
will be disciplined by God for the
purpose of righteousness. What
father...says the writer of
Hebrews...is there who is a good and
faithful father who doesn’t
discipline his own children? If the
Lord loves us, He will scourge us.
So, there are things that come into
our lives, difficulties and troubles
that fall into the words used there
in verse 10, that come directly from
the hand of God as discipline for
our sins. But that is not what this
passage is talking about because if
you go back to verse 10 you will see
that the weaknesses and the insults
and the distresses and the
persecutions and the difficulties
that Paul is talking about in his
life have come not because of his
sin, but for Christ’s sake. And the
phrase “for Christ’s sake” refers to
each of those five categories. They
are distresses for Christ’s sake, or
tribulations, or troubles,
persecutions, difficulties, insults
and weaknesses. He is talking about
a category of trouble that comes
into our lives that is apart from
sin. It is not to say that we are
without sin, it is to say this
trouble comes not to discipline us
for sin, but quite the opposite of
that, this is the trouble that comes
to keep us from sin. This is the
trouble that comes for the sake of
Christ. That is, in the living out
of Christian testimony, doing what
God wants us to do, being obedient,
being godly, God still brings
trouble into our lives even when we
are not being disciplined to lead us
further into spiritual strength,
further into spiritual usefulness.
It is an over-simplification to say
that if somebody has trouble in
their life, it is because of sin.
That’s, of course, what is the
age-old assumption. That view of
evil goes all the way back to the
book of Job, doesn’t it? Job had
trouble in his life and his friends
came along and said, “Well that’s an
easy problem to solve, you’re
sinful. All of this has come upon
you because you are sinful.” And
Job’s response was, “I’ve examined
my own heart, I’ve done an inventory
of my own life, I’m not perfect but
there is no sin that I’m engaged in
that I will not release, that I do
not want God to remove. I am
confessing, repenting, if you will,
it is not a sin issue.” And they
would not accept that and they
relentlessly pounded home their own
theological viewpoint, that all
suffering is a result of sin. This
comes up again in the New Testament
when Jesus heals a blind man,
recorded in John 9, and when the
question is asked, “Why is this man
born blind?” The answer comes,
“Because of some sin committed by
his parents.” And Jesus says, “The
parents have not sinned and brought
this about, neither has this man
sinned and brought it about, it is
rather for the glory of God.” There
is suffering in this life for divine
purposes apart from chastening and
suffering.
And sometimes this is the hardest to
understand, the most difficult to
understand. To be suffering, to be
going through difficulties and to do
an inventory in your life and to be
able to say to yourself, “Look, I
don’t really know anything in my
life that’s a glaring iniquity that
I’m embracing and cultivating. I
can’t find any such thing,” and have
people accusing you and saying,
“Well there’s got to be something
somewhere.” That’s a very hard thing
to endure. I remember having that
experience with a quote/unquote
Christian psychologist who said to
me, “What are you covering up in
your life?” And I said, “I don’t
know, I’m not sure I’m covering up
anything.” To which he replied, “Oh,
it’s that deep, is it? It’s that
deep that you’re not only covering
it, but you aren’t even aware that
you’re covering it.” And I went
through whatever process I was
supposed to be in his
quasi-Christian therapy to uncover
things that I couldn’t find and
nobody else could find, as if I were
living some secret life of shame.
I later on kind of figured out that
maybe, just maybe, he thinks
everyone is like him. I don’t know,
but it’s pretty easy to generalize
off of your own experiences. Paul
says back at the beginning of this
letter, chapter 1 and verse 12, “Our
proud confidence is this...” and
this is a humble boasting, “the
testimony of our conscience that in
holiness and godly sincerity, not in
fleshly wisdom but in the grace of
God, we have conducted ourselves in
the world and especially toward
you.” He says you can accuse me of
whatever you want to accuse me of,
and they were relentless, we pointed
that out last time. You can accuse
me of whatever you want such as in
chapter 4 verse 2, accusing him of
having a secret life of shame,
walking in deceit and adulterating
the Word of God, you can accuse me
of whatever you want, I will respond
by saying, “My conscience does not
accuse me.” The testimony of my
conscience is that in holiness and
godly sincerity, I have conducted
myself in the world and especially
toward you. This is not a product of
my own fleshly wisdom, my own
insight. This is the work of the
grace of God.
So here is Paul saying you may
accuse me, my own conscience does
not. And my own conscience is a
God-given device to accuse me if I
need accusing, and my conscience is
fully informed by a true
understanding of the law of God, the
law of God written in the heart of
Romans 2, and that law of God
written in the heart of the Apostle
Paul had been enriched and
embellished by a full understanding
of New Testament revelation. And so
he had a conscience that was fully
informed of the truth of God and
categorically understood what it was
to be holy and godly, and he says,
“As I look at my own conscience, I
can simply tell you this, I am not
being accused. I have conducted
myself in a godly way before you and
my conscience gives testimony to the
integrity of that claim.”
Still and this is perhaps more
difficult to deal with, the man’s
life was filled with trouble. Had he
had his own little group of Job’s
friends, they probably would have
dogged him all his life telling him,
“You’ve got to be hiding something,
Paul, you’ve got to be covering
something. Get the layers peeled
off. Maybe you’ve got repressed sins
that are down deep so repressed that
you’ve forgotten them. Maybe you so
trained yourself that you are very
adept at ignoring them.” He would
have been continually non-responsive
to those kinds of accusations and
gone back to the fact, “I have a
fully informed conscience, I know
the Word of God, my conscience is a
device given by God to accuse me if
I need to be accused of violating
that, my conscience is clear,” and
yet, suffering upon suffering, upon
suffering. And while some of his
suffering came from outside the
church, came from the Jews and the
Gentiles who resented the gospel,
much of his pain came from inside
the church.
In fact, with that in mind, go to
the eleventh chapter of 2
Corinthians and I remind you, in the
eleventh chapter of 2 Corinthians,
after having given a list of all
that he suffered from the enemies of
the gospel, all the labors,
imprisonments, beatings, danger, 39
lashes from the Jews, beaten with
rods, stoned, shipwrecked, all the
danger from robbers and countrymen
and Gentiles in the city and the
wilderness, in the sea, among false
brethren, labor and hardship,
sleepless nights, hunger, thirst,
without food, cold and exposure, all
of this that he had to endure, much
of it at the hands of the enemies of
the cross, really beyond that, more
painful than those external things
is the daily pressure upon me of
concern for all the churches.
I will tell you as a pastor, I fully
understand that...fully understand
that. I understand what it is to be
hit from the outside and the
outside, the enemies of the cross,
can afflict some minor external
wounds. Nothing to be compared with
how you can be wounded in the house
of your friends, in the place where
you’ve invested your life, where
you’ve labored in love and sacrifice
on behalf of a people who turn on
you. That’s what had happened to him
in the Corinthian church, they
turned on him. It was tough enough
just caring for the church. Verse
29, “Who is weak without my being
weak?” He felt their pain and when
they were weak and defective and
rebellious and recalcitrant and
unresponsive and irresponsible and
fleshy and divisive and sinful, he
felt the pain. Who is led into sin
without my intense concern? He knew
what it was to be wounded in the
house of his friends.
One of the things that happens every
year when pastors come from all over
the world to the Shepherds
Conference by the thousands, they
come here to lick their wounds. And
they are not wounds inflicted upon
them by non-believers, they are
wounds inflicted upon them by the
people in their own churches, the
people in whose lives they have made
the greatest investment. The closer
you are to people, the more you love
them, the more you expose yourself
to them, the greater their ability
to inflict pain on you. And if you
can’t identify with that personally
and experientially because you’re
not a pastor, then identify it as a
reality in your relationship with
family members, or with a close
circle of friends. You know in that
circle of family and friends is the
greatest potential to break your
heart...even in your own marriage,
your relationship with your husband,
your children, extended family,
close friends. When you give your
love to someone, when you give your
heart to someone, when you give your
life to someone, they have power to
devastate you. When a faithful man
puts his whole life unselfishly,
sacrificially, spiritually on the
line for the sake of virtual
strangers to bring them the gospel
and lead them to the knowledge of
the Christian faith and they turn on
him, it is THE most crushing
experience...if...if you do not
understand that even in that
experience God has a purpose...God
has a purpose.
Now this is exactly where we find
Paul when he wrote 2 Corinthians. He
is in deep pain. Talked about his
suffering in chapter 1, 4, 6, 10,
11, 12 and even refers to it in 13,
it is the constant recurring theme
in this book. And he was godly.
Go down to the fourteenth verse for
a moment in chapter 12, before we
back up, the fourteenth verse in
chapter 12. Here for the third time
he said, “I’m ready to come to you,
I will not be a burden to you, I do
not seek what is yours but you. I
don’t want anything from you. I’m
not selfish, I’m not in it for the
money. I’m not in it for anything
personal, I don’t want anything you
have. I want you and I want you for
God and for the Kingdom.” And the
illustration, “For children are not
responsible to save up for their
parents but parents for their
children.” I am to you a spiritual
parent. I am doing what I’m doing
because I love you and I care about
your spiritual life and growth and
development. So, in verse 15, “I
will most gladly spend and be
expended for your souls.” That’s his
attitude. It’s a giveaway of his
whole life. “If I love you the
more...verse 15...am I to be loved
the less?” Is this what I get in
return, for this love and this
sacrifice and this commitment?
Do you think he sarcastically
indicates in verse 16, “That I’m
some kind of sneaky crafty fellow
that took advantage of you by
deception?” “Certainly...verse
17...I have not taken advantage of
you through any of those whom I have
sent to you, have I? I urged Titus
to go, sent the brother with him.
Titus didn’t take any advantage of
you, did he? Did we not conduct
ourselves in the same spirit and
walk in the same steps?”
They were accusing Paul not only of
taking advantage of them, but false
teachers who had infiltrated the
Corinthian church and the church was
buying into their lies. But they
were also accusing even the ones
that Paul sent to help him in the
work there of doing what they did
for personal advantage. Paul says,
“None of us did that, we did what we
did for your sakes, we did what we
did because we love you. Is it going
to be our lot that the more we love
you the less you love us?”
Paul was in deep pain over this
disaffection of this church. His
life was right. He was godly. There
wasn’t any sin that he knew of which
God needed to discipline. This was
not remediation, this was not
punishment, this was not discipline.
He needed perspective and that
perspective comes in the passage
that I read to you. And it is a
perspective for all of us who suffer
in this life at the severest level
which always will be inflicted on us
by the people who have the most
power to hurt us and that is the
people whom we love the most. And it
answers the question of what in the
world is God doing in my life? I
have looked at my life, I don’t see
things in my life that are wrong.
Why am I suffering like this in my
marriage? Why am I suffering like
this in my family? Why am I
suffering like this in my extended
family or with the friends that I
counted on? Why am I suffering like
this in my Bible study, my
fellowship group, my ministry?
What’s going on here?
If I walk in obedience and if I walk
in godly sincerity and holiness
before the Lord and if I have a
clear conscience, shouldn’t there be
smooth sailing through life?
Shouldn’t all the negatives of life
disappear because I’m not being
chastened anymore? No...no, not at
all. And I take you back to the fact
that there are these two kinds of
suffering and God has a purpose in
the second. Listen to the words of
Peter, 1 Peter 2:20, “What credit is
there if when you sin and are
harshly treated you endure it with
patience?” You get no credit for
that, you’re getting what you
deserve. “But if when you do what is
right and suffer for it, you
patiently endure...this finds favor
with God.” You don’t get a reward
for enduring punishment for sin. But
you do find favor with God when you
endure trouble that is not because
of sin, when you do what is right
and suffer for it and patiently
endure it...this finds favor with
God. That’s 1 Peter 2:20. Here’s 1
Peter 3:17, “It is better if God
should will it so that you suffer
for doing what is right rather than
for doing what is wrong.” You’re
going to suffer. You’re going to
suffer for doing what is wrong. God
disciplines His children. But it’s
much better to suffer for doing what
is right, but you will suffer for
doing what is right. You will suffer
persecution. “All that will live
godly in this present age will
suffer persecution.” That’s a
promise Paul gave. “All that will
live godly in this life will suffer
persecution.” So the more godly you
are, the more external hostility you
will receive.
But we’re not talking about that.
There’s another kind of suffering
for righteousness sake that comes
not from the outside, not from the
enemies, but from the inside in the
most intimate circles of our
relationships. Nothing is as painful
as betrayal. Nothing is as painful
as disloyalty. Nothing is as painful
as rejection, misrepresentation,
unrequited love from those in whose
lives we have made the most loving
investment. It’s a crushing
experience and you have to have
perspective.
Paul’s in the middle of this severe
pain...in the middle of it. He is
being inflicted with what he calls,
let’s go back to verse 7 now and
pick up the text and wrap up our
discussion of it, he says, “There
was given me from God who is the
source providentially, there was
given me a thorn in the flesh,” not
for some sin, not for some
discipline, but there was
nonetheless given him a thorn for
the flesh. The word “thorn” I told
you was the word for shaft, a
sharpened beam of wood used like a
stake to drive in the ground or a
spear to thrust through someone with
deadly force. It is a sharpened
wooden shaft used to impale someone.
He says this shaft is literally for
the flesh, for the purpose of
inflicting wounds on my flesh. What
does Paul mean when he says “flesh”?
Not talking about his physical body,
he’s always talking about his
unredeemed humanness. That is to
say, though he is a new creation,
though he is a new man, though he
has a new disposition, though Christ
lives in him and the life that he
lives he lives literally in the
power of Christ, still that new
life, that new man, that new
creation is incarcerated in
unredeemed humanness. And while all
the longings and aspirations of the
new man are just and holy and
righteous, they are impeded and
limited and conflicted with the
longings of our humanness. He was
human. And his flesh had the
potential to do damage, the lust of
the flesh, the desires of the flesh,
as Paul refers to them. John speaks
of the lust of the eyes, pride of
life, those kinds of things that are
part of being human. And we won’t
lose that until the redemption of
our body and we enter into the glory
of heaven.
So for the time being, in order to
restrain our flesh, God brings along
things that literally inflict
massive wounds on our flesh. What
was this, a thorn in the flesh? What
is it? Well he tells you, “A
messenger of Satan.” Messenger is
angelos, angelos is angel, satanic
angel, a satanic angel is a demon.
Paul did not have a demon. Paul was
not demon possessed. Christians
cannot be demon possessed. Demons
cannot live in Christians, we are
the temple of the Holy Spirit. We
are the temple of God. We’re indwelt
by the Lord Jesus Christ. There is
not one single occasion anywhere in
the pages of Scripture where a
believer was indwelt by a demon. Nor
is there any reason to think that
you need to go around casting demons
out of Christians.
What is he talking about? He’s
talking about a messenger from
Satan, a satanic angel, a demon,
inflicting a profound wound on Paul
in the realm of his humanness. It’s
amazing what commentators say this
is. Here’s what I’ve read. The thorn
in the flesh is headaches, lust,
othalmia(?) some eye illness,
epilepsy, hysteria, hypochondria,
gallstones, gout, rheumatism,
sciatica, gastritis, leprosy,
malaria, lice, deafness, dental
infection, speech impediment, etc.
Now none of that was achieved by a
careful exegesis of the
verse...obviously. And the list
itself is self-destructive because
if it could mean all of that, then
it surely doesn’t mean any of that.
It’s not unclear. It is absolutely
crystal clear what he says it is. It
is a satanic angel. It is a demon.
If the demon isn’t in Paul, where is
this demon doing all this damage? It
is that demon-inspired leader of the
false teachers that I told you about
so many times that had infiltrated
the Corinthian church in an attempt
to propagate lies and in order to
achieve that they had to destroy the
people’s confidence in Paul and so
they launched an all-out assault on
Paul’s character. They’re tearing up
the church...tearing it up.
God has allowed the false teachers
to do terrible damage to that church
in the same way that God allowed
Satan to do terrible damage to the
family of Job and the possessions of
Job and the physical health of Job.
God goes to amazing lengths to
refine His people. And out of Job
losing everything, and never knowing
why, except that he knew it wasn’t a
discipline for sin. He lost it all,
he never deviated in this trust. He
said, “Though He slay me, yet will I
trust Him.” And in the end when it
was all said and done, Job says in
Job 42:6, “I have heard of you with
a hearing of mine ear.” I had a
certain second-hand knowledge of
You, now my eye sees You and I
repent in dust and ashes. It had a
profound spiritual impact on Job. It
broke his pride, it crushed him, it
humbled him before God.
That was the point. And then God
poured out blessing on that man. God
uses Satan. Satan is God’s servant.
Never does anything apart from the
sovereign purposes of God. And the
purpose here is clearly indicated in
verse 7. The thorn in the flesh,
this satanic angel, this demon
leading the assault on the church
was sent to that church, notice,
doesn’t say to disrupt the church,
it says to buffet me...to buffet me.
He knew what that meant. That’s a
word that means to strike somebody
in the face with a fist, same word
used in 1 Corinthians 9:27. The
Apostle Paul had written to the
Corinthians there and he said, “I
buffet my body to bring it into
subjection, lest in preaching to
others I myself become
disqualified.” I know, he says, that
I have the potential to deviate from
the truth. I know that I have the
potential in the flesh to fail. I
know that I have the potential to
fall into sin and be disqualified
from ministry, so I buffet my body.
I strike blows against my otherwise
sinful flesh to keep it in line. And
if he does that, if he buffets his
own body to keep it in place, then
why would we not expect God to
buffet him as well? Paul does what
he can do to keep his flesh where it
needs to be, and God does what only
He can do to keep His flesh where it
needs to be. And from God’s
viewpoint, the great temptation for
Paul was to become...what?...proud.
I mean, who wouldn’t? If you were
Paul, do you think you could be
humble?
And so, that’s exactly why God
brought this into his life. Just as
God says I’m going to allow the
devil to sow tares among the wheat,
as God said I’m going to allow the
devil to do his damage in limitation
to job, just as the Lord said to
Peter Satan is going to take you and
sift you like wheat, I have my
purpose so God had a purpose for
Paul. And so He has a purpose for
us. And sometimes that purpose may
involve even the forces of Satan.
Why? What is God trying to do? For
what purpose?
Number one, this is where we were
last time, God uses suffering to
humble His children. He says it
twice in verse 7, “To keep me from
exalting myself, to keep me from
exalting myself.” Not a hard thing
for Paul to understand. He had these
personal visions of Christ, as many
as half a dozen of them or so. He
had a personal trip to heaven. He
talks about it in the opening five
verses of this chapter. He had much
to be proud about. He reminds me of
the potential, the preacher who
finished his sermon and came down to
the front. A lady came up to him and
said, “That was a great sermon.” To
which he replied, “Thank you, ma’am,
my flesh told me the very same thing
as soon as I finished.”
There’s always that possibility and
that temptation, even when you’re
involved in the Kingdom of God to be
self-commending. His flesh needed to
be humbled because he had had so
many unique extraordinary
experiences.
Secondly now, God uses suffering not
only to humble us, but God uses
humbling to draw us to Himself. What
is the effect of this? What does it
produce? Verse 8, “Concerning this,
I entreated the Lord three times
that it might depart from me.” I
will tell you and you know this from
your own experience, where is the
first place you go when you get
caught in this kind of pain? Where
do you go? You go to God. I hope
you’re not looking for a therapist.
I hope you’re not looking for a
prescription. I hope you’re not
looking for some way to somehow
unscramble your omelet. God uses
suffering to draw us to Himself.
This is the absolute right response.
In the time of the greatest need, in
the time of the deepest pain, time
of the severest trial, Paul didn’t
go to Timothy, Paul didn’t go to
Titus, Paul went to God. He didn’t
call a committee meeting, he didn’t
say let’s have a strategy sessions,
let’s get together, guys, I don’t
know what’s going on, we’ve got to
figure out a way to deal with this
thing, we’ve got a messenger of
Satan, you know, running rampant
through the church at Corinth into
which I’ve made such a massive
investment, you guys have done it
with me, you’ve been there, you know
what’s going on...we need to figure
out a strategy to undo this thing.
Paul did what he had to do, he went
directly to God. It was beyond him.
The delight of his life, shepherding
the people of God, the joy of his
service, seeing a church develop in
that pagan place, when there’s no
technique and there’s no human
wisdom and there’s no strategy to
fix it, what do you do? What does he
do? “Concerning this I begged the
Lord.” By the way, entreated is used
frequently in the gospels, the word
is entreated in the NAS, used
frequently in the gospels to
reference appeals from the sick who
come to Jesus and beg Him to heal
them.
I understand that. I understand
that. You understand that. When your
spouse abuses you and mistreats you,
when your children do, when the
circle of friends collapses around
you, where do you go when you can’t
fix it? When there’s no easy
solution? Where do we go when we
feel these things in ministry,
betrayal, all of those kinds of
things? This is the best possible
thing for your prayer life. The more
intimate the suffering, the more
likely it is to drive you to God.
Even in the physical realm, I think
back...when I think about the most
intense times of prayer in my life,
and prayer for me is a state of
consciousness in which my life is
just open to God all the time, but
the most intense times of prayer,
you think back, involve times when
the people the closest to me that I
love the most were in a situation I
couldn’t do anything about. I
remember when I was told that
Patricia had a car accident and her
neck was broken, C2 was explosion
fracture and a C3 was fractured and
I didn’t know whether she was alive
or dead for a number of hours,
trying to get to her. There is no
way to even describe the intensity
of prayer that begins at that moment
and never ceases till resolution
comes. Finding my way eventually to
the hospital, seeing her in that
condition with a broken neck,
realizing the potential, terrible
damage, quadriplegia, or worse,
death, and there’s nothing I can
do...nothing that I can do to help
the people who are helping her, I
would only be in the way. Or when I
went to the neurosurgeon at Cedars
Sinai to be told that my son Mark
had a brain tumor, launched into
long term intensive prayer, pleading
with God, entreating God. When
trouble comes that has the potential
to do great damage to relationships,
to ministry, to the church. And yet
it’s a sad commentary on our lives
that it takes those kinds of things
to elevate the intensity of our
prayer life, isn’t it?
But no other time in Paul’s life
does he say, “I entreated the Lord
three times.” I went back on three
separate occasions and I entreated
the Lord. What was his plea? That it
might depart from me. Lord...I’m
sure he prayed the imprecatory
Psalms...remember the imprecatory
Psalms that David prayed over his
enemies? Pretty simple, “God, please
now kill my enemies.” That’s what he
prayed. Kill them. I’m sure Paul
prayed imprecatory Psalms, “Lord,
God, kill those false teachers. How
can You allow those false teachers
to go into the church where Your
name is named and Your gospel is
preached and wreak this havoc?” On
three separate occasions he prayed
to the Lord, that’s the only place
he could go and this is one of the
great benefits of suffering,
especially that inexplicable
suffering.
Notice Paul did not rebuke Satan. He
didn’t bind Satan. He didn’t have a
discussion with the demon. He didn’t
even confront the false teacher. He
went to the only one who can deal
with Satan and demons, he went to
the Lord. His prayer was in faith.
His prayer was persistent. His
prayer was specific. “Lord, I want
this to stop.” And by the way, that
verb “that it might depart from me,”
is usually used in the New Testament
of persons, not things. It’s not a
disease. He’s not saying, “I want
this disease to depart from me.”
He’s saying, “I want this pain, this
inflicted suffering coming at the
hands of this person to stop.” He
doesn’t really blame the false
teacher. He doesn’t go to him.
Doesn’t blame Satan, doesn’t start
pronouncing things against Satan. He
goes to God who controls
everything...everything. Face the
great trial knowing that God uses
trials to humble him and learning
that in the midst of these trials
there is a great benefit in an
increased commitment to prayer. The
sweetest times of communion with God
come in the most profound times of
suffering.
He went to the only one he could go
to, the one that we go to so
reluctantly when we’re not in
desperation. So we say, “God, bring
into my life whatever needs to come
to humble me, bring into my life
whatever needs to come to catapult
me into a more intense prayer life.”
Thirdly, God uses suffering to
display His grace. God uses
suffering to display His grace.
Verse 9, here’s His answer, “And He
has said to me...” Has said is a
perfect tense verb, means it is a
standing answer put permanently in
place. Or another way to say it is
he kept getting the same answer
every time he asked. “He has said to
me, ‘My grace is sufficient for
you.’” What a great statement. After
three times, Paul was done, got the
same answer all three times, good to
be persistent, also good to know
that this is the answer. God
answered not by removing the
trouble. God answered not by
removing the pain. God answered not
by removing the false teachers...not
at that point. God answered by
increasing the grace. He gave relief
not by removal of the problem. He
gave relief by the sufficient
strength to persevere through the
humbling process.
What God wants out of you is more
intimate fellowship. What God wants
out of you is greater humility. And
God will let you stay in the
suffering, turn up the grace to
whatever level He needs to, to put
you through that crucible of
suffering, to achieve that intimacy,
and to achieve that humility. It was
grace on display. And when you look
back on that, sometimes you wonder
how you can get through those times.
You wonder how you survived those
times. How did you ever make it? How
did I ever get through that time?
You look back and you say, “It was
grace, it was abundant sustained
grace. My faith never wavered. My
trust in Christ as my Redeemer never
wavered. My trust in God as a loving
Father never wavered. And there I
was about to lose everything that
was precious to me, there I was
about to lose everything in which I
had made the greatest investment,
the worst possible scenario was
unfolding before my very eyes and I
bore it all with profound grace and
never wavered in my faith. Is that
not a great thing to learn? That’s
where your assurance comes from. It
comes from faith being tested. Peter
says that, “When your faith is
tested, the product is assurance
that you have the real thing.”
Joshua 1:9, “Be strong and
courageous, do not tremble or be
dismayed, for the Lord your God is
with you wherever you go.”
Look at Lamentations 3, this is just
a passage that came to mind today
and it’s...it’s related, too
wonderful, too rich not to look at.
Lamentations 3:19. Lamentations is
that, it’s a lament, it’s a sad
time. God’s judgment is going to
fall on Israel. And the prophet
Jeremiah pours out his heart. Just
listen to this, starting in verse 19
of Lamentations 3. “Remember my
affliction in my wandering, the
wormwood and bitterness. Surely my
soul remembers and is bowed down
within me.” This is great suffering
for the prophet of God. People won’t
listen to him. People won’t hear his
message. People resent him.
Eventually threw him in a pit.
They’re headed for judgment. They’re
headed for captivity. His heart is
broken. He’s known as the weeping
prophet. He cries the very tears of
God. So he says, “My soul remembers,
is bowed down within me. This I
recall to my mind. Therefore I have
hope. What is it you recall that
gives you hope? The Lord’s
lovingkindnesses.” That’s the Old
Testament word for grace. “The
Lord’s grace indeed never ceases.
His compassions never fail. They are
new every morning, great is Thy
faithfulness.” Everything has gone
as bad as bad can be from the
standpoint of a faithful prophet. No
one listening to his message,
everyone rebelling and resenting
him. Judgment coming. No one will
listen.
What’s he left with? A faithful God.
Verse 24, “The Lord is my portion,
says my soul, therefore I have hope
in Him. The Lord is good to those
who wait for Him, to the person who
seeks Him. It is good that He waits
silently for the salvation of the
Lord.” Just shut your mouth, go
through the pain, go through the
suffering, and wait for the
deliverance that will come. “It is
good for a man that he should bear
the yoke in his youth. Let him sit
alone and be silent, since he has
laid it on him. Let him put his
mouth in the dust. Perhaps there’s
hope. Let him give his cheek to the
smiter, let him be filled with
reproach for the Lord will not
reject forever. For if He causes
grief, then He will have compassion
according to His abundant
lovingkindnesses.” That’s God.
That’s God.
Jeremiah had confidence in the
Lord’s grace, chesed, the Old
Testament term for grace. And when
the pain turned up, God turned up
the grace. God does not promise to
remove the problems and the
troubles, but He does promise to
give sufficient grace. “My grace is
arke(?), enough in the Greek,
enough...enough.
It was Spurgeon in his inimitable
way who told of an occasion when he
was riding home one evening after a
heavy-day’s work and feeling very
depressed. He thought of this verse.
“My grace is sufficient for you.”
And then he said he immediately
compared himself to a little fish in
the Thames River. Apprehensive, lest
drinking so many pints of water in
the river each day he might drink
the Thames dry. And hearing Father
Thames say, “Drink away, little
fish, my stream is sufficient to
you.” And then he thought of a
little mouse in the granaries of
Joseph in Egypt, afraid lest it
might by daily consumption of the
corn it needed exhaust the supplies
and then starve to death. And when
Joseph came along sensing his fear,
he said to the little mouse, “Cheer
up, little mouse, my granaries are
sufficient for you.” Or again he
thought of a man climbing to the top
of Everest, reaching the lofty
summit, dreading lest he might by
taking a big deep breath exhaust all
the oxygen in the atmosphere, only
to hear the Creator say, “Breathe
away, O man, there’s plenty of air
for you.” Well Spurgeon understood
in a beautiful way what the
testimony of this verse is. The Lord
has plenty of what we need to
endure.
There’s a fourth point and this
brings us to its culmination. God
uses suffering...He uses suffering
to humble us, He uses suffering to
drive us to Him in intimate
communion. He uses suffering to
display grace which becomes to us
profound blessing as it engages us
in an enduring confidence that our
salvation will hold in any
situation. And finally, He uses
suffering to perfect His power...He
uses suffering to perfect His power.
Back to verse 9, second half of the
verse, “Most gladly, therefore, I
will rather boast about my
weaknesses that the power of Christ
may dwell in me.” Paul says...Look,
I am glad to boast about my
weaknesses because I want the power
of Christ to dwell in me. And the
second half of the words of our Lord
recorded in verse 9, “Power is
perfected in weakness,” stand behind
Paul’s statement. I want power,
power comes through weakness. I’ve
said this to many ministers around
the world through the years, “There
are not very many men who are weak
enough to be powerful. There are
many men who are strong enough to be
impotent.”
Power in ministry is connected to
weakness. It is when you lose all
your own trust in your human
abilities. As long as you think
you’re it, you’re the driving force,
you’re the one who is pulling it all
off, as long as you trust in your
own strength, you are weak. Oh you
may have a superficial external
measure of success, long-term power,
long-term impact is perfected in
weakness. The suffering that humbles
us, the suffering that drives us to
God, the suffering that pours out
grace upon grace upon grace in our
lives is the same suffering that
makes us lose all trust in
ourselves. We can say with Paul, :”I
am what I am by the grace of God.
I’m the chief of sinners. I am weak,
I am nothing.” So no one is too weak
to be powerful, but there are many
far too strong. Paul says, “I gladly
will be weak if by being weak the
power of Christ may dwell in me.”
This is a joyous acceptance. This is
a glad acceptance.
Here he is, turned the corner, he’s
crossed the mountain top, he’s down
the other side. He doesn’t love the
abuse. He doesn’t love the
suffering. He doesn’t love the thorn
or stake rammed through his
otherwise proud human flesh. He
doesn’t love the torture to his soul
because of what’s going wrong in the
church that he loves, He doesn’t
relish with some kind of delight the
fact that he’s being afflicted with
this very depressing experience. He
doesn’t want to be so anxious in his
soul as to be relentlessly pleading
with God. But he does relish the
outpouring of grace that leads to
real spiritual power. He loves the
grace and he loves the power.
We’re not expected to love the pain.
We’re not expected to love the
process of going to God and
delivering our pain, casting our
care on Him. But we are expected to
love the grace and the power that
comes. So I will gladly rather boast
about my weaknesses, and he did it.
He did it. Just go back in to
chapter 11 and here he starts this
in chapter 11. He’s forced to boast.
But how does he boast? He boasts
about his weakness. Back in chapter
11, we can pick it up at verse 21,
“To my shame I must say that we have
been weak by comparison.” Compared
to the hot-shot false teachers who
always promote themselves, I must
appear very weak. I have nothing to
commend myself of my own doing.
Go down to verse 30. “If I have to
boast, I will boast of what pertains
to my weakness.” Chapter 12 verse 5,
“But on my own behalf, middle of the
verse, I will not boast except in
regard to my weaknesses.” All I can
tell you is this, there is no way to
explain my life, my ministry and its
impact by looking at my abilities.
No way. I am not the explanation for
what has happened. I will boast
about my weaknesses and when I come
to the place where all I can see
about myself is weakness, then the
power of Christ...and here’s a
magnificent verb...pitches its tent
in me, comes to dwell, power shows
up.” God aids and abets his
weakness. He is weak in the natural.
God hammers him to be even weaker
and less likely to trust in his
ability. Then God delivers
sufficient grace for him to endure
the hammering. And then when he’s at
the lowest point, he is infused with
power. When we have the deepest
troubles in life, pain is severest,
we suffer most, and we have no hope
in our own strength, we are at the
premium moment like Isaiah, “Woe is
me, I’m a man with a dirty mouth.”
God says you’re exactly who I’m
looking for.
God uses suffering to humble us,
draw us to Himself as the only
resource to display His grace and to
perfect His power. When you
understand that, then you can say
with Paul verse 10, “Therefore, I am
well content with weaknesses, with
insults, with distresses, with
persecution, with difficulties for
Christ’s sake. For when I’m weak
then I’m strong.” Lesson duly noted,
learned. God’s grace is sufficient.
I ask for prominence, God gave me
humiliation. I asked for power, God
gave me weakness. Then I was usable.
It was back in 1989 that a song was
written, the words of which I have
kept around nearby for many years.
It’s called “A Refiner’s Fire,”
listen to it.
“There burns a fire with sacred
heat, white hot with holy flame. And
all who dare pass through its blaze
will not emerge the same. Some is
bronze and some is silver, some is
gold. Then with great skill, all are
hammered by their sufferings on the
anvil of God’s will. I’m learning
now to trust His touch, to crave the
fire’s embrace. For though my past
with sin was etched, His mercies did
erase. Each time His purging
cleanses deeper, I’m not sure that
I’ll survive. Yet the strength in
growing weaker keeps my hungry soul
alive.
And then the chorus says, “The
Refiner’s fire has now become my
soul desire. Purged and cleansed and
purified that the Lord be glorified.
He is consuming my soul, refining
me, making me whole. No matter what
I lose, I choose the Refiner’s
fire.” Written by a mature
Christian.
When you choose the fire, you choose
what the suffering produces, that’s
maturity. I’m not offering you a
Christianity that eliminates
trouble. I’m offering you a
Christianity that if fully lived
will cause you to suffer not just
for your sin but at the hands of God
in the refining process. Embrace the
suffering, that’s where the power
lies.
Father, we again come to You at the
end of this wonderful day, minds
flooded, filled with the glories of
these truths. And thank You again
for this precious congregation of
people, their love for and
attentiveness to Your truth. Thank
You for giving me the really
unimaginable privilege of coming
here week after week and helping
them to gain some understanding of
Your that they might know You and
serve You and more importantly love
You and worship You more faithfully.
And we do want You, Lord, to do
whatever it is that You need to do
to humble us, whatever it is that
You need to do to draw us to
Yourself, whatever it is that You
need to do to unleash Your grace on
us, whatever it is that makes us
distrust ourselves and rest solely
and only in Your power. Put us
through the refining that we might
come forth in the very shape and
purity that pleases you. We pray in
Your Son’s name. Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "MacArthur's Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
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