My suffering was good for me,
for it taught me to pay attention to your decrees. Psalm 119:71 NLT
His
messages fluctuate between good and bad.
Santhosh
pastors in India. One of his recent messages said, “Twenty-five people have
taken water baptism today. All of them came to Christ from non-Christian
background. God is doing great work here.”
But
the news isn’t always good. One message read, “Please continue to pray for
Kerala. The situation is very horrible. There is no electricity, there is no
toilets, no place to stay, even the hospitals are full of water and not
working. Pregnant women and children are suffering literally. Scarcity of food, drinking water. Dead bodies
of animals are floating everywhere.”
Then
come the stories of persecution. The accounts of pastors and other believers
being burned or persecuted in other ways. The stories of Hindu nationalists who
stop missionaries and burn an entire trunkful of Bibles they had intended to distribute.
His
conclusion: “In spite of the increasing persecution and opposition, many people
are coming to Christ and taking water baptism publicly.”
The psalmist would agree with my friend: suffering for his faith brought good. And,
ironically, persecution has always led to the growth of Christianity while good
times have resulted in complacency.
Suffering
reminds me to pay attention to God’s commands and that I suffer because I obey
them. God’s commands most often run counter-cultural. Although enacting them
would result in a better society, sinful natures take us in the opposite
direction because we think we know better than God. When we put God’s commands
into action, they run against the grain, offend others, and often bring forms
of persecution and suffering.
At
the same time, suffering refines my faith. It takes faith to go against the
norm. Others reject us, ridicule us, persecute us. When we take this path of
most resistance, God grows our faith. We can’t walk this way without the
strength He provides. Trying to go it alone leads to failure.
Suffering
also brings good because it creates empathy for others. When we suffer for
doing the right thing, we’re more likely to identify with others who suffer for
the same reason. In turn, we’ll band together to do this great Kingdom work God
has given us to do.
God
doesn’t waste anything, and He won’t waste your suffering. Let your
suffering—physical, spiritual, and emotional—lead to good in your life.
Prayer:
Father, we accept the persecution as a part of our responsibility in following
You.
Tweetable: Are you letting your suffering produce good?
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