Read James 1
So, thus far,
you have gotten a good dose of “My
grace is sufficient for you.” Whatever our circumstances—to include our
worst days ever—we celebrate victory.
It is
victory in Jesus, and it is ours. We can’t mess that up, even if we are a total
mess from now until our heart stops or Jesus comes in the clouds. That victory
is ours.
You most
recently heard me speak about considering ourselves blessed when we are
persecuted for following Christ. We are
blessed when the world won’t claim us because Jesus did.
And what
could be next? Your grace is enough, persecuted for the name of Jesus is a
blessing, and let’s just throw in consider it pure joy when you endure
suffering of all kinds.
Now, we’re
pushing the envelope. I can see counting it as a blessing when I am persecuted
because I follow Jesus. I actually think that one is cool. I would much rather
be rejected by the world and claimed by Jesus than to hear, Depart from me.
I never knew you.
I can see
the blessing in being disowned by the world and claimed by Christ. I get it,
but this pericope says suffering of all kinds. That includes having the flu or
Covid or even a man-cold—far more painful than giving birth.
This sort of
suffering includes…
It includes
having a real nowhere man for my boss.
It includes
having to change a flat when it’s icy and the wind chill is brutal.
It includes
turning the sofa upside down to get enough change for a loaf of bread. I
remember my parents doing this to get a pack of cigarettes. You can still
search the sofa for change, but you had better find some serious folding money
if you hope to buy cigarettes. Those suckers are crazy high.
It includes
all the things that fall under the category of life; some are not much fun,
some are unpleasant, and some hurt.
But we are
told to be joyful. Consider the suffering experience as a labor of love.
And I come
to a place I have come many times before—wind sprints.
Back in the
day, wind sprints marked the dreaded end of football practice. You ran until
you puked your guts out. Almost everyone hated them, and the coach knew it.
I enjoyed football
practice, but I always had this thought in my mind: Wind sprints are coming.
One day in
his pontifications about the things of life that may or may not relate to
football, the coach noted that a horse will run itself to death. It will run
until it drops dead.
Then he
added, “A man will pass out first, so why are you holding back?”
Then it was
back to wind sprints, but Tom’s mind was hard at work. I would show the coach.
I would run with everything I had, and maybe I would pass out, or maybe I would
die, but in either case, the coach was going to be sorry.
So, when it
was time for the linemen and linebackers to run, I gave it all I had. That was
the day that I died, or not.
What
actually happened was that I finished my sprint five yards ahead of everyone
else.
The next
time, it was the same thing. It hadn’t killed me yet.
The third
time, I jumped the line and ran with the backs and receivers. I beat them all
but one, and I got him the next time.
I never
dreaded wind sprints again. In fact, I loved them. It was now something to look
forward to—wind sprints, I know. I was getting stronger, and I wanted more. I
was all in for whatever the coach threw at us.
James tells
us to look forward to, embrace, and consider it pure joy when we face trials of
all sorts—anything and everything.
Being
patient, waiting on the Lord, sticking it out, pressing on towards the goal,
and running the good race are what we do when we face a trial.
We know that
we will have trouble in the world. It is not something to be totally
avoided. Making wise decisions can reduce the amount of trouble that comes our
way somewhat, but we will still face trials.
Do you remember
why Jesus told his disciples that they would have trouble in the world, but to
take heart, Jesus has overcome the world? Why did he say this?
So, in the
midst of the world’s madness, we can still have peace. Trials are just a part
of life, but because of what Jesus did for us on the cross, we have already won
the ultimate prize.
It’s that
God’s way and everything else mindset. We can eliminate the unnecessary pain
and suffering that comes from our bad decisions, but we will still suffer and
have trials. That’s the way it is.
But if we
stay the course, we will be closer to completeness than when we started.
Remember that God
is the Potter, and we are the clay.
Everything we
do is rolled into the masterpiece God is making with our lives. If we remain
faithful, trust in the Lord over our own understanding, and simply wait upon
the Lord, we will emerge refined
at the end of our trial.
Our struggle
will not diminish us. Like in resistance training, we grow stronger with each
repetition. We have survived 100% of our worst days ever and are stronger for
it.
So, consider
it pure joy when we face trials of many kinds. Remember the three things I
reminded you of when you are persecuted
for the name of Jesus.
So, when you
suffer for any reason, also remember:
·
God’s grace is enough. You have already won the ultimate
victory.
·
You can handle whatever it is at the moment. It’s momentary. It could take 5 minutes or 20 years
and 5 minutes, but it is momentary.
·
Great is your reward in heaven and in the here and now. Great is
your reward in heaven when you are persecuted because you follow Jesus. Great
is your reward now because if you hold on and trust God through the trial—whatever
it is and however it came about—you will grow. And we get to grow in God’s
grace, knowing that our salvation is the gift of God and not dependent upon our
performance.
We just have to trust and remain faithful.
What does that trust look like? We are joyful in our trials
and suffering. It’s just part of the deal, and we come out the better for it.
Amen.