Finding Hope and Joy in Suffering Together

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"Do not be surprised at the fiery trial when it comes upon you to test you as though something strange were happening to you, but rejoice insofar as you share Christ's sufferings that you may also rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed. If you are insulted for the name of Christ, you are blessed because the spirit of glory and of God rests upon you. But let none of you suffer as a murderer or a thief or an evildoer or as a meddler." [00:41:39] (31 seconds) Edit Clip


"For our conversation today, I'm going to ask us some questions. I think they can be understood as diagnostic questions, questions of understanding. Because when we seek to discover what God is doing in the midst of our fiery trials, we want to be best prepared to not only understand it, but to embrace it and then to ask God how he wants to use it for our good. And ultimately what we see is for his glory." [00:42:47] (33 seconds) Edit Clip


"Peter says, beloved, again, this term of endearment, he loves these people. His tone has now changed in this particular text. He says, beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery trial when it comes upon you to test you as though something strange were happening to you. He says, but instead rejoice insofar as you share Christ's sufferings that you may also rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed." [00:45:03] (31 seconds) Edit Clip


"And remember that when we are not prepared for suffering, and instead we're surprised when it shows up, it renders us ill-equipped to learn from it and to steward the glory of God in the middle of it. So when we're all of a sudden persecuted for being a follower of Jesus Christ, and we'll talk about our persecution as it compares to global persecution for the church, but inevitably, when there are consequences for you and I being men and women of conviction for our faith in Christ, and we are surprised by that, then we're immediately ill-equipped to learn in that, and we're not ready to steward the way God might desire to use that for our good and ultimately his glory." [00:46:43] (52 seconds) Edit Clip


"And so that's the fellowship of suffering. And that's how we find joy because the moment that we are persecuted for the name and the fame of Christ, then we share in his suffering. Then we are bound to Jesus. We are connected to Christ in a profound new way. And so we must not be surprised, but instead we must rejoice. So how do I, Connor, respond to suffering?" [00:50:29] (31 seconds) Edit Clip


"Peter acknowledges there is general suffering in the world because our world has been fractured through the introduction of sin and the way God designed and ordered for everything to work doesn't always do so because our world is broken because we are broken. It's the reason why we need a redeemer. And Peter acknowledges that. But the majority of the suffering that he is referencing in this letter of encouragement, when he leans in and calls these people beloved, is the suffering they are experiencing, the persecution that they are enduring for remaining steadfast in their faith in Christ." [00:52:49] (39 seconds) Edit Clip


"Because in that application of extreme heat, the impurities that are not part of that rare mineral can melt away. They can be burned off so that what remains can be clearly seen. Now, fam, listen, here's what I'm saying. When you are a devoted follower of Jesus Christ, you've got to expect the heat is going to come. Right? Like the heat's going to come. You're going to see it in your workplaces. You're going to see it in your schools. We're going to see it in our communities. We're going to see it online." [00:55:33] (32 seconds) Edit Clip


"Peter's helping his audience to realize this profound biblical truth. Are you ready? Are you listening? God's got this. God's got this. And if you are in Christ, then God's got you. He's got this. And notice where Peter says that this work of God through suffering begins. Did you pay attention to that? In the household of God, he starts in his church. He begins the refining in his church. He's using suffering to make you and I look more and more like Christ." [01:00:01] (44 seconds) Edit Clip


"He's always at work in our trials. In verses 17 and 18, Peter says, God is working through hardship specifically within his church and the people who belong to him. In fact, it's our suffering, specifically our faith in Jesus that serves as an evidence of our belonging to Jesus. I have said this to you many times before. If you don't understand God's workmanship in all of our suffering, that which hurts the most, if you don't see his sovereignty, then you can't truly trust his word because Romans 8 28 says that God works all things together for good for those who love him and are called according to his purpose." [01:00:52] (41 seconds) Edit Clip


"Now, if you mark in your Bibles, and of course you should, highlight or underline verse 19. Because Peter says, therefore, in other words, in light of the fact that God is always working, therefore, let those who suffer according to God's will, what does he say? Entrust their souls to a faithful creator while doing good. The instruction here is to entrust our souls to God, who I think is very interestingly described by Pastor Peter as a faithful creator." [01:03:09] (39 seconds) Edit Clip


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