Rejoicing in Persecution: The Miracle of Joy

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The solution to this obstacle is that the Bible presents two relationships between joy and sorrow or weeping, not just one. Two. One is they are sequential. We weep and then we rejoice. And the other is simultaneous. Psalm 30 verse 5: Weeping may tarry for the night, but joy comes in the morning. [00:21:26]

Paul says in Philippians 4 verse 4, Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I will say rejoice, even though just a few verses earlier in chapter 3 verse 18, he is weeping because of the enemies of the cross. I love the apostle Paul. I trust his inspired letters. [00:22:14]

In other words, even though there are manifestations of sorrow and there are manifestations of joy that are very different and sequential, nevertheless there is also an experience of sorrow and joy in which the joy is like a great boulder on a sea coast which may be submerged beneath the waves of sorrow. [00:23:49]

One of the ways that secular culture distorts the biblical teaching and the congregational life together is by pulling out one or more of those strands in the fabric of Christian relationships, with the result that the beauty and the symmetry and the balance and the proportion of the tapestry of Christian teaching and Christian life is disfigured. [00:27:30]

Paul did as much rebuking as anybody in the New Testament, probably more, and yet the tapestry of his life as an apostolic whole is summed up like this in First Corinthians 4:12. He said when reviled, we bless; when persecuted, we endure; when slandered, we entreat. [00:28:31]

Have you ever noticed, have you ever thought that the people in Matthew 5:11 who revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you are lost? They're lost. They're perishing, and they might be members of your own family. So we're being told by the Lord Jesus to rejoice. [00:30:06]

I think the crucial insight in overcoming this obstacle is to realize that if the unbelief and the reviling of people we love could destroy our joy in the greatness of the reward of Christ, we would have nothing to offer them. It is precisely the indestructible joy that we have. [00:32:11]

Our joy in Christ in spite of slander is what shows the slanderers the preciousness of Christ, which they need more than anything. Therefore, paradoxically, though the tears flow when the loved one reviles the name we love, rejoicing in the face of that reviling testifies to the reality. [00:33:19]

It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a fallen human being to feel joy when reviled and persecuted and slandered. And Jesus faced throughout his earthly ministry, he faced these impossible situations, and he had a word for them. [00:35:12]

If you have been born again, you have within you the power to perceive the greatness of the reward clear enough and to treasure the greatness of the reward high enough and to be satisfied in the greatness of the reward deep enough that this miracle can happen in your life. [00:36:28]

Would you grant us to see it clearly enough and to treasure it highly enough and to be satisfied in it deeply enough so that we would experience the miracle of joy and gladness when reviled and persecuted and slandered for our faithfulness to you. I pray this in Jesus name. Amen. [00:37:04]

The miracle of joy and gladness in persecution is possible through the new birth and the power of the Holy Spirit. As believers, we have the power to experience this miracle by seeing, treasuring, and being satisfied in the greatness of our reward. [00:37:24]

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