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STAND FIRM IN THE FAITH! GOD IS TURNING TRASH INTO TREASURE IN YOUR LIFE |
In this you
greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief
in all kinds of trials. 7These
have come so that your faith—of greater worth than gold, which perishes
even though refined by fire—may be proved genuine and may result in
praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed .
It was about July A.D. 64 and the great fire had broken out in
History says that Emperor Nero lit the fire to destroy the shanties and
rebuild marble palaces and other monuments – to establish a name for himself.
Nero looked over the city and enjoyed watching it burning.
The people of
Many people didn’t believe this, but others believed it, about the
Christians, but Nero blamed them. Christians were lambasted with the
reputation for this terrible crime of burning down
During this time Christians were tarred and burned as torches to light up
Nero’s gardens. They were thrown to the lions, tied up in leather
bags and thrown into the water. When the leather bags shrank, the
Christians were squeezed to death. Nero was a brute in his torture of
Christians in the A.D. 60s.
The Christians scattered to avoid the persecution.
It was during this time in
First Peter begins:
". . .To God's elect, strangers in the world, scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia and Bithynia, who have been chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through the sanctifying work of the Spirit, for obedience to Jesus Christ and sprinkling by his blood" (I Peter 1b-2a NIV)
So we have this magnificent letter known as The First Letter of Peter.
It was almost unanimously accepted in the early church as from the Apostle
Peter.
At the close of the letter (5:13), Peter says he wrote it from
Apostle Peter probably wrote this letter from the city of
Peter wrote to encourage these believers who were facing some incredible
difficulties.
If you suffer from
difficulties of any kind, including suffering, I urge you to read the book of
First Peter.
Are you wondering what God is up to in today’s world of terrorism, tensions and all kinds of pressures – and worse is likely to come – here is a letter that is packed with ways that Christians ought to respond. It was written to people facing the kinds of terror, suffering and disease that we can identify with.[2]
In this message, we will address two primary areas that affect all of us.
Don’t chuck it in when the going gets tough in the Christian life.
Why?
First, There is a wonderful attitude or disposition about all of
life that the Christian is uniquely qualified to have in abundance. What
is it and how do you get it? and
Second: God
has an incredible way of turning trash into treasure in the life of every
Christian.
A. In Reader's Digest (October 1997)
There was an article called, "The Global War on
Christians." [3] In it we are told of the
persecution around that world against Christians. It states that "an
estimated 200 million to 250 million Christians are at risk in countries where
such incidents occur." [4]
Countries such as
I’ll mention just two examples:
"In
In
There is "a vast sea of victims--men, women and children who have been
tortured, imprisoned and executed [in 1997]. Their
crime? They are Christians." [9]
But we in the Western church don't seem to know much about this (unless we
receive material from Brother Andrew's “Open Doors” organisation or
Richard Wurmbrand's ministry, “Voice of the
Martyrs.”) We need to know what's happening to our persecuted
brothers and sisters around the world so that we can pray for them and support
as the Lord enables.
B. Perhaps you can't identify with this
opposition.
A Christian friend of mine is a
Christian counsellor in another city in Qld. and
he tells me that the opposition and antagonism to him as a Christian counsellor
seems to be increasing. He says there is a new wave of anti-Christian
persecution in that city, here in
Jesus said, "If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also"
(John 15:20). Paul to Timothy said, "Everyone who wants to live a
godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted" (2 Tim 3:12).
For you it might be the difficulties you face personally:
[My wife, Desley, (as of 2006) has
had 22 years of polycythemia (abnormal growth of red blood
cells)—shocking migraines, dull and dizzy head daily, always tired and
yet running the family and taking care of her 95-year-old father.]
TO THE SUFFERING, THE PERSECUTED, PETER WROTE WITH SOME INCREDIBLE
INSTRUCTIONS here in the first chapter of First Peter.
C. To the church who
were "strangers in the world" and "scattered" through
persecution (1:1), Peter writes. Just listen to some of the things these
believers were experiencing in
·
You are "a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a
holy nation, a people belonging to God" (2:9) who
"are being built into a spiritual house" (2:5) BUT. . .
·
"suffering all kinds of
trials" (1:6);
·
among the pagans "they accuse you of doing
wrong" (2:12);
·
Slaves are to even submit themselves to masters who
are "harsh" (2:18). Peter goes on to teach them that "it
is commendable if a man bears up under the pain of unjust suffering"
(2:19);
·
"suffering for doing good and you endure"
(2:20); "Even if you should suffer for what is right, you are
blessed" (3:14);
·
"Those who suffer according to God's will"
(4:19).
·
other Christians
throughout the world are undergoing the same kind of suffering (5:9); but this
suffering is only for a little while (5:10). [10]
Suffering, trials, persecution, discipline are not God's way of saying,
"I've had enough of you and your ways; I'm going to abandon
you." Rather, discipline is God's loving way of turning trash
into treasure in your life.
C.S. Lewis once said, "God whispers to us in
our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pains: it is His
megaphone to rouse a deaf world." [11]
Yet, 14 years after making that statement, Lewis said: "Time after time,
when [God] seemed most gracious He was really preparing the next torture."
[12]
These were not the words of an atheist or a sceptic trying to cast doubt on the
Scriptures and shake somebody's faith in God. They come from C.S. Lewis,
Christian writer and one of the foremost defenders of the Christian
faith. He was grieving the loss of his wife from cancer. Lewis did
not marry until late in life.
You and I know there have been times when we would not listen to God and God
had to do something to get our attention. God does that with
trials. He can use even severe discipline to get our attention so that we
will listen.
Let’s stop for a moment and apply this to yourself.
Please think of
the difficulties in your life right now. Why is God doing it or allowing
it? Does he have something against you? Is it punishment?
Does God have something better in store for you? Let's get this very
clear. God does not send trials and suffering to your life to play with
you like a cat does with a mouse. What could God be up to in your life
and mine by the trials we go through?
Yet I Peter 5:12 says: "I have written to you briefly, encouraging you and
testifying that this is the true grace of God. Stand fast in it."
1. They were suffering persecution and
trials and he wrote to encourage them.
2.
Also, I Peter is written to "testify"
of "the true grace of God."
Remember what Paul said to the Philippians (2:12-13): "continue to work
out your salvation with fear and trembling." God was working within
the Philippians; God's work is seen in Peter's audience of persecuted
Christians. And God is working out your salvation and mine--in the midst
of trails.
3.
A third reason I Peter is in the Bible, according to
5:12, is to encourage us not to chuck it in, but
to "stand firm/fast" in God's grace.
Under the inspiration of the Spirit, Peter, in 5:8 reminds us where some of the
trials come from: "Your enemy (adversary) the devil prowls around like a
roaring lion looking for someone to devour."
The devil prowls around looking for disillusioned sheep who are wandering from
the fold, who are vulnerable – because of the suffering they are
experiencing.
who is doing this to you. You must be joking when you say he is a good
God! Sigmund Freud was right: the religious have a mental problem.
The devil loves to pull down your
view of God.
There is always the danger you will throw in the towel, call it quits and
commit apostasy if you listen to the devil's accusations and not to God's word.
To counter all these phoney accusations, Peter teaches us to resist the devil,
stand your ground, strong in the grace of God--in the midst of trials.
I've been having some light-headed experiences of dizziness over the last few
months. I've been thinking it is stress related to my work and have had
CAT scans, brain wave tracings, seen a neurologist, etc. But in a recent
e-mail from my son, Paul, he wrote this: "I don't mean to go over
the top, Dad, but I know the devil doesn't want you to be doing what you are
doing. Remember his strategies." How timely this reminder was
for me. I thank the LORD for a godly 30-year-old son. The devil
does not make you do everything, but he certainly is a deceptive, accusing
person in the life of the Christian. But Jesus is the victor. We
need to live in that victory that was obtained at
As long as Jesus allows us to be on earth, trials will be our lot; the devil
will be our accuser throughout life.
I Peter 2:5 says that God is building "you"
(plural) into a "spiritual house." That's His goal for the
church. How does he do it?
In this passage we are considering (vv. 6-7), Peter encourages us, exhorts
us, teaches us: READ VV. 6-7.
To all of us, God says through Peter:
IV. DON'T CHUCK IT IN BECAUSE GOD
IS TURNING TRASH INTO TREASURE IN YOUR LIFE (vv. 6-7)
If God is going
to turn junk into gold, He uses two core principles. By these
principles, God takes what is displeasing to Him and makes you what He wants
you to be.
The two principles are found in the contrasts of vv. 6-7:
v. 6. "In this you greatly
rejoice" BUT you may have "to suffer
grief." The contrast is: Rejoicing in the midst of grief.
v. 6. You will experience "all kinds of trials" BUT
v. 8. You "are filled with
an inexpressible and glorious joy." Or as the KJV puts it,
"ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory." The
contrast: Trials vs. joy – but this is the Christian life.
CORE PRINCIPLE NO. 1:
CHRISTIANS ARE PEOPLE WHO ARE TO EXPERIENCE UNSPEAKABLE JOY
Please understand that I did not say, “Turning trash into treasure
requires a happy disposition.” There’s a great deal of
difference between joy and happiness. These two words,
"rejoice" and "joy" come from the same Greek root word, charis.
a. What is joy?
My wife, Desley, uses a detergent to get out stains and deep dirt, called
"Bio-Joy." I understand the idea behind such a name: you will
experience joy when dirty clothes become clean--thanks to the miracle working
Bio-Joy. But that is not what the Bible means by "joy".
We need to be fundamentally clear on this:
(1) Joy is not an option. You are
commanded to rejoice.
Perhaps it would be helpful if we briefly looked at what joy is not. [13]
You can know the joy of the Lord and have lots of fun. Read the book of
Philippians and you'll find Paul was in prison, expecting to die. It was
no fun. But he had lots of joy. Philippians is the book of joy.
These Christians Peter was writing to had severe trials, suffering and
persecution, yet they had "joy unspeakable and full of glory."
What then is joy?
On the evening that Jesus was betrayed and arrested, perhaps only 12 hours
before his crucifixion--he knew the horrors that were facing him.
According to John 15:11 he says,
"I have told you this [that is, that obedience will keep you in my love]
so that my joy may be in you and your joy may be complete."
Joy was his at that moment, but the circumstances were far from carefree and
happy.
Paul could have joy with the threat of being killed.
Here in I Peter 1: 6, Peter commands:
"In this you greatly rejoice."
Here we have the clue to what joy is and where it comes from. When he
says, "in this," he is referring back to something he has already
said. Your joy comes from this:
o
Your salvation.
v. 2, you have been chosen by God for
eternal life;
v. 3, you have a new birth, a living
hope;
v. 4, your inheritance is nothing
like what a wealthy person leaves behind for his children. Your
inheritance will never perish, spoil or fade. It is kept in heaven for
you.
v. 5. This salvation, even
though you experience it now with enormous benefits, it will be yours fully
when Jesus Christ is revealed when he comes again.
o
J.I. Packer defines it well: "Joy covers
the entire spectrum of what may be called the rapturous, ranging from the
extreme achings of ecstasy to the quiet thrill of
contentment... Joy is a condition that is experienced, but it is more
than a feeling; it is primarily a state of mind... A state of the whole [person] in which thought and feeling combine
to produce total euphoria." [14] It
is a deep contentment when you are in love with Jesus and nothing--not even
suffering, trials, persecution or death--can take it away.
"R.A. Torrey was one of the great Bible teachers [at the turn of the 20th
century] and [was] fonder of the Bible Institute of Los Angeles... He and
Mrs Torrey went through a time of great heartache when their twelve-year-old
daughter was accidentally killed.
"The funeral was held on a gloomy, miserable, rainy day. They stood
around the grave and watched as the body of their little girl was put
away. As they turned away, Mrs Torrey said, `I'm so glad that
"But even knowing this to be true, their hearts were broken. Dr.
Torrey said that the next day, as he was walking down the street, the whole
thing broke anew--the loneliness of the years ahead without her presence, the
heartbreak of an empty house, and all the other implications of her
death.
"He was so burdened by this that he looked to the Lord for help. He
said, `And just then, this fountain, the Holy Spirit that I had in my heart,
broke forth with such power as I think I had never experienced before, and it
was the most joyful moment I have ever known in my life!
"Oh how wonderful is the joy of the Holy [Spirit]! It is an
unspeakable glorious thing to have your joy not in things about
you, not even in your most dearly loved friends, but to have
within you a fountain ever springing up, springing up, springing up, always
springing up [365] days in every year, springing up under all circumstances
unto everlasting life." [15]
Application
Do you know this kind of joy as the constant reality in your life? If
not, there is only one way to receive it: repent, fall on your face before God,
and be reconciled with Jesus. Do you want joy? The
Scriptures command you to have it. Will you seek and experience this
"joy unspeakable and full of glory"?
Then you will discover that while you live in this depraved and fallen world,
life will not be a "joy ride," but it can become a
"joy road" through your response to God. [16]
Core Principle No. 1 for changing trash to treasure.
You are commanded to have the joy of the Lord. It must be yours.
CORE PRINCIPLE NO. 2 FOR TURNING THE TRASH IN YOUR LIFE INTO TREASURE: GOD SENDS ALL KINDS OF TRIALS YOUR WAY WITH A PURPOSE IN VIEW.
The classic case is Job. At the end of Job we
read (42:11-12): "All his brothers and sisters and everyone who had known
him before came and ate with him in his house. They comforted and
consoled him over [get this] all the trouble the Lord had brought upon him,
and each one gave him a piece of silver and a gold ring. The Lord blessed
the latter part of Job's life more than the first."
We have the benefit that Job didn't have. We have the Word of God that
even tells us in Job chapter 1 that God used Satan to afflict Job.
Will he do any more or less with us? Without a doubt, God can send
trials our way.
Remember Joseph who was badly treated and sent to
Then at the end of Genesis, Joseph was able to say to his brothers: "You
intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now
being done, the saving of many lives" (50:19-20).
This is the Romans 8:28 principle, "And we know that in all things God
works for the good of those who love him, who have
been called according to his purpose."
God turned trash into treasure in Joseph's life, through the trials of sending
him into
Here in 1 Peter 1:6-7, we are given some fundamental steps in this principle of
God using trials to turn junk into gold:
1. Refining gold by fire is used as an
illustration of what God does in our lives (v. 7).
Similarly,
2. Your faith is tested, purified by
trials.
The Bible is quite the opposite of the health, wealth and prosperity doctrines
that are proclaimed in many churches. God makes no promise to make you
financially wealthy. A leading Australian pastor has written a
book, You Need More Money. This seems to side-track us from core
issues of life. The true biblical teaching is:
v. 6 says
that you will:
Don't try to second-guess God as to what trials he sends your way. Every
bit of pain, difficulty, trials, suffering, persecution, that
God sends to you is to turn trash into treasure in your life.
This testing time that comes to all of us will cause us to "suffer
grief." It will be emotionally and physically painful. The
grief and hurt are real. That's why Paul to the Romans (12:15) says we
are "to rejoice with those who rejoice and mourn with those who
mourn." Gal. 6:2, "Carry each other's burdens, and in this way
you will fulfil the law of Christ."
However, never forget that, according to 2 Cor. 1:3-4, God is "the God of
all comfort who comforts us in our troubles, so that we can comfort those in
any trouble with the comfort we ourselves have received from God."
God comforts us directly. But he expects the body of Christ to come
alongside of us and offer comfort during our trials.
Why does God do it?
3. That your faith "may be proved genuine" (v. 7).
There is no room for fakes in the
The wheat and the tares (look-alike-wheat) will grow together until harvest
time. Christians and fake-Christians will be sorted out when Jesus comes
again. But the Lord tells us that some sorting out is done on earth--by
testing what kind of stuff your faith is made of by sending you all kinds
of trials.
Changing trash to treasure through trials is God's message throughout the
N.T. Read about it in: Romans 5:3-5; James 1:2-4; Hebrews
12:7-11; 2 Cor. 1:3-7.
For you, the praise will be, "Well done, good and faithful servant."
The glory will be the glory which was Christ's before the world began
and which he gives to the chosen/elect. To all believers Jesus said,
"I have given them the glory that you (Father) gave me that they may be
one as we are one" (John 17:22).
The honour will be the crown of righteousness given to the faithful who
have endured.
Bishop John Taylor, a well-known bishop in the past in
Just before that time, he injured his knee and had to rest up in bed. At
that time, he lay in bed and began to read through the Book of Romans. He
received such a blessing that he prayed in faith, "Lord, if this be the result
of a bruised knee, please give me a broken leg." [17]
Application:
If you are experiencing difficulties right now, how can God turn trash into
treasure for you?
Principle No. 1: You are commanded to have the joy of the Lord.
This is the disposition from God that enables you to endure the trials, knowing
that they are God-sent or God-allowed.
Principle No. 2:
God uses trials to test our faith to see if it is genuine or not.
There's a country song that Johnny Cash sang years ago. It says,
"I'm just an old chunk of coal, but I'll be a diamond some day."
Thank God for the trials he sends --- and seek
joy.
Don't chuck it in because God is turning trash into treasure in your life.
Closing Hymn: "Because He lives" (252 Wesleyan)
It is well with my
soul (262, Wesleyan)
Leaning on the
Everlasting Arms (267, Wesleyan)
He lives (Wesleyan
250)
Rejoice in the Lord
always [Scripture in Song, Vol. 1:81]
God is so good
(Scripture in Song, Vol. 1:121)
Joy is a flag
(Scripture in Song, Vol. 2: 218)
1. I
am an Australian family relationships' counselling manager, doctoral student in
biblical studies, an active Christian apologist, and may be contacted at:
2.
Based on the introduction to the message, “The Message of First
Peter,” Ray C. Stedman, http://www.pbc.org/dp/stedman/adventure/0261.html
[cited 27 November 2002].
3. Ralph Kinney Bennett ,“The Global War
on Christians,” The Readers’ Digest, October, 1997, pp. 104-109.
4. Ibid.,
p. 105.
5. Ibid., p. 106.
6. Ibid., p. 107.
7. Ibid.,
p. 105.
8. Ibid., p. 108.
9. Ibid.
10. Other sufferings/trials emphasised: you
are called to suffering because Christ suffered, leaving you an example to
follow in His steps (2:21); people speaking maliciously against their good
behaviour (3:16); "painful trial you are suffering" and they
"participate in the sufferings of Christ" (4:12, 13); insulted
because of the name of Christ (4:14); "Cast
all your anxiety on him" (5:7).
11. C.S. Lewis, The
Problem of Pain.
12. C.S. Lewis, A Grief Observed.
13. The points about what joy is not, are
taken from J.I. Packer, Laid-Back Religion?
14. Ibid., pp. 100-101, emphasis added.
15. In Michael P.
Green (Ed.), Illustrations for Biblical Preaching.
16. Packer, p. 93
17. Ibid., #17, p.
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