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Patience’s Perfect Work

My brethren, count it all joy when you fall into various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces patience. But let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking nothing.” (James 1:4-5)

To some, the words of James drop like a lead balloon. “Can he be serious?”, they say; their question loaded with emotional exasperation from what they’ve been through or what they are going through in this moment. Does he really mean to say that we are to rejoice in every trial and through every test or challenge of life?                                                  

Yes.

How can I“, comes the reply. We all have a certain tolerance for circumstances beyond our control but there is a limit to what we can bear. What is your threshold? How much is too much – is so much that it changes your outlook and extinguishes your peace?

The problem of pain impacts us all but it’s really the object of our attention during those times and seasons of life that has the most profound impact in our life and the lives of those around us. Our biblical quote above is taken from a Christian, actually from one of the siblings of Jesus Christ. He did not always believe what his half-brother Jesus said or declared about Himself but one day that changed. His begins his exortation by assigning it to his audience and calls that audience, “my brethren.”

His brethren is a reference not only to people who were but also to those who in these days also are believers in Jesus Christ. Now, the fact is that mankind is born to trouble as sparks fly upward (Job 5:7); in other words there are certain things that afflict believer and non-believer alike: cancer, sudden loss of a loved one or child, (sadly) divorce, loneliness, abandonment of one sort or another, grief in its various forms, economic hardship, layoff etc. But Christians the world over and for two millenia have also faced scorn, hatred, pressure and persecution from family, friends, coworkers, despots, national leaders and other religions just for believing in the name of Jesus and saying so both in word and action. In the midst of such trials of faith James tells believers to rejoice.

One reason for our joy should stem from the fact that every time our faith is put to the test and we patiently endure it our faith is strengthened. Just as a weight lifters strength is increased by adding more weight to the bar and repetitiously straining and lifting the weight, so a Christians faith is strengthened by every trial that does not kill him or her. Another reason for joy in these trials is that the goal of each is to mature us spiritually. Every successful test brings the Christian that much closer to the goal of being like Christ.

So our joy under pressure stems from the two things which our trials produce: endurance and Christian maturity. These are the perfect works of patience. But, when the trial is great, the pressure is high and the time is dragging on and on it helps to have our mind focused on Him who under great trial, anguish and suffering endured the cross and bore its shame (Heb. 12:2) for our souls sake. You see, in my mind, the only way to consider let alone endure any trial or test of faith with an attitude of joy is to focus on Him who went through all of that for us. Jesus is our Savior! Heaven is our home! These trials will come to an end but until then train your mind on a focal point beyond the pain: turn your eyes upon Jesus.

I like the hymn that reminds me of today’s verse: Andre Crouch’s ” Through it all;” part of that songs lyrics are the following words:

I’ve had many tears and sorrows,
I’ve had questions for tomorrow,
there’s been times I didn’t know right from wrong.
But in every situation,
God gave me blessed consolation,
that my trials come to only make me strong.

Through it all,
through it all,
I’ve learned to trust in Jesus,
I’ve learned to trust in God.

Through it all,
through it all,
I’ve learned to depend upon His Word.”

A good way to end this short study I think…

Priceless?

Is your Bible all to you that God wants it to be?

This thought provoking question comes from one of my favorite bible teachers – Warren Wiersbe and I ask it at a time when the Bible seems to be more and more devalued especially by those who claim both to believe that it contains the very words of God and who also claim to live by those words.

So let me ask and answer the question which some of you may be thinking – “What DOES God want our Bibles to be to us?”

Well, first of all, I don’t think that He wants it so much to be a rule book by which we judge ourselves and others as much as He wants it to be like an instruction manual for living life His way. The longest Psalm in the Bible, Psalm 119 emphasizes the instructional purpose of God’s word in (v 9) where the psalmist asks and answers his own rhetorical question: “How can a young man (person) keep his way pure? By keeping (his way) according to Your word (NASB95).” In other words, God gives us His word to be learned and lived so that we might overcome temptation; remember in this same Psalm, the writer declared in (v.11) “Your word I have hidden in my heart,That I might not sin against You. (NKJV)” So, one purpose of the word is to instruct us.

Secondly, the Lord wants us to value His word like a great treasure but not as a treasure which we horde, hide or store up in our hearts for our own benefit alone but as a treasure to also be given away. The Apostle Paul wrote in (Romans 10:13) that ” “For “whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved;” but how was that faith born in them? The Apostle tells us in (v.17) of (Romans 10) “So then faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.” But the key to this is in (v.14-15) where Paul wrote:

How then shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed? And how shall they believe in Him of whom they have not heard? And how shall they hear without a preacher? And how shall they preach unless they are sent? As it is written:“How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the gospel of peace,Who bring glad tidings of good things!”

Paul taught that the only way others will share in the treasure we have found in the Lord Jesus Christ and His word is if we share it with them.

Third, the Lord wants us to recognize the power in His word for daily living. Look again at the words of the Apostle Paul, in (Romans 1:16) he wrote, “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes, for the Jew first and also for the Greek.” Paul declared the gospel to everyone he could because he KNEW that the word was powerful, “more powerful than a two edged sword” he said, and able to get to the heart of matters and people (see Heb. 4:12). The word dynamite is a derivative of the Greek word used in (v.16) for power implying that God’s word can break down spiritual strongholds and lead captive men and women to freedom in Jesus.

Finally and above all, God wants us to value the Bible as a letter from His heart to ours ~ a letter of love and grace to people who have lived out of sync and in rebellion against Him. He wants us to feast on His word, believe in His word, live by His word, stand on His word, grow in His word and He wants us to obey His word.

As I conclude, it may be that you agree with everything I have written here and that the Lord has written in His word but before you nod your head at them and go on about your day, seriously ask yourself:

IS my bible REALLY ALL to me that God wants it to be?”

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