Living through Trials and Temptations

Living in the Hope of our Inheritance  •  Sermon  •  Submitted   •  Presented   •  1:02:02
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We in this country aren’t likely to be burned at the stake or thrown to the lions or beheaded for being Christians. And that makes it tougher than we’d like to admit, I’m afraid, to get our heads around our text this morning. Yet Peter begins,
1 Peter 4:12 ESV
12 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.

I. Persecution Will Come

The fact is that persecution of Christians, in one form or another, has been the normal state of affairs throughout most of the history of the Church. Peter is writing from Rome a few years before the end of his life. Persecutions are common here or there, but they are still small, local events. Often the persecution simply comes in the form of insults. The big prosecutions by the Roman Empire would not start for a couple more years. But Peter is anticipating that day. He is warning his fellow believers, particularly his fellow pastors, that they need to be prepared.
See, Peter makes the point that persecution should not be viewed as strange. Rather, persecution is the normal state of affairs. Those who are of the devil, the world, and the sinful flesh will always hate those who trust in Christ. Look how Christians are treated in the Middle East. Even many secular countries such as Japan, in which traditional religions have died out, resist the Gospel.
We in America have experienced something quite unusual. But even here, we see Christians persecuted for their beliefs. How often are political candidates mocked in the press if they are creationists? How often are they mocked in the press if they are pro-life? And listen to what the media has been saying lately as the Church being “essential.” And sometimes persecution comes from others who are supposed to be brothers and sisters in Christ.

II. God Uses the Persecution for Good

Seems strange, doesn’t it? But God has a purpose in allowing such persecutions. These trials, Peter says, are “to test you.” There’s the sense here that sufferings purify the Christian. Christ is always working to purify our hearts and our minds. The Christian, in standing firm, shares in Christ’s life and death. He suffers and dies with Christ. And this fellowship does not end but then continues into eternity.
The devil will use such persecutions as a trick. He “prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour” (v 8). But the roaring lion is a toothless lion, who only creates fear to drive his prey into the clutches of the hunting lions. The devil is likewise a toothless lion. He cannot actually harm us. He roars loudly to create fear, and his goal is to create such fearfulness that we deny Christ. But God is also using “fiery trials” for a purpose, his purpose. “If you are insulted for the name of Christ, you are blessed, because the Spirit of glory and of God rests upon you” (v 14). Strange as it may seem, it’s actually a great blessing to be counted worthy to suffer for the name of Christ.

III. Persecution We Cannot Seek

Suffering, however, is not in itself to be viewed as a good thing. Peter isn’t speaking here of physical ailments or the like. He’s speaking of things that are being done to us. In Peter’s day, this would have including floggings, imprisonment, and even being put to death. Peter himself would experience all these. But these things could be done to a person for other reasons. If one was a thief, they would be punished according to the law. This is not a blessing. This is not a good thing. It is just retribution against a person for committing a crime. Christians should not be criminals. Committing crimes is not how we show love for our neighbor. So Peter is clear to make this distinction: “Let none of you suffer as a murderer or a thief or an evildoer or as a meddler” (v 15). If one is arrested because he is a criminal, this is to be seen as shameful and the punishment just. But if one is arrested because she is a Christian, this is worthy of praise before God.
Strangely enough, some early Christians took Peter’s words, and the words of other apostles, so to heart that they would go out of their way to be arrested and put to death in times of persecution. While suffering for Christ is a great honor for the Christian, it is an honor we cannot seek. We must be chosen. So the Early Church began to teach that Christians should avoid persecution if they can do so without compromising their faith. It was wrong to be a martyr if one had opportunity to escape. So, for example, if a person knew Christians were being arrested in his town but not in another, he was to flee. Always, though, if confronted and arrested, he was to confess Christ.

IV. In Persecution, Christ is Always With Us

Was Peter here telling his readers to suck it up and take one for the team? No, not at all. What Peter was telling the Christians of that time, and the Christians of today, is that we are preserved by Christ in the face of trials. We do not preserve ourselves. Christ keeps us safe from true harm.
And what is true harm? True harm is denying Christ. We cannot save ourselves. Christ must save us. If we deny him, we are lost. Peter reminds us that God is also our Creator and is ever faithful to us. And Christ Jesus himself is no stranger to persecution. He gave his life on the cross so that we would never be separated from God. So we can entrust ourselves to God’s care, even in the face of death. Thus we need not lose faith.
1 Peter 4:13 NASB95
13 but to the degree that you share the sufferings of Christ, keep on rejoicing, so that also at the revelation of His glory you may rejoice with exultation.
1 Peter 4:19 NASB95
19 Therefore, those also who suffer according to the will of God shall entrust their souls to a faithful Creator in doing what is right.
Our sufferings are for but a little while; the glories of heaven last forever.
As we move from Easter into Pentecost, the so-called Time of the Church, we are reminded that the Christian is always under pressure from the world. The world does not want to be confronted with its own sin, its own inhumanity, or it tyrannical form of government. From the time of Peter, beginning with Stephen, until the present day, Christians are under attack. Various states are saying the Church is non-essential; what will they say next week?
It is said that more Christians died for the Christ in the twentieth century than in all the previous centuries combined. The persecutions have not ended. They never will end, until the return of Christ in the final judgment of this world. The world will be condemned. Those who reject Christ will be rejected by Christ and cast into hell. But those who stand with Christ—who abide—will remain with Christ, forever. Nothing strange about being persecuted, because Christ, who suffered all, will always be right there with us. We stand with Christ because Christ will stand with us.
We will not be left to stand on our own. Christ never abandons us. For he is our Creator and Redeemer. He is the God of all grace, the one who will restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish us.
Finally, a word to some of you who are here today: Whatever your burden, your cross, your suffering—if it takes great courage even to get up in the morning and face another day:
Psalm 31:24 NKJV
24 Be of good courage, And He shall strengthen your heart, All you who hope in the Lord.
In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
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