“We instinctively withdraw our hand if it’s getting burned,
right? But when it comes to tribulation, God’s attitude and perspective is, ‘No,
I don’t want you to behave like that,’ ” explains Alex Kurz.
“There’s a direct correlation with the activity of godliness
and the sanctifying effect that tribulations now have in life. It isn’t
something that we dread. It isn’t something we run away from. It’s something
that we can not only welcome, but we recognize we’re more than conquerors. God
says there is a specific provision He gives to us so we can triumph in life.
“Instead of looking at tribulation as something to avoid, we’re
to see its value. It’s no longer an enemy. I don’t have to fear or dread. I now
can welcome those tribulations.
*****
“Hebrews 5:7 is a powerful, powerful verse of our Lord Jesus
Christ: ‘Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and
supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him
from death, and was heard in that he feared.’
“He was a man of sorrows. Jesus was acquainted with grief.
You don’t think He was touched by the effects of living in a sin-cursed world
or the emotional and psychological trauma; the rejection and alienation. He knows--He
feels hurt. He feels pain.
“Verse 5:8 says, ‘Though he were a Son, yet learned he
obedience by the things which he suffered.’
“He didn’t succumb. While He’s in pain, while He’s in
anguish, while He’s experiencing the trauma, you know what He chooses to do? ‘I’m
going to learn.’ It’s a learning experience! When tribulations come our way,
what a learning experience!
*****
“The theme of II Corinthians actually has to do with
sufferings, tribulations and infirmities. It’s probably the darkest epistle the
Apostle Paul wrote.
“He starts chapter 1 with, ‘Blessed be God, even the
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies, and the God of all
comfort; Who comforteth us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to
comfort them which are in any trouble, by the comfort wherewith we ourselves
are comforted of God.’
“Drop down to verse 9: ‘But we had the sentence of death in
ourselves, that we should not trust in ourselves, but in God which raiseth the
dead:
[10] Who delivered us from so great a death, and doth deliver: in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us.’
[10] Who delivered us from so great a death, and doth deliver: in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us.’
“We’re going to learn to trust what God has to say about
tribulations. Our flesh and our emotions, which are committed to avoiding all
that . . . we now can learn what God says about it. So now we can tackle it
with this renewed understanding; this renewed knowledge about it. Don’t fear
it; don’t dread it.
“Paul says, ‘I’m now going to trust what God says.’ If He
says tribulation is ordained to be a spiritual benefit and blessing, are we
going to believe what He says about it? We have to readjust the way we think
about the problems of life.
“God will not remove your affliction. That’s why when Paul
said three times, ‘Lord Jesus, please,’ He responded, ‘Paul, you aren’t
thinking about what’s happening in your life,’ and Christ reminds Paul about the
available inner man capacity that he already had. Jesus didn’t say ‘no’ and He
didn’t say ‘yes,’ He just said, ‘Paul, you’ve already got something. I don’t
need to do anymore.’
“God will not miraculously reach down into your life and
remove your problem or shield you from the problem. He doesn’t give us immunity
or a hedge of protection. God said, ‘It’s a blessing.’
“What do we KNOW? ‘Hey, it’s going to work something!’ When
bad things happen in your life, it has absolutely nothing to do with God’s
displeasure. It has everything to do with God’s delight in producing something
in the core of your inner man.
“ ‘If I’m going to glory,’ Paul says, ‘I’m going to glory in
the things concerning my infirmities. God’s not angry with me; He’s not angry
with you.’
‘So wait a minute, Paul, why do you look like a physical mess?!’
Paul’s going to say, ‘You know what, that’s my certificate.’
“Acts 14:22 says, ‘Confirming the souls of the disciples,
and exhorting them to continue in the faith, and that we must through much
tribulation enter into the kingdom of God.’
“ It says, ‘We must.’ Is that optional? It’s a reality. The
sooner we accept the fact that tribulation is part and parcel of our experience
and edification, the sooner we can employ the very doctrines God says we need
in order to glory in and see the value, worth, profit and advantage in it.”
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