Happy And Merciful Part 1

Happy Ridge

“Happy are those who are merciful to others; God will be merciful to them!”  Matthew 5:7  *MEMORY VERSE

Have you noticed that the stock market continues to plunge up and down? We have learned firsthand that in this life there is no sure investment.

Except for one thing.  The investment in Mercy

There is classic commercial about an investment firm called E. F. Hutton. In this commercial, you see a room full of people sitting around, chatting. In one corner, there is a conversation going on and someone says, “My broker is E. F. Hutton and he says. . .” At that point, the whole room becomes quiet and everybody leans forward and strains to hear what E. F. Hutton said.  When EF Hutton talks…

As we look at this scripture, everyone sitting around is straining to hear what Jesus is saying. And as we listen, we hear Jesus gives the best investment advice in the world. He is telling us to invest in Mercy.

If you are a good investor, you have learned that before you invest in something, you must learn everything you can about it, so you can invest with realistic knowledge and expectations of what kind of return you will get.

So what is Mercy? Mercy is:

This beatitude raises three practical questions:
What is mercy?
How can I become merciful?
What can I expect as a result?

  1. What is mercy?
    The word mercy is used some 250 times in the Old Testament.
  • Mercy is one of the most important words in Old Testament theology and ethics” Vine’s Expository Dictionary of Biblical Words
  • Mercy was more important to God than the sacrificial system of the Old Testament.    (It meant to treat people right – the heart of the law)

“For I desire mercy, not sacrifice, and acknowledgment of God rather than burnt offerings.”  Hosea 6:6

“What does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy

and to walk humbly with your God.”  Micah 6:8

The Hebrew word for mercy is “Checed” which means to get inside someone’s skin, to look at where they view life and feel what they are experiencing; to move in and act on behalf of the one whose hurting. That is exactly what Jesus did when He chose to leave the comfort and glory of Heaven to become one of us.

Millions of people were gathered before the Throne of God. Some of the groups near the front talked heatedly and were belligerent. “How can God judge us, they asked?” God is in heaven where all is beauty and light, what does He know about suffering snapped a cynical woman. As she stood she rolled back her sleeve revealing a tattooed number from a Nazi concentration camp. We were tortured, humiliated, torn from loved ones, until only death gave release. What about this said an angry black man, Lynched for no other reason other than being black. We were enslaved, beaten, wrenched from loved ones, only death gave us freedom. Across the plain there were thousands who had similar complaints against God for the suffering they experienced on earth. So they decided to form a committee, each person was selected from their groups because they suffered the most. The committee met in the middle of the plain, they decided that before God could judge them he had to live on earth as a man. They set certain safeguards so that in times of trouble He could not use his divine power to escape. Each got up to pronounce their portion of the sentence.
1. Let him be born a Jew
2. Let him be born into poverty. To know hunger & thirst.

  1. Let him grow up under a tyrannical government.
  2. Let him champion a cause so great that people will call him mad or lunatic
    5. Let him be betrayed by one of his closest friends, let him be abandoned at his greatest time of need by all he loved
    6. Let him be condemned by the religious leaders
    7. Let him be sentenced to die
    8. Let him be humiliated and tortured
    9. Let him die like a common criminal
  3. Let his name live on forever that in moments of rage men would use it as a common curse word.
    As each pronounced their portion of the sentence loud murmurs of approval came from the crowd. When the last pronounced his sentence no one made a sound, no one dared to move. When the last pronounced his sentence they all knew, God had already served the sentence.

    I use this illustration because it clearly tells us what MERCY is. It is seeing with the eyes of others, feeling with their feelings, thinking with their thoughts, fully understanding what they are experiencing.
  • Mercy is more than a feeling.

Suppose a brother or sister is without clothes and daily food.  If one of you says to him, “Go, I wish you well; keep warm and well fed,” but does nothing about his physical needs, what good is it?” James 2:15-16

To be merciful is far more than to shed tears. Of course, those who are merciful sometimes weep. Jesus certainly did not restrain his tears as Martha and Mary grieved over their brother’ death.  Another time he looked at the city of Jerusalem and wept over it.   Jesus did far more than weep he gave his life for whom he wept.  It is easy for some to shed tears that are meaningless and unproductive. This is emotion without motion and this is not mercy.

  • Mercy is more than an act of charity.

. MERCY isn’t: 1. Pretending to have a heart of care and compassion. 2. It is not Self-Seeking – It is not showing kindness only when you think something’s in it for you. (Like a politician)  3. It is not Self-Righteous – like the Pharisees who thought they were getting brownie points from God by giving to the poor.    The heart matters, the intent matters too.

“If I give all I possess to the poor and surrender my body to the flames, but have not love, I gain nothing.”  I Corinthians 13: 3

  • Mercy takes action.

Mercy is Compassion in Action.” It is doing something with the feelings you have for someone. It is one thing to feel mercy and a step further to show it to others. Those who are merciful dare to help lighten the load of another. Mercy is action. If we have an attitude of mercy, we will perform deeds of mercy.
When springtime arrives it cannot be kept a secret. It expresses itself through blooming flowers and singing birds. (Asthma & Allergies too!!) And when the springtime of mercy is in our heats, it makes itself known in a multitude of ways.

A young boy was sent to the corner store by his mother to buy a loaf of bread. He was gone much longer than it should have taken him. When he finally returned, his mother asked, “Where have you been? I’ve been worried sick about you.”

“Well,” he answered, “there was a little boy with a broken bike who was crying. So I stopped to help him.”

“I didn’t know you knew anything about fixing bikes,” his mother said.

“I don’t,” he replied. “I just stayed there and cried with him.”
Biblical usage of ‘Mercy’ frequently speaks of someone “doing,” “showing,” or “keeping.”  Vine’s Expository Dictionary of Biblical Words

  • Mercy – Gr – eleos (def.) kindness or help to those who are hurting or needy.

Charles Swindoll – It does not mean only to sympathize with a person in the
popular sense of the term; it does not mean simply to feel sorry for someone
in trouble. It means the ability to get right inside the other person’s skin.
Clearly this is much more than an emotional wave of pity; this demands a
deliberate effort of the mind & of the will. It denotes a sympathy which is not
given, as it were, from the outside, but which comes from a deliberate
identification with the other person, until we see things as he sees them, &
feel things as he feels them.

In the next post we’ll look at “How I can become Merciful”.

Darrell

www.RidgeFellowship.com

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Happy Are the Harassed (Matthew 5:10-12) Commentary

Happy Ridge

Blessed are those who have been persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are you when men cast insults at you, and persecute you, and say all kinds of evil against you falsely, on account of Me. Rejoice, and be glad, for your reward in heaven is great, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.” (5:10-12)

Of all the beatitudes, this last one seems the most contrary to human thinking and experience. The world does not associate happiness with humility, mourning over sin, gentleness, righteousness, mercy, purity of heart, or peacemaking holiness. Even less does it associate happiness with persecution.

Some years ago a popular national magazine took a survey to determine the things that make people happy. According to the responses they received, happy people enjoy other people but are not self-sacrificing; they refuse to participate in any negative feelings or emotions; and they have a sense of accomplishment based on their own self-sufficiency.

The person described by those principles is completely contrary to the kind of person the Lord says will be authentically happy. Jesus says a blessed person is not one who is self-sufficient but one who recognizes his own emptiness and need, who comes to God as a beggar, knowing he has no resources in himself. He is not confident in his own ability but is very much aware of his own inability. Such a person, Jesus says, is not at all positive about himself but mourns over his own sinfulness and isolation from a holy God. To be genuinely content, a person must not be self-serving but self-sacrificing. He must be gentle, merciful, pure in heart, yearn for righteousness, and seek to make peace on God’s terms—even if those attitudes cause him to suffer.

The Lord’s opening thrust in the Sermon on the Mount climaxes with this great and sobering truth: those who faithfully live according to the first seven beatitudes are guaranteed at some point to experience the eighth. Those who live righteously will inevitably be persecuted for it. Godliness generates hostility and antagonism from the world. The crowning feature of the happy person is persecution! Kingdom people are rejected people. Holy people are singularly blessed, but they pay a price for it.

The last beatitude is really two in one, a single beatitude repeated and expanded. Blessed is mentioned twice (vv. 10, 11), but only one characteristic (persecuted) is given, although it is mentioned three times, and only one result (for theirs is the kingdom of heaven) is promised. Blessed apparently is repeated to emphasize the generous blessing given by God to those who are persecuted. “Double-blessed are those who are persecuted,” Jesus seems to be saying.

Three distinct aspects of kingdom faithfulness are spoken of in this beatitude: the persecution, the promise, and the posture.

The Persecution

Those who have been persecuted are the citizens of the kingdom, those who live out the previous seven beatitudes. To the degree that they fulfill the first seven they may experience the eighth.

“All who desire to live godly in Christ Jesus will be persecuted” (2 Tim. 3:12). Before writing those words Paul had just mentioned some of his own “persecutions, and suffering, such as happened to me at Antioch, at Iconium and at Lystra” (v. 11). As one who lived the kingdom life he had been persecuted, and all others who live the kingdom life can expect similar treatment. What was true in ancient Israel is true today and will remain true until the Lord returns. “As at that time he who was born according to the flesh persecuted him who was born according to the Spirit, so it is now also” (Gal. 4:29).

Imagine a man who accepted a new job in which he had to work with especially profane people. When at the end of the first day his wife asked him how he had managed, he said, “Terrific! They never guessed I was a Christian.” As long as people have no reason to believe that we are Christians, at least obedient and righteous Christians, we need not worry about persecution. But as we manifest the standards of Christ we will share the reproach of Christ. Those born only of the flesh will persecute those born of the Spirit.

To live for Christ is to live in opposition to Satan in his world and in his system. Christlikeness in us will produce the same results as Christlikeness did in the apostles, in the rest of the early church, and in believers throughout history. Christ living in His people today produces the same reaction from the world that Christ Himself produced when He lived on earth as a man.

Righteousness is confrontational, and even when it is not preached in so many words, it confronts wickedness by its very contrast. Abel did not preach to Cain, but Abel’s righteous life, typified by his proper sacrifice to the Lord, was a constant rebuke to his wicked brother—who in a rage finally slew him. When Moses chose to identify with his own despised Hebrew people rather than compromise himself in the pleasures of pagan Egyptian society, he paid a great price. But he considered “the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt” (Heb. 11:26).

The Puritan writer Thomas Watson said of Christians: “Though they be never so meek, merciful, pure in heart, their piety will not shield them from sufferings. They must hang their harp on the willows and take the cross. The way to heaven is by way of thorns and blood…. Set it down as a maxim, if you will follow Christ you must see the swords and staves” (The Beatitudes [Edinburgh: Banner of Truth Trust, 1971], pp. 259-60).

Savonarola was one of the greatest reformers in the history of the church. In his powerful condemnation of personal sin and ecclesiastical corruption, that Italian preacher paved the way for the Protestant Reformation, which began a few years after his death. “His preaching was a voice of thunder,” writes one biographer, “and his denunciation of sin was so terrible that the people who listened to him went about the streets half-dazed, bewildered and speechless. His congregations were so often in tears that the whole building resounded with their sobs and their weeping.” But the people and the church could not long abide such a witness, and for preaching uncompromised righteousness Savonarola was convicted of “heresy,” he was hanged, and his body was burned.

Persecution is one of the surest and most tangible evidences of salvation. Persecution is not incidental to faithful Christian living but is certain evidence of it. Paul encouraged the Thessalonians by sending them Timothy, “so that no man may be disturbed by these afflictions; for you yourselves know that we have been destined for this. For indeed when we were with you, we kept telling you in advance that we were going to suffer affliction; and so it came to pass, as you know” (1 Thess. 3:3-4). Suffering persecution is part of the normal Christian life (cf. Rom. 8:16-17). And if we never experience ridicule, criticism, or rejection because of our faith, we have reason to examine the genuineness of it. “For to you it has been granted for Christ’s sake,” Paul says, “not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake, experiencing the same conflict which you saw in me, and now hear to be in me” (Phil. 1:29-30). Persecution for Christ’s sake is a sign of our own salvation just as it is a sign of damnation for those who do the persecuting (v. 28).

Whether Christians live in a relatively protected and tolerant society or whether they live under a godless, totalitarian regime, the world will find ways to persecute Christ’s church. To live a redeemed life to its fullest is to invite and to expect resentment and reaction from the world.

The fact that many professed believers are popular and praised by the world does not indicate that the world has raised its standards but that many who call themselves by Christ’s name have lowered theirs. As the time for Christ’s appearing grows closer we can expect opposition from the world to increase, not decrease. When Christians are not persecuted in some way by society it means that they are reflecting rather than confronting that society. And when we please the world we can be sure that we grieve the Lord (cf. James 4:4; 1 John 2:15-17).

When (hotan) can also mean whenever. The idea conveyed in the term is not that believers will be in a constant state of opposition, ridicule, or persecution, but that, whenever those things come to us because of our faith, we should not be surprised or resentful. Jesus was not constantly opposed and ridiculed, nor were the apostles. There were times of peace and even popularity. But every faithful believer will at times have some resistance and ridicule from the world, while others, for God’s own purposes, will endure more extreme suffering. But whenever and however affliction comes to the child of God, his heavenly Father will be there with him to encourage and to bless. Our responsibility is not to seek out persecution, but to be willing to endure whatever trouble our faithfulness to Jesus Christ may bring, and to see it as a confirmation of true salvation.

The way to avoid persecution is obvious and easy. To live like the world, or at least to “live and let live,” will cost us nothing. To mimic the world’s standards, or never to criticize them, will cost us nothing. To keep quiet about the gospel, especially the truth that apart from its saving power men remain in their sins and are destined for hell, will cost us nothing. To go along with the world, to laugh at its jokes, to enjoy its entertainment, to smile when it mocks God and takes His name in vain, and to be ashamed to take a stand for Christ will not bring persecution. Those are the habits of sham Christians.

Jesus does not take faithlessness lightly. “For whoever is ashamed of Me and My words, of him will the Son of Man be ashamed when He comes in His glory, and the glory of the Father and of the holy angels” (Luke 9:26). If we are ashamed of Christ, He will be ashamed of us. Christ also warned, “Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for in the same way their fathers used to treat the false prophets” (Luke 6:26). To he popular with everyone is either to have compromised the faith or not to have true faith at all.

Though it was early in His ministry, by the time Jesus preached the Sermon on the Mount He had already faced opposition. After He healed the man on the Sabbath, “the Pharisees went out and immediately began taking counsel with the Herodians against Him, as to how they might destroy Him” (Mark 3:6). We learn from Luke that they were actually hoping Jesus would heal on the Sabbath “in order that they might find reason to accuse Him” (Luke 6:7). They already hated His teaching and wanted Him to commit an act serious enough to warrant His arrest.

Our Lord made it clear from His earliest teaching, and His opponents made it clear from their earliest reactions, that following Him was costly. Those who entered His kingdom would suffer for Him before they would reign with Him. That is the hard honesty that every preacher, evangelist, and witness of Christ should exemplify, We do the Lord no honor and those to whom we witness no benefit by hiding or minimizing the cost of following Him.

The cost of discipleship is billed to believers in many different ways. A Christian stonemason in Ephesus in Paul’s day might have been asked to help build a pagan temple or shrine. Because he could not do that in good conscience, his faith would cost him the work and possibly his job and career. A believer today might be expected to hedge on the quality of his work in order to increase company profits. To follow His conscience in obedience to the Lord could also cost his job or at least a promotion. A Christian housewife who refuses to listen to gossip or to laugh at the crude jokes of her neighbors may find herself ostracized. Some costs will be known in advance and some will surprise us. Some costs will be great and some will be slight. But by the Lord’s and the apostles’ repeated promises, faithfulness always has a cost, which true Christians are willing to pay (contrast Matt. 13:20-21).

The second-century Christian leader Tertullian was once approached by a man who said, “I have come to Christ, but I don’t know what to do. I have a job that I don’t think is consistent with what Scripture teaches. What can I do? I must live.” To that Tertullian replied, “Must you?” Loyalty to Christ is the Christian’s only true choice. To be prepared for kingdom life is to be prepared for loneliness, misunderstanding, ridicule, rejection, and unfair treatment of every sort.

In the early days of the church the price paid was often the ultimate. To choose Christ might mean choosing death by stoning, by being covered with pitch and used as a human torch for Nero, or by being wrapped in animal skins and thrown to vicious hunting dogs. To choose Christ could mean torture by any number of excessively cruel and painful ways. That was the very thing Christ had in mind when He identified His followers as those willing to bear their crosses. That has no reference to mystical devotion, but is a call to be ready to die, if need be, for the cause of the Lord (see Matt. 10:35-39; 16:24-25).

In resentment against the gospel the Romans invented charges against Christians, such as accusing them of being cannibals because in the Lord’s Supper they spoke of eating Jesus’ body and drinking His blood. They accused them of having sexual orgies at their love feasts and even of setting fire to Rome. They branded believers as revolutionaries because they called Jesus Lord and King and spoke of God’s destroying the earth by fire.

By the end of the first century, Rome had expanded almost to the outer limits of the known world, and unity became more and more of a problem. Because only the emperor personified the entire empire, the caesars came to be deified, and their worship was demanded as a unifying and cohesive influence. It became compulsory to give a verbal oath of allegiance to caesar once a year, for which a person would be given a verifying certificate, called a libellus. After publicly proclaiming, “Caesar is Lord,” the person was free to worship any other gods he chose. Because faithful Christians refused to declare such an allegiance to anyone but Christ, they were considered traitors—for which they suffered confiscation of property, loss of work, imprisonment, and often death. One Roman poet spoke of them as “the panting, huddling flock whose only crime was Christ.”

In the last beatitude Jesus speaks of three specific types of affliction endured for Christ’s sake: physical persecution, verbal insult, and false accusation.

Physical Persecution

First, Jesus says, we can expect physical persecution. Have been persecuted (v. 10), persecute (v. 11), and persecuted (v. 12) are from diōkō, which has the basic meaning of chasing, driving away, or pursuing. From that meaning developed the connotations of physical persecution, harassment, abuse, and other unjust treatment.

All of the other beatitudes have to do with inner qualities, attitudes, and spiritual character. The eighth beatitude speaks of external things that happen to believers, but the teaching behind these results also has to do with attitude. The believer who has the qualities required in the previous beatitudes will also have the quality of willingness to face persecution for the sake of righteousness. He will have the attitude of self-sacrifice for the sake of Christ. It is the lack of fear and shame and the presence of courage and boldness that says, “I will be in this world what Christ would have me be. I will say in this world what Christ will have me say. Whatever it costs, I will be and say those things.”

The Greek verb is a passive perfect participle, and could be translated “allow themselves to be persecuted.” The perfect form indicates continuousness, in this case a continuous willingness to endure persecution if it is the price of godly living. This beatitude speaks of a constant attitude of accepting whatever faithfulness to Christ may bring.

It is in the demands of this beatitude that many Christians break down in their obedience to the Lord, because here is where the genuineness of their response to the other beatitudes is most strongly tested. It is here where we are most tempted to compromise the righteousness we have hungered and thirsted for. It is here where we find it convenient to lower God’s standards to accommodate the world and thereby avoid conflicts and problems that we know obedience will bring.

But God does not want His gospel altered under pretense of its being less demanding, less righteous, or less truthful than it is. He does not want witnesses who lead the unsaved into thinking that the Christ life costs nothing. A synthetic gospel, a man-made seed, produces no real fruit.

Verbal Insults

Second, Jesus promises that kingdom citizens are blessed… when men cast insults at them. Oneidizō carries the idea of reviling, upbraiding, or seriously insulting, and literally means to cast in one’s teeth. To cast insults is to throw abusive words in the face of an opponent, to mock viciously

To be an obedient citizen of the kingdom is to court verbal abuse and reviling. As He stood before the Sanhedrin after His arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus was spat upon, beaten, and taunted with the words “Prophesy to us, You Christ; who is the one who hit You?” (Matt. 26:67-68). As He was being sentenced to crucifixion by Pilate, Jesus was again beaten, spit upon, and mocked, this time by the Roman soldiers (Mark 15:19-20).

Faithfulness to Christ may even cause friends and loved ones to say things that cut and hurt deeply. Several years ago I received a letter from a woman who told of a friend who had decided to divorce her husband for no just cause. The friend was a professed Christian, but when she was confronted with the truth that what she was doing was scripturally wrong, she became defensive and hostile. She was reminded of God’s love and grace, of His power to mend whatever problems she and her husband were having, and of the Bible’s standards for marriage and divorce. But she replied that she did not believe the Bible was really God’s Word but was simply a collection of men’s ideas about God that each person had to accept, reject, or interpret for himself. When her friend wanted to read some specific Bible passages to her, she refused to listen. She had made up her mind and would not give heed to Scripture or to reason. With hate in her eyes she accused the other woman of luring her into her house in order to ridicule and embarrass her, saying she could not possibly love her by questioning her right to get a divorce. As she left, she slammed the door behind her.

The woman who wrote the letter concluded by saying, “I love her, and it is with a heavy heart that I realize the extent of her rejection of Christ. Painful as this has been, I thank God. For the first time in my life I know what it is to be separate from the world.”

Paul told the Corinthian church, whose members had such a difficult time separating themselves from the world, “For, I think, God has exhibited us apostles last of all, as men condemned to death; because we have become a spectacle to the world, both to angels and to men” (1 Cor. 4:9). Paul drew the expression “become a spectacle” from the practice of Roman generals to parade their captives through the street of the city, making a spectacle of them as trophies of war who were doomed to die once the general had used them to serve his proud and arrogant purposes. That is the way the world is inclined to treat those who are faithful to Christ.

In a note of strong sarcasm to enforce his point, Paul continues, “We are fools for Christ’s sake, but you are prudent in Christ; we are weak, but you are strong; you are distinguished, but we are without honor” (v. 10). Many in the Corinthian church suffered none of the ridicule and conflict the apostle suffered because they prized their standing before the world more than their standing before the Lord. In the world’s eyes they were prudent, strong, and distinguished—because they were still so much like the world.

God does not call His people to be sanctified celebrities, using their worldly reputations in a self-styled effort to bring Him glory, using their power to supplement His power and their wisdom to enhance His gospel. We can mark it down as a cardinal principle that to the extent the world embraces a Christian cause or person—or that a Christian cause or person embraces the world—to that extent that cause or person has compromised the gospel and scriptural standards.

If Paul had capitalized on his human credentials he could have drawn greater crowds and certainly have received greater welcome wherever he went. His credentials were impressive. “If anyone else has a mind to put confidence in the flesh, I far more,” he says. He was “circumcised the eighth day, of the nation of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews; as to the Law; a Pharisee” (Phil. 3:4-5). He had been “caught up to the third heaven,… into Paradise” (2 Cor. 12:2, 4) and had spoken in tongues more than anyone else (1 Cor. 14:18). He had studied under the famous rabbi Gamaliel and was even a free-born Roman citizen (Acts 22:3, 29). But all those things the apostle “counted as loss for the sake of Christ,… but rubbish in order that I may gain Christ” (Phil. 3:7-8). He refused to use worldly means to try to achieve spiritual purposes, because he knew they would fail.

The marks of authenticity Paul carried as an apostle and minister of Jesus Christ were his credentials as a servant and a sufferer, “in far more labors, in far more imprisonments, beaten times without number, often in danger of death. Five times I received from the Jews thirty-nine lashes. Three times I was beaten with rods, once I was stoned, three times I was shipwrecked, a night and a day I have spent in the deep. I have been on frequent journeys, in dangers from rivers, dangers from robbers, dangers from my countrymen, dangers from the Gentiles, dangers in the city, dangers in the wilderness, dangers on the sea, dangers among false brethren; I have been in labor and hardship, through many sleepless nights, in hunger and thirst, often without food, in cold and exposure” (2 Cor. 11:23-27).

The only thing of which he would boast was his weakness (12:5), and when he preached he was careful not to rely on “superiority of speech or of wisdom” (1 Cor. 2:1), which he could easily have done. “For I determined to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified,” he told the Corinthians. “And I was with you in weakness and in fear and in much trembling. And my message and my preaching were not in persuasive words of wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, that your faith should not rest on the wisdom of men, but on the power of God” (vv. 2-5).

We live in a day when the church, more than ever before, is engaged in self-glorification and an attempt to gain worldly recognition that must be repulsive to God. When the church tries to use the things of the world to do the work of heaven, it only succeeds in hiding heaven from the world. And when the world is pleased with the church, we can be sure that God is not. We can be equally sure that when we are pleasing to God, we will not be pleasing to the system of Satan.

False Accusation

Third, faithfulness to Christ will bring enemies of the gospel to say all kinds of evil against [us] falsely. Whereas insults are abusive words said to our faces, these evil things are primarily abusive words said behind our backs.

Jesus’ critics said of Him, “Behold, a gluttonous man and a drunkard, a friend of tax-gatherers and sinners” (Matt. 11:19). If the world said that of the sinless Christ, what things can His followers expect to be called and accused of?

Slander behind our backs is harder to take partly because it is harder to defend against than direct accusation. It has opportunity to spread and be believed before we have a chance to correct it. Much harm to our reputations can be done even before we are aware someone has slandered us.

We cannot help regretting slander, but we should not grieve about it. We should count ourselves blessed, as our Lord assures us we shall be when the slander is on account of Me.

Arthur Pink comments that “it is a strong proof of human depravity that men’s curses and Christ’s blessings should meet on the same persons” (An Exposition of the Sermon on the Mount Grand Rapids: Baker, 19501, p. 39). We have no surer evidence of the Lord’s blessing than to be cursed for His sake. It should not seriously bother us when men’s curses fall on the head that Christ has eternally blessed.

The central theme of the Beatitudes is righteousness. The first two have to do with recognizing our own unrighteousness, and the next five have to do with our seeking and reflecting righteousness. The last beatitude has to do with our suffering for the sake of righteousness. The same truth is expressed in the second part of the beatitude as on account of Me. Jesus is not speaking of every hardship, problem, or conflict believers may face, but those that the world brings on us because of our faithfulness to the Lord.

It is clear again that the hallmark of the blessed person is righteousness. Holy living is what provokes persecution of God’s people. Such persecution because of a righteous life is joyous. Peter identifies such experience as a happy honor.

And who is there to harm you if you prove zealous for what is good? But even if you should suffer for the sake of righteousness, you are blessed. And do not fear their intimidation, and do not be troubled, but sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts, always being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you, yet with gentleness and reverence; and keep a good conscience so that in the thing in which you are slandered, those who revile your good behavior in Christ maybe put to shame. For it is better, if God should will it so, that you suffer for doing what is right rather than for doing what is wrong. For Christ also died for sins once for all, the just for the unjust, in order that He might bring us to God, having been put to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit.” (1 Pet. 3:13-18)

With those words, the apostle extols the privilege of suffering for holiness, and thus of sharing in a small way in the same type of suffering Christ endured. In the next chapter, Peter emphasizes the same thing.

Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal among you, which comes upon you for your testing, as though some strange thing were happening to you; 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. If you are reviled for the name of Christ, you are blessed, because the Spirit of glory and of God rests upon you…. If anyone suffers as a Christian, let him not feel ashamed, but in that name let him glorify God…. Therefore, let those also who suffer according to the will of God entrust their souls to a faithful Creator in doing what is right.” (4:12-14, 16, 19)

When we are hated, maligned, or afflicted as Christians, the real animosity is not against us but against Christ. Satan’s great enemy is Christ, and he opposes us because we belong to Jesus Christ, because He is in us. When we are despised and attacked by the world, the real target is the righteousness for which we stand and which we exemplify. That is why it is easy to escape persecution. Whether under pagan Rome, atheistic Communism, or simply a worldly boss, it is usually easy to be accepted if we will denounce or compromise our beliefs and standards. The world will accept us if we are willing to put some distance between ourselves and the Lord’s righteousness.

In the closing days of His ministry Jesus repeatedly and plainly warned His disciples of that truth. “If the world hates you,” He said, “you know that it has hated Me before it hated you. If you were of the world, the world would love its own; but because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you. Remember the word that I said to you, ‘A slave is not greater than his master.’ If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you; if they kept My word, they will keep yours also. But all these things they will do to you for My name’s sake, because they do not know the One who sent Me” (John 15:18-21).

The world went along for thousands of years before it ever saw a perfect man. Until Christ came, every person, even God’s best, were sinful and flawed. All had feet of clay. To see God’s people fail and sin is often taken as an encouragement by the wicked. They point a finger and say, “He claims to be righteous and good, but look at what he did.” It is easy to feel smug and secure in one’s sinfulness when everyone else is also sinful and imperfect. But when Christ came, the world finally saw the perfect Man, and all excuse for smugness and self-confidence vanished. And instead of rejoicing in the sinless Man, sinful men resented the rebuke that His teaching and His life brought against them. They crucified Him for His very perfection, for His very righteousness.

Aristides the Just was banished from ancient Athens. When a stranger asked an Athenian why Aristides was voted out of citizenship he replied, “Because we became tired of his always being just.” A people who prided themselves in civility and justice chafed when something or someone was too just.

Because they refused to compromise the gospel either in their teaching or in their lives, most of the apostles suffered a martyr’s death. According to tradition, Andrew was fastened by cords to a cross in order to prolong and intensify his agony. We are told that Peter, by his own request, was crucified head down, because he felt unworthy to die in the same manner as Jesus. Paul presumably was beheaded by Nero. Though John escaped a violent death, he died in exile on Patmos.

The Promise

But compared to what is gained, even a martyr’s price is small. Each beatitude begins with blessed and, as already suggested, Jesus pronounces a double blessing on those who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness, which is for His own sake. The specific blessing promised to those who are so persecuted is that theirs is the kingdom of heaven. The citizens of the kingdom are going to inherit the kingdom. Paul expresses a similar thought in 2 Thessalonians 1:5-7—”This a plain indication of God’s righteous judgment so that you may be considered worthy of the kingdom of God, for which indeed you are suffering. For after all it is only just for God to repay with affliction those who afflict you, and to give relief to you who are afflicted and to us as well when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with His mighty angels in flaming fire.”

I believe that the blessings of the kingdom are threefold: present, millennial, and eternal. Jesus said, “Truly I say to you, there is no one who has left house or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children or farms, for My sake and for the gospel’s sake, but that he shall receive a hundred times as much now in the present age, houses and brothers and sisters and mothers and children and farms, along with persecutions; and in the age to come, eternal life” (Mark 10:29-30).

First, we are promised blessings here and now Joseph was sold into slavery by his brothers, was falsely accused by Potiphar’s wife, and was imprisoned. But the Lord raised him to be the prime minister of Egypt and used him to save His chosen people from starvation and extinction. Daniel was thrown into a den of lions because of his refusal to stop worshiping the Lord. Not only was his life spared, but he was restored to his high position as the most valued commissioner of King Darius, and the king made a declaration that “in all the dominion of my kingdom men are to fear and tremble before the God of Daniel; for He is the living God and enduring forever” (Dan. 6:26).

Not every believer is rewarded in this life with the things of this life. But every believer is rewarded in this life with the comfort, strength, and joy of His indwelling Lord. He is also blessed with the assurance that no service or sacrifice for the Lord will be in vain.

As a sequel to his book Peace Child, Don Richardson has written Lords of the Earth (Glendale, Calif.: Regal, 1977). He tells the story of Stan Dale, another missionary to Irian Jaya, Indonesia, who ministered to the Yali tribe in the Snow Mountains. The Yali had one of the strictest known religions in the world. For a tribe member even to question, much less disobey, one of its tenets brought instant death. There could never be any change or modification. The Yali had many sacred spots scattered throughout their territory. If even a small child were to crawl onto one of those sacred pieces of ground, he was considered defiled and cursed. To keep the whole village from being involved in that curse, the child would he thrown into the rushing Heluk River to drown and be washed downstream.

When Stan Dale came with his wile and four children to that cannibalistic people he was not long tolerated. He was attacked one night and miraculously survived being shot with five arrows. After treatment in a hospital he immediately returned to the Yali. He worked unsuccessfully for several years, and the resentment and hatred of the tribal priests increased. One day as he, another missionary named Phil Masters, and a Dani tribesman named Yemu were facing what they knew was an imminent attack, the Yali suddenly came upon them. As the others ran for safety, Stan and Yemu remained back, hoping somehow to dissuade the Yali from their murderous plans. As Stan confronted his attackers, they shot him with dozens of arrows. As the arrows entered his flesh he would pull them out and break them in two. Eventually he no longer had the strength to pull the arrows out, but he remained standing.

Yemu ran back to where Phil was standing, and Phil persuaded him to keep running. With his eyes fixed on Stan, who was still standing with some fifty arrows in his body, Phil remained where he was and was himself soon surrounded by warriors. The attack had begun with hilarity, but it turned to fear and desperation when they saw that Stan did not fall. Their fear increased when it took nearly as many arrows to down Phil as it had Stan. They dismembered the bodies and scattered them about the forest in an attempt to prevent the resurrection of which they had heard the missionaries speak. But the back of their “unbreakable” pagan system was broken, and through the witness of the two men who were not afraid to die in order to bring the gospel to this lost and violent people, the Yali tribe and many others in the surrounding territory came to Jesus Christ. Even Stan’s fifth child, a baby at the time of this incident, was saved reading the book about his father.

Stan and Phil were not rewarded in this life with the things of this life. But they seem to have been double-blessed with the comfort, strength, and joy of their indwelling Lord—and the absolute confidence that their sacrifice for Him would not be in vain.

There is also a millennial aspect to the kingdom blessing. When Christ establishes His thousand-year reign on earth, we will be co-regents with Him over that wonderful, renewed earth (Rev. 20:4).

Finally, there is the reward of the eternal kingdom, the blessing of all blessings of living forever in our Lord’s kingdom enjoying His very presence. The ultimate fruit of kingdom life is eternal life. Even if the world takes from us every possession, every freedom, every comfort, every satisfaction of physical life, it can take nothing from our spiritual life, either now or throughout eternity.

The Beatitudes begin and end with the promise of the kingdom of heaven (cf. v. 3). The major promise of the Beatitudes is that in Christ we become kingdom citizens now and forever. No matter what the world does to us, it cannot affect our possession of Christ’s kingdom.

The Posture

Rejoice, and be glad, for your reward in heaven is great, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you. (5:12)

The believer’s response to persecution and affliction should not be to retreat and hide. To escape from the world is to escape responsibility. Because we belong to Christ, we are no longer of this world, but He has sent us into this world to serve just as He Himself came into this world to serve (John 17:14-18).

His followers are “the salt of the earth” and the “light of the world” (Matt. 5:13-14). For our salt to flavor the earth and our light to lighten the world we must he active in the world. The gospel is not given to be hidden but to enlighten. “Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in heaven” (vv. 15-16).

When we become Christ’s salt and Christ’s light, our salt will sting the world’s open wounds of sin and our light will irritate its eyes that are used to darkness. But even when our salt and light are resented, rejected, and thrown back in our face, we should rejoice, and be glad.

Be glad is from agalliaō, which means to exult, to rejoice greatly, to be overjoyed, as is clear in the King James Version, “be exceeding glad.” The literal meaning is to skip and jump with happy excitement. Jesus uses the imperative mood, which makes His words more than a suggestion. We are commanded to be glad. Not to be glad when we suffer for Christ’s sake is to be untrusting and disobedient.

The world can take away a great deal from God’s people, but it cannot take away their joy and their happiness. We know that nothing the world can do to us is permanent. When people attack us for Christ’s sake, they are really attacking Him (cf. Gal. 6:17; Col. 1:24). And their attacks can do us no more permanent damage than they can do Him.

Jesus gives two reasons for our rejoicing and being glad when we are persecuted for His sake. First, He says, your reward in heaven is great. Our present life is no more than “a vapor that appears for a little while and then vanishes away” (James 4:14); but heaven is forever. Small wonder that Jesus tells us not to lay up treasures for ourselves here on earth, “where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves do not break in or steal” (Matt. 6:19-20). Whatever we do for the Lord now including suffering for Him—in fact, especially suffering for Him—reaps eternal dividends.

God’s dividends are not ordinary dividends. They are not only eternal but are also great. If God “is able to do exceedingly abundantly beyond all that we ask or think” (Eph. 3:20), how much more abundantly is He able to grant what He Himself promises to us?

We often hear, and perhaps are tempted to think, that it is unspiritual and crass to serve God for the sake of rewards. But that is one of the motives that God Himself gives for serving Him. We first of all serve and obey Christ because we love Him, just as on earth He loved and obeyed the Father because He loved Him. But it was also because of “the joy set before Him” that Christ Himself “endured the cross, despising the shame” (Heb. 12:2). It is neither selfish nor unspiritual to do the Lord’s work for a motive that He Himself gives and has followed.

Second, we are to rejoice because the world persecuted the prophets who were before us in the same way that it persecutes us. When we suffer for Christ’s sake, we are in the best possible company. To be afflicted for righteousness’s sake is to stand in the ranks of the prophets. Persecution is a mark of our faithfulness just as it was a mark of the prophets’ faithfulness. When we suffer for Christ’s sake we know beyond a doubt that we belong to God, because we are experiencing the same reaction from the world that the prophets experienced.

When we suffer for our Lord we join with the prophets and the other saints of old who “experienced mockings and scourgings, yes, also chains and imprisonment. They were stoned, they were sawn in two, they were tempted, they were put to death with the sword; they went about in sheepskins, in goatskins, being destitute, afflicted, ill-treated (men of whom the world was not worthy), wandering in deserts and mountains and caves and holes in the ground” (Heb. 11:36-38). Though the world is not worthy of their company, every persecuted believer is. To be persecuted verifies that we belong to the line of the righteous.

Our assurance of salvation does not come from knowing we made a decision somewhere in the past. Rather, our assurance that the decision was a true decision for Jesus Christ is found in the life of righteousness that results in suffering for the sake of Christ. Many will claim to have preached Christ, cast out demons, and done mighty works for His sake, but will be refused heaven (Matt. 7:21-23). But none who have suffered righteously for Him will be left out.

The world cannot handle the righteous life that characterizes kingdom living. It is not understandable and acceptable to them, and they cannot stomach it even in others. Poverty of spirit runs counter to the pride of the unbelieving heart. The repentant, contrite disposition that mourns over sin is never appreciated by the callous, indifferent, unsympathetic world. The meek and quiet spirit that takes wrong and does not strike back is regarded as pusillanimous, and it rasps against the militant, vengeful spirit characteristic of the world. To long after righteousness is repugnant to those whose fleshly cravings are rebuked by it, as is a merciful spirit to those whose hearts are hard and cruel. Purity of heart is a painful light that exposes hypocrisy and corruption, and peacemaking is a virtue praised by the contentious, self-seeking world in words but not in heart.

John Chrysostom, a godly leader in the fourth-century church preached so strongly against sin that he offended the unscrupulous Empress Eudoxia as well as many church officials. When summoned before Emperor Arcadius, Chrysostom was threatened with banishment if he did not cease his uncompromising preaching. His response was, “Sire, you cannot banish me, for the world is my Father’s house.” “Then I will slay you,” Arcadius said. “Nay, but you cannot, for my life is hid with Christ in God,” came the answer. “Your treasures will be confiscated” was the next threat, to which John replied, “Sire, that cannot be, either. My treasures are in heaven, where none can break through and steal.” “Then I will drive you from man, and you will have no friends left!” was the final, desperate warning. “That you cannot do, either,” answered John, “for I have a Friend in heaven who has said, I will never leave you or forsake you.'” Chrysostom was indeed banished, first to Armenia and then farther away to Pityus on the Black Sea, to which he never arrived because he died on the way. But neither his banishment nor his death disproved or diminished his claims. The things that he valued most highly not even an emperor could take from him.

www.RidgeFellowship.com
Source: MacArthur New Testament Commentary, Matthew 1-7.

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MY RESPONSE TO PERSECUTION – Happy & Persecuted Part 2

Happy Ridge

It is interesting that the first seven beatitudes only use the word “blessed or happy” once. The eighth beatitude mentions it twice (v.10,11). It is as though Jesus is saying, “You are doubly blessed if you are persecuted.”  Jesus used two words to describe this direct attack in verse 11: insult and persecute. Insult is to make fun of”. When you are living your life for Christ the world will mock your faith, mock the institutions of the Church, belittle those things that we believe in order to shame us into submission. You see this mockery every time you see some wild-eyed madman on television set forward as an example of Christianity. Jesus was insulted, He was taunted. The people who saw Him said “Isn’t this just the son of the carpenter?”, “Isn’t He just a poor man?” (Mark 6.3). When the early Romans heard about the Lord’s Supper that the Christians  participated in, they mocked this custom by proclaiming that Christians were no more than cannibals who “ate of a man’s flesh and drank of his blood“. Satan wants us to cringe under these attacks, to hide our heads, to disassociate ourselves from Christianity and the Church.

  1. Recognize I’m in good company.

“This is how the prophets who lived before you were persecuted.” (vs. 12b)

“If the world hates you, just remember that it has hated me first. If you belonged to the world, then the world would love you as its own. But I chose you from this world, and you do not belong to it; that is why the world hates you.”   John 15:18-25

When we are persecuted, we are in good company. We join a long line of godly men and women.  Jesus and the writer of Hebrews remind us of these. In the great hall of faith chapter the writer tells us of those who have walked by faith down through the centuries who “experienced hardship. If we are persecuted today we belong to a noble succession of believers.   Dietrich Bonhoeffer put it eloquently, “Suffering, then is the badge of true discipleship. The disciple is not above his master. . . Discipleship means allegiance to the suffering Christ, and it is not at all surprising that Christians should be called upon to suffer. In fact, it is a joy and a token of His grace” (The Cost of Discipleship, p. 81)

  1.   Realize God is allowing the persecution.

So then, those who suffer because it is God’s will for them, should by their good             actions trust themselves completely to their Creator, who always keeps his promise.”  1 Peter 4:19

Now, we must realize that the persecution of Christians is not accidental. Persecution is because God is allowing it. In Acts 14 we read how Paul had been stoned and left for dead in Lystra. After preaching to people in other cities, he returned to Lystra, Iconium and Antioch. In verse 22 we read that he declared to the believers there, “We must go through many hardships to enter the kingdom of God.” Persecution is a must!

1 Thessalonians 3:3 Paul says he was sending Timothy to strengthen and encourage the Thessalonians “that no one would be unsettled by these trials” and then Paul added, “You know quite well that we were destined for them.” This is divine ordination.

“For you have been given the privilege of serving Christ, not only by believing in him, but also by suffering for him.” Acts 5:41

God gives us grace to endure persecution. That is what “For you have been given.”  Praise be to God for giving us such grace! Then everything is all right, isn’t that true? “It has been granted to you on behalf of Christ not only to believe on him but also to suffer for him since you are going through the same struggle you saw I had and now hear that I still have.” In other words, when God saves us, he gives us grace not only to trust in Jesus Christ but also to endure persecution. We should praise the Lord for his provision. He is not asking us to suffer persecution in our own strength. He is giving us grace to endure.

  1. Refuse to retaliate

“If someone does evil to you, don’t pay him back with evil . . . Never take revenge let God’s wrath do it.”  Rom. 12:17 + 19

Jesus, in v. 11, lists three different kinds of verbal harassment.  He says there are insults — when people try to dishonor you or discredit you or say derogatory things about you.  There is persecution — mistreatment.  Then He says, they will tell lies — deceit and deception.  The world loves to find fault with Christians.  If a pastor stole some money or ran off with some other man’s wife would it be in the news in the morning?  If the bartender down the street did it, would it be in the news?  The world loves to find fault with believers.  If they can’t find any fault — if you walk blamelessly, with integrity ‑- they’ll just make something up.  They will insult you.  They will mistreat you.  And they’ll make up lies about you.  They are going to attack Christians.

In the Bible Jesus was accused of being a drunk.  They said He’s a glutton and a wine bibber.  That means He was a party animal! But Jesus never reviled back.  He refused to retaliate.

It’s so hard for us to understand because we speak of our rights and of fairness to me.  But for a believer we are to “deny ourselves” We have been crucified with Christ.  One of my Seminary Professors used to say, we are corpses in Christ and a corpse doesn’t have rights.  Christ wants us to see the rights of others more than our own.  If Jesus were more interested in rights, rather than service wouldn’t He have said, “Bust em in the chops and tell to pack their own bags the first & second mile. I got my rights so back off!”

John Selwyn, a great missionary to the South Pacific, had at one time been recognized for his boxing skill. Touched by the Holy Spirit’s convicting power, however, he later became a missionary. A Methodist magazine reports that one day this saintly leader reluctantly gave a stern but loving rebuke to a man who regularly attended the local church. The disorderly one resented the advice and angrily struck Selwyn a blow in the face with his fist. In return the missionary merely folded his arms and humbly looked into the man’s eyes. With his boxing skill and powerful muscles, he could easily have knocked out his antagonist. Instead, he turned the other cheek and waited calmly to be hit a second time. The assailant became ashamed and fled to the jungle.

Years afterward, the man accepted the Lord as his Savior and gave his testimony before the church. It was customary at that time for a believer to choose a Christian name for himself after he was saved. When asked if he wished to follow this practice, he replied without hesitation, “Yes, call me John Selwyn! He’s the one who taught me what Jesus Christ is really like!”

  1. Respond positively

Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.”  Rom 12:21

Is that your normal reaction when you’re put down?  But you never get ahead by trying to get even.  If you’re always trying to get even you never get ahead.

When Niki was growing up she says her younger brother Chad teased & pestered her all the time. Once she burned him with her curling iron; she learned a secret that once she started reacting to him, he was in control. That’s true with any situation.  Once you start reacting, who’s in control?  The person who is taking the initiative.  So how do you respond positively? You take the initiative to do good.

Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.”  Matt. 5:44

Is that easy?  No.  Unusual?  Yes.  Is that what God says to do?  Yes.  He says, “Don’t react; respond positively.”  When people put you down, you build them up.  When people hassle you, you just be nice to them.  You do not retaliate.  The moment you start retaliating, they are in control.  One of the greatest principles of life that you need to learn is, You have control of your reaction.  You cannot control the things that happen to you, you cannot control the things that people say about you.  You cannot control the events, the persecutions, the hassles you’ll get.  But you can control how you choose to react.  You can control how you choose to respond.

Respond positively.  Love them.  Pray for them.  Pray for their good.  Pray for God’s will in their lives.

  1. Rely on Jesus’ Presence

You will not endure persecution alone. There is divine guarantee given in the Holy Scripture that the presence of God will be with you from beginning to end. In Isaiah 43:2-3 we read, “When you pass through the water or flames, I will be with you.” God will be with you when you go through waters and fire.

Do you remember the story of the three Hebrew children who were thrown into the fire by the Babylonians? Afterwards, King Nebuchadnezzar looked into the furnace and realized there was a problem. What did he say? “Weren’t there three men that we tied up and threw into the fire? . . . I see four men. . . and the fourth looks like a son of the gods.” You see, that is the presence of God. God is with us, brothers and sisters, in our afflictions, in our troubles, in our trials, in our waters, and in our fire. In Matthew 28:20 Jesus promised:  

I will be with you always, to the end of the age.” Matthew 28:20

  1. Remain Happy

“Be glad and happy . . .!”  (vs 12a)

Quite a statement, isn’t it?  It should be obvious that Jesus was not implying that persecution itself makes us happy. Persecution is difficult. It is hard. Persecution hurts. Jesus obviously was not saying that we should rejoice because of the persecution. Rather, its WHAT THE PERSECUTION REPRESENTS.

Be Glad” You see, there are different levels of gladness. If you receive a phone call from someone announcing that you have won a hundred dollars, you might look over at your spouse and with a smile say, “Honey, I’ve got some good news. We’ve just won a hundred dollars. I’m glad, aren’t you?” But if the phone rang again, and the person said that there had been a mistake – that instead of winning a hundred dollars, you had won a hundred million tax free dollars – what would you do? Well!!! This would call for an entirely new level of gladness, don’t you think? Instead of looking over at your partner with a smile, you might well leap to your feet – even leap around the room a few times. Your spouse may have to tackle you in order to find out why you are so excited. You see, there are different levels of gladness. The word “glad” comes from a Greek word which means leap for joy. It is the joy of the one who landed on the moon, or the joy of a mountain climber who finally reached the top of Mount Everest. Such a person truly leaps for joy!  Why?  He’s accomplished something significant!  When you are persecuted for being a Christian you have accomplished something.  You have arrived.

and Be Happy” What a person does when he hears good news. You get a raise, your physical turned out okay, you closed on your new home, you passed the final exam, etc… When a person faces persecution, he should accept it like good news because he is on the right track!

How, then, should we react to persecution? Jesus told us to “Be glad & happy.” Why did he say that? Because, according to Jesus, when we are persecuted for righteousness, we are blessed. The Jews believed that if people were suffering and persecuted, it was because they were wicked and God was cursing and punishing them. But now Jesus was reversing that idea and teaching that if a person was really being persecuted for righteousness’ sake, that demonstrated God’s acceptance of that person and blessing on him. It was proof that a person was righteous.

So Jesus said, “Be glad.”

  1. REASON S TO BE HAPPY WHEN PERSECUTED
  • I have a reward coming

“Be happy and glad, for a great reward is kept for you in heaven.” (vs. 12)

“Since we are God’s children . . . if we share Christ’s suffering, we will also share in his glory.”  Romans 8:17

  • It means God’s Spirit Can be Seen in My Life

“If you are insulted because of Christ, you are blessed, . . . for God’s Spirit rests on you.”  1 Peter 4:14

  • It means God Trusts Me

” As the apostles left the Council, they were happy, because God had considered them worthy to suffer disgrace for the sake of Jesus.”  Acts 5:41

The Bible says that they were considered worthy to suffer disgrace.  They can be a good witness even in suffering.  Its one thing to represent Christ when everything is going well, but what about when it’s bad?

  • It means I am growing spiritually

Be glad about this, even though it may now be necessary for you to be sad for a while because of the many kinds of trials you suffer. Their purpose is to prove that your faith is genuine. Even gold, which can be destroyed, is tested by fire; and so your faith, which is much more precious than gold, must also be tested, so that it may endure. Then you will receive praise and glory and honor on the Day when Jesus Christ is revealed.”  1 Peter 1:6-7

In other words, persecution purifies our faith. Persecution separates the authentic from the inauthentic and the genuine from the false and the imitation.

What else does persecution do for a believer? In Romans 5:3 we read, “Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character. . .” and so on. Tribulation is productive of Christian character, not destructive of it.  In divine order, persecution brings us to maturity.

If you’ve read anything about the church in Russia you’ll know that the Christians there pray for the Christians in America.  They say that the persecution has made them stronger believers.  Christianity is like a nail, the harder you drive it the deeper it goes into the wood.  There’s tremendous growth in Korea.  The largest churches are in Korea.  The Korean church was built on the blood of martyrs.    In China Christianity is growing because of persecution.   The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.

  • It is only temporary

” And this small and temporary trouble we suffer will bring us a tremendous and eternal glory, much greater than the trouble.”  2 Corinthians 4:1

Darrell

www.RidgeFellowship.com

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Happy and Persecuted Part 1

Happy Ridge

“Happy are those who are persecuted because they do what God requires; the Kingdom of heaven belongs to them!  Matthew 5:10   *MEMORY VERSE

 “Happy are you when people insult you and persecute you and tell all kinds of evil lies against you because you are my followers. Be happy and glad, for a great reward is kept for you in heaven. This is how the prophets who lived before you were persecuted.” Matthew 5:11-12

A Texan billionaire with a beautiful, 22 year old daughter, was fond of holding parties around his deep, opulent swimming pool. In the pool he kept a vicious 20 foot great-white shark. Every party night he would issue a challenge to all the young men present: “Half my fortune, or my daughter’s hand in marriage to the man who swims across this pool!”
Of course he could never get a challenger. Then one night, immediately the challenge was issued, a tall, muscular hunk hit the water. With arms churning he charged across the pool like a speed-boat. In a wink the shark sped after him closing in fast. The hunk reached the other side whipping out of the water just as the shark smashed into the concrete.
The pool guests screamed and applauded the incredible hero. “Bravo! Fantastic!” cried the Texan, “That’s the greatest act of courage I’ve ever seen. Half my fortune is yours!”
“I don’t want your fortune”, replied the hunk quietly.
With tears of pride in his eyes the Texan looking at his daughter who nodded excitedly, said, “I’d be so proud to call you son, you can have my daughter’s hand in marriage.”
“I don’t want your daughter either”, he replied.
“Well”, quizzed the Texan, “you don’t want my money or my daughter. What do you want?”
The hunk hissed through clenched teeth, “Just get me the name of the guy who pushed me into the pool.”

Today we’re looking at persecution.  Jesus said the “persecuted” are happy or blessed. The word “persecuted” means to pursue with hostile intent; thus, ridiculed, denounced, ill–treated, injured, threatened with death, inflict injury upon you. It is the imagery of being hunted down like an animal and killing it.

Why should we study persecution?  Persecution Is Part of Christianity If you live in the United States, you may think that the idea of persecution of Christians is not very relevant today. Why? We are not experiencing any real persecution here. But a little book by Nina Shea, In the Lion’s Den , published by Broadman and Holman, gives evidence that more Christians around the world have been martyred for their faith in the last one hundred years than in the combined previous nineteen centuries of the church’s history. In many countries today it is a crime to be a Christian.

We must study persecution because it is a part of Christianity. True Christians have been persecuted throughout the history of the church.

You know it’s going to be a bad day when:

  • You jump out of bed in the morning and you miss the floor.
  • You put both contact lenses into the same eye.
  • Your horn goes off accidentally and remains stuck as you follow a group of Hell’s Angels on the freeway.
  • You call suicide prevention and they put you on hold.
  • You know your going to get harassed for being a Christian. 
  1. PERSECUTION IS INEVITABLE

“ . . . when people insult you . . .”  (vs 11a)

That is the truth and there is no question or doubt about it. Jesus did not express this in terms of maybe. Persecution is real.  Persecution is for all believers. All believers will not be in a constant state of persecution, but it will eventually come to all of us. Therefore we should not be surprised.

“Everyone who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted.”  2 Tim 3:12    That is a guarantee of persecution.

Jesus is specific as to the cause of persecution.  Let us consider, however, what Jesus does say and what He doesn’t say. People will suffer for doing evil things, but such suffering is punishment, not persecution. Jesus is not saying that people in general will receive a blessing because they are persecuted for whatever cause.  He doesn’t say that we will be blessed if we are persecuted because we are obnoxious human beings. No, if you are persecuted because you are being obnoxious, you deserve it. I am sure you have known people like that. We would probably agree that they need a little persecution in order to straighten them out.

He is also not saying that we will be blessed if we are persecuted because we stand for a just cause. Standing for a just cause is not necessarily standing for Christ. And we must make this distinction. In fact, some people have almost try for martyrdom for the sake of their cause. They have seen it as a way to bring attention and notoriety to their cause. So, they have done things in order to be persecuted. This is not what Jesus is talking about.

Finally, He is not talking about our being persecuted for being good. We may be good, or noble, or self-sacrificing and not be righteous. As a matter of fact, the world generally praises good and noble and self-sacrificing people. In fact, they’re generally thought of as fine individuals. But the fact that the world praises them should perhaps raise a flag of warning to us. This is not what Jesus is talking about.

What is He talking about? When He talks about “because you are my followers, what does He mean? It means being like the Lord Jesus Christ.

If you are not being persecuted, you must ask, “Why?” And what is the answer? You are not living a godly life.  If you don’t experience persecution it is probably because the world doesn’t realize that you are a Christian. Even when you tell them that you are a Christian, your life proves it doesn’t make much difference.

**In the book, The Triumphant Church, Richard Wurmbrand recounts the last Sunday School class he taught before leaving Romania. He writes: “I remember my last Sunday School class…I took a group of ten to fifteen boys and girls on a Sunday morning, not to a church, but to the zoo. Before the cage of lions I told them, ‘Your forefathers in faith were thrown before such wild beasts for their faith. Know that you also will have to suffer. You will not be thrown before lions, but you will have to suffer at the hands of men who would be much worse than lions. Decide here and now whether you wish to pledge allegiance to Christ’” (p.15).

If that were you what would you have done? Would you have brushed it off and treated it lightly or would you have considered the cost?

 

  1. PERSECUTION IS BECAUSE OF JESUS

“ . . . because you are my followers”  (vs. 11b)

“No servant is greater than his master.  If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also.”  John 15:20

Why is the gospel offensive to some? Because of Jesus Christ. In John 3:20 Jesus said, “Everyone who does evil hates the light,” and in John 7:7 he declared, “The world . . . hates me because I testify that what it does is evil.”

The idea there is that if the master is hated, the servants of the master will also be hated. He then said that the world hates him without reason, which is what persecution for righteousness’ sake is. The world hated Jesus because he was light, righteousness, and holiness. They hated him because he revealed the wickedness of the people of the world. They hated him because he exposed their evil.

The persecution Jesus speaks of is when two irreconcilable value systems collide. When that occurs those who choose to stand on the truth of God’s Word can count on persecution.

**A Christian man accepted a new job among very profane men. He we very anxious and fearful about how he would be received. When he came home from the first day on the job, his wife asked how it had been. He replied, “Wonderful! They never knew that I was a Christian.” You’ll get long fine with unbelievers as long as you live like an unbeliever.

We must always keep in mind that sinners are enemies of God. In fact, sin at its heart is enmity against the true God. So if God is hated by the world, then Jesus will also be hated, because Jesus is God–very God and very man. And if Jesus is hated by the world, all his followers will also be hated by the world.

If you believe that Jesus Christ is the only Savior—the God man–you will be persecuted. Now, you will not experience persecution if you believe that Jesus is a savior along with many other saviors. You will not be persecuted if you say that Jesus is a god or a prophet among other gods and prophets. There won’t be any problem at all if you say these things. In fact, people will say you are a very nice person. But when you believe that Jesus alone is God and the only Savior, you will experience trouble. And especially if you believe this in certain countries in the world today, you will be persecuted. Read about it in The Lion’s Den.

What if you believe that our ultimate loyalty is due to Jesus Christ, the Sovereign Lord of the universe, and not to any other guru or Caesar in the whole world? You will be persecuted.

What if you believe that and declare that the Bible is the truth? No one will persecute you if you Believe multiculturalism or multi-religious ideas. But the moment you believe the in the truth of God’s word the Bible and not in other religious books, you will be persecuted.

What should we do? I say, go ahead and Believe on these things.  Tell people that Jesus is the way.  But be ready for misunderstanding, anger and persecution.

A number of years ago Bob Dylan wrote a song in which he was watching the verbal persecution of a Christian man take place:

Go ahead and talk about him because he makes you doubt,
Because he’s denied himself things that you can’t do without,
Because he can’t be exploited by superstition anymore,
Because he can’t be bribed or bought by things that you adore.
He’s the property of Jesus, resent him to the bone.
You’ve got something better—you’ve got a heart of stone.
When the whip that’s keeping you in line doesn’t make him jump,
Say he’s hard of hearing, say that he’s a chump.
Say he’s out of step with reality as you try to test his nerve.
Because he doesn’t pay tribute to the sovereign that you serve.
He’s the property of Jesus, resent him to the bone.
You’ve got something better—you’ve got a heart of stone.

In the next post, we’ll look at “My Response to Persecution”

Darrell

www.RidgeFellowship.com

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