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The following message was given
at Grace Community Church in Minden, Nevada. Turn to the text for this afternoon,
which is 1 Peter 1, 3-9. Is that still correct, Matt? Okay. You're about to hear the living
and abiding Word of God. Blessed be the God and Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to his great mercy
has caused us to be born again unto a living hope through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. To obtain an inheritance
which is imperishable and undefiled and will not fade away, reserved
in heaven for you, who are protected by the power of God through faith
for salvation, ready to be revealed in the last time. In this, you
greatly rejoice, even though now for a little while, if necessary,
you've been distressed by various trials, so that the proof of
your faith, being more precious than gold, which is perishable,
even though tested by fire, may be found to result in praise
and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ. And though you
do not see him, You love him, and though you do not see him
now, you believe in him. You greatly rejoice with joy
inexpressible, full of glory, obtaining as the outcome of your
faith the salvation of your souls. The grass withers and the flower
fades, but the word of our God abides forever. Amen. You may be seated. Let's pray
together. Father, truly, you have blessed
us and taken care of us in so many ways. We have countless
reasons to bless and praise you, our great God. And Father, we
know that the greatest blessing of all is that you've given us
nothing less than your only son, and that in him, We have redemption
through his blood, the forgiveness of our sins. Father, what an invaluable gift. And Father, we thank you for
your holy word and we pray for our brother as he comes this
afternoon to open that word to us. We pray that you would give
us open hearts. And Father, we continue to pray
for those who are grieving, those who are suffering, And Lord Chief,
among them right now, Walter and Sarah, and we pray that you
would uphold them in ways that go beyond anything they could
ever explain. May they say, the nearness of
our God is our good. And so, Father, we thank you.
We thank you for our brother, Matt. We now pray that you would
bless his labors among us in Jesus' name. Amen. All right,
well, unfortunately, I was not here Wednesday night to hear
one of my, and I say this just in keeping with the spirit of
the sermon, you are my favorite missionary. You're the best,
all right? So I heard Matt, I forget when you
guys were here last. 2018, so it's been a little while. It was so moving, and so I'm
so sorry that I missed Wednesday. But Matt and Nuria and their
two boys, hold on a second. Don't tell me, okay? Mark and
Alex, it's a pleasure to have you guys with us. And Matt does
all kinds of stuff. You heard it Wednesday night.
If you don't do any of this stuff anymore, just let me know that
I'm wrong. So you guys are missionaries in Spain. Matt is a teacher at
a seminary. You teach New Testament, right?
And Matt does a Spanish version that's similar to Daily Dose
of Greek. Do you still do that? Not anymore. Forget that. And
church planting or pastoring, right? And what else? You, so writing in Spanish? Yeah, so very good. Well, we're
delighted to have you with us. And the message will be in Spanish,
but as you guys saw on Sunday school, many of us received the
gift of interpretation. All right, so Matt, come on up. Good afternoon. So while we're
saying nice things to each other, I should say, Brian, you are
my favorite pastor in Minden. And maybe a few other preliminary
remarks. I was wondering about the pulpit
dress code here at Grace, and so I asked a really trusted member
of the congregation who I will not name, I asked if I should
wear my sport coat. And she said that Pastor Brian
starts with it and takes it off when he gets hot. Now I remember,
I've heard Brian preach three times, twice at fire and once
here. And you take your sport coat off when you're starting
to get serious. Well, I'm gonna get serious from the very beginning,
so I didn't even put my sport coat on. In all seriousness, we are thrilled
to be here with you these days. Brian's already introduced the
part of my family that's here with me. We have three older
children that are in Mississippi and Colorado working summer jobs,
so they're not here with us. But it's been a joy. We've only
been here for a few days, but Wednesday night was sweet. It
was great to arrive, and I saw this spread of not only Spanish
food prepared, but Catalan food. Where we live in Barcelona, the
northeast region of Spain, that's called Catalunya. And my wife
and my children's first language is not Spanish, it's Catalan.
And so it was really neat to see that somebody else who will
not be named, who is in here, I just saw her, okay, anyway,
over there, looked up online how to prepare these little Catalan
finger foods. And so I got to eat some Catalan
food before the prayer meeting, had a really sweet time. One
of the things that really encouraged me was that I got questions before
and after my presentation, thoughtful questions that reveal that people
here actually read our prayer letters. And in all seriousness,
I'm really grateful for that. One of my best friends back in
Colorado, who's been supporting our ministry for decades, we
were on home assignment five or six years ago, 2018, in fact,
the last time we were here, and went to his house for dinner,
and he comes up to me and he says, hey brother, good to see
you, and remind me again exactly what you're doing in Spain. Somebody's
not reading our prayer letters. But you do, and you asked even
about specific details about our youngest who's had some health
challenges this year, and my heart was warmed. Just so thankful
that you're paying attention to our ministry, that you're
praying for us. You've supported us generously
as a family, supported us generously also in the seminary, and we
are so thankful to be here today. with you. So Brian has already
read our text. We'll come back to it. It's a
really dense text. It's a really rich text, so we're
gonna work through it. I was told that I have like an
hour and a half. Yeah, that was less funny, wasn't it? Yeah. We'll go through it slowly. I'll
warn you that we're gonna start, we're gonna be in verse three
and four kind of for a long time, and it's gonna look like the
sermon might last an hour and a half. It won't. I promise we'll
speed up as we get a little farther into it. But I wanna begin by
thinking a little bit about insurance. So my guess is that many, if
not all of you have insurance, and perhaps different kinds of
insurance. You know, you can insure just
about anything today, not just your house and your car, If you're
so inclined, you can insure your pets. You can insure body parts. Do you know that some NFL quarterbacks
insure their throwing arms? True story. You can also insure
your mustache. I might be tempted to do that
if I could grow a good one, but I can't. So, why do people have
insurance? Well, insurance is designed to
protect us. Insurance provides a certain
guarantee of our well-being amid setbacks and problems that we
suffer in our lives. So you can think about your car
insurance for a minute. I'll tell you a story about my
father-in-law. So my father-in-law is a real character. And he's
got a car. He's got a nice car. He's got
this Range Rover SUV. I think it's called the Evoque
model, if you're familiar with that. He loves it. So it's always
polished. He's always got it clean. He's
taking care of it. And it's just a prized possession
for him. Well, one day, it was somebody's birthday at our house.
I don't remember who it was, but my father-in-law was up,
my mother-in-law, grandma, grandpa, of course, and after dinner,
he left early. I don't remember why, but he
wasn't out of the house 60 seconds, and we heard the screeching of
tires, and bam, a big crash out in the street, right in front
of our house. And sure enough, it was dark out, and my father-in-law
didn't see the oncoming traffic. He pulled right out in front
of somebody. Boom, he had a big accident. In his prized, Range
Rover SUV. And so we went out, and the first
thing we wanted to make sure of is that nobody was hurt, and
we saw that everybody was okay. And I went to talk to my father-in-law,
and I thought he would just be crushed, because he loves his
car. And he was remarkably calm. And I remember what he said to
me. He said, it's okay, the insurance will pay for it. It took months, supply chain
problems and getting doors from Great Britain to Spain is not
easy for some reason. But that peace and that calm
that he had was based on this guarantee that came from his
insurance policy that in the end his car was going to be okay. Now, wouldn't it be great if
we could all have an insurance policy that would guarantee happiness
in our lives? Wouldn't that be wonderful? I'd
be happy to be an insurance salesman if such a policy existed. How
would a policy like that work? What would its terms be? Well,
it would have to guarantee your health and your job and a happy
family and pretty much a constant flow of pleasant experiences
in your life. Obviously, no such policy exists. But I can talk to you this morning
about another guarantee that's even better. It's not an insurance
policy, but it's a promise. And it's a promise that if we
trust in it, we can experience in this life, in the midst of
suffering, true joy and true peace. So Brian's already read
our passage, 1 Peter 1, verses three through nine. Let's dive
into that. Peter starts off the letter by worshiping God. Right
there in verse three, first part of it. Blessed be the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. So Peter sits down to write,
to his readers and it's like he can't help but just start
off worshiping, it's spontaneous. But it's interesting because
he goes on to give his readers a reason why they should worship
God too. So have you ever wondered why
when you come to church service, one of the first things that
happens in the service is that somebody gets up and reads a
passage from the Bible, call it a call to worship. Is that
our cue to sit down and be quiet? Is that why that happens? No,
the thing is that a lot of us are dull and slow. I'll be really
honest, there's a lot of Sundays where I show up to church and
I'm not just gung-ho to start worshiping God. Worship and praise
don't flow out of me spontaneously like they ought to. And I need
to hear that passage at the beginning of the service to remind me of
some of the reasons that I have to be happy in God. And that's
precisely what Peter is doing here. He's reminding his readers
of one really important reason that they have to be happy in
God and to worship Him. So why does Peter think his readers
should worship God? Why should we worship God? Peter
says that God gives us a living hope. That's also there in verse
three. A living hope. Now that word
hope, we use that a lot of times in ways different than how it's
used in the Bible. So we say things like, I hope
I get a new job. I hope I pass my test. I had
to ask this morning in day spring, what NFL football team do you
root for if you live in Reno, Carson City, or Minden? And I
was told the 49ers, amen? Okay, I hope the 49ers, oh, there's
a strong no here. Another option, the Raiders,
ooh. Ooh, no. Okay, all right, get
back to the sermon. I'm hoping the 49ers win the
Super Bowl. You get what I'm trying to say.
We use the word hope to talk about desires. And it's not a
bad thing. Some of those desires are very
good. But here, when Peter uses the word hope, he's not talking
merely about a desire or about wishful thinking. He's talking
about assurance. He's talking about a firm confidence. And it's a confidence that's
based in a reality. And he's gonna tell his readers
what the reality is in the very next verse. So in verse four,
Peter says, verse three, you have this sure hope. The hope
is in verse four, an inheritance, an inheritance. So an inheritance
is just a family gift. You imagine a young man who grows
up in a really wealthy family, and he could be a deadbeat, but
when his parents pass, he stands to inherit a lot of money. And
he maybe didn't do anything for that money. I mean, he didn't
choose to be born into that family. He didn't work to help amass
the family fortune. Yet, because he is part of the
family, he receives an inheritance. It's a family gift. So it's great
how God speaks to us. He uses our language so that
we can understand what he wants to say to us. And inheritance,
here, means something very similar. It's a family gift. And it really,
throughout the Bible, God's good gifts are oftentimes described
as an inheritance. So the inheritance in the Old
Testament, what is it? The land, yeah. So there in Judges 14,
the word inheritance is used to describe the land. And it
fits because Israel didn't do anything to earn the land. In
fact, God told him, you're no better than the nations around
you. But he decided to adopt Israel as his son He willingly
chose to be their father, and they received the land as an
inheritance. It was a family gift. We as Christians
receive an inheritance as well. It's not the land, is it? Might
have been nice to have a little plot of land in the Mediterranean
where I could sit under my fig tree and enjoy peace and prosperity,
1 Kings 4. That's biblical, eh? That didn't
last for very long. We'll talk about that in just
a second. But the Christian inheritance is better. Peter says that our
inheritance is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading. That's there in verse four. Now
I think he uses the word undefiled on purpose. Because if you think
about the land as an inheritance in the Old Testament, the land
could be defiled. In fact, God told the people
in Numbers, he said, don't defile the land. And what did they do?
By their idolatry, they defiled the land. And what happened?
They lost it. Do you see that? So that inheritance
of the land, that temporary earthly inheritance, they had to maintain
it by their obedience. And they could not pull it off.
But Peter says something different about our inheritance as Christians.
He says it's undefiled, it's unfading, it's imperishable.
And the reason why is because our inheritance, and later he's
gonna say that's salvation, doesn't depend on us. Who's keeping that
inheritance? So the passage says that inheritance
is being kept not by you, it's being kept for you. So you as
a Christian are passive while God is keeping that inheritance.
And you know, it's actually already been kept because Jesus died
on the cross so our sins could be forgiven. Kept the law so
that righteousness could be credited to our account. And as we believe
in him, all of God's demands are satisfied. The inheritance
is ours and it's not because we earned it or deserved it,
it's because Jesus did. So that inheritance, it's firm, it's
solid. and it's being kept in heaven
for us. So I could potentially just quit the sermon right there
because that's wonderful news. We could all go home and remember
our heavenly inheritance, which is certain. But we have to talk
a little more about this because the tricky part is we don't enjoy
that inheritance in full right now. And Peter's saying, he's
gonna tell his readers, you need to rejoice in that inheritance.
But if you're like me, I want it all and I want it now. It's
hard for me to rejoice in something future. And really I would say,
to become people who can, in the midst of suffering and difficulty
in their lives, can rejoice in a future inheritance, that takes
a miracle. If you're a Christian, that miracle's
already happened in your life. So we're still in verse three.
Peter says to his readers that they've been born again into
a new and living hope. The reason why they have hope
is because they've been born again. So what does it mean to
be born again? Oh, I skipped something I should
mention, because I'm gonna come back to it. Ah, this is what
happens. So, truth being told here, I
preached the same sermon this morning, and I just got a little
overly confident. Like, oh, I can do this from
memory. No, I need to look at my notes every now and then. Yes. You know, the desire to
have it all now is, I think, one of the reasons why something
called the Prosperity Gospel is so popular. Have you heard
of the Prosperity Gospel? So you won't hear the Prosperity
Gospel preached here, but you've probably heard about it. It's
the message that says, if you believe enough, God will make
you healthy, God will give you money, and he'll make your life
peachy. That's the Prosperity Gospel.
And unfortunately, this message is preached in many places, in
the United States, in Spain, and around the world, and it's
attractive, and you can see why. We wanna experience heaven on
earth. Wouldn't that be great? But that's
not what the Bible promises. I mean, you don't have to go
any farther than the passage that Pastor Brian read for us
this morning to see that actually what the Bible promises us is
suffering. But, In the middle of that suffering, what Peter's
saying is that you can have true joy if you can learn to hope
in heaven. So back to the new birth. How am I gonna learn to
hope in heaven? That's not natural to me. I need to be born again.
What does it mean to be born again? Well, it means to start
to live. Not physically. So you remember
in John chapter three, Jesus is talking to Nicodemus. And
he says to Nicodemus, you're a teacher of Israel, you should
know better. You need to be born again to see the kingdom of God.
If you're gonna enter the kingdom of God, if you're gonna become
part of the family and participate in that inheritance, you have
to be born again. And Nicodemus doesn't get it. He's like, bro,
I can't enter into my mother's womb a second time. What are
you talking about? But Jesus isn't talking about something
physical. He's talking about something spiritual. The new
birth is when God causes a spiritually dead person to become spiritually
alive. So if you were converted later
in life, you may remember a time when you were not interested
in the things of God. Or maybe you were even hostile to the
things of God. You might have thought that the
Christian faith was like a fable. It's ridiculous. Or maybe it's
an obstacle to human progress. And you probably thought that
Christians were strange birds. The new birth changes all of
that. The new birth changes somebody's disposition, their fundamental
orientation, and where there was once indifference and opposition
to Christ, now there's love and faith. That's what the new birth
does. And the Bible talks about this
in different ways. In the Old Testament, Ezekiel taking out the heart
of stone, putting in the heart of flesh, the heart that believes.
In Ephesians chapter one, talks about God illuminating the eyes
of the heart to see the truth that was always there, but to
embrace it and to believe in it for what it really is. How
do you become a person who, despite suffering, rejoices in God? You have to be born again. The
orientation of your heart has to be changed and you have to
embrace Jesus. And when that happens, God makes us into strange
birds, doesn't he? So how do you get born again?
How is that even possible? Why does it happen? Peter tells
us. says you're born again to a living
hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ. So you're not
born again just because you got like struck by lightning out
in the middle of a field or something like that. There's a specific
power that God applies to a person and that's how they're born again.
The new birth happens because of Jesus's resurrection. We don't
make it happen. It doesn't happen because we're
somehow spiritually fit. So we haven't been in Carson
City long enough. We've rented an Airbnb in kind of the historical
part of town, where there's Victorian-style homes, and it's beautiful. We've
really enjoyed it. Haven't seen if there's a lot
of gyms. Is there a lot of gyms in Carson City and Reno? In Colorado,
there's gyms everywhere. And there's people walking around
in spandex with their muscles popping out, even when it's snowing.
That's Colorado, yeah. So, kind of an obsession, something
that we noticed just coming from Spain. There's a little bit of
this in Spain, but it was more obvious here, the obsession with
improving my body. And I'm gonna do it myself. You
know, if I do enough CrossFit and enough burpees, then I'm
gonna be rocked or whatever. Can you be born again doing spiritual
burpees? Spiritual CrossFit. No. We're born again because Jesus
himself went from death to life when he was resurrected. And
so God in his mercy, he unites the believer to Jesus Christ,
and what is true of him is true of the believer. Not just in
terms of Jesus's righteousness, but also in terms of the power
of the new life that Jesus experienced when he was raised from the dead.
If you're a believer, you've already been raised. And I'm
sure that on Resurrection Sunday, The main message is gonna be,
if you're a believer in Jesus Christ, just like Jesus rose
from the dead, you too will rise from the dead on the last day.
And that is an amazing gospel truth. But the Bible also says,
Paul says, in Ephesians 2, you have been made alive. Past tense. If you're a believer in Jesus
Christ, you've already been resurrected spiritually. You've been born
again. Now how does that happen? The
new birth doesn't come out of nowhere. God uses a means to
apply it. And now we're gonna go down to
the bottom part of the passage. I told you we would make progress.
We had to hang out in verse three for a long time. Go down to verse
eight. Look at verse eight with me. Why did Peter's readers believe
in Jesus? It was because they had met him.
They had had a personal encounter with him, but they hadn't seen
him. Look what he says. He says, you haven't seen him
yet you believe. I think that's really interesting.
So Peter's readers are spread out around the Mediterranean
world, not sure exactly where they were. And it's not like Jesus
after his ascension was bopping down and making personal appearances
in the churches. They knew Jesus because they'd
heard about him. They'd heard reliable testimony
about his life, his death, his resurrection, his ascension.
They heard the gospel. and that's how they were born
again. Now why do I say that? Probably on the same page of
most of your Bibles, you can look at verse 23. 1 Peter 1,
verse 23, we'll see what it says. This is great, God uses, he applies
that power of the resurrection to us, but he does it through
a certain means. Peter says that they were born
again, this is chapter one, verse 23, Same word, born again. Same
word as in verse three. You were born again, how? By
the living word of God. So you see, God's word is powerful.
How did God create the world? He didn't snap his fingers, he
spoke. And where there was nothing,
now there was existence. How does God create faith in
somebody's heart? In that non-believing heart,
there's nothing except death and sin. And God speaks the word
of the gospel, person's born again and they believe. Born
again by the power of the living word of God. And then continuing
on in verse nine at the end, it's by that faith in Jesus,
that faith that God enables us to exercise, by that faith in
Jesus, we receive the salvation of our souls. Synonym for inheritance. What's the family gift? What's
the inheritance? It's the salvation of our souls. How do we receive
it? We're born again, we have faith, we trust in Jesus, and
we receive that gift. By the way, this is why we have
to preach the gospel to people. People have to hear. Faith comes
through hearing. This is why you here at Grace
are busy in missions. I looked at your website. You're
active in ministries locally, internationally. We're thankful
for that. That's why missionaries go out.
That's why we need to talk to our neighbors. our family members,
coworkers who don't know. They have to hear the word. They
have to have an encounter with Jesus in order to be born again.
And they have that encounter by hearing the gospel. Now, after
saying that, I gotta say one more thing. We need to keep hearing
the gospel too, don't we? And that's gonna come up here
as we progress a little bit. There's a bit of a problem. So
I've got this inheritance. Peter tells me about this inheritance.
I believe it. It's in heaven. That's great. But I haven't received
it in full. I need to keep trusting. How
long am I gonna live before I die and see Jesus face to face? Or
how long is it gonna be before he comes back? I mean, a long
time might go by, decades. That's enough time for me to
fall off the train. I wouldn't have started believing on my
own. And if it were left up to me, I probably wouldn't keep
believing either. So Peter knows that, and so he sounds this note
of assurance in verse five. This is really amazing. Here's
what Peter says in verse five. By his power, he's talking about
God, we're being guarded. Ooh, isn't that great? That's
actually a military term, guarded. God is in his strength, in his
power, he's guarding us. So God is guarding two things.
He's keeping our inheritance in heaven, and while we're waiting
to receive it fully, he's guarding us. How does he do it? By faith. What in the world does that mean?
Like there's only one thing that it can mean. That God is gonna
make sure that we keep on believing till the end of our lives. Until
Jesus comes back. So that we're certain to receive
that inheritance that we're promised. Okay, so God's gonna guard me.
And the means for me to receive the inheritance is my faith.
God's gonna ensure that I keep believing. Can I just recline
in my spiritual easy chair? Let go and let God, passive,
God's gonna take care of it, can I do that? No. No. If I leave out a word, Pastor
Brian's gonna, again, I appreciate that. God uses means to keep us believing.
Why do you come to church on Sunday morning? Why do you read
your Bible? Every day, if you can. You know,
I've had people tell me that, oh, to teach that it's an obligation
to go to church on Sunday morning is a new legalism. Don't impose
that on people. I had somebody tell me once that,
oh, to tell somebody that they should read their Bible every
day is legalism. Don't impose that on somebody.
I don't remember how I answered that person who said that. I
know what I would say now. Here's what I would say. I think
this is pretty clever, we'll see what you think. Is it legalism
to eat breakfast? I love breakfast, by the way.
Oh, this is another just, I'm getting off track, but breakfast
in the United States is great. Bacon, egg, sausage, biscuits
and gravy. In Spain, they give you a little
croissant, a little coffee, and I'm like, oh, I need something,
my blood sugar's low. Where's the protein? I love breakfast. Give thanks to God for breakfast.
God's gonna keep you alive today. How's he gonna do it? Through
means, he provides and he gives you food. God's gonna keep you
spiritually alive today. How's he gonna do it? Through
the power of his word, through hearing the gospel at church,
fellowship with other believers, preaching the gospel to each
other, reading the scripture. That's not legalism. But we do participate
intelligently in that. It's a means that God uses. So
Peter here sounds this note of assurance. If you believe in
Jesus, your salvation is secure. You're going to receive that
inheritance that God is keeping for you in heaven. But there's
still this paradox that we quite haven't resolved yet. Because
Peter encourages his readers with assurance. And you know,
I think the reason why he does that is because when we look
at the circumstances in our lives, sometimes it could look like
God's maybe not on our side. We're tempted to despair when
things go wrong. So earlier I mentioned the prosperity
gospel. It sounds great. You can have
your best life now, but that's not realistic. That message promises
something that it can't give, and it's based on messed up theology.
And I'll give you an example of messed up theology. So I'm
not gonna name her name, but there was this famous US soccer player. She was like the best player
on the women's nationals team for quite a while. team captain,
and in her final match, I don't remember if they were playing
like, I don't know, America Cup or the World Cup or something,
her last match, she's team captain, she's scored all these goals
and she's supposed to enjoy this final match. Six minutes into
it, she tears her Achilles tendon. She's done. They interviewed
her afterwards and she said something that's really sad. She said,
this is proof that God doesn't exist. Now, I don't say that
necessarily just to criticize her, but to reflect that bad
theology. Because it's real easy to think, if God is all-powerful
and He loves me, well, He ought to order my life the way that
I would want it to be. But that's not what the Scriptures
promise. Life is rough, it's full of trials.
And Peter wants to lead his readers away from despair. So the heart
of the passage, verse 6, we're getting towards the end here.
Verse six, he says the Christian can have joy amid suffering. Look what he says. This brings
you great joy, although you may have to suffer for a short time
in various trials. Sounds like a paradox, like two
things that can't fit together. In the same sentence, joy and
suffering. How do we resolve that apparent
contradiction? How can those two things go together?
Well, Peter gives us two keys for how we can have joy in suffering.
He says two things. First thing is this, he says,
we can have joy because our trials don't last for long. He says,
we may have to suffer his words for a short time. And you may
say, ha, short time. What about my broken family that's
never gonna be reconciled? What about this chronic illness
that I'm going to have for the rest of my life? What about the
loss of a loved one? You know, C.S. Lewis wrote something
really interesting, and I don't remember where I read this, but
I think he was talking about somebody was trying to counsel
him after his wife died, and they said something like, time
heals all wounds. And C.S. Lewis said, no it doesn't. He
said, if your arm gets cut off, it doesn't matter how long you
wait, it doesn't grow back. And he's right. There's some of us
that have affliction in trial, really serious things that are
gonna burden us for the rest of our lives. So, what does Peter
say for a short time? What is he talking about? Well,
I think he's comparing this present life with eternity. And there's
a passage in 2 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians 4, I'll read it for you, you
can write it down and take a look at it later, but listen to what
Paul says. He says the exact same thing I think that Peter's
saying. 2 Corinthians 4, 17. For our momentary light suffering,
he calls it momentary and light. These people are being persecuted
for their faith, tossed into jail, maybe some of them killed.
Oh, your momentary and light suffering is producing for us
an eternal weight of glory far beyond all comparison. Do you
see the contrast? Your suffering now, it's real,
but compare that to eternity. Compare that to eternal glory.
Because we are not looking at what can be seen, but what cannot
be seen. For what can be seen as temporary,
that's what Peter means. But what cannot be seen is eternal.
So I think the first key Peter gives to help us have joy amid
suffering is to just remember the context. Eternity awaits
us. And it hurts now. I'm not saying it doesn't hurt.
I'm not saying that it's good. But if we can keep it in context,
it helps and it'll give us hope and joy in the midst of our trials.
The second thing he says is we can have joy because trials have
a purpose. Trials have a purpose. So trials
are not good in and of themselves. You know, who says, sign me up
for cancer. Sign me up to be painfully poor.
Sign me up to be persecuted for my faith. I think that's the
suffering that Peter's talking about, by the way. Probably being
persecuted for their faith. But at the same time, even the
worst trials serve good purposes in God's providence. Think of
Romans 8.28, it's my favorite verse. For God works all things
for the good of those who love him, who have been called according
to his purpose. Not just some things, all things. Isn't that
interesting? And it doesn't say that God's
gonna tell us what he's doing. A lot of times we can't discern
what his purposes are, but a purpose he does have in the midst of
that suffering, and that's reassuring. Also, in the book of Hebrews,
twice, in Hebrews 5 and Hebrews 12, the author to the Hebrews
talks about how suffering can be a discipline from a loving
Heavenly Father. Why do we discipline our children?
Well, sometimes we have to get their attention. And if you've
been a Christian for a little while, I'm sure you can give
a testimony about how a time when you were suffering, you
drew nearer to God than you would have otherwise. and you experienced
his comfort and his strength in a way that you might not have
otherwise if things would have just continued on as they were. So you can see the good purpose
there as well. But Peter talks about another purpose, and this
was surprising to me when I studied the text. Peter says that our
suffering serves to test our faith. That's the purpose. And
when our faith is tried, this is in verse seven, our faith
is tried, and it results in praise and glory. And this is what surprised
me. For who? Praise and glory for
who? So my first thought was, well it must be praise and glory
for God. And the way it works is, my faith is tried, I'm suffering,
and I keep on praising God. And what does that show? That
God is worthy of my praise regardless of what he gives me. He's not
a vending machine. I don't need to give him blessings
so that I'll praise him. He's worthy of my praise regardless.
And that's wonderful. I do think that as we suffer
trials and we continue to believe, we give that testimony to a watching
world. I was reading some of the commentaries and with the
emphasis sort of on the last day, and you know what I think
it means? I think it means that the testing of our faith results
in praise and glory for us. I'm waiting for Brian to run
up and drag me down. Okay, thank you. Praise and glory
for us. Not in the same way that God,
deserves our praise and glory, and not praise and glory from
other people, but approval from God. So as we persevere through
trials, we rejoice in God, in spite of our suffering, that
prepares us on the last day to receive that proclamation from
a loving, heavenly Father, well done, good and faithful servant.
I think that's what Peter means. Even if he doesn't, it's still
true. And certainly that's one of the
purposes. And I think it's really helpful to think of that, to
think of, yeah, one of the purposes of this suffering that I'm going
through right now is that God is testing my faith. And there's
a good outcome to that. There's praise and glory for
God, and there's approval for me on the last day. By the way,
we talk negatively about approval. And, you know, like, oh, you
don't, approval, you shouldn't be seeking approval. Well, we
shouldn't seek in unhealthy ways other people's approval, that's
for sure. Because that can lead us even
to sin. but we should always seek God's
approval. So it's good to seek approval, but whose approval
are you seeking? You should seek the approval
of our loving Heavenly Father. I've got a conclusion here for
you. What do you do when you suffer? How do you cope? Where do you try to find some
hope, some relief? Well, one option is to binge
on Netflix, or something else. or participate in illicit activities,
abuse substances, to try to mask it, to try to get distracted,
to try to put it away for a while. Well, I think we all know, and
I think even the world knows, that none of that stuff actually
makes it any better in the long run, right? Well, a supposedly
Christian solution for handling suffering is the prosperity gospel.
If you would just believe a little harder, then God would straighten
all these things out for you. This message is one of the reasons
why I wanted to include this in this sermon. Have you heard
of people who deconstruct their faith? Have you heard about that
a little bit? So these are becoming more and more common. Testimonies
on YouTube or podcasts or whatever. about evangelicals, people who
grew up evangelical, who later walk away from their faith, they
deconstruct their faith, they abandon it. And if you listen
to these testimonies, a lot of times, these people grew up hearing
prosperity gospel preaching. And they were promised that if
they would just believe enough, that God would order out their
lives the way they wanted. And as they get older and they
start to suffer, as you get older, you start to suffer more. They
realize it's not happening, and so what do they do? They've heard
this false message, and they start to doubt, and they end
up abandoning the faith, but they're not abandoning the true
gospel, are they? Maybe this would hit a little
closer to home. This is a mentality that sometimes I've had. Maybe
you too. Sometimes we have this, we'll
call it the if-only mentality. So I don't need the whole prosperity
gospel, but if only God would fix this thing. If only that
financial difficulty, if only he would heal that ailment, then
I could really be happy, I could relax, I could rejoice. Have
you ever thought like that? So what happens? I mean, we should
pray. Obviously, we should pray that
God would intervene, and he intervenes in some amazing ways in our lives,
and he relieves, and he heals, and he resolves, and he redeems,
and all these things. And we should give him praise,
and we should be thankful. But hey, God solves that problem
for you, wait a week. and right around the corner,
pow, something else. Or maybe it's a month, or maybe
it's a little longer, but you see, those are, they're blessings
from on high, but they're temporary. And they're meant to point us
to that eternal inheritance when the blessing's gonna be permanent.
So yeah, pray for those things. Give God glory when he provides.
But ultimately, what Peter's trying to say, I think, is that
our hope needs to be in heaven. He's offering us something better,
and we could say, don't take this out of context, we could
say that he's preaching the true prosperity gospel, because it
will be your best life, just not right now. It'll be then,
in the future. He orients their hope towards
the future, and it's a little bit like my father-in-law, who
stood out there in front of his crumpled car, and he had hope,
because he knew in a couple months it was gonna be fixed. So regardless
of the wrecks that we have in our lives as Christians, we can
have hope that God's gonna set it all straight in the future.
We need to learn to lean into this promise, and for me it's
hard. I mean, I wanna prop myself up with like any other kind of
crutch that I can find. I want now, I want relief now,
I wanna try to hope in the here and now, but I think we need
to learn to meditate more on heaven. And so, asking this question
of myself, where does my mind go when it's just in neutral?
Well, it goes all over the place. My prayer is that God would help
me to direct my mind to heaven in those moments. Or maybe you
could say it like this, where's your happy place? When you're
suffering, what do you think about to try to cheer yourself
up? The thing that we ought to be thinking about is the eternal
inheritance. That day when we see Jesus face
to face, when he wipes away every tear from our eyes, and we hear
that commendation from a loving Heavenly Father, well done, good
and faithful servant. May the Lord help us to look
forward to our eternal inheritance and worship him now for it. Let's
pray. Father, we're grateful that you
speak to us in ways that we can understand. We're grateful for
this powerful word that we have in the scriptures, the word of
the cross, which is foolishness to the world, but to you and
in your kingdom, it's power, your power unto salvation. We're
grateful that you caused the gospel to come to us. that it
was accompanied by the Holy Spirit, that it worked in power in our
hearts to cause us to be born again. We're grateful for faith.
We're grateful to be able to embrace Jesus and for the hope
of receiving that perfect, complete salvation of our souls. Thanks
for the promise of the inheritance. We pray that you'd help us. We
confess our weakness. We try to prop ourselves up and
lean on so many other things that are temporary, that are
fading that are perishable. Help us, Lord, to firmly ground
our hope in you and in Jesus and that undefiled, unfading,
imperishable inheritance that you're keeping for us in heaven. And we pray that you'd make us
a people who rejoice in you amid the suffering of our lives. We
ask this in Jesus' name, amen. We hope that you were edified
by this message. For additional sermons as well as information
on giving to the ministry of Grace Community Church, please
visit us online at gracenevada.com. That's gracenevada.com.
A Joyful Inheritance
Series Single Message
| Sermon ID | 811241925516373 |
| Duration | 44:52 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | 1 Peter 1:3-9 |
| Language | English |
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