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On October 19, 2014, Luell and
I walked over to the emergency room of Jefferson Hospital. I
had experienced some minor symptoms and my physician said, just go
to Jefferson, they'll take care of you. I thought they were minor and
it'd be a quick visit. We sat in the emergency room
that Sunday afternoon watching the Eagles. In those days, that
was the best place to watch the Eagles, the emergency room. And they finally took me back
into the examining room, and before long, there were representatives
from five different departments of the hospital in my examining
room. It didn't make any sense to me. And what I didn't understand
is that my kidneys were dying and I didn't know it. Had I waited another week or
so, I wouldn't be with you today. That 10 days of the hospital
were very, very difficult. For some reason, my body went
into full body spasms. They were very painful and terrifying.
The first 36 hours, I just screamed. I thought when they finally let
me out of the hospital that I was on my own, only to experience
in the next two years, six surgeries. If you have a surgery every four
months, you don't recover before you have the next surgery. And
I was growing weaker and weaker and weaker. I can remember one morning sitting
in my chair so weak I could literally not get out of the chair. And
trying to make sense in my mind how is it that God would give
me the widest gospel platform I've ever had in my life and
yet render me weaker than I'd ever been in my life. Now I haven't shared my story
with you so you would sympathize with me. But as an illustration
of something that's very important to understand, that we live in
two worlds. The one world is this gorgeous
world of God's grace. How could it be that we are the
receivers of His great and precious promises? How could it be that
He's present with us? How could it be that He unleashes
His power on our behalf? How could it be that we have
every spiritual blessing in Christ Jesus? It's a world so beautiful,
so gorgeous, it defies human description. Yet we don't just live in that
world. We live in a world of pain and loss heartache and betrayal. Where shocking, unwanted things
become part of our experience. Where bodies don't work the way
they should work, our minds don't work the way they should work. Where loved ones turn their back
on us and walk away. There are moments in life where
it's hard to reconcile those two worlds. More you cry out, God, where
are you? Do you hear me? Where are your promises? Why? Why? How long? Well, that's the world that our
passage this morning speaks into. If you would turn in your Bibles
to Romans 8, beginning with verse 18. That's page 944 in your church
Bibles. I was trained by Phil Reichen
never to call them pew Bibles. He didn't like how that sounded.
So they're church Bibles. And I will read this rather long
passage to you. Romans 8, beginning with verse
18. For I consider that the sufferings
of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory
that is to be revealed to us. For the creation waits with eager
longing for the revelation of the sons of God. For the creation
was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him
who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be set
free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the
glory of the children of God. For we know that the whole creation
has been groaning together in pains of childbirth until now. and not only the creation, but
we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit grown inwardly
as we wait eagerly for the adoption of the sons, the redemption of
our bodies. For in this hope we were saved.
Now hope that is seen is not hope for who hopes for what he
sees. But if we hope for what we do
not see, we wait for it with patience. Likewise, the Spirit
helps us in our weaknesses, for we do not know what to pray for
as we ought. But the Spirit himself intercedes
for us with groanings too deep for words. And he who searches
the hearts knows what is in the mind of the Spirit, because the
Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God.
And we know that for those who love God, all things work together
for good. For those who are called according
to His purpose. For those whom He foreknew, He
also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, in order
that He might be the firstborn among many brothers. And those
whom He predestined, He also called. And those whom He called,
He also justified. And those whom He justified,
He also glorified. What should we say to these things?
If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare
his own son, but gave him up for us all, will he not also
with him graciously give us all things? Who shall bring any charge
against God's elect? It is God who justifies. Who
is to condemn Christ Jesus as the one who died, more than that
who was raised, who is at the right hand of God, who indeed
is interceding for us? Who shall separate us from the
love of Christ? Shall tribulation or distress
or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword, as it is
written, for your sake, we are being killed all day long. We
are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered. know in all these things we are
more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure
that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things
present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth,
nor anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from
the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. Amen and amen. In case you haven't discovered
it in my reading, this passage is intended to be a treatise
on how God meets you by His grace in the darkest moments of the
human experience. First, we have preparing grace.
Preparing grace, that's verses 18 to 25. Verses 18-25 are in the Bible
because your Lord loves you. And He doesn't want you to live
with unrealistic expectations. Ignorantly. He wants you to understand
the nature and function of the world that you now live in. The
world that He has ordained would be your address. And there are provocative descriptions
of this world subjected to futility. Wow. There was no futility in
the garden, was there? Not one second. But our world is crushed by futility. In pains of childbirth, That's
that acute pain. Some of you have been in moments
of emotional, spiritual, physical, acuteness of pain. In bondage to corruption. That corruption here means decay. Isn't it a shocking reality that
everything that is now alive is in the process of dying? What a reality. So God wants
you to understand that this is the world that is your address. And because it is, fasten your
seatbelts, suffering is a universal human experience. Notice in verse
18, Paul doesn't argue for the existence of suffering. He knows
he doesn't have to. He assumes it. Because if you live in this world
that is broken and fallen, falling apart under the weight
of its fallenness, groaning itself, the physical world, waiting for
redemption, that fallenness will enter your world. That means that suffering is
not a sign that God has forsaken you, that He has forgotten you,
that you just don't happen to be one of His favorites. And I love the fact that the
Bible is very honest about suffering. You could argue that the blood
and dirt of the fallen world splashes across every part of
the Word of God. And the New Testament is very
specific about why we suffer. I'm going to give you five reasons
that are in the New Testament for those of you who are taking
notes. First, you suffer because you live in a fallen world. And because of that, it will
become somehow, someway, part of our experience. If you're
not suffering now, you will someday. And if you're not suffering now,
you're near someone who is. Secondly, we suffer for our spiritual
growth. This is 1 Peter 3 through 9. 1 Peter 1, 3 through
9. You've never heard anyone ever say, I had three of the
easiest, most comfortable years of my life and I learned so much.
Do you laugh? You've never heard that. But
you hear people again and again who say, I've been through the
hardest things and I learned, I grew so much. Suffering in
the hands of a Redeemer is a workroom of grace. You suffer so that you can bring
comfort to other sufferers. This is 2 Corinthians 1, three
through nine. Paul says, God, the God of all
comfort brings our comfort to us when we suffer so that we
can bring comfort to other sufferers. It's not just that I don't own
my blessing, I don't own my suffering. Even that, Lord wants to use
so I can bring comfort to other sufferers. You'll suffer for
God's glory. Life isn't about my glory. It's
about His. And this is 2 Corinthians 4,
beginning with verse 7. We have this treasure in jars
of clay. Show that all surpassing power is from God and not from
us. And then Paul names all these perplexities and he says, we
always carry around the death of Jesus so that the life of
Jesus may be seen in us. Your weakness puts God's glory
on display. And then, we will suffer because
of our faith. This is 1 Peter 4, beginning
with verse 13. Now here's what this means. I
love being able to say this. Your suffering is not in the
way of God's plan. But I'm not done. It's part of
God's plan. It's not an accident that you
live in the world you live in. It's not an accident that in
that world you experience the things you experience. This means that your suffering
is never meaningless. I hate when I hear people in
media talk about the meaninglessness of suffering. We don't believe
in fate. We don't believe in bad luck.
We don't believe in karma. We don't believe in a God who's
forgetful. We don't believe He lacks the ability to do what
He promised. Your suffering has meaning. We know this from the message
of the cross, don't we? What's the worst thing that ever
happened? The death of the one perfectly righteous person who
ever lived. What's the best thing that ever happened? The death
of the one perfectly righteous person who ever lived. Same event. But not only preparing grace,
intervening grace. Likewise, the Spirit helps us
in our weaknesses, verse 26. For we do not know what to pray
for as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with
groanings too deep for words. And he who searches hearts knows
what the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes
for the saints according to the will of God. What sweet, tender,
beautiful words. Paul wants you to know that you
are never, ever alone in your suffering. Because the Spirit of God now
lives inside of you. And you know if you've been through
those dark moments, there are times when you don't know how
to pray. Because you don't know how to
make sense of what's going on. There are moments when prayer
seems too much to ask. Your mind doesn't form the words
you want to say. You know what Paul says to you? Grown. Grown. Grown. Grown. Grown. Grown. Grown. Grown. Don't stop praying because you
don't have theological things to say. Don't stop praying because
you can't come up with a prayer that has a good beginning, a
good middle, and a nice end. Don't rehearse your prayer before
you pray it. Your Lord hears the rehearsal. Just groan. Some of my prayers in the hospital
were screams. People wouldn't have known I
was praying. There are times when I prayed
this three-word prayer over and over again, God help me, God
help me, God help me, God help me. God, the Holy Spirit, filled
in paragraph of details from those three words and took them to the Father.
How sweet, loving, and tender is our Lord. He knows your weaknesses. And he says, just come to me. Just with all of your babbling,
come to me. And I will carry your request
to the Father. you should be saying inside of
yourself right now, praise God, praise God, praise God, there
I've helped you. Not just preparing grace and
intervening grace, but unstoppable grace. Let me read the next few
verses, beginning with verse, 28, and we know that for those
who love God, all things work together for good for those who
are called according to His purpose. For those whom He foreknew, He
also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, in order
that He might be the firstborn among many brothers. And those
whom He predestined, He also called, and those who called,
He also justified, and those whom He justified, He also glorified.
Now, I'm about to discuss with you one of the most misunderstood,
misinterpreted, misapplied passages in all of the Bible. And it may
have happened to you. You're going through something
tough and someone says, don't worry, all things work together
for good. They smile and they walk away. As if this passage is teaching
that this side of eternity, everything is gonna turn out all right. Listen, there are ways that Paul
Tripp will never be fully healthy again until I'm on the other
side. I wanna say this respectfully. Johnny Erickson Tada is not arising
out of her wheelchair. It's not what this passage is
teaching. And when you throw it at people that way, you set
them up for frustration, disappointment, and anger with God. A little bit of Bible interpretation
here. Let Scripture interpret Scripture. And verse 28, is interpreted
and explained by 29 and 30. What is the good that is promised
us here? Redemption. That's your answer. That nothing you go through can
stop the march of redemption in your life. And with that march
of redemption comes everything you need. Your God will not abandon
you in your struggle. He will not abandon you in your
weakness. He will not abandon you in your doubt. Because His commitment to you,
according to this passage, is absolutely eternal. And he says, whatever I have
begun in you in my redeeming grace, I will not stop until
it's done, until it's completed. That's what it's talking about.
Listen, the best thing in your life is not your job. The best thing in your life is
not your nearly perfect marriage. That was a joke. Obviously not
a good one. The best thing in your life is
not your children who for some reason choose to obey. It's not your nice house. It's
not your artistic skills. Not your ability to communicate. It's not any of those things.
The best thing in your life is redeeming grace. Because the most broken thing
in your life is you. What I need to be redeemed from
is me. And this is a promise that nothing
will ever stop that. It's beautiful. And even if I live weak the rest
of my life, even if I live alone the rest of my life, even if
my career crashed and never comes back the rest of my life, I'm redeemed. I get up in the morning and get out of bed and wrap redemption
around me and face life again. It's beautiful. Not only preparing grace, intervening
grace, unstoppable grace, but providing grace. What shall we
say then to these things, verse 31, if God is for us, who can
be against us? He who did not spare His own
Son, but gave Him up for us all, will He not also with Him graciously
give us all things? You know, when the unexpected,
the unwanted, the hard, the difficult, the life-stopping or life-changing
thing enters your door, you are flooded with what ifs. You know
that's true. How are we going to pay our bills? How am I going to talk to my
children about this? How will our marriage survive? There are all kinds of fears
of provision that assault your heart. And so Paul speaks into
that world. And I love the logic here. The logic is the cross. And Paul is like, he's sitting
us down and he's saying, now listen to this for a moment.
Do you really think that if God harnessed the forces of nature
and controlled the events of human history to give us His
Son, to live a perfectly righteous life on our behalf, to suffer a substitutionary death
on our behalf, to rise out of that tomb on our behalf, to ascend
to the right hand of the Father and His royal priesthood reign
on our behalf, do you really think, if He did all of that,
that He would abandon us along the way? What's the obvious answer? No. The giving of the Son is the
ultimate guarantee that in your toughest moments, you will have
everything that you need. No, not everything you could
imagine. No, not everything you desire. No, not your long want
list. No. Boy, your wise heavenly Father
knows you need. No, I want to add something else
to our conversation here. I want to propose that perhaps
it's often the case that the suffering is the provision. And one of those moments when
I was sitting in utter weakness in my chair, I had a rather humiliating moment
of recognition. That much of what in my Christian
life I had thought of as faith in Christ wasn't. I was physically young for my
age. People around me called me the
Energizer Bunny. I had the ability to produce
a lot. And there was a lot of pride in my strength, my wisdom, and
my production. And it was in those dark days when I began to learn what it
really means to rest in my Savior. And I... began to understand that God doesn't need me to be
strong to use me. God didn't call me because I'm
able. He called me because He is able. If you read the history of scripture,
it's a chronicle of God using weak people. Often people we would never think
have potential You know why they do? Grace. I'm gonna share something with
you that some of you may have trouble believing, but it's absolutely
true. In that period of rather abiding personal weakness, I
wrote a book. And when I got the first copy
of that book, I looked at it and I began to weep. I called
Luella down from the upstairs and I said to her, this may sound
crazy, but I don't remember writing this book. And the first time in all the
books that I've written, I sat down while I was seated and I
read my own book cover to cover. That's what God is able to do. And people have told me again
and again that that book, of all the books that I've written,
it's just infused with the grace of God. Guess why? Because I
was holding onto that grace with both hands. I can say this to you without
hesitation. People who know me know I don't
like to suffer. But I would gladly go through
that again to get what my Savior has delivered to me. It's beautiful. Preparing grace intervening grace,
unstoppable grace, providing grace, one more, inseparable
grace. Who shall separate us from the
love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress,
or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword,
as it is written, for your sake we are being killed all day long. We are guarded as sheep to be
slaughtered. Know in all these things we are
more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure
that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things
present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth,
nor anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from
the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. And all God's people
said, Amen. Amen. I would love to say a whole lot
about this last section. But I want to say there's a reason
that this is the crescendo of this passage. Because one of the dynamics of
suffering is you will be attended by condemning voices. He mentions condemnation here. The whisper of the enemy. So
where is your God now? Why you? Why now? Maybe God is punishing you after
all. Maybe this is because you just
have never measured up. Maybe you don't even know Him. And perhaps the deepest of all
theological questions is not will I lose my salvation. The
deepest of all theological questions is will God ever stop loving
me? Because if that's a possibility,
close up the doors. We have no hope. And if nothing in heaven or earth
can separate me from the love of God in Christ Jesus, then
my poor, bumbling, foolish responses to my suffering won't separate
me from God's love either. Listen, there are two questions in the heart of every human being
that's ever lived. The first one is, will somebody
love me? Every human being is a person
in search of love. But the second question, is even
more terrifying. Once they get to know me, will
they still love me? And the answer of the gospel
is yes and yes. You see, you are never, ever,
ever alone in your suffering. in condescending love, love you
could never earn, achieve, or deserve, God meets you in your
suffering. He meets you with his preparing
grace, not wanting you to have unrealistic expectations. He
meets you in his intervening grace, moments when you don't
know how to pray, and says, just groan to me. I'll carry your
groanings. Meet you with His unstoppable
grace, letting you know that nothing can stop the march of
redemption in your life. Meet you with His providing grace,
reminding you if He gave you His Son, won't He give you everything
you need? And He meets you with the assurance that the love that you never earned won't be
withdrawn because you don't deserve it. If you are struggling this morning
with what has entered your door, I plea with you. Don't run from your Savior. Don't listen to those condemning
voices. Run to him. He is in you and with you and
for you. Maybe you're in this room and
you would say, I don't know this God. I don't know his son. And I surely
don't know the hope of the grace that's in this passage. I would plead with you, don't
leave this room before you do. There are lovely, knowledgeable
people sprinkled throughout this room. Grab somebody and say,
I want to know this, and I don't. There'll be people in the foyer.
Grab somebody, but don't leave. until the grace that has been
described in this passage becomes yours. Let's pray. Lord, how amazing it is that we can grab ahold of the
grace that we have examined this morning and say, it's mine, it's
mine, it's mine. Not because we deserve it, but because of what Jesus has
done. May in the darkest moments of
life, when we are the most confused, distressed, the weakest. May we run to you and not away
from you. And we pray this in the name
of the one whose name is above all other names, Jesus, amen.
When Life Doesn't Make Sense
| Sermon ID | 831251858425456 |
| Duration | 38:58 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Romans 8:18-39 |
| Language | English |
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