God has His purpose in trial, and what it is to do is to give us greater strength. As you go through one trial, your spiritual muscles are exercised, you're stronger for the next one. That means you can face a greater foe. That means you're more useful. You go through another trial and another trial, and all those are strengthening, strengthening, until now your usefulness is on the increase.
Your endurance makes you more useful. It's said that God never wastes affliction. Certainly it's comforting to know that tough circumstances don't just happen. Illness, the loss of a job, even the death of a loved one, are opportunities for you to grow spiritually and to become more like Christ.
Still, it's no secret that hard times aren't easy to get through, by definition. But thankfully, this process is made easier if you at least understand why the Lord allows trials in the first place. On this edition of Grace to You, John MacArthur will show you eight positive reasons that God allows you to experience trials. John calls today's message simply, the purpose of trials.
And with that, here's John. All of us, to some degree or another, if we think realistically, know we're going to face trouble. We're going to have to look right in the eyes of agony at some point in our lives.
And we need to understand how to face that. I was trying to think this week, as I sat in my study, of what to me would be the severest trial of all trials, the most painful experience to go through. And I thought about the classic Job who lost his family and his crops and his animals and everything. And I thought about that for a while, lost all his possessions, lost all his children. And worse, he was left with a wife who didn't understand anything.
He was personally struck with disease, and that is admittedly a heavy-duty trial. I was reading, as I often enjoy doing, the works of Thomas Manton, marvelous Puritan writer. And I found one line in some of the things I was reading this week that stuck in my mind. He said this, God had one son without sin, but no son without a cross.
It just goes with the territory. We're going to have trials. Psalm 23 says, Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil for thou art with me. Trials will come. The confidence is in the presence of God. Trials can come to us through several means and with several purposes in mind.
Let me just suggest some to you, all right? First of all, trials come to test the strength of our faith. There's a great illustration of this in 2 Chronicles 32, 31.
You don't need to look it up. I'll quote that portion of it. It relates to Hezekiah, who was king. And of Hezekiah, it says this. Listen. God left him to test him that he might know all that was in his heart.
Did you get that? God left him to test him that he might know all that was in his heart. That who might know? Well, not God. God didn't need to know by testing what was in Hezekiah's heart. He knew by omniscience, right? Does God have to test you to find out what's in your heart?
No. God doesn't have to test any of us to find out what's in our heart. God tests us so we can find out. In other words, he assists us in doing that spiritual inventory.
He assists us in self-examination. I need to know and you need to know the strength of our faith. And so God brings trials into our lives to demonstrate to us the strength or weakness of our faith. If you're right now going through a severe trial, it is revealing to you the strength or weakness of your faith, isn't it? If you're shaking your fist at God, if you're wondering why it's happening, if you're fretting all the time and worrying, if you're in anxiety from morning till night, there's a good indication that you have a weak faith. If on the other hand you're going through a trial and you find yourself resting in the Lord, having placed it into His care, letting Him bear the burden of it and going on your way rejoicing as best you can in a difficult situation, waiting for God to show you the way out, then you are seeing for yourself that you possess a strength of faith. So in one sense then, we ought to be thankful for trials because they assist us in the inventory of our own faith.
That's very helpful. I always want to know where my faith is so that it can be stronger, for the stronger my faith is, the more likely I am to be useful to God. When Habakkuk was going through the mystery of his own situation in the devastating promise that the Chaldeans were going to come and wipe out his people, in spite of everything, he said, even if the fig tree doesn't blossom and the fruit is not in the vines and the labor of the olive fails and the fields yield no food and the flocks are cut off from the fold and there's no herd in the stalls, in other words, if everything that I know of as normative in life ceases, yet will I rejoice in the Lord. I will joy in the God of my salvation. The Lord God is my strength and He will make my feet like mountain goats' feet and make me walk upon my high places.
And then at the end he says, to the chief singer on my stringed instruments, this is praise, sing it. In the midst of an absolutely unsolvable mystery his trust never wavered. He learned through that the strength of his faith. And so, one of the purposes of testing is to reveal to you and to me the strength of our faith so that we can move along the path to greater strength. So trials come as a test of the strength of our faith. We must recognize that trials come to humble us. They come to remind us not to think more confidently of our spiritual strength than we should.
It's closely connected to the first one, but a little different. They come not only to show us our strength, but they come to humble us. Lest we think that we are more strong spiritually than we are. This is illustrated, I think, perhaps as graphically as anywhere in Scripture. In the wonderful testimony of Paul in 2 Corinthians 12, you know it, he says in verse 7, and lest I should be exalted above measure, in other words, lest I should think more highly of myself than I ought to think because of the abundance of the revelations and to be caught up into the third heaven.
And all of the things that Paul was able to do in the power of the Spirit, miracles and signs and wonders and mighty deeds and revelations coming out of him, he said, is the power of him from God. And through all of these things, he could well have been exalted in his own mind. So lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelations, there was given to me a thorn in the flesh to buffet me, to just beat me up all the time, lest I should be exalted above measure. And we must realize that God allows trials in our lives, especially when we are blessed in places of spiritual service, to keep us humble, lest we think more confidently of our spiritual strength than we should and start to feel that we're invincible.
There's a third reason, as I thought these things through, and these are really my own reflections, trying to look at it from the biblical and the personal viewpoint. I believe the Lord brings trials in our life also to wean us from worldly things, to wean us away from worldly things. Have you found that maybe the older you've gotten and the more things you've accumulated, the more furniture or cars or houses or bank accounts or whatever, the more success you may have had, the more worldly things you've done, you've been here, you've been there, you've traveled, you've seen this, you've seen that. Have you noticed that as that has gone on in your life, those things tend to have less and less significance? There was a time when you thought that they were the most desirable things in life and now you no longer feel that because they have not been able to deal with the real issues of life. They don't really solve deep problems, great anxieties, hurts. And when trials come into your life and you reach out for all those worldly things and they make no difference and they mean absolutely nothing, that trial is weaning you off of those things because it is demonstrating their utter inability to solve any problem or to provide for you any real resource in a time of stress. We need to be weaned away. Philip, you know, in John 6, he comes to Jesus and he says, boy, how are we going to get bread to feed these people?
He's looking at things from a worldly viewpoint. There's no stores around here and there's not enough bread anyway. We've got a multitude here, a massive crowd. How are we going to get food for 5,000 men plus women and children? And so he says, well, Philip, you tell me, where are we going to buy bread? And it says in verse 6, and this he said to test it.
We want to find out whether Philip looked to worldly resources. And of course he did, but it wasn't any good at that point and the Lord then created a meal and very quickly weaned Philip off the worldly things and satisfied him with the spiritual things. I think about Moses.
Remember in chapter 11 of Hebrews verses 24 to 26? He had been raised in Pharaoh's house. He had been brought up as a prince in Egypt.
For 40 years he was educated. He was literally in line in the Pharaoh's family for prominence. He had reached the apex of Egyptian society which was at the height of the world. All the education, all the money, all the prestige, all the honor, all the success, all the comfort was there in his hands.
But he considered the reproach of Christ, the Lord's anointed, greater riches than the treasures of Egypt. See, he'd gotten his eyes off all of that and he began to be concerned about the trial of his people. And the Lord used that trial to wean him off of worldly things. Trials will do that. There's a fourth, I think, purpose in trials. I think they call us to what we could call an eternal hope. Trials in life, I don't know how they work with you, but they work this way with me. Trials in my life tend to make me want to go to heaven. Have you noticed that? That's what I'm saying.
I don't want to make it too difficult, it's pretty simple. They call us to an eternal hope. If the most precious people in your life and if the most precious person in your life, the Lord Jesus Christ, and if the most precious possessions in your life have been laid away as treasure in heaven, you're going to have a very, very disengaged relationship with this passing world. So trials, trials tend to show us the bankruptcy of human resources and wean us off the world and sort of settle us on the heavenly hope. In Romans 8, among many scriptures that could be noted, we just support that thought. In Romans chapter 8 it says, the Spirit bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God and if children then heirs, heirs of God join heirs with Christ. If so be that we suffer with Him, we may also be glorified together. And I reckon or I count that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us. As I go through suffering, Paul says, I just get more and more hungry for glory and I see the whole creation groaning and waiting for the hope to be realized, waiting for the glorious, verse 21, liberation of the children of God. Then in verse 24 or 23 he says, we are groaning, waiting for the redemption of our body.
Verse 24, we are saved in hope. So we go through trials, trials give us a greater affection for that which is eternal. They help us long for the eternal city. They set our affections on things above. That's a very important spiritual thing.
They cause us to think on things divine, things heavenly. And that's what Paul said in 2 Corinthians 4 16, for which cause we faint not. For though our outward man perish, the inward man is renewed day by day and our light affliction, which is but for a moment, works for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. Then he says this, while we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen. For the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal. How did he get that kind of attitude?
Oh, it's very easy. Just go back to verse 8. We're troubled on every side. We're perplexed. We're persecuted. We always bear in our body the dying of Jesus Christ. Verse 12, death works in us. He's going through so much trouble, it's little wonder he doesn't like the world.
He'd rather be in glory. So you see trials have a very, very helpful purpose. They test the strength of our faith. They humble us, lest we think more confidently of our spiritual strength than we should. They wean us off of worldly things and they call us to a heavenly hope. Fifthly, trials also serve a very important purpose because they reveal what we really love.
They reveal what we really love. You see, if you supremely love God, you're going to say, thank you, God, for what you're accomplishing through this. Help me to see that and give you glory though you're allowing this to happen. But if you really love self more than God, you're going to say, God, why do you do this?
And you're going to be irate and you're going to be upset and you're going to be bitter and you're going to be full of anxiety. You see, there's a sense in which if anything is dearer to you than God, then he has to have it. He's got to remove it. So in my own life, I just want to make sure nothing is dearer to me than the Lord because I don't want him to remove it.
Not that he always does. I was thinking about this and reading back in the Pentateuch a little bit, I came to Deuteronomy chapter 13, verse 3, thou shalt not hearken to the words of that prophet or that dreamer of dreams. This would be a false prophet. For the Lord your God, look at this, tests you to know whether you love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul.
Wow. The Lord is testing you to see who you really love, whether you love him with all your heart and all your soul. In Luke 14, 26, if any man come to me and hate not his father and mother and wife and children and brother and sisters, yea, in his own life also, he cannot be what? My disciple. And whosoever doesn't bear his cross and come after me cannot be my disciple.
Now what in the world is he saying? Is he literally saying that it's a Christian thing to hate everybody including yourself? No, what he means by that is if you do not love God to the degree that you willingly, if necessary, cut yourself off from father, mother, wife, children, brother, sister, and your own life, then you don't love God supremely. You're not worthy to be his disciple.
Well, what do you mean cut off? We mean by that this, that you will do the will of God first and foremost no matter what appeals those others make to you. No matter what appeal your father might make or your mother or your wife or your child or your brother or your sister or your own flesh, you will do the will of God no matter what appeals are being made because therein lies your supreme love. There's a sixth purpose in trials that really is very, very helpful and that is this. Trials teach us to value the blessing of God. They teach us to value the blessing of God. Reason teaches us to value the world. Sense, feeling tells us to value pleasure. Faith tells us to value God's word, God's word. God's favor, God's blessing. Reason says grab what you can grab in the world and go.
Sense and feeling says find pleasure at any price. Faith says obey the word of God and be blessed. See, trials teach us the blessing of obedience. In the midst of a trial, we obey and are blessed.
That's what they are intended to teach. They show us that obedience at all costs brings the blessing of God. The psalmist says in Psalm 63, 3, and this out of personal experience, because thy loving kindness is better than life, my lips shall praise thee.
God, I have seen your loving kindness and it's the best thing there is...the best thing there is. Jesus is the perfect example of this in Hebrews 5. In the days of His flesh, He offered up prayers, supplications with strong crying and tears unto Him that was able to save Him from death.
Jesus going through the trial in the garden, that's what's being pictured there. And He was sweating, as it were, great drops of blood, weeping and crying out to God, deliver Him. And He was heard and that He feared. And though He were a Son and a beloved one at that, yet He learned obedience by the things He suffered. And being made perfect, He became the author of eternal salvation to all them that obey Him. Through...watch this...through suffering, He was obedient and God exalted Him.
Philippians 2 puts it another way, He was humbled, took upon Him the form of a man, offered Himself in death and God highly exalted Him. Trials come to put us through suffering, that we may obey in the suffering and then receive the full blessing of God. And I would say that when you go through a trial, if you learn to obey God, you will experience the exhilaration of His blessing.
That's His promise. Let me give you two others that are purposes of suffering. Number seven, suffering comes, and this is a very, very valuable purpose, suffering comes to enable us to help others in their suffering. Sometimes when suffering comes, it may have no more purpose than to make us better able to assist others in their own suffering. I think of that in regard to the 22nd chapter of Luke where Jesus says to Peter, and the Lord said, Simon, Simon, behold, Satan's desire to have you that he may sift you is weak. Satan's going to take you and shake you. And I have prayed for you that your faith fail not. Now watch this. And when you are turned around, when you come through that thing, He says, strengthen your brethren.
There you go. A wonderful purpose. That's like Jesus in Hebrews chapter 4, Hebrews chapter 2 also, who becomes a faithful, merciful high priest able to help those who come to Him because He has been through every trial we've been through, right? That's what makes Him a merciful, faithful high priest. So we go through trials for the purpose of being able to help others. How wonderful, how wonderful that God allows us to learn by experience, to instruct others. And then finally, the eighth, trials come to develop enduring strength for greater usefulness.
They come to develop enduring strength for greater usefulness. Again, Thomas Manton said, while all things are quiet and comfortable, we live by sense rather than faith. But the worth of a soldier is never known in times of peace. End quote. That's right.
The worth of a soldier is never known in times of peace. God has His purpose in trial. And what it is to do is to give us greater strength to do is to give us greater strength. As you go through one trial, your spiritual muscles are exercised, you're stronger for the next one. That means you can face a greater foe. That means you're more useful. You go through another trial and another trial and another trial and all those are strengthening, strengthening, strengthening until now your usefulness is on the increase. Your endurance makes you more useful. And then the more useful you are, the more used you are. And the more used you are, the more you accomplish in the power of the Spirit for the glory of God.
So let me sum it up. What is God's purpose as He tests us? First, to test the strength of our faith that we might know where our strength is or isn't. Secondly, to humble us lest we think more confidently of our spiritual strength than we should. Thirdly, to wean us away from worldly things. Fourthly, to call us to a heavenly hope so that we live in the above and not in the below. Fifthly, to reveal what we really love. Sixthly, to teach us to value the blessing of God and to appreciate it as it comes to us out of the times of suffering. Seventh, to enable us to help others in their trial, to bear one another's burdens. And eighth, to develop enduring strength for greater usefulness so that God can thrust us into greater places of ministry and effectiveness. Now, aren't these all worthwhile purposes? All of these fit into the plan of God, by His grace. This is Grace to You with John MacArthur.
Thanks for tuning in today. You just heard John's message titled, The Purpose of Trials. Well, John, we've just finished a week of lessons on dealing with the suffering that is inevitable in this life. But with all the biblical comfort we've seen, you have to believe there are people listening who could use a bit of extra encouragement. Along that line, you've got a helpful book I know you want to mention.
Yeah, it's been around for many years, and it's been a book that leads people to Scripture that makes a huge difference in the middle of suffering. The title of the book is Anxious for Nothing. You remember the apostle Paul said, be anxious for nothing. What an amazing statement. Another way to say it would be, don't worry about anything.
That is a command, by the way. And yet, as Christians, we worry, and we have fears. And sometimes they're almost irrational fears, sort of existential fears, like things are out of our control, and we're having a lot of that in the time in which we live now. We hear from people, many people who battle with fear, and they battle with worry, and always through these years, we have pointed them back to this book, Anxious for Nothing. Tens of thousands of people have been helped by the truth that's in the book. It lays down the basic principles in God's revelation for getting you past worry, so that even in the most dire situation, you can defeat anxiety. You can live with contentment, and you can live with joy. The book also contains a listing of what I call Psalms for the Anxious.
Now here's the good news. We'll send this book to you free of charge, free to anyone who requests a copy. We're talking about a 200-page book with in-depth study of what the Bible says about fear and worry and how to overcome it. The title again, Anxious for Nothing, free to anyone who requests a copy. All you have to do is give us a call, send us an email, whatever it is that's going to get you in connection with us, even snail mail letters will do that. So let us know if you would like a free copy of Anxious for Nothing.
That's right, and by the way, this is a great book. Anxious for Nothing is pure encouragement, timely biblical truth that will strengthen you in any trial you face. And again, we'll send it to you for free. We want to get this book to as many people as we can, so to request your free copy of Anxious for Nothing, just call us or go to our website today.
Our number here is 800-55-GRACE and the website is gty.org. The book Anxious for Nothing looks at the spiritual resources God has given you so that you can live life worry-free, no matter what tempts you to fear, whether it's finances, health, relationships, or anything else. This book can help you take hold of the strength and comfort only Christ provides.
Again, for your free copy of Anxious for Nothing, while supplies last, call 800-55-GRACE or go to gty.org. And while you're online, take advantage of the thousands of free resources on our website that can help you better understand God's Word. You'll find previous broadcasts of this program, video clips of John's various conference and television appearances, and the Grace To You blog. You can also download all of John's sermons in audio or transcript format.
There are about 3,500 of them to choose from. So stop by and come by often at gty.org. Now for John MacArthur, I'm Phil Johnson. Next time John will look at how you can flourish spiritually no matter how evil this world gets. Be here for the timely study John calls How to Think and Act in Evil Days. It's another 30 minutes of unleashing God's truth one verse at a time, on Monday's Grace To You.
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