This article shows that Christ made it clear that his church will face trials and persecutions. It also makes clear that Christ showed his church how to prepare for trials.

Source: The Banner of Sovereign Grace Truth, 2014. 4 pages.

Preparing for Trials

One of the great hallmarks of the apostolic church was the grace God gave them to suffer well. The blood of unflinching martyrs was one of the most powerful factors in the growth of the church. As many others faced imprisonment and other forms of persecution, the observation of those who watched them was: “These people suffer well.” The steadfastness of the prophets, apostles, martyrs, and saints is a call to follow the Lord in adversity, persecution, or whatever affliction the Lord has in store for us.

For many in our world today, however, the idea that there would be a cost to following the Lord is unacceptable. In some quarters, the “health and wealth gospel” has made many suppose that being a Christian will invariably translate into earthly and material comforts. While we decry this perversion of the gospel, the general prosperity and plenty of our societies has subtly taken hold of many of us. We tend to think of Christian suffering as an exception rather than the rule.

To the extent that we believe this, however, it ironically only hurts us. Not only are we then a few steps removed from the truth of which Paul reminded the new converts in Asia Minor, namely, that it is “through much tribulation” that we shall “enter into the kingdom of God” (Acts 14:22). Worse than that, we are liable to become offended “when tribulation or persecution ariseth” (Matt. 13:21).

“Welcome to the Strife”🔗

These were the words with which those making confession of faith used to be greeted by those who had been fighting for many years and decades. There is in this greeting a tone of realism, matched only by the idealism it contains as well. After all, it is strife – yes; nevertheless, welcome to it.

Many of us who have lived through the last 30 or 40 years have witnessed a transition to an arguably post-Christian culture. In fact, our Western societies have become increasingly anti-Christian. Instead of causing alarm or panic, this reality should turn our homes and churches into schools, where we study the Scriptures to see how it is that we might rightly prepare for what God has in store for us in the time to come. We may be surprised to find people who not only endured in the face of tribulation. But as in the case of Paul we read that he even desired “the fellowship of (Christ’s) sufferings” (Phil. 3:10).

There is no doubt that, if it had been His good-pleasure so to do, God could have spared every believer every trial and tribulation from the moment of his or her first exercise of faith. It is not then a question of His ability. Instead, the proper question is: what is His aim? God’s good aim is to make His children conformable to the image of His Son (Rom. 8:29). It is not our comfort, but our conformity to Christ. In order to effect that, He sends the right amount of trials for each of His children at exactly the right time. Most of the time we don’t understand why He does what He does; but we need to believe what He says.

Armed for the Fiery Trial🔗

In the process of arming his readers for future usefulness (see 1 Pet. 4:1), Peter says: “Think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you” (1 Pet. 4:12). The Greek literally means: “Let the fiery trial not be a stranger to you.”1 If you have suffered anything major in your life, you know that trials can feel so “strange.” You think something has gone horribly wrong. Yet Peter so prepares the church that they won’t be tempted to think that trials are unexpected, useless, or inappropriate for someone following Christ.

Peter uses the term “fiery trial” to help explain the difficulties Christians will encounter. The term literally suggests the picture of a furnace, a place for refining ore. A refiner would heat the fire in a kiln, put the ore on a ladle into the smelting chamber and watch and wait until the ore was molten and the dross or impurities separated from the metal.

Peter is likely referring to persecution that would have heated up tremendously during this time. These newly converted men and women, young people and children were at risk of being imprisoned, slandered, maligned, discriminated against, marginalized, and even killed. This kind of persecution has been present since the beginning and still puts Christians in the furnace in many parts of the world (John 15:18; Heb. 11:32-38).

Scripture speaks of other trials as well, which can be no less severe. James speaks for example of temptation as a fiery trial. He writes: “Blessed is the man that endureth temptation: for when he is tried, he shall receive the crown of life, which the Lord hath promised to them that love him” (James 1:12).

Then there is the affliction that comes in every-day life. It can range from being mild to severe, temporary or permanent, obvious or hidden. It can be physical, mental, emotional, or spiritual. It can be brought on by or lead to illness or disability. It includes grief and sorrows. It affects family, work, and church. It can involve spiritual afflictions such as desertions and perplexing providences. These can be no less severe trials than suffering in a prison for the name of Christ.

By His Fatherly Hand🔗

If believers are ever going to see trials as not strange, they must, first of all, look behind trials and trace them to their source, namely God. The Catechism says so beautifully that “all things come, not by chance, but by His fatherly hand” (Lord’s Day 10; A. 27). If the Psalmist can say: “It is good for me that I have been afflicted” (Ps 119:71), surely these afflictions must have come from God, or they would not have profited. In fact, the Psalmist says exactly that four verses further: “In faithfulness thou hast afflicted me” (Ps. 119:75).

The well-known Puritan, John Flavel, echoes the same truth:

It is the great support and solace of the saints in all the distresses that befall them here, that there is a wise Spirit sitting in all the wheels of motion, and governing the most eccentric creatures and their most pernicious designs to blessed and happy issues.2

If we see suffering coming to us capriciously, randomly, or from some source other than God, we will shrink back from it. Thomas Brooks says: “The design of God in all the afflictions that befall (His people) is only to try them; it is not to wrong nor ruin them, as ignorant men are apt to think.”3

Elsewhere he writes:

There is no sickness so little God but hath a finger in it, though it be but the acting of the little finger. And as the scribe is more eyed, and more properly said to write, than the pen; and as every workman is more eyed, and more properly said to effect his work, than the tools which he uses as his instruments: the Lord, who is the chief agent and mover in all actions, and who has the greatest hand in all our afflictions, is far more to be eyed and owned than any inferior or subordinate causes whatever.4

If we learn to live eyeing the ultimate source of our trials, they will not be strange to us.

Acquainted with Grief🔗

A second way that trials will not be strange to believers is when they realize that God is with them in trials. He does not leave them to themselves in their trials, despite what they often think and feel. God’s presence with His people in their suffering was promised by Isaiah: “When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burnt; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee” (43:2).

This is clearly illustrated in the story of Daniel’s three friends in the fiery furnace. When King Nebuchadnezzar looked into the furnace, what he saw astonished him. “Did we not cast three men bound into the midst of the fire? They answered and said unto the king, True, O king. He answered and said, Lo, I see four men loose, walking in the midst of the fire, and they have no hurt; and the form of the fourth is like the Son of God.” (Dan. 3:25). This was none other than Christ, Immanuel – God with us – in the furnace with His people.

It is often in afflictions that God’s people have the greatest sense of God’s intimate presence. They can say with Paul: “All men forsook me, but the Lord stood with me” (2 Tim. 4:16-17). Elsewhere, he boasted:

Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword ... For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.Romans 8:31ff

If there ever was anyone for whom trials, from one angle, should have been strange, it should have been the Son of God. He knew no sin, nor had committed any sin. Yet, if there was anyone who did not consider trials strange, it was Christ, of whom we read that he was “acquainted with grief” (Isa. 53:3).

More importantly, Christ not only entered into His people’s affliction, but paid the price for their sins. As Samuel Rutherford consoled: “Ye know that the weightiest end of the cross of Christ that is laid upon you lieth upon your strong Saviour.”5 He went through the fires of Gethsemane and Golgotha, to pay for the sins of His people, so they would not need to. He had to go through the flame of God’s wrath, so that the fires of God’s wrath would be extinguished for His people.

Satisfied in God🔗

Believers will be helped not to see trials as strange, if, thirdly, they see how much greater God becomes to them after the trial. For God is not only the source of the trial; the support in the trial, but the satisfaction of the Christian after he or she is tried. The Psalmist said: “Before I was afflicted I went astray, but now have I kept thy word” (Ps. 119:67). More than ever, the Psalmist stays more closely attached to God’s Word. It’s a remarkable thing that it usually takes trials for believers to drink more deeply from the well that is God Himself. We know that we have done so when there is a deeper sense of joy in God than before. We learn to approve of the trial and especially of God, who has sent the trial.

In his classic commentary on 1 Peter, Bishop Robert Leighton put it well: “If the children of God consider their trials, not in their natural bitterness, but in the sweet love whence they spring, and the sweet fruits that spring from them, that we are our Lord’s gold, and that he tries us in the furnace to purify us ... this may beget not only patience, but gladness even in the sufferings.”6

Afflictions conform God’s precious people to Christ their Head. Indeed, in the moment, it might seem to believers as if trials produce more sin in their lives. They can rebel, complain, murmur, and distrust the Lord. However, if we go back to the picture of the fiery furnace, we can put it like Whitefield once said: “Afflictions don’t bring the dross; they reveal the dross.” Through trials, God brings our sins to the surface in order to expose them to us and separate them from us. Whitefield explained this further, writing in his journal the following: “Whilst I continue on this side of eternity, I never expect to be free from trials, only to change them. For it is necessary to heal the pride of my heart that such should come.”7

Even if we don’t understand why God is afflicting us, we should resign ourselves to our afflictions as quickly as possible and approve of God’s way of dealing with us. Edward Payson, a godly Congregational minister in Portland Maine, who was often greatly tried, was asked if he could see any particular reason for the heavy afflictions with which he was afflicted. He replied, “No, but I am as well satisfied as if I could see ten thousand. God’s will is the very perfection of all reasons.”8

Conclusion🔗

It would be wrong to pray for trials or even wish for them. However, we should prepare for them and prepare to benefit from them. Not to do so, we will find them to be strange, and Peter tells us not to think them strange. Peter knew what it was like to think a trial strange, and it was to his own detriment (see Mark 8:32; Matt. 16:23). Before he knew it, he was right in the middle of the furnace of temptation, there in the hall of Caiaphas (John 18:13-27). From that experience he warns us: Prepare for whatever trial it is God has in store for you.

It is said that Charles and Susannah Spurgeon had a plaque on their bedroom wall with the words of Isaiah 48:10: “I have chosen you in the furnace of affliction.” What a way to remind yourself that trials are not strange! Children of God who are in trials right now, consider Him who perfectly ordains your trials. Consider Him who accompanies you in them whether you feel it or not. Consider Him who uses them to purify you and to impress more of His own image upon you. Then trials won’t be strange, but strangely familiar.

Endnotes🔗

  1. ^ The Greek is xenizoo from which we get the word “xenophobia.”
  2. ^ John Flavel, The Whole Works of the Rev. Mr. John Flavel, 6 vols. (London: W. Baynes and Son, 1820), 4:342-43.
  3. ^ Thomas Brooks, Precious Remedies Against Satan’s Devices: Being, A Companion For Christians of All Denominations (Philadelphia: Jonathan Pounder, 1810), 94.
  4. ^ Thomas Brooks, The Mute Christian Under the Smarting Rod; With Sovereign Antidotes for Every Case (London: W. Nicholson, 1806), 26-27.
  5. ^ Samuel Rutherford, Letters of Samuel Rutherford (Carlisle, Penn.: Banner of Truth, [reprint] 2006), 34.
  6. ^ Robert Leighton, The Whole Works of Robert Leighton (New York: J.C. Riker, 1846), 316. Emphasis mine.
  7. ^ George Whitefield, George Whitefield’s Journals (Carlisle, Penn.: Banner of Truth, [reprint] 1998), 179.
  8. ^ Asa Cummings, A Memoir of the Rev. Edward Payson (Boston: Crocker and Brewster, 1830), 353.

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