2 Corinthians 12:9 “My power is made perfect in weakness”.
Work out your salvation with
fear and trembling
Today, the Lord willing, I am
going to expound on a very important subject in the word of God. Philippians 2:12 says: “So then, my beloved, just as you have always
obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in my absence, work out
your salvation with fear and trembling.”
Today we look at the words, “Work out your
salvation with fear and trembling.”
Through all my Christian life (which spans a long period), I
have never heard a sermon on these words. But these are important words because
they have to do with salvation. Our salvation must be worked out, surprisingly,
with “fear and trembling”. We tend to think that the Christian life is all
about love, joy and peace, but have we ever realized that fear and trembling
has everything to do with the Christian life or with salvation?
If you consult the various commentaries on Philippians, you will
look in vain for a satisfactory explanation of these words. I have asked many
people, “Please tell me what these words mean,” but nobody has been able to explain
these words to me. We have apparently lost the key to understanding the Bible
and understanding salvation. And if we lose the key to salvation, we will lose
everything.
Even if we did a word study on this verse, we still would not
find the answer. We must understand the broad base from which is derived the
principle of these words. So today we ask the Lord to help us to understand
these exceedingly important words.
Paul worked out his salvation
with fear and trembling
How to work out your salvation? The surprising answer is with
fear and trembling. Paul is the apostle of liberty; he is the apostle who talks
about the freedom of the Spirit (e.g.,
Galatians 5:1) and about love, joy and peace. But here he speaks about fear
and trembling in the context of working out our salvation!
That is not the kind of message that we enjoy listening to.
Nowadays there is much talk about power evangelism, about power and strength,
about glory and majesty. But “fear and trembling” is not something that we are
used to hearing. How do we understand this?
If you consult a concordance, you will discover that Paul uses
the words “fear” and “trembling” quite a few times in the very combination
“fear and trembling.” This term has slightly different meanings in different
contexts. Sometimes it means to be submissive or obedient in the sense that
slaves are to be submissive to their masters.
Note: All disciples of the Lord Messiah Jesus are his
slaves, bought and paid for by his shed blood, which makes us slaves to
righteousness [Romans 6:18, 22; 1 Corinthians 7:23; 1 Peter 2:16]
We may be surprised that Paul would make this kind of
exhortation, but he also applies the term “fear and trembling” to himself. In 1 Corinthians 2:2-3, for example, he says: “For I
determined to know nothing among you except Jesus the Messiah, and him crucified. And I was with you in
weakness and in fear and in much trembling.”
Here Paul is talking about Jesus the Messiah “crucified”. Not Jesus the Messiah the King of glory, nor Jesus the Messiah the Lord of lords, nor Jesus the Messiah the King of kings. He is talking
about Jesus the Messiah crucified,
hanging on a stake - cross in utter weakness
and powerlessness. Paul says to the Corinthians: “I determined to know nothing
else at this time, not even the Messiah’s lordship, but only Jesus the Messiah crucified!” For it is because of
his death on the cross that he is confessed as Lord (Philippians 2:8-11). He goes on to say, “I
was with you in ...” In what? In exercising the power and authority of an
apostle? No. He was with them “in weakness”. As though that were not
enough, he goes on to say that he was “in fear and in much trembling” - the
same term that he uses in the letter to the Philippians.
How do we understand this astonishing statement? Paul, the great
apostle, is telling the Corinthians that he was with them in “weakness” and in
“fear and trembling.” He was weak to the point of trembling.
Have you ever experienced this? At times I have been in such a
state of physical weakness that when I lifted my hand, it would shake. I would
say to myself, “What’s happening to me? Look at my hand!” Many of you have
probably experienced a fever that weakened you so much that you shook and
trembled.
But the apostle Paul feared! Yes, he feared and trembled. Here is a picture of weakness. Can
you understand this? All along you thought that the Christian life is all about
power. Nowadays we hear so much about power, even “power evangelism”. Everyone
wants power. Someone by the name of A. Robbins puts “Power” on the cover of his
books, and they sell like hotcakes. Want to sell a book? Just write about “HOW
TO GET POWER” and your book will sell.
But who wants a book on weakness? If a book is titled “How to be
Weak,” it would sit forever on the bookshelf, never to be sold. What person is going to buy a book on becoming weak? It
sounds so ridiculous. Well, that’s right; today I am preaching a message on
weakness.
The Church rejects the
principle of weakness
Much of theology today deals with the Pauline writings. Who is
the writer of the epistles that we so keenly study today? Paul, of course. What
is his secret of power? His secret is none other than weakness, and now he is
sharing this secret with us. “I was with you, and what did I do? Did I swagger
up to you and raise my chin and pull myself up to a full height of 5-foot 1
inch; and subdue you with my
overwhelming presence and charismatic power? Was it in awe that you all looked
at me; this great charismatic apostle
with a bright halo over his head?” That is what the world would expect of Paul.
A strong presence is very important in the world. If you act
like a mouse, you cannot be the General-Manager of a company. You need to walk
with confidence, wave your stick around, make your presence felt, and look
important.
But what does Paul say? In their presence he was in “weakness”.
We find this statement so unacceptable that we might suspect someone of
inserting these words into Paul’s letter. Sorry to say, these are Paul’s own
words.
Just how
weak was Paul? To the point of fear and trembling. Imagine, the apostle Paul
was standing there and trembling. Can you imagine Paul in this situation?
But weakness is a principle that pertains to
salvation. Paul tells us to work out our salvation. How? With fear and
trembling! These words express intense weakness.
Are you working out your salvation with fear
and trembling? Do you sense any profound weakness in your life?
There is the
problem with many of us. Many Christians are weak inwardly, but they think it
is improper and un-Christian to show any weakness. So even if you don’t feel
like doing it, you must give a big smile or else the brothers and sisters might
say to you, “What’s going on? You’ve got a headache or a stomachache? Your wife
gave you a scolding?” So, we try our best to put on a happy smile even when we
feel terrible. We are trained to put on the Colgate smile. This technique is quite
straightforward; you just stretch the muscles a bit, and then smile. And how do
you feel? You feel like a complete fool and hypocrite, don’t you? You say “Good,
good” when you don’t mean a word you say.
We don’t dare to admit that we are weak or miserable before others. So, we walk around in
hypocrisy. Every Sunday evening you are exhausted from a long day of acting in
the church. You acted so well that you should get yourself a job at Hollywood.
Everyone thought you were wonderfully happy even though you were miserable.
That sounds familiar, doesn’t it? We don’t have the courage to admit, “Today I
am weak and tired and depressed. For the whole week I just couldn’t live the
Christian life. I exhausted myself by putting on a show of strength. And the
more I pretended, the more tired I got. Eventually I even lost the will to put
on a show of strength. I don’t care what people think of me anymore.” If that
is your situation, perhaps you have finally come to where you should have been
in the first place.
I think the called-out
Assembly of God would be a healthier place if we could just come together to
the prayer meeting or the communion service and say frankly, “Brothers and
sisters, I feel lousy today. Forgive me for not smiling. I would be grateful if
you could remember me in your prayers. To be honest, I just couldn’t live spiritually victorious for the whole week. I
have done things I should not have done
and said things I should not have
said. So, forgive me for not smiling today. Just remember me in your prayers.”
That would be far more genuine than the ridiculous pretense that too often
characterizes the Christian life.
“Work out your salvation with fear and
trembling” means, at the very least, to be genuine and to acknowledge our
weakness. (It means much more than this, but at least this.) To be
genuine is to acknowledge that we are not as strong as we imagine ourselves to
be, or as we want others to think us to be.
Paul chooses to be weak
The apostle Paul is not given to presenting a false front - acting.
Not only is he determined to refrain from presenting a false front - acting, but
he realizes that as a disciple of the Lord
Jesus he is in a position of weakness, that he can do nothing of and by himself that will be acceptable to Yehovah or Jesus unless he is enabled by their spirit to do what they ask him to do. Is that hard to understand? As
you study his way of doing things, you will go from one surprise to another.
Let me give you an example of this. In 2 Corinthians 10:1-18: We see where Paul is coming from and how he represents the Lord Jesus: Now I Paul myself entreat you by the meekness and gentleness of the Messiah, I who in your presence am lowly among you, but being absent am of good courage toward you: yea, I beseech you, that I may not when present show courage with the confidence wherewith I count to be bold against some [false apostles in the congregation], who count of us as if we walked according to the flesh. For though we walk in the flesh, we do not war according to the flesh (for the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh, but mighty before God to the casting down of strongholds); casting down imaginations, and every high thing that is exalted against the knowledge of God, and bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of the Messiah; and being in readiness to avenge all disobedience, when your obedience shall be made full. You look at the things that are before your face.
If any man trusts in himself that he is the Messiah’s, let him consider this again with himself, that, even as he is the Messiah’s, so also are we. For though I should glory somewhat abundantly concerning our authority (which the Lord gave for building you up, and not for casting you down), I shall not be put to shame: that I may not seem as if I would terrify you by my letters. For, his letters, they say [the false apostles in the congregation], are weighty and strong; but his bodily presence is weak, and his speech of no account [these false apostles discredit what Paul says]. Let such a one [false apostle] reckon this, that, what we are in word by letters when we are absent, such are we also in deed when we are present. For we are not bold to number or compare ourselves with certain of them [the false apostles] that commend themselves: but they themselves, measuring themselves by themselves, and comparing themselves with themselves, are without understanding. But we will not glory beyond our measure, but according to the measure of the province which God apportioned to us as a measure, to reach even unto you. For we stretch not ourselves overmuch, as though we reached not unto you: for we came even as far as unto you in the gospel of the Messiah: not glorying beyond our measure, that is, in other men’s labours; but having hope that, as your faith grows, we shall be magnified in you according to our province unto further abundance, so as to preach the gospel even unto the parts beyond you, and not to glory in another’s province in regard of things ready to our hand. But he that glories, let him glory in the Lord. For not he that commends himself is approved, but whom the Lord commends.
Paul doesn’t have a charismatic or an impressive presence. Notice the word “weak”.
He tells the Corinthians that in their midst he is “weak”. His physical
presence was weak and unimpressive; his speech was not eloquent.
Despite his vast learning and superb intelligence (which every one acknowledges), Paul speaks in a way that
is not eloquent. In fact,
he is so learned that someone of prominence once said to him, “Your great
learning is driving you mad” (Acts
26:24). Paul is very learned, and learning is of course the basis of
eloquence and a vast vocabulary. With a good education and a brilliant
intellect, you can express yourself very eloquently and convincingly.
Why then is Paul’s speech of not eloquent? There is only one explanation
for that. Given his enormous intelligence which everyone acknowledges, there is
only one way that his speech can not be
eloquent. It is of his own choice.
1
Corinthians 2:3: “I was with you in weakness and in fear and in much trembling”.
Paul chooses to be weak rather than to
impress people with his eloquence. Why? He explains in 1 Corinthians 2:5: “that
your faith should not rest on the wisdom of men, but on the power of God.”
That is why Paul puts aside all human wisdom. Now we begin to
see the striking way in which Paul works, which is so different from the human
way of doing things. Our seminary-trained preachers are taught to be eloquent
and to display a presence at the pulpit, but Paul does just the opposite.
In 2 Corinthians 10:1, he says: “I, Paul, entreat you ...” Does he say “I, Paul, the boss and the apostle of the Corinthian churches, command you”? No, he says “Now I, Paul, myself entreat you by the meekness and the gentleness of the Messiah...”
Here he is evidently again
referring to the Messiah crucified.
Therefore, he pleads in the meekness and the gentleness of the one who was crucified for our sins, saying, “I
am meek when face to face with you. Here is
Paul’s secret. He does not use human techniques; that is why God used him.
Note: How do we become perfect? By becoming more and more like
the character, the Lord Jesus displayed when he was alive on this earth, i.e.,
he was meek and gentle, loving and did nothing but what His God and Father Yehovah
told him to do realizing that he was without any strength, and was entirely weak
to do God’s will without the indwelling presence of His spirit.
The Church has conformed to
the world
In North America I often visit bookstores, and I am always
amazed by how the church today is using the methods of the world to preach the
gospel. You can find books such as “Keys to Excellence” or “Strive for
Excellence”. The excellence that they are seeking is the excellence that is
derived from the techniques of the world, from the business administration of
the world, from the leadership principles of the world. That is the kind of
stuff that they want to apply in the church. And these books are best-sellers
that you can find in Christian bookstores. Some of the writers are not even
Christians; they are simply business experts in the world.
We have departed so far from the gospel that we no longer
realize that these worldly principles cannot be applied in the called-out Assembly of God. These
principles are the very opposite of the way the called-out Assembly of God is
supposed to function.
But Paul chooses to be lowly. He chooses to speak in a way that
puts aside human wisdom, and to refrain from impressing people with his vast
learning and powerful intellect. Many people rate Paul as a genius. That is
immediately apparent from his letters (e.g., Romans). But at the same time, it
is also apparent from his letters that he does not try to impress his readers
with his extraordinary intelligence.
Without this kind of attitude, you will not be able to live the Christian life, much
less work out your salvation with fear and trembling. You will not even know what fear and trembling
is according to Paul’s definition. Fear
and trembling are a matter of choice. Nobody is forcing it on you any more than
anyone is forcing Paul to be gentle and meek. He simply chooses to be like that as he follows in the footsteps of
the Lord Messiah Jesus.
He does not use his
God given authority, much less abuse it. He does not throw his weight
around or boss people around. He says, “I plead with you in the meekness and
gentleness of the Messiah.” There
is no pulpit-banging. Anyone who bangs the pulpit must think that he has the
right to bang the pulpit and to scold people. Have you ever listened to such
preachers? They are unbelievably arrogant. They equate pulpit-banging with
power and authority. How nonsensical.
The school of the Messiah
In my non-Christian days as a teenager, I used to read magazines
of interest to young boys. Many of these magazines carry advertise-ments of
body-building pro-grams. They would show a picture of a skinny skeleton-like
figure, fit to be a specimen for medical studies. Then there is another picture
of the same person after he enrolled in the body-building program. Wow, now he
is a muscle man with muscles bulging in every direction - a true he-man! You look
at yourself: “Hey, I’m more like this skeleton here. So, I have to move on to
the other photograph and become a he-man!”
What are the things that attract you? Do you want to be like the
he-man bulging with muscles? What do people find so attractive and desirable about bulging
muscles? It is power and strength. If anyone messes around with you, you can
teach him a lesson or two.
But suppose the advertisement is reversed: “All you muscle men,
come to our school and we will reduce you to a stick! Results guaranteed!” Will
there be a long queue of people waiting to become sticks? Of course not. It
sounds ridiculous.
But that is the school of the Messiah. Believe it or not, He is going
to reduce you to a stick, to
realize that without him you are helpless and in a totally weak condition to carry
out what he wants you to do, proclaim the Kingdom of God to the world. Is
anyone keen to apply to the school of Messiah? Years ago,
I entered that school, and look at what happened to me. Do you see this
beautiful physique?
Strength in my youth
When brother Chris Wong fetched me at the airport by car, I was
sharing with him about my youth. In my youth I was a sportsman who was not the
least interested in boring subjects such as history, literature, and chemistry.
Who has time for such nonsense when you could be playing in the sports field? So,
I spent all day at the sports field. After a few years of doing this, I was
bulging all over with muscles. I didn’t have to envy that advertisement very
much because I had quite a few muscles of my own. I used to admire myself in
front of the mirror. I would flex this V-shaped muscle and move my chest
muscles up and down. How nice. (You can’t imagine me like that now, right?)
I would look in the mirror to see these stomach muscles - all
six square plates down there. I did a bit of boxing, so it was important for me
to have some stomach muscles in case I got punched. So that was no problem for
me. I admired myself everyday. My father used to say, “What are you doing in the
washroom?” I would say, “Brushing my teeth!” “What’s taking so long?” The
brushing took only half a minute; the rest of the time I was admiring myself.
But you look at me now, and you are probably wondering how I could be like
that. But that was really me in my youth.
All day long I was in the sports field playing softball,
baseball, basketball, badminton; you name
it. My favourite sports were swimming, baseball, softball, and the martial arts
(to which I devoted quite a lot of time).
What about my studies? Well, in my spare time I managed to
squeeze in a little bit of study. Studying was just a spare-time activity. I
came up with a strategy that worked beautifully, and I used to wonder why
people would spend so many hours studying. My strategy was quite simple. By
excelling in two subjects, I was able to pass any entrance examination and
enter any school, from junior middle school to senior middle school. (In China,
school admission was determined by entrance examinations.) My father thought
that this young fellow who spent all day in the sports field would never get
into senior middle school. Well, I took my exams with the four best middle
schools in Shanghai and was accepted by all four. My father was quite
mystified.
My secret was very simple. First, I would excel in English
(which was easy for me since I had been in an English primary school). I did a
lot of reading in English, so my standard in China was considered very high. I
would always get above 90% in any English examination without studying for it.
That leaves me with only one subject to study: mathematics. I loved mathematics
because I treated it as a game. You can play around with it and get good
results. Playing with figures was fun, not hard work. Mathematics was another
subject in which I would always get close to 100%. Some teachers did not give
out perfect scores, so you had to settle for 99%. With these two subjects over
90%, you are guaranteed a place in any school so long as you pass the other
boring subjects; like chemistry,
for which I would get about 70%. That was the secret that allowed me to spend
all day in the sports field and to build up an impressive physique.
God teaches us to become
weak
But when the Lord took hold of me, He really worked on me. The
school of the Messiah led me
in the opposite direction: from a muscle man to a stick. Many of you know from
my testimony that after I came to the Lord, I went through three years of near
starvation, after which I was reduced to skin and bones. I was a pitiful sight
in the mirror. On one side you could play the guitar, on the other side you
could play the banjo. What happened to all my muscles? They got absorbed into
the body; everything was gone. God really works in the opposite direction,
reducing me from strength to weakness (cf. Psalm 102:23: He has broken my strength in midcourse; he has shortened my days).
Anyone who has ever been strong would know what this could do to
you emotionally. People go for bodybuilding not only to look nice, but also for
its psychological benefits. It makes you feel confident, a somebody. You are on
top of the world with an athletic spring in your step. Nowadays I don’t fully
remember how it felt. Now I am physically
weak
most of the time. And the more I progress in the school of the Messiah, the weaker I become. But God
wants to give us power; therefore, He teaches us to become weak – realize our weakness, that we are
weak.
This does not mean that the Word of God teaches us to take it
upon ourselves to neglect our health, much less to deliberately damage it.
There have been, for example, some zealous but misguided people who damaged
their health through long periods of fasting. We must remember that “you are
not your own, for you were bought at a price” (1 Corinthians 6:19-20: Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit
within you, that you have from
God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So,
glorify God in your body).
Our bodies belong to the LordJesus who bought us with his own blood, and we do not have the right to harm
it. Only he has the right to deal with us as
he, in his perfect wisdom, knows what is best for us
and for his called-out Assembly. Only he knows how to deal with us in such a way that
his power and his glory can be manifested through our
weaknesses.
Power is perfected in
weakness
Paul went through the same kind of experience. Paul says in 2 Corinthians 12:7: “And because of the
surpassing greatness of the revelations, for this reason, to keep me from exalting
myself, there was given me a thorn in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to buffet
me; to keep me from exalting myself.”
Even the apostle Paul was susceptible to pride, so he had to be inflicted with
physical illness. In verses 8 and 9 he says, “Concerning this I entreated the
Lord three times that it might depart from me. And he has said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient
for you, for power is perfected in weakness.’”
Three times Paul prayed, and three times the Lord’s answer was
“no”. How is power perfected? It is perfected in weakness. That is the
principle behind Paul’s other statements that we have read. Paul learned the
secret that God’s power is manifested only when we are weak, unable to do anything for Him unless we are
empowered by His indwelling presence.
Paul goes on to say, “Therefore I will rather boast about my
weaknesses, that the power of the
Messiah may dwell in me.” Paul not only accepts weaknesses, but he also
boasts in them. He joyfully accepts the thorn in the flesh to keep him humble.
Take a rose thorn and stick it into your flesh, and you will
know what pain is. The word “thorn” implies pain. Paul had a physical ailment that causes him great
pain. But he does not say with resignation, “I have eventually and finally come
to accept the thorn.” On the contrary, he rejoices in his pain and weaknesses.
Is he crazy? Not in the least, for he knows that when he is weak, the Messiah’s power will “dwell” in him (the
Greek word means to “live in”).
In 1 Corinthians 12:10 he
says: “Therefore, I take pleasure in
infirmities, in reproaches, in needs, in persecutions, in distresses, for the Messiah’s sake. (NKJV)” Then he
reiterates the secret of power: “For when I am weak, then I am strong.” Now we
know why Paul chooses to be weak. That is when God’s power is made perfect. If
you know this, you will not pretend to be strong or try to impress
people with your strength.
Are you feeling miserable? If you are, then you are feeling
weak. Now is the opportunity for God to manifest His strength in you. So why do
you try to suppress feelings of weakness? Why not welcome the fact that God has
finally brought you down to utter weakness, tiredness, and even depression?
Depression is simply discouragement. What are the things that discourage
people? Failure, for one thing. Is failure bad? It is in failure that God can
finally work in your life for the first time! He must bring you low. When the Messiah was nailed to the stake - cross, His disciples thought that
he had utterly failed. His death
seemed to have brought his whole
earthly ministry to a grand failure. Their
expectation of what they thought the Messiah would do at that time was gone. Little
did they know that that “failure” was precisely God’s triumph over sin and
death.
Paul says in 1 Corinthians
1:25 that “the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the
weakness of God is stronger than men.” How wonderfully Paul has learned that
secret.
Let us look at the five things that we have just read in 2 Corinthians 12:10: “infirmities, reproaches,
necessities, persecutions, distresses.” I would like to briefly look at these
five things that Paul takes pleasure in.
1. INFIRMITIES
The word translated “infirmities” has one of two meanings, and
both meanings apply perfectly to Paul. Infirmities can mean weaknesses, and it
can also mean sicknesses. That is why hospitals are sometimes called
“infirmaries”. People who are infirm (sick) go there for treatment.
Do you think it is terrible that God allows you to get sick?
When I get a backache, do you feel sorry for me? Thank-you for your sympathy,
but has it ever occurred to you that it is through this ailment that God is
making me strong spiritually? If you had realized that you would give thanks to
God for every weakness and sickness. We consider these things unfortunate
because we don’t understand the secret of God’s power. When we get a headache,
we wonder why God is so inconsiderate. But it is only in our weakness that God
manifests His power. That is why all the glory goes to Him.
Some years ago, I was preaching in London, Ontario (not London,
England), and I was scheduled to speak at the Chinese Christian Fellowship at
the University of Western Ontario on one of the evenings. But when I got up in
the morning that day, my legs buckled under me, and I fell back onto the bed. I
simply could not stand up. I tried to get up once more and I collapsed again. I
was wondering what was happening to me. I was totally weakened, probably due to
the exhaustion from preaching day after day. I struggled a few more times, but
I still could not get up. I was staying with some members of the fellowship,
and I called them into the room. I said, “I’m sorry I can’t get up. My legs
have no strength.” They got so worried that they said, “We advertised you as
our preacher for tonight, and people are coming from all over to listen to your
message. And you can’t preach? There’s no time to find another preacher. Even
if we could find one, the people will be disappointed because he is not the
advertised preacher.” I said, “I understand that this is a problem.” They asked
me what to do. I said, “You just pray.” They wanted to call the doctor, but I
said, “No, don’t call the doctor; he can’t do anything anyway. Just pray. If God is willing, I will preach tonight.”
They looked at me lying on the bed, and they were wondering how I could ever
get to the meeting. But I said, “Let’s leave it in God’s hands.”
As the day went on, I still could not get up. There was no
strength whatsoever. It was an amazing experience that I had never encountered before.
I had been transformed from a muscle man to a person who could not even get out
of bed. Pitiful, isn’t it? But all this was happening so that God could
manifest His power.
Half an hour before the meeting, the leaders were looking very
worried. I said, “All right, by God’s grace,
I now will get up by faith.” And I got up.
“Wow! He got up! But can he walk to the door without collapsing?” I got to the
door. “Not bad, but can he get into the car?” I got into the car. When we
arrived at the university, I had to walk up a lot of stairs. I walked up the
stairs. And that evening I preached with such power from the Lord (I knew it
was not from myself) that it just lifted me up as on eagle’s wings. I was so
carried up on wings and preached with such energy and power that I could see
the leaders’ faces staring at me in amazement, thinking, “Is this really
happening?”
That was a demonstration of God’s power in my weakness. That is
the way Paul would have it. “Make me weak so that Your power may be manifested.”
Many times, I have had to preach in a state of complete weakness. Just recently
in Singapore, I was sick and running a fever; sweat was pouring down. I was
propping myself up against the pulpit. The Lord God keeps me weak so that all the power may be
from Him.
Another time I was preaching in Edmonton, Canada. I was running
a high fever and again they said, “You are the advertised speaker and people
are coming to hear you preach.” I asked another pastor if he would like to
preach in my place. But he said, “They wouldn’t want to listen to me, they want
to listen to you.” So, I said, “But look at me. I am running a high fever and
sweating away even though the room temperature is moderate.” But he said, “No,
I can’t do it. The people will be so disappointed.” He himself was a well-known
pastor, but he refused to take my place. So, I had to go to the pulpit to
preach with sweat pouring down. I preached in complete weakness.
Why does God allow
this to happen? He knows that you are going to preach, so why doesn’t He take
the fever away? Instead, He allows you to preach in weakness, even with a fever
so high that you could hardly think straight. But that is the secret of the
Christian life.
Weakness is not just physical weakness but also an inner feeling of weakness. In 2 Corinthians 11:32-33 Paul recounted how
in Damascus he was let down in a basket through a window. How humiliating and
undignified! Can you imagine the great apostle going down the city wall in a
filthy vegetable basket? There was not a trumpet, or a red carpet prepared for
the great apostle. No, he was let down in a vegetable basket; he was probably
covered with vegetables so that the guards would not see him. Where is the
dignity? This kind of weakness is an inner feeling of weakness.
When you feel weak, can you thank God for that? Paul says, “I
take pleasure in my weaknesses, and even boast in them.” That is a whole new
mentality, isn’t it?
2. REPROACHES
Paul also takes pleasure in reproaches. The word “reproaches”
means insults, shame, mistreatment, outrage. Can you rejoice when people insult
you, ridicule you, mistreat you? Paul says, “I thank the Lord that I got
insulted.”
I used to go from door to door to preach the gospel. I seldom do
that now; in fact, I no longer do that. One time in Wales, in the United
Kingdom, I was doing door-to-door evangelism. Have you ever tried that? You
knock on the door and say, “Hello madam, here is a gospel tract for you.” Bang!
The door is slammed in your face. What are you going to do? Are you going to
say, “Do you know who is that important man who just spoke to you? If you knew,
you wouldn’t have slammed the door in my face!”
You feel insulted and humiliated. But do you know what? I
thanked the Lord for it. “Thank-you Lord that I got the door slammed in my
face. Thank-you that I am allowed to suffer a little humiliation for Your
sake.” For a person from my family background, having the door slammed in the
face is not exactly easy to take. Formerly in China, if anyone slammed the door
on those of us who lived in power and authority, that person stood a chance of
being shot. So, this insult was a wonderfully new experience for me.
The word translated “reproaches” can also mean disaster, damage,
or hardship. Hardship means to be thrown out of your home for your faith in the Messiah; you end up sleeping on the park
bench. Or you became a laughingstock to your friends and relatives. They call
you a nut case for being a Christian. You sit there and everyone looks at you with
a long face or with a pitiful smile, saying, “This guy belongs in a mental
asylum.” This is enduring reproach for the sake of the Messiah.
One day you might have to say to your boss, “Sorry, I can’t help
you falsify the figures.” “You can’t? You fool! Do you know what’s going to
happen to you? You’re not going to get your raise. In fact, I’m going to cut
your salary!” So, you get insulted. Your pay is slashed, and other things start
happening to you. How do you feel? Can you say with Paul, “I take pleasure in this”?
Let’s take something more common. You pray in public, and people
say to you, “Hey, we didn’t know you’re a holy Joe! Did you put on your halo
this morning?” How do you like that? Nobody likes that. But can you rejoice?
That takes transformation.
3. NECESSITY
Necessity has to do with our needs. “Necessity” can mean several things in Greek. (When I am
explaining the meanings of these words, I am giving you their Greek meanings.)
The word “necessities” generally means pressures of any kind. We live in a
stressful world. It is so hard to sleep at night because our nerves are in
tatters, and we need alcohol or sedatives to calm ourselves. But here Paul says
that he rejoices in stress and in pressures brought on by obligations.
Suppose you are going to lead a Bible study. You are leading a
Bible study, and all the brothers and sisters have high expectations of you.
There is pressure and stress. It becomes so unbearable that you resolve never
to lead a Bible study again. Worse yet, they criticize your Bible study. You
worked so hard, but they still say, “Why did you go wrong? Why did you cite the
wrong verses and turn to the wrong pages?” And you say to yourself, “I did my
best, and look at the criticism I get.” That is stress and pressure.
But Paul gives thanks. This is what he means by working out your
salvation and joyfully accepting weakness, inadequacy, and humiliation. Do you
understand Paul? He has a different mentality. Working out your salvation is
not pretending to be strong or to be what you are not, but simply accepting
every pressure, inward or outward, with joy. That is the Christian life.
Paul goes on to greater things that don’t even apply to us now.
The Greek word translated “stress” or “necessities” can also mean persecution
or even torture, according to Greek lexicons. Paul thanks God for pain and
beating and stoning, not just for rejection or ridicule (2 Corinthians 11:24-27: Five times I received at the hands of the Jews the forty lashes
less one. Three times I was beaten with
rods. Once I was stoned. Three times I was shipwrecked; a night and a
day I was adrift at sea; on frequent journeys, in danger from rivers,
danger from robbers, danger from my own people, danger from Gentiles, danger in the city, danger in the wilderness,
danger at sea, danger from false brothers; in toil and hardship, through many a sleepless
night, in hunger and thirst, often without food, in cold and exposure.).
4. PERSECUTIONS
In 2 Timothy 3:11 Paul
talks about the persecutions that he suffered in Antioch, Iconium and Lystra, a
reference to the events recorded in
Acts 13-14. What kind of persecution is hard for us to endure? Since you
don’t live in China, let’s not talk about persecution in China. What kind of
persecution do you experience here? One of the worst is slander (when people
say untrue things about you). There is no point justifying yourself because the
more you try to justify yourself, the worse your case becomes. Paul experienced
this in Antioch and Iconium. He was constantly slandered, and his teaching was
distorted. Bad things were being said about him and his co-workers (cf e.g., Romans 3:8). In Lystra he was even stoned because
of the slandering against him (Acts
14:8-20). Slander is the first step towards physical assault. To justify
their attacks, they would say that you are a bad guy who deserves to be
punished. So, Paul was stoned and left for dead. Yet these are the things for
which Paul gives thanks.
Think of the terrible stoning that he received at Lystra. He was
knocked unconscious and bleeding profusely. He was left lying on the ground,
presumed dead. The disciples also thought that he had died, but he got up by
God’s power and continued with his ministry. The fact that he was presumed dead
meant that the stones must have hit him very hard, probably leaving hideous
scars on his head. He bore those terrible scars for the sake of the Messiah. How would you like to have a
scarred face? Sisters are very sensitive about that, and I think brothers are
equally sensitive. Would you find it humiliating to walk around with scars on
your face because of being
stoned? But Paul glories in that. He is not ashamed of being
physically disfigured. It is undoubtedly very humiliating to him, but he
glories in it. At the end of Galatians (6:17) Paul says, “Let no one cause
trouble for me, for I bear on my body the brand-marks of Jesus.”
Now we begin to see the stature of the apostle Paul and why God
used him so mightily. Paul was a man who delighted in every weakness, from sickness to
disfigurement, from inner anguish to pain. He talks about pain, sleepless
nights, and every kind of distress such as poverty and hunger.
5. DISTRESS
The Greek word “stenochoría” literally means “narrowness” or to
be “hemmed in a narrow place”; figuratively it means distress or difficulty.
Paul endures every form of difficulty, including hunger. Do you enjoy being
hungry? If you miss a meal, you already feel weak. But Paul lives with hunger.
I too have known a lot of hunger, having lived with it for two and a half
years. God took me through the school of hunger and reduced me to skin and
bones.
Can you rejoice in your
weaknesses?
Let us conclude
We must clearly understand that God’s power is perfected in only
one way: in our weakness. The first step is therefore to accept our weaknesses.
Paul rejoices over his weaknesses. Since the called-out Assembly has so many weaknesses, we
have much to rejoice over.
Does it trouble you that your educational level is not up to the
standards of others? Does it give you an inferiority complex? My friend, if it
does, then you don’t understand the principle of weakness. God does not care
about your education. Man cares, you care, but God does not care. He is not
concerned about the academic degrees that you have or don’t have. In the called-out Assembly church of the Messiah, anyone who lives with an
inferiority complex because of education still does not understand that we must
work out our salvation in weakness and with fear and trembling. It is when you
are weak that God’s power is manifested.
People worry about all kinds of trivial things. Some people are
bothered if they are too short or too tall. A person may have an inferiority
complex because he is 5’1” and the other guy is 5’2”. So, he buys shoes with
higher heels, as though being tall is all-important. I am still trying to
figure out what is so important about it. One time I was in a department store
in Kuala Lumpur, and I saw a man who was about 6 foot 5. I observed him for a
while, and then realized that he was the store detective. He was so tall that
he could look above the shelves to see if anyone was shoplifting. At least
there is one advantage to being tall: you can be a walking TV monitor!
How people struggle over elementary things! They think it is
humiliating to look up to speak to someone taller. A dear friend of mine, Clark
Pinnock, professor of systematic theology at McMaster University (Hamilton,
Canada), is 6 foot 6. I admit that it is somewhat hard to talk to him because
my neck gets tired. But that is about the only inconvenience. Apart from that,
what is the problem? Why are you unhappy about your height? Some people are
acutely troubled by this, and it eats them up, especially when they are in the
company of tall people. Does your height make any difference? Does God care
about your height? Will He measure your height at the gates of the kingdom?
“Sorry, you’re too short to get in.” Maybe it’s the other way around. Some
people may be too tall to go through the gates of the kingdom!
I am mentioning these things because it is surprising how people
are bothered by their educational level, or their height, or even the cars that
they drive. The car I drive belongs in the museum! I bought it for $100. In
North America, cars don’t last very long because the salt used during winter
corrodes the body. So, my 1977 car is a relic. It is 16 years old, but it still
runs beautifully. I thank God for it.
Our sense of values must be inverted. Can we learn to rejoice
differently from the way the world rejoices? There is only one way to
experience God’s power, and that is to rejoice in our weaknesses, in being lowly, in realizing we are nothing. Paul understands God’s
power, and I hope you too will understand it.
“Lord God, I am so
weak. I have no power of my own. I am nothing; I can do nothing; I know
nothing. Please let Your power come into my life.”
Brothers and sisters, you are not going to be saved merely by
accepting His gift of salvation, but by letting His salvation work in you. That
is the only way that salvation can be worked out.
Have you ever heard this properly expounded to you? I have not.
I am also in the process of learning this lesson. I thank God - Yehovah for teaching me how to be weak,
and how to live in the weakness of the
Messiah. By nature, I am not weak, and neither is Paul. So, weakness is
something that we have to learn. We learn not only to accept it, but even to
delight in it. Then people will say, “Now I see God's power and glory in your
life!
Written by Eric Chang and edited by Bruce Lyon
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