Suffering: Oswald Chambers weighs in

churchsignFrom my college days, I’ve loved Oswald Chamber’s My Utmost For His Highest. I didn’t realize until recently that you can read the devotionals for each day online. I found yesterday’s entry to be especially appropriate to our discussion on suffering:

If you are going to be used by God, He will take you through a number of experiences that are not meant for you personally at all. They are designed to make you useful in His hands, and to enable you to understand what takes place in the lives of others. Because of this process, you will never be surprised by what comes your way. You say, “Oh, I can’t deal with that person.” Why can’t you? God gave you sufficient opportunities to learn from Him about that problem; but you turned away, not heeding the lesson, because it seemed foolish to spend your time that way.

The sufferings of Christ were not those of ordinary people. He suffered “according to the will of God” ( 1 Peter 4:19 ), having a different point of view of suffering from ours. It is only through our relationship with Jesus Christ that we can understand what God is after in His dealings with us. When it comes to suffering, it is part of our Christian culture to want to know God’s purpose beforehand. In the history of the Christian church, the tendency has been to avoid being identified with the sufferings of Jesus Christ. People have sought to carry out God’s orders through a shortcut of their own. God’s way is always the way of suffering— the way of the “long road home.”

Are we partakers of Christ’s sufferings? Are we prepared for God to stamp out our personal ambitions? Are we prepared for God to destroy our individual decisions by supernaturally transforming them? It will mean not knowing why God is taking us that way, because knowing would make us spiritually proud. We never realize at the time what God is putting us through— we go through it more or less without understanding. Then suddenly we come to a place of enlightenment, and realize— “God has strengthened me and I didn’t even know it!”

4 thoughts on “Suffering: Oswald Chambers weighs in

  1. Trent Tanaro

    Its interesting that as we endure the pain of suffering, we often do not realize what God is doing in the process. I usually do not see it until the pain passes or settles, for some pain never passes. Some of it becomes part of the fabric of who we are. My pain for example has been woven into my life to the point that I “really” do feel for others in pain and spend a great deal of time praying for them.
    It is a very good lesson for us to “try” and grasp as we deal with life on planet Earth. Great post Bro!
    (waiting for you and Rex’s comments…lol….would love to meet for coffee or lunch someday with both of you)

  2. Lisa

    Oswald Chambers had amazing insight. It’s incredible how often we tell God “I can’t do that”!!! He must think, “what, are you kidding? Of course you can’t! That’s what I’m here for!!”

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  4. L. King Dutton

    I met Compassion and Decency on my road to Gethsemane and they have been my dearest friends ever since. I am so grateful that my friend Jesus paved that road for me. Suffering was never meant to be my enemy but rather a tool used by God to make me awake to His current, ever-present, interaction in my life. Thank you God.

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