Message by Chad Kelly
Matthew Warren, the 27 year old son of Rick and Kay Warren, committed suicide Friday evening after an enjoyable evening with his parents. Rick Warren is the pastorSaddlebackChurchand author of “A Purpose-Driven Life”. His son, Matthew, had suffered all of his life from clinical depression and mental illness.
Rick said this of Matthew:
You who watched Matthew grow up knew he was an incredibly kind, gentle, and compassionate man. He had a brilliant intellect and a gift for sensing who was most in pain or most uncomfortable in a room. He’d then make a bee-line to that person to engage and encourage them.
My heart breaks when I think of the despair that choked this young man to death. And my heart breaks as I try to imagine all that his momma and daddy are feeling, even right now”¦and all that they will feel every day of the rest of their lives””the grief and sense of loss, the doubts, the questions, the sense of betrayal, the struggle with guilt”¦the simple pain of not having their son any more.
We been thinking about “When Life is Hard”””and we”™ve done that through a Bible study with that title.
James MacDonald
Sometimes trials are difficult because of their severity; others are difficult because of their length”¦Jesus”™ crucifixion demonstrates that some trials go all the way.
Grace and Thorns
2 Corinthians 12:7-10
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
2 Corinthians 12:7-10 (NLT)
7 even though I have received such wonderful revelations from God. So to keep me from becoming proud, I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger from Satan to torment me and keep me from becoming proud.
8 Three different times I begged the Lord to take it away. 9 Each time he said, “My grace is all you need. My power works best in weakness.” So now I am glad to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ can work through me. 10 That”™s why I take pleasure in my weaknesses, and in the insults, hardships, persecutions, and troubles that I suffer for Christ. For when I am weak, then I am strong.
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
The Message
7-10Because of the extravagance of those revelations, and so I wouldn’t get a big head, I was given the gift of a handicap to keep me in constant touch with my limitations. Satan’s angel did his best to get me down; what he in fact did was push me to my knees. No danger then of walking around high and mighty! At first I didn’t think of it as a gift, and begged God to remove it. Three times I did that, and then he told me,
My grace is enough; it’s all you need.
My strength comes into its own in your weakness.
Once I heard that, I was glad to let it happen. I quit focusing on the handicap and began appreciating the gift. It was a case of Christ’s strength moving in on my weakness. Now I take limitations in stride, and with good cheer, these limitations that cut me down to size””abuse, accidents, opposition, bad breaks. I just let Christ take over! And so the weaker I get, the stronger I become.
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
A thorn; specifically a thorn in the flesh; a barb under the skin; a stake driven right through his body, as if he had been impaled. Paul had what we all have: A crippling, limiting, frustrating condition, addiction, sickness, weakness or set of circumstances that prevented him ”“ he felt ”“ from being all he could be, and doing all he wanted to do.
MacDonald
A thorn is an enduring source of personal pain allowed by God for our good”¦allowed by God but sent by Satan.
And NO”¦I don”™t pretend to grasp how all of that works.
Frankly, I”™m not sure James MacDonald”™s explanation is as watertight as he wants it to be in our study.
At the end of the day, all we can say is what the Bible says:
God gave the thorn, but it was a messenger from Satan.
And the mystery in that will be explained by GOD when we get to heaven.
The most important issue for right now is, “How do I respond and live every day with this thorn that God has allowed in my life?”
7 I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger from Satan
What was Paul”™s thorn in the flesh, his limitation?
The church has speculated about it for years and there are endless theories.
The best guess, in my opinion, is rooted in the meaning of the word itself.
This word skolops, or thorn, indicates some kind of physical pain. It is a stabbing, piercing, slashing condition. Paul may have endured all of these other troubles and temptations and wanted to quit because of them, but here he seems to be speaking of something physical. He had a sickness or disability. Some say epilepsy, some say malaria, but more than likely it was something to do with his vision ”“ his eyesight. The traditional images of the Apostle Paul show him to be a little ugly man with large, bugging eyes, eyes that did not serve him well. And on two occasions in the book of Galatians he makes reference to his eyes being bad. He says to the Galatians: “you would have gladly ripped your eyes out and given them to me” (4:15); and at the end of that letter he says, “Look at what large letters I have written to you.” A secretary or scribe usually wrote Paul”™s letters as he dictated them. At the end of the Galatian letter, he puts his own penmanship on the paper, and he has to write big, kindergarten-style letters in order to even see it.
Rethink Paul”™s traveling, speaking, and writing ministry as a man who can barely see, and whose eye condition was extremely painful and limiting. He traveled more than 12,000 miles by foot, donkey, and boat, in his career, in the most primitive of conditions. He visited three continents, dozens of countries and hundreds of towns. By the numbers, he wrote the majority of post-Gospel New Testament and is the one chiefly responsible for the Christianization of Europe. It goes without saying, that outside of Jesus himself, Paul was and is the most important and dominating figure of our faith. And while he was bold, courageous, and seemingly with boundless energy, yet, it appears he was nearly blind, suffering from disease and in constant pain.
It makes you think, what could Paul have done if he had not suffered from this condition? And that”™s exactly what Paul was thinking.
8 Three different times I begged the Lord to take it away. 9
But the answer was always, “No.”
No. No. No.
We”™ve been there. We pray and beg and bargain with God for relief; for healing, for rescue, for him to take away some nagging impediment we can”™t shake off or get well from ourselves.
C.S. Lewis
“We go to God and find the door slammed and the sound of the door being bolted and doubled bolted from the inside.”
WHAT”™S THISALLABOUT?
WHY DID GOD SAY “NO” TO PAUL”™S REQUEST?
7 even though I have received such wonderful revelations from God. So to keep me from becoming proud, I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger from Satan to torment me and keep me from becoming proud.
Paul says, “I hate this limitation of mine, this disability. It is a torment sent straight from the devil. It is evil. It is satanic ”“ Satan means adversary, so it was adversarial ”“ it never lets up. But somehow it is for my own good.”
Paul had been the recipient of all these heavenly visions and revelations ”“ he talks about these in opening verses of this chapter. The Corinthians to whom he was writing were infamous trouble makers. At times they had what could best be described as an antagonistic relationship with their founder and pastor, Paul. They said things like, “He”™s not very impressive. He”™s speaking skills could be better. I wish he was more spiritual.” So when he had had enough, he unloads with both barrels about his qualifications as an apostle and missionary. He tells them how much he has suffered for the cause, he talks about his training and his pedigree, he gives them his personal testimony, and finally he tells them about these fantastic experiences, these out-of-body experiences, where he was ushered into God”™s presence in the highest of heavens.
You experience something like that, and it would be easy to become terribly conceited, impossible to live with. So this thorn in the flesh is used by God to keep Paul from being an arrogant, religious snob. God was saying “no” to Paul”™s request for Paul”™s own good.
MacDonald
That”™s where the thorn”™s going””to keep you from coming to the place in life where you think you have everything under control.
God can do anything; but he can”™t do much with the self-sufficient. How can he? How can we full of God if we are full of ourselves? How can we be dependent upon his ability when we are depending upon our own? How can we be everything God wants us to be, when we are still trying to be all we can be? How can we boast about the power of God in our lives while we boast about our own power?
The human heart does not have enough room for both our own supposed power and the true power of God”™s grace; they are incompatible.
God”™s “no” to Paul”™s prayer is for the purpose of him saying “yes” to something far better.
THIS IS THE SOMETHING BETTER: THE LORD SAYS TO PAUL, “MY GRACE ISALLYOU NEED.”
9 Each time he said, “My grace is all you need. My power works best in weakness.”
The Lord”™s response to Paul is written, in the old red-letter editions of the Bible, in red. Now, what did we learn about the red letters in the New Testament? Those are the words of Christ himself. So, here, pages and pages away from the gospels and years after the resurrection and ascension of Jesus into the heavens, here Jesus speaks directly to Paul. Apparently, in one of these heavenly visits Paul was prone to brag about, Paul and Jesus were hanging out together. It is then Paul learns that the only thing to be proud about is weakness. In weakness God makes us strong. “My grace is all you need,” Jesus says.
MacDonald
Your thorn will crush you without God”™s grace.
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
I have heard this little proverb my whole life, usually rolling off the lips of someone trying to comfort another. It is well-intended I suppose, but not very effective. In fact, I now think it is grossly dishonest. It goes like this: “Now don”™t worry. God won”™t put any more on you than you can stand.”
That is a lie.
If we could handle every situation on our own, there would be no need for grace.
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
It is because the human life is limited and finite and sometimes largely unbearable ”“ with its suffering and pain, its handicaps and its injustices ”“ because we all have thorns that stab through our bodies and souls that keep us from being all we can be, that we need God”™s mercy and grace to be what he can make us. In every situation, in every weakness, every day, and every moment: We might exist without this mighty grace, but we cannot truly live without it.
MacDonald
Grace is the capacity to anything spiritually profitable.
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
9 So now I am glad to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ can work through me. 10 That”™s why I take pleasure in my weaknesses, and in the insults, hardships, persecutions, and troubles that I suffer for Christ. For when I am weak, then I am strong.
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
Will we live out this paradox of grace?
Will we, like Paul, refuse to try to fix our weaknesses and be strong in ourselves, and, instead, admit our weakness so Jesus”™ power can flow through our lives?
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
There is more to learn from our thorns in our flesh than simply endurance.
We can change; we can let our weaknesses transform and carry us to God, and let God”™s mighty grace have the last word.
Isaiah 40:27-31 (New Living Translation)
27 O Jacob, how can you say the Lord does not see your troubles?
O Israel, how can you say God ignores your rights?
28 Have you never heard?
Have you never understood?
The Lord is the everlasting God,
the Creator of all the earth.
He never grows weak or weary.
No one can measure the depths of his understanding.
29 He gives power to the weak
and strength to the powerless.
30 Even youths will become weak and tired,
and young men will fall in exhaustion.
31 But those who trust in the Lord will find new strength.
They will soar high on wings like eagles.
They will run and not grow weary.
They will walk and not faint.
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
Florence Willett
I thank God for bitter things;
they”™ve been a ”˜friend of grace”™;
they”™ve driven me from paths of ease
to storm the secret place.
I thank Him for the friends who failed to fill my heart”™s deep need;
They”™ve driven me to the Savior”™s feet, upon His love to feed.
I”™m grateful too through all life”™s way no one could satisfy, and so I”™ve found in God alone
My rich, my full supply.
Our weaknesses are the channels through which God”™s mighty grace flows into our lives.
PRAYER: Lord Jesus, you must do all or all is nothing. May our limitations, our painful places, and the thorny nature of life, make us dependent upon you and the grace you freely give to those who will receive it with open and empty hands. And we pray for theWarren family today”¦as well as individuals and families right here, right now that need your grace for their painful place. We ask this in the name of the Christ, Amen.
Communion