Can We Prove
There Is A God?
A Suffering Savior
And Suffering Christians
Chapter Eight
Even if humankind learns the
lesson of the dire consequences of sin in this lifetime, how do
we know God’s Kingdom will succeed? What assurance is there that
at least the majority will crystallize the God-likeness that
will enable them to live in eternal peace, harmony and
happiness?
Jesus is our assurance. He is the
“surety of a better covenant” (Heb. 7:22), the New
Covenant which will bless all mankind in God’s Kingdom. As King,
Priest and Judge in that Kingdom, his name will be called
“Wonderful” (Rev. 20:6; John 5:22; Isa. 9:6). Yes, Jesus
will be a “Wonderful” success.
Why Jesus Suffered
Not only did Jesus die to provide
the payment, a perfect human life that will eventually release
the human race from death; but during his lifetime he suffered
at the hands of his fellow man so that he could fully sympathize
with their every need.
The Prophet Isaiah anticipated
the suffering of Jesus. “He is despised and rejected of
men; a man of sorrows acquainted with grief... Surely he has
borne our grief, and carried our sorrows... He was wounded for
our transgressions … and with his stripes we are healed”
(Isa. 53: 3-5). Therefore, Hebrews 4:15 tells us that Jesus is a
sympathetic high priest who can be touched with a feeling of our
infirmities. Jesus continually permitted himself to be afflicted
through contact with sinful man.
Every time Jesus healed, it was
at the expense of his own strength. We read that “virtue
[strength] went out from him” (Mark 5:30) as he healed
the blind, the lame, the deaf, the lepers. He was expending his
own strength so that he might be touched with a feeling of our
infirmities. Further, Jesus was mocked; he experienced
brutality, violence and murder at the hands of his fellow men.
As a Jew, he tasted the racial scorn of the Romans. He
identified himself with poverty, drudgery and obscurity. Full of
compassion, his heart was moved for the mentally ill, the
physically sick, the lame, the deaf and the blind. Why? So that
in God’s Kingdom Christ will know just what lessons mankind will
need. “Who can have compassion on the ignorant, and on
them that are out of the way; for that he himself also is
compassed with infirmity” (Heb.5:2). Jesus assumed upon
his shoulders the ills of this world. Indeed, he can have
compassion on the ignorant and them that are out of the way.
Those whom he ransomed, he will know how to restore.
Your High Calling
Jesus died nearly 2,000 years
ago. The question naturally arises, Why the long delay before
setting up his Kingdom for the blessing of all mankind? One
thing is clear throughout the Bible: God has not been attempting
to convert the world since Jesus’ death and resurrection.
The Scriptures speak of God
dealing with only a few for a specific purpose. Christ’s
followers are spoken of as a little flock. “Fear not,
little flock; for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you
the kingdom” (Luke 12:32). God is only calling a few; a
representative of every type of the human race is being called
into the church of Christ. The Greek word translated “church” in
the New Testament means “called out ones.”
What is this special calling or
selection of the church? Christians are called to the multiple
profession of judges, priests and kings of mankind in Christ’s
Kingdom. What an honor! At first our faith staggers. But the
Scriptures are explicit on this point. First Corinthians 6:2
states that “the saints shall judge the world.”
First Peter 2:9 shows Christians are called to be a “royal
[kingly] priesthood.” Similarly, Revelation 1:6 and 5:10 states
we are called of God to be “kings and priests” and
“we shall reign on the earth.” Revelation 20:6
states that Christians “shall be priests of God and of
Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand years.”
Judges, priests, kings! What a
profession Christians have been called to! But what a rigorous
training course the Christian must pursue to attain this
profession.
Not Many Wise
“For you see your calling,
brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not many
mighty, not many noble, are called. But God hath chosen the
foolish things of the world to confound the wise;…and the base
things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God
chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to naught things
that are: that no flesh should glory in his presence”
(1 Cor.1:26-29).
For the most part, God is
bypassing the world’s standards of greatness and calling the
ordinary of the human race to compose the “little flock.”
How will this “bring to naught things that are?”
Down through history, man’s wisdom has tried every conceivable
philosophy and political and/or economic ideology, but man has
failed to solve humanity’s problems. Each page of history is a
record of man’s inhumanity to man. The flaw is not so much the
ideology, but man’s selfish heart. History confirms the Biblical
teaching that man is born in sin and “shapen in iniquity”
(Psalm 51:5). The 20th century started with great expectations.
Through science and technology, utopia would be attained! Alas,
this century is closing in disillusionment. Communism has
failed. Capitalism is on the verge of bankruptcy. Unprecedented
teen suicide, vice, drugs and immorality are the symptoms of a
civilization self-destructing. In the meantime, the earth is
becoming a wasteland of pollution. With over five billion people
thinking of self first, could it be otherwise?
Thus the Lord has “brought
to naught things that are.” Human history has proven the
futility of man’s efforts. No flesh can glory in his [God’s]
presence. No president, prime minister or statesman, or anyone,
can boast that he has the solution for all man’s individual or
collective ills.
An Understanding Heart
But there are a few who have
learned early not to trust in the arm of flesh for solutions.
Through faith in God’s word they realize that only God’s Kingdom
will completely solve man’s ills. They have accepted Jesus as
their savior and made a full consecration to do God’s will.
Their calling is to be judges, priests and kings with Christ in
God’s Kingdom.
These Christians are not relieved
of their share of the tragedies common to man (1 Cor. 10:13).
Although many of mankind become bitter or hardened by the
tragedies of this life, consecrated Christians have the peace of
God which passeth all understanding (Phil. 4:7). Their faith
realizes that tragedy provides the Lord an opportunity to
develop in them a tender and understanding heart.
The loss of a loved one, husband,
wife, parent, child can mentally scar. Physical tragedy such as
being crippled, blind or deaf can leave one a forgotten member
of the human family. Drug addicts, alcoholics, the mentally ill
have found that few can understand. There are the scars of
mental or physical abuse by a stranger or even a loved one. To
those in economic poverty, nothing could be worse. Then there is
loneliness. Some have experienced a darkness of loneliness that
no human hand could reach. To consecrated Christians these
various experiences provide a unique opportunity to patiently
endure, while the Spirit of God transforms them day by day into
the likeness of Christ (1 Peter 1:7; 2 Cor. 4:16-18).
Foremost is the struggle of
subduing sinful flesh and its interests. These are the
“fightings within” (2 Cor. 7:5; 10:4-6; Heb.12:4). The
Christian’s struggle against his own fallen flesh gives him
compassion and understanding concerning the sin ingrained in the
hearts of men. A priest is one “Who can have compassion on
the ignorant, and on them that are out of the way; for that he
himself also is compassed with infirmity” (Heb. 5:2).
This can be illustrated by the
noble work of Alcoholics Anonymous. An essential step of A.A.
therapy is to assign a former alcoholic to each alcoholic that
comes for help. The victim being driven by alcohol will not
readily accept help or advice from just anyone. How could anyone
know his agony, his depression, his desperation if he has not
shared the same experience? But the alcoholic will accept help
from a former alcoholic because he knows that this person can
understand his agony. And this former alcoholic stands ready at
any time to come to his side to plead with him, encourage him
and make good suggestions for overcoming. It requires a former
alcoholic to rehabilitate an alcoholic. Psalm 51:13 beautifully
portrays this principle. Because the followers of Jesus were
once sinners and transgressors they will be able to say of their
work in the Kingdom—
Then will I teach transgressors
Thy ways;
and sinners shall be converted
unto Thee.
Finally, the church will be
united with Christ during his return and share the glory of his
Kingdom. Like him (1 John 3:2) they shall be compassionate
priests, understanding judges, and benevolent kings (Rev. 20:6;
1 Cor. 6:2). As a composite they will fully understand the sin
sick, mentally warped, emotionally scarred and physically marred
world of mankind. |