Keep Rejoicing
- Going through afflictions produces endurance. Endurance is that ability to keep going, to keep pressing forward. That raises the question in my mind “What am I to be moving forward toward?” Paul gives the answer to that in verses 1 and 2, before he instructs us to rejoice in stuff that isn’t what we would choose. Verses 1 and 2 remind us that we have been declared righteous because Jesus offered himself as a perfect sacrifice; Jesus was the penalty payment for our sins when he died on the cross. We now have peace with God and the opportunity to have deep intimacy with the Almighty One who created us. We stand in grace that not only offers us forgiveness, but also offers us entry into eternal life with the Father. We get to have deep intimacy with God for the rest of all time. That’s something to celebrate! We are moving forward toward experiencing God face to face for eternity. We are pressing toward the life God had planned for man when He created Eden. We are enduring through afflictions so that we can live the life we were all meant to live.
- As we continue to endure, our character is proven. We are becoming more anchored in Christ through this process of rejoicing in the fact that we are declared righteous, that we stand in grace, and that we are continually moving toward heaven, even when the circumstances of life are less than favorable. As we commit to celebrating over our salvation even when life is tough, the Spirit produces evidence of His work in our individual lives. Galatians 5:22 says, “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control…” Those characteristics, as they appear consistently in our lives, are proof to us and to others, that we have pledged ourselves devoted to Jesus who gave His life for us. We see Him as someone to always get excited over, to be glad about, to express joy in respect to what He as done.
- As our character becomes more and more formed into the image of Christ, our hope becomes stronger and deeper. I have realized the more my life is filled with Jesus, the deeper is my desire to be with Him. I want to experience His presence, His pleasure and His affirmation. I want to spend time with Him each morning. I set aside time to know Him more intimately and I work to pattern my life after all He says is significant. I long for our relationship to be more rooted and pervasive; I anticipate the day when I will be held in complete awe over the extent of His fully revealed glory. The hope of the someday of eternity becomes more real and more wildly exciting the more my life is intertwined with my Savior, Jesus Christ. Paul affirms this idea when he says in verse 5 “This hope will not disappoint us, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.” God’s Holy Spirit is already giving each of us a taste of this grand hope by allowing us to savor the love He is generously pouring into us.
Does it still feel complicated? Overwhelming? Are you still thinking “I’m supposed to be happy over what?” Let me try to simplify. We are to rejoice over who Jesus is and what He has done for us, while we are experiencing circumstances that we would never choose, because it draws us into greater intimacy with the One who created us and loves us most. When we are afflicted and still rejoice, we learn how to lean on His strength instead of trying to muscle through on our own. We grasp deeper understanding of truths like God’s ways and thoughts are higher than ours (Isaiah 55:9) and God’s presence is my good (Psalms 73:28). We encounter the Holy Spirit and open the door for Him to shape us. We take steps of obedience that create evidences, to ourselves and to others, that we are different from the world because we belong to a different Kingdom. We gain the practice of focusing more on what Christ says is important, not what this earth says is significant.