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this Sermon
June 29, 2003
3rd Sunday after Pentecost
2 Corinthians 4:13-18
Pastor Joel Zank
Look at Live through Eyes of Faith!
(2 Corinthians 4:13-18) It is written: "I believed; therefore
I have spoken." With that same spirit of faith we also believe
and therefore speak, 14 because we know that the one who raised
the Lord Jesus from the dead will also raise us with Jesus and present
us with you in his presence.15 All this is for your benefit, so
that the grace that is reaching more and more people may cause thanksgiving
to overflow to the glory of God.16 Therefore we do not lose heart.
Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being
renewed day by day.17 For our light and momentary troubles are achieving
for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all.18 So we fix
our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. For what is
seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.
In Christ Jesus whose resurrection guarantees our own, dear fellow
redeemed,
A young coed had two problems common to many students: low grades
and no money. To make matters worse, she had to find a way to explain
her troubles to her parents who, she knew, just wouldn't understand.
After a lot of thought she decided upon a creative approach to soften
the blows of reality. She sat down and wrote the following letter:
Dear Mom and Dad,
I just thought I'd drop you a note to fill you in on my plans.
I've fallen in love with a guy named Jim. He quit high school after
his junior year to get married. About a year ago he got a divorce.
We've been going steady for the last two months and plan to get
married in the fall. Until then, I've decided to move into his apartment.
I think I might be pregnant. At any rate, I dropped out of school
last week.
On the next page the she continued:
Mom and Dad, I just want you to know that everything I've written
so far in this letter is fiction. NONE of it is true. But Mom and
Dad, it is true that I flunked math and got a D in French. And it
is true that I'm going to need some more money. Could you send it
right away?
Love, Susan.
Now you may not think much of the young lady's letter, but can you
imagine how good the news of page two must have sounded to her parents
after they had read page one? I guess that even bad news can seem
pretty good if viewed from the right perspective. What looks bad
one moment may not seem so bad at all just a short time later. It
all depends upon where you're coming from; or should I say, it all
depends upon where your going to. That's what the Apostle Paul says
in the words of our text as he encourages us to LOOK AT LIFE THROUGH
EYES OF FAITH! Because in doing so we will forget what is seen;
and focus on what is unseen.
Paul says in the last verse of our text: "So we fix our
eyes not on what is seen." So that you might better understand
Paul's words, let me tell you about some of the things he was seeing
with his eyes. Paul was witness to a great deal of suffering both
in own life and in the lives of his fellow Christians. This suffering
came as a direct result of the Christians' relationship with Jesus.
Paul alludes to this in the opening words of our text: "It
is written: 'I believed; therefore I have spoken.' With that same
spirit of faith we also believe and therefore speak," (2 Corinthians
4:13). Paul is quoting the writer of Psalm 116, a fellow believer
whose enemies tried to silence him because he spoke God's truth
about sin and grace to an unbelieving world. A thousand years later
the same thing was happening to Paul and his coworkers in the ministry.
In the verses just before our text, Paul says, "We are hard
pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair;9
persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed"
(2 Corinthians 4:8-9).
To the untrained eye, it looked as if Paul's troubles were getting
the better of him, to the point where Paul admits, "...outwardly
we are wasting away" (2 Corinthians 4:16). I suppose you
might say that Paul's faith in Jesus was killing him. That may sound
strange, but it shouldn't surprise us. Jesus once said, "No
servant is greater than his master. If they persecuted me, they
will persecute you also" (John 15:20).
Jesus is speaking to all who follow him including all of us. Jesus
has enemies who want to silence us in any and every way they can.
The hardships they inflict vary from the cold silence of a family
member who's tired of our preaching, to the attacks of Satan himself
who's not beyond filling our lives with miseries of every kind.
So how goes the battle? Can you say with Paul, "We also
believe and therefore speak"? Are you proclaiming Christ
to the members of your family who do not know him or who have drifted
from the faith? Do you speak of Jesus to your neighbors and coworkers?
Do the people on your softball team know that you worship Jesus
as God's Son and the world's Savior? Or is your faith in Christ
a well kept secret? And if so, why?
See if your excuses are anything like mine. Often I say nothing
of Jesus because I don't want people to think I'm strange. I don't
want to be treated like some kind of religious nut. I often avoid
pointing out people's sin and their need for the Savior because
I'm afraid they may become upset with me. That has happened. One
time I told a couple who were living together outside of marriage
that they were sinning against God and the fellow got so angry with
me that he actually came to our house to "punch my lights out"
as he put it. Who needs that kind of trouble in his life? I have
enough other problems. I would guess that you do too. In fact there's
another reason we often fail to share the Bible's good news. We're
too busy feeling sorry for ourselves. Who's got the time and energy
to make disciples when there's so much to fret and worry about in
life? Satan sure is clever isn't he? He can use anything from fear
to self-pity to keep us from doing the one thing that God has put
us on earth to do-tell the world about Jesus. Now we may have all
kinds of excuses, but you see the sins that damn us don't you? They
are disobedience and unbelief. We're not doing what God tells us.
We're failing to look at life through eyes of faith. Rather than
trusting in God's promised blessings, we see trouble so we bury
our heads in the sand and ignore God's will. That's why Paul tells
us, "Forget what is seen." Why? Because "...what
is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal" (2 Corinthians
4:18).
What a gracious God we have! Instead of punishing us for our lack
of faith in him, instead of banishing us to hell for our failure
to carry out his will, he takes the time to come and nourish our
faith today with the very promises by which he first created this
life-saving gift in our hearts. He comes to clear up our vision,
to correct our nearsightedness so that we are actually able to see
all the way to heaven from right here on earth. Just look my friends,
look at life through eyes of faith, and by the power of God's Word,
you can focus on what is unseen to the naked eye.
For example, the very first thing that Paul helps us to see through
eyes of faith is our future. He says in verse 14 of our text: "...we
know that the one who raised the Lord Jesus from the dead will also
raise us with Jesus and present us with you in his presence."
What a beautiful way of reminding us that Jesus is the substitute
of sinners. Jesus lived God's will perfectly his whole life through.
By boldly proclaiming sin and grace everywhere he went, Jesus not
only brought salvation to those who heard and believed him, he was
actually earning salvation for all us sinners by becoming our righteousness
before God. His obedient testimony to the truth of God's love counts
as ours. For the sake of Christ, we are perfect disciples and perfect
disciple makers in the sight of our God. Our record is clean because
the fear and selfishness that so often keep us from sharing Christ
with others, are crimes that were charged to Jesus and together
with all our other sins were paid for when God sent Jesus to hell
in our place. How can we be so sure of all this? Because he who
lived and died as our substitute was also raised to life as our
substitute. Had the Savior's sacrifice not been sufficient, death
would still be holding on to Jesus, demanding full payment of sin's
wages. But as it is, our debt is settled. We know it because death
released our Substitute, so it will have to release us too. So since
only time separates our resurrection from that of the Jesus, Paul
is able to say that God, who is not governed by time, will raise
us with Jesus and present us to him as a bride is presented to her
bridegroom.
Someone has said "knowledge is power." That's certainly
true in our case. Here we are-a whole room full of people who live
with the knowledge that we are going to live happily ever after.
Doesn't such knowledge change everything? We already know where
we stand with God. What do we care what people think of us? We have
powerful news to share, news that will make the future of our relatives,
neighbors and friends as bright as our own. What's a little embarrassment,
what's a little discomfort compared to their eternal happiness?
Paul has the answer. Concerning his own suffering he says to the
Christians in Corinth, "All this is for your benefit, so
that the grace that is reaching more and more people may cause thanksgiving
to overflow to the glory of God" (2 Corinthians 4:15).
Knowing how his story ends, or should I say, knowing that it will
never end, Paul is more than willing to put up with a little suffering
for the sake of the gospel because he's in a win/win situation.
For whenever he shares the gospel, by its power, more and more people
believe and when that happens, there are more and more voices to
join Paul's in giving thanks to God for his amazing grace. That's
what sharing the gospel is all about. There's no better way to glorify
God's name than to use that name to save sinners.
And here's an added bonus: whenever we share the good news about
Jesus with others, the gospel we speak strengthens our own faith.
Paul says, "Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly
we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day.17
For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal
glory that far outweighs them all" (2 Corinthians 4:16-17).
The gospel we believe, the gospel we share is packed with God's
power. That gospel gives us the strength we need to lean on God
and God alone. There is nothing you and I can do to earn a place
in heaven. The gospel teaches us that there is nothing we need to
do, because Jesus has done everything to earn God's forgiveness
for us. In a way then, the troubles we experience in life, whatever
they may be, help us to achieve the eternal glory that Christ has
secured for us. Troubles do this not in the sense that they earn
us anything from God, but in the sense that they give us the opportunity
to see that we can and do live by faith in God alone.
So often we're tempted to think that it is our strength and our
intelligence that keep us going in life. But then some "thorn
in the flesh" comes our way, like the one of which Paul speaks
in 2 Corinthians 12. We pray that God take it away from us, but
instead God says to us as he said to Paul, "My grace is
sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness"
(2 Corinthians 12:9). God knows how to use the troubles of our
lives to turn us away from the pride that would damn us by showing
us just how powerless we are to help ourselves. In times of trouble
there is nothing for us to do except look at life through eyes of
faith and focus on what is otherwise unseen-the invisible grace
of our God. It's in the face of trouble that we learn to say with
the hymn writer: "Through many dangers, toils, and snares I
have already come; 'Tis grace has brought me safe thus far, And
grace will lead me home."
So you see my friends, the troubles that often seem so bad to us
are not so bad at all, not when you know that you're going to heaven
and that God uses even our troubles to bring us there for Jesus'
sake. Amen.
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