July 12
I wrote to
you out of great sorrow and anguish of heart – along with many tears – not to
make you sad but to let you know how much love I have for you (2 Corinthians
2:4 ISV.)
There is
nothing that is precious to the Lord, and which He would make the property of
His people, but there will be suffering for it. It will only become their
property – in that sense – as they suffer for it, and then woe betide who
criticizes that! If you are detached from a thing, if you are detached from a
testimony, from a work of God, you can do all the criticizing you like. You
have no inward heart-relationship to it, and so you pass your judgments upon
it. But if you are in it and you have suffered, if it has been a costly thing
where you are concerned, then you are seeing more than all the failings, more
than all those faults. The people who can criticize like that and judge and
point out faults are the people who have not suffered.
On the
other side, we may know all the terms, all the phraseology, all the doctrine,
all the truth, and it may be just objective, something we have heard; we have
lived in the midst of it, it is familiar to us. But what the Lord will do if
that is to become ours is to take us into travail over the matter. He will
relate that thing to our hearts in a deep, inward way, so that none of us will
be able to say, "I know all about that, I have heard all about that, I
could tell you all that you could tell me about that." The Lord would so
work in a costly, deep and painful way in relation to that, to make it ours
through travail, that we are brought into a new position.
We are not
spectators, looking on, criticizing; we are on the inside, looking out,
defending. We are jealous over it. Suffering is a great purifying thing. It
destroys selfishness. It destroys that self-interest that is the cause of so
much of the trouble. It makes us in a disinterested way jealous for what is of
God. Yes, suffering purifies, and suffering makes this deep, inward link. It
gives an extra feature to things. That extra feature where we cannot just be
occupied with faults and be people of a criticizing attitude, the extra feature
with a love which covers a multitude of sins. We have suffered together. When
we suffer together, what a lot we get over!
By T. Austin-Sparks from: The Eternal Reward of Labour
and Suffering
This photograph is by Eric Jonas Swensson of Sound Shore Media.
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