Today’s Text: James 1:1-4
Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you
face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces
perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and
complete, not lacking anything.
Words
of Devotion
When people confide to me
that they are praying for patience, I often ask what else they're doing to
acquire a calm and gentle heart. Patience isn't so much something believers
receive as it is an attribute that they develop over time and through
experience.
Think of patience as a
muscle that you have to use in order to see it build. To that end, believers
should recognize difficulty as an opportunity to flex their patience. The human
instinct is to cry out to God in bewilderment when tribulation comes knocking.
We blame. We resist. We complain. What we don't do is say, "Thank You,
Father--it's time to grow in patience!" People aren't trained to think
that way, but according to the Bible, that is exactly how Christians are to
respond.
James tells us to consider
trials a joy (1:2). But we often fail at this, don't we? Humanly speaking,
praising the Lord for tribulation is unnatural. However, doing so begins to
make sense to believers when they cling to God's promise that good comes from
hardship (Rom. 8:28). We are not waiting on the Lord in vain. We can praise Him
for the solution He will bring, the lives He will change, or the spiritual
fruit He will develop in us.
Accepting hardship as a
means of growth is a radical concept in this world. Even more extreme is the
believer who praises the Lord for the storm. But God's followers have cause to
rejoice. Tribulation increases our patience so that we can stand firm on His
promises and await His good timing.
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