Walking with God through Pain & Suffering
by Timothy Keller
Chapter 13: Trusting
Expressing our sorrow in lament is not in conflict with an abiding trust in the goodness and sovereignty of God.
Language of lament and language of trust are found throughout the Bible in the face of life’s suffering.
Both sets of texts are in the Bible, and they are both important.
We should not interpret one group in such a way that it contradicts or weakens the claims and assertions of the o...
Walking with God through Pain & Suffering
by Timothy Keller
Chapter 13: Trusting
- Expressing our sorrow in lament is not in conflict with an abiding trust in the goodness and sovereignty of God.
- Language of lament and language of trust are found throughout the Bible in the face of life’s suffering.
- Both sets of texts are in the Bible, and they are both important.
- We should not interpret one group in such a way that it contradicts or weakens the claims and assertions of the other.
Joseph’s Story
- The story of Joseph begins with a long string of terrible events that happened to him.
- Joseph probably asked God to deliver him on many occasions—but there was just silence.
- Joseph prayed for years and years for help from God—and never received a single answer.
- It was not until all of the events unfolded that Joseph could look back and understand God’s purposes.
The Hidden God
- Was God not there in all those years of difficulty and hardship in Joseph’s life?
- No, he was there, and he was working.
- He was hidden behind the scenes, but he was also in complete control.
- The number of “coincidences” that had to come together for the events to unfold as they did is astounding, and a number of those events were difficult and painful.
- But what would have happened if Joseph had never gone to Egypt?
- If Joseph had not gone to Egypt:
- Many people would have died from starvation.
- His own family would have been wiped out.
- Spiritually, his family would have been a disaster.
- Joseph corrupted by pride and his father’s favoritism
- The brothers corrupted by anger
- Jacob corrupted by his addictive, idolatrous love of his youngest sons
- The Joseph story shows us that even when people make choices of their own accord, even evil choices, that God is still sovereign and in complete control.
- God was working out his purposes throughout all of the events—even in the smallest details of the daily lives and schedules and choices of everyone.
- God “works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will” “for the good of those who love him” (Eph. 1:11; Rom. 8:28).
- How did all the events of the Joseph story unfold?
- They came about through suffering:
- The terrible years of crushing slavery for Joseph
- The terrible years of debilitating guilt for the brothers
- The terrible years of grief and depression for Jacob
- All of this was God’s plan to save lives.
- After the pain, comes a “harvest of righteousness and peace” (Heb. 12:11).
Trusting the Hidden God
- It is perhaps most striking of all to realize that if God had given Joseph the things he was likely asking for in prayer, it would have been terrible for him.
- God was hearing and responding to Joseph’s prayers for deliverance, rescue, and salvation, but not in the ways or forms or times Joseph asked for it.
- During all the time in which God seemed hidden, Joseph still trusted.
- We do not always get to see how everything fit together in God’s plan like Joseph did, but we must trust God regardless.
- At Dothan, Joseph prayed for deliverance and the answer was 20 years in the making. Also at Dothan, Elisha prayed for deliverance (2 Kings 6), and the answer came immediately.
- God was just as present and active in the slow answer to Joseph as he was in the swift answer to Elisha.
- Very often God does not give us exactly what we ask for. Instead he gives us what we would have asked for if we had known everything he knows.
- We must never assume that we know enough to mistrust God’s ways or be bitter against what he has allowed.
- We must also never think we have really ruined our lives, or have ruined God’s purposes for us.
- You cannot destroy God’s good purposes for us, and you can’t break God’s love.
Everything Hangs Together
- Everything that happens is part of God’s plan, even the little things and the bad things.
- Nothing happens by accident.
- Very seldom do we glimpse even a millionth of the ways that God is working all things together for good for those who love God, but you can be assured he will not abandon you.
- “Everything is needful that he sends; nothing can be needful that he withholds” – John Newton
The Ultimate Joseph
- Joseph was a forerunner of Jesus.
- Like Joseph, the Lord Jesus
- Sold for silver coins
- Denied and betrayed by his brethren
- Unjustly put into chains and sentenced to death
- Prayed for deliverance from God
- Accepted the suffering as God’s will
- Forgives his tormentors
- Knew God intended good from evil
- Promoted to power and intercedes for us
- Looking at the cross, not knowing the whole story, we would have said: “I don’t see how God could bring any good out of this.”
- But what we would have been looking at is the greatest, most brilliant thing God could ever do for the human race.
- On the cross, both justice and love are being satisfied—evil, sin, and death are being defeated.
- Don’t turn from God when we can’t fit events into our limited understanding.
- We must trust God, even in the darkest times, because God is sovereign and good.
- Even though we cannot know all the particular reasons for our crosses, we can look at the cross and know God is working things out for our good.
- God accomplishes his salvation through weakness, not strength. Jesus triumphs over death by dying, winning by losing.
- The grace of God grows more through our difficulties than our triumphs.
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