Sunday, August 03, 2025

Sermon Starters: Happy Trials to You

Preached at Mt. Edna Community Life Church, 8-3-25

Scripture: James 1:2-8, 12-15

Introduction

  • I haven't gone through many trials, perhaps you have (note relatively minor worries in the vast scheme of things).
  • My daughter lost 2 dogs, a cat, and a parakeet in the same year. Still, not the same as being martyred or losing a child.
  • This is the anniversary of my mother's death, but she died at 98, father at 87. They both died well, and lived blessed lives.
  • Still, the questions arise. Why does God allow so much suffering? Why so much evil? Why do the bad guys win so often? 
  • Tim Keller -- We have small pieces of an answer but not really a comprehensively satisfying one. Free will explanation. Satan and demons explanation. We just have to trust that God is in control and that, if we could see everything, we would see that he is in fact good.
  • James was stoned in AD62. Jerusalem was in between Roman governors and the high priest jumped at the opportunity.
I. Trials perfect us (1:2).

  • This is one of the main answers to why God allows suffering. It can make us stronger. It can help us grow. "No pain, no gain."
  • Running. If you're not training, you won't be able to make it on race day. Many times, our reaction to a sudden trial reveals whether we've been training -- by orienting our lives around surrender to God.
  • A person who has had an addiction needs to surrender that area of potential temptation every day. So we should be practicing surrender long before the time of trial comes.
  • We may, without thinking of it, think of God more as a candy machine than the one we are actually living for.
II. God wants to give us wisdom 1:5.
  • He doesn't begrudge us asking. While God (and the Holy Spirit) stand ready to give us wisdom for anything, the context suggests God will particularly give us wisdom when we are in a time of trial.
  • "Ask... seek... knock" (Matt. 7). This is "if we ask according to his will" (1 John) and are remaining in him (John 15). That is, our wills are aligned with his. And he gives us his Holy Spirit to guide us (Luke 18).
  • If we really want an answer, he will give it. It may not of course be the one we prefer.
  • The "double-minded person" is someone who has divided loyalties. They have not been truly surrendered to God but are half loyal, half self-loyal.
  • Many of us make the "Corban" move -- we say we have given everything to God but then we decide what to do with "God's" stuff (Mark 7).
III. Sometimes we bring trial on ourselves (1:14-15).
  • One reason for trials are bad choices we make.
  • 1:14-15 give the anatomy of a sin -- a temptation, a choice, a sin, eventually death.
  • As said, one reason we have suffering is because God gives us a choice. Then we experience the consequences.
  • God is not being mean when we run into a brick wall. The wall isn't being mean. We made a choice to run into it.
  • Give illustration of consequences of sin (e.g., a broken marriage because of sinful choices).
Conclusion
  • Let's start getting ready to suffer now.
  • Job -- never finds out about Satan's wager. He finally has to trust in a bigger picture he doesn't see.
  • God allowed Job to suffer. He didn't direct it in this case.
  • The bottom line -- 1 Cor. 10:31 and Col. 3:17 -- living a life fully oriented and surrendered to God

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