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"Hope springs eternal," or so
the saying goes. And for the most part it does. As men encounter and
experience various trials, troubles, and vicissitudes in their lives, they
quickly seek for solace, encouragement, and the determination to endure by
laying hold on some form of hope. It may be nothing more than the simple
optimistic thinking that ‘Things can’t get much worse; they just have to
get better soon’; which isn’t much more than mere wishful thinking. Or
it may be much stronger than that. It may actually be the assured prospect
of a definite change coming soon. Yet whatever the hope may be, and whether
it is a weak one or a strong one, it is the inner man’s natural first line
of defense against the discouraging and distressing effects of trouble and
suffering.
With this being so, hope usually does ‘spring
eternal.’ Since a troubled soul is a soul in desperate need of hope, if by
some chance one hope does not ‘pan out,’ the search immediately begins
for a new one. And when it is found, it is then latched on to for support
and stability. In connection with this it is interesting to note, as
Proverbs 13:12 states, that…
12 Hope deferred maketh the heart sick:
but when the desire cometh, it is a tree of life. (Proverbs 13:12)
Hope, therefore, certainly is health to
the inner man, especially in times of adversity.
Our Own Need For Hope
The various adversities, troubles, and
vicissitudes of life that we are speaking about are common to man. They are
a natural part of this world, being the fruits of the bondage of sin,
corruption, and devolution that grips it. As such all of these things come
under the heading of what the apostle Paul in Romans 8:18 refers to as
"the sufferings of this present time." And we ourselves, even
though we are the children of God through faith in Christ Jesus, are by no
means immune to them.
In fact in this present dispensation of
His grace, God makes it plain and clear to us that He is not going to be
shielding us from them. This, of course, is in contrast to the way things
operate in God’s program and dealings with Israel, where many forms of
natural trouble and suffering could be avoided, or God would directly
intervene to remove it. But such is not the case in God’s program with us
today. Indeed the reality of this is the unavoidable bottom line to all that
we are taught in Romans 8:18-39.
With this being so, we ourselves also have
a need for hope when we encounter adversity and suffering. Yet we do not
have the hope, or expectation, of God stepping in and ‘putting His hand
between us and the trouble.’ Again, this is not how God is dealing with us
in His program for this present dispensation.
Nevertheless, we still do have a God-given
hope that we are to operate upon in this dispensation. And it is not only a
true hope, it is a joyful hope at that. As well it is perfectly fitting to
God’s program and dealings with us today. And as such it is the hope that
God has specifically designed to effectually work within us when it comes to
"the sufferings of this present time."
Now before looking at our joyful hope and
considering its effectual working in our lives, we ought to first make sure
that we fully realize that God is by no means mistreating us in this
dispensation because He is not shielding us from "the sufferings of
this present time." Nor are we somehow being shortchanged in this
regard. Far from it. In fact the exact opposite is true. As strange as it
may sound, by allowing us to encounter and experience "the sufferings
of this present time" God is actually honoring us. That’s right. In
particular God is honoring us as His "sons." And as such He has
designed it so that "the sufferings of this present time" actually
have a bearing upon our inheritance as His "sons."
Our Sonship Status, Inheritance, and "The Sufferings
of This Present Time"
It is significant and important to note
that when Paul deals with the subject of "the sufferings of this
present time," he does so immediately after teaching us about our
sonship status.
14 For as many as are led by the Spirit of
God, they are the sons of God.
15 For ye have not received the spirit of
bondage again to fear; but ye have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby
we cry, Abba, Father.
16 The Spirit itself beareth witness with
our spirit, that we are the children of God:
17 And if children, then heirs; heirs of
God, and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with him, that we
may be also glorified together.
18 For I reckon that the sufferings of
this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall
be revealed in us. (Romans 8:14-18)
Now this is not just coincidental, as if
our sonship status and "the sufferings of this present time" are
two completely unrelated matters that just happen to be set forth in close
proximity to each other. No, not at all. The subject of "the sufferings
of this present time" purposely follows the doctrine of our sonship
status. And it does this because there is a direct connection between those
sufferings and a particular aspect of our inheritance as "sons."
Simply and briefly put, one of the first
matters about which a father educates his son upon his adoption is the
matter of his inheritance. In so doing, a "son" learns that there
are two aspects to his inheritance. There is an unconditional part and a
conditional part. That is, there is the part which the "son"
inherits by default, so to speak, seeing he is his father’s child. However
there is also the part that he can inherit by way of promotion, or reward,
in his father’s business at the conclusion of his sonship education and
training. Or in other words there is the part that is called "the
reward of the inheritance." This particular aspect of a son’s
inheritance is tied to the issue of his response to his sonship education
and his functional life as a "son." And this the "son"
can receive for having been a wise and honorable "son," who
faithfully labored with his father in his business. The son’s labor is
worthy of a reward, and his father rewards him with "the reward of the
inheritance."
Now as it is with sonship in general, so
also is it with us as God’s "sons." Having declared us to be His
"sons," God therefore immediately educates us in the matter of our
inheritance, as Romans 8:16-17 sets forth. And as verse 17 makes clear, we
learn that we also have the same two aspects to our inheritance.
17 And if children, then heirs; heirs of
God, and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with him, that we
may be also glorified together. (Romans 8:17)
As Paul says, we are "heirs of God,
and joint-heirs with Christ." Being "heirs of God," we are
heirs of God’s life and all that belongs to the honor of living in His
presence. And we will have all of this in glorified, immortal bodies. This
is the default aspect of our inheritance.
However Paul also speaks of us being
"joint heirs with Christ." Yet being "joint-heirs with
Christ" is not the same thing as being "heirs of God." It is
an additional issue, or an additional aspect of our inheritance. And as the
remainder of verse 17 sets forth, it is the conditional aspect. It is
conditioned upon, "if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be
also glorified together." And with this being the case, this is where
the issue of "the sufferings of this present time" come into play.
The opportunity for us to ‘suffer with
Christ’ actually begins with the issue of "the sufferings of this
present time" and our response to them. We ‘suffer with Him’ when
we ourselves respond to such things with the same godly thinking and
attitude towards them as the Lord Jesus Christ Himself has.
Indeed as the Lord witnesses the
occurrence of such things, and as He sees us encounter and experience them,
He ‘suffers’ their existence, as well as our experiencing of them. He
does not ignore them, hide His eyes from them, or pretend that they aren’t
real. Instead He actually ‘suffers’ them. Yet He does not do this
stoically, or fatalistically, or with mere gritty toleration. Rather He does
so through the effectual working within Him of a very particular
understanding that He has about them. An understanding that is derived from
the comprehension that He has of His Father’s business and why they are
allowed to occur. And with that understanding He Himself ‘suffers’ the
continued existence of the effects of the bondage of corruption in this
world, and He does so with patience and contentment. Moreover His patience
and contentment has for its solid, unmoveable foundation the knowledge of,
and effectual working of, a joyful hope.
Now once again, we as "sons"
today have the privilege of ‘suffering with Christ.’ With this being so
God is indeed honoring us when it comes to the issue of us encountering and
experiencing "the sufferings of this present time." As His
"sons" God is honoring us with the godly privilege of thinking
like He does, and like the Lord Jesus Christ does, regarding "the
sufferings of this present time." Our Father is granting us the sonship
privilege of responding to them as His godly "sons"; of possessing
His godly thinking and having it effectually work within us to produce the
same godly patience, longsuffering, and endurance that He Himself has. This,
therefore, is a sonship grace indeed, and one which provides for us to be
"joint-heirs with Christ" in the day when God manifests us as His
"sons," and establishes both Christ and us in the fulness of His
business and its future operations.
So then with this being the case, God is
by no means shortchanging us by not delivering us from troubles,
adversities, and sufferings. And neither has God ‘left us in a lurch’
when it comes to dealing with any of "the sufferings of this present
time." That is, He has not left us to our own devices for coping with
them, nor does He expect us to have to resort to the common hopes of the
natural man, or to those of this ungodly world. Rather, in accordance with
our sonship status and our godly edifying, God has given to us a very
particular hope that is contained in a ‘form of doctrine’ which He wants
us to have operating within us. This ‘form of doctrine’ is set forth in
Romans 8:18-39, and it begins with the specific doctrine of our joyful hope
in verses 18-25.
The Doctrinal Purpose of Romans 8:18-25
Simply put, the ‘form of doctrine’ set
forth in Romans 8:18-39 has at least 3 distinct components to it, the first
of which is contained in verses 18-25 and forms the foundation. This
foundation is the doctrine of the specific joyful hope that God has given to
us in this present dispensation of His grace. And once again, it is the very
same joyful hope that our Lord Jesus Christ Himself presently operates upon.
As His "sons" God has designed that it likewise effectually work
within us, and as it does for it to produce in us the same kind of godly
patience and content endurance presently belonging to Christ.
However this is not all. As the doctrine
of our joyful hope effectually works within us to produce godly patience and
endurance, it also redounds to God’s glory on account of its godliness.
This is something no other hope, no matter how effective it may be, is able
to do. And this is also something that could not be produced at all, if God
shielded us from the sufferings instead of allowing us to experience them.
Therefore being "sons" we ought
to count it a privilege of God’s grace to us to be equipped to respond to
any of "the sufferings of this present time" as such. And in view
of it we naturally ought to want to have the doctrine of our joyful hope
effectually working within us to this end.
Now there is one more thing that we should
do before looking at our joyful hope. We should take a brief look at the
actual mechanics of how the effectual working of a joyful hope produces
godly patience and endurance. This is important to note since there is a
distinct material difference between godly patience and endurance, and that
which is humanly devised. To see this we will look at two other cases: that
of our Lord Jesus Christ Himself in God’s program with Israel, and then
that of the remnant of Israel.
The Lord’s Joyful Hope
1 Wherefore seeing we also are compassed
about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight,
and the sin that doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the
race that is set before us,
2 Looking unto Jesus the author and
finisher of our faith; who for the joy that was set before him endured the
cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the
throne of God. (Hebrews 12:1-2)
In this passage the example of the Lord
Himself is placed before the remnant of Israel with a view to them fully
understanding and appreciating the effectual working of a joyful hope. As
they were told back in the latter part of chapter 10, they have "need
of patience" when it comes to enduring their particular sufferings. To
be precise, they needed to have godly patience and endurance in the face of
those sufferings. And in view of this they have been given a body of
instruction and exhortation beginning at the end of chapter 10 that is
specifically designed to effectually work within them to produce it.
And so with their "need of
patience" having been clearly established from chapter 10, and with
them now being exhorted in 12:1 to "run with patience" the race
that is set before them (especially in view of their increased sufferings to
come), God culminates the doctrine to them in verse 2 by giving them the
Lord’s own example of how He Himself operated upon the effectual working
of a joyful hope.
Now as they are exhorted to ‘look unto
Jesus’ in this regards, they are told how that He "for the joy that
was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame,…" And so
He did. The Lord operated upon a particular "joy that was set before
him"; a particular joyful hope. And it effectually worked within Him to
produce God honoring patience and endurance in connection with the
sufferings of the cross.
In God’s program with Israel, (just as
is described earlier on in the book of Hebrews), the Lord’s joyful hope
pertains to the issue of Him bringing to pass and enjoying all of the
glories that are resident in the final mandates of the Davidic Covenant. On
the cross the Lord Jesus knew that He would be fulfilling the first mandate
of that covenant — being the Redeemer — and that He would need to suffer
greatly in connection with it. However He also knew that this first mandate
was the one upon which the glories belonging to all of the other mandates
would depend. There would be "the sufferings of Christ, and the glory
that should follow," with the glory dependent upon the sufferings.
Therefore upon fulfilling the first
mandate, the Lord knew that He would then be "set down at the right
hand of the throne of God," where in eager anticipation He would be
"expecting till his enemies be made his footstool." Where He would
be eagerly anticipating putting into effect the remaining mandates of the
Davidic Covenant, and in so doing bring to pass and enjoy His joyful hope.
Now of particular importance to us in all
of this is what is said about the actual effectual working of the Lord’s
joyful hope within Him. Specifically the mechanics of it, and the nature of
the endurance it produced. As Hebrews 12:2 says, the Lord had "joy that
was set before him," and because of it He "endured the cross,
despising the shame."
When something is "set before"
your mind, it is put there for your thoughtful consideration; indeed for
your constant thoughtful consideration. It is designed for you to think on
it, not just occasionally think about it. It is provided as a ‘stay’ for
your mind, when there would be pressure upon your mind either to wander, or
to be distracted, or to be distressed.
Such was the case with our Lord’s joyful
hope, and He did with it just what He was supposed to do with it. It
therefore effectually worked within Him, enabling Him to ‘endure the cross’
because "the shame" of it was ‘despised’ by Him, being
displaced in His thinking by the knowledge of the more compelling issue of
His joyful hope.
The Lord’s example, therefore, makes it
clear that godly patience and endurance is not the same as any form of mere
humanly devised endurance. That is, it isn’t the issue of us being patient
and enduring some difficult situation or circumstance simply by gritting our
teeth and tolerating it. It’s not the issue of us having an ‘iron will’
despite being under pressure. Nor is it the issue of us simply determining
to put up with something by trying to put it out of our mind, and so not let
it ‘get us down.’ Neither is it the issue of us being given some
fleeting words of encouragement, which we discard once our trouble passes.
(For example, "Adversities build character, don’t you know." Or,
"It’s pressure that turns a lump of coal into a diamond.") It’s
also not the issue of us possessing an indomitable human spirit, (so highly
prized and praised by the natural man), which through ‘dint of force’
reaches deep down within and musters the strength to endure and go on. Nor
is it, (even though I have used the word in this article), simply the issue
of us learning somehow to cope with some difficulty.
Godly patience and endurance is none of
these things. Instead it is the issue of being both willing, and actually
desiring, to see some suffering, difficulty, or adversity through to its
end, because a very specific hope that God Himself has given effectually
works within to produce an overpowering "joy" for seeing and
enjoying that hope. And the overpowering "joy" belonging to the
hope overpowers any distress caused by the suffering because it produces a
despising of the shame, embarrassment, ridicule, discomfort, grief, and the
like, that may be associated with the adversity. The overpowering joyful
hope makes it so that the distress associated with the suffering loses its
power to occupy the mind. It is as if there just isn’t room for distress
to settle in the mind, because the mind is occupied with the joyful hope.
This is what godly patience and endurance
is all about, as well as where it comes from. And naturally it is what the
Lord Himself possessed by means of the effectual working within Him of His
joyful hope.
It is also what the remnant of Israel is
exhorted to possess in connection with their particular sufferings, as well
as what we ourselves ought to possess in this present dispensation in
connection with "the sufferings of this present time."
The Remnant of Israel’s Joyful Hope
3 For consider him that endured such
contradiction of sinners against himself, lest ye be wearied and faint in
your minds.
4 Ye have not yet resisted unto blood,
striving against sin. (Hebrews 12:3-4)
What the Lord endured, and how He did so,
is set forth as an example to the remnant. And as they "consider him
that endured" they are to understand and appreciate the mechanics of
the effectual working of a joyful hope. In particular, they are to
understand and appreciate the mechanics of the effectual working of their
joyful hope. They are to realize exactly how it is that God has designed for
their "need of patience" to be fulfilled.
Hence they themselves are to ‘consider’
the joyful hope that God has "set before" them. They are to think
on it, be occupied with it, so that they can operate upon it; so that it can
effectually work within them unto the producing of godly patience and
endurance, even when the time comes that they do begin to ‘resist unto
blood.’
In connection with this, in the remainder
of Hebrews through The Revelation we naturally find them being reminded more
than once of their joyful hope and its effectual working within them. For
example,…
3 Blessed be the God and Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ, which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us
again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the
dead,
4 To an inheritance incorruptible, and
undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you,
5 Who are kept by the power of God
through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time.
6 Wherein ye greatly rejoice, though now
for a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness through manifold
temptations: (I Peter 1:3-6)
The "power of God" that keeps
them, and enables them to "greatly rejoice," though they are
"in heaviness through manifold temptations," is the effectual
working within them of their "lively hope" and all the joy
belonging to it.
Our Joyful Hope
Once again, in Romans 8:18ff God has the
apostle Paul "set before" us the doctrine of our joyful hope,
along with the issue of its effectual working within us when it comes to any
of "the sufferings of this present time" that we may experience.
18 For I reckon that the sufferings of
this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall
be revealed in us. (Romans 8:18)
"The glory which shall be revealed in
us" is our joyful hope. And as Paul says, the knowledge of it
effectually working within makes "the sufferings of this present
time" pale by comparison. No, in truth Paul says it does even more than
that. As Paul himself encountered and experienced any such sufferings, in
his mind they not only paled by comparison to our joyful hope, they were not
even "worthy to be compared" with it. Hence they did not
pre-occupy his thinking, or become the persistent disconcerting object of
his thinking. And as such they were not able to get a grip upon him, nor
distress him. They were not able to make him miserable and/or despondent,
nor depress him. Instead the effectual working of the knowledge of our
joyful hope within Paul precluded any of these things from happening to him.
It produced within him the godly patience and contentment to endure any of
the sufferings, and to actually do it with joy.
Now just what is our joyful hope? Just
what is this "glory which shall be revealed in us," which is
designed to work so effectually within us? Is it the knowledge of our
confident expectation of the glory of God to come since we are justified
unto eternal life; i.e. the issue of living forever with God? This indeed is
part of it, however our joyful hope is more specific and more defined than
that.
The joyful hope that is set before us is
our participation in the fabulous glory belonging to the specific role and
vocation that God has purposed for us to fulfill as His heirs. And that
role, (which God has only now revealed in this dispensation), is that of us
providing for "the creature itself" to also "be delivered
from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of
God." As Paul explains,…
19 For the earnest expectation of the
creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God.
20 For the creature was made subject to
vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in
hope,
21 Because the creature itself also shall
be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the
children of God. (Romans 8:19-21)
"The creature" is the
designation given to the body, or realm, of God’s creation surrounding the
earth, which by the very nature of its creation actually has it being a
creature type embodiment for the earth. As such it incorporates the heavenly
realm with its living, intelligent angelic creatures designed by God to
function within it. Designating it as "the creature," it is
descriptive of God’s intended function for that realm, creating it as He
did with the earth in its midst, and designing it to be lively and
responsive to His very presence and residence on the earth within the midst
of it.
However though it was created as such, as
Paul says, "the creature" has yet to function accordingly.
Instead, it "was made subject to vanity." And this took place in
connection with the implementation of Satan’s plan of evil, which he
implemented first in the heavenly realm, and then shortly thereafter on the
earth itself. In connection with this, God Himself subjected "the
creature" to vanity. Yet, as Paul teaches, God did this "in
hope." For He Himself had a plan for delivering it from vanity, though
He did not reveal it at the time. Instead He left "the creature"
"subject to vanity," while He revealed and administered His plan
for delivering the earthly realm within its midst.
But now the creature’s "hope"
has been revealed by God. He will not leave it "subject to
vanity." Rather, "the creature itself also shall be delivered from
the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of
God." And this will be accomplished through some other "children
of God." Some others, who being God’s heirs, will be used by Him to
provide for glorious liberty to be given to "the creature." And
those other "children of God" are us; God’s "new
creature," the church the body of Christ, in this present dispensation
of God’s grace.
Such, therefore, is God’s glorious
purpose with us in this present dispensation. Being His
"children," and therefore being His "heirs," God has
purposed for us to be utilized by Him to provide for "the
creature" to be "delivered from the bondage of corruption."
And with this being so, the indescribable glorious liberty that this will
bring to "the creature itself," as well as the phenomenal honor
that it is to us ourselves to be so used of God, combine to constitute our
joyful hope.
Its Effectual Working Within Us
What a hope we have! Think on it. It is a
hope that is charged with such joy for what it all means, and for what is
all amounts to, that it should effectually work within us to make it so that
any of "the sufferings of this present time" that we may
experience amount to nothing more than mere background noise to us. Like a
radio playing in the background, the sufferings are there; but they
"are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed
in us." Instead, as we ourselves "consider" the "joy
that is set before" us, it effectually works within us to enable us to
"despise" any personal shame, grief, discomfort, unpleasantness,
and the like belonging to a suffering, knowing as God Himself does, and as
the Lord Jesus Christ does, that it is all worth it for His and our joyful
hope’s sake.
So rather than our minds being consumed
with the grievous, unpleasant effects of any of "the sufferings of this
present time," we like "the whole creation" should have our
minds consumed with the knowledge of what God is doing. And indeed the
knowledge of what He is doing is that compelling.
Specifically we should be preoccupied with
the grandeur of what we now know that God is providing for by means of this
present dispensation, and with the issue of our joyful hope in connection
with it. Such knowledge is indeed much more compelling, and it should
consume us like the earnest expectation and joy of a coming birth does for a
woman who is ‘groaning and travailing in pain’ waiting to be delivered.
Hence Paul says,…
22 For we know that the whole creation
groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now.
23 And not only they, but ourselves
also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan
within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our
body. (Romans 8:22-23)
So then as Paul goes on to say, with our
joyful hope effectually working within us to produce such ‘groaning within
ourselves,’ we are "saved."
24 For we are saved by hope: but hope that
is seen is not hope: for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for?
25 But if we hope for that we see not,
then do we with patience wait for it. (Romans 8:24-25)
Hence we are "saved" from the
grievous effects of "the sufferings of this present time,"
including such things as being driven to distress and/or misery by any of
them, or from being plunged into despair, or despondency, or depression by
them. And by being so "saved," we can "with patience wait
for" our joyful hope to come to pass, and also for the privilege of
being "joint-heirs with Christ" in that day.
Such, therefore, is the effectual working
of our joyful hope when it comes to "the sufferings of this present
time."
Now this has only been a brief primer on
the doctrine of our joyful hope. Nevertheless it bears asking, Does the
knowledge of your joyful hope effectually work within you? Is your response
to any of "the sufferings of this present time" the same as Christ’s
response? In other words, do you ‘suffer with Him’? Can you therefore
genuinely say with Paul, (having the same compelling understanding,
appreciation, and conviction), "For I reckon that the sufferings of
this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall
be revealed in us"?
These questions are important to ask. And
not only in connection with the effectual working of the doctrine of our
joyful hope. But also because this doctrine is really just the beginning of
hope’s effectual working within us. Or in other words, this is just the
beginning for us when it comes to the overall doctrine of hope that God sets
before us in our epistles. There is more hope that God has for us. More hope
that He has designed to effectually work within us to produce certain
results. Even some very specialized hopes. For example, there are those that
God has designed to be for specific comfort, consolation, and endurance with
regards to "the sufferings of Christ." And these other hopes are
set before us, and we learn about them, as our godly edifying and sonship
education proceeds on from Romans 8.
In view of this, the doctrine of our joyful hope is really
foundational in nature. And by the same token so also is its effectual
working within us. Consequently, if we do not benefit from it when it comes
to "the sufferings of this present time," most likely we will not
benefit from the other hopes either. Naturally therefore we should take
earnest heed to the effectual working of our joyful hope. For our capacity
to ‘abound in hope’ rests upon it
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