I am currently 44 years old. I have faced my share of joys and
sorrows. I’ve had my share of trials and
sufferings—as a child, as a youth, as a young adult, and as a full grown adult. I have faced the death of loved ones. I have faced the heartache of being forsaken
and abandoned by those who had previously claimed to love me. I have felt the bitter sting of hatred from
those I love deeply. Some of the trials have
certainly felt like much more than I wanted to endure or felt like I could
endure. Some of the trials lasted a
short time (days or months) while others went on for years, which felt to me
like an eternity. During some of those
trials, I was tempted to give up all hope and despair completely. My spiritual enemy and adversary of God, the devil,
lied to me and tried to convince me to give up hope and to give up my faith in
God. There were times when the spiritual
enemy even tried to convince me that death was better than life.
Oh, that devil, the father of lies, is
really good at whispering convincing lies to us. Deceptions and lies is part of what the devil
does best.

This week I was journaling and thinking
about all the current circumstances and trials.
I was pondering the encouragement I received from reading and taking to
heart Ephesians 6:
“…for our struggle
is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers,
against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of
wickedness in the heavenly places…”
(Ephesians 6:12, NAS)
Those words inspire me and help me to love
unconditionally, even when I am deeply hurt by the actions of others. That verse makes me realize that conditional
love is a byproduct of the devil’s craftiness and deceit. He causes us to focus on the flesh and the
wrongdoings of another person(s) so we will lose sight of the actuality that
he’s working out his schemes and deceptions against us. If he can keep our focus on people and on
blaming them, cursing them, or hating them, he can also promote and accomplish
a greater disruption and chaos in our lives.
As we focus on earthly things and people (flesh and blood) instead of what Ephesians 6:12
says (spiritual forces of darkness and wickedness), we lose sight of the
reality that the devil, the adversary of God, is the source of the blame, the
lies, the hating. He’s the promoter of
it all—the one stuffing it down our ears and into our minds in order to create
strife and division between us and to keep us from love and unity.
After pondering those aspects of the devil,
I was led to read something in the Dabhar literal Bible translation. It defined the name Devil (Diabolos in the
Greek language) as this:
“Diabolos is
derived from “dia” meaning “through” and “bole” meaning “cast” and is
translated “through-caster”. It is one
of the designations of Satan by which his character of causing disorder,
confusion, and chaos is shown up. It
also points out the method of distorting the truth by twisting and exchanging,
e.g. by confusing cause and effect, by advancing divine aims, or by
recommending them without a way or with a wrong way. Through-casting also means to use words of
the Writ but to give them a wrong meaning, i.e. to interpret them with a
falsified content or to put them into a wrong context.” (Concept
explanations, pg. 949, in Dabhar translation, Vol. 2)
What does that “through-caster”, the devil
and adversary of God, do best? He
distorts the truth by twisting it and changing it up for a lie. He did this when he lied to Eve in the Garden
of Eden. He told her some truth, added a
bit of lies, and planted seeds of enough doubt which convinced Eve what he
spoke was the truth. The devil creates
confusion and falsifies in such a conniving way that makes him quite
convincing. He uses some truth and adds
just enough deception for it to poison our souls, our minds, our lives, our faith, our
relationships, and the love in those relationships. He is good at being sneaky so as to not make
us suspicious this is what he is doing.
He repeatedly whispers here and there and is persistent over a long
period of time. How hard he works at
convincing people, especially the youth, that they should simply despair of
life altogether and that it is better to be dead than to live and discover a victory
past the current struggles or trials. The
adversary of God wants their impact upon this world removed. He is a man killer, a liar, and a destroyer. And he will go to great lengths trying to accomplish
his goals.
I speak of the devil and his ways not because I care to give him too much importance (for God is greater!). However, I
desire to make people aware of his schemes.
This is how he consistently works against us. If we can understand that we truly do not
struggle against flesh and blood (the earthly) but against the darkness and wickedness
of the spiritual realm, we will be able to face our trials and tribulations viewing
them in a totally different light and with greater strength.
How do we endure the hardest of trials?
From where do we gain the strength to
endure and persevere when we feel we can’t possibly muster another ounce of it
ourselves?
"...we do not want you to be unaware, brethren, of our affliction which came to us...that we were burdened excessively, beyond our strength, so that we despaired even of life; indeed, we had the sentence of death within ourselves so that we would not trust in ourselves, but in God who raises the dead; who delivered us from so great a peril of death, and will deliver us, He on whom we have set our hope. And He will yet deliver us..." (2 Corinthians 1:8-10, NAS)
"...we do not want you to be unaware, brethren, of our affliction which came to us...that we were burdened excessively, beyond our strength, so that we despaired even of life; indeed, we had the sentence of death within ourselves so that we would not trust in ourselves, but in God who raises the dead; who delivered us from so great a peril of death, and will deliver us, He on whom we have set our hope. And He will yet deliver us..." (2 Corinthians 1:8-10, NAS)
How do we go on when we feel like we can’t endure
one more difficulty or walk one more step?
“…be
invigorated in the Lord and in the might of His strength…”
(Ephesians 6:10)
I’ve
said this to friends many times: “I don’t know how I could possibly endure
the hardest seasons of life without God.
I don’t know how people who do not have a faith and hope in God are able
to endure.”
I
still feel that way today. Even having a
faith and hope in God, days have come which have literally planted my face to
the floor. The pressure and intensity have
shaken my faith and my hope to the core.
Days have come in which I have questioned God and questioned whether I
should go on trusting or believing Him.
Days have come in which I have truly felt I was at my limit and could
endure no more. On some of those days,
all I may have been able to muster in communication with God was a very desperate
“help me”. On others of those days, I wasn’t
able to even do that much, being at a total loss for words. And yet, I know that I do not have to come up
with words for my Father God and my Lord Jesus Christ to hear my soul’s
desperate pleas.
“…the spirit (of
God) also helps our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we should, but
the spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words; and He
who searches the hearts knows what the mind of the spirit is, because he intercedes
for the saints according to the will of God.”
(Romans 8:26-27, NAS)
Our
ability to endure, persevere, and overcome comes out of God and through the
Lord Jesus Christ.
“For we have not a
Chief Priest not able to sympathize with our infirmities, but One Who has been
tried in all respects like us, apart from sin.
We may be coming, then, with boldness to the throne of grace, that we
may be obtaining mercy and finding grace for opportune help…In the days of His
flesh, He offered up both prayers and supplications with loud crying and tears
to the One able to save Him from death, and He was heard because of His
piety. Although He was a Son, He learned
obedience from the things which He suffered.”
(Hebrews
4:15-16, CLNT and Hebrews 6:7-8, NAS)
Jesus
Christ can sympathize with our infirmities, has been tried in all respects like
us, though without committing any sin.
Therefore, we can boldly present ourselves to Him in the midst of our
greatest, most urgent need and obtain mercy, grace, and help. Jesus Christ can identify with your sorrow,
your suffering, your temptations, and the feeling that you can’t possibly
endure any longer. He has faced it and
felt it all. What did He do as He faced
such trials and tribulations in His earthly flesh? He cried out to God. And so should we.
In
Matthew 4, we are given an account of some of the temptations Jesus faced on
this earth. The account begins by
telling us this: “Thereupon Jesus was led
up by the Spirit into the desolate region to be tempted by the Diabolos…” (Matthew 4:1, Dabhar) The spirit of God specifically led Jesus into
the desert for the purpose of putting Him to the test. Jesus was led to the desert to be tempted by
the devil. This temptation did not occur
when Jesus was at his strongest or at his best.
No, the temptation ensued when Jesus was at his weakest point of the
flesh. “And fasting forty days and forty nights, He hungered hereafter. And the tempter having come said to Him…” (Matthew 4:2-3, Dabhar) When the flesh was severely weakened by
hunger and desperate to be satisfied, the adversary of God came to do his
tempting. The devil first tempted Jesus
by suggesting he satisfy the desperate hungering need of his body with
food. When Jesus declined that
invitation, the devil suggested Jesus put God to the test by throwing himself
from a building to an impending death so God would rescue him. When Jesus proclaimed He was not willing to
test God, the devil appealed to the flesh’s greed for power. He promised Jesus the kingdoms of the world,
if Jesus would only bow down and worship him.
Again, Jesus declined his offer.
After facing, enduring, and persevering through all three temptations,
the adversary of God left Jesus alone and angels from God came to take care of
Him.
Jesus
was not rescued out of the temptations. He was given the grace, strength, and
wisdom to endure and persevere through them.
After the time of trial was over, He was ministered to by messengers of
God. And Jesus learned from the
trial. He learned obedience to the
Father’s will and how to sympathize with mankind's weaknesses and temptations.

"...tribulation brings about perseverance; and perseverance, proven character; and proven character, hope; and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the holy spirit who was given to us [those who believe in Christ]..." (Romans 5:3-5)
Whether
we want to accept it or not, trials and sufferings are great teachers. It is through difficulty that we learn the
most. What I have learned as I endured
and walked through the past trials gives me greater hope for today and the
future. As I grow older, the trials do not get easier. As I grow older and endure and persevere
through trials and sufferings, my wisdom grows, my patience grows, my trust and
faith in God grows, my endurance grows, my compassion grows, my love grows, my
grace grows, my perseverance grows, and my hope grows. Without the trials and sufferings, there
would be no growth to speak of. Does
that mean that in the midst of them my heart doesn’t break and that my
patience, hope, and faith aren’t tested?
No. They are. Does it mean my spiritual enemy, the devil, doesn’t lie to
me and tempt me to despair or to test God?
No. He does. My heart breaks, countless tears certainly
fall, I may throw tantrums, and I may question God and face bitter
disappointment. But I have realized that
if ultimately God is not my Hope for redemption, then truly I am lost to misery
in all counts. It is God Who gives value
and meaning to me as a person, to my life, my trials, my victories, my joys, and
my sorrows. In His light and in His
hands, everything is of value, nothing is unimportant, and all is part of a
future only He can clearly see because He ordained it long ago.
“…be invigorated in
the Lord and in the might of His strength.
Put on the full armor of God, so
that you will be able to stand firm against the schemes of the devil. For your struggle is not against your parents
or any other authority over you, it is against the rulers, against the powers,
against the world forces of darkness, against the spiritual forces of
wickedness in the heavenly places.
Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to
resist in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm. Stand firm, therefore, having girded your
loins with truth, having put on the breast plate of righteousness, and having
shod your feet with the preparation of the gospel of peace; in addition to all, taking up the shield of faith with
which you will be able to extinguish all the flaming arrows of the evil
one. And take the helmet of salvation,
and the sword of the spirit, which is the word of God. With all prayer and petition pray at all
times in the spirit, and with this in view, be on the alert with all
perseverance and petition for all the saints…” (Ephesians 6:10-18)
I titled this post “Stand on Your Knees! The Sun
Will Rise after the Night”. While
you may consider standing on your knees an oxymoron, I assure you it is not
meant as such. The reason I have been
able to endure, persevere, and come through victorious on the other side of the
most difficult trials is because I have cried out to God for help, strength,
and grace to endure and make it through.
I don’t necessarily pray on my knees or with my eyes closed. My conversations with God take place anytime,
anywhere. When I suggest you face your
trials by “standing on your knees” I mean it metaphorically. I mean to say that you can face your trials
and endure by crying out to God and throwing yourself with abandon into His
arms. No, He may not quickly pluck you
out of that trial. In fact, the reality is that He probably
won’t. No, He may not do things the way
you think they should be done. No, He
may not miraculously stop all the pain. But
He will be there. You may become
convinced He’s not hearing you. You may
feel like He’s not listening to anything you say. The devil may try to assure you God has totally
abandoned you and is not coming to your aid.
But the truth is that God is always with you. He is hearing you. He is listening. And He will never, ever abandon
you. Be persistent in your crying out to
God, no matter the immediate results or lack thereof. It is through that persistent seeking and calling
out to Him while you are “standing on your knees” that strength and endurance
will also come.
As we seek and call out to God for help, we
should also seek the comfort and company of those who truly care for us. The devil strives to isolate us and remove us
from those who care about us so he can make us even more vulnerable and
continue to feed us lies. We should surround
ourselves with people who not only sincerely love us but who will also honestly
speak the truth to us.
If you remember nothing else after reading
this post, I hope and pray that you will remember this:
The sun will rise again after the night! The night may last for days or months or
years, but the sun will rise again after a period difficulty or suffering. I have experienced it in my life over and
over and over again. While I am in the
midst of the trial it seems like it will never end, but hang on and don’t give
up, because it will end and there will be joy and blessings afterwards. Seasons of life’s circumstances come and go
as the seasons of the earth. I know it
hurts really deep. I hurt right now too. As I write this I am enduring a trial that has lasted for years and breaks my heart in a million pieces. I’m not offering clichés. I am offering you Hope Himself. Our Father God and Lord Jesus Christ are getting
me through, day by day, minute by minute.
Talking to God, crying to Him, calling out to Him, trusting in His
sovereignty, and believing in His redemption is what is getting me
through. I don’t know how much longer
this trial will endure, but I know that one day it will all be redeemed by the
Great Redeemer Himself. I believe this for myself and for every other person on this earth.
"As for me, I know that my Redeemer lives..."
(Job 19:25, NAS)
In closing, I’d like to share two songs
that have literally carried me through this past week and encouraged me in the
saddest and most painful moments. Maybe
they will encourage you too.
“Stand” by Britt Nicole
"The Sun is Rising" by Britt
Nicole
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