1 Peter 1:7
So that the tested genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that perishes though it is tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ.
A Tested Faith Is a Trusted Faith
I’m not sure who said it, but I remember
hearing that a faith that’s never been tested is a faith that cannot be
trusted, which would seem to be true. How would we ever know how strong
our faith is unless it was tested by fiery trials? Peter says that it
can be tested so as to prove the genuineness or realness of our faith.
This test will prove to make it more precious than gold, which over time
will perish, but our faith never will. Can you think back at the last
trial or test of your faith and say you handled it well? How hard is it
to praise God in the storms of life? Job so wisely wrote that the Lord
gives and the Lord takes away, so blessed be His name (Job 1:21). Even
if He were to slay us, will we trust in Him and praise His name (Job
13:15)?
Persistence Pays Off
Those who persevere are those who pursue
God, and in our perseverance of doing good for others, we glorify God
(Rom. 2:7). As God tests us all, He is purifying us as the silversmith
does silver (Psalm 66:10). Any metal that is refined is made more
precious and valuable to the seller. In the same way, God refines each
of us to make us more valuable for His glory and for the work He has for
us to do in service to His kingdom. Our work on this Earth will be
revealed by the fire, and what remains is all that we did for His glory
and for His purpose, not our own. So each one of us will have the
quality of our works made known some day (1 Cor. 3:13).
A Tested Faith Is a more Genuine Faith
I touched on this earlier, but James
develops this even further by saying that the testing of our faith
produces perseverance. In our sufferings, we actually participate in the
sufferings of Christ (1 Pet. 4:13). Jesus’ advice to the church in
Laodicea was to buy from Him gold that has been refined by fire (trials,
testings), which will help us to be spotless and blameless on the day
that we stand before Him (Rev. 3:18). I’m not exactly sure how that
works, but He disciples every one of His own, whom He loves, and
reproves those who are His (Rev. 3:19). Discipline and love cannot be
separated (Prov. 3:12; Heb 12:7). Just ask any parent who loves their
children.
A Closing Prayer
Father, I know that disciplining seems
hard at the time, but it yields righteousness in me. It seems difficult
at the present, but the end is what You are looking for in me. Thank You
for Your patience with me, and help me to realize that the tests of my
faith are to prove that I have a sincere, genuine faith and that it is
intended for my good and not to harm me. In Jesus’ name I thank You and
pray.
No comments:
Post a Comment