God is for Us
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God’s Grace is For Us!
Genesis 50:14-20; Romans 8:28; 1 Corinthians
12:27; Acts 2:44; Romans 12:1; Joshua 1:9b
Do you believe that God is always working for your good and
for His glory? While no one is righteous (Romans 3:10-18), our hearts
are above all are deceitful (Jeremiah 17:9), and like the Israelites we
tend to be a stiff-necked people (Exodus 32:9); God still sees His
image in us and enables us to “become mature, attaining the whole
measure of the fullness of Christ” (Ephesians 4:13). Though we sin
and fall short of His glory the Lord never stops inviting those who
partake in the divine nature (2 Peter 1:4), His ambassadors (2
Corinthians 5:20) and royal priest (2 Peter 2:9), to have Him plant
furrows of righteousness in their hearts! While it would be nice if our
journey towards holiness was only one on the mountain tops of
blessings and by still waters, the truth is that the transformation
process of having our minds renewed (Romans 12:1) and conformed
to His will often happens in a fiery furnace of affliction (Isaiah 48:10).
I guess we should not be surprised for we not only live in a fallen
world but also tend to only seek and rely on God when our trust in
our own abilities has been diminished! While we “know that in all
things God works for the good of those who love Him” (Romans
8:28a); when we are being refined by the fires of affliction, we rarely
see God’s providential care for us! We tend to be like the Psalmist
and cry out “how long Lord, will you forget me forever? How long
will you hide your face from me? How long must I wrestle with my
thoughts and day after day have sorrow” (Psalms 13:1-2)? It is
incredibly hard to trust in God when our vision of His will for our lives
is unclear and we feel like we have been abandoned to drown in our
sorrows! Whom amongst us in such dire circumstances could ever
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put on the full armor of God (Ephesians 6) needed to withstand the
fiery darts of depression and desperation that the Devil constantly
throws our way?
When the “spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly
realms (6:12) seems to be always sinking new
fiery darts of affliction into us fragile jars of clay
how can one stand firm in the faith (1
Corinthians 16:13) and boldly declare “blessed be
the Lord, I can see how You are working in and
through my life?”
Last week we talked about how God’s grace is with us and in this
sermon, we are going to review the story of Joseph so that we might
see how God’s grace is also for us in all circumstances that we face in
life!
The Story of Joseph
The story of Jospeh is a great example of God’s grace being
extended amid tribulation for the good of those who love Him. At a
tender age of 17 Joseph learned that blessings, especially favoritism,
often provokes in others envy and hatred towards the recipient.
Joseph was one of twelve sons of Jacob. His father made him a robe
of many colors to express the truth that due to being born to him in
his old age Jacob loved him more than his other sons (Genesis 37:3).
Due to this favoritism and Joseph sharing a dream that his entire
family would one day bow down to him (37:7), this provoked such
intense jealousy that his brothers hated him, would not speak a kind
world to him, and eventually even plotted to kill him (37:18).
Realizing that they would not gain anything by killing him and
covering up his blood, Joseph’s brothers decided to sell him to the
Ishmaelites as a slave for twenty shekels of silver (37:26-28). They
then slaughtered a goat and dipped Joseph’s robe in the goat’s blood
so that their father would think that a ferocious animal had torn
Joseph to pieces, and he was not more (37:31-34)! The Midianites
then sold Joseph in
Egypt to Potiphar, one of
Pharoah’s
officials
(37:36). How difficult it
must have been for
Joseph to go from being
the favored son to being
despised as a slave but
despite
his
bleak
circumstances the Lord
was with Joseph and
granted him success in everything that he did (39:3). Potiphar saw
his success and placed Jospeh in charge of his entire household! But
after Joseph refused to be seduced by Potiphar’s wife, she promptly
blamed him for trying to seduce her and Joseph was thrown into
prison (37:11-23). Talk about bleak circumstances, first a slave and
now a prisoner! This roller coaster of blessings and tribulations was
far from done! God gave Jospeh the interpretation of Pharoah’s
dream that there would be seven good years of bountiful harvest and
then seven years of great famine. Joseph’s suggestion to Pharoah
that he ought to save one-fifth of the harvest in the good years to
prepare the bad ones seemed so wise that Pharoah put Joseph in
charge of this plan and made him second in command over all Egypt
(41:1-43)!
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Joseph stored up huge quantities of grain, like the sand of the
sea, during the good times that was so great that he “stopped
keeping records of it because it was beyond measure” (41:49). When
the famine hit Joseph opened all the storehouses and “all the world
came to Egypt to buy grain from Joseph, for the famine was
everywhere” (41:57). When Jacob heard there was grain in Egypt, he
sent all his sons except Benjamin to purchase grain (42:3-4). When
Joseph saw his brothers come before him, he not only pretended to
not recognize them
but also “spoke
harshly to them”
and accused them
of being spies
(42:8-9).
After
Joseph had placed
his brothers in
custody for three
days, he released all but one of them and demanded they bring
Benjamin, the youngest, to prove they were telling the truth about
their family (42:14-23). Joseph then gave orders to fill their sacks
with grain and put each brother’s silver back in their sacks (42:25).
Upon realizing their silver had been returned Joseph’s brothers were
filled with fear and they returned home and told their father
everything that had happened (42:28-34). Feeling that “everything
was against him,” Jacob refused to let the brothers take Benjamin
from his side for he feared for his very life (42:36-38). Once they had
eaten all the grain from Egypt and after Judah said, “hold me
personally responsible for Benjamin,” Jacob finally agreed to let the
rest of his sons make the journey to buy more grain (43:1-14). When
they arrived, they explained to Joseph that their silver had been
returned to them during the last visit to which Joseph said, “don’t be
afraid. Your God, the God of your father, has given you the treasure
in your sacks, I received your silver” (43:23). The brothers all bowed
before Joseph and offered him gifts (43:26) and had a meal with him.
When morning dawned again Joseph ordered his brother’s sacks to
be filled with grain, returned their silver in the sacks, and placed his
silver cup in Benjamin’s sack (44:1-5). When the cup was found in
Benjamin’s sack and Joseph stated he was going to make him a slave
Judah offered himself to take his brother’s place (44:33-34).
Joseph could not hold back his emotions any
longer, forgave his bothers and told them the
real reason why he went through so many
tribulations, “God sent me ahead of you to
preserve for you a remnant on earth and to save
your lives by a great deliverance” (44:7).
In Grace we are to Forgive Others
The first lesson we learn from the roller coaster of Joseph’s
life is that the grace God gives a person is meant to be given to others.
They plotted to kill him, sold him into slavery, and made his father
think a wild animal had torn him apart! Locked up in a dungy prison
Joseph had every reason to hate his brothers. When the brothers
realized that it was Joseph who was second in command of Egypt they
were “terrified at his presence” (45:3) because they were afraid, he
would be angry with them and seek revenge. But instead of being
filled with rage Joseph was filled with gratitude for in the roller
coaster of life’s blessings and tribulations he had experienced
firsthand God’s grace and was truly grateful. Billy Graham once
stated, “It’s the Fathers job to judge, the Spirit’s job to convict, and
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my job to love.” We live in a world where grace is often seen as a
sign of weakness. Many of the world believe that if you don’t “beat
down”
your
enemies then
they will not
respect
but
instead choose
to abuse you!
To this the Lord
says, “you have
heard it was
said, eye for an eye, and tooth for tooth. But I tell you, do not resist
and evil person. If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them
the other cheek also” (Matthew 5:38).
If retribution needs to be paid by the perpetrator,
then God will decide what it will be, not you
(Romans 12:19). Like Joseph when we are
wrongly persecuted by another our role is not
revenge but to extend the grace of God we have
received to the perpetrator.
Peter asked, how many times shall I forgive my brother or sister who
sins against me, and the response was seventy-seven times which
meant as many times as asked (Matthew 18:21-22). Think about all
the times Christ forgave you for having sinful thoughts, words, and
actions the moment you asked (1 John 1:9)! We need to take Christ’s
warning to heart, “if you do not forgive others their sins, your Father
will not forgive your sins” (Matthew 6:15).
Grace is not Just Words but Action
The second lesson we learn from the roller coaster of
Joseph’s life is that a true extension of grace to another must be
accompanied by action. Joseph did not merely send his brothers on
their way with hollow words but instead “invited his brothers into his
life, his story, and into his family,”1 to share in the bounty of God’s
blessings that he had received! Joseph did not seek revenge but
instead asked his family to move to
“the best of the land of Egypt” so that
they might “enjoy the fat of the land”
(45:18). While we are to extend grace
to the body of Christ of which we are all
part of (1 Corinthians 12:27), we are
also to offer grace to those who are the
fallen image-bearers of God that are
yet to be adopted into His family. Peter
states that the Lord is not slow in
returning but instead “is patient, not
wanting anyone to perish, but
everyone come to repentance” (2 Peter 3:9). Jesus tells us that “we
are to love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us, that
you may be children of your Father in heaven” (Matthew 5:43-48).
Instead of ridiculing and seeking revenge against those who wrong
us, should not those who were Christ’s enemies and yet saved by
grace through faith be more than willing to be the “beautiful feet”
(Romans 10:15) of those who make an appeal to the lost to be
reconciled unto God (2 Corinthians 5:20)? Do you believe like
Apostle Paul that “now is the time of God’s favor, now is the day of
salvation” (6:2)? What if in the persecuting hands of one’s
1
Taken from Grace Under Fire video series from Sermon Central.
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perpetrator you offered grace through both word and deed and in
doing so your light shined so brightly that it penetrated his/her
spiritual blindness and deafness and that person cried out Abba,
Father save me! Would not tears of joy run down your face as you
witness an enemy of the cross become a redeemed masterpiece of
God’s grace?
And when you see this person in heaven, and
they say thank you for being the hands and feet
of Christ will not the uncomfortable moment of
their persecution be worth it?
To serve in such a manner in the kingdom of God is a privilege and
honor beyond any money, fame, or power that this world could ever
offer!
In View of God’s Mercy
The last thing that I want to point out concerning Joseph’s life
is that he lived the future words of Apostle Paul who said, “In view of
God’s mercy, we are to offer our bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and
pleasing to God – this is your true and proper worship” (Romans
12:1). For God to “work all things for the good of those who love
Him” (Romans 8:28), this requires one to know and submit to His
good, pleasing, and perfect will. But how does one, in the throws of
affliction, be like Joseph and see the mighty hand of God at work both
in the good and bad times of our lives? It is in our commune with the
Holy Spirit who “searches all things, even the deep things of God” (1
Corinthians 2:11) that we in some small measure come to realize how
God takes the circumstances of our lives, both good and bad, and
redeems them for His honor and glory. In hindsight Joseph came to
understand his brother’s jealousy, his being sold into slavery, and
later being held in a dungy prison was meant to lead him down a path
that resulted in him
becoming second in
command of Pharoah’s
court so that he might
“save lives by a great
deliverance” (Genesis
45:7).
It was not
necessarily
the
circumstances
that
Joseph experienced but
his trust in the Lord that
led “God working all things for his good.” Had Joseph cursed God for
being sold into slavery or had he slept with Potipher’s wife the good
God offered him would not likely have happened. Joseph was
blessed because in all situations he took Solomon’s words to heart,
“trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not unto your own
understanding; in all ways submit to Him, and He will make your
paths straight” (Proverbs 3:5-6). Being a living sacrifice also means
trusting God to guide one’s steps even when they take one towards
a lifetime of persecution and affliction. The Biblical heroes of
Hebrews 11 were “commended for their faith and yet none of them
received what had been promised” (11:39).
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In view of God’s mercy His living sacrifices are to
deny themselves, take up their crosses and follow
the Lord (Matthew 16:24), even when the
reasons for every step of the journey must wait
until we go home to see Jesus!
Conclusion
God is always working for our good and His glory. The
unshakeable truth is that while our hearts are above all deceitful, no
one is righteous but instead often time stiff-necked; God still sees His
image in us and enables us to attain the whole measure of Christ in
our lives. If only the journey of life was always on the mountain tops
of blessings, then we would be more readily able to see the “good”
God is doing but living
in a fallen world
means that our lives
are often filled with
affliction
which
muddies the waters of
His purpose. Like Job
and many of the
heroes of the Bible, we
do not get, nor would
we likely understand
the reasons why tribulations come knocking at our door. In such
times one must have faith that God in His infinite wisdom has done
good to you even when the mind still wants to cry out, “how long
Lord will you forget me?” For all the times we see God working for
our good, we as ambassadors of Christ and His royal priests are
obligated to share the grace we have received with others. God’s
grace that we have received is to profoundly affect our relationships
with one another! For instance, when others wrong us, we are to
show them the same grace we, initially Christ’s enemies, received
when He died on the cross for our sins, by forgiving them! Billy
Graham was right to say, “It’s the Fathers job to judge, the Spirit’s job
to convict, and my job to love.” If there be any retribution for an
enemy’s attacks that is the Lord’s decision. Our responsibility is to
forgive and love them the way Christ forgave and loves us. Above all
the grace we have received ought to compel the partakers in the
divine nature to share in His view that none should perish.
Instead of ridiculing or seeking revenge against
the lost of this world should not the image of
Christ within them, though it be marred and
ignored, compel us to be the beautiful feet that
says to them, “God saved a wretch like me, He
will save you the moment you believe in His Son
Jesus?”
So, while we may not always know how God works for our good, let
us never stop sharing the grace we have received and trust that God
is always for us and not against us!
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