Persecuted for Righteousness’ Sake

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Psalm 118:1–2 ESV
1 Oh give thanks to the Lord, for he is good; for his steadfast love endures forever! 2 Let Israel say, “His steadfast love endures forever.”

Psalm 118:
Psalm 118:19–29 ESV
19 Open to me the gates of righteousness, that I may enter through them and give thanks to the Lord. 20 This is the gate of the Lord; the righteous shall enter through it. 21 I thank you that you have answered me and have become my salvation. 22 The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone. 23 This is the Lord’s doing; it is marvelous in our eyes. 24 This is the day that the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it. 25 Save us, we pray, O Lord! O Lord, we pray, give us success! 26 Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord! We bless you from the house of the Lord. 27 The Lord is God, and he has made his light to shine upon us. Bind the festal sacrifice with cords, up to the horns of the altar! 28 You are my God, and I will give thanks to you; you are my God; I will extol you. 29 Oh give thanks to the Lord, for he is good; for his steadfast love endures forever!
In your journal time this week, with words or images, record your thanksgiving to God.
Who has helped you remember that God’s love endures forever?
John 12:12–16 ESV
12 The next day the large crowd that had come to the feast heard that Jesus was coming to Jerusalem. 13 So they took branches of palm trees and went out to meet him, crying out, “Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord, even the King of Israel!” 14 And Jesus found a young donkey and sat on it, just as it is written, 15 “Fear not, daughter of Zion; behold, your king is coming, sitting on a donkey’s colt!” 16 His disciples did not understand these things at first, but when Jesus was glorified, then they remembered that these things had been written about him and had been done to him.
Follow Jesus’ path to Jerusalem this week. Try to look, using his eyes. Whom do you see, whom do you meet?
Matthew 5:3–12 ESV
3 “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 4 “Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted. 5 “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth. 6 “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied. 7 “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy. 8 “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. 9 “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God. 10 “Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 11 “Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. 12 Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

The Height of Honor

is in the lectionary every single year for Palm Sunday. The gospel reading that goes along with it changes, but every year you can count on being there because as Jesus rides into Jerusalem, we hear the people quoting this Psalm. Different Psalms were used in different situations and this one in particular would have been used to usher in someone who was preparing to enter the presence of God. So it is fitting that this is the Psalm used to usher Jesus into Jerusalem - the place where God was said to dwell: the place where ultimately he would give up his life, rise again from the dead, and ultimately return to rule the universe beside God the Father.
There is a great deal of debate over what exactly the people meant when they quoted this Psalm and shouted “Hosanna!” as Jesus rode into town. There is no question that today when we say or sing “Hosanna!” we are using it as a shout of praise or celebration. But, in Hebrew culture, it generally meant something more like “save us!” There are good arguments on both sides of this debate about the intentions of the people shouting, but when it comes down to it, they were missing the point either way. They wanted to be saved from Roman rule and oppression : from the persecution that was brought on them by the empire. They praised Jesus for bucking the authorities and for bringing physical healing. Either way, they were looking for someone who would miraculously make their lives easier, not harder.
Either way, they were shouting something that would have been shouted to God’s anointed one - the ruler who came to bring God’s Kingdom. This is a King’s welcome. It makes me think of Star Wars: A New Hope. You know the scene: Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, and Chewbacca are recognized for their bravery and are given medals in a ceremony full of pomp and prestige. It is the height of honor for them because they recognize hope for the people.
These people were shouting out “Hosanna“ to offer Jesus a hero’s welcome, but they had no idea what they were asking for in welcoming him. They had no idea how ugly things would turn just a few days later.
It can be very hard to make sense of what God is doing in the world.
Today isn’t just about Jesus’ hero’s welcome into Jerusalem. We have a Sunday that is just about Jesus’ Kingship - Christ the King Sunday, which happens just before Advent. Palm Sunday is set aside to recognize something else. It’s here to recognize the contrast between Jesus’ Kingship and what we want Jesus’ rule to look like. Jesus wasn’t brutally murdered because the people didn’t want a Messiah. Jesus was brutally murdered because the Messiah came and told them things they didn’t want to hear. He came and asked them to give up their rights for the well being of others. He came and told them that the rich and powerful are going to have a terrible surprise one day when they realize they can’t take it with them. He came and told them to pick up their cross- embrace their worldly shame - and follow him - even until death. He came and told them he hadn’t come to rescue them from Earthley persecution.

The Depths of Shame

This same Jesus who came into Jerusalem with a heroic and royal welcome, who was granted the highest honor, was just days later demoted to the deepest depths of shame. Just as parading in to shouting, happy crowds was the height of Roman honor, being forced to parade through town carrying your own cross was the deepest place of shame a person could be made to endure.
This same Jesus who came into Jerusalem with a heroic and royal welcome, who was granted the highest honor, was just days later demoted to the deepest depths of shame. Just as parading in to shouting, happy crowds was the height of Roman honor, being forced to parade through town carrying your own cross was the deepest place of shame a person could be made to endure.
He wasn’t just killed, he was shamed. He wasn’t just stripped of his physical life, he was stripped of all honor. When Jesus talks about persecution, it’s not something to be taken lightly. Jesus knew what was to happen to him and to those who followed him when he said “Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake.”
We like to feel persecuted for righteousness’ sake, as if that’s a good thing. And we tend to think that if we’re not riding in with a King’s entry of honor, we must be persecuted, but that’s not at all the case. There is a great deal of middle ground. It is in this middle ground that we get complacent. Is it better than being given all the glory and power? Probably. Things tend to go south when any religious group has all the power and glory or even feels like they should have all the power and glory. That’s how we get the crusades and the inquisition and Al Quiada and Westboro Baptist Church.
Be careful, though, my dear ones. We tend to think that if we’re not riding in with a King’s entry of honor, we must be persecuted, but that’s not at all the case. It’s not always one or the other. There is a great deal of middle ground.
A prime example of this is the bruhaha a few years back when Starbucks used plain red cups around Christmas instead of ones with any sort of symbolism or wording on them. People were REALLY offended by these plain, red cups. “SEE!” I heard many otherwise reasonable people say, “We Christians are being persecuted! They won’t even put Christmas stuff on the Starbucks cups anymore! They are taking the ‘Christ’ out of Christmas! We are persecuted!” Even though most of the Christmas symbols that go on things like that any more are reindeer and trees and other things that have nothing to do with the religious aspects of the celebration. Your own religious holiday not getting solo or even top billing is not persecution, dear ones. Sure, Jesus isn’t being led into town on a donkey over branches and cloaks, but this is a far cry from the brutality that he and even our forefathers and mothers in the faith saw. Our church has not been bombed on Palm Sunday, as was the church of our brothers and sisters in Egypt last year
We have to be careful because we’re caught in a weird gray area. We’re not persecuted as Christians in this country, but we don’t have the same sort of cultural capital we used to have. It is in this middle ground that we get complacent or grumpy (or both): in this place where we aren’t exactly the heroes anymore, but we don’t have it all that bad, either.
It is in this middle ground that we get complacent: in this place where we aren’t exactly the heroes anymore, but we don’t have it all that bad, either. Is it better than being given all the glory and power? Almost certainly. Things tend to go south when any religious group has all the power and glory or even feels like they should have all the power and glory and rights. That’s how we get the crusades and the inquisition and Al Quiada and Westboro Baptist Church.
Is it better than being given all the glory and power? Almost certainly. Things tend to go south when any religious group has all the power and glory or even feels like they should have all the power and glory and rights. That’s how we get the crusades and the inquisition and Al Quiada and Westboro Baptist Church.
But we are in this strange place in which it’s easy to look at what we used to have - full pews, packed Sunday school classes, overtly Christian prayer in public schools, Good Friday as a day off from work - and think that because we’ve lost those we are now very bad off. And it’s easy to build resentment about that. It’s hard to lose that sort of privilege gracefully.
It can be very hard to make sense of what God is doing in the world.

Persecution Breeds Spiritual Depth and Renewal

Persecution is not being told a public business has to bake a cake for either everyone who asks or noone at all. It’s not being told “Happy Holidays” instead of “Merry Christmas.” Persecution is not just losing our status as the religious majority. I regularly walk around carrying my Bible in public while wearing my clerical collar and driving around with a sticker on the back of my car that says “clergy” and nobody has ever so much as even teased me about it. The worst thing people ever do is think I’m a little weird (which they will probably think even without all that) or they ask me questions about faith. Sometimes they are hard or skeptical questions, but I have yet to have my life threatened for being a Christian. I’ve never been beaten or spit on or made to endure even a fraction of the shame that Jesus endured for me.
Both scripture and history point to an interesting pattern: Where there is persecution, God’s people flourish spiritually. In the Hebrew Bible, the Old Testament, we see the people of Israel grow closer to God when they are persecuted. When they are well off or more free, they wander off and start to let the idols of the world creep into their practice. It’s only when they are forced through the wringer that they manage to reconnect to God and God alone. We see the prophets, who are the ones closest to God’s Word and God’s work, persecuted for the sake of the message they deliver. The harder and more important the message, the worse they are treated. We see Jesus’ example of accepting persecution for the sake of God’s work in the narrative of the passion, holy week, whatever you want to call it. The apostles are persecuted for their beliefs and dedication to Jesus even after his death.

Dare to be the Weirdos

I often hear people lament the decline of Christianity in the modern world. But if you look around the world, there are just as many Christians now as there ever have been. They are just not all here in our corner of the world. That’s all. Christianity isn’t dead or dying or fading - it’s just moving to somewhere else because we have lost our sense of its centrality in our lives. Any time the Church (“big C” Church as in the combination of all the churches) begins to either get lazy or power hungry (or both), it loses its power and withers. But God doesn’t stop working. God will go to where people are ready and willing to follow.
Modern Turkey is where much of the early church’s flourishing occured. Today? It’s almost entirely a Muslim country. As the gospel spread, it made it to Europe and while it got watered down and fizzled in Asia Minor, it began to take off across Europe. When things got weird in Europe, and Christianity began to be used as a weapon rather than a message of freedom, it made its way over here. And while the church grew complacent and lukewarm here, the way of Jesus began to explode in parts of African and Asia. In each of those places, these vital, growing communities of faith sprung out of persecution. They were small, they were weirdos, they bucked sinful social patterns. And they changed things for the better.
It’s generally better to be small. Loop back around to where we started: Jesus riding into Jerusalem on a donkey. Have you ever met a donkey? They are not that spectacular. They are smaller than horses. They aren’t as stately as horses. They aren’t as exotic or hardy as camels. They are grayish in color - plain. The donkey is small and ordinary and it’s quite a strange choice for the Messiah to ride into town on; but small, strange, and ordinary things can usher someone into the presence of God. They can carry Jesus to where his work is. They can lead us to understanding Jesus’ death and shame.
When Jesus says we experience life by taking up our crosses to follow him, by dying to ourselves so that we can truly live - he means that individually and corporately. The faith community learns about real life through persecution, through being made small and shamed, through being forced to accept that the gospel is worth any amount of pain and sorrow and shame and living on the margins.
You know what? That’s ok.
It’s generally better to be small. The donkey is small and ordinary - small and ordinary things can usher someone into the presence of God. They can lead us to understanding Jesus’ death and shame. When Jesus says we experience life by taking up our crosses to follow him, by dying to ourselves so that we can truly live - he means that individually and corporately. The faith community learns about real life through persecution, through being made small and shamed, through being forced to accept that the gospel is worth any amount of pain and sorrow and shame and living on the margins.

Embrace Freedom

Let’s not take our freedom for granted this week. I encourage you to spend time in prayer this week for our sisters and brothers around the world who are truly persecuted for their beliefs. Let’s not let this middle ground between honor and shame make us lazy or grumpy. What could things look like if instead of getting jaded or cynical about the world, we stopped caring what other people think about us? What if we stopped caring about our own cultural status and just followed Jesus - even if it leads to actual persecution or loss of earthly freedoms?
As we work to honor our freedom, let’s also make a point to consider where we are not only not persecuted, but where we might be participating in the persecution of others. In this middle place of being neither in the seat of honor nor of shame, we can easily fall into unwittingly participating in the persecution of others. In a sermon on persecution, the great preacher George Whitefield talked about several types of persecution. I disagree with him that all of these can be labeled as persecution in and of themselves, but these all certainly contribute to or support the persecution of others. He mentions “persecution of the heart” - hate, stereotyping, fear of the other. He also identifies “persecution of the tongue” or hateful, mean, speech, gossip, talking about people in less than compassionate ways. Finally there is active persecution - hateful and oppressive actions against others.
How often do we speak fearfully or negatively about other people? How often do we allow the world’s description of someone else become our description of them rather than seeing them as God sees them? Rather than worry about our own place on the spectrum of honor and shame, let’s begin to worry about honoring those around us because Jesus came to bring honor and life out of shame and we are called to pick up our cross and follow him. Let’s let go of our desire to feel honored and accept that it’s not in raising ourselves up on a pedestal that we grow closer to God.
Trouble in the world
Trouble in the text
As we walk through Holy Week together this week, we begin with remembering the great honor that was bestowed on Jesus at his entry into the city, but also how tragically the people shouting Hosanna missed the point. We step through as the week gradually darkens, visiting the Last Supper on Thursday and Jesus’ death on Friday. We remember the shame piled on him by humankind - by US, brothers and sisters. We move quietly and purposefully through Saturday, awaiting redemption. And as we gather again on Easter, we remember the great life and abundance that come after walking through the shame and persecution. We remember how Jesus went from the heights of human honor to the depths of human shame and persecution to bring us all into the presence of true honor and glory - to bring us into God’s very presence.
Let’s not take our freedom for granted this week, either. I encourage you to spend time in prayer this week for our sisters and brothers around the world who are truly persecuted for their beliefs. Let’s not let this middle ground between honor and shame make us lazy or grumpy. What could things look like if instead of getting jaded or cynical about the world, we stopped caring what other people think about us? What if we stopped caring about our own cultural status and just followed Jesus - even if it leads to actual persecution or loss of earthly freedoms?
Spend time this week researching where Christians are persecuted today and pray specifically for those places. Look up where the church is growing these days and out of what history that growth sprang. Pray also for those places that God’s Spirit would continue to move in new and exciting ways.

Going Deeper

Holy Week Scripture Readings

Please see this week’s sermon handout for ways to

Monday

Monday

Revised Common Lectionary Monday of Holy Week

Old Testament Isaiah 42:1–9

Psalm Psalm 36:5–11

New Testament Hebrews 9:11–15

Gospel John 12:1–11

Tuesday

Tuesday

Revised Common Lectionary Tuesday of Holy Week

Old Testament Isaiah 49:1–7

Psalm Psalm 71:1–14

New Testament 1 Corinthians 1:18–31

Gospel John 12:20–36

Wednesday

Revised Common Lectionary Wednesday of Holy Week

Old Testament Isaiah 50:4–9a

Psalm Psalm 70

New Testament Hebrews 12:1–3

Gospel John 13:21–32

Maundy Thursday

Maundy Thursday worship will be held at 7 PM at St. Andrew’s UP Church.
Revised Common Lectionary Holy Thursday or Maundy Thursday

Old Testament Exodus 12:1–4 (5–10) 11–14

Psalm Psalm 116:1–2, 12–19

New Testament 1 Corinthians 11:23–26

Gospel John 13:1–17, 31b–35

Good Friday

Good Friday worship will be held at 7 PM at Emsworth UP Church.

Old Testament Isaiah 52:13–53:12

Psalm Psalm 22

New Testament Hebrews 10:16–25 or Hebrews 4:14–16, 5:7–9

Gospel John 18:1–19:42

Holy Saturday

Old Testament Job 14:1–14 or Lamentations 3:1–9, 19–24

Psalm Psalm 31:1–4, 15–16

New Testament 1 Peter 4:1–8

Gospel Matthew 27:57–66 or John 19:38–42

Here are some more resources that you might find helpful and/or interesting this week as you reflect on Palm Sunday and Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem:
John for Everyone, Part 2: Chapters 11–21 Jesus Enters Jerusalem (John 12:9–19)

Even now in Western culture most people know what the symbols mean. If someone went into a deep sleep, then woke to see shops full of stockings filled with presents, they would know it was nearly Christmas. If they woke up to see people with chocolate eggs, they’d know it was nearly Easter. If they opened their eyes to see lots of children going around on a dark evening dressed up as witches (or worse), they would realize it was Hallowe’en.

But supposing you woke up and discovered that everyone was filling stockings with presents and eating chocolate eggs? That could be confusing. You might think someone was trying to make a special point, to say something new. And you’d be right. And that’s more or less exactly what happened on the day Jesus came into Jerusalem.

It was Passover-time: the great spring festival at the heart of Jewish life, from that day to this. Passover celebrates the Exodus, the time when God set his people free from slavery in Egypt, through the sacrifice of the lamb and the crossing of the Red Sea. Passover had its own symbolism, and John is soon going to make sure that we know how he thinks Jesus, the lamb of God, fits into all that. But this incident has other meanings as well.

Although it’s the wrong time of the year, the symbols of Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem go with Hanukkah—which John has already mentioned in 10:22. When Judas Maccabaeus defeated the pagan invaders and cleansed the Temple in 164 BC, his followers entered the city waving palm branches in celebration (1 Maccabees 13:51; 2 Maccabees 10:7). Now, even though it’s in the spring, not mid-winter when Hanukkah is celebrated, Jesus’ followers wave palm branches to welcome him.

We don’t have to look far to find out why. Hanukkah was when Judas and his family became kings of Israel. Jesus and his followers were, so to speak, bringing together Hanukkah and Passover. They were saying both that Jesus was the true king, come to claim his throne, and that this was the moment when God would set Israel free once and for all. The ride on the donkey, with its echo (obvious to people who knew their Bibles) of Zechariah 9:9, makes the same point. And John adds other echoes of prophecies and psalms which all point in the same direction. Jesus is the true king, coming at last to set his people free.

Grace in the text
Grace in the world

How literally we are to accept the chronological sequence is hard to judge.

Because of John’s mention of palm, some have suggested that the entrance into Jerusalem really took place before the feast of Tabernacles when a great amount of palm was brought from the Jordan valley to build huts and to be carried in the processions (Lev 23:40; Neh 8:15). According to all the Gospels, the refrain chanted by those who witnessed the entrance of Jesus was taken from Ps 118, a Psalm that was part of the Tabernacles liturgy (but also sung at Passover and Dedication). Likewise, Zech 9:9, cited in Matthew and John, can be related to the Tabernacles context of Zech 14:16. Indeed, Zech 14:4, set in a context of Tabernacles, prophesied that God was to appear from the Mount of Olives, and Jesus was making his entry into Jerusalem by way of this Mount. For other arguments see J. Daniélou, MD 46 (1956), 114–36; T. W. Manson, BJRL 33 (1951), 271–82. The theory that Jesus entered Jerusalem at Tabernacles rather than at Passover is interesting, but beyond the possibility of proof.

Hosanna. This is a transliteration of Aram. hōšaʿ-nâ, Heb. hōšīʿā-(n)nâ, meaning “Save (—please).” This was used as a prayer for help; in particular at Tabernacles it was a prayer for rain (J. Petuchowski, VT 5 [1955], 266–71). But it was also used as an acclamation or greeting (2 Sam 14:4). The fact that the Gospels do not translate the Hebrew term, as does LXX, probably indicates that in this usage “Hosanna” is not a prayer of petition but a cry of praise. Luke 19:37 correctly speaks of praising God. “Hosanna” probably had already entered into the prayer formulae of the Christian community. See Freed, art. cit., and bibliography cited there.

Josephus was the closest thing to a historian we have from Jesus’ time. He even mentions Jesus in some of his writings. See here what he has to say about festivals and symbols from that time.
The Works of Josephus: New Updated Edition Chapter 10: Concerning the Festivals; and How Each Day of Such Festival Is to Be Observed

4. (244) Upon the fifteenth day of the same month, when the season of the year is changing for winter, the law enjoins us to pitch tabernacles in every one of our houses, so that we preserve ourselves from the cold of that time of the year; (245) as also that when we should arrive at our own country, and come to that city which we should have then for our metropolis, because of the temple therein to be built, and keep a festival for eight days, and offer burnt offerings, and sacrifice thank offerings, that we should then carry in our hands a branch of myrtle, and willow, and a bough of the palm tree, with the addition of the pome citron. (246) That the burnt offering on the first of those days was to be a sacrifice of thirteen bulls, and fourteen lambs, and fifteen rams, with the addition of a kid of the goats, as an expiation for sins: and on the following days the same number of lambs, and of rams, with the kids of the goats; but abating one of the bulls every day till they amounted to seven only. (247) On the eighth day all work was laid aside, and then, as we said before, they sacrificed to God a bullock, a ram, and seven lambs, with a kid of the goats, for an expiation of sins. And this in the accustomed solemnity of the Hebrews, when they pitch their tabernacles.

George Whitefield is considered to have been one of the greates modern Christian preachers. Spend some time with his sermon on persecution this wee
Selected Sermons of George Whitefield Sermon 55: Persecution Every Christian’s Lot

Persecution Every Christian’s Lot

Sermon 55

When our Lord was pleased to take upon himself the form of a servant, and to go about preaching the kingdom of God; he took all opportunities in public, and more especially in private, to caution his disciples against seeking great things for themselves, and also to forewarn them of the many distresses, afflictions and persecutions, which they must expect to endure for his name’s sake. The great apostle Paul therefore, the author of this epistle, in this, as in all other things, following the steps of his blessed Master, takes particular care, among other apostolical admonitions, to warn young Timothy of the difficulties he must expect to meet with in the course of his ministry: “This know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come. For men shall be lovers of their ownselves, covetous, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection, truce-breakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good, traitors, heady, high-minded, lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God; having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof: from such turn away. For of this sort are they who creep into houses, and lead captive silly women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts, ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth. Now, as Jannes and Jambres (two of the Egyptian magicians) withstood Moses (by working sham miracles) so do they also resist the truth; and (notwithstanding they keep up the form of religion) are men of corrupt minds, reprobate concerning the faith.” But, in order to keep him from sinking under their opposition, he tells him, that though God, for wise ends, permitted these false teachers, as he did the magicians, to oppose for some time, yet they should now proceed no farther: “For their folly (says he) shall be made manifest unto all men, as theirs (the Magicians) also was,” when they could not stand before Moses because of the boil; for the boil was upon the Magicians, as well as upon all the Egyptians. And then, to encourage Timothy yet the more, he propounds to him his own example; “But thou hast fully known my doctrine, manner of life, purpose, faith, long-suffering, charity, patience, persecutions, afflictions, which came unto me at Antioch, at Iconium, at Lystra; what persecutions I endured; but out of them all the Lord delivered me.” And then, lest Timothy might think that this was only the particular case of Paul, says he, in the words of the text, “Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution.”

The words, without considering them as they stand in relation to the context, contain an important truth, that persecution is the common lot of every godly man. This is a hard saying, How few can bear it? I trust God, in the following discourse, will enable me to make it good, by showing,

I. What it is to live godly in Christ Jesus.

II. The different kinds of persecution to which they, who live godly, are exposed.

III. Why it is, that godly men must expect to suffer persecution.

Lastly, We shall apply the whole.

1. First, Let us consider what it is to live godly in Christ Jesus. This supposes, that we are made the righteousness of God in Christ, that we are born again, and are one with Christ by a living faith, and a vital union, even as Jesus Christ and the Father are One. Unless we are thus converted, and transformed by the renewing of our minds, we cannot properly be said to be in Christ, much less to live godly in him. To be in Christ merely by baptism, and an outward profession, is not to be in Him in the strict sense of the word: no; “They that are in Christ, are new creatures; old things are passed away, and all things are become new” in their hearts. Their life is hid with Christ in God; their souls daily feed on the invisible realities of another world. To “live godly in Christ,” is to make the divine will, and not our own, the sole principle of all our thoughts, words, and actions; so that, “whether we eat or drink, or whatsoever we do, we do all to the glory of God.” Those who live godly in Christ, may not so much be said to live, as Christ to live in them: He is their Alpha and Omega, their first and last, their beginning and end. They are led by his Spirit, as a child is led by the hand of its father; and are willing to follow the Lamb withersoever he leads them. They hear, know, and obey his voice. Their affections are set on things above; their hopes are full of immortality; their citizenship is in heaven. Being born again of God, they habitually live to, and daily walk with, God. They are pure in heart; and, from a principle of faith in Christ, are holy in all manner of conversation and godliness.

This is to “live godly in Christ Jesus:” and hence we may easily learn, why so few suffer persecution? Because, so few live godly in Christ Jesus. You may live formally in Christ, you may attend on outward duties; you may live morally in Christ, you may (as they term it) do no one an harm, and avoid persecution: but they “that will live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution.”

2. Secondly, What is the meaning of the word Persecution, and how many kinds there are of it, I come now to consider.

The word Persecution, is derived from a Greek word signifying to pursue, and generally implies pursuing a person for the sake of his goodness, or God’s good-will to him. The

First kind of it, is that of the Heart. We have an early example of this in the wicked one Cain, who, because the Lord had respect to Abel and his offering, and not to him and his offering, was very wroth, his countenance fell, and at length he cruelly slew his envied brother. Thus the Pharisees hated and persecuted our Lord long before they laid hold on him: and our Lord mentions being inwardly hated of men, as one kind of Persecution his disciples were to undergo. This heart-enmity (if I may so term it) is the root of all other kinds of Persecution, and is, in some degree or other, to be found in the soul of every unregenerated man; and numbers are guilty of this persecution, who never have it in their power to persecute any other way. Nay, numbers would actually put in practice all other degrees of persecution, was not the name of Persecution become odious amongst mankind, and did they not hereby run the hazard of losing their reputation. Alas! how many at the great day, whom we know not now, will be convicted and condemned, that all their life harbored a secret evil-will against Zion! They may now screen it before men; but God seeth the enmity of their hearts, and will judge them as Persecutors at the great and terrible day of judgment.

Second degree of Persecution is that of the tongue; “out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaketh.” Many, I suppose, think it no harm to shoot out arrows, even bitter words, against the disciples of the Lord: they scatter their firebrands, arrows and death, saying, “Are we not in sport?” But, however they may esteem it, in God’s account evil-speaking is a high degree of Persecution. Thus Ishmael’s mocking Isaac, is termed persecuting him. “Blessed are ye (says out Lord) when men shall revile you and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely for my name’s sake.” From whence we may gather, that reviling, and speaking all manner of evil for Christ’s sake, is a high degree of persecution. For “a good name, *says the wise man) is better than precious ointment,” and, to many, is dearer than life itself. It is a great breach of the sixth commandment, to slander any one; but to speak evil of and slander the disciples of Christ, merely because they are his disciples, must be highly provoking in the sight of God; and such who are guilty of it (without repentance) will find that Jesus Christ will call them to an account, and punish them for all their ungodly and hard speeches in a lake of fire and brimstone. This shall be their portion to drink. The

Third and Last kind of Persecution, is that which expresses itself in Actions: as when wicked men separate the children of God from their company; “Blessed are ye, (says our Lord) when they shall separate you from their company:” or expose them to church-censures. “They shall put you out of their synagogues;” threatening and prohibiting them from making an open profession of his religion or worship; or interdicting ministers for preaching his word, as the high-priests threatened the apostles, and “forbad them any more to speak in the name of Jesus;” and Paul breathed out threatenings and slaughters against the disciples of the Lord: or when they call them into courts; “You shall be called before governors,” says our Lord: or when they fine, imprison, or punish them, by confiscation of goods, cruel scourging, and, lastly, death itself.

It would be impossible to enumerate in what various shapes persecution has appeared. It is a many-headed monster, cruel as the grave, insatiable as hell; and, what is worse, it generally appears under the cloak of religion. But, cruel, insatiable, and horrid as it is, they that live godly in Christ Jesus, must expect to suffer and encounter with it in all its forms.

This is what we are to make good under our next general head.

3. Thirdly, Why is it that godly men must expect to suffer persecution? And,

First, This appears from the whole tenor of our Lord’s doctrine. We will begin with his divine sermon on the mount. “Blessed are they who are persecuted for righteousness sake; for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” So that, if our Lord spoke truth, we are not so blessed as to have an interest in the kingdom of heaven, unless we are or have been persecuted for righteousness sake. Nay, our Lord (it is remarkable) employs three verses in this beatitude, and only one in each of the others; not only to show that it was a thing which men (as men) are unwilling to believe, but also the necessary consequence of it upon our being Christians. This is likewise evident from all those passages, wherein our Lord informs us, that he came upon the earth, “not to send peace, but a sword;” and that the father-in-law should be against the mother-in-law, and a man’s foes should be those of his own household. Passages, which though confined by false prophets to the first, I am persuaded will be verified by the experience of all true Christians in this, and every age of the church. It would be endless to recount all the places, wherein our Lord forewarns his disciples, that they should be called before rulers, and thrust out of synagogues, nay, that the time would come, wherein men should think they did God service to kill them. For this reason he so frequently declared, that “unless a man forsake all that he had, and even hated life itself, he could not be his disciple.” And therefore it is worthy our observation, that in the remarkable passage, wherein our Lord makes such an extensive promise to those who left all for him, he cautiously inserts persecution. “And Jesus answered and said, Verily I say unto you, there is no man that hath left house, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for my sake and the gospel’s, but he shall receive an hundred-fold now in this time; houses and brethren, and sisters and mothers, and children and lands, with persecutions; (the word is in the plural number, including all kinds of persecution) and in the world to come eternal life.” He that hath ears to hear, let him hear what Christ says in all these passages, and then confess, that all who will godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.

As this is proved from our Lord’s doctrine, so it is no less evident from his life. Follow him from the manger to the cross, and see whether any persecution was like that which the Son of God, the Lord of glory, underwent whilst here on earth. How was he hated by wicked men? How often would that hatred have excited them to lay hold of him, had it not been for fear of the people? How was he reviled, counted and called a Blasphemer, a Wine-bibber, a Samaritan, nay, a Devil, and, in one word, had all manner of evil spoken against him falsely? What contradiction of sinners did he endure against himself? How did men separate from his company, and were ashamed to walk with him openly? Insomuch that he once said to his own disciples, “Will you also go away?” Again, How was he stoned, thrust out of the synagogues, arraigned as a deceiver of the people, a seditious and pestilent fellow, an enemy of Caesar, and as such scourged, blind-folded, spit upon, and at length condemned, and nailed to an accursed tree? Thus was the Master persecuted, thus did the Lord suffer; and the servant is not above his Master, nor the disciple above his Lord: “If they have persecuted me, they will also persecute you,” says the blessed Jesus. And again, “Every man that is perfect (a true Christian) must be as his Master,” or suffer as he did. For in all these things our Lord has set us an example, that we should follow his steps: and therefore, far be it that any, who live godly in Christ Jesus, should henceforward expect to escape suffering persecution.

But farther: not only our Lord’s example, but the example of all the saints that ever lived, evidently demonstrates the truth of the apostle’s assertion in the text. How soon was Abel made a martyr for his religion? How was Isaac mocked by the son of the bond-woman? And what a large catalogue of suffering Old Testament saints, have we recorded in the 11th chapter of the Hebrews! Read the Acts of the Apostles, and see how the first Christians were threatened, stoned, imprisoned, scourged, and persecuted even unto death. Examine Church History in after-ages, and you will find the murder of the innocents by Herod, was but an earnest of the innocent blood which should be shed for the sake of Jesus. Examine the experience of saints now living on earth; and, if it were possible to consult the spirits of just men made perfect, I am persuaded each would concur with the apostle in asserting, that “all who will live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution.”

How can it be otherwise in the very nature of things? Ever since the fall, there has been a irreconcilable enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent. Wicked men hat God, and therefore cannot but hate those who are like him: they hate to be reformed, and therefore must hate and persecute those, who, by a contrary behavior, testify of them, that their deeds are evil. Besides, pride of heart leads men to persecute the servants of Jesus Christ. If they commend them, they are afraid of being asked, Why do not you follow them? And therefore because they dare not imitate, though they may sometimes be even forced to approve their way, yet pride and envy make them turn persecutors. Hence it is, that as it was formerly, so it is now, and so will it be to the end of time; “He that is born after the flesh, (the natural man, does and) will persecute him that is born after the Spirit,” the regenerate man. Because Christians are not of the world, but Christ hath chosen them out of the world, therefore the world will hate them. If it be objected against this doctrine, that we now live in a Christian world, and therefore must not expect such persecution as formerly; I answer, All are not Christians that are called so; and, till the heart is changed, the enmity against God (which is the root of all persecution) remains: and consequently Christians, falsely so called, will persecute as well as others. I observed therefore, in the beginning of this discourse, that Paul mentions those that had a form of religion, as persons of whom Timothy had need be chiefly aware: for, as our Lord and his apostles were mostly persecuted by their countrymen the Jews, so we must expect the like usage from the Formalists of our own nation, the Pharisees, who seem to be religious. The most horrid and barbarous persecutions have been carried on by those who have called themselves Christians; witness the days of queen Mary; and the fines, banishments and imprisonments of the children of God in the last century, and the bitter, irreconcilable hatred that appears in thousands who call themselves Christians, even in the present days wherein we live.

Persons, who argue against persecution, are not sufficiently sensible of the bitter enmity of the heart of every unregenerate man against God. For my own part, I am so far from wondering that Christians are persecuted, that I wonder our streets do not run with the blood of the saints: was mens power equal to their wills, such a horrid spectacle would soon appear. But,

Persecution is necessary in respect to the godly themselves. If we have not all manner of evil spoken of us, how can we know whether we seek only that honor which cometh from above? If we have no persecutors, how can our passive graces be kept in exercise? How can many Christian precepts be put into practice? How can we love; pray for; and do good to; those who despitefully use us? How can we overcome evil with good? In short, how can we know we love God better than life itself? Paul was sensible of all this, and therefore so positively and peremptorily asserts, that “all who live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution.”

Not that I affirm, all are persecuted in a like degree. No: this would be contrary both to scripture and experience. But though all Christians are not really called to suffer every kind of persecution, yet all Christians are liable thereto: and notwithstanding some may live in more peaceful times of the church than others, yet all Christians, in all ages, will find by their own experience, that, whether they act in a private or public capacity, they must, in some degree or other, suffer persecution.

Here then I would pause, and, Lastly, by way of application, exhort all persons,

First, To stand a while and examine themselves. For, by what has been said, you may gather one mark, whereby you may judge whether you are Christians or not. Were you ever persecuted for righteousness sake? If not, you never yet lived godly in Christ our Lord. Whatever you may say to the contrary, the inspired apostle, in the words of the text (the truth of which, I think, I have sufficiently proved) positively asserts, that all who will live godly in Him, shall suffer persecution. Not that all who are persecuted are real Christians; for many sometimes suffer, and are persecuted, on other accounts than for righteousness sake. The great question therefore is, Whether you were ever persecuted for living godly? You may boast of your great prudence and sagacity (and indeed these are excellent things) and glory because you have not run such lengths, and made yourselves so singular, and liable to such contempt, as some others have. But, alas! this is not a mark of your being of a Christian, but of a Laodicean spirit, neither how nor cold, and sit only to be spewed out of the mouth of God. That which you call prudence, is often, only cowardice, dreadful hypocrisy, pride of heart, which makes you dread contempt, and afraid to give up your reputation for God. You are ashamed of Christ and his gospel; and in all probability, was he to appear a second time upon earth, in words, as well as works, you would deny him. Awake therefore, all ye that live only formally in Christ Jesus, and no longer seek that honor which cometh of man. I do not desire to court you, but I entreat you to live godly, and fear not contempt for the sake of Jesus Christ. Beg of God to give you his Holy Spirit, that you may see through, and discover the latent hypocrisy of your hearts, and no longer deceive your own souls. Remember you cannot reconcile two irreconcilable differences, God and Mammon, the friendship of this world with the favor of God. Know you not who hath told you, that “the friendship of this world is enmity with God?” If therefore you are in friendship with the world, notwithstanding all your specious pretenses to piety, you are at enmity with God: you are only heart-hypocrites; and, “What is the hope of the hypocrite, when God shall take away his soul?” Let the words of the text sound an alarm in your ears; O let them sink deep into your hearts; “Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution.”

Secondly, From the words of the text, I would take occasion to speak to those, who are about to list themselves under the banner of Christ’s cross. What say you? Are you resolved to live godly in Christ Jesus, notwithstanding the consequence will be, that you must suffer persecution? You are beginning to build; but have you taken our Lord’s advice, to “sit down first and count the cost?” Have you well weighed with yourselves that weighty declaration, “He that loveth father or mother more than Me, is not worthy of Me;” and again, “Unless a man forsake all that he hath he cannot be my disciple?” Perhaps some of you have great possessions; will not you go away sorrowful, if Christ should require you to sell all that you have! Others of you again may be kinsmen, or some way related, or under obligations, to the high-priests, or other great personages, who may be persecuting the church of Christ: What say you? Will you, with Moses, “rather choose to suffer affliction with the people of God, than enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season?” Perhaps you may say, my friends will not oppose me. That is more than you know: in all probability your chief enemies will be those of your own household. If therefore they should oppose you, are you willing naked to follow a naked Christ? And to wander about in sheep-skins and goats-skins, in dens and caves of the earth; being afflicted, destitute, tormented, rather than not be Christ’s disciples? You are now all following with zeal, as Ruth and Orpah did Naomi, and may weep under the word; but are not your tears crocodiles tears? And, when difficulties come, will you not go back form following your Lord, as Orpah departed form following Naomi? Have you really the root of grace in your hearts? Or, are you only stony-ground hearers? You receive the word with joy; but, when persecution arises because of the word, will you not be immediately offended? Be not angry with me for putting these questions to you. I am jealous over you, but it is with a godly jealousy: for, alas! how many have put their hands to the plough, and afterwards have shamefully looked back? I only deal with you, as our Lord did with the person that said, “Lord, I will follow thee withersoever thou wilt. The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests, but the son of man, (says he) hath not where to lay his head.” What say you? Are you willing to endure hardness, and thereby approve yourselves good soldiers of Jesus Christ? You now come on foot out of the towns and villages to hear the word, and receive me as a messenger of God: but will you not by and by cry out, Away with him, away with him; it is not fit such a fellow should live upon the earth? Perhaps some of you, like Hazael, may say, “Are we dogs, that we should do this?” But, alas! I have met with many unhappy souls, who have drawn back unto perdition, and have afterwards accounted me their enemy, for dealing faithfully with them; though once, if it were possible, they would have plucked out their own eyes, and have given them unto me. Sit down therefore, I beseech you, and seriously count the cost, and ask yourselves again and again, whether you count all things but dung and dross, and are willing to suffer the loss of all things, so that you may win Christ, and be found in him: for you may assure yourselves, the apostle hath not spoken in vain, “All that will live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution.”

Thirdly, The text speaks to you that are patiently suffering for the truth’s sake: “Rejoice, and be exceeding glad; great shall be your reward in heaven.” For to you it is given, not only to believe, but also to suffer, and perhaps remarkably too, for the sake of Jesus! This is a mark of your discipleship, an evidence that you do live godly in Christ Jesus. Fear not, therefore, neither be dismayed. O be not weary and faint in your minds! Jesus, your Lord, your life, cometh, and his reward is with him. Though all men forsake you, yet will not he: no; the Spirit of Christ and of glory shall rest upon you. In patience therefore possess your souls. Sanctify the Lord God in your hearts. Be in nothing terrified by your adversaries: on their part Christ is evil spoken of; on your part his is glorified. Be not ashamed of your glory, since others can glory in their shame. Think it not strange concerning the fiery trial, wherewith you are or may be tried. The Devil rages, knowing that he hath but a short time to reign. He or his emissaries have no more power than what is given them from above: God sets them their bounds, which they cannot pass; and the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Fear not; no one shall set upon you to hurt you, without your heavenly Father’s knowledge. Do your earthly friends and parents forsake you? Are you cast out of the synagogues? The Lord shall reveal himself to you, as to the man that was born blind. Jesus Christ shall take you up. If they carry you to prison, and load you with chains, so that the iron enter into your souls, even there shall Chris send an angel from heaven to strengthen you, and enable you, with Paul and Silas, to “sing praises at midnight.” Are you threatened to be thrown into a den of lions, or cast into a burning fiery furnace, because you will not bow down and worship the beast? Fear not; the God, whom you serve, is able to deliver you: or, if he should suffer the flames to devour your bodies, they would only serve, as so many fiery chariots, to carry your souls to God. Thus it was with the martyrs of old; so that once, when he was burning, cried out, “Come, you Papists, if you want a miracle, here, behold one! This bed of flames is to me a bed of down.” Thus it was with almost all that suffered in former times: for Jesus, notwithstanding he withdrew his own divinity from himself, yet has always lifted up the light of his countenance upon the souls of suffering saints. “Fear not therefore those that can kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do; but fear Him only, who is able to destroy both body and soul in hell.” Dare, dare to live godly in Christ Jesus, though you suffer all manner of persecution. But,

Fourthly, Are there any true ministers of Jesus Christ here? You will not be offended if I tell you, that the words of the text are, in an especial manner, applicable to you. Paul wrote them to Timothy; and we, of all men, that live godly in Christ Jesus, must expect to suffer the severest persecution. Satan will endeavor to bruise our heels, let who will escape: and it has been the general way of God’s providence, in times of persecution, to permit the shepherds first to be smitten, before the sheep are scattered. Let us not therefore show that we are only hirelings, who care not for the sheep; but, like the great Shepherd and Bishop of souls, let us readily lay down our lives for the sheep. Whilst others are boasting of their great perferments, let us rather glory in our great afflictions and persecutions for the sake of Christ. Paul rejoiced that he suffered afflictions and persecutions at Iconium and Lystra: out of all, the Lord delivered him; out of all, the Lord will deliver us, and cause us hereafter to sit down with him on thrones, when he comes to judge the twelve tribes of Israel.

I could proceed; but I am conscious, in this part of my discourse, I ought more particularly to speak to myself, knowing that Satan has desired to have me, that he may sift me as wheat. Without a spirit of prophecy, we may easily discern the signs of the times. Persecutions even at the doors: the tabernacle of the Lord is already driven into the wilderness: the ark of the Lord is fallen into the unhallowed hands of uncircumcised Philistines. They have long since put us out of their synagogues, and high-priests have been calling on civil magistrates to exert their authority against the disciples of the Lord. Men in power have been breathing out threatenings: we may easily guess what will follow, imprisonment and slaughter. The storm has been gathering some time; it must break shortly. Perhaps it may fall on me first.

Brethren therefore, whether in the ministry or not, I beseech you, “pray for me,” that I may never suffer justly, as an evil-doer, but only for righteousness sake. O pray that I may not deny my Lord in any wise, but that I may joyfully follow him, both to prison and to death, if he is pleased to call me to seal his truths with my blood. Be not ashamed of Christ, or of his gospel, though I should become a prisoner of the Lord. Though I am bound, the word of God will not be bound: no; an open, an effectual door is opened for preaching the everlasting gospel, and men or devils shall never be able to prevail against it. Only pray, that, whether it be in life or death, Christ may be glorified in me: then I shall rejoice, yea, and will rejoice.

And now, to whom shall I address myself next?

Fifthly, To those, who persecute their neighbors for living godly in Christ Jesus. But, what shall I say to you? Howl and weep for the miseries that shall come upon you; for a little while the Lord permits you to ride over the heads of his people; but, by and by, death will arrest you, judgment will find you, and Jesus Christ shall put a question to you, which will strike you dumb, why persecuted you me? You may plead your laws and your canons, and pretend what you do is out of zeal for God; but God shall discover the cursed hypocrisy and serpentine enmity of your hearts, and give you over to the tormentors. It is well, if in this life God does not send some mark upon you. He pleaded the cause of Naboth, when innocently condemned for blaspheming God and the king; and our Lord sent forth his armies, and destroyed the city of those who killed the prophets, and stoned them that were sent unto them. If you have a mind therefore to fill up the measure of your iniquities, go on, persecute and despise the disciples of the Lord: but know, “that for all these things, God shall bring you to judgment.” Nay, those you now persecute, shall be in part your judges, and sit on the right-hand of the Majesty on high, whilst you are dragged by infernal spirits into a lake that burneth with fire and brimstone, and the smoke of your torment shall be ascending up for ever and ever. Lay down therefore, ye rebels, your arms against the most high God, and no longer persecute those who live godly in Christ Jesus. The Lord will plead, the Lord will avenge, their cause. You may be permitted to bruise their heels, yet in the end they shall bruise your accursed heads. I speak not this, as though I were afraid of you; for I know in whom I have believed: only out of pure love I warn you, and because I know not but Jesus Christ may make some of you vessels of mercy, and snatch you, even you persecutors, as fire-brands out of the fire. Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners, even persecutors, the worst of sinners: his righteousness is sufficient for them; his Spirit is able to purify and change their hearts. He once converted Saul: may the same God magnify his power, in converting all those who are causing the godly in Christ Jesus, as much as in them lies, to suffer persecution! The Lord be with you all. Amen.

The Psalm was used to usher people into the presence of God in the temple.
The donkey is small and ordinary - small and ordinary things can usher someone into the presence of God. They can lead us to understanding Jesus’ death and shame
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