
Part 1: Introduction | Part 2: Accessing the Enablement | Part 3: The Offices | Part 4: The Qualities | Part 5: Case Studies | Part 6: Contentment
Paul writes a second letter to our Thessalonian church.
Actually, we’re not sure that 2 Thessalonians is the second letter rather than the first; in the early days the book-order people put it second because it was shorter. We know the two letters belong together, but we’re not entirely sure of the order. And for our purposes in teasing out the characteristics of ministry, it really doesn’t matter.
At any rate, this shorter epistle begins with the standard epistolary opening–authors, recipients, benediction–and then an opening prayer of thanksgiving, which Paul includes in most but not all of his epistles. (Take a look at Galatians for a stark contrast.)
This prayer takes up the entire first chapter, and it carries a pretty clear theme: their faith toward God (2Th 1.3) and their love toward one another (2Th 1.3) is growing over time, with the result that they endure faithfully (2Th 1.4) even through difficult circumstances–specifically, “persecutions and tribulations” (2Th 1.4).
What empowers that? Why do they put up with such difficulties?
Paul’s words seem surprising to us: those trials are “a manifest token of the righteous judgment of God” (2Th 1.5).
What?! What kind of nonsensical talk is this? How does persecution, which is by definition unjust, demonstrate God’s justice? How does that make any sense at all?
Well, for several reasons. First. these difficulties are not purposeless or random. God sends them, carefully, filtered analytically to ensure that they are not–for us–beyond the limits of God’s grace to enable us to endure and therefore defeat (1Co 10.13).
And second, these difficulties are designed to be exercises, challenging exercises, the kind that build spiritual muscles when we persist in them. Every athlete knows from experience how this works; you work out, sweating and pushing and straining even beyond what you think you can possibly do, and you build muscle, you gain skill, so that eventually you will win the state championship.
“But it’s so hard!”
Yes, it is. No denying that. But that’s precisely the point. Defeating a fourth-grade wrestler isn’t any kind of achievement; it’s nothing to be proud of. In fact, it’s kind of embarrassing.
He’s nine years old, for cryin’ out loud.
But pinning a heavyweight, one with experience–now that’s a win. That calls for shouting and jumping on the mat, and for a trophy that’s four feet tall.
Trials and persecutions–big ones, hard ones–are an opportunity to experience victory, to celebrate.
The God who sends you those is good. Kind. Gracious. Just.
There’s a third reason.
In these battles he sends us, he watches, and he defends us his children. He brings us to overwhelming victory (2Th 1.6-9).
The battle is not close.
Our God is loyal to us in this battle, and he graciously enables us to be loyal to him at the same time (2Th 1.11-12).
How great and good he is! And how great a cause for celebration is the victory, even in the light of the trial!
Especially in the light of the trial.
This isn’t about being Pollyanna.
It’s about realism.
A good servant obeys his master loyally, faithfully.
And, at the end, without regret.
Photo by Mélyna Côté on Unsplash



