2 Corinthians 11:16-33
Trials
Paul’s opponents have fallen into the very trap warned against in Psalm 106. They have adopted the customs of the world around them and worshipped its idols. They are ‘boasting in the way the world does’ (v.18). They have boasted of their achievements, they have wallowed in a culture of fame, success and showy rhetoric.
Their boasting forces Paul into a different kind of boasting. They, like the world, were boasting about their strengths. Paul says that if he must boast he ‘will boast of the things that show [his] weakness’ (v.30).
He lists some of the things that he has been through. It is not the usual list of things about which most people would boast. Rather they are, almost entirely, a list of things of which most people would be ashamed even to mention, let alone celebrate.
They include often being in prison, being flogged five times with the Jews’ thirty-nine lashes, beaten by Roman rods three times, stoned with rocks once, shipwrecked, exposed to many dangers, hungry and thirsty, cold and naked (vv.23–27). The list culminates with what might appear to be a rather shameful escape from an arrest (vv.32–33).
In addition to all this, Paul lists his hard work (v.23), his travels (v.26) – ‘I have laboured and toiled and often gone without sleep’ (v.27) – the daily pressure of his concern (anxiety) for all the churches (v.28) and the pain he experiences when Christians are led into sin (v.29). He had plenty of anxiety, stress and challenges in his life.
Yet in spite of all this, Paul often spoke about the peace of God that he experienced and prayed for others to experience. God’s ‘perfect peace’ does not mean that there are no trials to face. What is extraordinary about his peace is that it is promised in spite of the trials. I cannot begin to imagine how it is possible to experience perfect peace in prison, being flogged, shipwrecked, constantly in danger, and much more besides. Yet this is what the apostle Paul seems to have experienced.
He writes, ‘Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, [that is ‘perfect peace’], which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus’ (Philippians 4:6–7).
As E.H. Bickersteth wrote, ‘Peace, perfect peace, in this dark world of sin? The Blood of Jesus whispers peace within.’
Lord, help us in our trials, criticism, bereavement, temptations, sicknesses and concern for all the churches. Even in the dark places, help me to live in such a way as to know your ‘perfect peace’.
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