Welcome!

By registering with us, you'll be able to discuss, share and private message with other members of our community.

SignUp Now!
  • Welcome to Talk Jesus Christian Forums

    Celebrating 20 Years!

    A bible based, Jesus Christ centered community.

    Register Log In

Wounded by God

Coconut

Member
Joined
Feb 17, 2005
Messages
4,663
Wounded by God
by Ralph I. Tilley

Six hundred years before the Word became flesh the prophet Isaiah was given a Vision of God's Suffering Servant. Of this One who was to bring healing, forgiveness and reconciliation to Adam's fallen race, the ancient seer said "Yet it was the Lord's will to crush him and cause him to suffer. . ." (Isa. 53:10).
While reeling from the unfriendly providences thrust upon him, righteous Job cries out to God, "The arrows of the Almighty are in me . . ." (Job 6:4).

The patriarch Jacob faced the challenge of his life. The very brother he had deceived 20 years previously is now approaching him with a band of men. As far as Jacob knows, Esau has come to take his pound of flesh. Jacob is desperate. He finds a place of solitude and the struggle begins . . . with God . . . and within himself. God uses Jacob's critical circumstances to show him His strength; He uses this occasion to open the eyes of His servant to his inherent weakness.

Under pressure from the Almighty, broken Jacob readily acknowledges that he was essentially a deceiver at heart, a manipulator of people. God wounded him internally as well as externally in order that He could bless him and use him. When Jacob had fully surrendered to God's strength, thereafter he always walked with a limp--a wound--a wound placed there by God so he would never forget God's strength and his own vulnerability (see Gen. 32:22-32).

The three aforementioned examples are typical of God's dealings with His people. We live in a religious age where we are constantly besieged by popular preachers and writers regarding God's willingness to heal: "Name it and claim it!" I'm a strong believer in divine healing. I know what it is to be healed personally; and I have seen others through the years healed by the Lord in a definite way. I have always emphasized in my ministry God's willingness to heal the body according to His sovereign pleasure and purpose.

But in our search for healing. prosperity, success and blessing from the lord, we're sadly and tragically missing out on something immeasurably more important. While we're continually crying out to God to bless us, we have failed to realize that God wants to wound us, bruise us, crush us.

Jesus said that the servant is not above his Lord. Even the Father, in order to effect His sovereign plan of redemption, chose to "crush" His own Son, that He might bring eternal blessing to mankind: "it was the Lord's will to crush him . . . . "

In our rush to be successful we have fought off being wounded by God; in our struggle to become somebody we have shied away from God's bruising blows to our self-centered egos and unsanctified ambitions. J. R. Miller realized this and observed, "Whole, unbruised, unbroken men are of little use to God." A.W. Tozer recognized the same truth when he said that those whom God chooses to bless greatly He must first wound deeply. There is no blessing apart from the blows. There is no resurrection without the cross.

When God wants to drill a man,
And thrill a man,
And skill a man
To play the noblest part;
When He yearns with all His heart
To create so great and bold a man
That all the world shall be amazed,
Watch His methods, watch His ways!
How He ruthlessly perfects
Whom He royally elects!
How He hammers him and hurts him,
And with mighty blows converts him
Into trial shapes of clay which
Only God understands;
While his tortured heart is crying
And he lifts beseeching hands!
How He bends but never breaks
When his good He undertakes;
How He uses whom He chooses,
And with every purpose fuses him:
By every act induces him
To try his splendor out--
God knows what He's about.
--Author Unknown

When Jesus prayed in Gethsemene, "Not as I will, but as you will", He understood that He could not be the Father's Instrument of atonement without surrendering to the Father's crushes.

If Jesus as the Son of God could not accomplish His Father's will apart from accepting His Father's wounds, who do we think we are?

Could it be that too many of our Lord's servants today are praying for God to bless them when, instead, the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ wants to wound them, bruise them, crush them?

Too often our prayers consist of "Bless ME, bless ME, bless ME," when they should be "WOUND me, BRUISE me, CRUSH me."

God's wounds are necessary because of the tendency of human nature to be proud. The Apostle Paul finally reached the point in his struggle over the "thorn" in his flesh where he understood God's purpose of the thorn. He wrote later that God sent it to "keep me from being conceited" (2 Cor. 12:7). How much pride is being flaunted in the body of Christ because God's servants have resisted the disciplining that comes from accepting God's piercing wounds in our points of pride.

When God chooses to wound His servants He selects the precise spots where they are the most vulnerable, the very places in their character and personality where a blow from God would cause them the most pain. He did this physically to Jacob by selecting one of man's most critical nerves--the sciatica. God struck His servant with a precision blow. He will likewise do to us . . . if we don't dodge.

The God who wounded Jacob, Job, Paul and His own Son, will wound His servants precisely where they need it the most. Why? In order to destroy us? Never! Because He's the Master Potter and wants to make us. Or, to change the metaphor, He takes our crushed egos, our wounded pride, our bitter failures, our defeated dreams--that He might create a divine fragrance, a heavenly aroma to ascend back to His throne. And when He smells the sweet smelling savor of His own making, He is pleased and rewarded. We want God to use our strengths; God wants to use our wounds. For God knows we are never stronger than when we are wounded. Because it is His wounds that make us weak in ourselves so that we might be strong in the Lord.

Years ago I copied on the fly leaf of one of my Bibles the following words written by Francis Asbury, American Methodism's premier pioneer circuit rider and leader: "Dear Lord, if Thou seest Thy servant will miss the way, in tender pity send a thorn deep into his side to drive him to Thy Christ and Thy Calvary." I never realized the depth of those words as a young preacher. However, I have had the opportunity since then to experience the wounds of God: for it has been the Lord's will even to crush me. And I must say I have lived to kiss the Hands which dealt the loving and measured blows.
 
God's wounds are necessary because of the tendency of human nature to be proud. The Apostle Paul finally reached the point in his struggle over the "thorn" in his flesh where he understood God's purpose of the thorn. He wrote later that God sent it to "keep me from being conceited" (2 Cor. 12:7). How much pride is being flaunted in the body of Christ because God's servants have resisted the disciplining that comes from accepting God's piercing wounds in our points of pride.

Amen Coconut, good article, I think everyone can benefit from this kind of teaching and if we think that we don't need it, well I think that confirms that we need a double portion of it.
 
Thank you Coconut for that powerful and wonderful article.

The quote: God wounded him internally as well as externally in order that He could bless him and use him. When Jacob had fully surrendered to God's strength, thereafter he always walked with a limp--a wound--a wound placed there by God so he would never forget God's strength and his own vulnerability.

For Christ's sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong.-2 Corinthians 12:10

I can add no more - only Praise God for His infinite wisdom and grace.

Love,
Snowrose
 
Snowrose said:
Thank you Coconut for that powerful and wonderful article.

The quote: God wounded him internally as well as externally in order that He could bless him and use him. When Jacob had fully surrendered to God's strength, thereafter he always walked with a limp--a wound--a wound placed there by God so he would never forget God's strength and his own vulnerability.

For Christ's sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong.-2 Corinthians 12:10

I can add no more - only Praise God for His infinite wisdom and grace.

Love,
Snowrose
Amen Snowrose, I feel the Holy Ghost up in here!
 
"Israel went into a great deal of suffering and distress because they did not respond to that love of God thus expressed, and it looked very much as though the everlasting love was lasting no longer. But not so, it has never changed. You see, love has sometimes to change its form of expression, although in itself it does not change, and so we have another side to the revelation of God's ways with wayward and wilful man.

Suffering, affliction and adversity to individuals and to nations and to the world is not because of a contradiction of the statement that God so loved the world. It is the only way in which that love stands any chance of getting a response of the kind God wants. God does not want that kind of love that is not love at all because it gets everything that it wants to satiate its own lusts. That is not love. This love of God must make us like itself, it must be after its own kind.

And so, strangely enough, many have come to find the love of God through the dark way of suffering - to discover that God was not their enemy but their friend, when they thought that He was pursuing with the object of destroying them." - Austin Sparks

This love of God must make us like HIMSELF!

Is it any wonder then that Job says "Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him: but I will maintain mine own ways before him."
- Job 13:15

Or that Paul should declare:
That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death Phi 3:10

OH THAT I MAY KNOW HIM!
 
Back
Top