By Ron Thomas
The Lord told His disciples that as He was
opposed, they would be also (John 16:1-4). In the
21st century in which we live, in the United
States our appreciation for that sentiment is
hardly experienced. Those who were
faithful to the Lord in the first century, and the
following centuries, experienced it often. For
instance, even going back to the time of the
prophet Jeremiah (Jeremiah 20), the Lord’s prophet
was put in stocks (similar to hand and leg cusps)
that was designed to torture its victims. One man
said it was designed to distort one’s posture,
making it crooked. If you can’t appreciate that,
be sure to thank the Lord for it. Again, in the
first century, at the time in which Nero was
emperor (A.D. 54-69), Christians were persecuted
in Rome, even used as human torches to be a “lamp”
in Nero’s garden. “The Roman people who hated
Christians were free to come into the garden, and
Nero drove around in his chariot wickedly enjoying
the horrible scene” (The Church in History,
p. 8).
Persecution, the Lord told us, is something
that each Christian should be prepared to
experience (2 Timothy 3:12). Because of such
preparation is made, because there is clarity of
vision with regard to why it occurs, and because
there is hope associated in the knowledge of
eternal things, does not mean the one who must be
willing to endure will necessarily have the
intensity of his experience lessened. Let us not
forget, however, that when Paul wrote to the
Thessalonians he said, “...it is a righteous thing
with God to repay with tribulation those who
trouble you, and to give you who are troubled rest
with us when the Lord Jesus is revealed from
heaven with His mighty angels, in flaming fire
taking vengeance on those who do not know God, and
on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord
Jesus Christ. These shall be punished with
everlasting destruction from the presence of the
Lord and from the glory of His power, when He
comes, in that Day, to be glorified in His saints
and to be admired among all those who believe,
because our testimony among you was believed” (2
Thessalonians 1:6-10, NKJV).
There is no real way to speak in a positive
way of persecution, but it is much easier to speak
well of those who are prepared to endure it for
the cause of Christ. Jesus willingly went to the
cross of His death; it wasn’t because He looked
forward to the pain and agony, but because He
understood the purpose of it all. This is in
contrast to one who has placed his or her hope in
self-preservation, or that hope one finds in worldly
things.
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Ron Thomas serves as preacher and an elder for the
Highway Church of Christ, Sullivan, IL He
may be contacted through the congregation's
website: http://www.highwaycofc.com
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