Gratitude Overflowing by C.R. Stam
Thus he says,
"...I thank Christ Jesus, our Lord, who hath enabled me, for that He counted me faithful, putting me into the ministry; Who was before a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious..." (I Tim. 1:12,13). Paul had been anything but faithful to God, to his Messiah, or to his people, but he was divinely enabled and counted worthy, as God entrusted him with the dispensing of the riches of His grace to a doomed and lost world. Thus, when these riches yielded great dividends, it was evident that the results were not due to Paul's oratory or his persuasive powers; they were of God, for the instrumentality employed in defending and dispensing this treasure was altogether disproportionate to the amazing effect produced.
SATAN'S ATTEMPTS TO CRUSH THE EARTHEN VESSELAnd now let us see how Satan, in the case of Paul, sought to crush the "earthen vessel." In II Corinthians 4:8-14 we have the story of the Apostle's struggles - and his victory in Christ. It is replete with metaphors, some taken from the Corinthian games, with which his readers were so familiar.
Verse 8: "We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed." The words "on every side," or "all around," are expressive. The Apostle was hard-pressed, as by a wrestler seeking to suffocate his opponent with his hold - yes, hard-pressed, but not crushed!
"We are perplexed, but not in despair." He himself testified that "we know not what we should pray for as we ought" (Rom. 8:26). But he was "not in despair," for he knew that the Holy Spirit does know what is good for us and pleasing to God (Rom. 8:26,27). What an encouragement the Spirit's intercession should be to us who likewise, so often, find ourselves not knowing how to pray! We need not "despair" that our adversary will succeed in crushing these earthen vessels if we simply trust God for the outcome.
Verse 9: "Persecuted, but not forsaken." The metaphor seems to be that of one pursued, harassed, by wild beasts. Constantly pursued by Satan's henchmen, plotted against, waylaid, hunted down, surrounded by enemies (I Cor. 15:32 cf. II Cor. 1:8), he was not abandoned or left to perish, for in life or in death, deliverance and victory were his (II Tim. 4:17; Phil. 1:20,21), so that spiritually he could say what Daniel said of his physical circumstances after a night in the lions' den: "My God hath...shut the lions' mouths" (Dan. 6:22).
"Cast down, but not destroyed." Evidently a metaphor from the boxing ring. In fight after fight, the count had seemed to pronounce the end - 6,7,8,9! but God had again raised him up to go on fighting the good fight of the faith. The above phrase has been rendered, "knocked down, but not out"!
By this time the Apostle had already suffered almost constant persecution, as II Corinthians 11 tells us.
Five times he had received "forty stripes save one" (II Cor. 11:24). Why does not the record simply say "thirty-nine stripes"? Because the Romans had a law on their books which said in effect: "Don't give a man forty stripes; you will kill him." So they gave him "forty save one."
Three times he had been "beaten with rods" (Ver. 25), those terrible clubs that could break a man's spine or leave him terribly disfigured.
Once he was stoned (Ver. 25) - and left for dead, and who cannot see, as they read II Corinthians 11, that repeatedly his very life stood in jeopardy.
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