Consider It All Joy!
“Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance have its perfect result, so that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing” (James 1:2–4).
I learned this passage many years ago, and I have recited it to others and have been encouraged when others have recited it to me, for it is our Father’s promise that not only is no sorrow or trial in life wasted, but that He will use them to transform us into the image of Jesus (Romans 8:29; Hebrews 2:10–11).
This is the Way of Jesus, for in Hebrews 5:8–9 we read, “Although He [Jesus] was a Son, He learned obedience from the things which He suffered. And having been made perfect, He became to all those who obey Him the source of eternal salvation.”
When James says that we are to “count it all joy,” he means that this is the way we are to view trials, this is how we are to respond. We offer our trials and temptations to our Father, trusting Him to be with us and work in us and to mature us in in our Lord Jesus.
Therefore, our first response to trial is obedience, and that obedience is in our initial response, and that initial response is a joyful recognition that God is working in us. Our natural response is to want the situation changed, but our obedient response is to be joy and a willingness for God to change us. As our Father changes us into the image of Jesus, the situation may or may not be changed, we must trust our heavenly Father in these things.
This joy is sacrificial. That is, it makes no sense to be joyful in trials, at least to our natural thinking. Nevertheless, we “offer up a sacrifice of praise to God, that is, the fruit of lips giving thanks to His name” (Hebrews 13:15).
Peter writes that we “greatly rejoice, even though now for a little while, if necessary, we have been distressed by various trials” (1 Peter 1:6).
Counting our trials as “joy” is an act of the will, it is offering ourselves to God as living sacrifices (Romans 12:1–2). This is not a denial of the reality of trials and challenges, but rather a declaration that God is greater than what we are facing and that He will work His transformational purpose within us for His glory.
But note that we must “let endurance have its perfect result.” Again we have an act of the will, for we must submit to God’s work of endurance within us, we submit ourselves to the Lordship of Jesus Christ. Do we believe that God is the Potter and we are the clay? If so, then let us trust our all-wise heavenly Potter to form us into the image of His Firstborn Son.
When we take control then we mar the work of the Potter, and we will likely be given another opportunity for submission and learning and growth…let us hope so. Let us learn not to waste the challenges that our Father allows into our lives.
As I heard long ago, “God fixes a fix to fix you, but if you fix the fix that God fixed to fix you, then God has to make another fix to fix you.”
This is one pithy saying that actually has some truth to it.
Jacob spent much of his life conniving to get his way, and conniving to escape from things he had done. He avoided permanent and transformational change until he was brought to the end of his own strength in wrestling with God (Genesis 32:24–32). The sooner we learn to submit to the working of our Father, to trust Him, and to consider trials and challenges "joy,” the better for us and for those around us. The sooner we can be the blessings that God has called us to be.
In one sense we may never know why certain things transpire in our lives, but in another sense we can always know that, whatever we are experiencing, our Father desires to reveal more of Himself to us than we have ever seen before. We know that our Lord Jesus wants us to have a deeper friendship with Him, and a greater experience in the Holy Spirit.
O dear friends, this life is important for sure, it is to have eternal meaning and significance. We are not accidents looking for a place to happen, but women and men and young people made in the image of God, an image restored in Jesus Christ. Let us learn to see as our Father sees, and to trust His incredible love for us. In doing so, we can consider it all joy when we face challenges, and we can expectantly look for the appearing of our Lord Jesus in the fires of trial and uncertainty – for He is always certain, and His love is always sure.
Let us have a joyful day in Jesus!