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Octavius Winslow

Psalm 65:5

Psalm 65:5
Octavius Winslow May, 10 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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May, 10 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about suffering and knowing God?

The Bible teaches that suffering can deepen our knowledge of God and His truth.

Scripture reveals that believers often experience a profound understanding of God's truth through trials and challenges. In Psalm 65:5, it is affirmed that God answers His people by His righteousness, especially in times of distress. Such experiences are crucial as they lead believers to a more intimate acquaintance with the Savior, enabling them to testify from personal experience rather than mere theoretical knowledge. Just as a mariner acquires practical skill in storms, so believers deepen their understanding of God through life's trials, leading them to confess their limitations and experience God's sufficiency and grace more fully.

Psalm 65:5, Job 42:5

How do we know that suffering can bring us closer to God?

Experiencing suffering often leads to a deeper relationship with God, revealing His presence and love in difficult times.

The assurance that suffering can lead to a closer relationship with God is found in how believers perceive their trials. When God allows His children to undergo hardship, it is designed to foster a greater understanding of His nature and character. In these moments, believers come face to face with their own weaknesses and learn to rely on the sufficiency of Christ. This process is akin to how Job ultimately gained a clearer vision of God after enduring immense suffering, leading him to say, 'I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear; but now mine eye sees You.' Thus, suffering becomes a vehicle through which God draws His people nearer to His heart.

Job 42:5

Why is knowing God important for Christians?

Knowing God is essential for Christians as it transforms their hearts and empowers them to live according to His will.

The pursuit of knowing God is foundational for Christians, as it directly impacts their faith and life. Through deeper intimacy with God, believers learn to love Him more fully, which inevitably enhances their service and obedience to Him. The Lord invites His children to welcome the trials and tribulations in their lives, viewing them as instruments to bring them closer to Him. By doing so, believers experience God's grace and truth in profound ways. This intimate knowledge fosters a more profound faith and motivates believers to live out the Gospel's truths in their daily lives, fulfilling their calling in Christ.

Psalm 65:5

“By terrible things in righteousness will you answer us, O God of our salvation.”

— Psalm 65:5

DEEPER experience of the truth of God is frequently the result of sore but sanctified trial. A believer knows but imperfectly what he is in himself, or what the truth of God is to him, until placed in circumstances favorable to the development of both. The Lord will have His people, and especially the ministers of His gospel, experimentally acquainted with His truth. They shall not testify of an unknown, unfelt, and unexperienced Savior. They shall be enabled to say, "That which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled of the word of life, declare we unto you." And more valuable and precious is one grain of the truth of God experienced in the heart than the whole system occupying a place only in the judgment. To deepen, then, their knowledge of the truth—to ground and settle them in it—to bring it out in all its practical power, a good, a covenant God often places His children in sore trial and temptation. It is in the storm and the hurricane, amid rocks and shoals, that the mariner becomes practically acquainted with his science. All that he knew before He launched his vessel on the ocean, or encountered the storm, was but the theory of the school; but a single tempest, one escape from shipwreck, has imparted more experimental knowledge than years of mere theoretical toil. So learns the believer. Oh, how theoretical and defective his views of Divine truth—how little his knowledge of his own heart—his deep corruptions, perfect weakness, little faith—how imperfect his acquaintance with Jesus—His fullness, preciousness, all-sufficiency, sympathy, until the hand of God falls upon him!—and when, like Job, messenger after messenger has brought the tidings of blasted gourds, of broken cisterns—when brought down and laid low, like him they are constrained to confess, "I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear; but now mine eye sees You. Why I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes."

Welcome whatever makes you more acquainted with God; despise nothing that will deepen your intimacy with God in Christ. Welcome the cross—it may be heavy; welcome the cup—it may be bitter; welcome the chastening—it may be severe; welcome the wound—it may be deep; oh! welcome to your heart whatever increases your knowledge of God; receive it as a boon sent to you from your Father; receive it as a heaven-sent message to your soul. And hearken to the voice that is in that rod: "My child, I want you to know me better; for in knowing me better you will love me better, and in loving me better you will serve me better. I send this chastening, this loss, this cross, only to draw you closer and closer to my embrace—only to bring you nearer and nearer to me." Welcome, then, whatever brings you into closer transaction, communion, and fellowship with your heavenly Father.

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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