What does the Bible say about suffering for Christ?
The Bible teaches that suffering for Christ is a privilege and part of the believer's calling, as seen in Luke 9:23-24.
The Apostle Paul reinforces this idea by stating that it is granted to believers not only to believe in Christ but also to suffer for His sake. Suffering is seen as a form of fellowship with Christ, allowing believers to share in His afflictions and become more like Him. This understanding transforms the suffering experienced in this life into an avenue for deeper communion with Jesus and greater glory in the life to come.
Luke 9:23-24, Philippians 1:29, 1 Peter 2:21
Why is it important for Christians to take up their cross?
Taking up one's cross is essential for Christians as it symbolizes a commitment to follow Christ and share in His sufferings.
Moreover, embracing the cross creates a profound bond between the believer and Christ, allowing them to experience the depth of His sufferings. It is through this shared experience that Christians identify with their Lord, reflecting His character and love to the world. The suffering that comes with taking up the cross is not without purpose; it shapes, refines, and sanctifies the believer, leading to an eventual exaltation in Christ, as illustrated in the New Testament scriptures.
Luke 9:23-24, Romans 8:17, Philippians 3:10
How do we know that Christ's suffering is essential for salvation?
Christ's suffering is essential for salvation as it fulfilled God's plan for atonement and redemption.
Furthermore, it is through His suffering that believers are granted forgiveness and reconciliation with God. The cross serves as the fulcrum of God's redemptive plan, illustrating that suffering and sacrifice are not arbitrary but essential components of divine love and justice. Therefore, comprehending the significance of Christ’s suffering underscores the gravity of sin, the holiness of God, and the incredible grace extended to those who are called according to His purpose.
Isaiah 53:4-5, 1 Peter 2:24, Romans 5:8
“And he said to them all, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me. For whoever will save his life shall lose it: but whoever will lose his life for my sake, the same shall save it.”
— Luke 9:23, 24
The life of our adorable Lord was a life of continuous trial. From the moment He entered our world He became leagued with suffering; He identified Himself with it in its almost endless forms. He seemed to have been born with a tear in His eye, with a shade of sadness on His brow. He was prophesied as "a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief." And, from the moment He touched the horizon of our earth, from that moment His sufferings commenced. Not a smile lighted up His benign countenance from the time of His advent to His departure. He came not to indulge in a life of tranquility and repose; He came not to quaff the cup of earthly or of Divine sweets—for even this last was denied Him in the hour of His lingering agony on the cross. He came to suffer—He came to bear the curse—He came to drain the deep cup of wrath, to weep, to bleed, to die. Our Savior was a cross-bearing Savior: our Lord was a suffering Lord. And was it to be expected that they who had linked their destinies with His, who had avowed themselves His disciples and followers, should walk in a path diverse from their Lord's? He Himself speaks of the incongruity of such a division of interests: "The disciple is not above his Master, nor the servant above his Lord. It is enough for the disciple that he be as his Master, and the servant as his Lord." There can be no true following of Christ as our example, if we lose sight of Him as a suffering Christ—a cross-bearing Savior. There must be fellowship with Him in His sufferings. In order to enter fully and sympathetically into the afflictions of His people, He stooped to a body of suffering: in like manner, in order to have sympathy with Christ in His sorrows, we must, in some degree tread the path He trod. Here is one reason why He ordained, that along this rugged path His saints should all journey. They must be like their Lord; they are one with Him: and this oneness can only exist where there is mutual sympathy. The church must be a cross-bearing church; it must be an afflicted church. Its great and glorious Head sought not, and found not, repose here: this was not His rest. He turned His back upon the pleasures, the riches, the luxuries, and even the common comforts of this world, preferring a life of obscurity, penury, and suffering. His very submission seemed to impart dignity to suffering, elevation to poverty, and to invest with an air of holy sanctity a life of obscurity, need, and trial.
We have seen, then, that our blessed Lord sanctified, by His own submission, a life of suffering; and that all His followers, if they would resemble Him, must have fellowship with Him in His sufferings. The apostle Paul seems to regard this in the light of a privilege. "For unto you," he says, "it is given in behalf of Christ, not only to believe on Him, but also to suffer for His sake." It seems, too, to be regarded as a part of their calling. "For even hereunto were you called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that you should follow His steps." Happy will be that afflicted child of God, who is led to view his Father's discipline in the light of a privilege. To drink of the cup that Christ drank of—to bear any part of the cross that He bore—to tread in any measure the path that He trod, is a privilege indeed. This is a distinction which angels have never attained. They know not the honor of suffering with Christ, of being made conformable to His death. It is peculiar to the believer in Jesus—it is his privilege, his calling.
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