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Paul Pendleton

A Manifest Token

2 Thessalonians 1
Paul Pendleton August, 10 2025 Video & Audio
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Paul Pendleton
Paul Pendleton August, 10 2025

In Paul Pendleton's sermon, "A Manifest Token," he explores the theological topic of suffering for the sake of the Gospel, as grounded in the teachings of 2 Thessalonians 1. The preacher emphasizes that the persecution believers face serves as a "manifest token" of God's righteous judgment, reaffirming that their faith and trials demonstrate their worthiness of God's kingdom. He articulates that faith, given by God's grace, enables believers to endure tribulations while remaining assured of their ultimate salvation. Key scripture references include 2 Thessalonians 1:5, emphasizing God's judgment, and John 15:18-20, which elaborates on the inevitability of persecution for followers of Christ. The practical significance lies in the assurance that suffering aligns with God's plan, ultimately leading to glorification in the presence of Christ, hence providing believers with a source of hope and endurance.

Key Quotes

“The manifest token is God's grace in giving us faith to believe him.”

“We are not counted worthy because we suffer. We suffer because we have been counted worthy.”

“Those who have been given this honest and good heart, what does it say they do? They bring forth fruit with patience.”

“It is all about his honor and glory. It is not about us.”

What does the Bible say about suffering for the kingdom of God?

The Bible teaches that suffering is a manifestation of God's righteous judgment and a token of our worthiness to the kingdom.

Scripture highlights that suffering is an expected part of the believer's life, as seen in 2 Thessalonians 1:5, which refers to it as a 'manifest token' of the righteous judgment of God. This suffering is not without purpose; it counts us worthy of the kingdom of God, and our faith amid trials reveals our reliance on God’s grace. Believers endure persecution as a testimony of their faith and hold firm to the promise that God will ultimately vindicate them.

2 Thessalonians 1:5, Romans 8:17

How do we know God's judgment is righteous?

God's judgment is deemed righteous because it is based on the faith He gives and the obedience that results from that faith.

In the Christian understanding, God's judgment is intrinsically righteous because it operates from His perfect nature and wisdom. As articulated in the sermon, those who believe God's record and obey His gospel demonstrate the faith that God has bestowed upon them. This faith is what qualifies believers as worthy of the kingdom, as their righteousness is not of their own doing but rather a result of Christ's work and the grace imparted to them. This understanding can be found throughout scripture, including Galatians 3:6, where belief is accounted for righteousness.

Galatians 3:6, Romans 5:1-2

Why is it important for Christians to endure persecution?

Enduring persecution is vital because it demonstrates our faith in God, strengthens our character, and aligns us with Christ's suffering.

For Christians, enduring persecution is essential as it reflects a commitment to Christ and His teachings. This perseverance allows believers to participate in the sufferings of Christ, as mentioned in John 15:20, where Jesus warns that His followers will face hate and persecution just as He did. The affirmation of faith during trials not only glorifies God but also serves as a powerful testimony to others, revealing the transformative power of the gospel in our lives. As believers hold fast in trials, they develop patience and character, reinforcing their hope in the ultimate redemption promised in scripture.

John 15:20, Romans 5:3-5, 2 Thessalonians 1:4

How does faith relate to suffering according to the Bible?

Faith is a divine gift that enables believers to endure suffering, revealing God’s grace in their lives.

In the biblical narrative, faith is presented as a gift from God that not only brings salvation but also empowers believers during times of suffering. According to 1 Peter 1:7, the trial of faith, much like gold refined by fire, serves to praise and glorify God. When Christians face tribulations, their faith allows them to look to God for strength, demonstrating that their endurance is rooted in divine enablement rather than human effort. This understanding aligns with the assertion that God's trials are purposeful, designed to draw believers closer to Himself and to affirm their identity in Christ.

1 Peter 1:7, Ephesians 2:8-9

Sermon Transcript

Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors

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Sovereign Grace Chapel, located
at 135 Annabel Lane in Beaver, West Virginia, invites you to
listen to a gospel message concerning Jesus Christ our Lord. I'm going to go ahead and get
started, because I'm hungry. So if you would, turn with me
to 2 Thessalonians 1. 2 Thessalonians 1. And it's not too long of a chapter,
so I'm going to read the whole chapter. 2 Thessalonians 1. Paul and Silvanus and Timotheus
unto the church of the Thessalonians in God our Father and the Lord
Jesus Christ. Grace unto you and peace from
God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. We are bound to thank
God always for you, brethren, as it is meat, because that your
faith groweth exceedingly, and the charity of every one of you
all toward each other aboundeth. so that we ourselves glory in
you in the churches of God for your patience and faith in all
your persecutions and tribulations that ye endure. Which is a manifest
token of the righteous judgment of God that ye may be counted
worthy of the kingdom of God for which ye also suffer. Seeing it as a righteous thing
with God to recompense tribulation to them that trouble you, And
to you who are troubled, rest with us when the Lord Jesus shall
be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming
fire, taking vengeance on them that know not God and that obey
not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. who shall be punished
with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord
and from the glory of His power, when He shall come to be glorified
in His saints and to be admired in all them that believe, because
our testimony among you was believed in that day. Wherefore also we
pray always for you that our God would count you worthy of
this calling and fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodness
and the work of faith with power, that the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ may be glorified in you and ye in him, according to the
grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen. I know I've spoken of persecutions
and tribulations before, not necessarily in detail, but I
have mentioned in several of my messages. I find it all over
the place in scripture that God's people will suffer, will endure
persecution, tribulation, and trials. Again, we read it right
here in 2 Thessalonians 1, and I particularly want to to pay
attention to verse five, verse five, which is a manifest token
of the righteous judgment of God that ye may be counted worthy
of the kingdom of God for which ye also suffer. I just want to say, there have
been some of God's people who have had to physically endure
persecutions and tribulations, I mean severe. I've not had to
do that, at least not yet. But all of God's people do endure
persecutions and tribulation. It is our lot in this world.
It is one good reason why we do not forsake the assembling
of ourselves together. We are ridiculed and we are troubled.
The Greek word for to them that trouble, that's all four, the
Greek word for all those four words in verse six means to crowd. This world makes it hard on God's
people in the path they walk with God by His grace. I might
not always see it. I do believe God gives us grace
that we can sometimes do as the old adage has said, like water
off a duck's back. Sometimes we can let them just
go on, it doesn't bother us. But then there are other times
it can get us down. You know what the persecution
and tribulation can be? And it's not limited to this,
but this is the basis of it all. Verse eight. Verse eight. In flaming fire, taking vengeance
on them that know not God and that obey not the gospel of our
Lord Jesus Christ. Amen. When men reject God's gospel
of his son, they persecute the sovereign God of heaven, whom
his people are a part of his kingdom, being his church. I want to go through some things
as it concerns this text, and in particular verse five. What
is the manifest token here? The righteous judgment of God,
counted worthy, and suffering for the kingdom of God. What is the manifest token here?
This is a mouthful, really. I mean, all of it's included
prior to this. All of that is included. So what is the manifest token?
We can boil it down to this. The manifest token is God's grace
in giving us faith to believe him. And this faith causes us
to believe God. It causes us to obey his gospel. I heard a quote about faith and
I've used it in several of my messages by Carol Poole. You
do not exercise faith, faith exercises you. Speaking of faith,
we read in 1 Peter 1 and 7, we read, that the trial of your
faith, being much more precious than of gold that perisheth,
though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and
honor and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ. It says the
trial of your faith, not your trial, the trial of your faith. Faith is a gift of God. And God knows, since he is the
author and the perfecter of faith, he knows what his faith, which
is given, will do in trials. Faith looks to him. Faith will
cause men and women to believe the gospel when someone preaches
it. It will cause them to have exceeding charity. And that is
agape love toward one another because they also believe his
gospel. These others also believe his
gospel. This is all because of his grace. Isn't that something though?
It is grace that God gives us faith and sends us trials of
that faith so that it causes us to look to him, to look to
him, to look to him. What else are we going to do?
To whom else are we going to go? Christ is our only hope,
but yet we are full of this flesh, and if he does not do this, that
is, try our faith, we will quickly become despondent. We will quickly
become complacent. We will quickly be filled with
pride. His faith, which enables us to
believe Him along with His grace and Him giving us these tribulations
are a manifest token that God loves us and that we are His,
Joe. God will not let these things
go. People will persecute us, but
God has righteous judgment. Now there's two parts here, I
believe, of this righteous judgment spoken of here. There is a righteous
judgment of God which says, these are my people because my son
died for them and I have given them faith and they believe his
record, they obey his gospel. In them having this faith, what
does God tell us? There are several verses and
you all know them, but I'll pick one, Galatians 3, 6. Even as
Abraham believed God and it was accounted to him for righteousness. Those whom have faith, God says
they are righteous. That is a righteous judgment
from God because that faith is the faith of Christ. And Christ's
faith did what? It went to the cross to pay the
debt of sin I owe. That certainly makes me righteous
before him and him doing that. But there is also a side of this
righteous judgment for those who do not believe his gospel. I want you to understand that
if you do not believe God, if you do not believe the record
God gave of his son, then you persecute Jesus Christ. There
are some who will mix in the works of man with the works of
God. They are persecuting the Christ
of glory. Why do they do this? Galatians
6, 12. As many as desire to make a fair
show in the flesh, they constrain you to be circumcised only lest
they should suffer persecution for the cross of Christ. If you
believe and you preach or you teach or you tell men and women
of this gospel, which says Christ has done it all and there's nothing
left for you to do for salvation, men and women will not believe
that. And they in turn will preach
God's work and man's work. That is, they will preach grace
and works. But these two do not mix. Some
may quickly say, but you have to believe. That is a work, isn't
it? It most certainly is. And it
most certainly is something that we must do. But the scripture
tells me that this is the work of God, that you believe on him
whom he hath sent. So God does the work in giving
you faith with which to believe. This is the token which counts
you worthy. The faith which he gives causes
you, it exercises you into belief of the truth. But this world
knows that if they preach that, then tribulations will come.
And so they do not preach it, we just read it. Some are very
subtle at doing this, that is mixing grace and works. But no
matter how subtle and deceiving they are to us, they will not
deceive God. But we must also see in our text
this righteous judgment of God against those who do not believe,
verses 6 through 8 of our text. Seeing it is a righteous thing
with God to recompense tribulation to them that trouble you. And
to you who are troubled rest with us when the Lord Jesus shall
be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming
fire taking vengeance on them that know not God and that obey
not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. What is the basis of
this tribulation? Men and women hate God and they
will not believe him. It says, on them that know not
God and that obey not his gospel. I would say it's pretty important
to believe the gospel of God's grace in the face of Jesus Christ.
They do not believe it is by grace alone in Christ alone.
And if that's what you believe, you are spitting in God's face
when you do not believe him. You are nailing him to that tree
as a blemished sacrifice, unworthy of paying the debt when you believe
not his gospel. If you trouble God's people who
try to hold forth the truth of the gospel, God will deal with
you. We may not see it, but God will
deal with those who do not believe him. He may not do it now, but
he will in flaming fire take vengeance on them. We just read
it. God says, vengeance is mine. I will repay, saith the Lord.
How much comfort does that give God's people? It gives me comfort. That gives us a reason to hope
in the salvation of God that he will have us with him one
day. Knowing these things and having
the faith God has given to me by His grace, it causes me to
be able to do this by God's grace given to me, Matthew 5, 44. But
I say unto you, love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do
good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully
use you and persecute you. He is my protector. even if I
get my head cut off for preaching the gospel. Why is that? Because I am counted worthy,
all because of his work and works. So counted worthy. And we've
already went through this when we talked about faith. We are
not counted worthy because we suffer. We suffer because we
have been counted worthy. by that God-given faith in Christ
Jesus. That faith which is his and his
faith saved our souls from everlasting destruction and damnation. Being
counted worthy has nothing to do with what we have done or
what we shall do. The token of faith which we have
been given is what God says. He accounts that to us for righteousness. These tribulations are a part
of growing up in God's kingdom, if you will. And in growing up
in this kingdom, there will be suffering that goes along with
it. So suffering for the kingdom of God. The kingdom is where
the king is. The king is the one who watches
over the kingdom. He has built his kingdom by himself
and he will keep his kingdom by himself. We suffer because
men hate this God. Whether we know it or not, God
says that this world hates him. But believers know, they know
this because they also at one time hated the God that they
now love. But these men and women hate
God, that is they hate the God of scripture. This book from
beginning to end is about the Son of God doing the work of
building his kingdom. We know he suffered. So what
is it then if we suffer? It is because of him that we
suffer, because they hate us, because they hate him. Turn with
me to John 15. John 15. John 15, verses 18 through 27, I'm gonna read. John 15 verse 18. If the world
hate you, ye know that it hated me before it hated you. If ye
were of the world, the world would love his own. But because
ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the
world, therefore the world hated you. Remember the word that I
said unto you, the servant is not greater than his Lord. If
they have persecuted me, they will also persecute you. If they
have kept my saying, they will keep yours also. But all these
things will they do unto you for my name's sake, because they
know not him that sent me. If I had not come and spoken
unto them, they had not had sin, but now they have no cloak for
their sin. He that hateth me, hateth my
father also. If I had not done among them
the works which none other man did, they had not had sin. But now have they both seen and
hated both me and my father. But this cometh to pass that
the word might be fulfilled that is written in their law. They
hated me without a cause. But when the Comforter is come,
whom I will send unto you from the Father, even the Spirit of
truth, which proceedeth from the Father, he shall testify
of me. And ye also shall bear witness,
because ye have been with me from the beginning. This world will hate you. As
it goes on to say in John 16, they will do these things to
God's people, thinking that they do God's service. But they neither
know God the Father, God the Son, or God the Holy Spirit.
They do this with that same hatred that Saul did before God met
up with him. But God does not owe us anything. What we need to do is bow down
to him and believe him. Now I've talked about persecution
and I do want to point out there can be great physical distress,
great physical things that are done to God's people. I mean
unthinkable things. But it is all because they hate
the God and the Christ of scripture and they hate his gospel. But
persecution is not always just those kinds of things. I've already
mentioned it. You do not have to become a martyr
to have been persecuted by God-hating rebels. Let me give you an example
of persecution. This might seem quite negligible,
if you will, but it is not with God. It's not negligible. We
here at Chapel give. We willingly give money and we
give time so that we can have the TV broadcast. to go out to
as many people as it will reach. There are those who persecute
us simply by doing the following, turning the channel when they
see our broadcast is on, simply because they do not like what
we say. They are saying, and listen, they are saying this
to God, they are actually persecuting God. But they are saying when
they do this, I don't need God. I do not need or want to believe
him. This is persecuting God. You
know the account of Saul, right? He persecuted the disciples of
Christ because they proclaimed Christ's name. Now this had with
it some difficult physical things that went along with it. Very
difficult and evil things that were done to God's people. Men
and women were being put to death. As we know the account, Saul
was just consenting to the stoning of Stephen when God met him in
the way. But he was putting men and women
to death, or at least in prison. Paul the apostle, who was Saul
even, tells us he was persecuting the church of God and wasting
it. But when you do these things,
when you do anything to try and stamp out the proclamation of
His dear Son, when you put to death a child of God, when you
put in prison a child of God, when you won't hear a child of
God talk about Jesus Christ our Lord, you are persecuting Jesus
Christ the Lord. So hear it in Acts 9, 4 and 5. And he fell to the earth and
heard a voice saying unto him, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou
me? And he said, who art thou, Lord?
And the Lord said, I am Jesus whom thou persecutest. It is
hard for thee to kick against the bricks. Men and women, This
world hate God and his Christ so much that they will do the
only thing they can do to get to God. They will persecute believers,
God's chosen people. But you know, there are even
those who suffer for the gospel sake. They are not even a believer. They at least come right up to
persecution, even unbelievers. Unbelievers may go through trials
that we go through. When we were unbelievers, we
went through trials such as I'm about to show you, until the
buck God came in. You all know the passage, Luke
8, 9 through 15, the Lord's explanation of the parable of the seed and
the sower. Those who do not have the honest and good heart, at
least for two types of ground, they, for a little while, last
until temptation, or that is adversity, comes because of the
word, the gospel. Or they do not last, or they
care about everything else instead of Christ and his gospel, and
they do not bring forth fruit to perfection. But those who have been given
this honest and good heart, what does it say they do? They bring
forth fruit with patience. This did not come from them,
this honest and good heart. It came from above you. There
is not one child of God who has anything that it did not come
from God. Everything a believer has, he
has it because God gives it, else we would have nothing. But
we will suffer in this life in some way, some more than others,
but we will suffer. John 15, 20, we read, remember
the word that I said unto you, the servant is not greater than
his Lord. If they have persecuted me, they
will also persecute you. If they have kept my saying,
they will keep yours also. God does have his people and
they will keep his sayings. So as we read in Luke, there
are those who suffer these things and what does it say? Those who
do have this honest and good heart, they bring forth fruit
with patience. How does this tie into our text? What do we read in our text in
verse four? so that we ourselves glory in
you in the churches of God for your patience and faith in all
your persecutions and tribulations that ye endure. Endure. To hold oneself up against is
what the word means. Have you ever watched like the
weather channel or something like that, especially when tornadoes
or hurricanes are coming through? Sometimes you will see a reporter
standing out there and they're leaning into the wind. It's blowing so hard they lean
forward into the wind to keep from being blown away. That's
what this is saying. The child of God braces in times
of trouble, standing fast in God's gospel. This the believer
does by the grace of God and by that faith given. Once it
is over, they just wait for the next one to come. So we may be
neglected, we may be ignored. People may leave us, but we are
to stand fast in the gospel of his dear son. We endure by his
grace. What else are we going to do?
Who else are we going to go? God enables us to see that hope
of eternal salvation, that salvation where we will one day be with
Christ and forevermore. We endure it because the gifts
of God calls us to endure. We have a good hope, that is,
we have a sure hope that we will be with Christ. 2 Thessalonians
1 10 through 12 of our text. When he shall come to be glorified
in his saints and to be admired in all them that believe because
our testimony among you was believed in that day. Wherefore also we
pray always for you that our God would count you worthy of
this calling and fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodness
and the work of faith with power. That the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ may be glorified in you and ye in him according to the
grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ. He makes us meet
with these things. It is all about his honor and
glory. It is not about us. It is about
Him. May God be with us all, and we
pray also for His grace and Him giving us faith and patience
that we might endure any manner of persecution, even unto death,
if that is needed. But the thought of every believer
who has been counted worthy will at least have this thought. Even
so, come quickly, Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.
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