Brandan Kraft addresses the Reformed doctrine of divine providence and God's sustaining grace in seasons of suffering, arguing that the absence of God's felt presence does not indicate His actual absence or abandonment. Through examination of Old Testament figures—Job, David, and Jeremiah—Kraft demonstrates that God's people have consistently encountered seasons of darkness yet maintained faith, discovering that God accomplishes His deepest purposes through suffering rather than merely in spite of it. The sermon emphasizes key scriptural themes: the substitutionary atonement (Isaiah 53:5-6), the imputation of Christ's righteousness (2 Corinthians 5:21), the sufficiency of grace in weakness (2 Corinthians 12:8-10), and the immutability of God's love (Romans 8:38-39). Kraft's central argument rests on the Reformed understanding that believers' security derives from Christ's finished work rather than personal performance, and that suffering serves the sanctifying purpose of conforming believers to Christ's image (Romans 8:28-29). The practical significance lies in providing biblical comfort to suffering believers by establishing that God's sovereign purposes are redemptive even when incomprehensible, grounding assurance in objective doctrines of grace rather than subjective emotional experience.
“Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him. Even if this kills me, even if I don't make it through this, even if God never gives me an answer, yet will I trust in Him. That's not shallow faith. That's not someone who's never suffered. That's someone who's lost everything, who's in agony, who can't see any way forward. Yet, he still clings to God.”
“It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not. They are new every morning. Great is thy faithfulness. You have to intentionally remember it; it does not come naturally when you are in the pit. You have to choose to recall God's character, God's faithfulness, and God's mercy.”
“When I am weak, then am I strong. That's the upside down mathematics of the kingdom of God. God's strength is most visible in our weakness. God's power is most evident when we have nothing left.”
“If God looked at you, if you're in Christ, He doesn't see your failures. He doesn't see your weaknesses. He doesn't see your sins. He sees Christ's righteousness. He sees Christ's perfection. He sees you clothed in the righteousness of His Son.”
The Bible acknowledges suffering but reassures that God is always present, even in our darkest times.
Job 13:15, Lamentations 3:22-23, Romans 8:28
We know God is with us through His promises in Scripture and the comfort of His presence.
Isaiah 49:15-16, Psalm 46:1, Romans 8:38-39
Suffering is essential for Christians as it refines faith and fosters dependence on God.
Romans 8:29, 1 Peter 1:6-7, 2 Corinthians 12:9
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
Brandan Kraft is a computer programmer from the Missouri Ozarks who has been writing about the sovereign grace of God since 1997. He started with a website called bornagain.net, built it into PristineGrace.org, and has published over two hundred articles, nearly sixty songs, and a growing catalog of podcasts from his living room in Ashland, Kentucky. All without permission from anyone.
He holds no seminary degree, no denominational endorsement, and no theological credentials. He has been writing software for the same employer since 1998. He thinks in systems and believes that the sharpest doctrine should produce the widest arms.
His systematic theology, A Thought in the Mind of God, derives every position from one sentence and applies it across every domain - from ontology to eschatology, from the nature of the human mind to the nature of heaven and hell. It is available at pristinegrace.org/mind.
Brandan lives in Ashland, Kentucky with his wife Angie and their son Cole. He plays trombone in the Marshall University Tri-State Brass Band and changes a diaper twice a day on a cat named OJ who was once paralyzed and whom nobody else wanted.
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