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Perseverance

September 18th 2009

Perseverance-the ability to withstand the trial we are now facing, and the ability to face the trial we are about to endure, while remaining steady in our faith.  Is perseverance something that happens to us, or something we become capable of doing?  I am going to borrow an acronym from my pastor who shared this with us this past Sunday:

P ursue

E verything

R elentlessly

S hirking

E xcuses

V aliantly

E xpecting

R ighteous

E ndurance

Using those words it sounds like perseverance is very active!  Perseverance is not something that simply falls upon us.  In 1 Timothy 6:11 Paul tells Timothy to pursue endurance, amongst other things.  If endurance is something you pursue, than it certainly isn’t something that just happens. Pursuing is active.  Pursuing something is what we do when we want something more than anything else we might give up while on that pursuit.  What might be the "everything" referred to in this acronym"?  In 1 Peter 3:10-12 we find the word pursue again "he must seek peace and pursue it." Peace, a good thing to pursue, but why stop there, why not pursue all the fruits of the spirit! (Gal 5:22-23 )

The opposite of pursue would be to get away from, to purposefully and diligently do all we can to avoid something in our lives.  In this acronym the word Shirking is used.  Good word when it comes to Shirking Excuses!  Someone who has perseverance is not going to use their trial as an excuse to shirk their responsibility to others.  But most especially they will not use it to shirk their responsibility to God.  When the Lord is faithful to us in trial, how much faith are we showing when we use our trial as an excuse not to do what the Lord is asking of us.  Look at Paul in Acts 21:10-13 , if anyone had the best excuse it was Paul, he knew what was coming.  Yet he refused to use it because his faith was bigger than the trial he would face.  Once again perseverance becomes active, because we must choose to act on our knowledge that God has made promises that He will keep, and that his plan is for us to prosper.  We must act on our faith, our perseverance becomes active when we make decisions based on what we know about the Lord rather than the situation we are in or are about to be in.  That is what Paul did, he made his decision to act based on what he knew about the Lord.  Active perseverance.

Paul’s decision was based on what he knew about the Lord because he knew the Lord would act on His promises.  The Lord promised never to leave us, to always be with us. (Matt 28:20 )  He was expecting righteous endurance, an endurance based on what the Lord had promised him, not on what he could do on his own.  In the same way Paul acted based on what he knew about God, so must we.  When we act based solely on the circumstance we are in we fail to recognize that the One who is in us is greater then the one who is the world, and that He is able to do far more then we ask or imagine. (1 Jn 4:4 , Eph 3:20 )  Endurance is acting on what we know about the Lord rather then our circumstance.

Endurance is active, active in attitude and in action.  We should pursue it, we should look to act on what we know of God rather then our circumstance when we make decisions.  Sometimes we need to do the opposite of pursue-but that is when it comes to excuses and we shirk those, because our trial is never bigger than what God has planned.  Perseverance is not going to just happen, it isn’t just going to become part of you, make a decision in your trial today based on what you know about God rather then your situation and that is perseverance.

3 Comments »

  1. Thanks for sharing what you learned about perseverance. I love the line from Building 429, “I won’t question in the dark, what is true out in the light. I will follow after You through the storm and through the night.” All we need to do is follow HIM. I’m following Him in what I think I’m supposed to be doing with the youth group, but I am soooo out of my element in this. The rest of the team was encouraging me in just what you were talking about, that it takes perseverance.

    Comment by Lisa — September 18, 2009 @ 3:21 pm

  2. Lisa-I also love that line because it is so true. Even when we are in trial nothing changes about God! That is what we forget sometimes, and that is when we get discouraged. When we determine to pursue God even when we can’t see what he is doing that is perseverance, when we choose to do what He has said, choose to see Him, act on the knowledge that He does not change-that is perseverance. Keep looking to Him and for what he is doing.

    Comment by race_12_1 — September 18, 2009 @ 3:32 pm

  3. This is a great post my friend. What always amazes me is believers seem to miss that seeking God (in any fashion whatsoever) is a present tense, action verb. It is not something we wish for, nor something that we hope to have one day — it requires as much action from us as it did Christ to willingly go to the cross to obey the Father’s will. Just because God wants us does not mean we are automatically in His presence; we must move forward constantly to strengthen our relationship with Him … without delaying because of our own agenda. As I read in Oswald Chambers yesterday he said, “God desires nothing of our old life … There is only one thing God wants of us, and that is our unconditional surrender”.

    Comment by TJ — October 24, 2009 @ 6:40 pm

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