John 16:20-23
Jesus told his disciples, "I am telling you the
truth: you will cry and weep, but the world will be glad; you will be sad, but
your sadness will turn into gladness. When a woman is about to give birth, she
is sad because her hour of suffering has come; but when the baby is born, she
forgets her suffering, because she is happy that a baby has been born into the
world. That is how it is with you: now you are sad, but I will see you again,
and your hearts will be filled with gladness, the kind of gladness that no one
can take away from you."
Food for thought!
Yesterday, we marked the Ascension, that is, his
return to heaven. Today's words were said before his return. He is saying to
his disciples: "I am leaving you; but I am coming back; the day will come
when my reign will begin and my kingdom will come; but before that you will
have to go through terrible things, with pain like birthpangs upon you. But, if
you faithfully endure, the blessings will be very precious." Then he went
on to outline the life of the Christian who endures.
(i) Sorrow will turn to joy. There may be a time when
it looks as if to be a Christian brings nothing but sorrow, and to be of the
world brings nothing but joy. But the day will come when the roles are
reversed. The world's careless joy will turn to sorrow; and the Christian's
apparent sorrow will turn to joy. The Christian must always remember, when his
faith costs him dear, that this is not the end of things and that sorrow will give
way to joy.
(ii) There will be two precious things about this
Christian joy.
(a) It will never be taken away. It will be
independent of the chances and changes of the world. It is the simple fact that
in every generation people who were suffering terribly have spoken of sweet
times with Christ. The joy the world gives is at the mercy of the world. The
joy which Christ gives is independent of anything the world can do.
(b) It will be complete. In life's greatest joy there
is always something lacking; even when we are very happy, we experience some
sadness. In every worldly joy they is some sadness; every worldly achievement
there is some failure. We all have this funny feeling whenever we are
contented, that this contentment will not last long. In Christian joy, the joy
of the presence of Christ, there is no tinge of imperfection. It is perfect and
complete.
(iii) In Christian joy the pain which went before is
forgotten. The mother forgets the pain in the wonder of the child. The martyr
forgets the agony in the glory of heaven. We all rejoice when, after much
struggle and suffering, we are victorious. Jesus is just reminding us that true
happiness and joy is that which comes after much fight and struggle. This is
why, whenever we are faced with a choice, we must always choose not the easy
one but the most difficult of the two choices.
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