What Goes Around Comes Around
2 Thessalonians 1:2
"Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ."
What is the evidence of your faith?
What can be said of your faith?
What will be said?
Paul said..."This [endurance and faithfulness] is evidence of the righteous judgment of God, that you may be considered worthy of the kingdom of God, for which you are also suffering" (v.5)
It seems that our faith must endure persecution. In fact a true faith cannot thrive without it. Because with persecution comes increased faith, and that is what God is striving for in us. It's the refinement of the church.
Paul is setting a tone of divine favor and wholeness amid difficulty. And he's forward thinking in this as he begins to describe a coming day of God's wrath and judgment on the earth. Paul doesn’t begin with sympathy for their troubles but with the very resources they need to stand firm, (God’s unmerited grace and the peace that flows from Him and from Christ).
Paul thanks God because the Thessalonians’ faith is growing exceedingly and their love for one another is increasing. Even more strikingly, he boasts about them to other churches. Their faith isn’t theoretical or private; it’s proven in the fire. It shows itself in steadfast endurance when things get hard.
That’s the visible evidence.
From a human perspective, the persecution we experience might look like God has forgotten us or that our faith is failing. Let me tell you something, when those thoughts come into your mind, you immediately rebuke them. You trash those thoughts and pray against that demonic spirit. Because that's its source. It's a devil tasked with getting under your skin.
The devils aren't always attacking from the front, he's not always attacking your shield of faith. Sometimes he sends a devil to whisper into your ears all sorts of doubts.
"No one loves you"
"What you do is going unnoticed"
"Look at your situation, where is your God"
"Why is He not listening to your prayers, day after day"
"He's disappointed in you and the things you do (or don't do)"
"Your not worthy"
"Your not good"
"It's all just an exercise in futility"
These days and times, with all its persecutions demanding our faithfulness and enduring love, can often look exactly like abandonment.
Where is God?
Why the silence?
Why this endless pressure?
Those thoughts feel so logical in the moment. And truth be told, many fail in these things. Many will not endure. Many move on, and find their hope in humanism and other forms of godless religious practices. And even worse, many pervert the faithful church with those very same humanistic ideologies. But Paul refuses to let the church settle there. Instead, he reframes their suffering as evidence of God’s righteous work; proof that their faith is real and that they are being made ready for the kingdom.
Persecution and affliction press hard; whether it’s the outright violence we hear about in places like Nigeria (where thousands of believers are murdered for their faith each year), or legal and social hostility elsewhere, or again, the subtler cultural squeeze that makes faithfulness costly in our daily life. Many endure in silence, unseen by the wider world.
There was a man climbing a mountain cliff side, and he lost his footing and fell. As he's falling he reaches out and grabs a small feeble tree protruding from the cliff.
The man is dangling there, roots giving way, heart pounding. He cries out to God for rescue. God answers clearly:
"Let go of the branch and I’ll catch you."
But the man looks down at the terrifying drop, feels the branch trembling in his hands, and shouts back, "Is there anyone else up there?"
What this funny little story does is, it reveals our human nature. We want salvation on our terms. We want God to rescue us while we keep clinging to whatever feels secure; the visible branch, the familiar plan, the thing we can control with our own grip.
This is exactly the temptation Paul is addressing in the Thessalonian church. From a human perspective, their persecutions looked like certain doom. The pressure was mounting. The roots of comfort and safety were giving way. The logical response for many would have been..."This faith is too costly maybe there's another way, a safer path, a different 'god' or ideology that doesn't demand so much." But for the Thessalonians church, they were living out enduring faith. Their patient faith wasn't a desperate hanging on; it was a deliberate release into God’s hands, even when the drop looked deadly. Paul reframes it boldly; your endurance in the face of this pressure is evidence of God's righteous judgment. It shows your faith is real.
In these times, many are still shouting, "Is there anyone else up there?"
For them, they get their reward today, whatever that is. Maybe a joyride through life. Give into the temptation and get an easier life. Make a few compromises in judgement and get a free pass from the devils. Rip off the rest and take what's yours, even if it's not yours. Just don't because if you don't someone will. Might as well be you who gets the best deal. And for a season, it can look like they’ve made the smarter choice.
A smoother ride through life with less resistance.
Approval from the world instead of scorn.
It feels pragmatic. It feels like winning in the moment. They trade the narrow, costly road for a wide one that promises joy today, success today, comfort today.
Humanism, compromised Christianity, or outright godlessness all offer the same illusion, "You can have the kingdom without the King's terms. You can have life without letting go."
But Paul’s words in 2 Thessalonians 1 stand as a solemn warning and a glorious contrast. He doesn’t sugar-coat the future:
"…since it is a righteous thing with God to repay with tribulation those who trouble you, and to give you who are troubled rest with us when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven with His mighty angels, in flaming fire taking vengeance on those who do not know God, and on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. These shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of His power, when He comes, in that Day…" (2 Thessalonians 1:6–10)
There's a man coming. A man on a white horse. Not the counterfeit rider of deception who goes out conquering with a bow and a single crown (Revelation 6:2), offering false peace and easier paths. No.
He's called Faithful and True and on His head are many crowns, and His name is called The Word of God. And it is in His name [Jesus] that we rebuke the devils, all their curses and influence.
He is not coming to negotiate or offer another compromise.
He is coming to judge in perfect righteousness.
He is coming to bring relief and rest to every troubled saint who held on by faith when the branch was trembling.
He is coming to be glorified in His saints, to be marveled at in all who believed.
Don't you see, God glories in that moment when He can point to you and your faithfulness in trouble. Every tear wiped away. Every wrong made right. The kingdom fully inherited. Christ Himself glorified in them, and they in Him.
He is the One who catches those who release their grip and trust Him completely. The branch is failing for the whole world. But the hands of the Man on the white horse are strong enough to hold every soul that trusts in Him.
Just let go.
Grace and peace to you, beloved, as we wait for the revelation of this glorious Man.
Come Lord Jesus, come.