Grief, Godly Sorrow, Repentance
1 Samuel 1:8–10; 2 Corinthians
“Father,
we are so very grateful that we have a country, a nation that has laws that are
based upon Your Word, that recognize the traditional historical foundation of
Judeo-Christian revelation. That gives us an absolute foundation for morality
and for law. Father, we pray for the Supreme Court hearings going on right now
with regard to same-sex marriage. We pray that You
would give wisdom to those who are listening. Cause them to see the truth. Open
their eyes that they may see things as they truly are and refrain from
changing that which is established within Your very
order of creation. Father, we pray that You might give
them wisdom to make these decisions and not create an environment that will
just increase hostility to Christianity and Biblical truth. Father, we pray for
us, that we might not grow discouraged or weary because we are to always have
hope; because our confidence is not in man. Our
confidence is not in flesh. Our confidence is in You; and no matter what happens
in the temporal realm, we know that You are in control, and that You are
working out Your plan in terms of human history, and that we have a tremendous
opportunity and role to be a witness in the midst of that plan, and that we can
rejoice in that. And Father, as we study Your Word tonight, help us to
understand the dynamics that occur within each of us as we face different
situations that give rise to various emotions and how this in itself is a test
for our dependence upon You, and how we respond to the emotional tests that we
each face in our own lives. And we pray this in Christ’s name, Amen.”
We’re in 1 Samuel, and we’ve been looking at Hannah in terms of these
emotions that have been generated in her life as she faces these circumstances
in her life. That’s not any different from any of us – that we face
certain circumstances. As I have shown before, when we face these
circumstances, sometimes they are sudden; sometimes they produce emotions in us
almost instantaneously that are fairly profound, and we don’t think about.
Other times there’s a slow burn; and there are circumstances that gradually
change or deteriorate or become less and less favorable; and we also have
certain unpleasant emotions that are aroused as we go through those circumstances.
That’s really an emotional test that we face in the Christian life. How do we
respond to our own emotions?
One of the problems that I’ve pointed out is that we live in a
quick-fix world. We live in a world where we think that if things aren’t
pleasant in our own lives, we have a support system through doctors and
psychotherapists who will gladly, willingly give us prescriptions so that life
can be better through pharmaceuticals. But as Christians we realize that we
ought to face these situations and handle them by the Word of God. Now I
understand that there are some truly significant things that are affected by
certain biochemical reactions in our body. But I think if you read certain
kinds of literature related to the psychotherapy market, there are a lot of
people who think those are rather small. Nobody is born with these problems.
These problems that we have that we can generally refer to
as emotional problems are the result not of birth, but of years of making bad
decisions.
Sometimes we’re not volitionally conscious enough at three, four, five
and six to realize that as we are indulging ourselves in terms of certain
emotions, that these have long-term consequences. That’s just one way that we
have to come to understand why down the road we have certain problems later on.
We developed habit patterns in our thinking, wrong mental attitude responses to
circumstances in life. When we are young, the only options we have are sinful
responses. Then those sinful responses become embedded in our thought patterns
and in our life as habits, but they are sinful habits. The Word of God says
that we are to be transformed by the renovating of our mind. That means as we
study the Word of God, we apply it when we face these emotional things that
occur in our life and recognize these sinful mental habits that we’ve
developed. We need to learn to address them head on with biblical truth so that
God the Holy Spirit can transform us into the image of Christ so that we become
more and more like Christ.
That’s one reason I’ve taken the time to go through this to help us
understand a little bit more about how the Bible addresses some of these
emotions. I’m not doing an in-depth study on emotions or emotional sins or
things like that where we would get into a number of different areas, but
primarily just focusing on areas related to sorrow and sadness and frustration
and maybe perhaps depression. When we don’t get our way, when things don’t go
the way we want them to go, then we can become sad as a result of that. If that
goes on for a lengthy period of time, we may become very frustrated and become
angry and irritated that things don’t change. We just keep trying to get our
way, to achieve something that we want, or to achieve something in our life we
think will fulfill our life, and if that goes on for a lengthy period of time.
That sadness can end up being frustration. We can become irritated, and we can
become angry. If that goes on for even a longer period of time we can become
depressed.
When we have those kinds of emotions, we need to examine our own
thinking to see what it is that we’re not achieving. In some way we’re just not
getting our way, so what way is it that we are trying to get? Is that really a
God-honoring goal? And how are we handling that sadness, the sorrow, the
depression, the frustration in terms of turning to God rather than turning to
the myriad of human viewpoint comfort solutions that are offered in our
society? A lot of people end up turning to drugs. They turn to alcohol. They
turn to lots of placebos in order to somehow assuage these emotional situations
rather than facing them. When we face them biblically, sometimes those
circumstances don’t change immediately. We saw with Hannah that this situation
has gone on and on and on and on, and she’s got a situation with the second
wife in the household who continues to provoke her.
As we go through things today, we are going to look at these various
topics on grief. Godly sorrow – we’ll get to that this week. Somebody
asked me right after class last week, why don’t you address 2 Corinthians 7? I
said just give me more time. I’ll get there. Patience is a virtue. Exercise it.
See in 1 Samuel 1:6, I’ve added something to this slide because it is
important. Hannah is in this situation. It’s gone on for quite some time,
years, where she is struggling with this. We live in a world that says after
two or three weeks, get over it, get a pill, do something. You’re not having
victory in your Christian life; you must be carnal.
All of these things flow out of impatience with life, and God’s timetable is
often much slower and longer than ours because spiritual growth doesn’t happen
over night. You can’t speed it up. So we look at this situation with Hannah.
Her rival, however, would provoke her bitterly to irritate her. So she’s got a
people test going on here that also produces an emotional test.
The word there for “provoke” is this first word I have there in the
slide, ka’as.
We’re going to come back to that word in a minute. It’s a word that has a wide
range of meaning. It means to be vexed or indignant, to be angry. So her rival
would anger her. Her rival would do this to irritate her. That’s the second
word, the word at the bottom of the slide, which is the Hebrew word raam; and it
means also to irritate or provoke. So they are very close in meaning. The New
King James translates it “Her rival would provoke her bitterly to irritate her.”
Others might translate this “Her rival would anger her to provoke her.” Those
words are very similar and overlap in terms of their meaning. The idea is that
this situation goes on for some time.
Now you can respond one way by human viewpoint solutions. This is the
way it is in every area of life. You can take the human viewpoint path, which
in Proverbs is called the path of the fool, or you can take the divine
viewpoint way. Many of us have the experience of jumping back and forth from
one path to the other. But the issue is learning how to pick that path of
wisdom, which is divine viewpoint and sticking with it no matter how many times
we have to confess, get back in fellowship, keep going forward, because we
fail. The sin nature is constantly tempting us to solve the problem the simple,
comfortable way, the way that makes it most easy for us.
Another verse that comes later in the passage that brings up these same
kind of ideas and is mistranslated (or I think poorly translated in some
contexts) is this passage in 1 Samuel 1:15. “But Hannah answered and said, ‘No,
my lord ….’” This is when Eli comes to her. She’s been
praying. Her lips have been moving. He thinks she’s drunk. That happens at
another time in the Bible. Where else does it happen where people are talking
and they are accused of being drunk? On the day of Pentecost
when the apostles are talking in languages. It is a similar type of
situation. Hannah is praying. Eli accuses her of being drunk, and she says, “No,
my lord,” which is just a way of saying “No sir.” She’s being polite,
addressing him in a normal term of respect for the high priest.
“I’m a woman of sorrowful spirit.” This is a funny term; it’s an odd
term. It’s a compound term qə·šaṯ (qasha), which literally means to be hard or
severe, and then the word for spirit. So it is a sorrowful spirit or sorrowful
attitude, and the Hebrew Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament, that’s abbreviated HALOT, says the meaning in this passage is
uncertain. The literal sense of the term is that something is hard or
difficult. So it indicates, probably it’s some idiomatic expression that she’s
going through a difficult circumstance. It’s difficult on her soul. The word “spirit”
here doesn’t necessarily mean the Holy Spirit or the human spirit. Often the
word is just used in a general sense to refer to her life – that she’s
having a hard life because she can’t have children. She can’t give birth right
now. So she’s going through this difficult circumstance. She says, “I have
drunk neither wine nor intoxicating drink, but have poured out my soul before
the Lord.”
Then we get to the strange translation. 1 Samuel 1:16 says, “Do not
consider your maidservant a wicked woman, for out of the abundance of my
complaint.” I’ve got three translations on the screen: the New King James
Version (NKJV) at the top of the slide; the Holman Christian Study Bible
(HCSB) in the second place; and then the New American Standard
Bible (NASB) at the bottom. Somebody asked me this on Sunday, showed
me the translation in the HCSB and said this really sounds like she’s out of fellowship.
She’s resentful. That’s how it translates that. The second word is resentment.
That sounds wrong, “complaint”; the Bible says we shouldn’t complain. The
Israelites in the wilderness complained to God. That sounds also like she’s out
of fellowship. We’ve got to look at these words to understand that that’s not
what is being said here.
The NKJV says, “Out of the abundance of my complaint and grief….”
This word that’s translated “grief” in 1Samuel 1:16, the second word, and “resentment”
by the HCSB, and then “provocation” in the NASB is that word kaas. That’s the same word we saw
earlier when we looked at 1 Samuel 1:5. In this idea I think really the NASB has the best translation, “provocation.”
She’s in a situation where she is constantly being provoked
by this other person. Somebody’s needling her. Somebody’s giving her a
hard time. Somebody is ridiculing her, making fun of her, belittling her,
showing her a lack of respect; and so she is being provoked. That’s the best
way to translate that. That doesn’t mean that she should respond in anger, but
she is being constantly being tested in that
particular way.
Now the first word, the word that is translated “complaint” (NKJV) in 1 Samuel 1:16, is translated “the
depth of my anguish” (HCSB); and in NASB “my great concern.” Complaint, as an
English word, indicates that she’s complaining, but that’s not the only nuance
to that word. The word in the Hebrew is this word at the bottom of the slide, siach, and it
has the idea of presenting a problem in the sense of a complaint, not in the
sense of complaining. For example, you may go to your homeowner’s association
because there’s a problem, and you are presenting your complaint. It doesn’t
mean you are whining and complaining. That’s a different sense of that word.
You are presenting the problem so that it can be fixed. In the Bible this is a
word that is often presented as a lament.
We use that term “lament” many times to describe a group of psalms, a
large group of psalms, where David is presenting a problem. These are
classified in terms of study as personal lament psalms, because David starts
off crying out to God. He’s in desperate need because he’s
oppressed by his enemies. He’s troubled by circumstances. He’s
presenting his complaint, his problem to God. He’s not complaining. He’s
presenting his complaint to God, and then he turns to God. As you read through
the psalm, you see how he focuses on some aspect of God’s character or some
promise or the covenant, or something like that. Then as his mental attitude
shifts because he realizes God is the only solution to his problem, then
usually those psalms end with a declaration of praise to God for having
resolved his problem.
So that’s the idea here. She’s presenting a problem, a difficulty. She’s
got a difficult set of circumstances in life, and she’s presenting that to God.
So when we look at 1 Samuel 1:16 she is saying, “out of the abundance of” her
difficult circumstances, of her lamentable circumstances. She is in grief, and
in her sorrow, her struggle, she’s being provoked, the provocation from
Peninnah. She has now presented that to the Lord. She is showing that this is
how we are to handle the problems that we face in life when we are grieved,
when we are filled with sorrow, when we are tempted to react in anger, when we
have these emotional things that are stirred up because of people and because
of situations and circumstances. We aren’t to turn to quick-fix solutions. We
aren’t to turn to the human viewpoint solutions of the day. She doesn’t turn to
the fertility religions of Baal and the Asherah. She turns to God. So this is a
very positive presentation of how she is handling the problem. Did she handle
it right every single day? No. Neither do you, neither do I. She was a sinner.
She struggled with that, but she understood across the breadth of her life that
God was the solution to her problem. So she takes this to Him at the
tabernacle.
I went through a number of examples last week in the Old Testament (OT) looking at the issue of weeping and
grieving as it is presented in the OT and into the Gospels. I stopped in John
11 with the situation with Jesus at the tomb of Lazarus, pointing out that when
Jesus wept there, Jesus wasn’t grieving over the death of Lazarus. Jesus was
commiserating with the grief of the crowds who were going through their
mourning and their grief because of the death of a loved one – making the
point that death is not normal. Death is abnormal. Death is not God’s primary
plan for man. It is the result of going to Plan B because Adam sinned in the
Garden. Therefore, every time we grieve or sorrow, every time there is a death
and we feel the pain, the grief, the sorrow of that death, the first thing we
ought to train ourselves to think of is God didn’t intend for this to happen.
If you’ve ever had someone close to you, a spouse, a family member,
even a pet die, you know immediately what’s going on in your soul is –
this isn’t right. There’s something inside you that screams out this is wrong!
And that is God’s little reminder that yes indeed it is wrong. This was not
Plan A. This is this way because there is sin in the world and man is going
through this because of sin. Jesus sees that grief in the crowd; and if you
look at the context, this is why Jesus weeps. It shows His empathy with human
beings because we have to struggle with the consequences of sin.
Following that, just prior to the cross, we have another example and a
positive example of weeping. This is Peter. Peter has been warned by the Lord
that he is going to deny the Lord three times. Of course, Peter in his
arrogance says, “No, no, no, this isn’t going to happen. I’m not going to deny
you. I’m your most faithful apostle. I’m your most faithful disciple. Everybody
else may deny you, but not me!” And then as he is in the outer courtyard of the
high priest’s house where Jesus is being held, he is asked three times if he’s
a Galilean, if he’s a disciple of Jesus. And he denies it all three times; and
here we see in Mark 14:72 that when that occurred and the cock crowed, he
realized it, and he immediately, biblically taught, uses the term “repent.”
Repent means to change your mind. And repent, as we’ll see, can include an
emotional element. It certainly did with Peter. At that moment he realized how
he had been arrogant, how he had failed the Lord; and his immediate reaction is
he just breaks down weeping as a reaction.
Let’s go on to the next example, and this is one of the most important
examples that we’ll see in the Scripture because this deals with the Lord Jesus
Christ. Go to Luke 22:44. I’m going to look at three passages; all parallel of
what’s going on in the Garden of Gethsemane. Luke tells us that Jesus was in
agony. It is a physical term. The term that we translate agony is from the
Greek cognate AGONIA. It means the same thing. He’s going through physical
pain. The pain that He feels physically is the result of His anticipation of
what He will go through the next day on the cross. He will go through the
physical torture that preceded going to the cross where He was beaten, where He
was flayed with the Roman flagellum, which had several strips of leather, and
woven into the leather were pieces of metal and glass and rock and whatever.
They would literally strip the skin off the back of the one who was going to be
crucified, exposing all of the muscles underneath, and even exposing the
bowels. There would be a certain amount of bleeding that would be as a result
of that. They just beat Him mercilessly until He was unrecognizable. All of that He was anticipating the night before He went to
the cross.
But if you remember, when He goes through all of that, He doesn’t utter
a sound. “Like a sheep before a shearer is dumb, so He opens not His mouth.” He
fulfills that prophecy. The only time He screams out on the cross is when God
the Father imputed to Him the sin of the world. The perfect Second Person of
the Trinity is, at that instant, separated judicially from God the Father for
three hours to bear our sin. That’s when He screams out, “My God, My God, why
have you forsaken Me?” The indication is that’s the
beginning of Psalm 22, and He probably quoted the whole Psalm as He is
screaming it out in prayer to God to sustain Him during this time upon the
cross. So He is going through a period of physical pain and emotional distress
and agony on the cross, and He is turning to God to sustain Him. It doesn’t
remove the agony, but God sustains Him.
The pattern there for us is we go through these difficult times, and
they are hard. And we may feel emotionally on edge and unstable, but God is
still sustaining us even though we continue to feel that way. We get the idea
that when we go through these difficult times that that grief, the sorrow,
whatever it may be is going to disappear. No, God’s not going to take it away.
He sustains us so that we can go through it and we can handle it.
In the Mark 14:34–36 passage that I have on the slide, we read in
Mark 14:34 as He is in Gethsemane, He is addressing Peter and James and John,
who He’s taken with Him as He has separated Himself from the other disciples;
and He says to them, “My soul is exceedingly sorrowful, even to death,
stay here and watch.” I don’t know if you’ve ever gone through this. Many
people have. At some point in your life something traumatic happens. Maybe it’s
the death of a loved one; maybe it’s the loss of a job; maybe it’s something
having to do with personal failure in your own life, or personal sin and
reaping the consequences of it like David did after the sin with Bathsheba. But
it is going through an emotional turmoil where you just wish you were dead.
This is something close to that. The Greek word there is PERILUPOS. The root word there is LUPOS, the cognate of the verb LUPEO. We’re going to see this a lot tonight.
This is the core word translated grief or distress or sorrow. Sometimes it’s even translated anger. But it is primarily in that
realm of distress and sorrow and grief.
When you add a prefix to it, PERI, which is a Greek preposition, it
intensifies the meaning. PERI means something that goes around something, like the word
perimeter, that we go around the circle, that’s the perimeter of the circle. So
He feels like He is surrounded by sorrow. It’s an intensification of that term.
What does Jesus do? How does He handle it? He goes off to pray. He uses prayer
in order to focus His trust in God to handle the pressure that is coming from
this emotion that is in His soul. Having that emotion in His soul is not
sinful. Jesus is in hypostatic union. He’s undiminished deity, and He’s true
humanity united together in one Person, and He never sins. So having this kind
of emotion is not a sin. It is what you do with it. It’s what we do with it. We
handle it the wrong way. He handles it like Hannah handled it. He goes to the
Lord in prayer – depending upon God the Father to sustain Him while He
goes through this. He even prays that God would remove it from Him.
Some people would say that if you pray for God to take something away
that God wants you to have, that that’s wrong. But Jesus prays, “Father, remove
this cup if possible.” And the Father says, Nope, it’s not possible. You have
to go through this. So it is not wrong to pray for something;
and especially for us, we don’t know what’s going to happen. We can ask, Lord,
take this – change this – take this out of my life. And that’s not
wrong to pray for that, because sometimes the Lord will say, okay, because you
prayed for it, I’m going to respond, and I’m going to lessen the difficulty. I’m
going to change things. We don’t know, but we do know that prayer changes
things, and James says, “You have not because you ask not” – that if we
don’t pray for it, then God is certainly not going to do anything about it. So
praying for it may change it. It may not, but God has a couple of different
ways of answering prayer. He says, yes, no and wait awhile; and mostly we get
no’s and wait awhile’s, especially if God has designed this test for our
spiritual growth.
The point is Jesus is going through this incredible pressure cooker,
and as Luke points out, His sweat became like great drops of blood falling down
to the ground. This is called hematidrosis, and this is not real common, but it happens to people
who are under great emotional distress. They feel the pressure physically so
much that the blood in their capillaries close to the surface of their skin
will actually excrete blood through the pores of their skin. This tells us that
Jesus is going through really tense stress and adversity before He goes to the
cross. But He is not reacting to it in a sinful way.
Matthew tells us that “He took with Him Peter and the two sons of
Zebedee, and He began to be sorrowful and deeply distressed.” The word “sorrowful”
is the verb cognate of PERILUPOS that we had here. This is the verb for LUPEO and it means to grieve, to be in pain,
to be in sorrow. Then the second word is “deeply distressed,” which is the
Greek word ADEMONEO, which means to be under a weight, that
something is very heavy, that you are feeling oppressed and pressured by the
circumstance. We’ll see that word show up in a couple of other passages.
The point is that Jesus has these emotions. Therefore, having these
emotions in and of itself is not sinful. It is how we
handle it. We have to learn that when we have these emotions that things are
going on in our life. We need to stop and think about what is going on in our
life. What is going on in our brain, and how we are handling this from the Word
of God? It should drive us to greater dependence upon God and a greater dependence
upon His Word and using the faith-rest drill at these particular times.
Another example of the use of this word, of the noun form LUPE, is in Romans 9:2, where Paul is talking
about his love for the Jewish people and his desire for their salvation. He
says, “I have great sorrow…” as he thinks about the thousands of his Jewish
kinsmen that are not trusting in Jesus as Messiah. He says he has “great sorrow”
in his heart.
Now we can say, Paul, don’t you understand it’s their volition? Just
straighten up and quit grieving over it. That would be wrong. He knows that,
but he understands the realities of the situation; and when we’re honest with
that, we understand that our loved ones as well, who may not trust in Christ,
are going to be eternally condemned. If we are spiritually focused, that should
bring a certain level of sorrow and grief into our thinking. But we’re not
going to let that overwhelm us or distract us.
That’s what we have here. Paul has “great sorrow and continual grief.”
It’s on-going. Is Paul out of fellowship? No. Why is
he experiencing that sorrow and grief? For a righteous reason: the spiritual
loss of these kinsmen because of their negative volition and their rejection of
the gospel. Again we see a legitimate expression of grief and sorrow in life.
Does that mean that they are not happy or joyful at the same time? No. They
have great joy at the same time, but there is a measure of sorrow because we’re
living in the devil’s world, and these people that we love are hostile to the
gospel.
Let’s go to 2 Corinthians. You might turn in your Bibles to 2
Corinthians because we’re going to spend the rest of the night looking at two
passages that are somewhat related in 2 Corinthians, where Paul uses the
terminology related to sorrow and grief quite a bit. In 2 Corinthians 2, the
issue here is that in his previous epistle in 1 Corinthians, Paul pointed out
that there was a man in the congregation who was committing an overt sin. He
was married to his stepmother, and this was considered to be a great sexual
sin. This was considered to be incest in the Greek world – that if you
married your stepmother even, then this was considered incest. Even the carnal
Corinthians (and remember they’re reprobates – they’re pretty perverse
sexually – they would just about go along with anything that you could
think of), but this shocked them.
In the local church they acted as if this was no big deal. They adopted
a licentious attitude; and in 1 Corinthians Paul says that they needed to
exercise church discipline on this individual and exclude him from fellowship
because what he was doing was wrong, and by acting toward him with this
permissive attitude, it brought shame upon the gospel of Jesus Christ. Now the
Corinthians did that. They responded accurately to what Paul said. They pointed
out this individual’s sinful ways – that this was wrong and he was living
in immorality – and that he needed to correct his problem. And he did.
But they didn’t welcome him back then into fellowship. See, they rebuked him
for his sin, as they were supposed to; but then he recognized, admitted the
error of his ways and straightened things out. But then they did not accept him
back.
In issues like that, what we have is a lot of people who are
self-righteous who tend to run off too quickly in areas of sin in somebody’s
life and church discipline. That situation was one where he was committing a
sin that was known to everybody in town; and everybody knew he was doing it.
And even the unbelievers were appalled that he was doing it. They were also
appalled that it didn’t seem to matter to these Christians. This was an
extremely egregious situation. It wasn’t the situation we have in a lot of
congregations where somebody’s got some sin that becomes known to one or two
people, and they immediately want to kick the person out of church instead of
talking to them and helping them work through the circumstances. Usually the
more egregious mental attitude sins are somehow ignored, and we just want to
zero in on one or two overt sins. But what happens then is that Paul has to
write them a pretty harsh letter to get them to forgive this individual and to
readmit him to fellowship within the local body.
There is another epistle to the Corinthians that hasn’t been preserved
that took place between 1 Corinthians and what we know as 2 Corinthians. It
wasn’t part of the inspired Word of God, or what would be preserved in the
Scripture. So he’s coming back now, and he’s relating to this and the fact that
they responded positively and readmitted him. That gives us a little bit of the
context, but we don’t want to get distracted by too many details of the text.
We just want to look at what he says about grief and sorrow. In 2 Corinthians
2:1 he says, “But I determined this within myself, that I would not come again
to you in sorrow.” This indicates that he had come before in sorrow. That is
that first word on the left of the slide, the noun LUPE. We’ve already seen it as PERILUPEO. We’ve seen it as LUPEO in the verb.
Then in 2 Corinthians 2:2 he says, “For if I make you sorrowful”- that’s
the verb on the right side, LUPEO. “If I make you sorrowful, then who is
he who makes me glad but the one who is made sorrowful by me?” Both of those
words “sorrowful” in 2 Corinthians 2:2 relate to the verb. He’s talking about
the legitimacy of this emotion. He had come to them in sorrow. He wasn’t out of
fellowship. Paul was not distracted by his emotion, but he faces the reality of
their failure; and as a result of that, it made him sad. But he also said that
when he taught the Word, it made them sorrowful and he doesn’t regret that. He
says in 2 Corinthians 2:3, “I wrote this very thing to you, lest, when I came,
I should have sorrow over those from whom I ought to have joy.”
Paul wanted to straighten out their problem so that when he came, he
didn’t have to straighten the problem out. He didn’t have to come in and
discipline or rebuke anybody, and that would make him sorrowful, that’s LUPE there. He says I wrote this to you so
that you would straighten things out because I didn’t want to “have sorrow over
those I ought to have joy, having confidence in you all that my joy is the joy
of you all.” Notice the contrast between joy and sorrow. There is a joy in the
Christian life that is unchangeable. As we mature, we realize that joy of
Christ that the Lord has given us. But at another level we respond with sadness
and with joy to circumstances. We have to keep those two different things in
balance. We can be sad and joyful at the same time if we’re focused on the Lord.
In 2 Corinthians 2:4 he says, “For out of much affliction and anguish
of heart I wrote to you.” This says that even as he is writing to rebuke them,
this is having an emotional impact upon him. First of all he says, “out of much
affliction”; this is the Greek word THLIPSIS. That’s the same word that is translated
in terms of the Great Tribulation, the end time event.
The reason I point this out is because one of the things that Pre-Trib Dispensationalists
are all often accused of is that we just teach the Rapture because people want
to escape suffering and adversity in life. That’s just so silly and superficial
and sad; and it is such a misrepresentation of Dispensationalism. We believe Christians
will go through adversity. They’ll go through serious adversity. Some will lose
their life. Many are losing their lives today with the hostility toward
Christianity in Islamic countries. There are many who have been executed by ISIS and others. And even in this country
there are people who are going through adversity because they are taking a
stand for their Christianity. Like this couple in Oregon that had a bakery, and
they were fined $135,000 because they refused to bake a wedding cake for a homosexual
wedding.
Now that is a penalty that far exceeds the crime. But we’re living in a
world today where the crime is becoming Christianity. The crime is becoming
holding to biblical absolutes and bringing that into the marketplace. That is
why we have the 1st Amendment to protect people like that. But the
government doesn’t see it that way, so the government is becoming the enemy of
Christianity, and this is absurd. This is something we’re going to have to face
in our lifetime, and it’s going to get a whole lot worse. It’s going to come to
the point like in times in the Roman Empire; it’s going to be sporadic
persecution and difficulty. That’s the same word that Paul uses here. It refers
to personal difficulty, adversity, and it runs the gamut all the way to the
Great Tribulation. He uses the word “affliction” there. And then he uses the
word SUNOCHE, which means distress. So he’s distressed. Is he out of
fellowship? No. He’s facing the reality of life.
Living in the devil’s world, we are often distressed. We’re anguished.
We are concerned. It’s difficult, but that drives us to greater dependence upon
the Lord and a greater recognition of the way He works in our lives. So “out of
much affliction an anguish of heart I wrote to you”. Often when we face difficulties
in life that is what moves us and motivates us to go to the next level of
spiritual growth. He writes, “with many tears”. He is weeping. This isn’t just
a figure of speech. He weeps over the things that are going on in the
Corinthian church and the problems; and you get the impression here that Paul
is not someone who enjoys straightening them out. He would rather have joy and
rejoice with them than have to challenge them with failures in their spiritual
life and pointing out how they need to straighten it out.
He said, “I wrote to you with many tears, not that you should be
grieved”. There’s our word LUPEO again, “but that you might know the love
which I have so abundantly for you.” In other words, the grief isn’t the end
game. I didn’t rebuke you just to get the affect of sorrow and making you feel
bad. Later, as we get into 2 Corinthians 7 we’ll see that he was glad that they
felt bad because that drove them to truly change their mind and change their
behavior, which was the end result. But we’ll get there in just a minute. So
what we see here is that there is a proper place in the spiritual life for
grief, for sorrow, and for these particular emotions. And having them is not
necessarily or inherently sinful. It depends on what the circumstances are and
what the cause is.
As we go on to 2 Corinthians 2:5 “But if anyone has caused grief,
he has not grieved me”. So if you’ve created problems it really hasn’t grieved
me, but all of you to some extent, not to be too severe. He’s just again expressing
the fact that grief is a reality within their lives. So we’ll go on from there
to 2 Corinthians 7.
Now flip over, if you are there, from 2 Corinthians 2 – to 2
Corinthians 7. The background is still the same issue. He’s covered many things
between 2 Corinthians 2 and 7, but he comes back to this. I think it is
interesting and important to note that in 2 Corinthians 2:1 as he comes out of
2 Corinthians 6, he says, “Therefore, having these promises.” These promises
that he mentions in 2 Corinthians 7:7 are among those that he references in 2
Corinthians 6:16–17.
There are promises that come out of the OT: promises that relate to passages such
as – Exodus 29:45, “I will dwell among the children of Israel, and will
be their God.” – Leviticus 26:12, “I will walk among you and be your God
and you shall be My people.” That’s the backdrop for 2
Corinthians 6:16 where he tells the Corinthians, “For you are the temple of the
living God, as God has said: I will dwell among them and walk among them, and I
will be their God, and they shall be my people.” Now in the original context in
the OT, that’s talking about Israel. Paul isn’t taking that verse and saying
that he’s talking about the church. He is applying the underlying principle of
that verse to the church. The underlying principle is, that just as God was
faithful to Israel as His people, so God will be faithful to the church as His
people.
If you remember, we’ve gone through the four different ways the Old
Testament (OT) verses are used in the New Testament (NT):
1. Literal: prophecy is literally fulfilled.
2. The statement from the OT is used as typology and is fulfilled
typologically in the NT.
3. Taking an event that has only one point of comparison with the NT fulfillment, and in this case it would
be that the church age are people of God. It only has one point of comparison.
4. What the NT writer is basically saying is this situation is similar to
that situation in the OT, and we can draw an analogy and application
from that. So that’s the way he’s using these verses here.
In 2 Corinthians 6:16–17, he is referring to passages such as
Numbers 33:51–56 and Isaiah 52:11. So he’s saying in 2 Corinthians 7:1, “having
these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the
flesh and spirit”. He’s talking to the Corinthians who are clearly believers,
but they have to be cleansed of sin. That’s just 1 John 1:9, confessing our
sins, and “God is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us
from all unrighteousness.” Then he begins to talk about what has taken place in
the past; how he has corrected them and some of the
things that have gone on.
I just want to skip down without going into a lot of detail. He
recognizes what he’s had, for example in 2 Corinthians 7:5 he said, “we came to
Macedonia, our bodies had no rest, but we were troubled on every side.” That
word translated “troubled”, “we were troubled on every side. Outside were
conflicts, inside were fears.” The word “troubled” there is the verb form from THLIPSIS.
THLIPSIS was the word we just looked at related to adversity and
tribulation. THLIBO is the verb form of that same word, being afflicted, going through adversity or trouble. So he says, we were
troubled; we had adversity on every side; “outside were conflicts”. This is the
idea of strife; it is the Greek word MACHE. “Inside were fears.” Here he is saying
that as we went through life, we were faced with hostility and adversity and
opposition; and inside there was fear. But the fear doesn’t drive them to run
away, but to greater dependence upon God. Fear is like that. “Perfect love”, 1
John says, “casts out fear.” Fear, I would say, is the primal emotion related
to the sin nature. When Adam and Eve sinned and God came walking in the Garden,
they ran and hid and said, “We hid because we were afraid.” But fear also has
positive dimensions in the Scripture. We are to “fear the Lord,” and here as we
face adversity, it is a normal reaction to be afraid, to feel insecure. But it
drives us to trust God.
It is sort of like physical pain sometimes. It stops you from doing
something wrong. It alerts you to something that is going on that may be
harmful to you. That fear is a recognition that this
is a hostile situation. I can’t solve the problem on my own because I’m not
suppose to be anxious for anything, so I am going to take the problem before
the Lord. This is Paul’s focal point: outside are conflicts, and inside are
fears.
2 Corinthians 7:6, “Nevertheless God, who comforts the downcast,
comforted us by the coming of Titus.” In other words he is encouraged because
another person comes along. He’s not in isolation. We can’t always depend on
other people, but that doesn’t mean that we just say well to heck with
everybody. I’ve just got to go it alone. He is strongly encouraged because
there’s another believer who God brings along who can go through the adversity
and the difficulty with him. So he says, “Nevertheless God, who comforts the
downcast, comforted us by the coming of Titus.”
Now the word here translated “comfort” is the verb PARAKALEO. The noun form is PARAKLETOS. That’s the term that is used to
describe the role of the Holy Spirit in the believer’s life. He is our
Comforter. He is our Advocate. He is the One, who encourages us and strengthens
us. But God also uses other believers to do that in our lives, and this was the
case with Titus. His coming along with Paul encouraged him and strengthened
him; and in 2 Corinthians 7:7 Paul goes on to say, “and not only by his coming,
but also by the consolation.” Now “the consolation” is the noun form of PARAKALEO, PARAKLESIS; “by the consolation (or encouragement)
with which he was comforted in you.” Now how do we comfort people? A lot of
times we comfort people and it’s not wrong, but it’s a starting point. We give
them a hug. We tell them we’ll help them. We’re there for them. That’s the
beginning point. That’s not the endgame of comfort. Comfort isn’t related to a
sentimental emotion. As we’ll see when we go to another passage, comfort is
ultimately related to communicating and encouraging people with Scripture and
the principles of Scripture. We’ll get to that before we close.
So Titus comes along and he is encouraging. 2 Corinthians 7:7 goes on
to say, “also by the consolation with which he was comforted in you, when he
told us of your earnest desire, your mourning.” So as the Corinthians
are straightening themselves out and realizing that they have really blown it
spiritually, as we’ll see in the next verse, they have a sorrow, but they are
also mourning. Paul isn’t saying that you are wrong for having these emotions.
If that’s all it was – was to dwell in those emotions, then it would be
wrong. But those emotions played a role in moving their spiritual life down the
field toward the goal post. It wasn’t something that distracted them. The word
here is ODURMOS, wailing, mourning, or lamentation. They are experiencing
remorse and sorrow over the sin in their life.
Now does that mean that we have to experience remorse over sin in our
life? No. You and I both know that we have sins in our life that we’re fairly
comfortable with. And even though we know that they are wrong and we confess
them on a daily basis, at least two or three dozen times every day, but because
we have been dealing with those sins since we were conscious of them when we
were eight or nine or ten or eleven or twelve, we just can’t get all worked up
emotionally about those sins. You’re impatient. I know I’m impatient. I’ve been
impatient for almost 63 years. It probably is not going to change next week.
Does that mean I’m rationalizing or trying to justify it? No. It just means
that I’m not going to get too worked up about it.
Now there are other sins that we commit that kind of shock us, and we
can get worked up about those things. Or we may commit a sin that we realize is
just a standard weakness we have, and it really hurts somebody. That’s when we
really feel an emotional impact from it. So keeping that in mind, what Paul
says about this situation in 2 Corinthians 7:8 is, “For even if I made you
sorry with my letter.” He really reamed them out for not letting this guy back
into the congregation after he confessed his sin and straightened things out.
He said, “even if I made you sorry.” That’s the word there. I’ve got a lot of color coding here. We have the verb LUPEO, which I’ve put into purple and the verb
METAMELOMAI, which I’ve put into blue.
Now the word LUPEO we’ve study; that’s sorrow. But METAMELOMAI is a word for some sort of emotional
remorse. He says, “For even if I made you sorry, even if I made you
grieve because you really screwed up, I don’t regret it.” Paul says, I’m not upset about it. I’m not going to have remorse
because I made you feel bad; though I did regret it.
What does he mean by that? I don’t regret it, but I do regret it? What he means
by that is like most of us, especially if you are a parent you can relate to
this. You don’t regret disciplining your children, but you do regret
disciplining your children. You don’t like it. You don’t enjoy it. It is not
something that gives you pleasure, but you know that you have to do it; and so
for that reason you don’t regret it. He goes on to say, “For I perceive that
the same epistle made you sorry.” That is LUPEO; it made you grieve, “though only for a
while.” 2 Corinthians 7:9, “Now I rejoice, not that you were made sorry.”
See, the endgame isn’t just to create an emotional response. The
endgame is to lead to repentance. “I rejoice, not that you were made sorry, but
that your sorrow led to repentance. Now repentance is the word METANOIA, the noun, which means to change your
mind. The interesting interplay here is between METAMELOMAI, which means to be sorrowful, just to
have remorse, and METANOIA, which means to change your mind. A lot
of people have remorse when they get caught. They are just sad they got caught.
It never leads anywhere. They just feel bad about the fact that they got
caught, or that God is disciplining them. But what Paul is saying here is there’s
an endgame here. The remorse is good if it leads you to change your mind, but
we’re not just after remorse for remorse sake. Many times you can change your
mind and go through biblical repentance, or change without the remorse. But in
this situation they were sorrowful, and it led to repentance.
Then he says (and this is where it gets into some interesting
translation issues), “For you were made sorry in a godly manner, that you might
suffer loss from us in nothing.” This is a really lousy translation. Later on,
when we get into 2 Corinthians 7:10–11 we’re going to see that it is
translated “godly sorrow.” For some people, that means that God has sorrow. No,
that’s not what this is saying. It doesn’t even say godly sorrow in the
original language, and this has caused people a lot of difficulty.
In fact last week when I was asked this question, well, are you ever
going to address this “godly sorrow” issue in 2 Corinthians 7? – and because this individual has been learning LOGOS – I came up with seven questions
to lead them through the answer themselves. And I sent it out to a group of
pastors that I work with on Friday mornings; and several of them had some real
illuminating experiences with the Greek text. "Godly manner" is a
translation of this phrase in the Greek on the lower left of the slide, KATA THEON.
KATA is a preposition. In the Greek it means it has to be
followed by a noun in the accusative. So we have a preposition plus the noun
object of the preposition. That means that when it is translated into English,
you have to have what? A preposition and a noun. Godly
is what? Is that a preposition? No. It’s not an adverb either. Oh, I got you on
this one.
See we all learned back in 7th or 8th grade that ‘ly’
is the morpheme in the English for an adverb. A morpheme is the smallest part
of a word that communicates something; and that ‘ly’ is an adverb. But in some
words in English the ‘ly’ comes out of an Anglo-Saxon and Old German
background, and it is an abbreviation for “like,” and it is an adjective. Godly
is really an English adjective “God-like.” So what this godly means is
that God-like sorrow. Okay. It’s an adjective. Is there an adjective in the
Greek text? No. There’s a preposition and a noun object of the preposition.
There’s no adjective or adverb. Then you have the word “sorrow”, which is a
noun.
So they’ve completely messed it up, and you can compare this across the
board with every translation known to man, and hardly any of them, some of
them, come a little close to translating it “according to God.” That’s how it
should be translated, “according to God” – according is a preposition, “according
to,” is the preposition, and God is the noun object. It is very simple. What
does that mean “according to God”? God has a standard. What happens is we’re
confronted with God’s righteous standard in our life, and we realize oh, man,
have I screwed up! Then we have a sorrow according to God’s standard. KATA always indicates something that’s according
to a standard, and so it is according to God’s standard. So you are made sorry
according to God’s standard. You recognize that you failed and didn’t measure
up to God’s standard. That was good, because now you are not going to suffer
loss at the judgment seat of Christ.
In 2 Corinthians 7:10 it goes on to say, “For godly sorrow” and this is
KATA THEON, again for sorrow according to God produces a change of
mind, repentance. See, it isn’t for the sake of sorrow, because you may or may
not have remorse. You may or may not grieve over the sin, but the purpose for
having the emotion is to drive you past the emotion to change your life, change
your thinking, so that now you are walking in obedience. So this is what Paul
is saying. “For sorrow according to God produces repentance leading to
salvation.” What kind of salvation? Not justification. They are already
justified. These are the Corinthians. Phase 2, spiritual growth, Phase 2 salvation, not to be regretted, METAMELOMAI. There’s the word METANOIA for repentance and here it says, “not to
be regretted”, which is the negative of METAMELOMAI, AMETAMELETOS, which means “without regret.” See this
is a repentance without remorse. It’s a change of
mind. You’re not just going to wallow in your sorrow and think that you’ve had
a spiritual experience because you felt sorry for your sin.
“Not to be regretted; but the sorrow of the world produces death.” This
is temporal death. If you just end up with having an emotional experience, then
you are still going to remain out of fellowship, and you are not going to go
anywhere in your spiritual life. Then he goes on in 2 Corinthians 2:11 to say, “For
observe this very thing, that you sorrowed in a godly manner.” Once again this
is a bad translation. You sorrowed according to God, and that drove you to a
change of mind.
Two more quick passages and we’re done. 1 Thessalonians 4:13, Paul says
to the Thessalonian believers who’ve lost loved ones, who have physically died,
since he left them just a few months ago. They are wondering well what happened
to them. We thought Jesus was coming back and the Rapture was going to occur,
but these people died, where are they?
He said, “I do not want you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning those
who have fallen asleep” – that is believers who have died physically, - “lest
you sorrow as others who have no hope.” See, he recognizes you’re going
to grieve when your loved one dies, but you’re not going to grieve interminably
like an unbeliever because you have hope, the hope of resurrection. Then he
goes on to remind them of the Rapture – that “those who are dead in
Christ will rise first, and then we who are alive and remain will be caught up
together with them in the clouds, and thus will we ever be with the Lord.” And
then he says, “Therefore, comfort one another with these words.” There’s that
verb PARAKALEO. I told you we’d come back to that. What does it mean to
comfort one another? In context he says “comfort them with these words.”
When someone dies, and you’re comforting someone who is grieving, we
comfort them with the fact that we will be reunited together with our dead
loved ones at the Rapture and when we go to be with the Lord. We comfort people
with content. We don’t comfort people with a hug and with a squeeze and tell them
everything is going to be okay. That may be a starting point, but we ultimately
comfort people with the content of the Word of God. Peter says, “In this you
greatly rejoice, though now for a little while… you have been grieved by
various trials.” In other words, as we go through tests it’s legitimate to be
sorrowful and to grieve because we’re going through intense adversity, but at
the same time we have joy. So this is our run through of verses.
Just to close it out, Ecclesiastes 7:3, great verse, “Sorrow is better
than laughter.” What does he mean by that? What he ultimately means by that is
that when the sorrow is the result of going through God’s spiritual training
program, then it is better than just having a happy life – if the sorrow
comes from God dealing with us to mature us. And then he says, “For when a face
is sad, a heart may be happy.” That’s a good verse because it tells you at one
level you can be sad and grieving, but at another level you have the infinite
unchangeable joy of the Lord that can never be taken from you.
In Isaiah 35 and Isaiah 51, the Israelites are comforted. In Isaiah
35:10 we read, “And the ransomed of the Lord will return and come with joyful
shouting to Zion, with everlasting joy upon their heads. They will find gladness
and joy, and sorrow and sighing will flee away.” When the kingdom comes, sorrow
is gone. In Isaiah 51:11 he says, “So the ransomed of the Lord will return and
come with joyful shouting to Zion, and everlasting joy will be on their heads.
They will obtain gladness and joy, and sorrow and sighing (once again) will
flee away.” In Revelation we’re told that tears and sorrow and pain, the old
things passed away, there will be a time of perfect joy. But in the meantime we
have a struggle. But guess what? Keep working because we’ll eventually rest,
and we can’t fail in the process.
Let’s close in prayer. “Father, thank You for the opportunity to study
these things this evening and to learn that as we face these sometimes
disturbing emotions and sometimes emotions that go on for a long time, that we
need to look at them biblically. We need to understand that they’re part of our
makeup as human beings. Sometimes they are the result of sin. Sometimes they
alert us to the potential of sin. And sometimes they alert us to the fact that
we are truly struggling in the devil’s world, and it should drive us to greater
dependence upon You – but that these emotions
that we have are not necessarily a sign that we are out of fellowship or a sign
that we are doing something wrong. Often they are legitimate and are there to
drive us to greater trust and consistency and obedience. Help us to walk more
consistently and faithfully. We pray this in Christ’s name. Amen.”