Fear Not Faithful, God Gives Good Gifts in Affliction

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When you read a title like the one above you may wondering, “How in the world can there be anything good in this?”

Previously, we’ve tried to help you see that suffering precedes glory, and so you may think to yourself “I just have to endure all this until I reach glory!” That is true. There is an incomparably glorious future for believers. It’s why we can have real joy in the midst of real loss. But it’s also true there is great encouragement now, even in seasons of loss, we should be content and stand on the stable word of God knowing that God will never leave us nor forsake us. This is all really good news, especially to those who are suffering.

I would like to add to this good news the truth that some of the best gifts that God gives to His children, He gives in affliction.

You see, if you are a believer in Jesus Christ, you need not fear affliction. You serve the God who is absolutely sovereign over the amount and depth and length of affliction you are facing. In your affliction, God is not trying to hurt you because He has some evil delight in your harm. Far from it, like a surgeon, God cuts and removes and binds up, all for your good. He brings healing through hurting. The Psalmist who wrote Psalm 119 came to this conclusion and penned his 9th stanza to assure us of this very truth: when affliction shows up in your life you can be sure that God is there and that He has good and gracious gifts to give you in affliction.

I want this truth to sink into your heart. God has good and gracious gifts to give you in affliction. That is why, dear faithful one, you should fear not.

Before we hear the Psalmist himself, testify to this, you may be wondering, who is the author of Psalm 119? The short answer is we don’t know for sure. Many have thought David penned this glorious acrostic poem. But others have said Ezra, or Daniel or Jeremiah, or Solomon or even Hezekiah. Reading the Psalm against the background of these men’s life circumstances is an interesting and profitable task in and of itself. If you were to go back and learn what you could from the scriptures about each of these men you would find they all faced difficulties, trials, and afflictions. This is a common lot of those who follow the LORD.

As we read Psalm 119, we have the distinct privilege of entering the prayer closet of a faithful man of God who is patiently enduring great suffering. If you were to read the whole Psalm you would hear many references to his affliction. He speaks of governing authorities devising wicked plans against him (v.23). He faces verbal assaults upon his character (v.42), others have slandered him (v.51). He describes himself as ensnared by the cords of the wicked (v.61). Overall, he describes himself as afflicted (v.67, 71). His very life hangs in the balance (v.87). Others want him dead (v.95). He summarizes his situation as one where “trouble and anguish have come upon me.” (v.143).

Yet, in one of the most profound stanzas in the whole Psalm the author testifies to God’s goodness and faithfulness in his affliction. He praises God for the good gifts that he has received from God as a result of his affliction.

It is my hope that as you read and reflect on this stanza you too will have eyes to see the good gifts that God is giving you through your suffering and that this will cause you to praise Him all more. Let’s learn from the Psalmist:

65 You have dealt well with your servant,

O Lord, according to your word.

66 Teach me good judgment and knowledge,

for I believe in your commandments.

67 Before I was afflicted, I went astray,

but now I keep your word.

68 You are good and do good;

teach me your statutes.

69 The insolent smear me with lies,

but with my whole heart I keep your precepts;

70 their heart is unfeeling like fat,

but I delight in your law.

71 It is good for me that I was afflicted,

that I might learn your statutes.

72 The law of your mouth is better to me

than thousands of gold and silver pieces.

 

Do you see the good and gracious gifts that God has given the Psalmist through his affliction?

Let’s look at seven of them together.

 

1. God gives you opportunity to see His faithfulness in your life

If I asked if you would like to see the faithfulness of God on display, tangibly, in your very own life, my guess is you would probably say “Absolutely!” But if that came gift wrapped in an affliction would your answer remain the same? Sometimes it is difficult to see that God could be doing something good even while we walk through the dark valleys of His providence and face evil on every side. Yet, by God’s grace, and perhaps after some time, we begin to catch up with God and see His wisdom and goodness toward us in our affliction. That’s the Psalmist’s experience, at least. He says, “You have dealt well with your servant, O LORD, according to your word.” (v.65)

What an amazing conclusion given all the Psalmist has gone through and all that he is facing! He has experienced it and knows it and testifies to it: God has dealt well with His servant. The Psalmist, through his trials, affirms the sovereignty of God and understands that while God Himself does no evil to the Psalmist, God does sovereignly permit evil to come to His servant for good purposes. It is in this sense that the Psalmist sees God dealing, and dealing well, with His servant through the affliction that has come upon him. How it is that God has dealt well with him is revealed throughout the rest of the stanza. But for now, it’s enough to see that the Psalmist’s humble and thankful conclusion concerning God’s dealings with him is to the effect of “you have treated me well in this.” The Psalmist has seen God’s faithfulness directly in his life through the affliction he has endured. I imagine that you have experienced the same through other trials in your past. Perhaps there are some you still don’t fully understand, but nonetheless you can surely conclude, you have dealt well with your servant, O LORD.

2. God trains your moral discernment and perception

The Psalmist offers a prayer “teach me good judgment and knowledge, for I believe in your commandments” and in doing so, he recognizes the opportunity to not just know but to live and apply God’s word in the midst of his affliction. The unique trials that the Psalmist is facing are a gift because they force him to humble himself before God, asking for help that he might judge wisely how he should act in his situation. He does not want the affliction to pass without having his moral discernment trained and exercised for God’s glory. He believes in God’s commandments and knows they are the main source of wisdom and guidance in his affliction. In his trials, the Psalmist does not see God’s word as irrelevant. Rather, he sees it as the refreshing fountain of divine instruction that he must drink from so that his spiritual palate is cleansed, and he can rightly taste and see what is good and then go about doing it. Like the Psalmist, in your affliction ask the Lord to train your moral discernment, this is a gracious gift from God.

3. God brings you to greater obedience to Himself

Another gift that God graciously gives in affliction is the gift of greater obedience to himself. We can begin to see why the Psalmist previously said that God had dealt well with him in his affliction. In humility he acknowledges, before I was afflicted, I went astray.

The idea of going astray captures the Psalmist’s admission that his life had begun to be characterized by a waywardness. He had allowed certain sins to gain a foothold in his life. But God used the affliction as a gracious gift to break the pattern of the Psalmist’s wandering and also to bring the Psalmist back to Himself.  This is why the Psalmist says before I was afflicted, I went astray, but now I keep your word. In other words, all things considered, the Psalmist is grateful for his affliction because God has graciously used it to restore him and bring about greater obedience to His word. Can you see God dealing well with you through your suffering? Have you noticed him using suffering to grab your attention, reveal your sin, and direct your heart back to Him? Are you in affliction now? Do you hear him shouting with love for your return?

C.S. Lewis has put it well, “Pain insists upon being attended to. God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our consciences, but shouts in our pains. It is his megaphone to rouse a deaf world.”

May we all hear loud and clear and respond in humble obedience to God in our pain and suffering. Renewed obedience because of affliction is a gracious gift from our good God.

4. God shows you His perfectly good character and works

Reflecting on the fact that God has used affliction to bring the Psalmist to greater obedience to God he cannot help but praise God for his goodness:

68 You are good, and do good,

teach me your statutes

There is a simplicity and yet a profundity to the Psalmist’s praise here. He first acknowledges that God is good. There is no evil in God. Now and forever, He is good. Goodness is part of His unchanging character. God could not be evil if He tried. Likewise, God could never desire evil nor ever do anything evil. God is good and therefore He does good. His good character necessitates His good conduct. Or as one of my theology professors Dr. Mook loved to put it, “Because God is Who He is, He does what He does.” Since God is good, He must do good in everything that He does! What a glorious and comforting truth! What affliction or suffering are you experiencing? What trials are you facing? Beloved child of God, God is unchanging, and He is good, and so whatever you are facing you can know that God is at work doing good for you. When you understand that, then you will understand your responsibility to hold on to Him and to His word and to learn to grow in obedience as He works for good through your suffering. Therefore, ask God as the Psalmist does, “teach me your statutes.”

5. God provides opportunity to prove your loving faithfulness to Him and others

Another gift that God gives in affliction is the opportunity to demonstrate true faith through loving obedience to Him. If you want to know and show that you love God with all your heart, then trials are a good and gracious gift from God. The Psalmist says,

The insolent smear me with lies,

but with my whole heart I keep your precepts

We should notice that this is not a prideful and self-centered boast but rather a quiet and joyful confidence in God after having passed a test. The word for smear can mean to “stick, glue, plaster.” The idea is that proud and evil men have completely ruined his reputation. It’s as if the Psalmist’s true identity cannot even be seen anymore. Lies have been plastered all over him. Yet instead of reviling in return, or fighting back, he sees it as an occasion to prove his whole-hearted obedience and trust of God’s precepts. 

When one experiences a measure of success in battle it brings great encouragement to the soul and powerful assurance to the heart. The Psalmist has picked up his shield of faith and has deflected the fiery arrows of accusations and is still in the fight and ready for more. The Psalmist has not returned evil for evil. He has made God’s law his delight (v.70). Unlike his enemies, He has maintained a sensitive conscience, one that joyfully obeys God’s word. He characterizes his enemies as having hearts that are “unfeeling like fat” which is probably a Hebrew idiom for their minds having become dull and insensitive. His enemies have no love for God and their evil actions show their rebellion to God. Even so, the Psalmist sees the evil actions of his enemies as a gift from a good God who wishes to give opportunity to His servant that he might overcome them and prove his loving faithfulness to God.


6. God grants you greater understanding of His word

There are still more gifts God gives in affliction. In the next verse the Psalmist acknowledges as much when he says, “It is good for me that I was afflicted.” The word used for affliction here can also mean to be oppressed or humbled or humiliated. The Psalmist had been brought low. But he noticed that in his humiliation God had given him the gift of a humble heart which more than almost anything else enables one to do the best learning. He said, “It is good for me that I was, that I might learn your statutes.”

The Psalmist found himself more than ever understanding God’s word, learning the word of God, devouring the word of God, living the word of God, and delighting in the word of God. I think he comprehended in a way He never did before the incomparable wisdom of God’s word, the glorious nature of God’s promises, the righteousness of God’s statutes, and understood with clarity what it meant for his life in his current situation. All of this brought great comfort to him in his affliction and caused him to rightly value the word of God. This leads us to the last gift the Psalmist mentions that God has graciously given him in his affliction.

7. God makes His word your greatest treasure

God has one final precious gift that He gives us in affliction, that is the gift of a heart that truly values God’s word. Do you desire a heart that treasures the word of God? Do you want a heart that greatly appreciates the word of God? Thankfully God desires His servants to treasure Him and His word, and He graciously uses affliction to that very end. Look how the Psalmist concludes this stanza:

72 The law of your mouth is better to me

than thousands of gold and silver pieces

The Psalmist recognized that God dealt well with him. God brought the Psalmist back to Him. God used affliction to humble the Psalmist, to teach the Psalmist his word, that he might value the word as he ought. God’s law, which comes from His very mouth, is better to the Psalmist than thousands of gold and silver pieces. His point is that when you put the word of God side by side with anything else of value, even that which is of greatest value like silver and gold, it is not even close. God’s word is better to the Psalmist. He gets Proverbs 15:16, “Better is a little with the fear of the LORD than great treasure and trouble with it.” He also understands Proverbs 11:4, “Riches do not profit in the day of wrath, but righteousness delivers from death.” Silver and gold cannot deliver him. Silver and gold cannot save him. Silver and gold cannot do him the good that God has done for him. The Psalmist knows:

Silver and gold cannot purchase a greater understanding of God’s faithfulness  

Silver and gold don’t afford one greater moral discernment and perception.

Silver and gold cannot turn the straying believer back to God.

Silver and gold cannot compare to the delight that comes with a clear conscience and proven faithfulness.

Silver and gold don’t grant a person deep understanding of God’s word.

Silver and gold don’t cause a person to value God’s word as the most precious commodity in existence.  

Those gifts are invaluable. They are truly priceless. They are some of the best gifts that He gives to His children this side of heaven. They cannot be bought with precious metals. Yet they are given graciously by a good God to His faithful children in His Word through their affliction. This is what God does. So fear not faithful, God gives good gifts in affliction. For in and through your affliction your heavenly Father is good and doing good.

 May you have eyes to see in the midst of your pain and suffering, the ways our gracious God is giving you good gifts, and may it lead you to praise Him, now and forever.