Faith Comes with Opposition
Those who seek to follow Jesus will encounter opposition. It follows as surely as night follows day. The opposition may arise within ourselves; it may arise among the followers of Jesus; or it may arise in the world. It may be subtle, blatant, mild, or severe. But opposition is sure to come, so the issue is not whether it will appear but how we respond to opposition.
Following Jesus was not easy in the first century, and it is not easy in the twenty-first century. The level of opposition to Jesus from within his own family and his own religious group surprised his early followers. Two thousand years later we understand a little more about human personality, but the level of opposition to Jesus and his followers still surprises us.
We may be able to understand the opposition of the Roman government, but it is hard to understand the opposition of a religious community that claimed to be seeking God and faithfulness to God just as Jesus was. And yet, opposition still comes today from within the church as well as from without. How are we to face opposition when it comes? Squarely, humbly, openly, and with all the faith we can muster.
To commit to following Jesus is to commit myself to a lifelong journey of being led where Jesus wants me to go and not necessarily where I want to go. This situation often causes opposition within myself. Jesus may call me to do what I do not normally and easily do. Jesus may ask me to wait or remain silent when I wish to speak or move on. In each of these cases I experience opposition within to what Jesus calls me to do and to be.
External opposition can arise when God calls for an action that is not what the church wants or what the world wants. Am I to follow Jesus? If so, I will face and feel opposition. And yet, the only course for faithfulness is to follow where Jesus leads. May God always guide us, and may we have the grace to follow Jesus as faithfully when we face opposition as when we face affirmation, affection, and acclaim.
—Reuben Job
The devotion begins, ‘It is not whether opposition will appear, but how we respond to it.’ We can’t control who throws darts at us or from which direction they come. What we can control is how we will react and respond to them. It is in our response that God is glorified, and others are ministered to. Here is one arena in which ‘loving others’ is put to the test; can we even love those who have harmed us? These are the instances where it is hard to follow Jesus; to offer the other cheek; to go the extra mile; to sacrifice. Let’s pray for more of Jesus and less of our fallenness in bearing opposition. May we love like Christ loves and forgive as He forgives. —DH
—David Hoskins, Founder & Care Guide, Sanctuary Clinics