If you didn’t read my previous article, please do so before you read this one (But just as a recap: The thorn was not sent from God, it was not sent to humble/humiliate Paul and it was not a sickness). This time I want to address what the thorn actually is and why it was sent. In the previous article I showed that when Paul referred to his thorn he called it his infirmity which I showed to be the persecution he suffered while spreading the gospel.
Matt 5:11 “Blessed are you when they revile and persecute you, and say all kinds of evil against you falsely for My sake.” (NKJV)
Luke 11:49 Therefore the wisdom of God also said, ‘I will send them prophets and apostles, and some of them they will kill and persecute (NKJV)
John 15:20 Remember the word that I said to you, ‘A servant is not greater than his master.’ If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you. If they kept My word, they will keep yours also. (NKJV)
There are many more verses like this where Jesus spoke of the persecution some believers will face for His Name’s sake. The awesome work He did on the cross to provide us with salvation and healing did not include setting us free from the hate the world has for us. In fact, being saved is what pulled us out of the world. That is the reason why it hates us now, more than it did before we were saved and why it is trying to destroy us. When we accepted Jesus, we turned our back on the world and the devil in regards to their ways and their destiny. After being saved we turn back to the world to bring salvation to those still caught in it. When you actually do this, you make the devil pretty angry. When you do it with signs and wonders following like Paul did, you definitely rub him up the wrong way (And making him angry is not something to fear, it is actually something you should enjoy doing!). Since your spirit is now united with Christ, hidden in Him and seated with Him in the Heavenlies, the devil cannot find the real you to destroy you, yet your unredeemed body and soul can still be attacked. That is how this spiritual being (messenger from satan, unclean spirit, demon etc) could inflict damage to Paul’s body (flesh).
The thing you need to understand about persecution is the reason why it was employed. Why were Christians imprisoned or killed? Because that was the most effective way the devil could stop them from reaching a problem that needed the power of God. When an early Christian reached a problem, the problem got solved with the power of God. Jesus said to heal through laying our hands on people. If you can keep the Christian from the sick person, you in effect stop the delivery of God’s power to that sick person through the laying on of hands. I know you can minister over a long distance, but long distance, though effective, should not be the first line of attack. Let me explain it like this: You are walking in the mall and see a man in a wheelchair. In your head you pray and command healing to restore his ability to walk. Suddenly he jumps out of his chairs and shouts: “I can walk!” You run up and say, “Yes, it is because I just prayed for you and God loves you, He did this.” That guy is going to look at you very funny and think, “Whatever!” Now imagine the same scenario but instead of praying in your head, you go over to the man and tell him the Gospel: that God loves him and God is bigger than his paralysis. Then lay your hands and command him to get up. If he then gets up and shouts, “I can walk!”, will there be any doubt that it was actually God? No, and that is why Jesus said “Go!” and not “Watch and pray in your head.”
If you are there to actually speak the gospel (which is the power of God unto salvation) and then lay hands and heal somebody, it is much more effective display of the love of God towards a person then when just praying for them over a distance, them getting well and not knowing why. Back to the point, if you can physically stop the believer from reaching the person or problem, you reduce the authenticity and effectiveness of the gospel for the person with the problem. The physical restraining is what we refer to as persecution. Anything that physically stops or tries to stop you from spreading the Gospel is a form of persecution. That persecution is the messenger of satan. What is the messenger’s message? “If you don’t stop spreading the Gospel I am going to kill you!” It is merely a scare tactic the devil uses to try and stop us from fulfilling the great commission. The downside for us is that it hurts, even kills and it is not nice to go through things like Paul or the underground church in China goes through. The upside is that the greatest periods of growth in Christianity happened during the greatest periods of persecution. The further you chase somebody, the further they get. The disciples went to one town, spread the gospel there and got persecuted for it. The persecution forced them to go to a new town and do the same thing. If there were no persecution in the first town, the disciples would have probably stayed there and the gospel would not have reached the nations.
Paul asked for this messenger to be taken away three times, and three times God said, “My Grace is sufficient for you.” What does that mean? If you want to know, look out for Part 3 in this series J But to end of, ask yourself honestly: What is keeping me from going? What is hindering me from stepping out for Jesus? Any excuse you give is the very thing that is keeping you from walking out your destiny, the Great Commission, here on earth.
Glory to God! Freedom to Man!
Cornel



Home
January 23rd, 2010 at 3:44 PM
I believe God allowed the thorn probably Paul’s sight. Paul would look to be
handicapped so man would not worship him.
January 26th, 2010 at 1:43 PM
Hi Leo,
For God to allow any sickness or suffering would mean Jesus didn’t die for all and that the work of the cross is not finished. I will explain more about God’s reply to Paul in part 3 but I don’t currently have an internet connection where I am staying so I am not online much. I will aim to post it soon!
God bless
Cornel
February 3rd, 2010 at 9:26 PM
I’m talking about Paul’s outward appearance.