Have
You
Been Tested Lately?
by Jerry
Munk
The Apostle Simon Peter is an example of someone
who went through many difficult times of
testing. We can read about one of Peter’s tests
in the Gospel of Luke – it takes place just
before the crucifixion.
The Lord said, “Simon, Simon! Indeed, Satan
has asked for you, that he may sift you as
wheat. But I have prayed for you that your
faith should not fail; and when you have
returned to me, strengthen your brethren.”
[Peter] said to him, “Lord, I am ready to go
with you, both to prison and to death.” Then
[Jesus] said, “I tell you, Peter, the
rooster shall not crow this day before you
will deny three times that you know me.”
– Luke 22:31-34
Peter was warned of the trial he was about to
face, yet he still stumbled and denied Jesus.
If we can learn from Peter’s experience,
perhaps we will be better prepared when our
time of testing arrives.
Learning from tests
… that he may sift you like wheat.
I read the story of a man who had attended
medical school in Edinburgh around 1800. At
that time, medical school was much different
than it is today. It was more of a
self-directed course of study. On the first
day of class many professors would give an
examination. The exam was something of a
sifting in that it helped the students
separate the material they already knew from
the material they did not yet know. Without
the exam, the students may have focused too
little on the material they had not yet
mastered.
In the same way, it is important for us to
identify the strengths and weaknesses in our
spiritual life. We are in many ways
self-directed in our spiritual education.
Certainly the Holy Spirit guides us, and we
receive help from our brothers and sisters,
but whether we learn and what we learn is
pretty much up to us. It is, therefore,
helpful to know what we do well and what we do
poorly, where we are strong and where we are
weak. A time of testing helps reveal to us the
areas in our spiritual lives that need some
work.
Giving the right answer
I have prayed…that your faith should
not fail.
Jesus prayed that Peter would give the correct
“answer” as he went through his testing. The
answer that Jesus was looking for was faith
(and hope and love, as well as courage and the
other virtues). Unfortunately, there was
something lacking in Peter’s faith. In the
Gospel of Matthew, Peter correctly identified
Jesus as the Son of God – an astounding
confession of faith at the time. Yet just
moments later, Peter doubted God’s plan and
God’s power by trying to prevent Jesus from
going to Jerusalem to die (Matthew 16:13-23).
Peter had the faith to see that Jesus was God
(believing faith), but he lacked the faith to
trust fully in God’s plan (trusting faith).
This lack of faith appears again, when in the
courtyard he denies even knowing the Lord
Jesus.
Peter was tested many times and repeatedly
got the answers wrong. He lacked faith and
hope when he rebuked the Lord and tried to
hinder the Father’s plan. He lacked love and
courage when he denied the Lord, as Jesus was
being sentenced to crucifixion. Failing these
tests painfully revealed to Peter his faults
and weakness. In the same way, when we are
tested, the Lord reveals to us areas in our
lives that need some work.
We will be tested many times in our lives.
The Lord is looking for us to respond with
“correct answers” as we experience these
trails. Here is a hint: the correct answers
are faith, and hope, and love – and prudence,
justice, temperance, and courage. The Lord
looks for virtue and strength of character. He
also looks for the fruit of the Holy Spirit:
love, joy, peace, patience, longsuffering,
kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness,
and self-control. Often, people seek
miraculous deliverance as the answer to their
tests. From time to time deliverance may part
of it, but normally the right answer is
virtue.
Giving the wrong answers
I don’t know him.
So very often we respond with the wrong answer
in times of testing. Some common wrong
responses are: anxiety, despair, resentment,
fear, and recklessness. If you look at your
life and see anxiety, despair, resentment, and
fear – you are in a time of testing, (perhaps
without realizing it) and you are getting the
answers wrong.
When we fail a test – give the wrong answer –
it really is important to recognize that
failure and repent. If we keep giving the
wrong answer over and over we will never
become the person that God wants us to be. We
will wallow in fear, anxiety, resentment, and
despair instead of growing in the virtue and
fruit that pleases our Lord and makes us
useful in building his kingdom.
There is life after
tests
When you return … strengthen your
brethren.
Our life is not mainly about tests. Peter’s
ministry and all he accomplished for the Lord
is not defined by the tests he failed; it is
defined by what he did after the tests. We can
see how Peter obeyed the “strengthen your
brethren” part of Jesus’ prayer – he did
spread the gospel and strengthened the early
church. In John 21:17 Jesus asks Peter three
times, “Do you love me?” Peter’s answer is
always “Yes,” and the Lord commands him to
“feed my lambs, tend my sheep, feed my sheep.”
Jesus is reviewing with Peter his test and
his failure. He is also pointing out that
Peter has a job to do, that he should not
wallow in self-pity, but strengthen his
brothers.
There is fruitful ministry following our
tests – even if we do not score 100%. Tests
today prepare us to serve the Lord tomorrow.
It is important to respond rightly during a
test; it is also important to respond rightly
after the test. It is especially important to
respond rightly after a failed test: like
Peter we need to return to the Lord Jesus in
love, repentance, and obedience.
In the time of Christ a newly-forged sword
would be heated until it glowed like the
evening sky. It was then thrust into cold
water. This “testing” made the sword stronger
and better able to hold a sharp edge. (It was
because of this technology that the Roman army
won so many wars. Their swords could literally
cut their opponents’ swords in two.) In the
same way we are made stronger and more useful
to our Lord as we experience the fire of
testing.
Seeing the test in
progress
I am ready to go…to prison and
death.
Peter’s test at this time was not to go to
prison and death: that test would come in the
future. The test at hand was answering the
statement of a servant girl in the courtyard,
“This man was with him.” Jesus warned Peter
that he would be tested, that the test would
come before dawn, and it would involve denying
the Lord Jesus. We can look at it now and say
that Peter should have been prepared, but the
test seemed to catch him unaware.
Often times we fail to recognize tests as
they happen, even when we are warned of them
in advance. Jesus warned Peter he was going to
be tested just as he has warned us we will be
tested. Will we recognize the test when the
time comes? Often tests are subtle, like a
servant girl asking, “Aren’t you one of his
followers?” If we are expecting something
dramatic, we may miss the subtle test, just as
Peter did.
When tests are small, more like quizzes, the
smallness, the ordinariness, blinds us to the
fact that a test is taking place. What kind of
spiritual “quizzes” might be going on right
now?
- A relationship problem with your spouse
- A relationship problem with your
children
- Trouble with finances and work
- An area of persistent sin
- Failure in your personal Christian
disciplines.
How can we learn from our tests and be
strengthened in our walk with the Lord if we
don’t even realize that we are being tested?
Learning to recognize small tests like these can
help us recognize larger tests when they come
our way.
Note: Those who we are close to will also go
through times of testing, and their tests can
spill into our laps. For example, the Lord
Jesus was going through a huge test as he was
preparing to die for us. Peter’s test in
the courtyard was the result of Jesus’ test.
When we see that a brother or sister is being
tested, perhaps a test will come our way as a
result. Will we respond to our brethren in
faith, hope, and love – and prudence, justice,
temperance, and courage.
Preparing for a test
Pray that you may not enter into
temptation.
In Luke 24:40, Jesus instructs Peter to pray
that he does not enter into temptation. The
Greek word translated temptation here
is pirasmos, meaning a trial or proof.
God allows temptation – He allows tests – but
never beyond what we can endure. “God…will not
allow you to be tempted (to be tried or
proven) beyond what you are capable, but…will
also make a way of escape that you may be able
to bear it (1 Corinthians 10:13).”
We should prepare for tests through prayer.
When the Lord Jesus taught his disciples to
pray, he included the phrase, “lead us not
into temptation”: literally “lead us not into
hard testing” (Matthew 6:13). The Lord has
been telling us as a community that a test is
coming. He is doing this for a reason. I think
the reason is so we can prepare. We should
pray for his strength and for his grace; we
should pray that we will recognize the test
when it comes and answer it with faith, and
hope, and love.
I thought it was
supposed to be easy
For my yoke is easy and my burden is
light (Matthew 11:30).
How does this passage from Matthew 11:30 fit
into difficult times of testing? Trials almost
never seem easy nor do their burdens seem
light. Looking at the Greek can be helpful in
coming to an understanding of what this
scripture passage is communicating.
The word easy is translated from the
Greek word chrestos, which means
useful, good, or manageable. Testing is useful
for us, although not always easy in the
English sense of the word; but it is good for
us and the Lord never gives a test that is
unmanageable. Tests are useful because they
prepare us for the future work God has for us.
Difficult is not always bad, nor is easy
always good. The Lord’s yoke, the harness that
makes our work purposeful, is good, and
useful, and manageable.
The word light in the text is
translated from the Greek word elow’no,
which means “driven by the wind.” I see this
as implying the power of the Holy Spirit, as
wind in scripture is often associated with the
Holy Spirit. Along with the yoke and burden,
the Holy Spirit fills us with his power. He
enables us to bear the burdens that come in
his service by supplying his own power – the
power of the Holy Spirit. The Apostle Paul
says, “I can do all things through Christ who
gives me strength” (Philippians 4:13).
Conclusion
For what son is there whom a father
does not chasten? (Hebrews 12:7)
Brothers and sisters, the Lord has told us
that testing will come.
- We should be praying.
- We should be on the alert.
- We should keep the correct answers close
at hand.
- We should remember that tests are useful.
- We should rely on his power and his
grace.
- In all of this let us seek to strengthen
our brethren – that is, one another.
Jerry Munk is a
member of Holy Trinity
Greek Orthodox Church in
Lansing, Michigan, USA,
and a coordinator of the Work of Christ Community in
Lansing. He is the author
of The Sword of the
Spirit: Communities of
Disciples on Mission, Becoming
Transgenerational and
Kairos -- for such a
Time as This,
and Life in
the Spirit Seminar for
Children (all
available from Tabor
House).
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