Reigning With Christ Through Suffering

Through Christ’s sufferings and death, he reigned.  In fact, this was perhaps his greatest single act of reigning.  This is a profound statement considering the fact that we might perceive his greatest act of reigning to have something to do with a scepter, a crown or even a throne.

Consider Philippians 2:6-9 which says,

Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death— even death on a cross! Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name.

At the very least this should cause us to reflect more deeply on Christ’s life.  But even more than that it should cause us to re-think what it means to reign with Christ in the here and now.  Clay Jones, professor at Biola University says,

His (God’s) ultimate goal for us isn’t for victory in boardrooms or on battlefields (although, on occasion, that is part of it). The victory He’s interested in isn’t measured with financial statements, in batting or earned run averages, in salaries, in sales, or in medals. Our victory is different.

But if our present day reigning isn’t expressed through our positions, bank statements or accolades, than how is it expressed?  According to Jones, Jesus reigned by enduring suffering rather than avoiding it.  Jesus reigned by sacrificing himself in order that others could experience reconciliation with God.  Jesus cared for and cultivated the world around him by displaying God’s character and glory through suffering.  And Jesus reminded his own disciples that by following him they will also walk a similar path of suffering and self-denial. (Matthew 16:24-26).

Paul reminds us that God’s strength is displayed through our weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9).  Today, reigning like this is typified in our persecuted brothers and sisters around the world.  Because of their apparent weakness, we often pity them or even think they need rescuing.  But God honors them and uses them to display his glory in some of the most challenging places on the earth.

Has God used suffering as an occasion to reign in your own life?

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My IDOP Prayer For The North Korean Underground Church: Please Let Us Not Do Them Harm, Lord

SUSA-KoreanThe International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church is upon us for the year, and I have been contacted by a number of reporters this week asking, “How can Western Christians pray for the North Korean underground church?”

My answer is the same as the first of the General Rules of John Wesley’s Methodist Societies:

By doing no harm.

Come again?

I admit it is an uncommon prayer, so much so that reporters wonder if I have misunderstood their question. But I think it is a good prayer, and, especially this year, the right prayer, so permit me to explain.

When Mrs. Foley and I founded Seoul USA ten years ago, we did so recognizing that though much was beginning to be said and done with regard to the evangelism and discipleship of North Korea, most of the saying and doing was coming from South Korean missionaries and mission agencies and international humanitarian and human rights NGOs. We decided that Seoul USA would exist to provide a saying and doing platform for North Korean Christians to talk about their own country, and, indeed, that is what Seoul USA became. We launch balloons and do short wave radio broadcasts and run discipleship programs and a missionary training school because that is what North Korean Christians have said is the most effective way to reach North Korea. And when I say “we,” I mean Western Christians and South Korean Christians in partnership with North Korean Christians.

Ten years later, it is no longer unusual to see North Koreans reaching North Korea–and that is a welcome change  But what I still see today–perhaps, sadly, even more than what I saw ten years ago–is well-meaning Western and South Korean Christians seeking to do good inside North Korea in either intentional or accidental partnership with the North Korean government.

And that is a travesty.

The number of religious tourists to North Korea is increasing.

The number of churches across middle America sponsoring humanitarian aid to North Korea is increasing.

The number of Christian business people pouring big money into opening coffee shops and noodle factories in North Korean free economic zones, ostensibly with the hope of making discrete witness for Christ to North Korean government officials and workers, is increasing.

“Surely these are doing some good,” people will sometimes say to me. To which I always make the same observation in reply:

Seoul USA’s purpose is to support North Korean Christians to evangelize and disciple their own country. And in ten years I have never met a single North Korean who has advocated religious tourism, humanitarian aid, or business investment in North Korea.

Not. One.

Instead, if you ask a North Korean Christian about religious tourism, humanitarian aid, or business investment in North Korea, they respond with a phrase like this:

“Are you crazy?”

They are puzzled why anyone would trust the North Korean government and are adamant that any aid given to a government-related project only strengthens the regime’s ability to eviscerate the real Christians.

So as you contemplate prayer on behalf of the North Korean underground church this IDOP week, please consider joining me in this modest prayer:

Please let us not do them harm, Lord.
Please let us not put too much faith in our wealth or worldly freedom, Lord.
Please make us more like them instead of us making them more like we are.
Please let us learn from them before we try to help them.

(If you are interested in learning from the North Korean underground church, this is a great week to join Seoul USA’s 100 Days of Worship in the Common Places with the North Korean Underground Church.)

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Video – We Are Given All Things…So As To Be Given TO All Things

Pastor Foley gives us the corollary to Romans 8:32: He who did not spare his only Son will not only give us all things; he will also give us to all things.

For all of the latest podcasts on Ransoming the Captives and on past Works of Mercy visit our Seoul USA Podcast Page!

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