Note: This sermon has a quotation from the Apocrypha and treats the quotation 
from Sirach as Scripture.  This is simply how our Confessions treat the 
Apocrypha.  Ref: Ap XXI, 9: “We grant that angels pray for us.  For there is a 
passage in Zechariah 1:12, where an angel prays, ‘O Lord of hosts, how long 
will you withhold mercy from Jerusalem?’  To be sure, concerning the saints we 
grant that in heaven they pray for the Church in general, just as they prayed 
for the Church in general while alive.  However, no passage about the dead 
praying exists in the Scriptures, except that of a dream recorded in 2 
Maccabees 15:14.”  Note that our Confessions call 2 Maccabees, a book in the 
Apocrypha, "Scripture."

Now the sermon:


Intro
Everything in our faith-life hinges on these words: “Since we have been made 
righteous.”  But what does that even mean?  It means that, despite all our 
mess-ups with God, He has straightened them out, so much so, that we are even 
now righteous.  That’s what it means. 

Think of a courtroom.  God is the judge, and we are on trial.  Everyone knows 
we’re guilty, but for some reason, God acquits us anyway.  Now, He doesn’t 
acquit us because He overlooks sin or considers it trivial.  No, He acquits us 
because someone else has stood up to take the guilty plea for us: Jesus.  
That’s why we aren’t guilty.  That’s why God the judge declares that we are, 
instead, righteous. 

Main Body
Since God has made us righteous, we have peace with Him.  Yet, this peace with 
God is not our normal way of life with Him.  For we are born, as St. Paul says, 
as His enemies.  But Jesus has stepped in to do what we could never do 
ourselves, to make peace between us and God.  And, because of that, we are 
righteous. 

It’s as Paul tells us, “Through our Lord Jesus Christ we have gained access by 
faith into this grace in which we now stand.”   But then Paul more-fully 
fleshes out what being in God’s graces means: “Since we have been made 
righteous … we also rejoice in our sufferings.”  

Wait a minute; I can barely get my head around this idea of being righteous 
because of someone else, because of Jesus.  But now because of that we rejoice 
in our suffering?

Who rejoices in suffering?  I don’t.  You don’t.  We’ll do whatever we have to 
do to avoid suffering.  But that’s not what Jesus tells us.  He says, “Whoever 
wants to save his life will lose it” (Matthew 16:25).  And Jesus even says 
more.  “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself, [that means not to 
indulge or make life easier for himself] take up his cross, and follow me” 
(Matthew 16:24). 

So, why do Christians suffer?  It’s because we follow Jesus who suffered.  
Jesus didn’t have to suffer; He chose to do so.  That wasn’t because He had 
some strange yearning to suffer.  No, it was because you and I needed Him to 
suffer.  For if Jesus didn’t suffer, we would have no have peace with God.  
That was the only way we could be righteous.  

But our faith-life goes beyond Jesus’ suffering.  We also need to suffer.  Now, 
that’s not because Jesus needs to see us suffer.  We don’t need to suffer to 
pay for our sins.  Jesus already did that.  But we need to suffer because it’s 
for our good.  This is a hard truth to take: we need to suffer because it’s for 
our good!

Suffering, Paul says, produces endurance.  Endurance: that’s patient 
waiting--patiently waiting for the Lord to help.  Sometimes endurance means 
that you have to wait on the Lord for many years.  Yes, rejoice in your 
suffering because suffering produces endurance.  And in this fallen world, you 
need endurance!

And endurance produces character.  Until God tests our faith, you and I won’t 
know how strong that faith is.  Now, testing doesn’t show God how strong our 
faith is.  God already knows; after all, He’s the one who gave us that faith.  
Testing shows me, and you, how strong that faith is.  It teaches us to learn 
that we can trust our Lord no matter what, or whom, we may be asked to give up. 
 

Remember that when your Lord lets you go through trouble, He’s refining your 
faith.  He’s getting rid of the impurities, giving you a stronger trust in Him, 
so no matter how hard life gets, you learn to hang on to Him.  Jesus tells you, 
“You will have suffering in this world.  But take heart!  I have overcome the 
world” (John 16:33). 

That’s what Paul means by “character.”  That’s what he means when he says that 
“suffering produces endurance and endurance produces character.”  Character is 
a forged and tempered faith, which shows itself as true. 

And character produces hope.  Hope is to have confidence that, even when you 
are suffering and it looks as if nothing useful can come from it, the Lord is 
at work turning suffering into our eternal benefit.  How can you be sure?  Look 
at the cross!  

If we were at Jesus’ crucifixion, we would have said, “There’s no way God can 
bring anything good out of this gruesome crucifixion.”  But our Lord used that 
to carry out the greatest good in all of history.  For through the death of 
Christ, God the Father has made us righteous in His sight.  

Consider this: If God has used the cross of Jesus for our good, then he 
can--and will--use the crosses we have to endure for our eternal well-being.  
That’s the assurance, the hope that He give us.  But let’s be honest.  No one 
wants to suffer.  Peter didn’t.   But Jesus told him that “the Son of Man would 
have to suffer a great deal and be rejected by the elders, the high priests, 
and the scribes.  Then he would be killed, but, after three days, he would rise 
again” (Mark 8:31).  

Peter said, “No, that can’t happen.”  But how did Jesus respond to Peter?  He 
said, “Get behind me, Satan!”  For it was for Peter’s own benefit that Jesus 
suffered.  It was also for our own benefit that Jesus suffered.  

So, rejoice in suffering.  Rejoice in your suffering.  Rejoice in Jesus’ 
suffering.  But also rejoice when a Christian you love has to suffer.  For most 
of us, that’s the hardest of all to take, especially when it’s your husband or 
wife who’s suffering. 

We understand how Peter felt.  Several of you have watched someone you love in 
pain.  You’ve said, “I would give anything if I could be suffering instead of 
him.”  But our gracious God has laid a cross on that person you love for a 
reason.  “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself, take up his 
cross, and follow me; whoever loses his life for me and the Gospel will save 
it.”

Our crosses and our salvation are linked, for these crosses teach us to hold on 
to our salvation for dear life.  When God lays them on us, those crosses are 
for our benefit, whether it’s you or someone you love who is carrying that 
cross.  Although you may not understand it all now, in eternity, it will all be 
clear. 

So, when you see those whom you love carrying their crosses, cry out to God for 
them.  Pray day and night for them, but don’t stop there.  Assure them also of 
our Lord’s promises.  Point them to the Last Day, when Christ will raise the 
dead, and we will spend eternity in a new heaven and a new earth.  But don’t 
try to remove the crosses that God has given them for their eternal well-being. 
 

Now that doesn’t mean that you don’t take someone to the doctor if he’s ill.  
For the Old Testament book of Sirach tells us, “Honor the physician according 
to your need of him … The Lord created medicines from the earth, and a sensible 
man will not despise them” (Sirach 38:1,4).  What it does mean is that we 
recognize that God allows, and even brings about, suffering in our lives for 
our eternal benefit.  That’s why we can rejoice in our suffering. 

When you try to take away someone’s suffering that is for his eternal benefit, 
he should say to you, “Get behind me, Satan.  God gave me that cross.”  And if 
someone tries to remove a cross that God has given you, if he says that it’s 
unfair for you to suffer, say, “Get behind me, Satan.  My Lord gave me this 
cross.”

Today, we live in an age where many see comfort and wealth as a reward from God 
for being faithful.  When you think like that, suffering then only becomes a 
curse, not a blessing.  But Scripture unabashedly says that we are to rejoice 
in our suffering.  

But how can you be sure that when you suffer it’s a blessing from God and not a 
curse?  Look at what God did through Jesus’ suffering.  “While we were still 
weak, at just the right time Christ died for the ungodly”--which is to say, 
Christ died for us.  

For whom would you be willing to die?  Perhaps, you would die for a friend.  
But would you die for an enemy?  I doubt it.  But your Lord did.  He died for 
us when we were still at war with Him.  “God shows his love for us, because 
while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”

“While we were still his enemies, we were reconciled to God through the death 
of his Son.”  That shows that God loves you.  That’s why “in Christ, God was 
reconciling the world to himself, not counting their sins against them” (2 
Corinthians 5:19).  That means God wasn’t counting your sins against you, 
because He counted them against Jesus. 

Conclusion
Your life as a Christian may be hard.  People may look down on you or ridicule 
you when you do what is right.  You may have to sacrifice when you stand up to 
be faithful.  People may even hate you.  But whatever crosses you must bear, 
you know the Person who matters in the end is the one who loves you.  You know 
it’s true, because from the depth of God’s love, He gave His own Son for you. 

Since God has made you righteous, you are at peace with Him, not at war.  
That’s why you can rejoice in your suffering, for God is using such suffering 
for your eternal well-being.  And despite such suffering, you can still know 
that God loves you.  Suffering doesn’t change that.  After all, God used 
nothing less than Jesus’ own suffering to reunite you to Him.  That’s why you 
are righteous in His sight!  Amen. 





 --
 Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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