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1 Pe. 1:6-7

Abounding Joy / Crushing Grief(transcript)

layers Part 11 of 103 menu_book More on 1 Peter lightbulb 12 illustrations in this sermon

Pastor Albert N. Martin expounds 1 Peter 1:3-7, addressing the profound paradox of abounding joy and crushing grief in the Christian life. He defines the nature and source of both, arguing that Christian joy is a deep, spiritual exultation rooted in an intelligent apprehension of God's great salvation, while grief arises from manifold, divinely ordered trials. Martin emphasizes that these trials are temporal and purposeful, serving to test and validate the genuineness of faith now, and ultimately to purify and vindicate it for praise, glory, and honor at Christ's return. He applies these truths by asserting that joy mingled with grief is the concurrent experience of every true Christian, that saving faith will always be tried, and that only in Christ can present grief lead to future glory.

Primary Texts

menu_book
1 Peter 1:3-7 This is the central text from which the sermon's main points about abounding joy and crushing grief are drawn and expounded.

Outline 12 sections · 64 min

  1. Introduction: The Paradox of Christian Experience 0:03
  2. The Experience of Abounding Joy: Nature and Source 8:15
  3. The Foundation of Joy: Doctrinal Instruction 17:20
  4. The Experience of Crushing Grief: Nature and Occasion 23:41
  5. Characteristics of Trials: Temporal and Divinely Ordered 29:22
  6. Characteristics of Trials: Manifold and Purposeful 36:28
  7. The Immediate Purpose of Trials: Proving Faith 39:14
  8. The Ultimate Purpose of Trials: Praise, Glory, and Honor 45:14
  9. Application 1: Joy Mingled with Grief is the Christian Norm 50:59
  10. Application 2: True Faith is Tested Faith 55:31
  11. Application 3: The Unconverted Face Eternal Grief 59:13
  12. Conclusion and Prayer 61:55

Key Quotes

“Are they grieving or are they rejoicing? Oh, if they are greatly rejoicing, can they be grieving? Are not great joy and crushing grief mutually exclusive? This is a paradox, an apparent contradiction, but only an apparent contradiction.”
“He knows they need to have the taproots of their Christian life sunk into the subsoil of the great doctrines of the Christian faith. That's what makes strong, mature, good soldiers of the Lord Jesus Christ. And that alone will produce solid, substantial, exuberant joy wherein you greatly rejoice.”
“And to put it bluntly, fighting God is losing business. And being irritated with God will cut off all of your strength. will cut off all your ability to hold communion with God.”
“He's saying the immediate purpose of these trials is your faith may be put to the test and be validated that it's real.”
“My professing Christian friend, untried faith is worthless.”
“It is in times when the reason for hardship cannot be seen that trust in God alone seems to become the most pure and precious in His sight, though He slay me. Yet, those are the words of Job.”
“Joy mingled with grief and grief tempered by joy will be the concurrent experience of every true Christian in this life.”
“The more heat, the more pressure, the more the last bit of dross is going to be burned away. Some of us wonder why the fire gets hotter the closer we get to the end of the journey, because God's burning away dross. And hopefully there ain't quite as much dross. So God says I've got to turn up the heat to get the rest out.”

Applications

Parents & families

  • Pray, 'Lord, put me in circumstances that will test the reality of my faith,' if you are wrestling with whether Mom and Dad's God is truly your God.

All listeners

  • Grasp that joy mingled with grief and grief tempered by joy will be the concurrent experience of every true Christian in this life.
  • Understand that true saving faith will always become a tried and tested faith in order that it may be a praiseworthy faith in the day of Christ.
  • If you are not a child of God, whatever joys or griefs you now experience, you will know nothing but grief in the day of Christ.
  • Be made jealous to become a Christian by observing that no tested believer regrets serving Christ, but only regrets not serving Him more faithfully.
  • Deliver us from our tendency to want to find the comfort zone. We pray that we would welcome the fire and the furnace and the crucible of purifying.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 152 paragraphs, roughly 64 minutes.

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