NEW RELEASE
		
		Suffering: The Mark of Faith
		
		Courtesy of BreakPoint Online 
                 
            with Charles Colson
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com  
          The  young man was alone in his room, smoking cigarette after cigarette. He knew he  had a big decision to make. Dietrich Bonhoeffer had been a leader of the German  resistance against Hitler, but when he was ordered into the armed forces,  church authorities helped him escape to safety in America. 
              But  was America where God wanted him to be? Pacing his room at Union Theological  Seminary, the young pastor tried to understand the unease that had come over  him. By the summer of 1939, his mind was made up. He had heard a fundamentalist  preacher preach the true Gospel. He knew he had to return to Germany to  minister to his people and share their fate. 
              Six  years later, implicated in a plot to assassinate Hitler, Bonhoeffer was  executed. 
              As  I write in my new book, The  Faith, Bonhoeffer's consecrated life is a model for all of us—a  total giving of self to Christ. Most of us will not be tested in this way, but  we may be sure of one thing: We will be tested. 
              For  example, we may endure real agony over the suffering in the world, as Mother  Teresa did, and that she persevered against all hope is the best proof of  faith. Or we may feel that years of work for the Lord have come to naught. We  do not always see the fruit of our labor. 
              And  then there is the intense physical suffering. Could you and I endure the  suffering of Bonhoeffer, or of Christians who suffer under Islamic rule today? 
              But  suffering is, as Bonhoeffer teaches us, the cost of discipleship; it belongs to  our calling as Christians. After their first arrest, the apostles left the  Sanhedrin's court "rejoicing because they had been counted worthy of  suffering disgrace for the Name" (Acts 5:41).\ 
              In  many places today, Christians are called to suffer persecution for the sake of  the Gospel. In scores of other countries—India, Iran, Burma—believers risk  their lives by even professing Christ. 
              The  real question is not whether we will suffer, but how we will react to suffering when it comes. We can see it  as a miserable experience to be endured, or we can offer it to God for His  redemptive purposes. This is the great truth Christians know: God will always  use what we suffer for Christ's work of redemption if we let Him. 
              Suffering  is rightly called "the school of faith"; it is only through  difficulties and setbacks that we are brought to the end of ourselves and  forced to trust God alone. 
              No  wonder so many believers have said with the apostle Paul that they long for  "the fellowship of sharing in Jesus' suffering" (Philippians 3:10). 
              Why,  then, should we expect, if we are going to draw ever closer to Christ, that we  should be exempt? Would not God use our suffering in our lives for the same  purpose He used suffering in the life of Christ? To tell people life is going  to be easy with God—no sickness, disease, and all material blessings—is heresy. 
              Seventy-three  years after the death of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, his willingness to suffer and die  for Christ is still bringing people to the foot of the Cross. Are you and I  willing to suffer as he suffered, for just such a cause? 
              I  hope you will read my new book, The  Faith—and learn more about why suffering is the mark of true faith. 
              More books, movies, and music on CBN.com.  
               
              From BreakPoint, Copyright  2008 Prison Fellowship 
                Ministries. "BreakPoint 
                  with Chuck Colson" is a radio ministry of 
                    Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission of Prison 
                    Fellowship, P.O. Box 17500, Washington, DC, 20041-0500." 
                    Heard on more than 1000 radio stations nationwide. For more information 
                    on the ministry of Chuck Colson and Prison Fellowship visit their 
                    web site at http://www.breakpoint.org. 
               
              This commentary was delivered by PFM President Mark   Earley. 
               
              
              
          
		  
 
 
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