Chrysostom
Beloved
You have laid out before God a great many troubles and names and circumstances, and you ask for breakthrough and protection and for Him to move mightily against what you perceive as evil. But examine your own soul. Is your appetite for spiritual food as keen as your appetite to have these specific people corrected and these conflicts resolved according to your own desire? We often portion out all our time for trifles and the anxious recitation of our list, yet we become sick and thoroughly sated at the hearing of the divine doctrines twice or thrice in the week. That is a bad state of soul. The teaching of the soul, the more it is prolonged, renders the soul stronger. But now you spend yourself in naming every grievance and wanting the Lord to confront and convict and stop this one and that one. Did Job not say, after his great affliction, “I have heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear; but now mine eye hath seen Thee; wherefore I have made myself vile, and I accounted myself earth and ashes”? Consider whether your constant cataloging of others’ faults is the cry of a soul made low, or of a soul anxious to see its own justice done.
You ask for the Lord to anoint your outreach and your sermons, yet observe how Paul, when recounting his authority, pointed to his former life and his sudden conversion as proof that God alone taught him. He did not first run about demanding that God rebuke the Judaizers. He entrusted the troublemakers to God, saying only that whoever they are, they shall bear their judgment. Do you see? The good conduct of one must not become an encouragement to the evil disposition of another, but neither must your peace be destroyed by making their faults your constant meditation. You even confess that you spoke of a matter to others which you should not have done, forgive me for saying it plainly, but this is a sign of a heart that has not yet learned to keep still and let the Spirit work. The wind blows where it wills, and you hear its sound, but cannot tell where it comes from or where it goes. So is everyone who is born of the Spirit. Will you be overanxious about the working of the Holy Spirit in the lives of those you name, when you cannot even control the wind? God does not need you to direct His arm like a general ordering troops. He is mighty in battle, and He has already led captivity captive. The enemy is weaker than you think.
You ask for miracles for a young person, for healing, for help with exams. All these are good to ask. But love is the more excellent way. If you speak with tongues of men and angels and have not love, you are a sounding brass. Even if you have all knowledge, all faith to remove mountains, all prophetic insight into what is wrong with others, and you hand over your body to be burned in zeal, without love it profits nothing. Your long request is full of names and circumstances, but is your love patient and kind? Does it not envy? Does it not parade itself, is it not puffed up? Love does not behave rudely, does not seek its own, is not provoked, thinks no evil. You ask God to severely confront evil and convict. Yet the Lord said, “The Kingdom of God is come unto you.” He came to preach deliverance to captives. Are you yourself a captive to resentment or a disordered concern about what others are doing? Then receive that deliverance first.
Let food and baths and the necessary affairs of life have their appointed time, but let the teaching of heavenly philosophy have no separate time, let every season belong to it. This means that when you bring your requests, you must also bring a heart that hungers for God Himself, not merely for God to fix things outwardly. You ask Him to promote your church, to anoint the prayer gathering, to bring back those who have left. These are worthy prayers. Yet see how Paul spoke: “We commend not ourselves, but speak as giving you occasion to glory.” In all his perils and straits, he did not exalt himself or demand immediate relief. He saw his weakness as the stage for divine power. Why are you cast down? The Comforter is with you. The foundation of love is strong as death. That love made the timid courageous; it will make you able to bear these interpersonal trials without growing bitter.
I charge you, therefore: In season, out of season, reprove, rebuke, exhort, yes, but begin with your own soul. Make yourself of no account before God. Trust that He will deal with those who trouble you, and pray for them with true charity, not as one who wishes them merely to be convicted for your comfort, but that they may find salvation and healing. Leave the timing to Him. Do not make the whole day’s meditation a rehearsal of your hurts. Meditate instead on His law day and night. Then the God who called Paul from being a persecutor to an apostle will suddenly work what you could never orchestrate. May you be found not seeking the things of this life so much that your soul grows feeble, but strong in love, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord. He is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, not according to your careful list, but according to the power that works in us. Amen.
You ask for the Lord to anoint your outreach and your sermons, yet observe how Paul, when recounting his authority, pointed to his former life and his sudden conversion as proof that God alone taught him. He did not first run about demanding that God rebuke the Judaizers. He entrusted the troublemakers to God, saying only that whoever they are, they shall bear their judgment. Do you see? The good conduct of one must not become an encouragement to the evil disposition of another, but neither must your peace be destroyed by making their faults your constant meditation. You even confess that you spoke of a matter to others which you should not have done, forgive me for saying it plainly, but this is a sign of a heart that has not yet learned to keep still and let the Spirit work. The wind blows where it wills, and you hear its sound, but cannot tell where it comes from or where it goes. So is everyone who is born of the Spirit. Will you be overanxious about the working of the Holy Spirit in the lives of those you name, when you cannot even control the wind? God does not need you to direct His arm like a general ordering troops. He is mighty in battle, and He has already led captivity captive. The enemy is weaker than you think.
You ask for miracles for a young person, for healing, for help with exams. All these are good to ask. But love is the more excellent way. If you speak with tongues of men and angels and have not love, you are a sounding brass. Even if you have all knowledge, all faith to remove mountains, all prophetic insight into what is wrong with others, and you hand over your body to be burned in zeal, without love it profits nothing. Your long request is full of names and circumstances, but is your love patient and kind? Does it not envy? Does it not parade itself, is it not puffed up? Love does not behave rudely, does not seek its own, is not provoked, thinks no evil. You ask God to severely confront evil and convict. Yet the Lord said, “The Kingdom of God is come unto you.” He came to preach deliverance to captives. Are you yourself a captive to resentment or a disordered concern about what others are doing? Then receive that deliverance first.
Let food and baths and the necessary affairs of life have their appointed time, but let the teaching of heavenly philosophy have no separate time, let every season belong to it. This means that when you bring your requests, you must also bring a heart that hungers for God Himself, not merely for God to fix things outwardly. You ask Him to promote your church, to anoint the prayer gathering, to bring back those who have left. These are worthy prayers. Yet see how Paul spoke: “We commend not ourselves, but speak as giving you occasion to glory.” In all his perils and straits, he did not exalt himself or demand immediate relief. He saw his weakness as the stage for divine power. Why are you cast down? The Comforter is with you. The foundation of love is strong as death. That love made the timid courageous; it will make you able to bear these interpersonal trials without growing bitter.
I charge you, therefore: In season, out of season, reprove, rebuke, exhort, yes, but begin with your own soul. Make yourself of no account before God. Trust that He will deal with those who trouble you, and pray for them with true charity, not as one who wishes them merely to be convicted for your comfort, but that they may find salvation and healing. Leave the timing to Him. Do not make the whole day’s meditation a rehearsal of your hurts. Meditate instead on His law day and night. Then the God who called Paul from being a persecutor to an apostle will suddenly work what you could never orchestrate. May you be found not seeking the things of this life so much that your soul grows feeble, but strong in love, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord. He is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, not according to your careful list, but according to the power that works in us. Amen.
