Acts 1:12-26; 1 Peter 4:12-19, 6:6-11; John 17:1-11

The problem we have with God’s choices isn’t unique to Americans. All people naturally resist God and His will. In our sinfulness, we desire to glorify ourselves rather than glorify God. We recognize (and even expect) this in those people who don’t know Christ. But it’s just as great a problem for Christians as it is for unbelievers. Even though we belong to Christ and confess our trust in Him, in our weakness we hesitate to follow Him into the glory that He has chosen for us. Instead, we seek out the glory that suites us — glory that looks strikingly like the glory that the world desires and exalts. We prefer and pursue a glory that comes without suffering rather than the glory that is found in suffering. But the glory we seek is neither what God has chosen for us nor is it His glory. It’s simply our glory dressed up as His.
Jesus knew that He would have to suffer in order to glorify the Father. He also knew that all of His followers — from the first disciples to us and those who will come after us — would have to suffer in this world to glorify Him. His desire as He resolutely embraced the Cross suffering through which He would glorify the Father and that we would glorify Him. He knew that such glory necessarily involves the Cross — for Him and for us. This is why He prayed for us and not for the world (John 17:9). We’ve been chosen to glorify God which invariably leads us into suffering for the sake of His name — and just as invariably leads us, after we have suffered for a little while, to His eternal glory.
Click here to listen to the sermon "Chosen to Glorify God" (or right-click to download the MP3 file).
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