When Your Faith Is On Trial
Join Pastor Scott Cannon for a powerful message exploring what happens when our faith is put on trial. Diving into 1 Peter 4:12–19, this sermon reveals that there is meaning, purpose, and a divine intention behind the difficult seasons we experience.
Using an illustration from an arborist, Pastor Scott explains how trees develop a “root flare” at their base to widen and anchor themselves when facing heavy winds. In the same way, the fierce storms of life are designed to flex our spiritual muscles, breaking us down to build us back up into more mature, deeply rooted followers of Jesus.
The message unpacks three distinct types of human suffering:
• Common Suffering: Hardships that happen simply because we are human beings living in a broken world, like sickness or a leaky utility.
• Carnal Suffering: Consequences and pain that we bring upon ourselves through our own sinful choices, pride, or compromises.
• Christian Suffering: Intentionally facing trials, mockery, or systemic pressure simply for choosing to stand up for righteousness and the name of Jesus.
To navigate these fiery ordeals, Pastor Scott outlines five keys to standing firm:
1. Realize suffering is bound to happen: Salvation is a completely free gift, but living it out puts a spiritual target on your back.
2. Rejoice when suffering does happen: True joy is a conscious internal choice based on our confidence in Jesus, allowing us deep fellowship with Him.
3. Refuse to be ashamed: Do not run from situations that put your faith on display; proudly stand as a Christian to provide a watching world with evidence that God is real.
4. Remember the reward you will receive: Earthly athletic trophies eventually tarnish and fade, but enduring light afflictions for Christ produces an incomparable eternal weight of glory.
5. Remain faithful to God: Entrust your soul to your faithful Creator even when the situation makes no sense, trading your fragile self-reliance for deep reliance on Him.
Don’t quit on God in the middle of the fire. Lean directly into the wind and allow the trial to refine, prove, and strengthen your testimony.