Today’s Scripture: Philippians 4:12
“I know how to be brought low.”
Philip Hughes said, “every believer must learn that human weakness and divine grace go hand in hand together.” Paul had learned that lesson well. He said, “Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me” (2 Corinthians 12:9).
Paul had learned that God’s grace is indeed sufficient; his divine enabling through the power of the Holy Spirit would sustain him in the midst of the torments of his thorn, and in the depths of other “weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities” (verse 10).
When Paul wrote these words to the Corinthians, it had been fourteen years since Paul received those surpassingly great revelations. If we assume the thorn was given to him at about the same time, and that the three instances when he pleaded for its removal occurred soon afterward, we can say that Paul had had almost fourteen years to prove the sufficiency of God’s grace. Hardships, troubles, and dangers would continue unabated (2 Corinthians 11:25-28).
Paul was no ivory tower theologian. He did not write from the comfortable confines of a minister’s study or a counselor’s office (nor, for that matter, does any competent pastor or counselor today). Paul wrote from raw experience because he “had been there.” The anguish he experienced was real anguish, and the grace he received was real grace. It was not theoretical, nor make-believe, nor merely “whistling in the dark” to keep up his courage. No, Paul experienced a very concrete expression of God’s love and power as the Holy Spirit ministered comfort and encouragement to him in the midst of affliction. (Excerpt taken from Transforming Grace)