Monday, February 17, 2025

Romans 5:3,4: Hope and an Angel on the Downtown Eastside.

Presented to Nipawin and Tisdale Corps on April 20, 2008; Swift Current Corps on August 09, 2009; Corps 614 Regent Park on May 15, 2016; and Alberni Valley Ministries on February 16, 2025 by Captain (Now Major) Michael Ramsay

  

This is the 2025 Alberni Valley version. To view the previous version, click here: https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2008/04/romans-534-hope-and-angel-on-downtown.html

  

I have shared this story with you previously:

 

When our oldest two children were just little, we served with The Salvation Army in North America’s poorest postal code - Vancouver’s downtown eastside. I remember one day – one morning, I was mugged. I knew better but I wasn’t paying attention. It was early in the morning and I was right on Main and Hastings – that most infamous intersection in this most infamous neighbourhood and I was on the pay phone with Susan (remember those things!) Someone came running up behind me, grabbed my briefcase and tore down Main Street. In the briefcase was my laptop and all the information for the summer school program I was running for the kids in the area; so, like anyone mugged in the depths of skid row, I’m sure, I…well, I chased the mugger.

 

I followed him down Main Street through Chinatown across busy streets and around the myriad of mazes that are Vancouver’s back alleys. Scaring rats, jumping over sleeping street folk, I pursued my assailant. When I was within reach of him… I fell right in front of a bus and though I escaped from in front of the bus with my life, the mugger escaped with my briefcase, my laptop, and my files for the kids.

 

It was when I was walking back, completely distraught and despondent from this incident, that I experienced the miracle that happened: I encountered an angel, a messenger of God, in the back alleys of Vancouver’s storied downtown eastside. I can still remember vividly; he looked like a ‘dumpster diver;’ he prayed with me and he offered me these words of encouragement from Romans 5:3,4 “...but let us also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.” Inside I sighed. I knew he was right. God gave me these words to encourage me.

 

When the Apostle Paul recorded these words circa 55 AD in his letter to the Romans, he himself had already seen much suffering - he had already spent so much time under arrest, so much time in prison and even now he will be ultimately killed for his faith and tradition suggests that he was even beheaded by the Romans themselves.

 

In the first few verses of Chapter 5 Paul was not only warning the Romans about the persecution and suffering that was coming for him but he was also warning them about the suffering that was coming for them and ultimately he was warning us about the suffering that may be coming for us as we do the Lord’s bidding as well.

 

Now you’ll notice from our text today, that not only are we to endure our suffering but Paul says, depending on your translation, we are to rejoice and even boast in our suffering (cf. Phil 2:17; 1 Pet 4:6, 4:13). 1 Thessalonians 5:18 states that we are even to give thanks in all circumstances (cf. Phil 4:11) and Paul in Philippians 4:4 says, ‘Rejoice in the Lord always and again I say rejoice.’

 

So this is important: we aren’t supposed to lick our wounds when we suffer for doing the Lord’s work; we are to rejoice. Now we should think about what exactly God and Paul are saying here for a moment because it does go against a lot of popular culture and indeed seems to oppose the so-called ‘prosperity gospel’ that is ever so prevalent in our affluent North American culture.

 

This prosperity heresy - the idea that wealth, health and prosperity come to those whom God loves but trials, tribulations and suffering on this earth come to those whom God hates - this prosperity heresy was apparently alive and well in Paul’s day as well but just like it was a lie then, it is not true now.

 

Paul says that we should rejoice in our suffering because - if indeed our suffering is for the gospel of which Paul is not ashamed (1:16) -our suffering will produce perseverance and you know what perseverance is good for right? It gives us the ability to get through more suffering and you know why God gives us that ability to get through more suffering: because we’ve got more difficult times to get through! So as we rejoice in our perseverance through these times we can rejoice because we will be ready for – the even more difficult times that are still to come but there is even more than that.

 

Paul says that through this perseverance we will also develop character. And what is character? 

 

Character is what you get when you survive suffering (joyfully?)

 

Here are some comics that give us Bill Waterson’s perspective:

 


Character is what you get when you survive suffering (joyfully?)




 

 … In my home growing up the phrase ‘It will build character’ was always the answer to the question. “Why should I do that? Why do I have to …rake the leaves, mow the lawn, clean my room, take grade six band? ...It will build character. Well more or less this is what Paul is saying

 

Paul really does say that we should enjoy our character-building experiences. (They are a means to the strength of the Lord.) In Philippians 1 Paul says that whatever happens, everything will be okay because living is Christ and even to die is gain because there is the resurrection ahead. We really have nothing to lose! To die is gain and to live, to live is Christ! (Phil 1:21)

 

Paul had a lot that was building his character with all his time in jail and the Roman Christians had great opportunities to develop character as they faced lions in the Coliseum and my mugging on the downtown eastside wasn’t our first experience with loss nor was it our last but it was directly related to our work for the Lord and this period was extremely significant in our lives.

 

When I was mugged and my laptop containing all the information for The Salvation Army’s tutoring ministry was stolen it was only the beginning. My foot was injured, my hands were inexplicably painfully swollen, my eye was injured (so painfully that I couldn’t even get up for days) and it was later re-injured too- I required surgery; Sarah-Grace, who was 2 at the time suffered seizures in front of our eyes, our car stopped working; we ran a transition house out of the DTES then: a person in our home was struggling with heroin addiction, the police visited our home and encouraged a roommate of ours to leave and so many more things that even a chain of attacks straight from the Enemy. We were serving the Lord, openly and abundantly and we were suffering as we did so and there was more to come.

 

Knowing all this was still to come, after my mugging the Lord sent His messenger - the angel in the form of a downtown eastside resident - to encourage me to perseverance. He told me specifically from Romans 5:3,4, to “...rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.”

 

What is Paul saying about suffering here? He is saying we have to rejoice in it but is he talking about any kind of unpleasant event? Any suffering? Not necessarily. The Greek word here (thlipseis) refers to, more literally, ‘pressure’ that is applied to Christians from the world, from God’s opponents (cf. John 15:18, 16:20). John Stott writes that Thlipseis is “almost a technical term for the suffering which God’s people must expect in [these] last days.” This suffering is something that we can expect as we do the will of God in these last days. When we serve the Lord, there is opposition both spiritual and practical and though the war is won, the battle rages fierce.

 

As we fight in this battle that is our life, there are people, powers and principalities who oppose God and who oppose us. As we fight in this battle, it develops our perseverance, it develops our character, we become like battle-hardened veterans experienced in engaging the foe. We are no longer green. Our character is being built. We know that we can endure. We know that we may live up to what has already been obtained (cf. Phil 3). We can be bold for the gospel (cf. Phil 1). We know we can be counted on to persevere through even more of whatever opposition, whatever pressure the enemy throws our way. We know we can, like Paul says here, we can have hope - because God will never leave us nor forsake us (Romans 3:3,4).


Jesus Christ himself suffered and he rose again on the third day. Jesus Christ himself endured and he is the reason for our hope. And what is our hope in that grows through this suffering, this perseverance and character-building experiences? What is this hope? This hope through Jesus Christ is in the power of the gospel, the power to transform us all (Ro 1:16), our hope is in the Lord Jesus Christ who will never leave us nor forsake us and our hope is in the resurrection of the dead.

 

Paul knows, as we know, that when our bodies fade away it is not the end. We will be in paradise with our Lord but more than that: there is the hope of the ultimate resurrection of the dead. We will rise again.

 

And as the Lord has conquered Sin and Death, he will indeed continue to conquer our own sins that lure us to death and we can have confidence, we can have faith, we can have hope in the resurrection.

 

But even more than that - now I know that there are some serious struggles that each face us each here today. I remember when we were serving in Nipawin and Tisdale, Saskatchewan a father and son perished and another family lost their home in an explosion and fire that rocked the Nipawin.

 

Now our pets are often a source of comfort. Our cats and dogs offer us comfort when we are in times of need. The family whose house was lost in the explosion, they had a dog. The dog didn’t escape. The house exploded and fell in on him. The fire raged and ravaged the site all day and in the night. In the morning, just before 7am when I was bringing the firefighters and SaskEnergy people coffee, we heard it – barking. The dog was barking. You should have heard the firefighters cheer. You should have seen the excitement on their faces. They pulled the dog from the rubble and he wasn’t even hurt, not a bit. The Lord saved the dog. This provided hope for the fire fighters, hope for the SaskEnergy guys, hope for the Emergency Operations Centre staff, and comfort and hope for this family who had already suffered such loss. The Lord provides hope in our suffering.

 

(Some of the work you do at the Army here, btw, the Lord uses to provide that hope to people too – last week alone in this small community you served people 868 Breakfasts, 877 lunches, 946 dinners ​at the Bread of Life​ and 3942 meals to the shelters ​and from the food truck​. We have had 265 overnight guests at our shelter, and so much more)

 

The enemy will attack with whatever Thlipseis (pressure) he can muster. The Enemy does and will attack those of us here that serve the Lord. There is pressure but we must not give in to the temptation to surrender to the pressure. Instead we must boast in our sufferings, experience our new found endurance and character so that we too will continue to experience the faith, the joy, the hope that is in Christ Jesus.

 

Let us all, as Romans 5 says, “...rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.” And this hope will never disappoint us (v.5).

 

Let us pray.