Weakness Builds Strength

Weakness Builds Strength

Nobody wants to be seen as weak.  We want to be strong; we want others to think we are strong.  We tend to hide, minimize, or excuse our weaknesses.  

But what if true strength comes from embracing our weaknesses?  

The apostle Paul was a powerful man of God – he was educated, influential, experienced, wise.  His ministry was changing the world!  And yet, he was only human.  He had weaknesses just like you and me.  In God’s good purposes, Paul dealt with a thorn in his flesh to make sure he never forgot just how weak he was.    

We don’t know Paul’s affliction, but whatever it was, God allowed it to remain. Paul pleaded, but in the Lord’s wisdom, that thorn stayed. Paul had to hear from the Lord – just as you and I do – “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”  

We don’t need human strength – not physical power, intellectual dominance, or outstanding aptitude.  What we truly need is God and his power.  And so, we can boast about our weaknesses, because in that posture the power of Christ can truly fill us.  In admitting our difficulties and deficiencies, fears and failures, sins and struggles, we open ourselves up to rely fully on the Lord.  When I am weak, then I am strong!  

Weakness builds strength (1)

In the next chapter, Paul is discussing how he’ll need to confront opposition in the church.  He warns that he will take a powerful posture to rebuke them.  

Paul recognizes that in his ministry, he is an agent of Christ.  Although he didn’t experience sin, Christ experienced human weakness in his earthly life.  But he also experienced astounding victory and power in his resurrection.  And so, Paul says, we too are weak in Christ – since we have died with him.  But in our ministry to others, we live with him by the power of God.  While you and I may not be confronting false teachers in the church who oppose the true Gospel, there are times when we need to take postures of strength.  In parenting, sharing Christ, church leadership, and many other areas, we need to operate with courage and power.  But this begins with weakness.  Internal strength and strength to deal with others begins by dying with Christ, so we can rise with Christ.  

When I am weak, then I am strong. 

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