Trust the Process
2 Corinthians 1:8-10 (NASB)
In 2 Cor. 1:8 we read, “We do not want you to be uninformed about our affliction which came to us in Asia” (NASB). Paul was compelled to share with the Corinthians the difficult time they had been through. It’s not clear exactly what was afflicting them but whatever it was it was markedly difficult and he tells them, “We were burdened excessively, beyond our strength so that we despaired even of life.” They were pushed so far out and beyond themselves that there was a complete loss of hope. Yet, it was all by design. It was a divine invitation to a place that would ultimately bring profound change to their lives though they probably didn’t realize it at the time. It sure didn’t feel like an invitation – “indeed, we had the sentence of death within ourselves” (vs. 9) – but God was working. From burden to despair to feeling that sentence of death, all of it was working together for this: “In order that we should not trust in ourselves but in God who raises the dead” (vs. 9).
Trusting in ourselves. It’s the source of so many of our troubles and so much of our unrest. Dealing with it sometimes requires more difficult measures, as evidenced by Paul’s testimony. It is interesting to note the distinction he made when he said that we should trust not just in God, but in God
who raises the dead. That’s significant. It speaks volumes in light of their situation. God wasn’t going to just move in their circumstances, which is so often only what we are only prone to believe for. No, He was going to raise to life for them a new way of living and doing things. That death they were feeling? I believe a large part of it was the death of their self-reliance and familiar ways of doing things that their circumstances were exposing. It was the death of trusting in themselves, their own strengths and their own abilities. They were feeling it and grieving it as their affliction pressed it out of them. Being in a situation that greatly burdened them and for which they could do nothing about forced the issue. What happened on the other side of it? Nothing short of glorious. In fact, it was miraculous! It was RESURRECTION. And, of course, there can be no resurrection without death. He took their dead, self-reliant trust and raised it to fully functioning trust in Him. He’ll do no less for us when we endure the pressing and let the process work. It is a truly beautiful exchange.
The Bible says in Prov. 28:26, “Those who trust in themselves are fools” (NIV). Clearly, it is unwise. But unlearning trust in ourselves and learning to
really
trust God is not a quick fix. We are always on the spectrum of growing in it. The process can be challenging but it is necessary if we are going to fully live in what is possible. The depth of the challenge is simply a picture of the depth of the freedom and reworking that He intends to bring. It is a false hope to live only within our strength. It is a false way of living to live only within our abilities. As God allows circumstances to “come to us” and we remain steadfast, walk through them and trust the process He is requiring of us, the reward of a resurrected trust in Him will be more than worth it. It won’t just change us by improving our existing trust; it will transform us by fundamentally shifting it into an entirely new trust resurrected by the power of Jesus. It will far outweigh the challenging process we may have to face to get there and we can stand confidently in the truth that, “It was God who preserved us, it is He who still preserves us and we trust Him to keep us safe in the future. We fasten our hopes on Him” (2 Cor. 1:10 Phillips/TPT).
Recommended Worship:
1. Trust – Pat Barrett
2. That’s the Power – Hillsongs Worship
3. Trust in God – Elevation Worship


