Have you ever had a season where it seemed life couldn’t get any worse?
Only for something new and even harder to come along?
Today’s verse, James 1:2–3, helps us put those seasons into perspective.
"Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance." - James 1:2–3 NIV
It’s easy to read verses like this and think:
“That might work for some people, but their trials aren’t as hard as mine!”
The trap here is we start comparing our situation with other peoples’, rather than looking at our hardship from God’s perspective.
What helps me most is pausing to consider three things:
Who wrote this letter?
Whom did he write to?
What was happening in their lives at the time?
Reframing Trials in James 1:2–3
James, Jesus’ older brother, wrote this letter to the early Church during a time being a Christian wasn’t just hard, it was dangerous.
In fact, James would soon find out, as he was stoned to death for following Jesus.
So we’re not hearing from a guy whose life was sunshine and rainbows.
We’re learning from a man who would endure death itself — and could still “consider it pure joy.”
James is reframing the purpose of trials and recasting our source of joy!
The truth is, we don’t live in joy because our context gives us comfortable lives.
We have Jesus’ “complete” joy in us (John 15:11).
And eternal joy is such a profound prize Jesus was able to “endure the cross” and “despise” its shame (Hebrews 12:2)!
Trials aren't obstacles to true joy - they are opportunities for it.
Don’t Fall, Soar
I love how F.J.A. Hort explains James 1:2–3:
“The Christian must expect to be jostled by trials on the Christian way. All kinds of experiences will come to us. 
"There will be the test of the sorrows and the disappointments which seek to take our faith away.
"There will be the test of the seductions which seek to lure us from the right way.
"There will be the tests of the dangers, the sacrifices and the unpopularity which are so much a part of the Christian way.
"But they are not meant to make us fall; they are meant to make us soar.
"They are not meant to defeat us; they are meant to be defeated.
"They are not meant to make us weaker; they are meant to make us stronger.
"Therefore, we should not complain about them; we should rejoice in them.
"Christians are like athletes.
"The heavier the course of training they undergo, the more they are glad, because they know that it is preparing them all the better for victorious effort.”
Find Your Pure Joy
So, we’ve talked trials and learned a new perspective: trials are not roadblocks, but stepping-stones.
They’re not meant to bring us down - they’re meant to make us soar.
Remember James?
Even in bitter persecution, he found joy.
A joy so deep, it came from Jesus himself.
Joy because God uses trials to build endurance and perseverance.
Not for drudgery, but for joy.
Not simply for duty, but for delight.
Today’s devotion by Jordan Loftis. Bestselling author and editor of Short Daily Devotions
Jordan from SDD
Jordan Loftis
President and Editor
Jordan writes and speaks about how to study and live out the Bible. He’s the author of two books, Today We Win and The Men With Bare Feet, host of The Bible Better Podcast, and the president and editor of Short Daily Devotions.
Jordan is also the founder of Story Chorus, an innovative publishing company, and the cofounder of It’s Your Time Wellness with his wife, where they coach people to optimal health. He lives with his beautiful wife and three kids in Bismarck, North Dakota.
Get every believer in the Word every day. Shortdailydevotions.com is just what it sounds like, a short, Christian daily devotional that can be read either on the website’s main page, or in a Monday through Friday email. The devotions are a quick read and an effort to love and edify God’s people amidst the rush of our busy lives. They are intended as a supplement to your daily walk with Jesus as you study the Bible, pray, and fellowship with Christian brothers and sisters.
You might also like:
Streams in my desert: Our Daily Trials - God allows trials - for us to grow, develop character, and produce intimacy in relationships. A trial is not a temptation. We often say God is tempting us. He never does. Temptation happens when we are dragged away by our own desires. The difference between a temptation and a trial is that a tempter is cheering for you to lose and someone putting you through a trial or test wants desperately for you to win. Trials become an opportunity to form the character of Christ within us and release our true identity


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