Tribulations of the Believer
Ephesians 3:13
Why I desire that you faint not at my tribulations for you, which is your glory.


The very word "tribulation" is full of significance in regard to the Christian's trials. Tribulatio is the Latin for the winnowing or thrashing out of the corn from the husk. The early Christians, seeing that God intended sorrow as a holy discipline, gave to the word a high and spiritual import, which was, to its original meaning, as the soul of man is to his body. When sorrow came to them they called it tribulatio, the separation of the chaff that was in them from the wheat. And the Christian will so look at afflictions. They come to him as they did before he was brought to Christ. Now, however, he has a strength to bear them which he had not before. They sometimes come like a flood; sometimes in the small worries of his daily life. As when the sculptor, working on the marble block, with heavy strokes brings off large pieces of the stone, and again with nice and delicate touches develops the folds of the robe and the beauty of the form, so does God at one time bring upon us great afflictions, at another smaller griefs, but always in him who receives them rightly is He bringing out the character of Christ. He first makes the heart plastic in the fires of tribulation, and then, as with a royal signet, imprints upon it the image of His Son.

(J. G. Pilkington.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Wherefore I desire that ye faint not at my tribulations for you, which is your glory.

WEB: Therefore I ask that you may not lose heart at my troubles for you, which are your glory.




Tribulation, the Church's Glory
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