The Commercial Appeal

Being Christian can bring loneliness, unpopulari­ty

- FROM THE WRITINGS OF THE REV. BILLY GRAHAM This column is based on the words and writings of the late Rev. Billy Graham.

Q: I became a Christian a few years ago and I thought my troubles would go away. Now that I have learned more from the Bible, I realize that being a Christian can add to our problems. During COVID-19 I have seen how the church has come under attack. Why is this?

— C.T.

A: It’s never easy to be a Christian; it can bring its own loneliness, unpopulari­ty, and problems.

It’s human nature to dislike, resent, or regard with suspicion anyone who is “different.” This is one of the great problems today. Tribal difference­s, class difference­s, ethnic difference­s, and cultural difference­s separate people. Such difference­s often lead not only to misunderst­anding, but to war.

When the Christian brings the standards of Jesus Christ to bear upon life in a materialis­tic and secularist­ic world, it is often resented. Because the moral and spiritual demands of Jesus Christ are so high, they often set the Christian “apart.” This can bring about suffering, fear, and even persecutio­n. One of the answers to the “why” of suffering is given in the Bible: “For a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These have come so that your faith — of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire — may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed” (1 Peter 1:6-7, NIV). This is the key to understand­ing trouble that comes to Christians — to bring honor and glory to God.

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