2 Corinthians 12:1-10 · Paul’s Vision and His Thorn
Redefining Life
2 Corinthians 12:1-10
Sermon
by King Duncan
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If I were to say, "He-e-e-e-e-ere's Johnny!" what image would come to your mind? If you're old enough, you will probably think of "The Tonight Show," with Johnny Carson. What if I came out here and said, "Let's get ready to rummmmmble!" What comes to mind? Some of our younger people might recognize this as the opening of a professional wrestling show.

I don't know if you have ever thought about the importance of a good introduction. It is very important to an entertainer or a speaker or a performer of any kind that he or she be properly introduced to the audience prior to coming out. A good, upbeat introduction puts the crowd in a much better mood to respond than a rambling, unprepared intro.

Country music star Merle Haggard once gave a concert for a promoter who was quite star-struck. This promoter made no secret of the fact that his biggest ambition in life was to introduce Merle at a concert. He was so persistent in his request to perform this act of introducing Merle to an audience that Haggard's manager finally gave in.

The manager gave clear instructions, though. "We don't want you up there ad-libbing a fancy introduction, understand? All you say is "˜Ladies and gentlemen, here he is--the poet of the common man--Merle Haggard!' You got that? That's all you say! The poet of the common man--Merle Haggard!"

The promoter assured the manager that he understood exactly what he was supposed to do. But when it came time to bring Merle on stage the promoter got excited and forgot about the line, "the poet of the common man." Instead, he exclaimed: "Ladies and gentlemen! Here he is, Merle Haggard!--the POOR and COMMON man." (1) Well, that's not quite what the manager had in mind. But life is like that. One minute you're a celebrity, the next minute you're a poor and common man or woman.

Nobody wants to be thought of as common, do we? We all want to be like the citizens of storyteller Garrison Keillor's fictional town of Lake Wobegon: "Where all the women are strong, all the men are good looking, and all the children are above average." We smile when we see polls that show that eighty per cent of men rate themselves as above average athletically, because we know that nobody--[especially men]--wants to be thought of as below average--in ability, in social status, in how we look, in what we've accumulated or what we've accomplished. And so we strut around with one intent--to convince others that we are, at least, above average.

If anyone had the right to claim "above average" status, it would be the apostle Paul. He was an intelligent and ambitious man. He was persuasive, a leader in his community, a man who could communicate powerfully with his voice or his pen. Before his conversion to Christ, Paul was a passionate persecutor of Christians. After his conversion, he became the most influential Christian evangelist in history. God gave him visions and miraculous powers. In Acts 19: 1112, we read, "God did extraordinary miracles through Paul, so that even handkerchiefs and aprons that had touched him were taken to the sick, and their illnesses were cured and the evil spirits left them." (NIV)

In fact, Paul could have been the first Christian celebrity, on a par with Christian rock stars and televangelists today. He could have taken his show on the road. If he had been smart--if he'd only had a good business manager--he could have made big bucks selling prayer cloths and pamphlets on how to live the "victorious" Christian life. But Paul didn't take advantage of these opportunities. You and I say, "Way to go, Paul. We don't like those televised religious hucksters, anyway." Surprisingly, though, Paul was criticized for not cashing in. Can you imagine that? He was criticized for his humility and his authenticity.

In this passage, Paul responds to criticism from false prophets in the Corinthian church. They suggested that if Paul were really from God, he would brag about his visions and miraculous powers. If he were truly God's man, he'd be tooting his own horn, or turning a profit. Surely he wouldn't be such a "poor and common" man.

Paul replied that though he has had awesome visions from God, "nothing is to be gained" from boasting about it. In verses 7 through 10, we learn what separates Paul from the false prophets:

"To keep me from becoming conceited because of these surpassingly great revelations," Paul writes, "there was given me a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But he said to me, "˜My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.' Therefore, I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ's power may rest on me. That is why, for Christ's sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong." (NIV)

Until the end of time, theologians will debate what Paul's "thorn in the flesh" was. No one knows. It must have caused him great suffering, though. And yet, according to Lawrence O. Richards in The 365-Day Devotional Commentary, when Paul writes "there was given me a thorn in my flesh," he uses the same verb form for "was given" that he uses in other places to indicate that he had received a special favor from God. (2)

How could Paul view his suffering as a special favor? How could he possibly delight in this thing that tormented him? How could he possibly write that he delighted "in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties."

Paul trusted God. He knew his life was in God's hand. Maybe that is why in Romans 8 he could write, "all things work to the good of those who love Him" (v. 27). "All things." What a radical statement. All things. Not some things. But all things. Even a thorn in the flesh. So using Paul's example, let's give some thought to ways we can re-define our lives so we see suffering as a positive, and not as a negative. Now for the next few moments I need for you to put on your thinking cap. Use your imagination. How can we re-define the negative qualities of suffering in our lives as positive qualities?

Let's start with this: suffering destroys our illusions. This is a hard teaching, but stay with me. Suffering destroys our illusions. Most of us are under the illusion that our primary purpose in life is the pursuit of our own happiness. My life is all about me and my desires, me and my agenda, me and my self-actualization. Then something comes along that doesn't fit in with our plan: a divorce, a diagnosis, a death, a disruption. And as our perfect self-centered world disintegrates right before our eyes, we wonder where to turn. It is then we realize that the world isn't built around us and our desires. It is a beautiful world, a wonderful world, but it is not a world that caters to our every whim.

Pastor Paul R. Smith tells of a young woman in his congregation who developed cancer when she was very young. The disease left her unable to have children. She responded to this heartbreak as people often do, with increased faith in God. As she told Pastor Smith, "I need that hole in my life to keep me focused on [God]." (3)

Do you have a hole in your life? Maybe that hole is actually pushing you farther away from God. Only you can decide what the focus of your life will be. Will your suffering cause you to focus inward in self-pity and rage, or will it cause you to focus on God and the greatness of His strength?

At age 38, Los Angeles Dodger star Brett Butler was also diagnosed with cancer. Throughout his surgeries and treatments, Butler's faith sustained him. In an interview concerning this difficult adversary of cancer, Butler focused on the opportunity he had to witness for Christ. Then he made this statement: "Now I'll be able to measure my success from the lowest point in my life." (4) Wow! Brett Butler's illusions had been stripped away. All that was left was faith. But that faith helped see him through.

A self-centered life is small and miserable. What the world deems success is, ultimately, not very fulfilling. Suffering demolishes our illusions and points us in the direction of true peace and fulfillment. So, what's one positive thing we can say about suffering? It destroys our illusions about life. Here's another.

Suffering destroys our happiness. The lesson gets even harder. Suffering takes away our happiness. Can that ever be good? Possibly. When we are happy, we don't yearn for God.

Pay close attention now. I'm happy because my team won the championships, I'm happy because I got the big promotion, I'm happy because I'm in love. But what happens when the team doesn't win, when you're passed over for the promotion, when your spouse says, "We need to talk"? Does your happiness fly out the window? Sometimes it does. What, then, is left? That depends what you've got in reserve. Many people who have suffered great tragedies discover that when happiness is gone, joy and peace, which have been there all along, but which have been masked by the desperate need to be happy, begin to emerge.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a Protestant pastor who was imprisoned and eventually executed by the Nazis during World War II. From his prison cell, Bonhoeffer wrote letters full of faith and hope. This is a quote from a letter he wrote to his sister: "I think that God is nearer to suffering than to happiness, and to find God in this way gives peace and rest and a strong and courageous heart." (5)

Happiness is not dependent on God's presence. Hitler and Charles Manson probably experienced moments of happiness. But did they ever know true joy, hope, peace, or strength? I doubt it. Remember Paul's words in Romans 5: 3-5. ". . . we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance produces character; and character produces hope. And hope never disappoints us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us."

This is a hard but important lesson Paul is trying to teach us: suffering can be positive if it destroys our illusions and takes away our happiness, for these may be keeping us from God.

But there is one thing more suffering does for us. Suffering makes us desperate. This is getting heavy. Suffering makes us desperate. And this, too, can be a good thing, because that's when God enters into the situation. It is when we are at our weakest that we call on the greatest power in the universe. It is only when we are completely broken and overwhelmed by our situation that we finally give up and let God be God. If you've ever faced a situation that threatened to overwhelm you, then you understand the pain behind Paul's words: "Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me."

Have you ever been at a point where, even if you could pray, all you were able to pray was: "God, have mercy"?

Listen to how God answers Paul's prayer. God says, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness." That verb "made perfect" can also be translated as "carried out" or "completed." God's power is completed in our weakness. And then we find, as the apostle Paul wrote in Philippians 4: 13, that "I can do everything through him who gives me strength." (emphasis mine)

Notice that God did not promise to take Paul's thorn in the flesh from him. All God said was, "My grace is sufficient." Paul would never be overwhelmed by his thorn, he would never be undone by it, never scandalized by it. God's grace was sufficient.

In the year 2000, Pastor Ed Dobson was diagnosed with ALS, or Lou Gehrig's disease. He asked a pastor friend to anoint him with oil and pray for his healing. The two men discussed the fact that sometimes God answers a prayer for healing just the way we want Him to, and sometimes He doesn't. Sometimes we receive spiritual healing instead. And then Pastor Dobson's friend left him with this advice: "You need to get lost in the wonder of God. If you'll get lost in that wonder, who knows what He'll do for you." (6)

The apostle Paul was surrounded by threats, persecution, and suffering. How did he endure it? He got lost in the wonder of God, and that, my friends, is a pretty good prescription for anything that happens to us in life.


1. "Whisperin' Bill Anderson. I Hope You're Living As High On The Hog As The Pig You Turned Out To Be (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1993), p. 34. 

2. Lawrence O. Richards. The 365-Day Devotional Commentary (Colorado Springs, CO: ChariotVictor Publishing, 1990), p. 957. 

3. Paul Smith, Romans 8:28: God's Plan For Our Good (Chicago: Moody Press, 2000), pp. 163-166. 

4. The Greatest Lesson I've Ever Learned, Vonette Zachary Bright, ed., (San Bernardino, CA: Here's Life Publishers, 1990), p. 49. 

5. "In Their Own Words" By Col. William Francis, The Asbury Herald, Volume 112, No. 2 & 3, pp. 10-11. 

6. "Leave Room for God," an interview with Pastor Ed Dobson, Leadership, Fall 2001, p. 34. 

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan