Barbara Lee, MSET
Many Christians in the United States wonder if they would be able to âsuffer for Christâ. Now, has anyone ever âsuffered for Christâ? How is this form of suffering different from our normal daily ordeals or hardships?Â
SCRIPTURE:  12 Dear friends, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal that has come on you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you. 13 But rejoice inasmuch as you participate in the sufferings of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed. 14 If you are insulted because of the name of Christ, you are blessed, for the Spirit of glory and of God rests on you. 16 However, if you suffer as a Christian, do not be ashamed, but praise God that you bear that name. (1 Peter 4: 12-14, 16; NIV)
An Unwanted Blessing
My sisterâs Bible class was discussing that in the United States it appears that we have not been âcalled to suffer for Christâ. After all, we arenât tortured or killed due to our statement of faith when we go to church on Sunday or carry our own Bibles. Yet, my sister commented, âYou have suffered greatly for Christ.â And this is the truth Iâve endured since at least 2015.
For about 12 years, I taught in the New Jersey Juvenile âCorrections Systemâ. For about 10 years, I taught full-time in juvenile âcorrectionsâ in northernmost New Jersey. The last 2 years were atrocious with enforcement of the âmodern educational ideologyâ. As teachers, we were told what we âcould think, believe, and sayâ. I faced daily threats and weekly harassment which meant that I faced a very unsafe and hazardous working environment. Management wanted proper automatons. Often, I was able to âsidestepâ the inmateâs questions or be abstruse in my answer. Yet I felt an âincreasing sense of foreboding uneasinessâ and had an âawarenessâ that momentarily I would be called to either defend my faith or just âgo with the flow into Hellâ. That day, there were only 2 choices for me, and I resolved to defend my faith in Christ. I just didnât know what it would TRULY cost me.Â
 In the classroom, an inmate told me about the FACT of evolution and told me of his belief about humans coming from apes. (You read that correctly.) I said that evolution is a theory and explains the similarities and differences in the world with different breeds of dogs, cats, and other living organisms. The inmate confronted me that it is a theory, and it is therefore a fact. I explained that a theory is a process of discovering the truth. Then (in front of the full class, and 2 additional classes of students, teachers, and the officers), I felt His Spirit fill me as I allowed His Spirit to confront the inmatesâ deceptions that they were âaccidental by-products of pond scumâ and therefore not responsible for their actions.Â
Days later, an inmate who had been in one of those classes, confronted me at my desk in a different building and demanded that he be permitted to go on the computer under my access code (which was a âfiring offenseâ). I refused his demand; so he reached across the desk, gripped my hand, pulling and pushing me across the desk multiple times. I screamed to get out of the classroom and locked the door. I knew I was severely injured since I spent hours trying to just sign my name and write a documentary narrative about the assault. A month later, I completed the resignation process, never to return.Â
I retained a New Jersey legal firm for Workerâs Compensation, and over 5 years received no medical care through Workerâs Compensation. After the assault, Delaware Medicaid provided me with all appropriate surgeries which seem to me to be directly related to the assault. Since I am no longer in the âInjustice Systemâ, it appears I just donât understand âthe lawâ. Yet the consequences of the assault have been unparalleled. I have had 1 cervical fusion of my neck (3-7) and 3 lumbar fusions (from my 3rd vertebrae which is near the base of my ribcage to the end of my spine) trying to repair the extensive damage from the assault.Â
Unwanted Lessons
Many Biblical characters endured âfiery ordealsâ. The most logical examples of enduring âfiery trialsâ would be Daniel, Joseph, and Esther who encountered âstrangeâ, life-shattering experiences. Daniel was (supposedly) a teenager when he was taken to another country and forced to renounce everything that was of value to him. Joseph was a spoiled, young man who was sold into slavery, and then taken to another country and accused of crimes that he didnât commit. Esther was a young woman who was taken to another country, and she won the Miss World Pageant. She was blatantly told to not speak of her faith. Yet, she followed Godâs directions through her uncle and wisely saved the Hebrew nation. Each of these people exemplified faith when it was critical.Â
Moses, Gideon, and Joshua encountered âfiery trialsâ of a different sort. Moses had to reject his âadopted cultureâ and lead perhaps an âarmyâ of millions of complaining âsheepâ through the wilderness. Each sheep âknewâ that they could do a better job than Moses. Gideon had significant âself-esteemâ issues as God told him to fight against a far more powerful and prepared army. Like most people, Gideon tried to work out the solution based on his understanding and wisdom but had to listen to hear Godâs mystifying directions. Joshua took the âarmy of sheepâ from Moses and had to be prepared to enforce a âdeath penaltyâ on any friend or family member who refused to follow Godâs directions.Â
So, as a Christian, would these âfiery ordealsâ seem something âstrangeâ to you? The âgreatsââ Daniel, Joseph, Esther, Moses, Gideon, and Joshua made their choice to suffer for their faith. But, if you are given the choice to suffer for Christâ, could you? Each of these people fought battles to defend the Truth of God. Each character risked their life, and the lives of those that they loved, to speak the truth of God.
So, my friend, the question is: What would you do for Christ?