Theme: Rejoicing in Persecution
Text: 1 Peter 4:13 "But rejoice, inasmuch as you are partakers of Christ's sufferings; that, when his glory shall be revealed, you may be glad also with exceeding joy."
Central Theme
The anointing provokes opposition from those resistant to the Holy Spirit's movement, creating worship opportunities.
Three Responses to Anointing
- Acceptance - Recognition of Jesus as Messiah and conversion
- Respectful Distance - Acknowledgment of God's power without commitment
- Resistance - Religious leaders opposing the Spirit's work (provides worship opportunity)
Core Teaching Points
1. Intercessory Power of Anointed Worshippers
Prayers from devoted worshippers transform persecutors through Christ's love expressed on behalf of opponents. Stephen's forgiveness prayer during martyrdom exemplifies this; similar intercession changed Saul from murderer to disciple.
2. Early Church Persecution Context
The apostles rejoiced despite beatings and threats because they recognized suffering for Christ's name as privilege. Persecuting believers constitutes persecuting Christ Himself.
3. Paul's Worship Foundation
Revealed at conversion that suffering would characterize his ministry, Paul prioritized worship above circumstances. His framework: "that I might finish my course with joy" regardless of imprisonment or provision status.
4. Characteristics of Persecution-Based Worship
- Love-motivated rejoicing, not confrontational provocation
- Humble submission rather than deliberate aggressiveness
- Recognition of heavenly reward perspective
Summary
- No one is beyond becoming a worshipper through intercessory prayer
- Opposition creates legitimate worship occasions
- Ministry flourishes when built on worship foundation
- Persecution rejoicing reflects eternal reward consciousness