Daily Radio Program with Charles Stanley - In Touch Ministries - Lessons We Learn in Gethsemane - Part 1
Episode Date: March 30, 2026Our Savior accepted God's will—enduring the greatest trial but reaping the greatest reward for His obedience.Donate: https://store.intouch.org/donate/generalSee omnystudio.com/listener for priva...cy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the In Touch podcast with Charles Stanley for Monday, March 30th.
The story of Jesus in the Garden of Getsimony is familiar.
But today, you'll see how it speaks directly to the emotional pain we all experience.
When you are suffering pain, whether it be physical pain or emotional pain,
and it becomes so intense that you even despair of your future, where do you turn?
There are many places you can turn.
but the most helpful, healthiest, most encouraging, the best place you can turn, the most rewarding
place you can turn is to the Word of God. It's all right here. And what God has done,
he's given us in the experiences of his children in the past and of his servants, he's given
us principles. He's shown us how in their lives he worked during those difficulties and
hardship so that you and I might also learn how to deal with these things so that what happens is
because they know how to respond, the very pain that would destroy them ends up in enriching them
and preparing them for greatest service of the Lord. Well, what I want to talk about in this message
is simply this, and that is, I want to talk about the experience Jesus had probably the longest, most
difficult night of his life. I want to talk about lessons we learn in Gethsemini. And I want you to turn,
if you will, to the 26th chapter of Matthew. Jesus has just finished the Lord's supper with him,
and Peter's just told him how faithful he was going to be. And so they crossed the valley up to the
Garden of Githrimony. And now in that garden where Jesus so many times went alone to be alone with the
father, and sometimes no doubt carried his disciples with him. On this night, it is everything but
a peaceful night. So the scripture says beginning in verse 36. Then Jesus came with them to a place
called Githemeny and said to his disciples, sit here while I go over there and pray. And he took with him,
Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, that is James and John, and he began to be grieved and distressed.
Then he said to them,
My soul is deeply grieved, to the point of death.
Remain here and keep watch with me.
And he went a little beyond them and fell in his face and prayed saying,
My father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from me,
yet not as I will, but as you will.
And he came to the disciples and found them sleeping and said to Peter,
so you men could not keep watch for me for one hour.
Keep watching and praying that you may not enter in.
to temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. He went away again a second time and
prayed, saying, my father, if this cannot pass away unless I drink it, your will be done. Again,
he came and found them sleeping for their eyes were heavy. And he left them again and went away
and prayed a third time saying the same thing once more. Then he came to the disciples and
said to them, are you still sleeping and resting? Behold, the hour is at hand and the son of man is
being betrayed into the hands of sinners. Get up, let us be going. Behold, the one who betrays me
is at hand. Now, usually the night in the garden was a wonderful night, but tonight it is a night
of grief, it is a night of warfare and bloodshed. This is a night of all nights in the life
of Christ. No night was so dark, no night was ever so long as this one. So what we have to ask is this.
What lessons can you and I learn from the life of Jesus in just this one night of his life?
Well, I believe we can learn several very important lessons because you see the truth is all of us
go through our nights of difficulty, hardship, trial, suffering, physical, emotional pain.
sometimes they only last the night.
Sometimes they last night after night after night.
Sometimes they only last the day, but other times they last day after day after day.
Sometimes it's only a year.
And then those times when it's year after year after year.
How do we respond when we go through those difficulties in trials and life?
Well, I want you to notice several things here that I think are helpful lessons I think that you and I can learn from the suffering and the pain
of Jesus that we can apply to our own life because all of us are going to respond in one or two ways.
We're going to respond the right, most profitable way that will bring fruit in our life,
or we're going to respond the wrong way, and we're going to suffer even more because of a wrong
response.
And what I want you to think about for a moment is this, that in order for God to accomplish
his will and purpose in your life and mind, sometimes his purpose and his will require
that you and I go through our Gethsemin, that is, we have to go through pain and suffering and hurt
that we don't like any more than Jesus liked his. So we come to ask the question, well, was Jesus
struggling over doing the will of God or not? No, he was not. It was not a matter of whether he was
going to do the will of the Father or not. What he was struggling about was what he spoke about
in that cup. That cup represented the fury and the wrath of God that would be declared upon. And, listen,
and not just lavished upon, but stormed against the one who bore the sin of the world.
When he went to the cross, he felt the avalanche, he felt the tidal wave of God's wrath
and God's fury against all the sin of all mankind forever, past, present, future.
Jesus knew what he was facing.
Of course he cringed at the cross.
Of course he understood because he had seen people crucified before.
He knew something of the anguish and the pain and the suffering of hanging.
in there and dying by degrees. And as horrible as that was, even more horrible, was the fact that
he and the father would be separated. How would you and I describe that? I don't think any of us
will ever be able to describe or fully understand until we get to glory, and then maybe it won't
be an issue, of course. But until we get there and he explains the worst, the horrendous pain
that he experienced when he was separated from the father for our sins, it would be like
taking your physical body and cutting it right in half and pulling it apart.
Can you imagine the kind of horrible pain that would be?
Because remember that Jesus and the Father had never been separated in the eternity past.
Never.
But you see, that was the price he was willing to pay for your sins and mine.
And so when he comes and we find him struggling here in the garden,
it's very evident what he's struggling about.
And he is struggling, not whether to do the world of the Father or not,
but because he wanted to do the will of the Father,
is there some other way we can do this,
not eliminating the crucifixion,
but eliminating that point and that time of separation.
Now, no one will ever suffer like Jesus suffered.
Now, remember this.
There are many women out there for their faith
who have been martyed for their faith,
who have gone through all kinds of pain
and whose physical pain may have been equal to Jesus' physical pain of crucifixion
because many people have been crucified in the past.
But Jesus was different because along with that crucifixion he bore the weight of the sin of the world.
Now, when you and I go through difficulty and hardship and pain in our life,
we certainly would like to escape from it, if at all possible.
And yet God knows what he's up to in our life.
And as we said in the very beginning, it may be that it is the will of the Father
that we go through difficulty in order to prepare us for his purpose in our life.
Now, remember this.
It certainly wasn't God who put the nail.
in his hands, but he certainly allowed the Romans to put the nails in his hands in his feet
and put a crown of thorns upon him. Some things may not be the will of God itself in your life
and my life, but God allows it to happen. And so if God allows it to happen, he has purposed
our pain for our profit. He will spare, listen, no experience, he will spare no effort,
he will spare no pain in order to prepare us and get us where he wants us to be in life to accomplish
his purpose and his will. And when you think about the pain and suffering and hurt that you've been
through in life, you think, well, what a waste. Now watch this. What a waste to go through this pain
and suffering and heartache and trial and persecution, all the rest. Remember this careful. You listen
and say amen. It is only a waste if you allow it to be a waste. Only a waste if you allow it to be a waste.
and some people live that way.
They go through all kinds of pain, hurt, and sorrow, and suffering,
and because they don't respond in the right manner, what happens is,
it is to some degree a big waste in their life.
They didn't ask the question, God, what is your goal for me in this?
They didn't seek the mind of Christ.
They didn't ask God, what is your purpose?
What do you want me to do?
What are you saying to me?
What do you want to change in my life?
They just want to go on in their own rebellion,
wasting the pain and suffering and hurt,
and oftentimes ultimately bringing their lives to destruction.
When I think about what pain does in our life, I want you to jot down four things because this is true.
And that is, pain and suffering in our life can be very instructional.
There are some things that you and I are not going to learn in pleasure when the times are good.
When we have everything we need, everything we want in life, pain can be very instructional.
We learn things about God in our suffering.
We won't learn any other way.
We learn things about ourselves.
if we wouldn't learn any other way.
We learn things about other people we wouldn't learn in any other fashion.
There's something about pain that makes us get down to the nitty-gritty of our life
and see what we really like.
What can we endure?
Secondly, it is very purifying.
There's something about pain that causes us to be able to see things as they really are.
All the fog lifts, the clouds are blown away, and we begin to see reality.
We see ourselves in a different light.
we see other people in different light.
We begin to be able to perceive and understand things
that we would not understand otherwise.
Pain is not only instructional, but it is very purifying.
It is likewise very motivational.
And God knows, listen, he knows whether to send you
blessing to motivate you to do his will
or whether to send you pain.
He knows exactly what it'll take to instruct us
in the ways he wants us to go.
He knows exactly what it'll take to purify our heart.
And I mean, not just a matter of confessing
those surface things, but allowing God to get that on the inside of our being, until we see things
about ourselves that we've never seen. We feel what we've never felt. Somehow God exposes to us
our lives as we've never been exposed before. It's instructional, no doubt. No doubt that it's
instructional. It's very purifying. It's very motivating, but also it creates the atmosphere
for awesome intimacy, because it's when God brings us to the end of ourselves that we're willing
to get in a relationship with him that he desires.
A warm, intimate relationship.
It's when he removes from us,
that which is precious to us.
When he takes away from us everything we have,
when he lays us flat on our back,
and he's all we've got,
I'm telling you, my friend,
that creates the atmosphere
of great, awesome intimacy with God the Father.
Pain is a very profitable thing
in the life of God's children.
When we allow it to be,
when we understand that it's instructional,
when we understand that it's purifying, when you understand that it's motivating, when we understand
it is the atmosphere in which God can do a great, awesome work in our life. So let me ask you a question.
How have you been responding in your pain? How have you been responding in your suffering?
Have you been responding when people have criticized you have persecuted you? How have you responded
when you have hurt so deeply you did not know what to do next? Which way to turn? Where to turn?
My friend, you want to turn to the living Word of God.
And listen to what he says about his love.
You say, well, how can I believe that God loves me when he allows all this to happen in my life?
What you have to ask is, God, what is your goal for this experience in my life?
Because, God, listen, being in the will of God does not mean that we will not suffer.
So, first of all, I simply say that God's purpose and plan for our life may include the time of Getsimini in our own life.
The second thing I want to say is this.
that our times of suffering, our Gethsemin,
may also be extremely painful for us.
I think there are two primary reasons
that God has placed this particular event
in the life of Jesus in the scripture.
Number one is certainly that you and I,
who are the very reason and the cause of it.
Listen, if there were no sin,
there would have been no Get Semini,
no sin, no cross.
He wants us to understand
the horrible pain his son, Jesus Christ,
went through to atone for
as the substitute, pay the same thing.
sin debt for us in Githemeny, that excruciating painful night was the beginning, the horrible
beginning of the debt he paid for you and me. God wants us to see that. Salvation is not cheap.
Grace is not cheap. What you and I have, the forgiveness of our sins did not come cheap.
When people talk about cheap grace, they know nothing about the scripture. There's no such thing as
cheap grace. Grace cost Almighty God His only begotten son. And that grace has been bestowed upon us,
not because we are worthy of it, not because we are fit for it, but simply because God loves
sinful human beings. What does he want? He wants us to be forgiven of our sin. He wants us to be
sanctified into himself. He wants us to come into an intimate relationship with him. God has
something awesome in mind by allowing us to go through this difficult in pain. So one of the
primary reasons is he wants us to see and understand something of what our Savior experienced.
A second thing he wants us to see is this. He wants us to understand. He wants us to understand.
He wants us to see how Jesus responded, how the Apostle Paul responded.
He wants us to learn the principles of dealing with, of responding to difficulty,
hardship, and pain and suffering so that we will respond in the right fashion so that,
listen, we will not waste our sorrows.
We will not waste our pain.
We will not waste our hurt.
But we will profit from it.
It will become a fruitful time in our life.
And in our tears, our hurt, our brokenness, our loneliness, our sorrow, and our sadness.
All of that is like rich soil, rich fertile soil plowed up.
And what happens?
God drops his awesome principles.
Listen to this.
He drops his awesome principles in the soil of tears and hurt and pain and shame and suffering
and persecution.
And what comes out of that?
God begins to water that in your life and something transpires in your life that makes you
more valuable to the kingdom of God than you have ever been or ever could even imagine
to be in your fondest dream.
It just depends upon how you're going to respond.
And you see, being in the will of God doesn't mean that you're going to escape pain, suffering, and hurt.
And when I hear people talking about the fact, well, if you're in the will of God, you're doing God's will and you're full of the Holy Spirit, you're not going to suffer this and this and this.
I want to tell you something that is totally unscriptural.
No one could be holier than Jesus.
No man who's ever walked apart from him could have been at least more obedient than the Apostle Paul.
These two men suffered for the gospel of Jesus Christ,
there's no other two people that I know in history have ever suffered.
Everywhere Paul went, somebody was on his case,
persecuting him for one reason or the other.
He was absolutely obedient to the father.
Did he have his struggles?
Yes.
His weak moments, yes.
Crying out to God to take that thorn out of his side,
and God did not do it.
He understood what struggling over the will of God was about.
He understood what's struggling against those who had persecuted him
and left him for dead lying in the streets,
having stoned him.
He understood all of that.
Did that mean he wasn't in the will of God?
No, it does not.
People who walk in the sin of the will of God oftentimes suffered the most.
Now, in the 22nd chapter of Luke in the 44th verse, here's what it says.
That he was in agony, listen, in agony, and he was crying out to the Father, praying fervently to the Father
and sweating as it were drops of blood.
Now, some of you want to turn to that, look if you will.
The 22nd chapter of Luke and the 44th verse.
In fact, it was so bad.
Verse 43, Luke's account says, now an angel from heaven appeared to him strengthening him.
He was at the point of death.
Listen to this.
And being in agony, he was praying very fervently, and his sweat became like drops of blood
falling down upon the ground.
You say, well, how in the world could that be?
Here's the way it can be.
And that is when a person, and of course this does not happen very often, but in times of war,
this has certainly happened when men have been a world.
under such absolutely intense pain and suffering and stress, the capillaries under the skin.
With that kind of stress can burst. They, of course, begin to bleed, and that blood begins
to mix with a person's sweat, and what happens is a person is literally sweating drops of
blood. This is the kind of pain. This is the kind of pressure. This is the kind of stress.
This is the kind of tension. This is the kind of sorrow. It was so deep, so yearning. And I don't
know how deeply distressed you've ever been. Have you ever been so deeply distressed that you think
that your insides were coming out, that all the weeping in the world was not enough? You couldn't
weep enough. You couldn't say enough. You couldn't pray enough. You couldn't feel enough. You couldn't
think enough. You couldn't do enough of anything to express the awesome, horrible sense of deep,
listen, deep penetrating, cutting pain in your life. You see, if you've had an easy life, you've missed
something. You said, I don't want any of that in my life. You say, I don't want any of that in my life.
Let me ask you a question.
You want to be what God wants you to be?
You want to be the best that God can make you.
You want to be used of God.
You want to at least head in the direction of the maximum potential of your usefulness for God.
Then, my friend, you must be willing to submit to whatever God sends in your life
because whatever he sends you in your life has a very definite, godly purpose for it.
Thank you for listening to today's podcast titled Lessons We Learn in Gatsemone.
If you'd like to know more about Charles Stanley or InTouch Ministries, stop by intouch.org.
This podcast is a presentation of InTouch Ministries, Atlanta, Georgia.
