
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Persecution is not a poetic metaphor in Matthew 5:10. When Jesus says, “Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake,” He is speaking about real hostility toward real faithfulness. The word He uses carries the sense of being pursued, hunted, or driven out. This isn’t about being disliked for personality or politics. It is about belonging to Christ in a world that resists His reign. In this episode, we examine what Jesus actually promises the persecuted and why the present-tense assurance, “theirs is the kingdom of heaven,” changes everything about how we understand suffering.
We also look beyond abstraction and consider the sobering reality of believers in places like Nigeria, where faithfulness to Christ can cost everything. Their endurance forces us to confront our assumptions about comfort, safety, and cultural approval. Persecution is not a sign that God has lost control. It is often confirmation of allegiance. Christ still reigns. His kingdom cannot be shaken. And those who suffer for His name are not abandoned. They are blessed.
#Christianity #SermonontheMount #Apologetics #Jesus #Nigeria #Persecution
By Adam ParkerPersecution is not a poetic metaphor in Matthew 5:10. When Jesus says, “Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake,” He is speaking about real hostility toward real faithfulness. The word He uses carries the sense of being pursued, hunted, or driven out. This isn’t about being disliked for personality or politics. It is about belonging to Christ in a world that resists His reign. In this episode, we examine what Jesus actually promises the persecuted and why the present-tense assurance, “theirs is the kingdom of heaven,” changes everything about how we understand suffering.
We also look beyond abstraction and consider the sobering reality of believers in places like Nigeria, where faithfulness to Christ can cost everything. Their endurance forces us to confront our assumptions about comfort, safety, and cultural approval. Persecution is not a sign that God has lost control. It is often confirmation of allegiance. Christ still reigns. His kingdom cannot be shaken. And those who suffer for His name are not abandoned. They are blessed.
#Christianity #SermonontheMount #Apologetics #Jesus #Nigeria #Persecution