“These sufferings of ours are for your benefit. And the more of you who are won to Christ, the more there are to thank him for his great kindness, and the more the Lord is glorified.” 2 Corinthians 4:15 (TLB)
When I use my pain to help others, God will bless me in ways I can’t possibly imagine.
The apostle Paul went through enormous pain in his life, which is why God was able to use him in enormous ways. He was shipwrecked, beaten, and robbed. He went without food, water, and sleep. Yet God used him to spread the Gospel throughout the Roman Empire. In fact, if I was to ask Paul, “How’d you put up with so much pain?” He’d tell me it was because he wanted to bring people to Jesus Christ. He wanted to help others.
Paul said in the Living Bible paraphrase, “These sufferings of ours are for your benefit. And the more of you who are won to Christ, the more there are to thank him for his great kindness, and the more the Lord is glorified” (2 Corinthians 4:15).
I may never suffer the same ways Paul did, but I will go through pain in life. So I might as well use my pain for good and not waste it.
There are actually three kinds of suffering God uses to help others: self-imposed suffering, innocent suffering, and redemptive suffering.
Some suffering is the kind I bring upon myself. I cause some of my own problems by making poor judgements. I don’t always eat the right foods, make the right decisions, or respond the right way to others.
Innocent suffering is when, through no fault of my own, I get hurt by someone else. Whether I was abandoned, rejected, or scammed, everyone has been hurt by the sins of other people.
But the highest form of suffering is redemptive suffering. This is when I go through pain or problems for the benefit of others.
This is what Jesus did. When Jesus died on the cross, he didn’t deserve to die. He went through that pain for my benefit so that I could be saved and go to heaven. In the same way, God will use my pain to bring hope and healing to others.
Who can better help somebody going through bankruptcy than somebody who went through bankruptcy? Who can better help somebody struggling with an addiction than somebody who’s struggled with an addiction? Who can better help parents of a special needs child than parents who raised a special needs child? Who can better help somebody who’s lost a child than somebody who lost a child?
I am most powerfully positioned to serve the person I once were?
God will never waste a hurt. God will work in my life so that he can work through me to encourage others.
Praise God and rejoice during trials, because suffering will build your endurance and help others in their pain. God can use all three kinds of suffering for good. Start by giving each of my hurts to him and say, “God, I want you to use my pain to benefit others.”
In summary:
In 2 Corinthians 4:15, the Apostle Paul re-frames personal hardship not as a senseless burden, but as a strategic tool for ministry and the expansion of God’s grace. By examining the lives of Paul and Jesus, we see that suffering—whether self-imposed, innocent, or redemptive—attains its highest value when it is leveraged for the benefit of others. The text argues that my greatest platform for service often emerges from my deepest places of pain, transforming personal trials into a catalyst for communal gratitude and the ultimate glorification of God.
Bottom Line:
God never wastes a hurt; your greatest ministry will likely emerge from your deepest misery when you choose to use your pain for the benefit of others.
Next Step:
Identify one specific "past version of myself" who struggled with a challenge I have since navigated—whether financial, emotional, or relational—and commit to a "Redemptive Audit" this week. Instead of dwelling on the "why" of that past pain, document three lessons learned and reach out to one person currently in that same fire to offer the specific encouragement you once lacked.
