We’ve all been there—standing in the middle of a storm, wondering why the clouds won't part. When life hits hard, our first instinct is often to look for the relief button. But what if the adversity we’re trying to escape is actually the very tool God is using to build something beautiful in us?
While suffering is never easy, the Bible reveals that it is never wasted. As C.S. Lewis famously said in The Problem of Pain, “God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pain: it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world.”
👉Here are eight ways God uses trials to transform our lives and deepen our faith.
In Psalm 119:67, David admits, “Before I was afflicted I went astray, but now I keep your word.” Sometimes, God uses the sting of suffering to wake us up to the deception of sin. For the Christian, this isn't condemnation. Romans 8:1 reminds us we are safe in Christ, but it is a kindness that redirects our hearts back to his righteous path.
The Christian life is a marathon, not a sprint. We often pray for mystical or superhuman strength to hit us in a moment of crisis, but God’s normal way of giving grace is through prior trials. Romans 5:3 tells us that “suffering produces endurance.” Today’s difficulty might just be the training ground for the strength you’ll need a year from now. Each test of endurance builds our spiritual muscles for the future.
There is a significant difference between knowing a truth in your head and feeling it in your heart. Adversity is the melting pot where head knowledge becomes heart-conviction. As James 1:4 tells us, when we let steadfastness have its full effect, we become “perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.” Through trials, we stop relying on ourselves and start rooting our hope in God alone.
Have you ever noticed that certain scriptures really come to life when you’re in a valley? David wrote, “It is good for me that I was afflicted, that I might learn your statutes” (Psa 119:71). Suffering “unbolts the door of the heart,” as Richard Baxter put it, allowing the Word to enter more deeply than it ever could during times of ease.
God comforts us so that we can become comforters to others. 2 Corinthians 1:3-4 says that we receive God’s mercy so that we can share it with those in any affliction. Your experience of God’s faithfulness in the dark becomes a lighthouse for someone else navigating their own storm.
We naturally prefer “walking by sight”, having everything under control and within our power. But suffering strips away that illusion. It forces us to rely "not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead" (2 Cor 1:9). The deepest lessons of love rarely come from times of ease; they come when we have nowhere to lean but on Christ.
Suffering is a “test of genuineness.” It reveals whether our faith is a lifestyle of convenience or a core conviction. When we endure through the fire, it provides us with the deep, quiet assurance that our faith is real. 1 Peter 1:7 compares this to gold being refined, the heat doesn’t destroy the gold; it purifies it.
Finally, God is most glorified in us when we are satisfied in him even when happiness in life is difficult to come by. When the world sees someone suffering who still has hope, they notice. Like Moses, who chose the “reproach of Christ” over the treasures of Egypt (Heb 11:26), our endurance shows the world that God is worth more than anything this life can offer.
As you navigate your own season of trial, keep these two things in mind:
Reflection Question: Do you see any of these eight purposes where God is working in your life right now?