Adrian Rogers - Preparing for Persecution (02/06/2026)
Pastor Adrian preaches on Matthew 5:10-12, the Beatitudes about persecution for righteousness' sake and for Christ's sake, urging believers to prepare for it as a sign of genuine faith, promising joy, heavenly reward, and the kingdom as theirs, just like the prophets before.
Introduction to Persecution in the Beatitudes
Take God’s Word and turn to Matthew chapter 5. We have been studying together the Beatitudes. And I don’t know about you, but my own heart has been blessed and enriched as we have studied together the Word of God, these Beatitudes. As we’ve said, these are the attitudes that ought to be, the character of a Christian, what a Christian is really like, and we call these “The Keys of the Kingdom”. And today we come to Matthew chapter 5 and verses 10 through 12, “Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake: for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven. Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you and say all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake. Rejoice and be exceeding glad, for great is your reward in Heaven. For so persecuted they the prophets which were before you.”
And I have a feeling, ladies and gentlemen, that we are living in the lengthening shadows of the last days. I believe that Jesus Christ is coming soon, and one of the marks of the last days—and we can see it fulfilled—is the persecution of the saints of God, the children of God. The new whipping boy in the world today, do you know who he is? He is the Bible-believing Christian. You can ridicule other groups and get in trouble, but today if you want to become the butt of jokes, if you want to receive the wrath of the world, become a true Bible-believing Christian.
There’s no way to be a genuine Christian, a true man of God, a true woman of God, and escape persecution. I want you to put in your margin Second Timothy chapter 3 and verse 12—don’t turn to it but listen to it. The Apostle Paul said, “Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.” There’s no ifs, ands, or buts about that. “All who will,” that is, who determine to live godly in Christ Jesus.
Why Persecution Comes to True Believers
So I want to speak to you today on this subject, “Preparing for Persecution.” And you need to prepare your children, just as you prepare them to go to school, you need to prepare them to live in a world that is becoming increasingly hostile to Bible-believing Christians. Now, you can rub shoulders with this world. You can compromise with this world. You can go along with this world and not receive any persecution. The persecution comes to those who will live godly in Christ Jesus.
Now, as a matter of fact, this verse that I just read to you speaks of joy. It says, “Rejoice and be exceeding glad,” and it speaks of persecution. That’s incredible that God would put both joy and persecution in the same passage, isn’t it? Let me tell you what joy is, and let me tell you what persecution is. Joy is the thermostat. Persecution is the thermometer. You say, “What do you mean by that?” Well, no matter what happens, the joy of the Lord is there to regulate conditions in your life. There’s nothing that can take your joy from you. Joy controls conditions like a thermostat.
But let me tell you about persecution. Persecution is the thermometer that registers how much you love Jesus. That’s it. If you’re out and out for Jesus Christ, you can tell whether or not you’re out and out for Jesus Christ by the persecution you get. Now if you’re not getting any persecution, don’t say you must be doing a wonderful job. Very frankly, you’re doing a poor job. For the Bible says in Second Timothy 3:12, “Yea and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.”
That doesn’t mean that they’re going to throw you in the dungeon. That doesn’t mean that they’re going to tie you to a post and whip you. That doesn’t mean that they’re going to come in with a machine gun and kill your children. It may—all of that may happen—but that isn’t what that necessarily means. The word persecution literally means to pursue, as we’re going to see here in a moment. They’re going to follow after you in many ways; you will become the butt of jokes, you’ll become ostracized socially, you’ll be passed by for promotions, you’ll be looked down upon as socially inappropriate, if you live godly for Christ Jesus.
Personal Stories and the Reality of Being Different
When I was a young man working my way through school, I worked in construction work, and I was a carpenter’s helper. And in high school and also early college, I worked alongside a man who was quite a profane man. And when he learned that I was going to be a preacher, he really enjoyed ragging me about my faith, which I didn’t mind really, but I was the butt of a lot of jokes and a lot of innuendos and so forth.
But then he said, “Listen, young man, if you’re going to be a preacher, why don’t you be a good one.” And then he said, “I knew a preacher one time, he was a good preacher.” I said, “Well, tell me about him.” He said, “He was a great guy.” Said, “You could be around him, he would never mention politics or religion.” That was his idea of a good preacher, a man who never talked about God.
Now if you just want to be the kind of person who never takes a stand for anything, never witnesses for the Lord Jesus Christ, the people like that profane man that I was working under, they’ll think that you are just fine.
The Reasons Christians Face Persecution
Now let me very quickly, in the time we have, as we look at this passage of Scripture that says preparing for persecution. I hope to make it very personal and let me give you first of all the reasons for persecution. Why are Christians persecuted? Look in Matthew 5 verse 10 if you will, “Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake.” Do you see it? That’s the reason. For righteousness' sake.
Now, the word righteousness comes from a Greek word which means to divide. The reason that Christians are persecuted is that in a very real sense they are divisive; they divide. They are different. You see, to divide means to be different. Christians are different. Christians ought to stand out like a diamond in a coal mine, like a gardenia in a garbage can. Christians are different.
Now, point in case, if you’ll just take the first seven Beatitudes that we read and look at them. How different they are from the world. We’re just simply different. For example, it says in Matthew 5:3, “Blessed are the poor in spirit.” Well, the world doesn’t want you to be poor in spirit. Humility is laughed at today. Today we’re told, “Be number one,” assert yourself.
The Beatitudes say in verse 4, “Blessed are they that mourn.” Who in America wants to mourn? America is laughing her way into Hell. Verse 5, “Blessed are the meek.” The world says don’t be a meek man; be a mighty man, be a muscle man, be a money man, be a missile man. But whatever you do, don’t be a meek man. The world doesn’t like that. The world thinks that meekness is weakness and the world’s attitude and motto is winner take all.
Living the Beatitudes Guarantees Persecution
Now what I’m simply saying is this and listen to me, my dear friend. If you will take these Beatitudes, I will guarantee it. If you’ll take the first seven Beatitudes and begin to live that way, then number eight is guaranteed. You will be persecuted. Now if you’re not living by the first seven, you’re not going to get number eight. But if you’ll take the first seven, if you’ll take these Beatitudes and you will begin to put them into shoe leather, get them out of that notebook that you’re writing in and get them into shoe leather, the eighth is guaranteed.
Why? Because children of God are children of light, and they [the world] are children of darkness. My dear friend, we’re alive in the Spirit. They are dead in trespasses and sins. We live by faith, they walk by sight. We understand them, but they do not understand us. And Jesus, in Matthew 5 verses 13 and 14, after He talked about being persecuted, He said, “You’re the salt of the earth. You’re the light of the world.” Salt irritates when it is poured into a wound, and light reveals.
And I’m telling you that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is an irritant to the putrefying wounds of this world. And the Gospel of Jesus Christ is a revealing light to the things of darkness of this world. And therefore, they say remove that salt, and put out that light.
Persecution vs. Punishment: Knowing the Difference
Now, when we are persecuted for righteousness' sake, we must be very careful here. We must be very, very careful that it is persecution and not punishment. A lot of Christians confuse persecution and punishment. And let me tell you the difference between persecution and punishment. We are punished by good people when we do evil. We are persecuted by evil people when we do good; now that’s the difference.
Now, there are a lot of people, very frankly, who think that they’re being persecuted when they are simply receiving punishment that they ought to receive. Here’s another verse I want you to put in your margin. First Peter chapter 4 beginning in verse 14, “If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye. For the spirit of glory and of God resteth upon you. On their part, He is evil spoken of, but on your part He is glorified.”
But now listen to First Peter chapter 4 verse 15, “But let none of you suffer as a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evildoer, or as a busybody in other men’s matters.” Verily, he that sticketh his nose in shall find a fist at the end of it. “Yet if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed.”
A lot of Christians think they’re being persecuted. They’re not being persecuted. They’re just busybodies; they’re just people with bad manners and bad breath and arrogance and ego and everything else. And they say, “Oh, people don’t like me; I’m being persecuted.” They’re not. You’re not being persecuted. My dear friend, you’re not living for the Lord Jesus Christ. That’s just what you have received because of what you have done.
You say, “Well, I’m a witness,” but the problem is you’re not a witness; you’re more like a prosecuting attorney. You say, “Well, I want to be different,” but the problem is you’re not different; you’re odd.
Now my dear friend, when Christians are filled with the Spirit, they’re going to be supernaturally natural. They’re going to be naturally supernatural. They’re going to be different, and they will be persecuted. But don’t go around and say you’re persecuted if you’re not living for the Lord Jesus Christ.
This passage of Scripture in the Beatitudes says, number one, it must be false what they say about you, and number two, it must be for His sake.
Two Main Reasons for Persecution
The first reason that we’re persecuted, number one, my dear friend, is because of what we are—that is, the life we live. Second reason we’re persecuted, look at the Scripture again, Matthew 5 verses 10 and 11, “Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake,” that’s the first reason. Now look if you will in verse 11, “Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you and say all manner of evil against you falsely for My sake.” That’s the second reason.
The life we live. The Lord we love. That will bring persecution. The life we live—righteousness' sake. The Lord we love—Jesus says, “For My sake.”
May I tell you, this world hates Jesus Christ. You say, “Oh no, the world doesn’t hate Jesus Christ.” My friend, the world hates Jesus Christ. Now, when I say that, a lot of people don’t understand why I say that. Let me say this, my dear friend, the world does not hate the baby Jesus. Pretty soon Christmas will come and everybody loves a baby in a manger. The world doesn’t hate the baby Jesus. Well, a few people may. But by and large, the world, the giddy crowd, dances around the manger, and the merchants will make millions. They don’t mind the baby Jesus.
I’m going to tell you something else. The world does not hate the Jesus that healed the sick and fed the multitudes. The world doesn’t hate that Jesus, not at all. That isn’t why the world hates Jesus. And if that’s all you know of the Lord Jesus Christ, then you may think that the world really doesn’t hate the Lord Jesus.
Do you know why the world hates Jesus? In John 3:8, Jesus said, “I have come to destroy the works of the devil.” And that, my dear friend, is why the world hates Jesus. Jesus has come to destroy the works of the devil. What are they? Liquor, abortion, pornography, pride, racism, and greed. And Jesus Christ stands against that, and the world stands for it.
And my dear friend, when you stand with the Christ of the Bible—when you stand with the Christ of the Bible, I’m not talking about the baby Jesus, I’m not talking about the humble Jesus by the shores of Galilee, I’m talking about the Savior.
Listen to what Jesus Christ said in John chapter 15 verse 19 and following. Jesus said to His disciples, “If ye were of the world, the world would love his own: but because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you. Remember the word that I said unto you, The servant is not greater than his lord. If they have persecuted me, they will also persecute you; if they have kept my saying, they will keep yours also.”
My dear friend, the only reason that the world hates Jesus is because Jesus is not of the world. And the Bible says in Philippians 1 and verse 29, “For unto you it is given in the behalf of Christ, not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for his sake.”
My dear friend, when you receive Jesus Christ, you receive suffering. You say, “Well, then I don’t think I’ll receive Him.” That’s your business. Just don’t receive Him. But don’t come down here and say, “I want to be a Christian. I want Jesus Christ as my Lord, I want Him as my Savior, I want Him as my companion, I want His fullness, I want His grace, I want His love, but I’m not going to suffer with the Lord Jesus Christ.” My dear friend, you can’t be that way.
Jesus said in John 15:19, “I have chosen you out of the world,” and the reason that a Christian, a real Christian, is persecuted—number one is for righteousness' sake. He is different. And number two for the Lord’s sake. He is devoted. The life we live and the Lord we love.
The life we live, the Lord we love. My dear friend, you begin to live by these Beatitudes and you be out and out with a burning, blazing, passionate, emotional love for Jesus Christ that will not back up, let up, or shut up, and this world will come down on you like a hammer. And if you don’t believe it, it’s because you’re not doing it.
My dear friend, the Bible says in Second Timothy chapter 3 verse 12, “Yea, and all—all—all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall—shall—shall suffer persecution.” That, my dear friend, is the thermometer that registers how much you love the Lord Jesus Christ.
The Results of Persecution in Daily Life
Now, here’s the second thing. Not only the reason for persecution, but the result of this persecution. What shall it be like? Look if you will in Matthew 5 verse 11, “Blessed are ye when men shall revile you,” number one, “and persecute you,” number two, “and say all manner of evil against you falsely for My sake,” number three.
First of all, there’s going to be personal insult. They will revile you. You will be made the butt of jokes. There are people that are going to laugh at you. They’ve done it ever since I was a teenager, gave my heart to Christ at high school and would not do the things the other guys did and would not use the language the other guys used. I was captain of my football team, president of our class. I wasn’t one of the guys that didn’t participate. But nonetheless, I knew what it was to be ridiculed and reviled for Jesus Christ.
But not only will they revile you, my dear friend, there may be not only personal insult but physical abuse. The Bible says, “They will persecute you.” And this word persecute has more than just being reviled. It means actually they will do you harm if they can.
You say, “Well, people don’t do that in this century today.” My dear friend, listen to me, more people have died for Jesus Christ in this century than all of the other centuries put together. In this century. As a matter of fact, there are people right now who are in prison—I’m not talking about in the former Soviet Union, I’m talking about in America. You know why? They’re standing up for the unborn. They’re standing up for the unborn. I mean today. They are in prison; they’re being persecuted. Why? Because they stand up for those who cannot stand up for themselves!
But not only will there be personal insult and physical abuse, there will be social stigma. “They will say all manner of evil against you falsely for My sake.” My dear friend, true Christians, Bible-believing Christians, are never really reported on in the newspapers or in the media, most of the time at least, as they ought. If you ever see a situational comedy, the Bible-believing Christian—what’s he made to look like? He is, number one, made to look like some authoritarian bigot or some cruel monster or some Elmer Gantry hypocrite.
And the whipping boy, I say, of society today is the Bible-believing Christian. He may be the most widely hated species on this earth. Much of it comes from the radical, liberal media, and radical civil libertarians and the pornography industry. The mainstream film and television producers are becoming overtly anti-Christian. That’s the result of it.
How to Respond When Persecution Comes
Now, number three. I’ve talked to you about the reasons for it. I’ve talked to you about the result of it. They will revile you, they will persecute you, “They will say all manner of evil against you falsely for My sake,” the Lord Jesus said. Now, number three, what is your response? How are you going to respond?
Well, number one, my dear friend, you need to respond like a king. Look at it if you will. He says in Matthew 5 verse 10, “Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake: for theirs is the kingdom of Heaven.” Now just underscore that. And the very first thing you ought to do is reign like a king. When you’re persecuted, never come down to their level. You are a part of a kingdom and you need to live like it. You need to walk like it, you need to talk like it. Never get down on their level. Remember yours is the kingdom. You’re one of the King’s kids. And learn to act like it and live like it.
There are three levels of life. First of all there’s what I want to call the hellish level. That’s the level of Hell. That’s the level that returns evil for good. That’s what Jesus is talking about. We’re persecuted for righteousness' sake. All of that is out of Hell. If you’re one who persecutes the righteous, may God have mercy upon you!
There is the hellish level, then there is the human level. The human level returns good for good and evil for evil. Most people are on that. They’re not on the hellish level, they’re on the human level.
But my dear friend, there’s the heavenly level. The heavenly level, the level of the kingdom, returns good for evil. Now that’s the level you’re to get on. When you’re persecuted, don’t return evil for good, or don’t even return good for good or evil for evil. But learn to return good for evil. That, my dear friend, is what we’re called to do.
Look in Matthew chapter 5 and verse 43 through 45. You’re there in Matthew 5, look in verse 43, “Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour, and hate thine enemy: But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you; That ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven.”
That’s what I’m saying, you’re the King’s kids. You act like your Father in Heaven. And don’t get even. You see the problem with getting even is this: you’re a child of the King, and you’re in the Kingdom. Here are these people, they’re out of the Kingdom. You say, “I’m going to get even.” You see what you do when you get even? You get even. Don’t get even. Return good for evil. Reign in life.
The Command to Rejoice in Suffering
Number two, rejoice in the Lord. Look in Matthew 5 verse 12. He says to, “Rejoice, and be exceeding glad.” Do you know what this word means? I did a word study on it. It literally means to leap and jump. I mean to dance. You’re so happy, you can’t keep your feet on the ground. Why? Because you’ve been persecuted.
You say, “That doesn’t make sense.” Oh friend, when you realize they can finally see the difference, when you realize that somebody has discovered that I’m a Christian. Somebody said, “If most people were arrested for being a Christian, there wouldn’t be enough evidence to convict them.” “Rejoice and be exceeding glad,” because somehow they have identified you with the Lord, and that ought to be a time of great joy.
I was reading in Acts chapter 5 verse 41 about those early Apostles who were persecuted and the Bible says in Acts chapter 5 verse 41 after they departed from the presence of the council, rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for His name. Boy, isn’t that a great verse. Have you ever said, “Oh, thank you Lord, thank you, thank you, I’m worthy to suffer shame for Your name.”
Reign in life, rejoice in the Lord. Our Lord has commanded that you’re to rejoice and to be exceeding glad. The Bible says in Second Timothy chapter 2 verse 12, “If we suffer, we shall also reign with Him: if we deny Him, He also will deny us.”
Responding with Love as the Ultimate Witness
The third thing, not only should you reign in life and rejoice in the Lord, but you should respond in love; just respond in love. What a witness that is. You see it’s so much easier to respond in love if you’ve done the first two things. Just reign in life and rejoice in the Lord and then just respond in love.
You see, my dear friend, the world needs love. The world doesn’t need what it deserves. You know what love is? Love is not giving people what they deserve. Love is giving people what they need, and Jesus said in Matthew 5 verse 44, “Love your enemies, bless them that curse you. Do good to them that hate you.”
What a witness. Let me tell you what happened. Saul, before he became the Apostle Paul, Saul hated a Christian. That Christian’s name was Stephen. My son Stephen is named after this same Stephen. Stephen stood up for the Lord Jesus Christ and Paul hated him. And Paul said, “If you guys want to stone him, I’ll hold your coats.” And there’s old Saul over there holding the coats, looking with glee, as old Stephen is being stoned, and here’s Stephen over here, the stones are falling on him, he’s crumpling to the earth and he begins to pray, and he says in Acts 7 and verse 60, “Lord, lay not this sin to their charge.”
He, as he’s being stoned and he’s praying, he’s praying for old Saul over here. Saul never forgot it. Later on when Saul got saved, Jesus said in Acts 26 verse 14, “It is hard for thee to kick against the pricks.” That is, it’s so hard for you to rebel against what is happening in your heart and your life because you saw the love of God released in a man who was being persecuted for righteousness' sake. He returned good for evil. And the greatest Christian who ever lived came to Jesus Christ.
You say, “Well, I don’t know if these people who are persecuting me are going to get saved. I don’t know whether they’ll be better or not if I return good for evil.” I don’t know whether they will or not either. I don’t know whether they’ll be better or not myself, but I know one thing, you’ll be better. You’ll be better.
You see, look folks, we are not in this world to please other people; we’re here to please Jesus. I’m told that a concert violinist played a concert, and when he finished playing, the people stood to their feet in applause. But the violinist put his face in his hands and wept. They said, “Don’t weep. Look at the people; they loved it.” But he kept weeping. They said, “Look, they’re all standing.” He said, “They’re not all standing.” He said, “You see that man down there, he’s not standing.” They said, “He’s only one man.” Said, “I know, but he’s my teacher, and if he’s not pleased, I’m not pleased.”
Friend, I want to tell you something, it doesn’t matter if you please the whole world and don’t please Jesus. But if you please Jesus, it doesn’t matter whom you displease. That’s it.
Invitation to Commit to Christ
I’m going to give you a chance right now to take a stand for Jesus Christ. No fine print in the contract. I’m going to ask you to come to Jesus Christ and commit your life to Him and to be different, to receive persecution, yes, but to receive joy unspeakable and full of glory.
Heads are bowed and eyes are closed. Father, God, I pray now that a holy hush will come in this place and I pray to my God and our God, for those who do not know Jesus Christ. Oh Lord, that today they will give their hearts to Him. Oh God, please in the name of Jesus, bring the lost to Christ.
If you’re not certain that you’re saved, would you like to be saved, would you? Would you like to know that you really do have life? Jesus said, “I’ve come that you might have life.” Could I lead you in a prayer? We’ll call this prayer the sinner’s prayer. And you can pray and accept Christ as your personal Lord and Savior. You can do it right now.
Would you pray this prayer? “Dear God, I know that You love me. Thank You for loving me. And I know that You want to save me. Jesus, You died to save me and You promised to save me if I would trust You. Jesus, I do trust You. I believe You’re the Son of God. I believe you paid for my sin with Your blood on the cross. I believe that God raised You from the dead. And now I receive You as my Lord and Savior. Forgive my sin. Cleanse me. Come into my life. Take control of my life and begin today to make me the person You want me to be. And Jesus, give me the courage to make it public. Help me never to be ashamed of You. In Your name I pray, Amen.”

