' Strength in Weakness: How God’s Power Is Perfected Where Yours Runs Out - Sanmi Dawodu Ministries

Strength in Weakness: How God’s Power Is Perfected Where Yours Runs Out

Strength in Weakness: How God's Power Is Perfected in Your Weakness | 2 Corinthians 12:9 & Isaiah 40:31
40 Days of Prayer · Week 3: Victory Over Temptation · Day 20

Strength in Weakness: How God's Power Is Perfected Where Yours Runs Out

“My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.”
— 2 Corinthians 12:9

📅 Published April 25, 2026 ✍ Sanmi Dawodu Ministries 📖 2 Corinthians 12:9

What does "strength is made perfect in weakness" mean?

2 Corinthians 12:9 reveals one of the most paradoxical truths in all of Scripture:

  • God's strength reaches its fullest expression in the places where our strength has run out
  • Paul's unanswered prayer for the thorn was answered — just not the way he asked
  • God's "No" to removing weakness was a greater "Yes" to sustaining grace
  • Boasting in weakness is not resignation — it is strategic alignment with where God's power rests
  • Waiting on the Lord renews strength — not by removing weakness but by transforming it
  • The weakest point in a believer's life is often the most fruitful

Key Scripture: Isaiah 40:31“But those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.”

“And He said to me, My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness. Therefore most gladly I will rather boast in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.”

2 Corinthians 12:9 (NKJV)

A Word from Sanmi Dawodu

If you're struggling with weakness right now, you are in excellent company. The Apostle Paul begged God three times to remove a weakness — and God refused. What God said instead changed Paul's theology, ministry, and life forever.

We have spent this week pursuing victory — over the flesh, over lust, over pride, over addictions, over the undisciplined life. And in that pursuit, many of us have come face to face with a painful reality: we are weaker than we thought. The resolutions we made at the beginning of this week may already have been tested and found wanting. The battles we entered with confidence may have revealed vulnerabilities we did not know were there. And in that place of revealed weakness, the question arises: what now?

Today's message is the answer to that question — and it is one of the most liberating truths in all of Scripture: in the Kingdom of God, weakness is not the obstacle to divine power. It is the prerequisite for it. 'For when I am weak, then I am strong.' This is not a theological paradox designed to comfort the persistently failing believer. It is the deepest operational truth of the Kingdom — the principle by which God has always done His greatest work: through the weakest, the least likely, the most inadequate vessels available.

"My Grace Is Sufficient for You" — What This Promise Actually Means

The word "sufficient" in 2 Corinthians 12:9 is the Greek arkeo — to be enough, to be adequate, to be sufficient for the need. God is not saying grace will merely manage your weakness. He is saying grace is precisely calibrated to meet your exact need. The thorn did not disqualify Paul from power — it was the very mechanism through which Christ's power was manifested.

Yesterday in Day 19 we accepted the call to holiness; today we discover the resource — God's strength perfected in our weakness. Continue through the 40 Days of Prayer series.

Paul's Unanswered Prayer: When God Says No

Second Corinthians 12:7-10 records one of the most extraordinary passages in the New Testament — the account of Paul's 'thorn in the flesh.' Paul had been caught up to the third heaven (2 Corinthians 12:2-4), had received revelations of such magnitude that God deemed a protective measure necessary: a thorn in the flesh, a messenger of Satan, to buffet him. Whatever the thorn was — physical illness, persistent opposition, a spiritual affliction — it was debilitating enough that Paul prayed for its removal three times.

God's answer to those three prayers is one of the most significant divine responses in all of Scripture: 'My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.' Not 'I will remove the thorn.' Not 'pray longer and I will deliver you.' Not 'your faith is insufficient.' But: My grace is enough. My strength reaches its fullest expression — is 'made perfect,' reaches its completion — precisely in the conditions of your weakness. The thorn is not an obstacle to My power through you. It is the condition that makes My power most fully expressed.

The Theology of Sufficiency: Grace Is Precisely Calibrated

The word 'sufficient' — 'arkeo' in Greek — means to be enough, to be adequate, to ward off want, to satisfy. 'My grace is sufficient' is God's comprehensive answer to every human inadequacy — not 'my grace will eventually be sufficient when you have improved enough to access it.' My grace IS sufficient — present tense, immediate, currently in force for your current weakness, your current need, your current inadequacy, your current battle.

This is the foundation of the Spirit-empowered life under temptation: not 'I must become strong enough to win' but 'His grace is sufficient right now for this moment of weakness.' The battle against temptation is won not primarily by building greater human fortitude but by accessing greater divine grace — and divine grace flows most freely to the person who has most completely abandoned confidence in their own strength.

💡 The Paradox of Kingdom Power: The Kingdom of God consistently operates through what the world would consider insufficient instruments: Gideon reduced from 32,000 soldiers to 300, so that Israel could not say they had won by their own strength (Judges 7:2). Moses the stutterer commissioned to confront Pharaoh. David the youngest son anointed as king. Mary the obscure peasant girl chosen as the mother of the Messiah. God specializes in choosing the insufficient to demonstrate the sufficiency of His grace.

Boasting in Infirmity: Why Paul Stopped Arguing with God

Paul's response to the thorn and God's answer reaches a conclusion that scandalizes the self-sufficient mind: 'Therefore most gladly I will rather boast in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.' Boast in infirmity. Not merely accept them. Not merely endure them. BOAST in them — with gladness, with enthusiasm, with the confidence of a man who has discovered that his weaknesses are the precise locations where Christ's power rests most fully.

The word 'rest' — 'episkēnoō' — means to pitch a tent upon, to take up permanent residence in. The power of Christ pitches its tent most firmly and most permanently on the ground of human weakness. This is why Paul can say 'I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in needs, in persecutions, in distresses, for Christ's sake.' He is not engaging in spiritual masochism. He has discovered that every circumstance that reveals his weakness is a circumstance in which Christ's power finds its most accessible and most visible expression.

Waiting on the Lord: How Strength Is Renewed (Isaiah 40:31)

Isaiah 40:28-31 provides one of the most comprehensive theologies of strength-in-weakness in the Old Testament, set in the context of God's people who are exhausted, discouraged, and questioning His attentiveness: 'He gives power to the weak, and to those who have no might He increases strength. Even the youths shall faint and be weary, and the young men shall utterly fall, but those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength.'

Three levels of strength-loss are identified: the natural strong (youths) faint, the prime of human strength (young men) utterly falls, but the waiters on God — regardless of their natural condition — renew their strength. The Hebrew word for 'renew' — 'chalaph' — means to pass through, to change, to replace entirely. It is not the restoration of spent strength but the exchange of human exhaustion for divine energy. 'They shall mount up with wings like eagles' — not because the eagle is native to desert terrain, but because the eagle mounts on the thermal currents of rising air that lift it above conditions it could never navigate on its own.

“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.”

Philippians 4:13 (NKJV)

What Weakness Produces in a Believer's Life

The person who has genuinely come to the end of their own strength — who has tried every human resource, every self-generated strategy, every religious effort — and found it all inadequate — is standing at the most productive position in the spiritual life: the position of total dependence. And total dependence is the position of maximum divine supply. This is not a position to be embarrassed by or to escape from as quickly as possible. It is a position to be embraced, inhabited, and learned from.

The history of the greatest moves of God confirms this. The disciples in the upper room were not the confident, capable men who had argued about who was greatest. They were the broken, frightened, confused men who had watched their hopes die on a cross and had nothing left to offer. From that position of total emptiness, they received the fullness of Pentecost. The weaker they were when the Spirit fell, the stronger they became when the Spirit filled.

Strength for the Battle Ahead: Closing Week 3's Foundation

As we enter the final day of Week Three tomorrow — walking in righteousness — the strength we need to sustain the life of victory over temptation is not generated by more discipline, more prayer, or more spiritual effort alone. It is received by waiting on the Lord — by the daily, deliberate posture of exchanging our spent human energy for His infinite divine supply. 'They shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.' Not because they are physically superior to those who faint, but because the source of their strength is inexhaustible.

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Altar Call: How God's Strength Is Perfected in Human Weakness

Day 20 of Week 3 calls you forward — not into intellectual agreement with what you have read, but into actual surrender. Strength In Weakness is not a topic to study; it is an invitation to receive.

Your weakness is not an obstacle to God's power — it is the address where His power takes up residence. Tomorrow in Day 21: Walking in Righteousness, we close Week 3 by learning to reign in life through the One, Jesus Christ.

Receive what God has been speaking to you today. Pray the prayer below from your heart.

A Prayer for Strength In Weakness

Father, I bring You the weakness I have been ashamed of, the thorn I have begged You three times to remove, the limitation I have hidden from others and bargained away in prayer.

I receive Your answer: My grace is sufficient. Your strength is made perfect in this exact weakness. I stop fighting what You are using.

I boast — not in my strength, not in my performance, not in my track record — but in my infirmities. Let the power of Christ rest upon me. In the name of Jesus, Amen.

Frequently Asked Questions

What was Paul's thorn in the flesh?

Paul does not specify the thorn in 2 Corinthians 12:7, which has led to centuries of speculation — a physical ailment, a persistent spiritual adversary, a difficult person, or ongoing persecution are the most common interpretations. The ambiguity may be intentional: every believer reads their own thorn into the passage and finds the same grace waiting.

What does Isaiah 40:31 mean by "renew their strength"?

The Hebrew chalaph in Isaiah 40:31 means to exchange, to pass on, to change — like changing one garment for another. Those who wait on the Lord do not simply recover their old strength; they exchange human weakness for divine strength. The imagery of mounting up on eagle's wings speaks of effortless ascent powered by currents no human effort could generate.

Why didn't God remove Paul's thorn?

God's answer was that the thorn was serving a purpose: preventing Paul from becoming proud of the extraordinary revelations he had received (2 Corinthians 12:7), and providing the exact conditions under which Christ's power would be most visibly displayed. The grace God gave was better than removal because it addressed a deeper need.

How do I wait on the Lord when I feel weak?

Waiting on the Lord is active, not passive. It involves deliberate prayer, Scripture meditation, worship, and releasing the outcome to God's timing. It is the choice to depend on God's strength rather than straining to manufacture your own. Isaiah 40:31 promises renewal to those who wait — not to those who push through in self-reliance.

Is it okay to ask God to remove weakness?

Yes — Paul did it three times. Honest prayer about weakness is not a failure of faith; it is appropriate dependence. The key is Paul's ultimate posture: "Therefore most gladly I will rather boast in my infirmities." He moved from request to acceptance to boasting — not because he stopped wanting relief but because he recognised the superior value of what God was doing.

Your weakness is not a disqualification. It is the very place God's strength is perfected.

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