Showing posts with label Exposition of 2 Timothy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Exposition of 2 Timothy. Show all posts

Sunday, June 3, 2018

2 Timothy 1:13- 2:13 "Guard the Good Deposit!"


I want to draw your attention to verses 13-14, in 2 Timothy  Chapter 1:  “Follow the pattern of  the sound words  that you have heard from me, in the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus. By the Holy Spirit who dwells within us, guard the good deposit entrusted to you.

The context is clear. Paul is speaking to Timothy about the importance of guarding the Gospel. This is the point which the apostle Paul has been making since v.8.  The gospel (which is the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes[1])   had begun to destroy much of the powerful satanic cult of Diana in Ephesus[2] as people turned from the darkness of rank and file idolatry to the light of the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.  You may be very certain that Satan would not have left this advance against his kingdom unchallenged. He is the most formidable opponent of the gospel and he will throw everything against the advance of the gospel of Jesus Christ by means of his demonic forces. In addition he will use those people whom he has taken captive to do his will (see 2:26) to accomplish his destructive purposes.

Wherever there has been a work of God in history, there you will also have seen an anti-work of Satan. The Reformation of the 16th century,  which saw the Word of God restored to the church was opposed by the Counter Reformation, beginning with the Council of Trent (1545–1563) and ending at the close of the Thirty Years' War (1648). The Counter Reformation included the brutal Inquisition[3], an office dedicated to persecute those that had deviated from the Roman Catholic faith. It continued throughout the period of the Protestant Reformation, and in the name of the Catholic Church, many Protestant brothers and sisters were killed for their real faith in Jesus.

Back to Ephesus and Timothy; I can only imagine (and I know some of this from personal experience)   that the spiritual battle[4], the fight for  true faith in Ephesus was very severe and exhausting  so that   Timothy was tempted to shrink back[5].  In this situation the apostle Paul reminds him that God had not given him a spirit of fear but of power and of love and of self- control (1:7). He encourages him not to be ashamed of the gospel of the testimony about the Lord Jesus Christ[6] (1:8). Paul himself was not ashamed, for He himself is firmly rooted in the gospel: ”I am not ashamed, for I know  whom I have believed, and I am convinced that he is able to guard until that Day what has been entrusted to me.” [1:12].

It is from this  that this great  exhortation is made to Timothy in vv.13-17 (paraphrased): “Follow the pattern of the  sound words that you have heard from me  in the faith and  love that are in Christ Jesus. Timothy, by the Holy Spirit, who dwells within us, guard the good deposit entrusted to you! Guard the Gospel. Do not be ashamed of it and do not turn away from it like so many in Asia who have turned away from me and the Gospel-  except Onesiphorus.   

The key idea here is ‘guard the gospel’. But how is the gospel to be guarded? I want to answer this question with the help of our text, 1:13-2:13.

In the first place we must make sure that the gospel is guarded in our own hearts and lives.  We see how intensely Paul works with Timothy on this matter. Fear of what people may think and say of our Christian profession and becoming ashamed of the gospel can be a great hindrance to the life of our soul.  The only remedy is to make sure that we know Christ the Saviour very well. We come to know the Lord Jesus in the gospels and through the sound words of apostolic teaching  [1:13]. And we must guard this truth of the gospel not in our own strength and willpower, but by always drawing on the strength of the indwelling Holy Spirit [1:14]. Of the   Person and Work of the Holy Spirit  the Lord Jesus said in John 16:13: “ When  the Spirit of Truth comes, He will guide you into all the truth, for He will not speak on His own authority, but whatever He hears He will speak , and he will declare to you the things that are to come.” 

So here is  what is meant  by  guarding the truth of the Gospel:  First,  we  must guard the truth  as it is in Jesus  Christ in our own hearts, and in so  doing we must not add, subtract, embellish or diminish the gospel. We must tell the story of the Bible as plainly as possible, and when we do that, we must remember secondly, that we can only do that by the Holy Spirit who dwells in us.  He helps us keep the pattern of sound teaching. He enables us to guard the good deposit with faith and love that are in Christ Jesus [1:13]. Thanks be to God who gives us the victory through the indwelling Spirit.
Are you able to guard the gospel in your own heart, and in your own family and in your own society? The answer is yes, because if you are a Christian, you are enabled by the Holy Spirit, and you are strengthened by the grace that is in Christ Jesus (2:1). Notice that the work of the Holy Spirit and the Work of Christ is synonymous.   Notice also that you and the Holy Spirit must work together in taking hold of the Gospel.  You are called to be responsible to guard the gospel deposit and at the same time you are called to be reliant upon the Spirit’s power and by   the grace of God to   guard the Gospel.  God has designed this to be so.  We must do everything and yet we can do nothing without Him.  An old Puritan motto says it all: “Pray and work.” So when it comes to challenging times and when we feel under pressure to abandon the good deposit, the  gospel,  we need to know that we are not alone. We will pray and ask that the indwelling Holy Spirit will help us at such times. Paul had fully embraced and defended and kept the gospel at every turn. So must Timothy and so must we. We must and we can. We are not helpless when it comes to being challenged   to stand for the gospel. 

In the second place we must make sure that we raise up a generation of faithful, eloquent gospel messengers: “and what you have heard from me ( the pattern of sound words) , in the presence of many witnesses, entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach  others also.”  [2:2]. Now, while every Christian has a duty to guard the gospel by the power of the indwelling Holy Spirit, we also have a duty to nurture a future generation of fearless gospel pastors and preachers like Timothy and Titus. The pastoral ministry according to Ephesians 4:11-16 as a foundational ministry of the church. Pastor-teachers are given to build up and equip so that the saints of God can do the work of the ministry. Are you daily praying for a future generation of fearless, courageous, Spirit filled,   Gospel saturated   pastors who will pass on the baton to yet another generation?  Are you praying to God that your future children and your future grandchildren will   have a gospel church to attend?  Don’t take this for granted. I am afraid that this has already become a problem. Remember the prophecy of Amos 8:11-12.  Remember, that such a famine of the absence of the Word of God existed in the Intertestamental period, those 400 years before the coming of Christ. Remember, that such a famine existed hundreds of years before the 16th Century Reformation. Woe to that generation to whom the Word of the Lord, the Gospel of Grace will be withheld. How will they be saved without the Gospel? How will they enter into eternity, into the presence of a Holy God and into His holy heaven, unreconciled and without Christ as Mediator for their sin?  Think, brothers and sisters, and do not think only, but take each other by the hand and say, come let us pray and seek the Lord, to have mercy upon us!   Plead with Him that He will not take His Gospel from us!

In the third place remember that the gospel  will not be maintained and guarded without  suffering: “Share in suffering as a good soldier of Christ Jesus…” [2:3]. Paul reminds Timothy that Gospel labour is associated with suffering. It is a spiritual battle, and we read here that it requires the mind-set of a soldier, and like any soldier worth his salt, he is ready to embrace the hardships and suffering and discipline and disappointments that come with living under the Gospel. Paul experienced this, and in 1:15 you saw a hint of it. 

But Paul does not only use the image of a soldier to convey the need for a disciplined approach for gospel centred  living. Think over what I say, he says [2:7]: You need the mindset of a soldier, an athlete, a hardworking farmer . All of these images remind us of the commitment, sacrifice and  hard work that is part and parcel of the Christian life. Paul says to Timothy, ‘Gospel work is  hard, so don't expect it to be easy.’ Our generation does not like to hear this.  We want a soft and cuddly Christianity, but that is not possible in this life.    Brothers and sisters,  remember  that we are at war! In this war we are guarding our most precious commodity, the Gospel against the attack of Satan. I trust that you can see this clearly! On May 10, 1940, in the midst of WW II,  Winston Churchill, became the Prime Minister of Great Britain. On May 13th  1940 he  gave his first  famous speech as Prime Minister to the House of Commons.  He said: 
I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears, and sweat. We have before us an ordeal of the most grievous kind. We have before us many, many long months of struggle and suffering. You ask, ‘What is our policy?’ I can say it is to wage war by sea, land, and air, with all our might and with all the strength that God can give us to wage war against a monstrous tyranny never surpassed in the dark, lamentable catalog of human crime. That is our policy. “You ask, ‘What is our aim?’ I can answer in one word: it is victory; victory at all cost; victory in spite of all terror; victory, however long and hard the road may be; for without victory there is no survival…”.

That was a great and significant war. Nothing has been seen like this before, and that speech and call to action was necessary in order to guard the safety and integrity of Britain. The Bible is calling us here to a much bigger and critical and important battle against a much darker kingdom than the Third Reich. It calls us to guard and defend the Gospel from those who would invade it and pervert it.

Fourthly, in the defence and the guarding of the gospel, remember your ultimate position and destiny! Paul writes, ”remember Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, the offspring of David, as preached in my gospel… [2:8-13]. The Christian life, the Christian ministry, Christian service, is based on the person of Christ, on the work of Christ, and on the truth of Christ.  Yes, Paul is suffering for the sake of Jesus. It is the reason why he is bound in chains as a criminal. But  the Word of God is not bound, and so this momentary suffering  which Paul experience  for the elect (the church)  is nothing, when compared with that  which is before  him. Do you see that?  Paul looks ahead! The gospel that he preaches included that great fact that Christ is risen from the dead. The fact of the resurrection (heaven) transforms the way in which we look at our temporary sufferings, and Paul in particular sees here that this is all worth it. He knows  that  His suffering  will benefit all God’s people, even those like you and I who are now reading this letter, for Paul’s persistent and faithful testimony about Jesus  encourage me today! I know that this trustworthy saying in vv.  11-13 is true. This little faithful saying serves like a memory verse - something that you would repeat to yourself over  and over in times  of  difficulty.  And it is a reminder of the nature of the Gospel. 
This little text teaches us that you won’t need to give up, because Jesus does not give up on you! He will never forsake you.   If you have died with Jesus Christ, you will also live with Him.  And you  will not only live with Him. You will reign with Him.

But there's a warning here “If we deny Him, He will deny us.” If you give  upon the Gospel there  can be no hope of heaven for you, because His is the only name under heaven by which a person can be saved: Jesus Christ. So , dear people- guard that good deposit  with all your power , whilst trusting  the Holy Spirit  to  keep you  faithful to the end. There is no greater priority than this. Hold on to the Gospel.  Your heaven is waiting. Your resurrection is coming!



[1] Rom 1 :16
[2] See Acts 19:21-41
[3]  This  institution was  created by the pope already  in the 12th century
[4] See Ephesians 6:10-18
[5] Hebrews 10:38,39
[6] All in Asia (including Phygelus and  Hermogenes) had turned away from Paul in his imprisonment , presumably because  they were ‘ ashamed’ of him. Onesiphorus (1:16)  was  an exception

Sunday, May 27, 2018

2 Timothy 1:8-18 : Unashamed!


We are looking at Paul’s last letter, written somewhere   in AD 67/68. The Pastoral Epistles are so called because they were letters written to young pastors (Timothy in Ephesus and Titus on the island of Crete) by a senior pastor. These are wonderful letters, full of pastoral wisdom, speaking directly  into our  own hearts.

Our text (2 Tim. 1:8-18) begins with a ‘therefore’, meaning that it relates to something said previously. Last time  we saw that the apostle   Paul, Timothy’s mentor  reminded his young friend  that he needed to fan into flame the pastoral gift  that was in him through the laying on of hands by the council  of church elders, with Paul present  (cf. 2 Tim 1:6 à  1 Tim 4:14). In the exercise of this pastoral gift he needed to know that ‘God had not given him a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of self –discipline’. It takes spiritual courage, and a rugged faith and a very real trust in God’s power (and not  self- reliance), and it takes discipline to be   to be a God centered and gospel –centered Christian, and nowhere is this more true than in the pastoral ministry.   

The reality of the Christian life and especially the experience of pastoral ministry can be very intimidating. The devil, the Christian’s most powerful adversary  actively seeks to intimidate, resist and afflict pastoral leadership in particular (cf.  1Tim 3:7; 2Tim 2:26 ….which cautions us against‘the snare of the devil’).  And Satan frequently incites powerful, intimidating human personalities against pastoral leadership. The net effect can be that pastoral leaders are tempted to shrink back, and somehow become ashamed of the gospel. Paul’s concern in our text is that Timothy should not be ashamed of the gospel - the testimony about the Lord Jesus. Neither should Timothy be ashamed of Paul, who is in prison for the sake of the gospel.  

Not ashamed! This is the phrase we want to consider.  You have seen it used   three times in our reading cf. vv. 8,12,16.  

·       In v. 8 Paul exhorts  Timothy  to be  not ashamed of the gospel;
·       In v.12 Paul says that he is not ashamed of Jesus.
·     In v.16 he makes reference to a man called Onesiphorus who likewise   was not ashamed  of Paul who was  a prisoner for the  sake of  the  gospel. We would usually be ashamed of telling people that we have friends or relatives in prison. Well, Onesiphorus was not ashamed of Paul’s imprisonment for the sake of the gospel.

So there is the real temptation to be ashamed of the gospel and of those that are gospel messengers. But what exactly is shame? Why are we ashamed?  What is the cause of shame?   Collins English Dictionary (2004 ed.)  says,  “Shame is  a painful emotion resulting  from an awareness  of having done something dishonourable or unworthy caused by a consciousness of guilt or shortcoming or impropriety.”  
This definition fits the original sin of Adam and Eve. Shame is actually the very first emotion described in the Bible. Prior to sin Adam and Eve enjoyed an open, transparent, unashamed fellowship with God and with one another. Genesis 2:25 tells us that the man and his wife were both naked and were not ashamed. Then came sin.  Sin changed their attitudes both towards one another and towards God.  Sin introduced the notion of shame. Adam and Eve suddenly felt naked, and suddenly they felt ashamed of their bodies, trying to hide their nakedness from one another. Above all they felt ashamed before God and they sought to hide from God. There once was a time when shame was not a part of our human experience, and now it is. The phenomenon is well described in academic circles, trying to understand the nature of shame, usually without reference to the fall. And this is how it has been with the world ever since. Shame is a universal human emotion, appearing in all known human cultures, and it is always bears a negative connotation, except in South African circles, where ’Ag shame’ is apparently an expression of sympathy!

There are two facets   to this shame: true or real shame and false shame. Adam and Eve experienced a true or real sense of shame when they sinned, and as previously indicated, the human heart feels ashamed when exposed by sin at various levels. It is a very real emotion, and it is important that we feel this when we sin. A hardened, abandoned, shameless conscience in this fallen world is a terrible curse from God.

But there is also this false sense of shame, and this is the one that Paul addresses here in our passage. Don’t be ashamed of the gospel, or of me the gospel messenger, Timothy. I am not ashamed of the gospel, and neither is Onesiphorus ashamed of the gospel.  

Why should Timothy not be ashamed?  Well, the great effect of the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ is that when He saves us from our sin, there is no more condemnation (Rom. 8:1). This is another way of saying that when I become a Christian, then I have no more shame to bear. I am absolved from my guilt  and therefore I  do not have to stand  before God guilty and  ashamed any longer.  The gospel takes away the shame of our sin because Jesus took our shame upon Himself. Hebrews 12:2 counsels us  to ...fix your eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Jesus experienced the shame of our sin. Because of that, He calls us not to be ashamed of Him. The gospel takes away our shame. But it is one thing to hear that and another thing to live that. It is clear that Timothy, might still struggle with a sense of shame, even though he was Christian. 
Why? Because, it appears, he was still in the grip of fear – the fear of man – which produces a sense of shame  in terms of standing for Christ (or Paul in prison) – like Peter, who at the time of Jesus’ trial was ashamed to own  him whom he at one time had  owned as the Christ, the Son of the Living God. But all of a sudden, powerful people appeared to be greater than God and Jesus who now stood condemned and seemingly helpless before the Jewish council. So what is the cure for this fear, this sense of shame?

This is where verses 8 – 12 come in. This  is  one long continuous sentence, in which  Paul  provides  Timothy  with spiritual medicine to cure  this feeling of being ashamed of the gospel  (this stumbling block to the Jews, this foolishness to gentiles- 1 Cor.1:23). Follow the logic:   

The main proposition:  Therefore do not be ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me His prisoner,

Subordinate clauses :  
·       but share in suffering for the gospel by the power of GOD. Yes, Timothy, you   will suffer for the sake of the gospel in this world (because people think it is stupid and foolish), but remember that  God by His power is  with you in this. You are not alone in this.   Jesus gives us an example of this in Matthew 10:19-20.  Timothy  do not be ashamed of the gospel  or of me the gospel messenger!
·       Here  is  more  reason  as to why  you do not have to be ashamed: “…who  saved us, and called us with a holy calling, not because of  our works, but because of his own purpose and grace which he gave us  in Christ Jesus  before the ages began.  Timothy, think of the ground of your salvation. God saved you decisively! He called you with a holy calling  i.e. he separated you from the world to be His. You did not do this by your own works and  achievements. No, no, no! God did this by His own purpose and grace before the ages began!   Timothy, your salvation was planned and designed by God from eternity past- when you came to Christ, you were entering something that is older than the age of the earth. You did not choose Him. He chose you before you were even born. Your salvation is rooted in something much bigger than you are able to conceive… therefore to not be ashamed of the gospel or of me the gospel messenger!
·       and which now has been manifested  through the appearing of our Saviour CHRIST JESUS, who abolished death, and brought life and immortality to light through the GOSPEL.  Timothy, God did not only plan all this in the past and before the beginning of time, but  in time He put His plan  into action. The Saviour  Jesus  was born. He lived , died, rose and ascended and  put God’s plan of salvation into action. The biggest  benefit is that  He killed death and gave you an immortal life  through the gospel….  therefore to not be ashamed of the gospel or of me the gospel messenger!
·       for which I was appointed a preacher and an apostle and a teacher, which  is why I suffer as I do.   Paul himself had understood all this. He was rooted deeply in the gospel  and it is this  which  produced in  Paul  AN UNASHAMED FAITH
·       But I am not ashamed  for I know whom I have believed, and I am convinced  that he is able to guard  until that Day  what has been entrusted to me.  The facts of the gospel deeply meditated  upon and stored up in  his heart is   what changed the way Paul  thought and lived.

A  FURTHER GUARD AGAINST SHAME

Follow the pattern of sound words which you have heard from me, in the faith and love which are in Christ Jesus. 14 By the Holy Spirit who dwells within us, guard the good deposit entrusted to you. (2 Timothy 1:13-14).

Timothy is called to guard this gospel treasure expressed in these sound words of Paul in the FAITH and  LOVE that are in Christ Jesus.  Jesus is the One to whom we turn to get the faith the believe in Him (Lord,   I believe. Help me in my unbelief! Mk. 9:24);  Jesus  who loved us first is also the Source of our love. We learn from Him, we draw our ability to love  God and  man (in that order) from him.   And we do this by the power of the out-poured Holy Spirit who dwells within us.  We are not helpless. We are not victims of our shame. We have been freed to serve God and the gospel unashamedly !

A SHAMEFUL EXAMPLE
You are aware of the fact that all who are in Asia turned away from me, among whom are Phygelus and Hermogenes. (2 Tim. 1:15). These two men  were evidently leaders within the churches of Asia. They were among the many in Asia who turned away from Paul. To understand what this means, you have to remember Paul’s circumstances once again. He is in prison. He is  incapacitated, and  he appears helpless to the human eye. And  now they have turned their back on Paul. They are ashamed of him.  

PORTRAIT OF  A MAN WHO IS NOT ASHAMED
Onesiphorus in 2 Timothy 1:16-18 stands in  contrast to the negative examples of Phygelus and Hermogenes. He had been with Paul at Ephesus and more recently he had come to Paul while he was imprisoned in Rome. Onesiphorus is only mentioned here and in 4:19 where he tells Timothy to greet the household of Onesiphorus. Concerning him Paul says: He... was not ashamed of my chains; 17 but when he was in Rome, he earnestly searched for me, and found me (1:16-17).   This clearly shows us where Onesiphorus was rooted. He was not ashamed of the gospel, nor of Paul the gospel messenger. 

CONCLUSION
I believe that we may all struggle with a sense of shame when it comes to owning the gospel and her messengers in various situations. The solution to this false sense of shame, according to Paul, is  to deeply meditate upon the work of God  in salvation – to drink deeply from the wells of your salvation and to be not ashamed of  your faith in Jesus, being persuaded by that which you have believed, trusting  in no one less than God Himself to guard keep you until that  Day,  when faith shall be turned  into sight. Amen !



Sunday, April 22, 2018

2 Timothy 1:3-7 "God Has Not Given Us A Spirit Of Fear "


Our focus text is  the 7th verse. Fear can be a good thing, but it can also be a very crippling thing. It is good when it keeps you from doing stupid things like dangling from long elasticated ropes, jumping into deep gorges and from suspension bridges. The Bible also says that the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom (e.g. Prov. 1:7). So there is healthy fear.  Our text however speaks about   the matter of unhealthy fear, and this is the subject we are addressing today. I have provided you with some additional reading material on the subject, available in your bulletins and by way of an extra pamphlet we have published.

Last time we considered the opening verses (1:1-2) of   the second letter of Paul to Timothy. These opening words gave us an insight into the nature of Paul’s ministry. He was an apostle by the will of God according to the promise of the life that is in Christ Jesus. Paul was endowed with a tremendous sense of power and authority from God. That is what he needed for this particular apostolic work to which he was called.

From a concurrent study of the book of Acts on Sunday evenings we are able to observe the almost fearless nature of Paul as he,   in his apostolic journeys among the gentiles in Asia and Greece, walks into the proverbial lion’s den time and time again.  In 2 Corinthians 11: 16-33 he provides us with a biographical sketch of    what happened on his many journeys. It is hair-raising, and yet he kept on and on. On his last missionary journey[1]  he, against  all counsel  and  warning, went  on to Jerusalem, knowing that trouble and hardship would await him there  which would send him into this prison in which he now finds himself in  Rome. Yet he did not waver, for he knew that God had given him a spirit, not of fear, but of power and of love and of self- control.

Paul is writing to Timothy, his beloved child in the faith (2 Tim. 1:2).  Timothy is currently serving the church in Ephesus  (1 Tim. 1:3) , and it appears  from his first letter that Timothy had to contend with a number of  tough issues there, and it seems as if Timothy is really struggling  to apply himself  in this situation.  He is clearly suffering for the sake of the gospel (2 Tim. 1:8) and that always brings with it peculiar temptations and fears.  So, Paul wrote this letter to strengthen him and to encourage him. He does this with so much love and tenderness and with insight into Timothy’s background.
But he also writes with firmness. He reminds Timothy that he is a gifted man and therefore an enabled man (1:6). We must not be tempted to think that Timothy was generally  weak and fearful. Why would Paul send Timothy into spiritually difficult situations if he was so fearful? It would seem quite unlikely that a timid soul would be entrusted with such an important  assignment.  He is essentially lacking nothing to do this difficult work in Ephesus, but he appears to have this Achilles heel- this fearful heart, this timidity at this time, and it is not helping him in this ministry. What then must he do?
Paul says to him, “God has not given us a spirit of fear but of power and love and self- control.” Now how will that piece of advice solve Timothy’s problem?  More than you may realize at this present moment! But before we look at this, please note that Paul does not address this statement specifically to Timothy but to "us". He applies this matter to all his readers, all people (you and I) including himself.  And if you are like me, you may also often   be oppressed by a spirit of fear which comes to us in many different ways.   Anxiety, worry about what might or might not happen … these are forms of fear; this is the spirit of fear. This verse says that these do not come from God.

Did it ever occur to you that we Christians are forbidden to fear or to be anxious when it comes to trusting God with our life? How many times in the Scriptures do we read that Jesus said, "Fear not!"; "Do not let not your heart be troubled" [Jn. 14:1, 14:27]; Do not be anxious about your life… your heavenly Father knows [Matt. 6:25-34].  Stop it when it starts going that way. God does not give us a spirit of fear.

The word translated as fear here in the ESV (timidity in the NIV) is not the normal word used in the Greek (phobos). It is the word deilia and it was never used in a good sense[2]. In Greek literature it describes the behaviour of a man running away in battle and so it is associated with a cowardly fear. How does this happen? It may be a timid or cowardly nature, whereby a person is just a plain coward. But I do not think that cowardice was Timothy’s problem.    It seems that Timothy may have become battle weary in the front lines of this spiritual battle. Paul in his days in Ephesus mentioned that he fought   with the wild beasts of Ephesus[3]. Timothy was in the same position. Day after day he faced the enemy of the gospel in so many different ways.  The danger of becoming battle weary is that we stop standing against the enemy and withdraw from the front lines of serving Christ, allowing the enemy to gain ground.  The rule of spiritual warfare, according to Ephesians 6:10-18  is to stand  against the enemy. 

British Prime Minister Winston Churchill (1874 -1965) once spoke to the boys at his old school, Harrow School, in October of 1941, on Speech Day and he told them, "Never give in. Never give in. Never, never, never, never–in nothing, great or small, large or petty–never give in, except to convictions of honour and good sense. Never yield to force. Never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy.” [4]
Well, there was a man who led Britain through her darkest hours against overwhelming odds. By his leadership he caused Britain to stand resolutely against Hitler’s German Reich. 

As Paul sat in this Roman prison, awaiting execution, he wrote this final letter to encourage Timothy to not to give into cowardly fear, despite the opposition.  And this letter is for every Christian enlisted in the war for Christ and His kingdom, and against Satan and his kingdom.   And God doesn’t give us a spirit of cowardice.  He calls us not to hide our lights under a cover.  He calls us not to be ashamed of the gospel of Jesus Christ.  That is not the spirit of the Christian soldier.  

So how is that very common experience of fear (whether through actual cowardice or induced by battle weariness) dealt with among us? Listen to Paul’s brief answer, as he provides us with an effective  threefold strategy from God to combat this spirit of fear.  God gives power, God gives love and God gives self- control - and this is the remedy!

1. God Gives Us A Spirit Of Power.
Thank God that we need not be slaves to anyone – and especially not to fear.  We have been given powerful resources in Christ. We are not helpless or defenceless.  No one in the Bible puts it better than the apostle Peter:  His divine power has granted to us all things that pertain to life and godliness, through the knowledge of him who called us to his own glory and excellence“ [2 Peter 1:3]. Being a Christian is not a self -driven effort.  The Bible tells us that the   God who begins a work in our lives helps us [Phil. 1:6]. If he begins a work in us then he will bring it to completion. His power continues the work that his power began. So too, everything that God gave Timothy to do, He also equipped him for.  Paul knew that so well. He wrote to the Philippians, “I can do all things through him who strengthens me.” [Phil. 4:13]. Whatever God commands us to do in the Bible, that He also gives us the power to do.  When He wants you to forgive your worst enemies He will give you the power to do so.  When He commands you to love Him with all your heart and to love your neighbour as yourself, He will give you the power to do so for every situation.  When He commands you to love your wife as Christ loved the church, and you ask Him to help you, He will.  And you dear woman, can submit to your difficult husband, as to the Lord (1 Peter 3:1-7). Children,    you can obey your parents when your teenage hormones are beginning to rage against them.  You can do everything through him who gives you strength. Everything God asks of you in the Bible you can do by the power God gives you every day, and sufficient for the day thereof.  God has not given us a spirit of fear but a spirit of power. This power  does not belong to a  Christian  elite.   This power from God is given to every single Christian without exception. 

2. God Gives Us A Spirit Of Love.
The apostle John, that great apostle of love, gives us the most profound insight in this regard. He says in 1 John 4:18: “There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear.”  He tells us that God is love [1 Jn.  4:8]. And God loved this poor world that He gave us His Son as an atoning sacrifice to take away our sin. And John says that if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another [1 Jn. 4:11] …and not only ought we to. We can stand firm in love, because God has poured His love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit whom He has given us [Romans 5]. Against all opposition and intimidation that gave way to fear, a   great spirit of love came upon the early Christian church, so that they shared all they had with other Christians. They loved one another not just in word but also in deed. That love, God gives to every one of his people, and it drives out fear. Love is the antidote to fear. You will not fear your enemies if you love them.

3. God Gives Us A Spirit Of Self- Control (NIV – self-  discipline)  .
Again this word is found only here in the New Testament (Gr. sōphronismou). It means to be wise and   level-headed; to have a practical, sanctified common sense. How can anyone lead others when they cannot control themselves?  Even power must have self-control. A powerful engine without controls is power out of control.  A powerful dictator without accountability is out of control.
And love too must have control. Love without truth is hypocritical, mushy, soppy sentimentalism. Love without principled truth behind it will cause a man or a woman   to leave their spouse and family and run off, simply because   they are utterly infatuated with one another. We need this self-discipline, along with love and power to fight against the spirit of fear.  And so you see that we have a powerful triad here.  These three Christian graces need to be present in forming our Christian character in this world. And you need them all – just like faith, hope and love, another vital Christian triad.   Not just two out of the three – all three.  

Will you measure yourself and test yourself by the Scriptures today?
·       Especially with regard to your fears in immersing yourself completely in the gospel?
·       Being a fearless soldier in Christ’s work? 
·   Will you lay hold of God’s power and God’s love and will you exercise self- control by His strength this week?
·       Will you ask Him for it in prayer?
·       Will you believe that He will supply your need against fear?
·       And will you testify some day before this congregation how God helps you in this matter?



[1] Acts 18:23- 21:26
[2] Vines Expository Dictionary: p. 230 .
[3]  See 1 Corinthians 15:32.   This probably refers  to the struggles that  Paul  had with  the  devotees of Artemis (The Cult of Diana of Ephesus).
[4] https://www.nationalchurchillmuseum.org/never-give-in-never-never-never.html  This  link contains the short, but powerful  speech given on that occasion.

Sunday, April 8, 2018

2 Timothy 1:1-2 "To Timothy from Paul, with Love."


The second letter of Paul to Timothy written in 67/68 AD is a very special, beautiful, fatherly letter written to a beloved son in the faith. Jesus had his beloved disciple John, and Paul had his beloved Timothy.

These are Paul’s last recorded words that we know of. Paul knows that he is going home to be with Jesus very soon (4:7, 8, 18). Last words are significant. They are weighty and in true apostolic fashion they are prophetic and thus by the   inspiration of the Holy Spirit he writes to help Timothy and the church at Ephesus over which the Holy Spirit had made him a pastor. And he helps us here today. The message of the Bible,  the inspired Word of God is timeless and for all ages, and remains an important counselling tool  for us.  

Paul is in chains (1:16). He is imprisoned, under house-arrest, but as we see in Acts 28:30,31 he initially  has  significant liberties. He can receive visitors and he is free to preach the gospel to all who come to see him. However, his  liberties in preaching the gospel  will only increase the hate of those  that oppose the gospel and so it appears  in this letter that  Paul knows that soon he will be dead (cf.  4:6-8).The time has come. His work is done, and what a work that was!  After Christ’s death, and following Pentecost   many were converted under the missionary labours of the apostle Paul.  But Satan who always opposes the gospel through people who he has taken captive to do his will, will  always make   sure that  God’s work would be opposed (cf. Acts 20:29,30). Here is an instance.  
In A.D. 64, a few years before Paul’s second letter to Timothy was composed, the emperor Nero caused Rome to burn and he conveniently blamed it on the Christians, because Christianity was beginning to make a real impact upon Roman society.  So Satan inspired men like Nero to start a cruel persecution of Christians. Being a Christian was now no longer a novelty. It was dangerous, and it led to apostasy on the part of many whose hearts weren’t truly settled in Christ.

But in addition to the persecution of the church there was also the deception of the church. Paul had warned the Ephesian elders about this in Acts 20:29, 30. False teachers, wolves in sheep’s clothing as he calls them,   were upsetting the faith of many and so Paul also includes a pointed warning in this letter concerning the coming times of difficulty (3:1ff) along with encouragement to stand steadfast in the gospel (4:1ff).  

Another thing… at this time Paul found himself virtually abandoned in Rome (vv. 15-17).

So with all this in mind we now simply wish to consider the nature of Paul’s relationship with this young pastor, whom we know as Timothy.   

PAUL AN APOSTLE OF CHRIST JESUS BY THE WILL OF GOD…

This letter to Timothy came with a particular authority.  Yes, Paul was indeed Timothy’s mentor and father in the faith and as such that fact would have carried much weight, but notice that the weight of his words does not come from his special relationship with Timothy. Paul was not a self-styled guru, a magnetic personality, to whom people are attracted and devoted. Paul did not appear to have such qualities in any case[1].  No, these words came from an apostle of Christ Jesus – an appointed messenger, a dedicated messenger of the Lord Jesus. These words come ultimately to Timothy from God Himself.

Paul was appointed a messenger of divine truth by the will of God. And Paul did not call himself to this ministry. God sovereignly chose him before he was born (Gal. 1:15).  And he was called to be an apostle in time by the Lord Jesus, whilst on the road to Damascus with the intention to persecute Christians (Acts 9:3ff). You may choose to become a painter or a construction worker, a designer or a policeman, but you do not choose to become an apostle. That, incidentally, is true for all spiritual gifts. They are callings.  Spiritual gifts are sovereignly granted and appointed by the Holy Spirit, who gives as He wills (Eph. 4:11; 1 Cor. 12:7,8,11). Paul, by trade and skill was a tentmaker, and by calling he was an apostle of Jesus Christ.

As an apostle he had the God given authority and calling from God to be a reliable truth bearer after Christ had ascended to heaven.  He was able to speak and provide reliable doctrine (God -breathed Scripture cf. 3:16) for the young church, and to have these reliable words written down for future use. In this letter he is concerned to   help his young pastor friend (who also has a divine calling) to pass on this apostolic doctrine to faithful men who will be able to teach others also (2:2).  Timothy, apart from teaching sound words to his congregation (1:13) and having a high regard for the Scriptures (3:16, 17),   must mentor others who will also teach (2:2). He must be a balanced man, and careful with words (2:14). He must be sound and balanced in the presentation of his doctrine. He must not engage in foolish controversy (2:23) nor be quarrelsome, but be kind to everyone, able to teach, patiently enduring evil, correcting his opponents with gentleness (2:24, 25). He must understand the rebellious nature of the people that he ministers to (3:1-9; 4:3-4). He must be a ready preacher of the Word of God (4:1) - an evangelist; a preacher of the gospel of Jesus at all times (4:5). In all this, Paul was a true model of a balanced gospel ministry.  There is no real Christianity without learning from Jesus and His apostles. That is why we (beginning with pastors, elders, deacons, heads of families, fathers, mothers) must get to know the Bible and make its teachings our lifestyle.  

ACCORDING TO THE PROMISE OF THE LIFE THAT IS IN CHRIST JESUS…

This is the heart of the apostolic message:  “according to the promise of life that is in Christ Jesus”. You can live the Christian life only by the power that Christ supplies day by day. We get this life only by being united to Jesus.

TO TIMOTHY MY BELOVED CHILD…

Timothy represents the new generation of pastors. He himself is not an apostle. He builds upon the  foundation that the apostles and prophets have laid.  And Timothy has a special place in Paul’s heart.  In all likelihood he was converted under Paul’s ministry, and that is special.  I have a special affection and love in my heart for Richard Graham and Buzzy Kloot, students at UCT who first challenged my lukewarmness in the first half of 1978. I have a special affection for Pastor Frank Retief, the man under who’s preaching my spiritual eyes were first opened on the 22nd of June 1978 to see the Lord Jesus for who He is. I have a special love for that loving man Victor Pearce, now with the Lord, a University chaplain at the Student YMCA. He was the one who first nurtured me   as a raw convert.  And what can I say about my love and gratitude for my first real pastors at the Walvis Bay Baptist Church, Don Watson and later  Peter Radmanovich? And what can I say about Charles Whitson, the founding pastor of the Eastside Baptist Church, and his dear wife Betty, (both now with the Lord Jesus) who have been so kind and loving to me when I first came to Windhoek in 1983?  It was under Charles Whitson’s ministry that I was encouraged to enrol at the Baptist Theological Seminary in Cape Town   in 1986, and what rich years those were. And in that same year I met the woman who would love me more than anyone else on this earth.

Timothy my beloved child (or son)… Timothy was truly loved by Paul and he loved Paul.   As already said, he probably came to know and love the Lord Jesus whom he now served as a pastor, under Paul’s ministry.  And Paul knew Timothy’s family. He knows that his mother was named Eunice and he even knows the name of his grandmother, Lois. (1:5) Timothy was half Gentile and half Jewish. His father was a Greek. He was born and raised in Lystra where Paul had been nearly stoned to death (Acts 16:1). He was ordained when Paul and the other elders laid their hands on him (1:6; 1 Tim 4:14). Paul knew Timothy well. He knew that Timothy had a  timid nature (1:7). He knew that he had a fragile constitution who needed to be urged to take a little wine for his stomach’s sake and his frequent ailments (1 Tim 5:23).

You really love a person when you take care to get to know them. Paul really loved Timothy.  He took care to know him. He was not some high minded church leader, aloof and altogether on another level, mightier than thou, preoccupied with his own importance and status as an apostle.  Paul was like his Lord Jesus. Jesus, the mighty Son of God Himself was capable of getting down to the level of the man or woman he would meet along life’s highway. He was able to love the unlovely. He came for sinners. We read that when he met with the conceited rich young ruler in Mark 10:21, that He looked at him and loved him. And so too we remember that God loved us while we were yet sinners (Rom. 5:8), and the cross is the profoundest evidence of this fact. Jesus died on the cross for sinners. God so loved the world that He gave ….(Jn. 3:16)

God is love.  God loves us. You, dear believer are made in the image of God.  And you are made to imitate the God who loves you  (1 Jn. 3:16; 4:11). You are born again to love God and to love others. It is the mark of a true Christian.  

So, before we get into this  letter, we take note  that  Paul was not only an apostle. He was a true child of God characterized by his real love for God and for this individual, called Timothy and his real love for the lost world of his day.  When Paul loved Timothy he showed that he was a true disciple of the Lord. And because he loved him, he wanted the very best for him. What is the very best that we could wish for anyone?  Grace, mercy and peace from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord!
The Grace of God, the mercy of God changed Paul from a hateful persecutor to a loving man.

SUMMARY

Our first meditation in this little letter has opened our hearts and minds to the profound apostolic authority of Paul and the deep love which accompanies this ministry.  They belong together as two sides of a coin. The natural outflow of our apostolic doctrine is that we love God, love one another and love this lost world.  And we see it consistently reflected in Paul’s life and ministry.  And this is all built upon the life and ministry of our Lord Jesus whose wonderful love we now remember  and celebrate in this table [ Lord's Supper]  set before us. 


[1] E.g. 2 Corinthians 10:10 English Standard Version (ESV)  10 For they say, “His letters are weighty and strong, but his bodily presence is weak, and his speech of no account.”

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