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

Monday, July 23, 2018

2 Timothy 3:1-13 "Understanding Our Times"


I am constantly amazed to see how the Bible has the ability to speak to every generation and at all times. This particular letter from Paul to Timothy was written nearly 2000 years ago[1]  and yet it is as relevant today as it was in the day in which it was written. 
It is true of course, that the world has undergone massive,   breath taking changes.  In Paul and Timothy’s day there were no cars and no aeroplanes, no modern electronic and computer gadgets, no aspirin and  antibiotics, no insurance policies and retirement plans…, but  in many other regards much remains the same – God remains the same  and the heart of man remains  the same.  Nothing has changed with regard to the heart of man, and when we read these words   again in 3:1-13, we will find   our hearts and minds saying over and again … ‘this is still  true’.

Now these words from Paul which we have read do not stand on their own. They are written in the context of his second letter to Timothy. Here  Paul is concerned here  that his young  friend Timothy, pastoring  the church in Ephesus,  a difficult city, and being tempted with many kinds of fears[2], should  hold on to Jesus (2:1, 8-13) and  do   the work of  in keeping with the gentle and  meek spirit of Christ (2:24-26), continuing in what he has learned  from Paul, his mentor (3:1-15). 

It is against this background that we consider our theme, “Understanding the Times” as it arises out of 2 Timothy 3:1–13

1.               Vv. 1–5:   Understanding the general behaviour of people in the last days.
2.               Vv. 6–9:  Understanding how they affect society and a lesson from history.
3.               Vv. 10–13: Understanding what it costs to live a godly life in such a culture.

 1.  3:1-5  Understanding the general behaviour of people in the last days.

3:1 “But understand this, that in the last days there will come times difficulty…. From the New Testament perspective, the last days began with the coming of the Lord Jesus, and the last days will end at the second coming of the Lord Jesus, when the world as we know it now will end. Following that the new heavens and the new earth[3] will appear.  Many Christians think that this text refers to the last of the last days. It does not. What is written here characterises the entire church age. “There will come times of difficulty…”.  And so we take note  that evils that characterize the last days appear again and again in  our history.  Thank God that not all days are uniformly evil. My grandparents lived through two horrendous world wars. I have been spared from that, but there is no telling what our children might face. Thank God for times of peace. Thank God also for the history of Revivals, when  God mercifully intervened  time and again for the sake of His people. At such times society was reformed and evil people were restrained.  There may yet be, before the return of Christ, another great revival. I encourage you to pray and work to that end. Don’t capitulate to the darkness. Don’t use this text to promote pessimism. Don’t retreat. Remember that the gates of hell will not prevail against Christ's church (Matt. 16:18). Preach the Gospel according to  what you have in you, day in and day out, in season and out of season (2 Tim. 4:2). But know that life in this fallen world for the Christian man and woman will be difficult, and it affects the church as we shall see in v.6.

The difficulty relates to what Paul says in 3:2-5. It relates to the behaviour of people in this age. And it is demonic!  In 1 Timothy 4:1 he says, “Now the Spirit expressly says that in later times some will depart from the faith by devoting themselves to deceitful spirits and teachings of demons.” The apostle Peter says, “Scoffers will come in the last days” (2 Peter 3:3). Jude says, “In the last time there will be scoffers, following their own ungodly passions” (Jude 1:18).

And so you find in 3:1-4 a list of typical behaviour in these days – 19 characteristics[4].   

Firstly, consider what they love:  They are ‘lovers of self’, lovers of money, not loving good lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, and in v.4.  The fundamental problem with these people is that they have a misdirected love for all the wrong things.  The greatest commandment is to love the Lord our God with all heart, soul, mind and strength and to love our neighbours as ourselves[5], and yet these people just love themselves.

Then, in between those four misdirected loves we find 15 words which describe destructive patterns of relating to others.  They are proud, arrogant, abusive (lit. blasphemers). That is what self- lovers are  like. They are self- absorbed and dismissive of others. They are   narcissistic.  In Greek mythology, Narcissus was a hunter who was known for his beauty. The story  goes  that he came to a pool, where he saw his own reflection in the water and fell in love with it, not realizing it was merely an image. Unable to leave the beauty of his reflection, Narcissus lost his will to live. He stared at his reflection until he died.  From him comes the term narcissism, a fixation with oneself and one's physical appearance or public perception.

Consider the next five words: disobedient to parents, ungrateful, unholy, heartless, unappeasable. In the Greek form these five words are all in the negative[6]. Here are people known by what they are not, rather than what they are. They do not obey their parents (Gk. goneusin apeitheis- lit. unable to be persuaded).  They are not grateful beings (Gk. acharistoi). They have no desire for holy living (Gk.  anosioi – unholy); they  have no heart – they are  without love (Gk. astorgoi). They are unappeasable (Gk. aspondos i.e. implacable, unforgiving, irreconcilable).

The remaining seven words: ‘slanderous’ (Gk. diaboloi lit. diabolical- the devil  is  a slanderer); ‘without self-control’ (Gk. akretēs lit. without power); ‘brutal’ (Gk. anēmeros lit. not gentle ); ‘not lovers of the good’ (Gk. aphilagathos);  ‘treacherous’  (Gk. prodotēs this term is  used of Judas who betrayed Jesus) ; ‘reckless’ (Gk. propetēs  lit. falling forwards – i.e. rash); ‘swollen with conceit’ (Gk. tuphoō – lit. to wrap in smoke, hence puffed up, conceited, high minded) ; lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of  God.

Here is a portrait of the godless life of mankind all over the world, in every kind of society and at all times. This is the life of people in Namibia in the 21st century. Only the gospel offers a radical solution to this problem. Only the gospel changes people from within, when we learn to put off old habits and put on the life of Christ (Eph. 4: 17-32).

Note that these people are religious! (v.5)
We are told in v.5 that they have “the appearance of godliness”. They practise a form of religion. Think of the Pharisees and the priests who stood against Jesus and His church. They were religious. Theirs was the temple, the ceremonies and the law of God, but their religion was a man-made tradition. They had exchanged the truth of God for a lie. Sadly there are so many people in this world who are like that. They are religious, but not converted. The problem with this religion is that the heart worships what it creates in its own image. True religion is to love the God who has created us in His image, and to serve Him according to His Word.   

What is Timothy to do with such a people? “Avoid such people”, says Paul. Look for the broken hearted sinner. Look for the man, the woman who despairs of themselves and who seek for God.  Introduce them to Jesus. Let them be changed by Him.

2.  3:6–9  Understanding how they affect society and a lesson from history.

Take note that these people  undermine  weak people (vv. 6,7).
Paul says “… for among them are  those who creep  into households and  capture weak women, burdened with sins  and led astray by various passions, always learning and never able to arrive  at a knowledge  of the truth” (vv.6&7). This is not a general statement that applies to all women. Timothy was raised by two strong, godly, discerning women.  Paul is describing certain women, weak in character and weak in mind, and open to manipulation. Paul is simply illustrating how unscrupulous people work.  They are predators pulling down the weak and the vulnerable, the foolish and the ignorant in society.  Paul is showing us the tactics used by these pseudo religionists.  They were literally going into homes of (especially the wealthy, middle, upper-class) women of that Greco-Roman culture who had been introduced to faith in Christ through the preaching of faithful teachers like Timothy and Titus and Paul. They were going there while their husbands were at work, and they were tickling their ears with false teaching. They go to people who haven't really grasped the truth as it is in Jesus.   They  go to people  that  are unstable in their sense of purpose and direction in life. They were led by various passions/ emotions.  They were burdened with sins (guilty consciences). They had a desire to get rid of that, but they really have not fully understood the provision of God in Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of their sin. And so they’re weighed down with sins, and they’re looking for a way to get rid of their guilt.  They are not equipped to question what they hear. They are not like the Berean Christians, evaluating everything …  they are always learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.”

V.v 8&9: Paul then gives an example from the OT of this kind of subversive person. Jannes and Jambres (although we don’t find their  names in the Scriptures), the Pharaoh’s so called magicians, men who  opposed Moses  and who opposed the truth (v.8), but  the fact was that in the eyes of Pharaoh and Egypt they were powerful, influential   figures  who were keeping Pharaoh and the Egyptians blindfolded  as regards the truth. Paul assures  us here that  such false prophets will not win. They will fail. This is vital for Timothy to know. It's vital for you and me to know.
So, we are provided here with a picture of our society. It is a wicked, immoral society, and yet there is plenty of religious activity, but it is a religious activity that pulls down the weak and ignorant. You need to know that. You need to understand the times. God has given us   this counsel so that we should be forewarned, and prepared, and not become discouraged.

 3.    3:10–13 Understanding what it costs to live a godly life in such a culture.

"You, however, have followed my teaching, my conduct, my aim in life.my faith, my patience, my love, my steadfastness, my persecutions, my sufferings… yet from all the Lord rescued me…”. Make sure that you listen to godly people, and not self - driven people, whose god is money, who do not love the good and who are lovers of pleasure, and who exhibit all  the negative character traits described here. Many of the glossy magazines extol their virtues, but you all  know that they are  moral  failures. Don’t seek their company. Don’t envy them, just because they look glamourous. Don’t let their philosophies worm their ways into your home.    The Scripture says  that such “evil people and impostors will go from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived.” (v.13)  Follow people like Paul, who are lovers of God.
Those are the choices that face you. Either a life of trials and testings, because you are going against the stream  (v.11), but experiencing many  wonderful deliverances, or ‘going from bad to worse.’  You do know what Jesus desires. 
Follow Him to heaven!



[1]  the last letter from Paul  - 2 Timothy  was written  in AD 67/68
[2]  2 Tim 1:7
[3] 2 Peter 3:13;  cf. Isa. 65:17,66:22; Rev. 21:1
[4] most of these phrases here are just one word in the Greek
[5] Mark 12:29-31 cf. Deut. 6:4-5
[6] Beginning with the prefix – ‘a’

Monday, July 2, 2018

2 Timothy 2:14-26 "Watch your Words, Watch your Life!"


Oh the importance of the spoken and written Word! It is significant  that the gospel of John  introduces us  to  the Lord Jesus Christ in these  words -  “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and   the Word was  God.” (Jn. 1:1).  The Lord Jesus Christ is the Word (logos) of God.  By sending Jesus, the eternal God  communicated His word to us. In fact He is the first and  He is the final Word (Hebrew 1:1-3). And Jesus by His Holy Spirit instructed His apostles  to  pass on His Word from generation to  generation (2 Tim 2:2).That is  why we  Christians are  the people of  the Book. “This is the Revelation from God  of Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show to his servants the things that soon must take place. He made it known by sending his angel to his servant John, who bore witness to the Word of God  and to the testimony of Jesus Christ..” (Revelation 1:1)

Last time we saw that the  word of truth  was passed on  in ‘trustworthy sayings’  (2:11-13):  “If we have  died with him, we will also live with him; if we endure, we will also reign with him. If we deny him, he will also deny us; if we are faithless, he will remain faithful, for he cannot deny himself” (2:11-13). These are of central and cardinal importance for every Christian. They are truth statements. They are absolute truths to live by. 
That is why Paul says in 2:14, “Timothy, keep reminding them of these things – these important words.” But as soon  as he has stressed  the importance that  these important words must be brought to the congregation at Ephesus,  he  launches into a lengthy  discussion  concerning the subversive, undermining    noise that (i)  words and  (ii)  actions  can have. Actions form an important consideration of our text  today,  and it has often been said, “actions speak louder than words!”
So, in context, Paul wants the church at Ephesus to know that a negative use of words must be avoided at all costs in the congregation,   and   he wants Timothy to know that actions and words  must befit that of “one approved, a worker who need not be ashamed” (2:15), it must match that  of   the Lord’s servant” (2:24) in order to fulfill his calling.  The testimony of the true Word is severely undermined when Christian congregations and Christian pastors sinfully misrepresent  the Word of God in their words and in their actions. 

1.     “TIMOTHY,  TELL THE CONGREGATION TO  WATCH THEIR WORDS!”

Charge the congregation not to quarrel about words, which does no good, but only ruins the hearers (2:14). He repeats this essentially in 2:23.   Now, don't misunderstand Paul. He isn't saying you shouldn't fight about words. In all times in history important battles have been fought over meanings of words and of the importance of certain words in the place of our Christian vocabulary.   There are important words that are being twisted and redefined  by heretics. Words and concepts like justification and sanctification and heaven and hell, and the gospel and even the person and work of Jesus,  and the Holy Spirit – words  and meanings of words like these are constantly  redefined, reinterpreted  and misplaced. We must hold on to the biblical (in- context) meaning of such words.  The Holy Spirit isn’t an influence  from God  or an ‘ it’ ; Jesus is not a created being  or an angel; the gospel is not   a social programme; heaven and hell are not fictitious, but real places; Both, sanctification and justification are because of   God’s primary  initiative, and never of our (or the church’s)  doing. We are responsible  for the outworking of that which has been worked into  us. 

What we are talking about here  in our text  is  a way of talking about words and of arguing about words that actually doesn't edify, that doesn't in the end promote true  clarity   which  leads  to godliness. Paul is thinking about people who simply want to be controversial. You know them.  They ask questions, but they are not interested in the answer–they simply want you to hear how clever they are! They  do not  think of doctrines as primarily true or false, but merely as something  academic, and to argue over, merely for arguments sake.   Such people often  have attended  some form of theological training and therefore they think themselves to be wise. At best they have learned  to quarrel about  words, getting lost in the details,   having forgotten  (or perhaps having never learned) the importance of absorbing the true Word in its totality,   which is  the Truth as it is in Jesus. Jesus does not preoccupy their thinking and vocabulary,   and so they  have become dry wells. They have  sold their books  soon  after leaving seminary. Beware of them! Guard yourselves against such people, for use their tongues to destroy  the faith  of those  who listen.  Paul says that the unguarded tongue “ruins those who listen.”

David was aware of this problem.    In Psalm 141 he prays, “Set a guard, O LORD, over my mouth; keep watch over the door of my lips!”  Solomon gives many helpful insights into the destructive use of the tongue -  “rash words are like sword thrusts” (Prov.12:18);  “Whoever guards his mouth preserves his life; he who opens wide his lips comes to ruin.” (Prov. 13:3)  “Whoever restrains his words has knowledge…” (Prov.17:27). That is the mark of a wise man.
And so Paul continues to counsel Timothy  in 2:16-18,  Avoid irreverent  babble, for it will lead people  into more and more ungodliness, and their talk will spread like gangrene. Among them are Hymenaeus  and Philetus, who have swerved from the truth, saying that the resurrection has already happened. They are upsetting the faith of some.” 

Can you see how the  unguarded tongue  progresses to irreverent babble  leading people into more and more ungodliness?  Paul says that this kind of talk has an effect like gangrene in the body. Gangrene is when part of your body tissue dies. This occurs because the tissue is not getting enough blood from your circulatory system. And so drastic action  needs to take place. Body parts, toes, legs  have to be amputated to stop  gangrene from infecting the rest of the body.

People with an irreverent way of talking, and coarse joking, and those that undermine the confidence of young believers in the gospel through false doctrine  or emphasis, can  cause real damage. We have had people like this in the history of our own  church who have led people astray.  Paul even resorts to name calling here. He gives examples. Hymenaeus and Philetus were presumably well known personalities in church circles. They had started well, but now they have swerved from the truth. They were teaching false doctrine and in so doing they were now upsetting the faith of some.  They taught something concerning the resurrection that did not resonate with the testimony of Scripture. Their error started harmlessly… quarrelling about words. They began by indulging in speculative, irreverent babble,  and one is tempted to  overlook this , but there  comes a time when it is right to tell people to stop it, and to warn them before God.  

Do not be guilty of quarrelling about words in the Bible. Do not engage in godless, irreverent babble about the Bible, particularly  if you know little. If you speak, let your speaking about the  Bible be plain, in context,  and  for the  purpose of building others up (Eph. 4:29). This does not mean that you cannot name things for what they are. Jesus said that Herod was a fox, and that the Pharisees were a brood of vipers. To those who defiled the temple, He told them that they had made the house of God a den of robbers. Understand that that was said on account of righteous anger.  God’s glory was offended. When that happens  you  too must speak, but watch it lest you become sinfully angry in the process.   

2.     TIMOTHY, BE  A MODEL  OF GODLY WORDS AND ACTIONS

Timothy needed  to remind and charge his congregation not to quarrel over words. But that was not all that Paul said to Timothy. He had something to say about his personal demeanor as a pastor, for actions speak louder than words. 

“Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth “ (2:15).
Do your best to present yourself to God.  The God who saves you calls you to obedience. That is how Paul always works out his great doctrines. He begins with the great work of God in salvation and then he tells us, this is how you apply it.   The turning point of his letter to the Romans is found in Chapter 12:1ff. “Present your bodies as a living sacrifice to God, because of all these glorious mercies you have received from him.”  ALL OF YOU…. hands, feet, mind, mouth. EVERYTHING! You present your whole body to him. It is no longer your own.  You were bought at a price. You were rescued from everlasting hell and  the terrible judgement of God,   and now you owe Him your life. 

 Present yourself to God as one approved by God. God is the one who has made it possible for you to present yourself to him. Your name is known in heaven. You have been justified by his grace; you are washed; you are sanctified, and you are approved.  

Present yourself to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed. You are a worker. No sluggard -  you are working unashamedly,  working in God’s field, often  sacrificially, and bearing the scars of your labour.

Present yourself to God as one who correctly handles the word of truth. You cut straight (orthotomeo) the word of truth. The underlying idea is not to get side-tracked in useless and unimportant things. Pastors are to focus on the main things, and to rightly interpret the Bible with a view to seeing the whole of the Bible as the word of God. This is what Hymenaeus and Philetus did not do. They wandered away from the truth. They were not talking straight. Paul is saying, “Timothy, tell it to them straight. Aim for their minds and consciences and affections and wills. Be accurate, plain and simple.  You are not in the ministry to make friends but to make disciples of Jesus Christ. “ That is an unashamed Christian worker, someone who tells it straight.

Flee youthful passions and pursue  righteousness, faith and love, peace … do not be quarrelsome … but kind to everyone, able to teach, patiently enduring evil, correcting his opponents  with gentleness….  (2:22).  Here is  further amplification of the nature  and deportment of   a gospel minister, and you will see  again  and again that speech and action is critical. It helps  to clarify the gospel  (see  2:25). It helps people to  come to their senses and so escape  from the snare of the devil  after being captured  by him to do his will (2:26).

Isn't it interesting, that one of the  great concerns of the apostle Paul,  just before he dies,  is to say to Timothy, 
  • Make sure  that your people  are trained  not to subvert the gospel through subversive speech. 
  • Make sure  that you preach and live out  accurately the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.
On a human level  this  is our responsibility, our  contribution, and God's expectation of us. May the gospel flourish  in our  churches !


Friday, June 22, 2018

2 Timothy 2:11-13 "Dying with Jesus – Living with Jesus"


Last time   I had to cut my sermon short, and I am glad I did, because I could not do justice  to the  last few verses  that  I wanted to cover. They are deserving of  so much more  attention  than I originally  had planned for. This is the mystery of preaching.  I  often find that  after I have carefully  prepared my manuscript, that the burden  of the text  grows on my soul while I am preaching, and it  goes beyond that which I have written. 
The old preachers called this phenomenon ‘unction’, (Holy  Spirit directed counsel) and the problem with ‘unction’ sometimes is  that it clashes with time! There is always so much more to say and to unpack and to connect from the sacred text.   So, due to time constraints  I had to leave out my last point, and  in one sense I am glad that I did.

Last time  I  spoke to you from  2 Tim.1:13-14, under the heading “Guard the Good Deposit”. We saw that the good deposit is the gospel  and the leading question we asked was,  how is the gospel to be guarded? I attempted to answer this question from  the immediate context  in 1:13 - 2:13 in terms of  4 observations, and  flowing from the text.  
We saw that:  
1.     The gospel  must  be guarded in Timothy’s (and our)  own hearts and lives.(vv. 13,14)
2.     We must ensure  that we raise up a future generation of faithful gospel messengers (vv.1-2) so that the testimony about Jesus is guarded in every generation.
3.      We  must  remember that the gospel  will not be guarded without  suffering (vv. 3-10).   Paul uses three illustrations (a  single minded soldier ; a  diligent athlete  and a hardworking farmer) to show us  anything worth  guarding will need to be done with  hard work and suffering.
4.     And now the point that I did not  complete  is found in that trustworthy saying  in vv. 11-13.  And here we are helped to see  that in  the guarding of the gospel we must hold on to the gospel by holding on to our faithful Lord  Jesus.

So by way of a summary,
·   hold on to, and  guard   the gospel  in yourself through the help of the Holy Spirit (1:14).
·   make sure that the gospel is guarded by handing it on  to faithful men in subsequent generations  who will be able to teach others (2:2)
·   do not expect to  have an easy  task. Suffering is part of holding on to the gospel. Many unfortunately cannot handle this (see 1:15; 4:10).  But you must persevere. Remember the end is in sight. This is how Paul comes to his insight in 2:10, when he says, “Therefore I endure everything for the sake of the elect, that they may also obtain the salvation that is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory.” Paul knew how to endure, persevere  and hold on to the gospel for the sake of the future church! 

Brothers and sisters, we have Christ and heaven to gain and eternal separation from God and hell to shun!  Persevere, endure, share in this light momentary suffering for the sake of the gospel. Hold on and guard that good deposit for your own sake and for the sake of your children and those that come after you. Paul makes this point with the help of a trustworthy saying. There are, incidentally five  such ‘trustworthy sayings’  found  in the three pastoral epistles.[1] These trustworthy saying are, as one might expect,  truths  well understood, well known and well accepted  and often repeated  sayings among Christians. Perhaps   these were memorable words from  an ancient hymn of the church. Perhaps it was something  which   a convert recited this  at his or her baptism. We don’t know,  but our text  in 2:11-13 is one of these  faithful sayings  and it  is   written in poetic form  and each line begins with the word ‘if’ (Greek ‘ei’) followed by an implied ‘then’.

·   If we have died with Christ… (then)  we will also live with  Christ.
·   If we endure or persevere in this Christian life (then) we will also reign with  Christ.
·   If we deny Christ (then) He will also deny us.
·  If we are faithless to Christ (then) He still remains faithful, for He cannot be  false to Himself.

Let us consider these 4 lines of this trustworthy saying, as we need to be encouraged to hold on to that Good deposit of the gospel, for which Paul endured everything for the sake of the elect. Let us keep our course through this often challenging, confusing life by looking to Jesus. He is the subject of our text. He is our goal. Let us further learn from this text how to persevere with the gospel:

1.     If we have died with Him, we will also live with Him.
A wonderful promise!  We find these words also in Romans 6:5, and they are implied in Colossians 2:13.  This is a KEY TRUTH for Christians. It speaks about our identification in the death of Christ and in the resurrection of Christ. This is what is reflected in baptism.  
It all begins when you become a Christian.  You are introduced to Jesus, and in looking to Him you are not left untouched by Him.  He leaves you with a sense of deeply feeling your sin and at once He lets you know that He is the solution  to your problem. And you cast your sin burden on to Him. You embrace Him for all that He is. He is God’s solution to your sin. And you embrace Him for the work that He came to do for the world, in the cross and in the resurrection from the dead. You see that He is the Way to God, and then you believe  and  repent. You turn from your sinful, self- centered life to Jesus , and in response you receive His  forgiving grace and mercy.  You know  that the death that Jesus died  was for  you.  You now know that you have a hope and a future in heaven. You know that not only the first part of the sentence is true (If we have died with him). You know that the second part is also true, “We will also live with Him.” When you become a Christian you truly begin to live now, but more so, you will also live in eternity.  

2.     If we endure (then) we will also reign with Him.
The Bible leaves us in no doubt that we need to show our true commitment to Christ by enduring or by persevering. How do we endure? We endure by continually holding on to that good deposit. We endure by not being like Phygelus and Hermogenes (1:15); We endure by being like Onesiphorus who was not ashamed of the gospel (1:16); we endure by being strengthened by the grace that is in Christ Jesus (2:1). We endure by understanding and accepting that suffering for the sake of the gospel (i.e. following Christ) is a part of this present life. We endure by thinking like a focused soldier and like a diligent athlete and like a hard working farmer (2:3-6). We endure by remembering Jesus risen from the dead. We endure everything for the sake of the elect ( God’s chosen people yet to come into the fold)  for whose sake we labour in an evangelistic sense  that they may obtain the salvation  that is in Christ Jesus  with eternal glory (2:10). That is how we endure, and if we endure we may be sure that we will obtain the salvation that is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory, and we will be welcomed into eternal dwellings: “Well done, good and faithful servant.”  So brothers and sisters, keep the goal in view. The heavenly city is in sight. Stay on the narrow road. We shall live with Him and we shall reign with Him. Remember Stephen (Acts 7:54 ff). As he was being killed he was given a vision of the risen, exalted Lord Jesus Christ. He saw heaven opened and he saw our Lord Jesus standing beside  the  throne,  to welcome him. There from that throne we will judge men and angels. We will reign with Christ. Endure - wait for the promised reward! These are  key concepts in our Christian thinking. 

3.     If we deny Him (then) He will also deny us.
The third  aspect of this trustworthy saying makes reference to  the  words of the Lord Jesus  in Matthew 10:32-33, “Whoever acknowledges me before men, I will also acknowledge him before my Father in heaven. But whoever disowns me before men, I will disown him before my Father in heaven.”  There will be  many  to whom He will say on that day : “Depart from me, I never knew you.” (Matt. 7:21-23). He will deny them.  There  were those at the trial  and the  cross of Jesus said, “We will not have this man rule over us.”  He will deny them at the judgement  and worse still  He will  throw  them into  a place of everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels and all that deny Him. There are those in time and history  who had no time and gave no place to the Lord Jesus in their lives. They  misused His name , His Word , His Day, His people, His Holy Spirit, His worship and these people will be disowned by Jesus before his Father in heaven.  Hell is awaiting  them. Hell is the terrible logic of rejecting and denying Christ. Be warned. This is a trustworthy saying. “If we deny him, he will also deny us.”

4. If we are faithless (then) He remains faithful for He cannot  deny Himself
We can understand this in two senses, and both are  possible:

   a.     It can mean that Jesus remains faithful  to His righteousnessand justice.  In that sense we think of Jesus when He warned the Pharisees (“Woe you scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites”-Matt. 23) and when He spoke of two destinations, of sheep and goats, saved and lost, light and darkness. This Jesus is  faithful in His faithful  righteousness and justice  to exercise punishment on  those who deny Him,  because He cannot deny the justice and holiness of His own  being.
   b.  But it can also mean that the Lord  Jesus, despite our faithlessness  can chose to remain faithful.  Let’s  face it. None of us never sins. None  are ever  totally free from sin. All we are and all we do needs forgiveness. And some of our sins are shocking! The Bible has numerous examples  of people  falling into sin, and yet  they  are not cast aside by our Lord. 

  •     Think of  Adam and Eve –our  first parents who sinned  and yet the Lord had mercy on them.
  •    Think of Abraham’s lapses of faith, particularly when it came to lying about his wife; 
  •   Think of Lot’s  drunkenness and incestuous relationship with his daughters. 
  •      Think of David’s adultery. 
  •     Think of the apostle Peter disowning his Lord three times.   

They were all forgiven. They were faithless but the Lord Jesus  remained faithful to them because He cannot  be unfaithful to His  covenant. What a comfort that would have been to Timothy who must have been tempted to give up in Ephesus.  What comfort to me, and to you. Here is the great biblical truth to hang on to: God’s mercy is grounded in His covenant keeping love. The God who sent his Son to save Adam and Eve,  Abraham, and Lot, and David, and Solomon, and Peter,  and countless others is always the same faithful God. We are not like that. We are not always faithful, and like Peter we have had times when we have wept over that. But God and His Son, the Lord  Jesus are always faithful. The Holy Spirit is always faithful to His own Word.  It is not the nature of the Holy Trinity to be  unfaithful.
     
    So then, hold on to the gospel, guard the good deposit. Remember that  at the heart  and at the foundation  of your faith there is a Living Saviour. Remember His promises - that  if you have died with Him, you will live with Him; if you endure, you will reign with Him. But also remember His warnings. If you deny Him, he will deny you. That is terrifying news for  the enemies of  Christ! But also remember dear  child of the covenant… no sin can keep your Saviour from you. His Grace and covenant faithfulness are greater than all our sin. He will save you from your sin, even if it means that you will carry terrible scars in this earthly life. He will save you,  for He cannot be but faithful.





[1]  1 Tim.1:15; 3:1; 4:9; 2 Tim. 2:11; Tit. 3:8

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