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Tag Archives: worship at the beach

The Quick and the Dead, 2 Timothy 4:1-5

Sep

25

2022

thebeachfellowship

I’ve titled today’s message the quick and the dead. That phrase is found in vs 1 of our text in the KJV. That title does not really describe the major content of my message, but I thought it sounded cool, so I decided to make it my title. If it sounds like the title to a western movie, it’s because it actually is. It was used for at least two movies by that name. One was what is called a revisionist western, which had cast some sultry actress as the gunslinger. I never bothered to watch that. As someone who grew up watching westerns, I felt that it was something like sacrilege to have that actress play a gunslinger in a western. The other movie called The Quick and the Dead was based on a Louis L’amour novel, and he did have a realistic knowledge of how it was in the Old West. And they had Sam Elliot play the lead in that. He at least looked and sounded like a cowboy.

Of course, in a western movie you would think that the word “quick” was a reference to how fast they could draw a pistol. But the origin of the phrase “the quick and the dead” is actually from the King James Version of the Bible and as I said it is found in our text today, in vs 1. Modern versions interpret it as the living and the dead. And that is more accurate. That phrase is used several times in scripture, and also in the Apostle’s Creed.

But that phrase, while it makes for a cool title, is really only a side note of this final message of Paul to Timothy. The context of this message really starts in chapter 3 vs 1, where Paul says, “But realize this, that in the last days difficult times will come.” I said previously that the last days speaks of the church age, which started with the first appearing of Jesus Christ and continues until His second appearing. And during this age, Paul said, there will be perilous seasons, actually becoming more perilous and more frequent as the age comes to a close. We are living in the last age, and I believe the church is in yet another perilous season.

Paul says that the danger to the church was there would be seasons where apostasy would run rampant in the church, when false teachers would prevail in the pulpits of churches, when people would be duped by a form of religion but without the power of the Holy Spirit to change their hearts from being dead in their trespasses to being made alive in Christ.

Now last Sunday as we studied the last half of chapter 3, I said that Paul gave Timothy and by extension, gives us, a strategy for surviving these perilous seasons. The first part of that strategy for surviving the perilous times which we covered last time, was the need for discipleship. Being a disciple means abiding in sound doctrine. Following the teaching and principles of the word of God as given by the apostles. Paul says in chapter three vs 10, “Now you followed my teaching, conduct, purpose, faith, patience, love, perseverance, persecutions, [and] sufferings.” So being a disciple is to pattern your life after the example of Christ and the apostles.

And another aspect of discipleship that we talked about last week is the need to abide in the word of God. Avoiding the perilous times, the traps of the enemy, will be accomplished by continuing your walk according to the word of God, which is able to train you for righteousness and equip you for every good work. Today we come to the next part of the strategy for surviving perilous times, and that requires submitting to the preaching of the word of God. And we find that laid out for us in chapter 4, starting in vs one. We must remember that the chapter breaks are a man made effort to categorize the scriptures so that we might refer more easily to them. But when Paul wrote this letter, he did not make a break in his argument. There were no chapter breaks in the original text. So he continues his argument in chapter 4.

That being said though, we do see a heavy emphasis given here to the necessity of preaching in chapter 4. Paul gives a very solemn charge to Timothy to preach the word. Starting in vs 1 he says, “I solemnly charge [you] in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by His appearing and His kingdom: preach the word; be ready in season [and] out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction.”

Paul gives Timothy a solemn charge to preach the word. I just don’t know how to say it any better. I guess the closest example is that it’s like a command from a superior officer, an order to do something that has serious, life or death consequences. An officer in the army who gives a solemn order to a soldier to perform a most serious mission, even a very dangerous mission, which has serious consequences.

Notice he gives this order in the presence of God and Christ Jesus. The Father and Son are ultimately the authority for the command to Timothy. He will be acting on their orders, on their behalf. You know it’s a serious responsibility to preach the word of God. We should not approach this responsibility with a cavalier attitude. James said, “let not many of you become teachers brethren, knowing that as such we shall incur a stricter judgment.” It’s a serious responsibility to preach the word of God, and it has serious consequences. It is a matter of life and death.

And Paul adds that aspect of life and death by saying, ““I solemnly charge [you] in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead.” As I mentioned earlier, in the KJV it reads “the quick and the dead.” I like that better. But I think it needs to be explained. Most commentators think that this phrase refers to those who are still living when the Lord comes back, and those that have died before His second coming. Thus the living and the dead or the quick and the dead.

But I don’t interpret it that way at all. I think it refers to those who are spiritually alive and those that are spiritually dead. We are all to be judged. Paul indicates that Timothy will be judged by Christ regarding how well he carried out his mission to preach the word. I will be judged by that same standard. 2Cor. 5:10 says, “For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each one may be recompensed for his deeds in the body, according to what he has done, whether good or bad.” Everyone will be judged by what he has done in the body, whether good or bad.” All those that are spiritually alive and all those that are dead in their trespasses and sins will be judged when the Lord comes back. Everyone will face the judgment.

It is by His appearing and His Kingdom that the King will judge the earth and all the inhabitants of the earth, both those who are of His kingdom and those who have rejected His kingdom. The first time Jesus came to earth He came to establish HIs kingdom and offer salvation to those that would believe in Him and confess Him as their Lord. The second time He comes to consummate His kingdom and judge the people of the world. And those that He finds have been good stewards will be rewarded, but those who denied Him will be cast out into outer darkness.

Jesus said in Matt. 25:31-33 “But when the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the angels with Him, then He will sit on His glorious throne. All the nations will be gathered before Him; and He will separate them from one another, as the shepherd separates the sheep from the goats; and He will put the sheep on His right, and the goats on the left.”

That judgement which will come upon the whole world is the reason that the charge Timothy is given is such a solemn, weighty command. Because the preaching of the word is the primary means by which God has established that people will be given the wisdom that leads to salvation and the sanctification without which no one will see the Lord. It is by the foolishness of preaching that men are saved, and by which those that are saved are trained in righteousness. 1Cor. 1:21 says, “For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not [come to] know God, God was well-pleased through the foolishness of preaching to save those who believe.”

To preach, by the way, means to be a herald of the message that God has given to men. It’s the proclamation of the gospel, the good news of salvation. It is the exercise of what it means to be an ambassador.

And very important to note, Paul commands Timothy to preach the word. Not Timothy’s word. Not preach some form of spiritualism. Not human psychology. Not the social gospel. Not the prosperity gospel. Not how to have your best life now. Not how to win friends and influence people. Not what you think is a more current, relevant, socially acceptable, politically correct version of the gospel. And not preach something that is designed to make everyone feel all warm and fuzzy and loved and special and not hurt anyone’s feelings. But preach the word of God, the truth of God, the truth about sin, about hell, about the cross, about sacrifice, about atonement, about reconciliation, about justification, about sanctification, about glorification. Preach all of the word, every word of God given to us in scripture.

As we learned last week in chapter 3 vs 16, “All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness; 17 so that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work.”

Now in our text today Paul goes on to say that truly preaching the word of God will have four essential components. First, to “be ready in season and out of season.” This idea behind the phrase translated “be ready” to preach isn’t really communicated very well by our translation. Some versions say be instant, others be urgent, others be prepared. The original Greek translation is primarily used for the idea “to come, or to stand, or to appear.” So it’s a little hard to determine what it means exactly. But I think the idea is that he was to be consistent, on point, at all times. Not hot or cold. Not fervent in preaching in good times and in perilous times lax in preaching. But having an urgency that each opportunity to preach was of vital importance.

I have always personally applied that verse to my ministry, especially the in season and out of season part. It’s difficult to have seasons such as we have in our church. But remember, Paul was waring Timothy of the perilous seasons which were to come. Paul says be ready, be earnest, be prepared, be urgent in your preaching, both in the perilous seasons and in the more acceptable seasons.

The second essential component of preaching the word is to reprove. Another possible translation might be to convict. Sin must be preached against so that the sinner repents. To not preach about sin is to take away the whole purpose of the cross, to nullify Jesus’ atonement.

Thirdly, preaching must include rebuke. In the process of reproving, there must be a reprimand. Actually, I think there is very little difference between reprove and rebuke. I suppose you might say one emphasizes conviction, and the other emphasizes correction. This is what you have done wrong, this is how you correct it.

And fourthly, preaching must include exhortation. Exhortation is to encourage. Not just showing sympathy, but motivating the person to make a change, to take action, to get up, to continue, to persevere. Urging. That’s really the difference between preaching and teaching. Preaching is exhortation. Emphatically urging. I guess that’s why preachers tend to yell. Or at least, that’s my excuse.

Then as a modifier to all the above elements of preaching, Paul adds, preach with great patience and instruction. The preacher must be patient with the one hearing the message. Not patient as in “well, when you get around to it, eventually, you should do this.” But the pastor should persevere, be deliberate, willing to put in the time, to wait for the Lord to give the increase to the seed which he plants. Instruction means teaching. So preaching includes teaching. And his teaching should be characterized by great perseverance or endurance, which is perhaps the best idea behind patience.

Then in vs 3, Paul gives a reason why Timothy must be so diligent in preaching the word. Because he says, “the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but [wanting] to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires, and will turn away their ears from the truth and will turn aside to myths.”

The perilous season will be a time when men will not listen to sound doctrine. Men will not tolerate the truth, or say that there is not absolute truth, and so give ear to false doctrines and myths.

The different translations translate the phrase differently, “wanting to have their ears tickled.” Some say “having itching ears.” Itching ears means you want to hear something that scratches that itch. You want to hear something that suits your own desires. You know it’s a strange irony in Christianity that a lot of people have an interest in church, or an interest in religious things, they seek out Bible studies, they hop from one church after another, trying to find one that tells them what they want to hear. It’s like Paul said of certain idle women in the church in the last chapter, “always learning but never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.”

Sometimes it’s taken me awhile to recognize a person who seems to have an interest in the Bible, in being taught the things of God, and I suppose that because they have been going to Bible studies or to other churches that it’s evidence of their sincere faith. But it sometimes becomes evident later on that they really had no saving knowledge of the truth at all, but were merely searching for someone to scratch their itch, to validate their false belief. So pursuing religious activities, or going to church is not a true measure of one’s desire to know the truth. Paul says they don’t want to know the truth, they want to hear something to validate their false doctrine.

And so he says they accumulate to themselves these false teachers, these teachers that over emphasize some doctrines, yet overlook other aspects of scripture. They are attracted to teachers who add human psychology and mysticism and spiritualism and all kinds of other isms to their message. The bottom line is that people in these perilous times turn away from the truth, the pure milk of the word, and turn to false doctrines. And that’s what is so perilous about these difficult seasons in the church age, it causes men to believe a lie, and as such remain dead in their sin.

Paul concludes this solemn charge to Timothy by saying in vs5 “But you, be sober in all things, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry.” Paul is making a sharp contrast between the false teachers that people accumulate and congregate around and listen to, and Timothy’s ministry. I think he is indicating that Timothy must recognize that he is to take the less popular path. The false teachers are very popular. They have no problem gathering a crowd with their people pleasing doctrines. The truth is much less popular. Timothy must accept that, and endure the hardship that comes from preaching the truth, to not being popular.

You know, the prophets in the Old Testament were rarely popular. Not even Moses was popular while he was living. The people usually were antagonistic towards God’s prophets. But the false prophets are popular. Don’t judge a preachers’ message by the size of his congregation. At least not by the standard that bigger is better. That’s not how God measures, or how God will judge his ministry. God will judge a preacher by how faithful he was to God’s word.

Paul encourages Timothy to do the work of an evangelist. An evangelist is someone who preaches the gospel. It could be used as a title as well. It was used as a title for some early preachers like Philip. But notice Paul is not saying Timothy is to be an evangelist, but to do the work of an evangelist. That simply means to be a gospel bringer. To bring the gospel. To bring it, in season and out of season, in good times, and in hard times. Bring it. Don’t back down, don’t hesitate, don’t grow tired and discouraged and want to take a break for a while. Stir up the fire in you and bring the gospel to a world that is dying. Bring the gospel to the quick and the dead. That’s the mission, that’s the command. Fulfill your ministry.

What is your ministry, or better yet, what is your part in the ministry? Paul said in Eph 4:11-16 “And He gave some [as] apostles, and some [as] prophets, and some [as] evangelists, and some [as] pastors and teachers, for the equipping of the saints for the work of service, (that’s you, that’s your ministry – the work of service) to the building up of the body of Christ; until we all attain to the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to a mature man, to the measure of the stature which belongs to the fullness of Christ. As a result, we are no longer to be children, tossed here and there by waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by the trickery of men, by craftiness in deceitful scheming; but speaking the truth in love,(that is the work of an evangelist; speaking the truth of the gospel in love for those that are dying) we are to grow up in all [aspects] into Him who is the head, [even] Christ, from whom the whole body, being fitted and held together by what every joint supplies, according to the proper working of each individual part, (that speaks of each of you doing your part in proclaiming the good news) causes the growth of the body for the building up of itself in love.”

So you have been commissioned to bring the gospel as well. To do the work of an evangelist. To build up the body of Christ, that is to build up the church, to add to the church, to make disciples. That is every Christian’s commission. That’s your solemn charge. It’s a matter of life and death. I pray that you will heed the call, and fulfill your ministry, that you may be found a faithful servant when the Lord comes again to judge the quick and the dead.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, church on the beach, worship at the beach |

Guard the gospel, 2 Timothy 1:13-18  

Aug

14

2022

thebeachfellowship

I want to first review the overall theme of this first chapter before we consider the details of this last couple of paragraphs at the end. Sometimes, I think that in attempting to exposit the word, verse by verse, we fall victim to the old adage that we can’t see the forest for the trees. We have spent weeks now going verse by verse through this chapter, and it’s good if we remind ourselves of the main thought and purpose that Paul is trying to convey.

So to begin with, we need to remember that Paul is in prison as he writes this letter, and the Lord has revealed to him that he will not get out of there alive. The time of his death is imminent. He says in chapter 4 vs 6 “For I am already being poured out as a drink offering, and the time of my departure has come.” There is no greater gravitas in a man’s life than realizing that your death is imminent. I don’t think that I would want to know my life was soon to be over. Perhaps it would be easier to go in your sleep.

But the Psalmist said there was a benefit in knowing that your days are numbered. Psalm 90:12 says, “So teach us to number our days, That we may present to You a heart of wisdom.” We should live each day like it was to be our last. If we lived like that, then I am sure we would live life quite differently. I am sometimes amazed to see people that look as though they might not make it much past dinner, and yet they are involved in activities that seem to defy any sense of their mortality. And contrarily, it is almost just as disheartening to see young people waste so much of their invaluable time and resources, as if they thought that their youth would never end.

Irregardless, Paul recognizes his time is close, and so he writes this last letter to his son in the faith, to make sure that he passes on all that he possibly can in order to strengthen and encourage Timothy in his faith. It would seem that Timothy was feeling a little of what a lot of Christians must have been feeling at that time. They were fearing for their lives. Nero was emperor. He had burned Rome and blamed it on the Christians. And as a result, Christians were being rounded up and exterminated. It was said that Nero illuminated his garden by the burning bodies of Christians who were tied to poles placed around the palace grounds. Christians were public enemy number one, and Paul was personally suffering from that national purge, at this point rotting in a dungeon, which was probably not more than a hole in the ground with a metal grate over it. And furthermore, he knew by the Spirit that he was going to be executed.

So in light of this persecution against Christians, Paul writes to Timothy to be courageous, to not be fearful, but to continue his ministry by the power of the Holy Spirit and be bold in the proclamation of the gospel. He reminds him of the faith of their forefathers, and the faith of Timothy’s mother Eunice and grandmother Lois. All those saints, though dead, had persevered in the faith. He reminds him that he himself had persevered in the faith in spite of persecutions, imprisonments, and abandonment by associates. And so he tells Timothy to rekindle the fire of his faith, not let it grow cold or even be hidden, but to join with Paul in suffering for the gospel.

We must not skim over that exhortation of Paul. In effect, he is telling young Timothy that he needs to prepare to possibly lose his own life for the sake of the gospel. A lot of preachers and Bible commentators make much over the timidity of Timothy, as if he is some sort of sissy, or lightweight. But I wouldn’t be surprised to find out in heaven that Timothy was quite a man, in every sense of the word. I wouldn’t be surprised to find that he was bold and courageous, far beyond what we might be in similar circumstances. But he is facing possible torture and death and Paul is saying don’t shy away from it. Some ancient non biblical writings say that Timothy did eventually die around 80 years old as a martyr by stoning for preaching the gospel.

But here is the thing that is behind Paul’s exhortation. What’s behind this urgency is Paul’s assertion that the gospel is the antidote for death. The whole world is condemned to death and to eternal separation from God. The whole world lies in the power of darkness and are dead in their trespasses and sins. And only the gospel can save them. Only the power of the gospel can deliver men and women from eternal damnation and destruction. And Paul and Timothy were the men that God had chosen to bring the gospel to a dying world. They were on an urgent mission of mercy to save souls. Their mission was so important that it was well worth risking or even sacrificing their lives for it.

In our society today we see some people who are convinced that the world is being destroyed by climate change or some environmental concern. These people are called eco warriors, or environmental activists. These people are so concerned for the safety of the planet that they are willing to make great sacrifices in their own lives in order to do what they think will preserve the planet. I don’t necessarily agree with their agenda, but I must say I admire their zeal and passion for what they believe in. Some of them I’m sure really believe they are doing what is essential for the preservation of humanity.

But I wonder if Christians have an equal zeal and passion for the saving of humanity. If we really believed the gospel then we might have a different attitude towards reaching the lost with the truth. I said last week that there are two sides to the gospel. Paul said in Romans 1:16, “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.” Paul goes on in the next verses of that passage that in the gospel the righteousness of God is revealed, and the wrath of God is revealed against unrighteousness. Both aspects need to be revealed, both God’s gift of righteousness and God’s wrath against unrighteousness. That is the full gospel that leads to salvation. It’s a matter of life or death. And we need to understand that we have in the gospel the only answer to death, the only way to life.

The English Puritan pastor Richard Baxter once famously wrote of preaching the gospel as a dying man to dying men. He was emphasizing the urgency of the gospel. But I think that it is more accurate to think of it as a living man preaching to dying men with the message of life.

The gospel is worth sacrificing for. It’s worth dying for. We need not fear dying, because we that have believed the gospel have been given immortality. Paul said as much in vs 10, “[the gospel] now has been revealed by the appearing of our Savior Christ Jesus, who abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel.” So Timothy should not be ashamed of it, should not be fearful of the consequences of preaching it, because he is immortal, and the gospel is the only means by which the world can be saved from death.

Now as Paul concludes this section of his exhortation, he goes on to add another concern that he has for Timothy, and that is that Timothy guard the gospel. That he holds fast the sound doctrine which comprises the gospel. He says in vs 13, “Retain the standard of sound words which you have heard from me, in the faith and love which are in Christ Jesus.” I don’t think the NASB does the word rendered “retain” justice. The KJV says “hold fast.” Don’t let the gospel, or what he calls sound words, slip away. The ESV says “follow the pattern.” I kind of like that one; in other words, follow the blueprint I laid down for you. Follow the pattern of sound doctrine that was given to you and don’t deviate from it.

We speak a lot about doctrine in this church, especially sound doctrine as opposed to false doctrine. But what does doctrine mean? It simply means teaching. Principles and precepts laid out in the word of God. Soundness means you can trust it. We talk about a banking institution being sound. Sound doctrine then is principles that arise from the word of God, the pure milk of the word, the truth of God.

Listen, if the gospel is the antidote for death, then it’s important that the antidote is not watered down, it is not adulterated, it is not added to, it is not based on false premises or worldly knowledge or the world’s wisdom. If, as Paul says in Romans 1:16, the gospel is the power of God unto salvation for all the world, then it must retain the sound doctrine that God gave it. Christ gave the gospel to Paul. It wasn’t some concoction of Paul’s, or Peters, or anyone else. Paul said in 1 Corinthians, “For I received from the Lord that which I also delivered to you…”. Paul was faithful to retain the sound words of Christ, and pass them on in his epistles to the church, and particularly to entrust their keeping to Timothy. Now Timothy was to be responsible for preserving the soundness of the gospel.

The gospel was under attack then, and it is under attack today. The gospel is under attack from within the church and from without the church. Paul describes the attacks from within the church in chapter 4 vs 3, “For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but [wanting] to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires, and will turn away their ears from the truth and will turn aside to myths.”

Why would professing Christians do such a thing? Because they were ashamed of the gospel. The gospel is offensive. People think that if the message isn’t all about love, then it isn’t going to be accepted, and they aren’t going to be accepted or liked by the world. And so they water down the gospel. I will give you the acid test for you to take back to your church to see if they have watered down the gospel. I suggest that you to keep track of how often the pastor speaks about sin. How often does he call out certain things as sin, and how often does he call for repentance from sin? I would suggest to you that if the calling out of sin as sin is a rarity in your church, then they have already capitulated to the world.

So Timothy, and by extension, we here today, must follow the pattern of sound doctrine. Don’t deviate from it to try to conciliate or accommodate the world. Only in it’s purity is the gospel effectual. And then notice he adds, “in the faith and love which are in Christ Jesus.” In the faith means an unswerving belief, a deep seated belief. It’s assurance that these things are so. It’s not a type of thinking which says, “well, as long as you believe in something that is all that matters.” It’s a firm conviction that the truth of God is absolutely true, that it’s just as relevant today as it was 2000 years ago, and that the word of God endures forever and is unchanging.

Paul spoke earlier of the fatih of his forefathers. Did you know that some of our forefathers in the faith died for the word of God? For the privilege of reading the word of God? William Tyndale was such a man, a man to whom we owe most of our translation of the Bible. He was the first to translate the Bible into English from the original Greek and Hebrew languages and he was eventually executed for that crime. Wikipedia says “In 1535, Tyndale was arrested, and jailed in the castle of Vilvoorde outside Brussels for over a year. In 1536, he was convicted of heresy and executed by strangulation, after which his body was burnt at the stake. His dying prayer was that the King of England’s eyes would be opened; this seemed to find its fulfillment just one year later with Henry’s authorization of the Matthew Bible, which was largely Tyndale’s work.” That’s an example of not being ashamed of the gospel. That’s an example of the faith of a man that knew that the only hope for the world was the gospel, which is contained in the word of God, and that it was worth the greatest sacrifice in order to see that men had the opportunity to hear the gospel.

And that’s an illustration of the love that Paul speaks of at the end of vs 13. The love the Bible speaks of is not sentimentality. It’s not just an emotion. But it’s a sacrificial concern for the well being of others above your own needs. That is love. Jesus said, no greater love has any man than this, than a man lay down his life for his friends. William Tyndale had a love for others that caused him to give his life so that they might have the gospel in written form.

Paul goes on to give further instructions to Timothy in regards to the gospel in vs 14. “Guard, through the Holy Spirit who dwells in us, the treasure which has been entrusted to [you.]”. Paul speaks of the gospel as a treasure, which Timothy must guard against attacks from the enemies from without and within. This is not an idle exhortation. Timothy is to keep watch over the gospel as a sentinel would keep watch over camp, or over a garrison. A watchman, a sentinel must call out when danger approaches. He must be on guard against subterfuge. He must be vigilant night or day.

Listen, the gospel is a treasure beyond our comprehension. When the crowds left Jesus because of the offensiveness of His gospel, Jesus asked the disciples, will you leave me now also? And Peter responded, “Where are we to go? For you have the words of life.” Peter got it. There is no greater treasure than the words of life, the sound words of Christ, the doctrine of salvation, the truth of God.

The apostle John wrote in 1John 1:1-3 “What was from the beginning, what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands, concerning the Word of Life– and the life was manifested, and we have seen and testify and proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and was manifested to us– what we have seen and heard we proclaim to you also, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ.” What a treasure is this word of life, and we must guard it, that it’s power may not be diminished, and that souls might be saved.

And Paul adds that Timothy must guard it by the Holy Spirit who dwells in us. That power of the Holy Spirit would be what would make Timothy triumph over the enemies attacks. The Spirit gave him discernment when the enemy tried to confuse, or to question. The Spirit gave him insight, when the false teachers tried to undermine the gospel. The number one tactic of the devil is to lie, and his second tactic is to deceive. But in the power of the Holy Spirit, we are given discernment and sound judgment so that we may disarm him.

In the last paragraph of this chapter, Paul gives two examples of other Christians as illustrations of either being ashamed of the gospel, or not being ashamed of the gospel. These two examples are likely people that Timothy knew well from his ministry in Ephesus. He first gives the negative example in vs 15 “You are aware of the fact that all who are in Asia turned away from me, among whom are Phygelus and Hermogenes.”

We don’t know who Phygelus and Hermogenes are, or their background. This is the only place in scripture they are mentioned. We have no record of their activities, but we do have their names engraved on the hall of shame. Certainly though Timothy knew these men. It is suggested by some scholars that they may have been neighboring pastors. And it would seem that somehow they had an opportunity to help Paul, either in his legal defense, or in some sort of assistance to him while he was in prison. And yet Paul says that they turned away from him. Others also had turned away from him in his hour of need, but these men perhaps were the leaders.

Undoubtedly, they thought that to be considered as associates of Paul was not a healthy thing in that political climate. Paul had captured a lot of attention, and was obviously a man who had spent a lot of time in prison, in beatings, had fought with the lions, had even been stoned and left for dead. Common sense would tell you that if you hung around Paul, or were an associate of Paul, then you could expect a similar fate. And so when the going got tough, they abandoned ship. They deserted Paul and tried to get as much distance from him and his gospel as possible.

The other example is a good example of a man who is not ashamed of the gospel. Paul speaks of him in vs 16, “The Lord grant mercy to the house of Onesiphorus, for he often refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chains; but when he was in Rome, he eagerly searched for me and found me– the Lord grant to him to find mercy from the Lord on that day–and you know very well what services he rendered at Ephesus.”

Onesiphorus is another person of whom we know very little. He is mentioned only here in 2 Timothy. His name may give us some insight into his character though. It means “bringing profit.” It’s obvious from Paul’s statement that he brought profit to Paul, he often refreshed Paul and was not ashamed of his chains. Perhaps he brought food to Paul, or clothing. These things were not always prohibited when someone was in prison. In fact, Paul asks Timothy at the end of this letter to bring some things such as his cloak and the parchments.

But it’s likely that Onesiphorus went out of his way to serve Paul in his imprisonment. First, Paul says that he had to search all over the city of Rome for Paul. That in and of itself would have been a dangerous thing, especially since Paul was such a persona non grata to the Roman authorities. It seems that he had traveled there from Ephesus in order to look for Paul in Rome. That journey would also have not been without great danger and expense.

But what one commentator at least suggested that is really telling about the character of Onesiphorus, was he suggested that he might have ended up losing his life as a result of this desire to serve Paul. And that is indicated by the fact that Paul says he sends greetings to the house of Onesiphorus. And then in the last chapter, he says give his greetings to the household of Oneshiphorus. It’s possible that Paul wished them well, and asked for God’s mercies upon them because Onesiphorus had lost his life in the service of the gospel. Now that is conjecture, but the wording does make it seem as though Paul is blessing his family, but the man himself has passed away.

Whether that is true or not we will have to wait until we get to heaven to know for sure. But one thing we do know for sure is that the name of Onesiphorus is written on the hall of fame of the faithful. Paul says, he was not ashamed of my chains. He made a tremendous sacrifice for the sake of the gospel, and possibly even made the ultimate sacrifice. But either way, Paul wishes for Onesiphorus, that the the Lord would grant to him to find mercy from the Lord on that day. That day refers to the day of judgment, the judgement seat of the Lord which everyone will one day stand in front of.

Paul said of his own faith and the fate which he was to face in chapter 4 vs 7 “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the course, I have kept the faith; in the future there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day; and not only to me, but also to all who have loved His appearing.”

It is daunting to be sure to endure criticism and judgment from your peers or from your community. It would be frightening to be judged by a court of law here on earth because of your faith as a Christian, or to have to bear the punishment for such a crime as did William Tyndale. But there is one tribunal that everyman and woman on earth will one day be judged by. If needs be we suffer judgement here on earth by the world’s courts then so be it. But I can guarantee that the reward of the faithful at the judgment seat of the Lord will make all those trials here on earth seem insignificant in comparison.

I trust that you will follow the example of Paul and Timothy and Onesiphorus, and not be ashamed of the gospel, but because of your love for God and your love for your fellow man, sacrifice whatever you have to give in order to share the good news of salvation to a lost and dying world. There is no greater love than this. There is no more noble purpose in life.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

Unashamed of the gospel, 2 Timothy 1:8-12

Aug

7

2022

thebeachfellowship

Last time, as we introduced this letter of Paul to Timothy, his son in the faith, we noted that it was the faith of his fathers that Paul said he was passing on to Timothy. In that statement, Paul was referencing the faith of the patriarchs, the prophets and other saints of the Old Testament period, which he said was the same faith that he had. And I extrapolated from that passage the exhortation that we should endeavor to pass on our faith to our children, from our generation to the next. I also talked from a personal perspective as my father had been a pastor, and how he had passed on his faith to me.

My father has been dead about 33 years now, but I find that I am more aligned with his beliefs now than when he was living. But I must confess that when I was growing up, I was somewhat ashamed of my dad’s profession. I would dread those times at school when a teacher or some classmates would ask what our fathers did for a living. I would dread it because I thought that by extension his profession became intertwined with my identity. And in daily practice, I guess subconsciously I tried to do everything I could to oppose that identity.

Perhaps Paul senses a certain reluctance of his son in the faith, Timothy, to publicly and boldly identify with the ministry of Paul. That may seem incongruous to us as we think about Timothy in light of the scriptures. After all, Timothy was a pastor, the personal representative of the apostle Paul. He was someone who was greatly instrumental in the advance of the gospel in it’s infancy.

Yet if I had to guess, I would suspect that many of us here today find ourselves somewhat embarrassed of our faith. I would confess that even I find myself sometimes hesitant to let people know that I am a pastor. I guess I feel that people will treat me differently, or not be as friendly with me, or harbor certain expectations of me that I might not fill.

My wife and son and I went on a boat trip a couple of weeks ago in Chincoteague, Virginia. It was a small boat, and only one other couple was on board. The captain was an old local fisherman who loved to talk. And right off the bat, in a very loud voice, he yelled across the boat and asked what kind of work that I did. I told him I was a pastor, but I admit, I was somewhat worried about what his response might be. Turns out, my response led him on a very loud rant about religion and various churches he had been in, that lasted about 15 minutes. There was no harm in what he said, but I have to admit it was a bit uncomfortable at times, not knowing what he was going to say next, and somehow feeling responsible for everything he did say.

I think most people who are truly saved recognize that our beliefs are increasingly at odds with the culture we live in. Our faith attracts criticism like a lightening rod. Any expression of our faith is not really welcomed in public society, and as such we feel defensive, or even afraid to speak of it, for fear of being ostracized or criticized by the culture we live in.

Perhaps such a feeling of embarrassment, or uncomfortableness on Timothy’s part is what Paul has in mind in vs 8. He says “Therefore do not be ashamed of the testimony of our Lord or of me His prisoner, but join with [me] in suffering for the gospel according to the power of God.” Now we that study the Bible know that when we see the word therefore, we need to find out what it is there for. And in this case, “therefore” refers back to the previous verse, in which Paul said, “For God has not given us a spirit of timidity, but of power and love and discipline.”

Now that expression is a description of the Holy Spirit who has been given to Timothy and to all believers. 1Cor. 3:16 tells us, “Do you not know that you are a temple of God and [that] the Spirit of God dwells in you?” And in Rom 8:9 it says, “However, you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you. But if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.”

So the Spirit that God had given to indwell Timothy was the Spirit of power, love and discipline. The Spirit then is not something that should make you socially self conscious, or afraid to reveal, or in some way ashamed of. The Spirit of God is the power of God in you. Remember Jesus said to the disciples when they were awaiting the giving of the Holy Spirit, He said “you shall receive power, when the Holy Spirit shall come upon you and you shall be My witnesses.”

The power of the Holy Spirit is something that as Christians we cannot operate without. But there is a misunderstanding of the power of the Holy Spirit in the church today. They want to have the power of the Spirit to do miraculous signs and wonders. But they don’t see much purpose in that power other than in miracles. They don’t see the power of the Holy Spirit is the means by which we are witnesses of the gospel, that we are able to do the works of righteousness, that we are able to have control over our bodies and minds, and the power over sin and over death. Those are tremendous aspects of the Holy Spirit’s power. We could have no power over sin except by the Holy Spirit. He is the only way we have the power to live the life of Christ. He is the only way we have power over death.

So Paul is telling Timothy in light of the power of the Holy Spirit in him, to not be ashamed of the gospel. Paul describes the gospel as the testimony of the Lord Jesus. What was the testimony of Jesus? It was that He was the Anointed One, the Messiah, the Word of God made flesh, the manifestation of God to man. His testimony was that He was the Way, the Truth, and the Life, and no man comes to the Father except through Him. That is the gospel of Jesus Christ, and it was the same gospel of Paul, who was suffering imprisonment because of that gospel.

Paul is saying in that passage not to be ashamed of his gospel. Timothy perhaps had a reluctance or reticence about the gospel of Paul. Paul seemed to spend more time in prison than out of it. Paul was a controversial figure, to say the least. The socially acceptable society did not accept Paul, nor his gospel. Even many so called Christians of his day found Paul to be too far right, too controversial for their tastes. His doctrine wasn’t polictically correct, whether by the standards of the religious Jews or the philosophical Greeks. Remember what the philosophers said about Paul on Mars Hill? “What would this idle babbler wish to say?” And King Agrippa accused Paul of being mad. So the upper crust of society whether Jew or Greek ridiculed Paul’s gospel, and ridiculed Paul himself. Perhaps Timothy thought he should distance himself from Paul somewhat in order to be more effective in his ministry.

You know, the gospel literally means good news. And it is good news. But it’s good news to a condemned people. It is good news to a person on death row. In other words, for the gospel to be good news, you must first tell them the bad news, that they are dead in their trespasses and sin, and condemned to death. And the only escape from that condemnation of death is through believing in Jesus Christ, and in His death and resurrection. But that is sometimes an uncomfortable message to have to give to people. Some of you have unsaved brothers or sisters or mom’s and dads. And it can be very difficult to tell them that they are going to go to hell for their sins. That kind of news can completely wreck the family Christmas get together. They are not going to want to hear that sort of thing, and if you say anything remotely like it, it it’s going to make the family get together miserable for everyone.

So very likely you don’t say anything. You don’t proclaim the gospel in it’s fullness. At best, you speak lightly of God’s love, of God’s gift, but you don’t declare the full gospel. And if you examine yourself you might have to admit that though you believe the gospel, yet you are ashamed to proclaim it in it’s fullness. But a partial gospel does not save partially. Rather a partial gospel does not save at all. A partial gospel gives a false sense of security. And so you must not be ashamed of it, but you must proclaim it fully, since only in it’s fullness is the power of the gospel able to work and bring about salvation.

Paul said in Romans 1:16, “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.” Paul goes on in the next verses of that passage to say that in the gospel the righteousness of God is revealed, and the wrath of God is revealed against unrighteousness. Both aspects need to be revealed, both God’s gift of righteousness and God’s wrath against unrighteousness. That is the full gospel that leads to salvation.

And that proclamation of the gospel is what prompts Paul to recount a synopsis of that message of salvation. Speaking in vs 9 of God “who has saved us and called us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to His own purpose and grace which was granted us in Christ Jesus from all eternity, but now has been revealed by the appearing of our Savior Christ Jesus, who abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel…”

Let’s briefly break that down. God has saved us. To be saved, one must first be lost. To be delivered from the condemnation of death is to be saved. A lot of so called Christians don’t like the term saved today. That smacks of fundamentalism, of old fashioned hell fire and damnation preaching that doesn’t play well in our culture today. But as I said a moment ago, if you don’t first understand the premise that you are dead in your trespasses and sins, and condemned to death, and death means spending eternity in hell, then you can’t understand the gospel of salvation. Because you must first recognize that you are lost in order to be saved.

But our salvation is not dependent upon our works, but it is dependent upon the call of God upon our lives. Romans 8:30 says, “and these whom He predestined, He also called; and these whom He called, He also justified; and these whom He justified, He also glorified.” God is the one who saves us, and He initiates our salvation in eternity past, predestining us for salvation, and then effectively calling us to Himself, and those He calls, He justifies not on the basis of their works, but on the basis of their faith in Christ whose righteousness is credited to us who believe in Him. That is the gift of salvation, the grace of salvation, that we didn’t earn it, Christ purchased it for us by His death on the cross in our place.

Paul says this salvation which was planned and predetermined from all eternity past, was manifested, or brought to light by the appearing of Jesus Christ as our Savior. The purpose of God before creation was to bring about our salvation through Jesus Christ. But that purpose was revealed, manifested, made known by the appearing of Jesus Christ on earth. The Old Testament saints did not see clearly how God would bring about their salvation, but they were saved by faith in what was not seen. But when Christ came into the world, the salvation of God was manifested, made visible in Jesus Christ. And the apostles were witnesses of HIs resurrection, which was the capstone of the gospel.

Through His resurrection Jesus Christ abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel. Through His resurrection from the dead, Jesus triumphed over death and sin and hell, and He holds the keys of death and hell, and those who believe in Him are given life, and that life that He gives is everlasting, it is eternal, it is immortality. That is salvation. What a tremendous gospel it is, that we who were condemned to death, to eternal death, are granted an immortal life through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on our behalf.

And the really great thing about this immortal life that we are given is that it is not given at some point in the future, but it is given now to those who believe in Him, so that Jesus can say, “He who believes in Me shall never die.” There is no greater riches, no greater treasure, than immortality. Down through the centuries of time, many men have searched the world for the fountain of youth, for the elixir of immortality, but we that believe in Jesus Christ have been delivered from death and received eternal life as a gift of God.

And Paul says in vs 11, of that gospel, that wonderful, tremendous good news, that for that reason he “was appointed a preacher and an apostle and a teacher.” There could be no higher calling, no more noble endeavor, than to be the means by which God’s salvation is made known. But unfortunately, that is not the perception of the world. You know, there is nothing more foolish to the world than a preacher. A lot of pastors I know personally avoid referring to themselves as a preacher. It’s bad enough to tell people that you are a pastor, but if you were to say “I am a preacher” they immediately categorize you as some sort of right wing radical. And so a lot of pastors avoid that title.

But not Paul. Paul was a preacher. And guess what? John the Baptist was a preacher. Mark 1:4, says John the Baptist appeared in the wilderness preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. … 7 And he was preaching, and saying, “After me One is coming who is mightier than I, and I am not fit to stoop down and untie the thong of His sandals.” And then in vs14 we read that Jesus was a preacher. It says, “Now after John had been taken into custody, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of God.” And likewise Peter was a preacher, and so was Paul.

In fact, Paul said in 1Cor. 1:21 that preaching is the means by which God saves the lost. “For after that in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe. Vs. 18 For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God.” So let’s not be ashamed of preachers, nor of preaching, for it is the power of God.

Nor was Timothy to be ashamed of the fact that Paul was an apostle. To be an apostle was to be one who was a witness to the resurrected Christ. Paul referred to his apostleship as one who was untimely born. He recognized that his apostleship was different than the twelve. And yet he said in no way was he any less an apostle. His apostleship was different, but not less. He did witness the resurrected Christ. He was taught personally by Christ. He was taken up into heaven and heard and saw things which he was not permitted to speak of. He was possibly the greatest apostle, though he would not have claimed that for himself.

And I say that he was the greatest apostle on the basis of his teaching. He says he was a teacher of the gospel. No one wrote more, taught more doctrine, more explanation of the gospel, than Paul did through his writing. He was by far the most prolific teacher, who wrote more epistles than any other apostle which have been the basis for most of our Christian doctrine. Timothy should not be ashamed of Paul on the basis of his preaching, or apostleship, or teaching. In fact, he should be unapologetically proud of his adoptive father.

But because of this glorious gospel, because of the testimony of Jesus Christ, because of the fact that Paul was a preacher and teacher of this gospel and an apostle of Jesus Christ, he was suffering in prison, knowing full well that he was going to die for the gospel. He says in vs 12, “For this reason I also suffer these things, but I am not ashamed; for I know whom I have believed and I am convinced that He is able to guard what I have entrusted to Him until that day.”

Though the Jews and the Romans had sentenced Paul to prison, though he would soon be executed as a criminal, he was not ashamed. He was not ashamed of the gospel. He was not ashamed to be identified with Christ who also suffered death as a criminal in the eyes of the world.

He is not ashamed because He knows whom he has believed, and is persuaded that He is able, to keep that which he committed to Christ, that is his very life, until that day when he is joined to Christ forever through the death of his body. Paul had committed his life to Christ, the very life that Christ had given him, Paul gave back to Christ, to live for Him, to live for the glory of Christ and the proclamation of His gospel. And he was convinced that this life he had entrusted to Christ, Christ was able to guard this treasure of an immortal life, until the day when it was fully realized by passing from this world to the next.

Peter spoke of that trust in 1Peter 4:19 “Therefore, those also who suffer according to the will of God shall entrust their souls to a faithful Creator in doing what is right.” In that context Peter was speaking of the life of the believer, doing what is right, speaking the truth, sharing the gospel with the unsaved, so that he says if [anyone suffers] as a Christian, he is not to be ashamed, but is to glorify God in this name.” I think that the suffering we might experience for the gospel is pretty tame in comparison to what the apostles suffered. But I do recognize that we can suffer the loss of friendships, even the loss of family relationships due to our sharing of the gospel of Jesus Christ. But I can also promise that the glory that awaits us on that day when the Lord shall be revealed will far surpass any momentary light affliction we may experience here on earth.

Let us not be ashamed of the gospel of Jesus Christ. For it is the only power of God that will accomplish the salvation of our loved ones and friends. Let us be bold in our proclamation of the truth, and let the power of God loose to work out their salvation.

And if you’re here today, and you have not received the gift of life that Jesus has purchased for you through His death, I urge you to trust in Him today as your Savior, repenting of your sin and by faith in Christ receiving forgiveness of your sins and the righteousness of Christ applied to you account, that you may receive life, and that life which is eternal. Today that life is offered to you, look to Jesus and be saved.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

Faith of our fathers,  2 Timothy 1: 1-7  

Jul

31

2022

thebeachfellowship

Paul writes this second letter to his son in the faith, Timothy.  He says in vs2, “to Timothy my beloved son.” Paul was Timothy’s spiritual father.  Timothy’s natural father had died early in his life, from what we understand from scripture. His mother Eunice and his grandmother Lois raised him, presumably without a father figure in his life until the apostle Paul came on the scene. And at that point, Paul became his spiritual father, possibly leading Timothy to the Lord.

Paul went on to mentor Timothy as a disciple in the faith, and then later as a brother in arms so to speak, as he took Timothy into ministry with him on various missionary journeys, traveling together to all parts of the Roman Empire. Now as Paul is much older and Timothy is about 32 years of age or so, he writes to him as one who will be his successor, carrying on Paul’s ministry of overseeing the churches that they had planted together.

It must have been a bittersweet experience for Paul, recognizing the maturity of Timothy on the one hand, and being proud of his spiritual son, and on the other hand realizing the inevitableness of their separation, and soon his own execution, which meant that he probably would not see Timothy again on this side of heaven.  In the first letter to Timothy, Paul had been released from prison, and he was able to travel again and minister freely.  But when this letter is written, he is by all accounts in a Roman prison, not much more than a hole in the ground  with a metal grate above from which food and water is let down to him.  And it seems certain that he recognizes that this time he is not going to get out there alive.  This time his imprisonment will certainly conclude by execution from the court of the Emperor Nero.

So considering their relationship, it seems odd that Paul begins his letter by emphasizing his apostleship.  It would be like me writing a letter to my daughter in California and saying, Roy Harrell,  pastor of the Beach Fellowship, to my daughter Rachel, greetings!”  She would probably think that something was wrong with me if I used that kind of introduction.

The only explanation, of course, for Paul writing this way, was that it was going to be read as scripture in the churches, and also he wanted to emphasize his apostleship, so that it might be received in the context of his apostolic commission to establish the doctrine of the church. Notice that his apostleship was of Christ Jesus.  That means he is a witness to the resurrected Christ. He is sent as an apostle to the Genties by Christ, which is the will of God.

This apostleship is in accordance with the promise of life in Christ Jesus.  In other words, there could be no apostleship without the promise of life in Christ Jesus. This is the promise given by Jesus to those who believed in Him, that they would be given life.  Jesus said I came that they might have life, and have it more abundantly.  He said “I am the way, the truth and the life, no man comes to the Father except by Me.”  Jesus said “I give eternal life to them, and no one shall snatch them out of My hand.”  This life that Jesus speaks of is spiritual life, which is eternal, which is real life, which is life indeed.  It is life that transcends the physical existence.

This life is salvation.  This life in Christ is Christianity, the Christian life. It is a new way of living, a new way of thinking, a new perspective, a new heart, new desires, new outlook. This life requires a new birth.  Jesus said to Nicodemus, “you must be born again.”  John 3:3, 5-6  Jesus answered and said to him, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.” … 5 Jesus answered, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.”

And it’s fitting that Paul would mention the promise of this life, this indestructible life, when he is considering the certainty of his own death. Therefore 2 Timothy is not only the last letter we have from Paul, but there is a note of urgency and passion as we might expect from a man who knew he would soon be executed. And it’s a testament to Paul’s faith in his life in Christ, that in spite of his own impending death, he is able to bless Timothy and express thanksgiving for Timothy’s  life of faith. He says in vs 2, “Grace, mercy and peace from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord.” 

I think it was the great 19th century pastor Charles Haddon Spurgeon who noticed that when Paul wrote to the churches in general in all of his other epistles, he wrote the greeting “Grace and peace.”  But when he wrote what are called the pastoral epistles, the letters he wrote to pastors, such as 1 Tim. 2 Tim., and Titus,  Paul includes “Grace, mercy and peace.” He went on to say that pastors need more mercy than most people. ““Did you ever notice this one thing about Christian ministers, that they need even more mercy than other people? Although everybody needs mercy, ministers need it more than anybody else; and so we do, for if we are not faithful, we shall be greater sinners even than our hearers, and it needs much grace for us always to be faithful, and much mercy will be required to cover our shortcomings.”

I told the group that came out on Wednesday evening to our bonfire Bible study that I had recently found some old cassette tapes of my Dad’s preaching.  My dad died over 30 years ago now. These tapes were probably made back in the late 70’s and preached in country churches in eastern North Carolina.  I hadn’t heard them for over 30 years, and now that I’m a pastor, I listened to them a lot more critically than I had before. And I was struck by a few things as I listened to my dad.  First, I would have recognized his voice anywhere.  But unfortunately, he wasn’t speaking to me as his son, he was speaking as a preacher.  And in those days, in that culture, preaching had a particular style that was definitely of that era and of that region, and of that particular brand of church.

I must confess it was a little hard to listen to in some respects. I guess there is no greater critic than those of your own family.  But I will say this about my dad.  He was faithful to the Lord.  He was faithful to scripture.  He may not have understood every doctrine perfectly, he may not have been the greatest orator.  But I believe that the Lord counted him faithful.  I said last week that when my Dad died, he did not look like a winner from the world’s perspective.  He was living in subsidized housing.  He had no family nearby.  My mother had divorced him.  His health was ruined.  And he died at the same age I am now. But I believe that in the sight of the Lord, he kept the faith, he fought the good fight, he finished the course. And I believe the Lord will reward him on that day. And I will add this, the testimony of the faithfulness of his life is my faith today. I have the same faith as my father.  I may not preach the way he preached, I may not understand all doctrines the same way he understood them.  But the fundamental faith of my father is the same faith that I have.

Paul didn’t look like a winner to the world either.  His enemies were rejoicing that he was in prison.  They had followed him all over the Roman Empire trying to undermine his ministry, discredit his apostleship, and malign his character.  And now he was rotting in a Roman prison, cold, hungry, hurting, and he says later in this letter that everyone had deserted him except Luke. And he urged Timothy to come soon, and bring his winter coat and the parchments, that would have been the scriptures.  We don’t know that Timothy ever got there in time. It’s doubtful. But the triumph of Paul’s faith was the enduring faith of Timothy.  It was the faith that he passed on to Timothy, that he instilled in Timothy, the faith that would endure even after his departure.

And in turn Paul speaks about the faith of his forefathers that had been passed on to him in vs 3, “I thank God, whom I serve with a clear conscience the way my forefathers did, as I constantly remember you in my prayers night and day…”   Paul had a clear conscience in regards to his ministry. Though he was convicted by the Roman courts as a criminal, he knew that he had served God faithfully and fully.  Though he would be sentenced to death by the world’s court, he would be granted life by God’s court.

But what’s interesting is that he references the faith of his forefathers.  That is a reference to Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses,  Elijah, and other men of old, Israelites who believed in God, and it was counted to them as righteousness.  Not men who kept every commandment perfectly, but who were given righteousness by God as a gift of His grace, in exchange for their faith.  Abraham believed God and it was counted to him as righteousness.  The OT saints were saved the same way we are saved; they were saved by faith.

And so the examples of faith that we read about in scripture should be examples for us to follow, to emulate, that give us encouragement.  They were men with similar passions such as we have.  They were flesh and blood like us.  They were sometimes weak, sometimes timid, sometimes doubtful, but they persevered in faith, and they were counted as faithful, and as such they were granted the righteousness of Christ. The faith of our fathers should encourage us, it should strengthen us, and give us hope that we can also persevere in faith.

But notice that a key to Timothy persevering in faith is the fact that Paul prayed for him constantly night and day.  Do you think that is merely hyperbole on Paul’s part?  Do you think he really is praying constantly night and day for Timothy?  I can assume from my own experience in praying for my kids that perhaps Paul puts night before day because nighttime is a time when I really pray for my kids.  In the middle of the night I seem to wake up and lay there and the thoughts concerning my kids come unbidden in the darkness, and I have no other recourse but to pray.  At three in the morning here it’s midnight in California, and I start to wonder whether or not they are safe in their beds are running around somewhere in California and I really begin to pray in earnest.

I can’t over emphasize the importance of your prayers in the life of your children. I don’t know how it works, I don’t often see evidence of my prayers working, but I believe that our prayers can change the trajectory of our children’s lives.  I believe God protects them according to our prayers. I believe God hears our prayers, and answers our prayers,  especially the prayers of a parent in the middle of the night. I often think in that regard of Jesus, who in the middle of the night before he was arrested and crucified, asked the disciples to pray with Him for just one hour.  Do you think their prayers were necessary?  Do you think their prayers helped? It’s hard for us to understand how it works, or what purpose there was to their prayers, but nevertheless, Jesus wanted them to pray for an hour.  Have you ever prayed for your kids for one solid hour?  Maybe you should.

Paul said to Timothy that he was “longing to see you, even as I recall your tears, so that I may be filled with joy.”  Undoubtedly, Timothy had learned or was possibly even there when Paul was taken prisoner, or at the least, had wept when Paul had departed from him the last time, perhaps knowing that this might be the last time  they would be together.  Timothy had a genuine love for Paul that I think was like  the love a man has for his father.  I know in my life there was nothing that rocked me to the core like losing my father.  I had anticipated it for years because of his bad health, but when it happened it tore me up.  I would have done anything for just one more day with him.

And Paul as well longs to see Timothy one more time.  The memory of Timothy’s tears probably made it especially hard for him.  But ultimately, he knows and is assured of Timothy’s faith, and the fact that one day they will be reunited again in heaven.

He says in vs5 “For I am mindful of the sincere faith within you, which first dwelt in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice, and I am sure that [it is] in you as well.” I don’t know if we can be sure that Paul led Timothy to the Lord, or his mother Eunice did, or perhaps his grandmother Lois. But one thing is for sure, his mother and grandmother played a major part in his coming to faith.

In chapter 3:14 Paul says to Timothy, “You, however, continue in the things you have learned and become convinced of, knowing from whom you have learned [them,]  and that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.”  How could Timothy know the sacred writings, the scriptures from childhood unless his mother and grandmother had not read to him and taught him the word of God when he was a little boy.

Listen folks, as a parent or a grandparent you have no greater responsibility than to raise up your children in the nurture and admonition of the word.  You have no greater responsibility than to bring your children with you to church.  I am just flabbergasted when I hear  parents or grandparents say that they can’t come to church the next week because their grandchildren are visiting with them. That’s your opportunity to live out your faith before them as an example.  That’s your opportunity to share the scriptures with them which are able to give them the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. 

Perhaps some of you think that because the church doesn’t have a children’s program they won’t be able to understand or relate to what’s going on.  Nothing could be further from the truth. Timothy learned the scriptures from childhood. And the scriptures gave him the wisdom that lead him to salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.  Jesus said in Mark 10:15  “Truly I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child will not enter it [at all.]” So childlike faith is what is required for salvation.

We had a young family come to our bonfire Bible study the other night and they have two boys, one 7 and the other about 12.  And I was surprised when I talked to them the next day that they said they had really enjoyed the Bible study.  I was surprised because we didn’t have anything special for the kids.  And we were studying Malachi.  A few weeks earlier we had studied Jonah and I could maybe see how kids might enjoy the story of Jonah.  But not Malachi.  And the littlest one, Solomon was his name.   He was so smart, he was telling me all the things that I had said, or at least what he thought I had said.  But he was pretty much on track.  I doubt many adults had understood much more than he did.  But you know, it’s the Holy Spirit who teaches us from the word.  And so the Lord is able to give them enough understanding.  But what is probably the greatest lesson that children get from church is seeing the faith of their father and mother as they participate in church.  They may learn more from watching their parents than they do from hearing the pastor preach a sermon.

On the basis then of the faith that Timothy’s mother and grandmother had established in him, Paul says in vs 6, “For this reason I remind you to kindle afresh the gift of God which is in you through the laying on of my hands.”  Now most commentators seem to agree that the gift which Paul refers to here is the gift of ministry as the apostle’s representative to the churches. And the reference to Paul laying on of hands on Timothy Is more than likely a reference to that.

But I think it could also be the gift of faith that Paul is referring to. He is saying, rekindle the gift of God which is in you.  That is very possibly the gift of faith. Ephesians 2:8 says, “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, [it is] the gift of God.”  What is a gift?  Salvation or faith? I would say that both are a gift of God. Because faith is salvation. And God is the initiator of our faith.  1 Cor. 12 which lists the gifts of the Spirit includes in that list “faith.”  So faith is a gift.  And I can tell you from experience that faith needs to be stirred up from time to time.

Peter had this to say to the church in 2Pe 1:13-14 “I consider it right, as long as I am in this earthly dwelling, to stir you up by way of reminder,  knowing that the laying aside of my earthly dwelling is imminent, as also our Lord Jesus Christ has made clear to me.”

I would suggest that all of us need our faith to be stirred up now and again. That’s one of the main reasons we need to be under sound preaching of the word.  We need to be refreshed once in a while.  It’s possible for our love to grow cold.  It’s possible for our spiritual fire to start to wane, to flicker and come close to going out.  I would suggest that some of you have left your first love and gone back to the things of the world and have allowed the things of the world to draw your focus off of the things of the Lord. Folks, I urge you to rekindle the gift which has been given to you.  Let us be able to say like Paul, I have kept the faith, I have finished the course, I have fought a good fight.  That we persevered to the end.  That we might leave a legacy of faith for our family to emulate as they carry on in our absence.

So to that need to be stirred up, to kindle afresh the gift of faith within you, Paul adds in vs 7, “For God has not given us a spirit of timidity, but of power and love and discipline.”  Our faith is not something to be timid about, to be kept in a closet.  Our faith is not something we are to hide under a bushel basket.  Our faith is not some private, personal thing that we do not share with others. But our faith is the source of power.  This word power in the Greek is dynamis.  It’s the word we get our word dynamite from.

It’s the same word used in Romans 1:16 where Paul says, “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”  Faith is the means by which we tap into the power of God, by which we believe in the promises of God, so that we might even move mountains.  So that we might be able to do that which seems impossible.  Timothy needs to be rekindled in his faith so that he might be able to proclaim the gospel in the power of God.  The power of God is able to be brought to bear on our situation, because we pray in faith, we persevere in faith, and we act in faith.  The power of faith is a tremendous power.  Not faith in faith, but faith in God and in His word, His promises. By faith we receive the Spirit of God, by whom we have the power of Christ in us.

Then Paul says our faith produces love.  Love is not a feeling.  A lot of people think that faith is a feeling.  Faith may be joined to feelings, whether they be good feelings or not remains to be seen.  But faith in and of itself is not feeling, it’s believing in the truth, and then acting upon the truth.  And the truth of the gospel is God so loved the world that He gave His only Son, that whosoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.  And then through faith we love Him because He first loved us.  And through faith we love one another because He loves us.  And through faith we love even our enemies.  But love is not a feeling, it’s obedience.  It’s obedience to the Lord’s commands.  If we love our neighbor, then we will certainly share the gospel with our neighbor that they might escape the condemnation of death and be saved. 

1 Cor. 13 says, “if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing.”  So true faith produces love, and love is considering the needs of others as more important than your own.  The world is lost and dying and without hope, and we have the answer.  If you love as Christ loved us, then we must tell the world of the hope of life that comes through Jesus Christ. 

Last thing Paul says faith produces is discipline, or sound judgment, or a sound mind.  I have quoted this verse a thousand times to soothe a person or even my own mind in times of distress, emotional upheaval, and things like anxiety attacks or depression.  And the translation “a sound mind” certainly helps us to see that application.  But I must confess that I don’t think the definition of a sound mind means a peaceful mind. Though peace should be the result of a sound mind.  But the word in the Greek is “sōphronismos”. (so-fron-is-mos’)

“Sōphronismos” means discipline, or self control.  Faith then produces power, love and self control. In other words, through faith I have power over sinful impulses. Through faith I have power over temptation. Through faith I have power over the lusts of the flesh.  But my faith needs to be stirred up.  I need to be reminded of the faith of my fathers.  I need to remember their steadfastness, their devotion to the Lord regardless of their circumstances, regardless of their temptations.  I need to be reminded of the Lord’s love for me, and His sacrifice on my behalf that I might be considered righteous before God. 

Self control by the way is a fruit of the spirit that is listed in Galatians 5:23. We don’t hear a lot about it because it’s not as glamorous or exciting as some of the other gifts. But self control is something we achieve by faith, especially by a faith that is stirred up, because we know that God’s way is better than man’s ways.  We can trust God’s plan, and so we don’t have to feel like we need to give in to our lusts, or our sinful desires.  But it also means trusting in God’s word as being true, and recognizing the lies of the devil and the lies of the world.  That’s self control, that’s sound judgment, and that produces a sound mind.  A mind that is set on the right course by the word of God, that as a result, we are no longer to be children, tossed here and there by waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by the trickery of men, by craftiness in deceitful scheming;  but speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in all [aspects] into Him who is the head, [even] Christ, from whom the whole body, being fitted and held together by what every joint supplies, according to the proper working of each individual part, causes the growth of the body for the building up of itself in love.”

The bottom line is that the faith of our fathers is one which we pass on to others, which is a mature faith, which is not timid, but is a faith that produces power, faith and love.  I trust that you will rekindle the faith within yourselves, that you might be able to say with Paul, 2Tim. 4:7-8 “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the course, I have kept the faith;  in the future there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day; and not only to me, but also to all who have loved His appearing.”

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

Godliness versus worldliness, 1 Timothy 6:1-11

Jul

10

2022

thebeachfellowship

Before we start our exposition of this sixth chapter of 1 Timothy this morning, I would like to turn to Paul’s second letter to Timothy, chapter 3 verse 16 which says, 2Tim. 3:16-17 “All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness; so that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work.” I quote that verse as a reminder that the text we are looking at today is indeed Scripture, and it is therefore profitable, even though at times we may question it’s relevancy today.

1 Timothy has several difficult passages, not the least of which are those found at the beginning of chapter 6. And because of the difficulty of this passage and others like it, I have sometimes doubted my own sanity in choosing to preach through 1 Timothy on Sunday mornings, and especially to preach through it on the beach. But as I have stressed every week, Paul is writing this letter, according to chapter 3 vs 15, “so that you will know how one ought to conduct himself in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and support of the truth.”

Now to that end, how we are to conduct ourselves in the household of God, Paul has talked about virtually every element of the household of Christ, from pastors/teachers, to women, old men, widows, deacons, and now he is going to speak to slaves. But the primary point of what Paul is speaking about here is not the rightness or wrongness of slavery per se, but the Christian’s life of godliness as opposed to worldliness. That’s really what Paul is addressing, godliness versus worldliness. And he is going to give instructions about that in reference slaves and indirectly to their masters in regards to this principle of godliness.

Now remember, this is scripture, it is the truth of God. But in rightly interpreting scripture, it is imperative that we begin by understanding the immediate historical context in which it was written. Only when it has first been understood who it was written to, at what time it was written, under what historical conditions and circumstances it was written, are we then able to extract principles which can then be applied to todays circumstances and conditions. But if you fail to take the historical context into consideration, and instead try to make application of what was written directly to today’s culture or the society that we live in, you are very likely to end up with a distorted, or incorrect interpretation of scripture.

I say all of that as an introduction to this section, because though Paul is addressing the broader theme of godliness as opposed to worldliness, he is going to work it through the historical context of slavery as he knew it living in the height of the Roman Empire. It’s estimated by scholars that there were about 60 million slaves at that time in the Roman Empire. Slavery was the status quo for about 1/3 of the population. Slavery was a grievous institution both then and now, but in Paul’s day, it was much more an accepted way of life for a large segment of the population. You were either slave or free. And in the church, there were both slaves and free people mixing together, as one body, which was the household of God.

In Roman society, there were many ways you could become a slave. One of the most common ways was that your native country had been conquered in war, and the survivors were offered either slavery or death. The majority of people faced with that choice chose slavery. And as a result, there was a broad range of the types of occupations that were occupied by slaves. Most of the artisans and tradesmen were slaves. Teachers were predominately slaves. Even physicians were sometimes slaves. Slavery affected all levels of life. And it was a fact of life in that society that was not something that could just be easily done away with.

So as Paul addresses this large group of people within the church, his concern is not to rouse them to rebel and to overthrow their masters so that they might be free. His concern is that they live lives that are godly, and as such, they become examples of godliness to others, that they might be drawn to the gospel and be saved. Paul doesn’t approve of slavery. But he doesn’t advocate abolishing slavery from external means such as through rebellion or legislation, but he advocates working from the inside out. He knows that if hearts are changed, then society will be changed, and slavery will be eventually abolished. God’s method of changing man is always from the inside, to the outside. Not vice a versa. We are not commissioned to change the world through political maneuvers, not even through legislating morality, but we are commissioned to go into the world with the gospel, that hearts might be changed, souls converted, so that men might become workers of righteousness, and not doers of evil.

So understanding that historical context, let’s consider Paul’s words in vs 1. “All who are under the yoke as slaves are to regard their own masters as worthy of all honor so that the name of God and [our] doctrine will not be spoken against.” You should remember that in chapter five the church was told to give honor to widows, then it was told to give double honor to pastors. And now Paul is saying that slaves are to give honor to their masters.

To give honor in this respect is not to give financial remuneration as with widows or pastors, but to give respect and honor to their masters as in giving them an honest day’s work. And they are to do that so that the name of God and the teachings of Christianity would not get a bad reputation. The goal of Paul’s instruction is that God would be glorified, Christian doctrine would be magnified, and souls would be saved. Having a rebellious attitude, sloughing off when you are supposed to be working, perhaps pilfering from their employer, all those things would only serve to give Christianity a bad name, and give an excuse to those who are looking for a reason not to become a believer.

Another possibility for misuse of their position might be that not only was the slave a Christian, but his master may have become a Christian. So how did that change the worker/owner dynamic? Paul says in vs 2, “Those who have believers as their masters must not be disrespectful to them because they are brethren, but must serve them all the more, because those who partake of the benefit are believers and beloved. Teach and preach these [principles.]”. So rather than seeing the fact that their master has become a believer as a possible benefit to themselves in regards to better work, or less work, or even their potential freedom, Paul says that they are to actually work even harder for their Christian masters.

Now that goes against the grain of our thinking. Our first inclination is to say that the first job of a Christian convert should be to free their slaves. Paul doesn’t say that. He does not advocate for slavery, but neither does he call for it’s abolition here. His immediate concern is that the one whom is a slave is to be without reproach in his responsibilities to his master. As the master’s heart is changed and conformed to the image of Jesus Christ, and he learns to love his neighbor as himself, his attitude towards owning slaves will be undoubtedly changed. But Paul is going to trust that change of heart to God, and not try to legislate it. And in the interim, the slave is to be diligent in his work and give honor to his master.

Paul doesn’t see fit here to spend any time writing about the evils of slavery. That’s not his point. His point is to exhort the church in all it’s facets to a life of godliness so that the cause of Christ will not be maligned and the gospel will not be hindered. In due time, the church and it’s doctrine will be the undoing of slavery. But it will come from God changing hearts, and not Christians changing culture.

Now that was the message in it’s historical context. And the principle that we ought to take from that and apply to our day is that as Christians in the workplace, we should give honor to our employers. The best worker at the job site should be the Christian. The most conscientious worker in the office should be the Christian. We should not be undermining the authority of the boss by backbiting or slacking off. Instead our testimony at work should be such that the name of Christ is glorified by our work and our attitude at work. And if we should work for a Christian employer, then rather than seeing that as an opportunity for taking advantage, but should render them even more diligent effort in our work. I will say from personal experience, that unfortunately that is not always the case with Christian workers. I built a house many years ago, and wanted to use Christians from my church as contractors. And I found that some of the Christian contractors were the worst in regards to the work that they did and the timeliness of it and so forth. I suspect that they thought they should expect a greater degree of laxity due to the fact that we were both Christians. Paul says that should not be. A Christian should exemplify godliness in his work, whether it be for believers or non believers.

That principle of godliness on the part of the church is the subject of the next paragraph. Vs3, “If anyone advocates a different doctrine and does not agree with sound words, those of our Lord Jesus Christ, and with the doctrine conforming to godliness, he is conceited [and] understands nothing; but he has a morbid interest in controversial questions and disputes about words, out of which arise envy, strife, abusive language, evil suspicions, and constant friction between men of depraved mind and deprived of the truth, who suppose that godliness is a means of gain. But godliness [actually] is a means of great gain when accompanied by contentment.”

So what does Paul mean by a different doctrine? What was the original doctrine? Well, the true doctrine of the church is stated in vs 2 as that which conforms to godliness. What is godliness? Godliness is being holy, being Christ like, being like minded as God, and our actions following suit. It’s the life of sanctification. It’s following in the example of Jesus Christ. Godliness is God’s character lived out in our lives. Godliness then is the template that is given for our lives. And Paul compares that with worldliness. Worldliness is life that is according to man’s natural inclinations, what seems right to us, what the world’s wisdom advocates.

And what Paul has been teaching in this letter since the beginning, is that there was and is in the church a doctrine which purports to be of God, but in actuality is the doctrine of demons. It is the doctrine of the world. Man’s wisdom mixed with a little bit of scripture, verses cherry picked from here and there in order to substantiate man’s wisdom.

Notice how Paul describes what that worldly doctrine produces; “he is conceited [and] understands nothing; but he has a morbid interest in controversial questions and disputes about words, out of which arise envy, strife, abusive language, evil suspicions, and constant friction between men of depraved mind and deprived of the truth, who suppose that godliness is a means of gain.”

Worldly doctrine produces conceitedness, pride in oneself, in one’s achievements. Pride in one’s rights and what they have deemed to be blessings given to them. Worldliness produces controversy about words, arguments about scripture, which they try to twist to serve their own interests, and use to validate their rebellion. They are not interested in the truth of God, but only in how to use God’s word for their benefit or to substantiate their position or agenda. Did you know that you can find some text in the Bible to seemingly validate almost anything you want to do? That was done in regards to slavery in this country for a long time by quoting from this very passage. And it’s done today to validate homosexuality or women in ministry or host of other errant doctrines. They twist scripture and use verses out of context and argue about what something really means in order to try to validate their agenda.

And what is the world’s agenda? Generally speaking, their agenda is to accumulate more of the world’s riches, to get rich. And to that end, Paul says, they suppose that godliness is a means of gain. There is a prevailing false doctrine today that we are constantly being exposed to by a large number of preachers out there which is what we call the prosperity gospel. And it is a very good sounding doctrine, very appealing. It promises health and wealth and prosperity to those who believe in Christ. And the bottom line of that doctrine is that God wants the best for you, and for you to have your best life NOW. Not the best life in eternity in heaven, but right now in this life. And you can have YOUR best life now, whatever you want that to be, if you will just believe it. If you have enough faith, God will give you all that you can imagine and ask for, in order for you to have your best life now. And they have a lot of Bible verses that they can quote which to the naive seem to support that doctrine.

But that is not God’s truth. They have twisted God’s truth and made their own doctrine. And Paul says that doctrine may have a form of religion, but it is worldly and it produces worldly results, which are envy, strife, abusive language, evil suspicions, and constant friction by men of a depraved mind and deprived of the truth. A depraved mind is a mind set on the things of this world, what this world can offer. But that which the world offers can never satisfy the soul. Sin begets sin, and lust begets more lust, and that life which the world offers can never satisfy, and the riches of this world you can’t take with you when you die, so they won’t be of any help in the next life either. The currency of this world is of no use in the next. It won’t spend.

Paul says in vs6 “But godliness [actually] is a means of great gain when accompanied by contentment. For we have brought nothing into the world, so we cannot take anything out of it either. If we have food and covering, with these we shall be content.” Contentment in the way Paul is using it here means something like being satisfied. The idea is that you are content with your lot, content with the life you have in Christ. It’s not trying to find satisfaction by material things, because we know they will never satisfy. But it’s being satisfied in what God has done in your heart. Knowing that you are God’s child, knowing that He cares for you. Knowing that your sins have been forgiven, that you have an inheritance in heaven that is far greater than anything you could ever imagine.

Paul speaks of having that contentment irregardless of his circumstances in Phl. 4:11-13 “Not that I speak from want, for I have learned to be content in whatever circumstances I am. I know how to get along with humble means, and I also know how to live in prosperity; in any and every circumstance I have learned the secret of being filled and going hungry, both of having abundance and suffering need. I can do all things through Him who strengthens me.”

So godliness with contentment is a great gain. It’s something we should aspire to. Not in the accumulation of the world’s goods, but in conformity to the example of Jesus Christ. Being willing to suffer temporary hardship now in order to experience eternal glorification later. Contentment is satisfaction deferred now, for the satisfaction that will endure forever when we are with the Lord.

The Psalmist said in Psalm 131:2 “Surely I have composed and quieted my soul; Like a weaned child [rests] against his mother, My soul is like a weaned child within me.” A nursing child cannot rest against the mother’s breast without wanting more milk. But a weaned child can rest against his mother’s breast and find even greater comfort than simply warm milk. That is a picture of contentment with godliness. Not always wanting more and more, but simply being satisfied with what God has already provided, knowing that He will take care of our needs.

So the opposite of godliness with contentment is worldliness and a craving for more. Paul addresses that craving for more as a desire for riches in vs 9 “But those who want to get rich fall into temptation and a snare and many foolish and harmful desires which plunge men into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.”

Notice the downward progression of the product of worldly doctrine. First there is the desire, the craving for riches. Then the fall into temptation, the sin that allures us with the promise of riches, and then the plunge into ruin and destruction.

And notice that riches itself are not identified as a sin. But the love of money is a root of sin. It’s not the only root, there are other causes of sin. But the love of money is A root of sin which leads men into sin, in order to try to satisfy their desires. We excuse a lot of sinful practices in the name of making money. Money is the world’s god. And the world promises that money will make you happy, that it will provide satisfaction. But of course, when you die, your money goes to someone else. You can’t take it with you.

On the other hand, you can use money for good. Money in and of itself is not evil. But the desire for money, to accumulate money, to hoard money, is a root of all sorts of evil. And many people have been ruined by it. If that’s what you’re living for, then what you have ruined is your hope of heaven. Jesus said in Matt. 6:24 “No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and wealth.”

So serving God produces godliness and contentment. Serving worldly wealth produces ruin and destruction. , Paul says “for the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.” Wandering away from the faith does not mean they are no longer saved, but they have wandered away from the truths of the faith, the doctrines of the faith. Those are the doctrines which produce godliness. But instead they have turned aside to other doctrines, and those doctrines are false, offering false hope in worldly wisdom, and they end up suffering the consequences of that sin. And those consequences are often painful.

So Paul ends this section with an exhortation to be godly. Vs 11, “But flee from these things, you man of God, and pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, perseverance [and] gentleness.” If you are a man or woman of God, then your life will be characterized with the attributes of God. Those attributes are things we should pursue, and not the allure of this world. The attributes of God is righteousness, godliness, faith, love, perseverance and gentleness. I don’t want to belabor those attributes, for the most part they are self explanatory. But we will look at them in more depth next week.

For now let’s just close with that exhortation to pursue godliness. To follow in the footsteps of Christ. To fix your mind on things of heaven and not on things of earth. I think a good example of godliness with contentment is seen in Abraham, about whom Hebrews 11 says, “By faith [Abraham] lived as an alien in the land of promise, as in a foreign [land,] dwelling in tents with Isaac and Jacob, fellow heirs of the same promise; for he was looking for the city which has foundations, whose architect and builder is God. … All these died in faith, without receiving the promises, but having seen them and having welcomed them from a distance, and having confessed that they were strangers and exiles on the earth. … But as it is, they desire a better [country,] that is, a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God; for He has prepared a city for them.”

Let us keep our gaze fixed on things above, and our purpose fixed on the mission here on earth. Then after we have suffered a little while, and kept the faith, and proclaimed the gospel, we will find that in the future there is laid up for us the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to us on that day; and not only to us, but also to all who have loved His appearing.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

Family relationships, 1 Timothy 5:1-16

Jun

26

2022

thebeachfellowship

According to what Paul said in chapter 3 vs 15, he is writing this letter to Timothy “so that you will know how one ought to conduct himself in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and support of the truth.” Now that should be of importance to all of us, and I assume by your presence here today that you too are interested in how you should conduct yourself in the household of God.

And that the church is likened to the household of God I think is the key to understanding these verses. He is speaking of the church body as being the family of God. A family should be known by it’s love for one another. That’s the hallmark of a good family, they love one another. They respect one another. They submit to one another. They help one another out. They are concerned for one another. And according to the Biblical standard, one doesn’t grow out of that family. The commandment to honor your father and your mother doesn’t have an expiration date on it. I’m sure those of you that are parents continue to love and be concerned for your children even though they are grown and may have children of their own. And I’m sure that all of us that have living parents continue to love them and care for them.

That model of the natural family is the illustration of the spiritual family that we belong to if we are Christians and a part of a godly church. In many cases, our church family has even replaced our human family, perhaps due to the rejection that we have suffered from our family as a result of our coming to the Lord. I think that was often the case in Paul’s day, especially among Jewish converts who found themselves ostracized by their unconverted Jewish families.

So our conduct in the church towards each other is that all is to be done in love, as if those in the church are our fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters. And to that effect, Paul gives some practical advice how that love for one another should look. He says in vs 1 and 2, “Do not sharply rebuke an older man, but [rather] appeal to [him] as a father, [to] the younger men as brothers, the older women as mothers, [and] the younger women as sisters, in all purity.”

Paul is speaking primarily to Timothy, but indirectly he is speaking to everyone in the church. And we are all to have this familial type of love for one another. There is a bond that you have with your natural family, I’m sure. No matter how your paths in life may separate you, there is still nothing like being able to pick up the phone and talk to your mother or one of your siblings. There is an acceptance and freedom and love in those relationships that is essential to our well being. My mother has been dead for about 5 years now, and I still find myself sometimes wanting to pick up the phone and call her. She may not have always been the perfect mom -though I don’t think that anyone can be the perfect mom or dad – but nevertheless she was always interested in what I had to say and willing to listen. That kind of love should be characteristic of God’s family as well.

In regards to rebuking older men, upon further study we find that the ancient Greek verb for rebuke is not the normal word for “rebuke” in the New Testament. This is the only place this word is used, and it means literally “to strike at.” So basically what Timothy was being told was not to lash out at older men, but to treat them with respect as he would his own father. In fact, the idea behind “appeal to him” means to take him aside. The issue is not whether or not the pastor should rebuke an older man. We are told elsewhere, such as in Titus 2:15, “Rebuke with all authority. Let no one despise you.” Now that is the more common word for rebuke, but the idea is clearly stated that there are times when people are to be rebuked. But in the case of older men, don’t lash out at them but treat them with respect and honor.

And just for reference, Timothy was probably around 32 years of age. So an older man would be someone perhaps 60 years old or older. If you’re younger than 60, it’s ok to lash out, I suppose. I’m kidding, of course. But I must admit I have always had a certain degree of jealousy for some of our Old Testament models of leadership who didn’t seem to have a problem administering corporal punishment.

For instance, I’ve always admired Nehemiah when he found out that the sons of Israel were marrying the pagan women from around the region near Jerusalem. And he said “So I contended with them and cursed them and struck some of them and pulled out their hair, and made them swear by God, “You shall not give your daughters to their sons, nor take of their daughters for your sons or for yourselves.” I’ve always been a little jealous of the fact that Nehemiah was able to slap and pull the hair of people that were disobedient. I wonder if that would be effective today. I kind of doubt it.

In fact, Paul warns us not to lash out against those men that are older, but treat them like you would treat your father, and younger men as brothers. I’m going to take exception to the brother part and try to treat younger men better than my brother and I treated one another. We fought constantly our entire childhood. And even today, if we get together for more than 10 minutes we will be arguing so heatedly my wife is afraid that we will come to blows. But ideally, treat younger men as brothers. Maybe the idea there is to treat younger man in the church like an older brother who takes his younger brother under his wing and teach them the essentials of life.

And then Paul adds in regards to older women, treat them like you would treat your mother. Or at least, like you are supposed to treat your mother. You show them respect, honor them. Listen to them. You know, the fact is, a lot of us probably had parents or family relationships that were far from perfect. A lot of us wish that we had a godly mother that could have set the right example, that had a sacrificial love for her children, that gave wise advice. The hope is that in the church, you might find such a person who could be the godly mother, or godly father, or big brother or sister that you never had.

I think this is what is missing today in the church. We all know that we are told the characteristic of the church is that we are to love one another. But we don’t know how that is supposed to look. To be a godly mentor, a godly big brother, or a godly mother to a young woman who may not have had a good mother in her life, that’s the practical way that you love one another. It doesn’t mean that you have to have a one on one Bible study with someone in order to love them. It may mean that you take a young man fishing, or take a kid surfing, or take some young woman in the church out to lunch, or to a farmer’s market, or any other of number of ways you can practically love someone.

You know, in your family growing up you just kind of accepted what the hand you were dealt and things happened because you lived in close proximity to one another. But in the church, you have to be a little more intentional than that. You might have to plan for it and create an opportunity. But what I think Paul is going to show here in the remaining verses, is that loving one another is a little more practical and concerned with daily needs and activities than what you might think.

The final relationship he mentions is that of young women, whom he says should be treated as sisters, with all purity. In other words, there should not be any concern about a young woman, particularly an unmarried young woman in the church. The same attitude that men would have towards their sister is the type of approach that you should have in the church. Now saying that, I do recognize that young people should ideally be able to find a mate in the church. We are to marry “in the Lord”, that is, we are to marry another Christian, and only Christians. And the pastor has the right to slap and pull the hair out of those who break that cardinal rule. But seriously, I think it’s appropriate for a young man and young woman to meet and marry within the church.

But I think Paul is speaking of impropriety, where a married man, or a pastor, or someone in leadership, is to avoid at all costs any improper conduct towards a young woman. But rather guard such women, as a young man might guard the honor of his sister. And if we look upon those women as our sisters then there should be no impure thoughts, or impure actions. Unfortunately, that has not always been the practice in the church at large. Pastors and other men have sometimes given into temptation and took advantage of these young women and in the process ruined both parties lives as well as the church’s reputation in the world. So above all, a pastor must be above reproach in that area. I said I think last week that for my part, I refuse to counsel a woman without my wife present. That’s just being prudent against gossip, or temptation or just bad appearances.

And then Paul begins to illustrate this principle of love within the household of God by dealing with a subsection of the family that we may not think much about today, but which was very much a part of the family dynamic in his day. But even though we may not have as much of this sort of thing in our churches today, we can still apply the principles to the church family in our age. Paul says in vs3 “Honor widows who are widows indeed; but if any widow has children or grandchildren, they must first learn to practice piety in regard to their own family and to make some return to their parents; for this is acceptable in the sight of God.”

I think it is helpful to understand the historical context in which he presents this principle. In Paul’s day, there wasn’t life insurance, or term insurance in the case of the unexpected death of a husband. There wasn’t public assistance or welfare, or government programs to help the needy. And so as a result, there were two classes of people that were left very vulnerable in that society. One was widows and the other was orphans. Both stood to become financially destitute by the loss of the husband, who was by and large the primary breadwinner of the family. Today that is not as much of a concern. We have programs and insurance and all kinds of government plans to take care of at least most of the financial needs of people that fall victim to the loss of a husband or parents. But there are still great emotional and spiritual needs that such people have that we should be concerned about.

But what Paul is addressing primarily here is the financial needs, which he says should be taken up by any surviving members of the widow’s family. If they have children or grandchildren, then the responsibility to take care of them should fall on them. The principle is that the parents took care of their needs as they were growing up, and now that they are unable to care for themselves, the children should care for the parents. And I think that we are seeing that to a great degree in our society, as people are living longer, but many times require assistance in living in their old age.

So there is a spiritual as well as a physical obligation to care for the elderly. And I would hope that doesn’t mean just handing them over to an old folks home and then forgetting about them. A person needs a lot more than just food and water to live. And additionally, the elderly have a lot more to give that we sometimes give them credit for. I don’t believe that God designed the family to be as split apart and separated as it is today. But unfortunately, economic and social concerns have taken precedence over family unity, and so a lot of young people think that growing up automatically means moving as far away from home as they can get. I don’t think that is God’s intention for the family. But nevertheless, God’s design is for the family members to take care of the elderly or widowed parent.

If you notice in Paul’s original injunction regarding widows, he says “Honor widows who are widows indeed.” Now he wants to define who are “widows indeed.” In other words, in the eyes of the church, who are really dependent widows. He says in vs 5 “Now she who is a widow indeed and who has been left alone, has fixed her hope on God and continues in entreaties and prayers night and day. But she who gives herself to wanton pleasure is dead even while she lives.”

A widow indeed is one who has been left alone, her husband has died, and there are no children or family that can help her. But even in that situation, it’s apparent that she is a godly woman, continuing in prayers night and day, and has fixed her hope on God. The contrast to a widow indeed is a woman who lost her husband, but she is living for pleasure. She obviously has the means to do so and she is not necessarily living for the Lord either. She is living for the pleasures of this world. Paul indicates that she is wanton; that means sexually unrestrained. Such women are not the kind of widows that the church should be concerned with supporting.

Vs7 “Prescribe these things as well, so that they may be above reproach. But if anyone does not provide for his own, and especially for those of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.” So these aren’t suggestions, they are commands. And the commands are given so that we might be above reproach in our conduct.

And the principle which is given has a much broader application than simply to widows. I think it applies to everyone. And that is, that a person should provide for those of their household. To not do so, is to deny the faith. That’s a pretty serious condemnation. That condemnation covers dead beat dads who leave their family and don’t take responsibility for their kids. But it also covers any member of the family that has the responsibility to provide for the needy ones in their family and yet doesn’t do so. Paul even goes so far as to say in 2 Cor. 12:14, that “children are not responsible to save up for their parents, but parents for their children.” So even saving up money for their children is a way that we are to provide for our household.

And of course, spiritually speaking, the church should provide for the needs of those of it’s household. That means spiritually providing for them, and if necessary, physically providing for one another’s needs as well. Those needs may be financial, but other needs that people have are just as important, such as companionship, mentorship, and so forth.

Now in the church of Paul’s day, there was such a widespread need for assistance for widows that there was a list in the church that those women were added to, that needed basic food and necessities for living. These women had no other resources for their living expenses other than the benevolence of the church. I can’t say that I have ever heard of that sort of list in churches today. We do sometimes have other type of lists in the church, especially for people that are shut ins. They may not have a shortage of food, but they are unable to get out and do things that they need to have done. So as we look at this, we’re going to look at it but briefly, not because we have the same situation occurring in our churches, but because the principle of caring for one another’s needs is applicable to many possible scenarios.

Paul says in vs9 “A widow is to be put on the list only if she is not less than sixty years old, [having been] the wife of one man, having a reputation for good works; [and] if she has brought up children, if she has shown hospitality to strangers, if she has washed the saints’ feet, if she has assisted those in distress, [and] if she has devoted herself to every good work.” So this is a description of a godly woman, a “widow indeed” which Paul referred to earlier. She was a loyal wife, she has served the church, she has helped others and shown hospitality, and she has generally been known for her good deeds. And, she is at least 60 years old. I think as a general rule people didn’t live as long in those days, and so 60 was considered old. I used to think 60 was old. But now I don’t think it’s quite as old as I used to. But that was their standard of old age in their day. Bottom line, she was an older woman, without any real opportunity for remarriage, with no children, with no relatives, but a godly woman who lived a life for the Lord and depended upon the Lord for her survival.

In contrast to that, Paul speaks of younger widows. Vs11 “But refuse [to put] younger widows [on the list,] for when they feel sensual desires in disregard of Christ, they want to get married, [thus] incurring condemnation, because they have set aside their previous pledge. At the same time they also learn [to be] idle, as they go around from house to house; and not merely idle, but also gossips and busybodies, talking about things not proper [to mention.] Therefore, I want younger [widows] to get married, bear children, keep house, [and] give the enemy no occasion for reproach; for some have already turned aside to follow Satan.”

As a general rule, these younger widows were not to be added to the support roll of the church, because they generally could provide for themselves and could remarry. Paul isn’t condemning young widows for wanting to get married, only observing that some unmarried women are so desperate for marriage and companionship that they don’t conduct themselves in a godly way in regard to relationships.

But a woman doesn’t have to be a young widow or even a widow at all to fulfill the description of “they learn to be idle, wandering about from house to house, and not only idle but also gossips and busybodies, saying things which they ought not.” Those who spend much time talking about other people’s lives need to mind their own business get a life of their own. We all need to guard against gossip and being a busybody. I’m afraid a lot of times gossiping masquerades as prayerful concern for others, when in fact some people find it exciting to speak of things that they shouldn’t be concerned about.

Paul was saying though that a young widow who might go on support assistance from the church could end up with too much time on her hands, which leads to being a busy body. If she were to get remarried, that problem would take care of itself. Paul is not condemning any young widow’s desire for romantic companionship; but he insists that it be pursued and expressed in the purity that is becoming to all believers.

Then finally, Paul restates the same principle he has already given twice before. So for the third time he confirms this principle in vs 16 “If any woman (some versions add man) who is a believer has [dependent] widows, she must assist them and the church must not be burdened, so that it may assist those who are widows indeed.” In other words, the first responsibility for support is at the level of the family; then the church is to support the truly destitute who are godly and dependent upon the Lord.

But let me close by reiterating the undergirding principle that I started with this morning. And that is that Christian love is practical. It’s not all about feeling something for someone, or having an attraction for someone. It’s about recognizing various needs of different members of the church and then acting to supply or fill those needs. I would suggest that most of the needs we have today in the church are not financial. Though there may be some financial needs amongst the various church members. But there are also many emotional and physical and spiritual needs that people have that can be fulfilled through Christian love. I would encourage you to pray that God will identify those needs to you as you consider and pray for one another.

Jesus gave us the command to love one another. It’s restated numerous times by the apostles. Three times in John’s gospel we read Jesus’ words. John 13:34 “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you, that you also love one another.”
John 15:12, “This is My commandment, that you love one another, just as I have loved you. … And John 15:17 “This I command you, that you love one another.”

“Let us consider how to stimulate one another to love and good deeds, not forsaking our own assembling together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging [one another;] and all the more as you see the day drawing near.” Hebrews 10:24,25

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

Job description of a pastor, 1 Timothy 4:11-16

Jun

19

2022

thebeachfellowship

The first letter to Timothy that we are studying is a personal letter to Timothy on the one hand, but it is also scripture, and as such it was meant to be read publicly in the church. And the purpose of that was two fold as well; to give instruction in regards to the qualifications of pastors and teachers in the church, but also to inform the church as to what to expect from a pastor/teacher.

And I think that is very necessary today. I believe that many pastors and teachers are obviously wrongly informed as to what their job is supposed to be, and many people in the church have a wrong view as to what to expect from the pastor. Pastors seem to have the impression that their primary job is to be kind of like the general manager of the church, orchestrating all the various parts so that they work together and present a comprehensive service. And then in addition to that they think that they are to be an entertainer of sorts. They must be witty, be able to get a good laugh now and then from the audience, and able to speak fluently and articulately in such a way as to leave the audience with the vague impression that he said something meaningful, comforting and encouraging, without being insulting or offensive in any way. That’s the pastor’s perspective.

The church people’s expectation is somewhat of a mystery. I think there are as many different expectations as there are individuals in the church. So the pastor in some respects has failed before he starts, because there is no way he can meet the expectations of everyone there. Some wish to be merely entertained. Some wish to hear things which validate their own beliefs. Some wish to be comforted and encouraged in regards to some personal crisis that they are going through. And a few, albeit I believe a very few, desire to hear the word of God, irrespective of whether or not it seems relative to their own particular interests. But above all, most people’s desire is that the pastor be as brief as possible.

I think it is necessary and helpful for today’s audience to hear what the apostle Paul says is to be the primary function of the pastor. Because after all, it is the Lord’s church, and the pastor has been called by God to that role, and God has established certain qualifications for the pastor, and so it’s God’s prerogative to determine what the pastor should do and say. Since God hires the pastor, He is justified in determining the job description for the pastor. And that will serve to inform the congregation as to what they should expect and desire from the pastor.

So Paul has been warning Timothy in the beginning of this fourth chapter about the deceiving nature of false prophets who will arise in the church, and draw away many after them by teaching fables and false doctrine such as asceticism and Gnosticism. Paul’s response to that false teaching was to say that bodily discipline profits but a little, but godliness is profitable for all things, for it offers a promise for this life and the life to come.

So now as Paul instructs Timothy in what a godly pastor is to teach, he begins by saying, “Prescribe and teach these things.” Prescribe is from the NASB, but the KJV and others say “command and teach these things.” Prescribe sounds a little more politically correct. But the emphasis in the original language is a bit more strenuous than that. Paul says in effect that Timothy, or the pastor, is to command certain things to the church. In other words, there is to be no equivocation in preaching these truths. There is to be no watering down of the truth to make it more palatable. These truths are non negotiable. They are not to be emasculated by the current culture. If God says it, then that is enough and it’s to be accepted as the word of God. There is no alternate truth.

And we all know what it means to teach. That means to explain, to expound. The great thing about God’s commands, God’s word is that He doesn’t just give us absolute imperatives without also giving reasons for His commands. Sometimes they aren’t explicitly stated directly afterwards, but when you compare scripture with scripture, and interpret scripture with scripture, then you can usually see the reason for God’s injunctions. And it’s the pastor’s job to teach, to answer the questions why, what, how. To show from correlating scriptures what God is saying in it’s fullness and completeness.

That’s really what I think my job is as a pastor/teacher. Its to be an expositor of the word. To expound the word. To use the common vernacular of the day, to unpack it. There is a lot that can be contained in a single sentence of scripture. And so the pastor is to prescribe the word as a remedy for a certain malady, to command the word as the will of God, and teach the word by explaining it and applying it.

What things is Paul referring he should prescribe and teach? Well, everything that came before verse 11, and even those things which come after. Specifically though I think he is referring to teaching sound doctrine, the principles for godly living, in contrast to the worldly fables and old wives tales that the false prophets were relying upon to keep their audiences attention on themselves. He has emphasized the importance of godly living, which is another way of referring to sanctification, which means to be conformed to the image of Jesus Christ.

There is a church in the area that on it’s advertising says, “nobody’s perfect.” As in don’t worry, we’re not going to hold you to any standard of perfection. Nobody’s perfect, and we don’t plan on trying to be either. Well, actually, Jesus is perfect. And according to Romans 8:29 we are supposed to be conformed to the image of Jesus Christ. Peter said in 1 Peter 1:14-16 “As obedient children, do not be conformed to the former lusts [which were yours] in your ignorance, but like the Holy One who called you, be holy yourselves also in all [your] behavior; because it is written, “YOU SHALL BE HOLY, FOR I AM HOLY.” So I guess that means we are to be perfect. We may fall short of that perfection, but that is what we are to be striving for, modeling ourselves after. Being holy is not a feeling, but a life style that follows in the footsteps of Jesus. And the path to holiness is through the gate of repentance, not by insolently taking offense at the standard of holiness.

Then there is a seemingly odd statement here by Paul concerning Timothy’s age. He says in vs 12, “Let no one look down on your youthfulness, but [rather] in speech, conduct, love, faith [and] purity, show yourself an example of those who believe.” Now some think that this is an reference to the age of a pastor, as if Paul is concerned about how old or how young a pastor should be. And there may be some merit to one’s age if it is measured by one’s spiritual maturity. But I’ve met some spiritually adolescent 70 year old pastors as well. So their biological age is not necessarily the issue here, but their spiritual maturity is very much the issue.

The word that is translated as “youthfulness” is according to Greek scholars comes from a word that denoted the age of a military male. And you were considered to be of military age up to 40 years in those days. And so he is not talking about a teenager. Actually, it’s believed by most scholars that Timothy was about 30-32 years of age. About the same age as Jesus when He began His ministry. But what he is referencing here is don’t let your relatively young age keep you from being an example to the church. Make sure that your conduct is something that people can look up to.

I just finished saying a moment ago about how we are to be following the example of Jesus in regards to holiness and perfection. And now Paul says that Timothy is also to be a similar example to his church. His life should be one that his people can emulate. Paul says about himself in 1Cor. 11:1 “Be imitators of me, just as I also am of Christ.” So as the leadership in the church, Paul says they are to imitate Christ, and in so doing give an example to be imitated by the church.

Now how does the pastor do that? Or how are you to be an example to your children, to your coworkers, to your family and friends? I think we are all called to live godly lives as an example to others, regardless of the role which you are given. So first of all, we follow the example of Christ’s life and conduct. Peter says in 1Peter 2:21 “For you have been called for this purpose, since Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example for you to follow in His steps.”

I think we have all heard the adage, “do as I say, and not as I do.” Well, that may be the world’s way of teaching, but it’s not God’s way. God’s way is that we teach by example. And the pastor should be a good example of a godly life. But so should a housewife, or a school teacher, or a construction worker, or a father. And the example we should follow is Christ.

Specifically, Paul says there are five areas of your life that should be exemplary. Speech comes first. So much damage is done by speech. James writes a lot about controlling the tongue, which he calls a restless evil, full of poison. Godly speech doesn’t mean that we are mealy mouthed, that we can’t speak the truth, or that we have to say thee and thou and intone some pantomime of piousness. But it means we speak peace and not hurt. We speak love and not hate. Our speech is not a fountain from which flows both bitter water and sweet. You want to be godly? Then start with your speech. Knock off the vulgar, foul language. Stop the angry, bitter language. Take control over your speech.

The second is conduct. Your behavior. Behave as a Christian should behave. Jesus, on two separate occasions, took a bullwhip to the temple and drove out the money changers and sellers of merchandise that were taking advantage of the people. So behavior doesn’t mean you always have to be lovey dovey and limp-wrists. If you want to know how a Christian is to behave, ask a non-Christian. They know how Christians are supposed to act. I can tell you that it’s not in drunkeness, sexual immorality, crude speech, lying, stealing, etc. Model your behavior after Christ.

Third is love. Love is agape love. There are many Greek words for love. Eros is one that means sexual love. Phileo is another which means brotherly love. Agape is the third that means sacrificial love, and that is the word that is used here. Someone explained it this way; eros is take, phileo is give and take, and agape is give. We are called to love with a sacrificial love. That is by the way, the ultimate love in marriage as well. That’s the sacrificial type of love we are to have for our spouse.

Faith is the fourth. Faith here is not a reference to believing in something very, very fervently and then presto, it comes to pass. Some think that is what faith means. And I guess they think that a pastor should be really good at faith, and because of that faith in whatever he says or prays, it will come about. That’s a perversion of faith. Faith in this context is belief in Jesus Christ, in who He is, and what He accomplished, and what He will yet accomplish. So really Paul means the pastor is to be an example of being firm in the faith. All the tenets of our faith are held by him without wavering.

And the final example we are to have is by our purity. This is the perfection we were talking about earlier. I guess we do need to be perfect if we are going to be an example of purity to the church. But purity, while it does indicate the idea of perfection, also speaks of the lack of perversion or corruption. His actions are to be above board, beyond reproach, transparent.

Not to read too much into this, but purity may also speak to motive. A pastor may be in that position for the wrong reasons. Some have obviously used their position to try to gain wealth or fame or for other possible reasons. So being pure in his motives for ministry is important.

Having addressed the pastor’s conduct, Paul now speaks to his ministry. He says in vs13 “Until I come, give attention to the [public] reading [of Scripture,] to exhortation and teaching. Do not neglect the spiritual gift within you, which was bestowed on you through prophetic utterance with the laying on of hands by the presbytery.”

The primary job of the pastor is the preaching of the word of God. That is done by public reading of scripture, exhortation from scripture and teaching of scripture. A man who lived during the days of Spurgeon and all the great preachers of the late 19th early 20th century, and had listened to them all, said that the most powerful sermon he ever heard was from the Scottish pastor Alexander Whyte, who simply read through the book of Philippians with only a few words of explanation here and there.

I don’t know that I would necessarily go that far, but I certainly want to avoid the other extreme as well. I visited a multi campus, mega church central office in San Diego a few years ago, and I toured their facility. At one point I was shown a conference table in a room that I was told was for the sermon committee. A large group of creative writers met there to write the message that would be preached the following Sunday. The pastor wasn’t even a part of the committee. He just showed up a day or two before and practiced delivering his lines.

That to me is obviously so far from what God has called the pastor to do as to be ludicrous. But people seem to like it. A more common practice among a lot of pastors is to buy a “canned sermon” or a series of messages from some online source which arrives all prepackaged with power point presentation and witty, whimsical stories and so forth. That’s really popular.

Paul says read the Bible, expound the Bible, give exhortation from the scripture, and teach the scripture. In his second letter to Timothy Paul says, (2Tim. 4:2) “preach the word; be ready in season [and] out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction. For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but [wanting] to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires, and will turn away their ears from the truth and will turn aside to myths. But you, be sober in all things, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry.”

Preach the word, in season and out of season. That’s the verse that God used to confirm my call to the ministry, by the way. Preaching the word is hard enough, but the in season and out of season part is really the most difficult part.

And notice this preaching of the word is what Paul refers to as a spiritual gift that Timothy was given by God. “Do not neglect the spiritual gift within you, which was bestowed on you through prophetic utterance with the laying on of hands by the presbytery.” Now that sounds all ecclesiastical, but I think we need to recognize that the presbytery is just another term for elders. So at some point, Paul and some of the other apostles laid hands on Timothy. But that doesn’t mean that the gift of preaching came from Paul or the elders. The gift came from God, and the elders just confirmed it. But it’s the same idea that we see in our ordination services today, where godly men confirm a pastor’s calling.

But much has been said about this gift of preaching, or gift of teaching. I don’t think we should think of that as some special gift of articulation or oratory. It’s not a gift of being a good story teller. A spiritual gift is just the ability or power to do something that God wants you to do. There are times when I don’t feel like physically I can preach. There were a couple of times when I was in extreme pain from needing a root canal and was unable to get it done before Sunday and had to preach when I could barely speak. There have been times when I was dehydrated or something and I felt like I was going to pass out and had to pray for God to keep me from falling out. I’ve had times when I lost my voice right before I was scheduled to speak. But in those times when physically I felt I could not do it, God gave me the strength or the voice or whatever it was I was lacking, to be able to preach the gospel. No one listening was aware of anything miraculous happening, but I knew that God provided the ability I needed to do what He wanted me to do in that hour.

There is a wonderful, godly couple who come to our church whenever they are visiting Bethany. They’ve been coming here for years. And they have an amazing British accent. Not the Cockney kind of accent, but the sophisticated type. And I’ve jokingly said that if I had their accent I could have been a mega church pastor. Instead, God decided to keep me humble and give me a Southern accent. But what that illustrates is that people can think someone has the spiritual gift of preaching just because of how they sound and how the articulate words. But the gift is simply being able to rightly divide the truth and proclaim “thus says the Lord.”

And sometimes, according to 1Cor. 1:26-29 God choses the opposite type of person that we might choose to give that gift to. Paul says, “For consider your calling, brethren, that there were not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble; but God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to shame the things which are strong, and the base things of the world and the despised God has chosen, the things that are not, so that He may nullify the things that are, so that no man may boast before God.” I think that speaks especially of God’s call to pastors. God doesn’t necessarily look for the ex rock star, or ex football star to be who He uses to preach His word. He uses the weak the foolish, to shame the wise.

But Paul indicates in the last verses of this passage, that our gift is not something that we are to become complacent with, but which we are to exercise, to strengthen, to build upon, to practice, so that we might increase it’s effectiveness in ministry. He says in vs15 “Take pains with these things; be [absorbed] in them, so that your progress will be evident to all. Pay close attention to yourself and to your teaching; persevere in these things, for as you do this you will ensure salvation both for yourself and for those who hear you.”

So pastors are to work on their preaching. We are to study the word, diligently prepare the message from God’s word. In his second letter to Timothy, Paul said, “Study to show yourself approved unto God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, accurately handling the word of truth.” Persevere in preaching, take pains with it, be absorbed in it, so that you will preach the truth of the word of God, which has the power to save.

And that word of truth that we are preaching is the means of salvation for those who hear. Romans 10:14 says, “How then will they call on Him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe in Him whom they have not heard? And how will they hear without a preacher?”

1Co 1:18, 21 says, “For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God. … 21 For after that in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.”

Saved means salvation, and salvation can refer to the full scope of salvation or any part of it, from justification, to sanctification, to glorification. All are essential parts of salvation. So back in vs 16, when Paul speaks of salvation for those who hear you, he is talking about any and all parts of salvation. For those who have been saved, it is a reference to deliverance from the power of sin. That’s the process of sanctification which we were talking about earlier. About godly living. Being under Bible preaching and teaching and exhortation is the means by which we mature, by which we live godly, holy lives, and the means by which we are perfected in our faith.

And that sanctification is the means by which all of us are able to preach a message that is seen by a watching world, that they may want what we have, which is a new life through Jesus Christ. I hope you will show yourselves as an example of godliness in speech, conduct, love, faith, and purity, as you follow in the footsteps of Christ.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

Apostasy versus the truth, 1 Timothy 4:1-10.

Jun

12

2022

thebeachfellowship

I think almost every week as I preach, I somehow find a reason to quote the words spoken by Jesus found in John 4:24 “God is spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.” That statement by Christ is closely correlated to another He made in prayer to the Father, which is, “Your word is truth.” And that statement finds it’s consummation in the words of Jesus found in John 8:32, “If you continue in My word, then you are truly disciples of Mine; and you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free.”

Now when He says make you free, He is not speaking of political freedom, or freedom from tyranny, but freedom from the captivity and condemnation of sin. And we have been saying that in our church practice and worship it must be according to the truth of God’s word. Paul has written this letter to Timothy according to chapter 3 vs 15, so that we might know how we are to conduct ourselves in the church of the living God, the pillar and support of the truth. So when Paul lays out qualifications for leadership, for pastors, for deacons, and so forth, it is a matter of being obedient to the truth revealed by God. There are not multiple ways of doing church depending on the culture you live in, nor multiple ways of interpreting scripture, nor multiple possibilities in regards to pastoral qualifications. There is the truth, period, which we are to adhere to without deviation. Some aspects of church conduct are not stated, but things that are stated are not negotiable.

But now in this manifesto for church conduct, Paul turns his attention to the enemy of the truth, which is apostasy. Apostasy simply means the abandonment of the truth. And that has been something which the church has had to deal with since the very beginning. Paul says it is in the latter days, but he is speaking as if he is in the latter days. The latter days, or latter times is a reference to the church age, which began at Pentecost and continues today, and will come to its conclusion at the second coming of Christ. So Paul was living in the latter days, and we are living in the latter days.

Notice what he says in vs 1, “But the Spirit explicitly says that in later times some will fall away from the faith, paying attention to deceitful spirits and doctrines of demons.” Now there are two primary ways that you can understand faith. There are maybe more than two ways, but these are the two major ways to understand faith. One is our faith which is believing unto salvation. Believing and trusting in who Christ is and what He has accomplished through His work on the cross. The second way is understanding faith is the faith, that is a reference to the body of truth which we hold and practice. And that is how Paul means it here.

So who is he speaking about here when he says some will fall away? I would suggest that it is people who are at least in some way physically attached to the church. They profess to be Christians. That doesn’t mean that they are truly Christians. I don’t believe that the Bible teaches that a true child of God can cease to be a child of God. So Paul isn’t saying that people who are truly saved have fallen away unto perdition. But they can fall away from the practice of the faith into spiritual and physical shipwreck. But more than likely what he is primarily speaking of here are people who have professed to be Christian but are not really Christians. And because they did not believe the truth so as to be saved, they were led astray further by believing false doctrine, which makes it almost impossible for them to be saved.

And that is the goal of the devil. His goal in purveying false doctrine is two fold; to cause those who are saved to suffer spiritual shipwreck and ruin their testimony, and secondly, to cause those who would possibly come to be saved, to become so deceived by false doctrine, or so confused by false doctrine, that they can not come to believe the truth so as to be saved. That’s why Paul attributes this apostasy to the doctrines of demons. Because the architect of apostasy is the devil and his angels.

Notice the end of verse one, these who have fallen away were “paying attention to deceitful spirits and doctrines of demons.” Jesus said concerning the devil in John 8:44 “You are of [your] father the devil, and you want to do the desires of your father. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth because there is no truth in him. Whenever he speaks a lie, he speaks from his own [nature,] for he is a liar and the father of lies.” So the architect of false doctrine is the devil. He is a liar and a murderer, and he twists the truth into a lie so as to deceive the world and lead them to destruction.

We should remember that John said in 1John 4:1 that we aren’t to believe every spirit, but we are to test the spirits to see if they are from God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world. It amazes me how gullible people are. Anything that is said or done in church or in the name of Jesus is automatically assumed to be true and of the Holy Spirit. And yet we are warned again and again in scripture that from within the church false teachers will arise and deceive many. And yet some crazy thing happens in a church building that you can not find even suggested in scripture, like angel dust falling from the rafters, or being slain in the spirit, and automatically people attribute it to a great work of the Holy Spirit. It’s a spirit alright, just not the Holy Spirit. It’s evil spirits, doctrines of demons and deceitful spirits at work in the church.

Now these spirits make use of men who speak their lies. These men are false prophets, false teachers and preachers in the church. Look at verse two, “by means of the hypocrisy of liars seared in their own conscience as with a branding iron.” Their consciences are cauterized so that they no longer feel the pangs of their guilt. They become hardened in their rebellion. Grieving the Holy Spirit has led to resisting Him, which has led to quenching Him. So their conscience no longer bothers them when they tell their lies. Do you know it’s possible to tell a lie so often that you start to believe it? I think that sort of thing happens a lot. Especially in politics, it would seem. But the thing about a lie is that there is usually a germ of truth in it but it has been perverted into something that no longer is the truth.

Now what I think is really interesting is what Paul gives as examples of this demonic deception that leads to apostasy. You would think that it would have to be some great evident heresy, like saying Jesus is Beelzebub or something to that effect. But that is not what Paul identifies. Instead he choses to illustrate this principle with two doctrinal errors that really don’t seem that big of a deal. Just a difference of opinion perhaps, not a matter of doctrine.

But notice what he identifies in vs 3 as examples of doctrines of demons. “[men] who forbid marriage [and advocate] abstaining from foods which God has created to be gratefully shared in by those who believe and know the truth.” Forbidding marriage and abstaining from certain foods. These are the two great illustrations of apostate doctrine. Now I don’t think for a minute that Paul is saying that these two are the only possible means of apostasy. I think there are numerous possible false doctrines that can lead to apostasy. But Paul chose these two probably because they were prevalent at that time in Ephesus, and because they were so subtle that Timothy might not have been aware of the danger.

These particular doctrines more than likely came from a philosophy known as asceticism. In many ways asceticism had a lot in common with Gnosticism which the Apostle John warns about at the end of the first century. But it was a belief that matter was bad, and spiritual was good. So they made a big deal out of restricting the physical in the belief that it would accentuate the spiritual. We see that in pagan cultures today, such as in Tibetan Buddhism. But certain aspects of asceticism has also been practiced in Christianity, for instance by monks, particularly in the Middle Ages. It’s the idea that refraining from certain physical comforts helps one attain a degree of spirituality or holiness.

The problem was that in practice asceticism did not keep one from sin. In fact, in Gnosticism they believed that you could participate in sin without any repercussions, because it was only the spirit that was important. And so they actually advocated that you could overcome the flesh by indulging in it. The flesh and the spirit could lead opposing lives and that was ok. And perhaps that spirit of Gnosticism is still working among the sons of disobedience today by saying we live in a age of grace and not law, and so therefore, we are not under condemnation but under grace, so there is no sin, no need to repent, and not to worry when they walk after the lusts of the flesh.

But my purpose here this morning is not to try to teach about asceticism or Gnosticism or Antinomianism, or any other ism. What I would like to show you though is that false doctrine may be something we might consider relatively minor, of not any real consequence. And yet the culmination of small deceptions can end up taking one far from the faith.

Now in regards to both marriage and food, Paul adds, “which God has created to be gratefully shared in by those who believe and know the truth.” In other words, God created marriage for man and woman to be enjoyed, to be a mutual comfort and support for both, and something that we are to be grateful to God for. God said in creation that it was not good for man to be alone, and so He made woman to be a help mate for him. So we should thank God for that, and our gratefulness to God for marriage should make us honor marriage and the vows we made to God. But instead, these false teachers had said that by forbidding marriage they were accomplishing some spiritual achievement.

But as Paul said in Col 2:23 “These are matters which have, to be sure, the appearance of wisdom in self-made religion and self-abasement and severe treatment of the body, [but are] of no value against fleshly indulgence.” In fact, in one particular church denomination today where they forbid marriage, there is ample evidence that practice has not prohibited fleshly indulgence, but has probably induced gross fleshly indulgence. And yet they persist in teaching this false doctrine as a means of achieving holiness.

The other thing that was popular among the ascetics was abstaining from certain foods. We still see that in certain religious circles today. There are certain denominations that say that you need to practice vegetarianism, or that you need to follow the Jewish dietary laws.

But they clearly haven’t read what God revealed to Peter in Acts 10:9-16 “On the next day, as they were on their way and approaching the city, Peter went up on the housetop about the sixth hour to pray. But he became hungry and was desiring to eat; but while they were making preparations, he fell into a trance; and he saw the sky opened up, and an object like a great sheet coming down, lowered by four corners to the ground, and there were in it all [kinds of] four-footed animals and crawling creatures of the earth and birds of the air. A voice came to him, “Get up, Peter, kill and eat!” But Peter said, “By no means, Lord, for I have never eaten anything unholy and unclean.” Again a voice [came] to him a second time, “What God has cleansed, no [longer] consider unholy.” This happened three times, and immediately the object was taken up into the sky.” So at that time God declared all foods clean.

So Paul says if food is received with thanksgiving, with gratitude towards God, then it is sanctified by means of the word of God and prayer. It is blessed by God, and given thanks for by us, and thus it is good, given by God to nourish us and strengthen us for our life. God has provided for us physically as well as spiritually, and we should receive such blessings with gratitude. Not believing the lies of demons that try to twist the truth into a false means of righteousness.

Instead, Paul indicates that a good pastor will teach the truth, and the truth will be spiritual food for the church that gives them spiritual life. Remember Jesus said, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.” So rather than give heed to the word of false teachers, Paul says in vs6 “In pointing out these things to the brethren, you will be a good servant of Christ Jesus, [constantly] nourished on the words of the faith and of the sound doctrine which you have been following.” Some translations say you will be a good minister of Christ Jesus. Either way, he is talking to Timothy, who is a pastor in Ephesus. And he indicates that the truth of God’s word and sound doctrine is the spiritual food that nourishes the soul.

That verse also indicates that it is the faithful pastor’s job to point out false doctrine and expose those who teach it. Now I could spend a lot of time here this morning naming names and calling out apostate churches and televangelists and fake healers and so forth. But I don’t think that is necessarily profitable. However, when I do call them out by name, it doesn’t mean that I am being unloving or unnecessarily combative. It means that I take my job seriously. I take the truth seriously. I believe that the devil is real and he is working. And I value the spiritual and physical lives of those in our church enough to warn them when the wolves are in the hen house.

I was in the Post Office the other day and noticed that they have these bulletins on the board in the lobby showing the pictures and names and address of people that have been convicted of being sexual predators, who are now living in the community. Does that seem mean to you? No, if you have kids and you live next door to that person, it seems prudent that you would like to know if your neighbor is a convicted sexual predator. I’m sorry if some people find in offensive, but I think the same principle applies to spiritual predators, that cause children of God to suffer shipwreck in their faith. They need to be called out. And I would be happy to give you the names of some if you want to see me afterwards.

So the pastor is to contend for the faith. But as in his letter to the Thessalonians, Paul warns about these teachers who have concocted spiritual doctrines from vague Biblical references which they combined with asceticism. And so he says to Timothy in vs 7 “But have nothing to do with worldly fables fit only for old women. On the other hand, discipline yourself for the purpose of godliness; for bodily discipline is only of little profit, but godliness is profitable for all things, since it holds promise for the present life and [also] for the [life] to come.”

You know, we could make too much or too little out of his statement that bodily discipline is only of little profit. We could take that to mean that we all should practice bodily exercise in moderation. That it does have some profit. And certainly, that is practical advice which is backed up by science.

Or on the other hand we could emphasize the fact that there is only a little benefit to bodily exercise. And therefore use that as an excuse to say why bother – eat, drink and be merry for tomorrow we die. But what I think Paul is really saying here is physical exercise has only physical, temporal benefits, but spiritual discipline has eternal benefits.

The kind of discipline that Paul advocates is that which restricts the lusts of the flesh. He says in 1Cor. 9:25-27 “Everyone who competes in the games exercises self-control in all things. They then [do it] to receive a perishable wreath, but we an imperishable. Therefore I run in such a way, as not without aim; I box in such a way, as not beating the air; but I discipline my body and make it my slave, so that, after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified.” So we do exercise discipline in regards to the lusts of the flesh, so that we may walk in the Spirit.

We discipline ourselves to walk in the Spirit, so that we might attain godliness, and godliness is profitable for all things, since it holds promise for the present life and also for the life to come. And to that he says, “It is a trustworthy statement deserving full acceptance.” In other words, this is the truth of God, which is to be accepted and believed and practiced by the church. The false teaching that these men were teaching wasn’t the truth, and it did not produce godliness, just self righteousness.

And that truth of God, Paul says in vs 10, is that for which “we labor and strive, because we have fixed our hope on the living God, who is the Savior of all men, especially of believers.” We serve the living God, and we have our hope in Him. There is no hope in science, or philosophy, or physical fitness, or any degree of education or knowledge. We cannot save ourselves. Salvation is from the Lord, and there is salvation in none other than Jesus Christ. He is the Savior of all men, who believe in Him and in HIs word.

I don’t know what hope you have for life after death. I hope you are not trusting in anything other than in the atoning work of Jesus Christ through His death and resurrection. The Bible says it is appointed unto man once to die, and after that the judgment. The only way to escape the judgment of condemnation which has been passed to all men -for all have sinned – is to trust in Jesus Christ as your Savior, as the One who took the wrath of God upon Himself. It’s only by the transference of our sins upon Him, and His righteousness upon us, that we might be able to stand spotless and blameless before the throne of God.

If you’re here today and have not believed in Jesus Christ for salvation, then I urge you to make that commitment today, to confess Jesus as your Lord and Savior, and receive the gift of new life.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

Leadership of the church, 1 Timothy 3: 1-7

May

29

2022

thebeachfellowship

As most of you know, we practice verse by verse preaching at this church, rather than trying to approach the scripture from a topical perspective. There are times when I think I would like to preach topically, and perhaps today is one of those days. But for the most part, I feel that the verse by verse, chapter by chapter approach is better for me, because it keeps me in line with God’s priorities, rather than my own, which may vacillate from week to week depending on the circumstances.

We have been studying the first letter to Timothy for the last few weeks, and so we are at this particular passage today by the providence of God. The purpose of writing this letter, as Paul states in vs 15 of this chapter, is “so that you will know how one ought to conduct himself in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and support of the truth.”

Now I suppose I could say that this subject is one that we could well postpone, or skip over, or save for a Wednesday night Bible study and not do any great harm. But as we come to church today, as we worship the Lord, it is important that we do so according to God’s design for the church. It is His church, and as Jesus said, they that worship God must worship Him in Spirit and in truth.

That being said, the Christian community today has been playing fast and loose with the template for the church for quite a number of years now. First of all, they have played with the authority and inerrancy of God’s word. While most churches feign obeisance to the Bible, in reality they don’t believe it is inerrant. They don’t believe it is absolute truth. They don’t believe it is authoritative.

And so they have thought that the ordinances of the church and the gospel of the church, and the leadership structure of the church are something that they can change according to what seems good to them, and relevant to the modern culture that we live in. So perhaps it is more pertinent than ever before to remind ourselves of God’s template for the church, and particularly God’s instructions in regards to church leadership. Because if we don’t get the pastor/teacher position right, then it’s doubtful that we will get our doctrine right either, and the church will continue it’s downward spiral into apostasy and irrelevancy that it has already succumbed to, to a large degree.

Now last week as we looked at chapter 2, Paul laid out the doctrinal reasons that women were not to take the place of authority in the church. He gave reasons from scripture, going all the way back to creation, in support of this instruction that women were not to teach, nor exercise authority over the men in the church. I said last week, and I will say it again for the benefit of those who weren’t here last week, that this is not a cultural issue, as some would try to dismiss it. But it is the prerogative of Christ, whose church it is. And the Lord could have just laid down the law and that would be it, but He supports it with two arguments that come from creation. So He is showing that this is His plan from the start. It’s not something that we can dismiss by saying that was the culture of Paul’s day. This predates that culture.

And by the way, let me add something to that discussion which I failed to say last week. Paul was the apostle to the Gentiles. The Gentiles in Ephesus and the surrounding region were pagans by nature. Before they were saved they worshipped the popular pagan deities of that day. And a number of those deities were female, such as Artemis, Diana, and Aphrodite. Those religions had no problem with women as priestesses of their cults. In fact, women were often held in high esteem in those cults. And furthermore, those religions encouraged engaging in immoral acts in those temples. Now I say that, not to be scandalous, but to show that women were not a problem in the Gentile religions. So when Paul advocates that only men were to be in church leadership, he is not saying something that is in keeping with the culture, but was counter to the culture. And so that’s just one more reason that we cannot dismiss this as a culture issue.

But now in chapter 3, Paul is going to focus on the leadership of the church, and lay out the requirements for such positions. He starts with what he calls here an overseer. This is the translation of the Greek word episkopē. It could also be translated as bishop in other versions. In the book of Titus, we see that position rendered as elder, and then elder is used synonymously with overseer, or bishop. The same can be said with shepherd, or pastor, which are synonyms for overseer. For our purposes, I think we can best interpret it a pastor. Pastor is related to the word for shepherd. And so pastor, or elder, or overseer, all refer to the same position.

Notice he says in vs 1, “It is a trustworthy statement: if any man aspires to the office of overseer, it is a fine work he desires [to do.]”. I think the KJV says it is a noble work that he desires. I like that translation better. Noble has in mind a sacrificial task. One that is performed for the benefit of others, rather than for one’s own benefit.

But some confusion has been brought about by this phrase; “aspires to the office of overseer.’ Some think that it encourages men to seek after such a position. And they think that is self serving and vain. Personally, I think that if a man is called by God to preach, or to be a pastor, then that calling will manifest itself in a desire to preach.

Paul said of his own call to preach in 1Cor. 9:16-17 “For if I preach the gospel, I have nothing to boast of, for I am under compulsion; for woe is me if I do not preach the gospel. For if I do this voluntarily, I have a reward; but if against my will, I have a stewardship entrusted to me.” So I think the idea that Paul has there is if a man is called to preach, he will have a desire to preach. But the main point to what he is saying is that the office is not one to be denigrated or looked down upon. But though it is a position of service, it is nevertheless a noble office. It is service for a greater good, for a greater purpose.

I think most of the problems with church leadership today is that many of those who claim the office are not called by God to the office. I’m not sure why people would choose this position. I don’t see reaping any great rewards on this earth for spending your life as a pastor. Unless you are a mega church pastor, or a television evangelist, I don’t think there is any real money to be made. Though there are certainly some multimillionaire television evangelists out there. But they are so far out of the norm that it’s unfair to pastors to include them in the same genre.

So why someone would be attracted to the ministry I do not know. I know I wasn’t. I grew up as a preacher’s kid, and I was told constantly growing up that my dad had prayed for two preacher boys before my brother and I were born. And so after we were born, that meant that we were destined to be preachers when we grew up. Well, though we pretended to go along with that prophecy as children, by the time we were teenagers we both were doing everything we could to prove them liars. But the strangest thing happened when we reached our middle age. We have both since become preachers. But neither of us ever sought it, in fact, we resisted that call for many years.

The bottom line though I think is that we need to recognize that a pastor is called. And I don’t mean called by a pastor search committee. I don’t have a lot of faith in those contraptions. And you don’t find any basis for them in the scripture. Paul told Titus that he was to appoint elders in every city. Titus was to make sure that the men he chose fulfilled the requirements that Paul laid out, which by the way are almost exactly the same in 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 1. But for those who are called, it is a noble work to which he is called, and he should have a desire to fulfill that office.

I want to say something else about this word overseer. As I said, in Titus 1 Paul instructs Titus to appoint elders in every city. In Acts 14:23 we read that Paul and Barnabas did the same on their missionary journey. Acts14:23 “When they had appointed elders for them in every church, having prayed with fasting, they commended them to the Lord in whom they had believed.”

Now some have derived from these texts that the scriptures teach the necessity for a plurality of elders. So in a church, there must be at least more than one elder or pastor. And so we have today a very popular church doctrine that says there must be multiple elders, and yet usually only one person is the pastor. I think that is a misunderstanding of the text. It’s widely understood that the churches in those days were house churches. There was no mega churches, because there were no houses that could even hold a hundred people at one time. We have Bible study at my house, and I can tell you that it’s almost impossible to get more than 25 people in there. I don’t have a big house, but I’m sure it’s bigger than most of the houses of the common people in those days.

So the common sense understanding is that Paul is talking about multiple house churches in a city or region. If you used the template of a Jewish synagogue, then 10 men were required for creating a new synagogue. And so these were small, neighborhood type of assemblies in people’s homes. And so that begs the question, how many shepherds are needed to take care of two dozen sheep? This idea of having multiple elders just to satisfy someones fear of monopolistic leadership in a church, is not founded in scripture.

I like a quote I read recently from Charles Haddon Spurgeon, the great, late 19th century English preacher. Every pastor loves to quote Spurgeon, but I have yet to hear any quote this saying concerning one man ministry. He said, “Every now and then we hear some simpleton or other talking about a one man ministry, when it has been a one man ministry from the commencement of the world to present day, and whenever you try to have any other form of ministry, except that of each individual saint discharging his own ministry, and doing it thoroughly and heartily and independently and bravely in the sight of God, you very soon run upon quicksands.” So it would seem Spurgeon did not support a multiplicity of elders.

But nevertheless, people are rightly concerned about the qualifications of a pastor, and to offset such concerns, Paul lays out some stringent requirements for that office. And the primary requirement is that they are to be men whose character is above reproach. I think that as you read vs 2, you should imagine that there is a colon there after the word reproach, and then everything that follows describes how being above reproach looks.

So we read starting in vs 2, “An overseer, then, must be above reproach, the husband of one wife, temperate, prudent, respectable, hospitable, able to teach, not addicted to wine or pugnacious, but gentle, peaceable, free from the love of money. 4 [He must be] one who manages his own household well, keeping his children under control with all dignity 5 (but if a man does not know how to manage his own household, how will he take care of the church of God?), 6 [and] not a new convert, so that he will not become conceited and fall into the condemnation incurred by the devil. 7 And he must have a good reputation with those outside [the church,] so that he will not fall into reproach and the snare of the devil.”

So we see that according to this list, the pastor must have a favorable testimony from two groups of people, those inside the church, and those outside. Now reproach can mean criticism, and if we were to apply that literally, then no pastor would pass the first qualification. In fact, I would suggest that criticism is part of the due process of being a pastor. But the idea of being above reproach is not speaking of criticism, which we get aplenty, but of having some moral or character failing which attracts criticism. Paul received much criticism in his ministry, but it was ill founded and he was able to appeal to those who knew his character as being above reproach.

Now there are 14 or so areas in which a pastor is to be above reproach as stated in the first 7 verses. I am not going to spend a lot of time explaining each one, or we would be here all day. I think most are pretty explanatory. But notice that the word perfect is missing from this list. Thank God for that. We need to remember that pastors are not perfect, though they should be striving for perfection.

The first qualification is one that is contentious today: “the husband of one wife.” That’s impossible to do if you are a woman pastor. But then again, it’s easy to dismiss this as another example of Paul’s male chauvinism. But aside from the discussion of male and female roles which we had last week, it means that the pastor is to be a one woman man. His wife is to be held in honor. He is not a womanizer. I think you can make the argument that he is not to have remarried in the case of divorce. The exception to that would be if his previous wife died. Paul said in 1Cor. 7:39 “A wife is bound as long as her husband lives; but if her husband is dead, she is free to be married to whom she wishes, only in the Lord.” And I think it’s obvious that the same would be true of a man whose wife had died, as long as he marries a Christian.

Another misunderstanding that has arisen from this is that a pastor must be married. He must have one wife. I think that is a wrong interpretation of this text. Paul himself was not married and he served as a pastor. We have no record that Timothy was married. Jesus wasn’t married. And He is the head Shepherd of the church. So I don’t think that means that a pastor must be married. However, I will say that being married is a safeguard against temptation. And so a single pastor must take extra precautions to make sure he is above reproach.

The pastor is to be temperate. We live in a temperate climate. That means mild. Not too hot and not too cold. So we understand what Paul is saying; the pastor is not to be a hot head. It doesn’t mean he’s supposed to be so meek and mild that he can’t blow his nose. But not a hot head. Level headed.

Prudent is related to that. It means wise, but not so much like wise in the typical way we think of it, like having a high IQ, but judicious, able to make good, sound decisions. Having common sense.

The next characteristic is respectable, which means of good repute, honest, trustworthy. After that we read, hospitable. Many years ago I used to be a part of the hospitality business. That was a term used by the hotel and restaurant business. So to be hospitable is someone who is welcoming, who is congenial, helpful in regards to the needs of others.

The last one in vs 2, is one that we probably usually think of first; able to teach. That qualification is not usually applied to those churches who believe in a multiplicity of elders. Most elders in those churches are not qualified to teach, and not able to teach, at least beyond a rudimentary level. But having the ability or gift to teach is essential for a pastor/teacher. And I believe it is a gift, though a gift that can be improved upon and practiced to become better at it. But irregardless, notice that it’s not at the top of the list, but somewhere in the middle. It’s important, but it’s not the most important thing.

In vs 3 we find the next group of qualifications. Vs 3 “not addicted to wine or pugnacious, but gentle, peaceable, free from the love of money.” Not addicted to wine is also the same qualification that is listed in Titus for overseers. I would go so far as to say that wine or alcohol should be off limits for a pastor. And I say that as someone who used to drink every day. For me it wasn’t wine, it was Coors Lite. But the Holy Spirit says not addicted to wine. That gives you enough freedom to hang yourself. Because I can tell you that if the pastor is a wine drinker, or likes his beer, he is going to have a real disadvantage when it comes to being above reproach in his conduct. Solomon said in Prov. 20:1 “Wine is a mocker, strong drink a brawler, And whoever is intoxicated by it is not wise.”

Then the next qualification is probably deliberately added after to addicted to wine; not pugnacious. That means a brawler, the same thing that Solomon said about strong drink. Pugnacious means looking for a fight. Some men don’t need alcohol to look for a fight. But either way, only a fool looks for a fight. I made that mistake a few times when I was younger, and I finally met someone who was willing to give me one, and it almost cost me my life. God doesn’t need us to fight with physical means. We are to fight with spiritual means. Eph 6:12 says, “For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual [forces] of wickedness in the heavenly [places.]”

And not being pugnacious is followed by peaceable. Rather than being someone who is looking for a fight, he is to be the one who is peaceable. He is a peacemaker. Jesus said in Matt. 5:9 “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.” We should be men who tell others how to make peace with God and with their fellow man.

The last one of vs 3, is free from the love of money. Paul said in 1Tim. 6:10 “For the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.” Notice that it does not say that it is wrong for the pastor to have money, or even to appreciate money. In fact, he goes on to say later in this passage that he is to govern his household well. That indicates he uses his money wisely. But it is a love for money and a longing for money that causes ruin. And I will admit that is a hard adage to accept. Because everyone has a natural tendency to want money. The more you have the more you want, and the less you have the more you want. But a desire for money that supersedes what you know is right and proper, a desire that says whatever it takes I will do it, that attitude is what causes a person to wander away from the faith, and causes grief in their life. We all have to be on guard against that desire. Jesus said “you cannot serve God and money.”

In vs 4 and 5 we see that principle of managing his household that I spoke of earlier. “He must be one who manages his own household well, keeping his children under control with all dignity (but if a man does not know how to manage his own household, how will he take care of the church of God?),” I think as we consider the entire context of both verses, this is not simply speaking of the pastor’s role in raising his children, but is speaking of the complete task of managing his house. As the father of the house, he is a loyal and loving husband to his wife, a father who disciplines his children with dignity, not overbearing, but firm and with love for his family, and as a provider and a manager of his household affairs.

The church is not a little like a family, and though the pastor’s primary job is preaching and teaching, yet he is also a manager of the house of God. And so the way he manages his home is a good indication of how he will manage the church. Not even the pastor can make someone come to faith in Christ, even if they are his own children. When they come of age, they will be responsible for their faith or lack of it. But he should be able to keep his children under control and in submission to his rule. The key there is not ruling with an iron fist that provokes a child to rebel.

As a general rule to all fathers, Paul says in Eph. 6:4 “Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.” To do both well is to be able to balance love and discipline in the same way that is illustrated by God the Father towards us. And the pastor is to be a good example of that balance.

The last of the “insider” qualifications is found in vs 6, “[and] not a new convert, so that he will not become conceited and fall into the condemnation incurred by the devil.” Understand that a new convert does not indicate the physical age of the pastor. However, it does indicate his spiritual age. Paul says to Timothy later in chapter 5 vs 22 “Do not lay hands upon anyone [too] hastily and thereby share [responsibility for] the sins of others; keep yourself free from sin.” The idea is that a new convert must have a time of testing, of proving, which brings about maturity and a deeper faith.

A position of leadership can sometimes work against a person by their pride. And we know that pride goes before a fall. James said in James 3:1 “Let not many [of you] become teachers, my brethren, knowing that as such we will incur a stricter judgment.” With that greater responsibility comes a great need for spiritual maturity. And perhaps spiritual maturity is tied to some degree to physical maturity. Age is not a prerequisite, but perhaps it is a help.

Finally, we come to the last qualification, which is regarding those outside the church. He says in vs 7, “And he must have a good reputation with those outside [the church,] so that he will not fall into reproach and the snare of the devil.” Perhaps this is one of the most difficult qualifications of the pastor. Those outside of the church are the world, and the world is at enmity with God. So to be above reproach and to have a good reputation with the world is difficult at best. Jesus said if they hated me, they will hate you.

So I think the answer must be that we are above reproach “in the sight of God.” I know I have to conduct myself in such a way as to please God, and in so doing, I know that I am doing right in regards to man. I have to love my neighbor, though my neighbor may not love me, nor be deserving of my favor. I have to love my enemies, though they seek my hurt. I cannot treat my neighbor in such a way as to make a contradiction of my faith.

Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount, [Mat 5:43-48 “You have heard that it was said, ‘YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR and hate your enemy.’ “But I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven; for He causes His sun to rise on [the] evil and [the] good, and sends rain on [the] righteous and [the] unrighteous. “For if you love those who love you, what reward do you have? Do not even the tax collectors do the same? “If you greet only your brothers, what more are you doing [than others?] Do not even the Gentiles do the same? “Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.”

Well, I started off by saying that the requirements that Paul laid out for the pastor did not include being perfect. And now I end up with the requirement of Jesus that we are to be perfect. But I can’t help but point out that admonition of Christ is not to pastors, but to all who are the children of God. The pastor, however, is to be an example to the church. We are to treat others like we would like to be treated. And pastors even more so are beholden to that rule. On that note, I would say in closing, pray for your pastors. It’s easy to criticize. They are on a stage and say a lot of words, and it’s possible to pick apart any pastor and find fault with him. But pray for him, and realize that he is called to this task that is greater than his ability. And I would add, if you are visiting today, and you recognize that your pastor of your home church is in flagrant disregard of these qualifications, then I would suggest you leave that church and find another which is in line with these qualifications. Don’t try to change the pastor, rather change your church. Let God take care of the pastor. He will receive a stricter judgment from the Lord.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

The ministry of prayer, 1 Timothy 2:1-8

May

15

2022

thebeachfellowship

Paul gives the purpose of this letter in chapter 3 vs 15, “I write so that you will know how one ought to conduct himself in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and support of the truth.” And so to that purpose, Paul has written so far about the establishment of the church, specifically, that the apostles were given to be the foundation of the church and to establish the church. Then he wrote about the ministry of the church, and we said there were many different types of ministers, or servants of the church. Not all have the same title, nor the same responsibilities, but all of us have a ministry, all of us are to serve the Lord.

Now as we begin chapter 2, Paul makes the point that one ministry that all of the church are given, the service that we are all tasked with, is the ministry of prayer. And we should notice that this exhortation to pray is given as an addendum to his charge to Timothy at the end of chapter one, vs 18, to fight the good fight. We see that prayer is one of the ways that we are to engage in spiritual battle.

In the famous section in Ephesians 6 on spiritual warfare and the spiritual armor that we are to wear, Paul lists all the pieces of armor, which are defensive, and then he says take up an offensive weapon, the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God. And then he adds another weapon in vs18 “With all prayer and petition pray at all times in the Spirit, and with this in view, be on the alert with all perseverance and petition for all the saints, and [pray] on my behalf, that utterance may be given to me in the opening of my mouth, to make known with boldness the mystery of the gospel.”

Now Paul doesn’t use a metaphor of a weapon to describe prayer, but nonetheless it’s clear that it is the second of only two weapons at our disposal. And both are empowered by the Spirit. That’s very interesting the way Paul says that; pray at all times in the Spirit. We need to think about how one prays in the Spirit. I can tell you what it is not; it is not some reference to praying in tongues. But rather it is a reference to spiritual communication in conjunction with the Holy Spirit. In agreement with the Holy Spirit. And the way you do that is by praying in conjunction and agreement with the Sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God. That’s how we pray in the Spirit.

Now there is much more that could be said about that, but I want to follow the text, and hopefully in so doing Paul will address all the essential elements of prayer in the process. So to start with, what Paul indicates in vs 1 is the priority of prayer. Notice he says, “First of all, then, I urge that entreaties and prayers, petitions and thanksgivings, be made on behalf of all men.” What he is saying is that this is a priority, of first importance. Prayer is not the last resort, prayer is our first resort. It’s the priority of the church. It’s first in ministry.

When the apostles were forming the first church in Jerusalem, they realized they needed to add the office of deacons to aid in the service of the church. But they said for their part, they wanted to devote themselves to prayer and the ministry of the word. They recognized that prayer was of utmost importance and deserved first place in their ministry. Consider even Jesus Himself who many times spent the night in prayer to His Father. Jesus was a man of prayer, though from our perspective, He was one who needed it the least. But He obviously considered it an essential part of His ministry. He needed consistent communion with His Father.

And that prompts the question – what is prayer? We are called to pray, to pray at all times, to pray without ceasing, but do we understand what prayer really is? Prayer is simply communication with God. It is spiritual communication, spiritual conversation. Now I say spiritual conversation because you are talking to a Spirit, and the Spirit does not respond verbally to you. So that is what makes it spiritual conversation. The Lord hears us whether we speak loudly or softly. The Bible says the Father knows what we are going to ask before we even say it. Whatever part of the world you happen to be in, it doesn’t matter, the Lord hears you. That’s spiritual conversation. If you are a Christian, the Holy Spirit indwells you, and He hears you and prays with you, and for you, according to the will of God.

Rom 8:26-27 says, “In the same way the Spirit also helps our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we should, but the Spirit Himself intercedes for [us] with groanings too deep for words; and He who searches the hearts knows what the mind of the Spirit is, because He intercedes for the saints according to [the will of] God.” So that is another aspect of praying in the Spirit – the Spirit intercedes for us. But bottom line, prayer is spiritual conversation with God.

Now Paul breaks down our spiritual conversation into four categories. This is not a formula. We all would love to find a formula for prayer that assures us that we will get what we want when we pray. But this is not a formula. A lot of people want to say that in order to pray correctly you have to incorporate all four categories in your prayer. I don’t see that expressed in this verse. But rather Paul is just breaking down prayer into different types of conversation.

So I don’t think we need to make a mountain out of a mole hill here, but nevertheless, let’s consider the four types of conversation we might have. The first type is in the NASB translated entreaties. Other versions says supplications, or petitions. In the Greek it is deēsis, which means needs, or entreating, asking. Most of us are pretty good at that type of prayer. But I don’t want to diminish that type of prayer as juvenile and say we need to get beyond such things. I think Jesus taught us to ask for what we need, what we want, with the confidence that our Heavenly Father wants to give us good things. So as a child of God, entreaties are appropriate prayer, to ask for needs, to come to the Father and lay out petitions.

I also want to say that our manner of conversation does not need to be stilted and so formal that it is not natural. I don’t think that God relates to our prayers better when we say thee and thou rather than you. We don’t need to speak in stilted, formal language in order to pray effectively. Imagine if your child or grandchild came in to your living room and said, “O blessed Father, who sitteth upon the couch, please grant the requests I make to thee.” If your son or daughter said that, you would think he was setting you up for something big. He wants to take your vintage sports car out on a date or something. God doesn’t need us to speak in Elizabethan English in order to be sympathetic to our prayers.

Jesus said in Mat 6:5-8 “When you pray, you are not to be like the hypocrites; for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on the street corners so that they may be seen by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. But you, when you pray, go into your inner room, close your door and pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father who sees [what is done] in secret will reward you. And when you are praying, do not use meaningless repetition as the Gentiles do, for they suppose that they will be heard for their many words. So do not be like them; for your Father knows what you need before you ask Him.”

All right then, entreaties, supplications or petitions. That’s one type. The second type is prayer. That’s a little redundant, isn’t it Paul? Well, I confess I don’t know exactly why Paul uses this here, except perhaps that it is a more general, broader entreaty or supplication than the previous type. All of these words are meant to describe prayer. So there is a sense in which they are all expanding on the previous type. Entreaties may be specific needs, prayers may be general needs.

I find it interesting that the first time the word pray is used in the Bible, it is in Genesis 20, and it is used by God. He says to Abimelech, who had taken Abraham’s wife thinking she was his sister, and God said to Abimelech in a dream, “Now therefore, restore the man’s wife, for he is a prophet, and he will pray for you and you will live. But if you do not restore her, know that you shall surely die, you and all who are yours.” So in that case, prayer was for someone else’s good. Abraham was praying for someone else’s needs, not his own.

But that reference in Genesis also speaks to the next type of prayer Paul lists, which is intercessions or petitions. And intercessions is perhaps the best translation, which has the idea of speaking to God about someone else’s need. Pleading on behalf of others. That’s what Abraham did for Abimalech. Praying that he would not die. And what’s really interesting in that example is that Abimalech is a king, and Paul says in vs 2 that we are to pray for kings. It’s interesting that the first recorded example of prayer is a prayer of intercession for a non believing king.

So obviously there is some overlap in these types of prayer. As I said, I don’t think it is so much meant to be separate categories as it is to be an expansive description of prayer. The last type of prayer Paul gives is thanksgivings. Now in the original Greek I am told that there were no punctuation marks. The NASB has a comma after thanksgiving, followed by the phrase, “be made on behalf of all men.” And I think that is correct, in that “be made for all men” applies to all the categories or types of prayer. Some translations have no comma there, so that thanksgiving for all men is the meaning. I don’t think Paul is saying we should give thanks for all men. That doesn’t make sense. While Paul may say pray for kings and those in authority, he does not say give thanks for Nero who was killing Christians on a massive scale. That just doesn’t make sense. Where you place a comma makes a big difference. It’s like the texted the a group text at Thanksgiving that said, “let’s eat Grandma” and forgot to put a comma between eat and Grandma. Grandma got a little concerned. So we can’t be dogmatic about the comma, but I think it makes more sense that the phrase “be made on behalf of all men” applies to all categories, and not just thanksgiving.

Thanksgivings are to be made to God for what God has done. Thanksgivings are an important aspect of our prayer. They are not some part of a secret formula by which you can get God to do what you want. Some people seem to teach this narcissistic view of God that just wants to hear us praise Him and thank Him all the time. He doesn’t care too much about anything else as long as we praise Him. I don’t think that is a true characterization of God at all. But we should be cognizant of all that God has done for us, and continues to do for us on a daily basis and we should express our thanks to Him. In other words, our conversation with God should not be just one sided, as in what we want God to do for us. If we have a mature relationship with Him, then it should be evident in our conversation with Him.

Now as I said, I believe Paul says we should pray on behalf of all men. That is our service to God and to one another. We are given the ministry of prayer for all men. We pray for all men, all people, all that we come into contact with. We are to pray for our church, pray for our families, pray for our neighbors, and even pray for our enemies. We pray according to the will of God, according to the word of God, in conjunction with the Spirit of God, in agreement with the Spirit of God. God wants to work with us, and our service of prayer is the means by which He does that. We are to pray for all men, for what they need, for God to work in their hearts and to save them.

Then more specifically, Paul says pray for kings and for those in authority. And perhaps that is the extension of praying for your enemies. Look at Vs 2, “for kings and all who are in authority, so that we may lead a tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and dignity.” Now as I said earlier, I don’t think Paul was saying that he should give thanks for Nero. Nero was a blood thirsty, insane tyrant. He was an enemy of the church. He had a young man about 14 years old castrated and he married him in a public ceremony. He tarred and burned Christians upon stakes to light up his garden. He set fire to Jerusalem and then blamed it on the Christians so as to justify persecuting the church. I don’t think Paul was saying we should give thanks for a demonic tyrant.

But I do think he is saying pray for tyrants, pray for those in authority whether they be good or evil, that they would leave us alone so that we might live a tranquil and quite life of dignity that we may live godly without persecution and have the freedom to proclaim the gospel. That is an appropriate type of prayer for those particular type of people. There was no recourse in Paul’s day to go to the polls and vote and hopefully get a new emperor in four years. You were saddled with a king for life in most cases. So the only recourse you had was to pray for them, that God would somehow prevail over the inherent evil that these tyrants brought to bear upon the church.

Romans 13 tells us that we are not to overthrow the government. We are to submit to the government as long as they are not forcing us to do something contrary to the command of God. So the only other recourse for us as Christians is to pray for the governing authorities. God is able to change the king’s mind as in the case of Abimelech.. God is able to make it possible for even an evil king to find other things to occupy his mind and leave the church alone.

So we should pray for all men, even our enemies, and the enemies of God, because Paul says in vs 3, “This is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.” So we pray because that is the means by which we partner with God, we collaborate with God to bring about salvation for all men. Now of course, he is not indicating that all men will be saved. Peter said, God is not willing for any to perish, but for all to come to repentance. But the Bible tells us that not all will be saved. The scripture makes that very clear. Jesus made that very clear saying the way is narrow that leads to life, and few there be that find it. Not everyone finds it. But we are to pray for all to find it.

Now that’s an interesting dilemma isn’t it? That God’s will is that no one perishes, yet they perish. That reveals to me that God’s will is not intractable. But God has a perfect will, and a passive will. And man has a part to play in the execution of God’s will. Jesus when he taught the disciples to pray said, “Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” Our prayers facilitate the will of God on earth. But if God’s will was completely foreordained and intractable, then why are we told to pray for His will to be done?

Now the scriptures say that salvation is of the Lord, but we are tasked with participating in bringing salvation to men. I don’t pretend to know how all of this works. But I know that God works through prayer. God desires our prayer. And God wants all men to be saved. And so God sends us to proclaim the gospel to all men, everywhere. And He wants us to pray for all men to that end. So at the very least, we know that our ministry which we are given to perform is to pray for the salvation of all men. That is the service we are to give to men and to God.

I can tell you this. From what I have read in biographies of great preachers, and stories about great revivals, the success of both were preceded by a period of extensive prayer. Prayer is the essential sharpening of the axe before the first swing is ever laid against the tree. Abraham Lincoln was supposed to have said, “if you have 8 hours to cut wood, spend 7 of them sharpening your axe.” I think that can be applied to prayer in regards to evangelism as well. That is why we do the Jericho March before we enter every summer season on the beach. That season of prayer is necessary if we are to have a successful season on the beach.

The next part of prayer that Paul addresses here is the principle of through whom we pray. We are very much accustomed to end our prayers by saying “in Jesus name we pray, Amen.” We do that without thinking, for the most part. But what does it mean to pray in Jesus name? Why does that matter? Well for one, Jesus told us to pray in His name. In John 14:13-14 Jesus said, “Whatever you ask in My name, that will I do, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If you ask Me anything in My name, I will do [it.]”

And Paul addresses that same principle here in vs 5 “For there is one God, [and] one mediator also between God and men, [the] man Christ Jesus, who gave Himself as a ransom for all, the testimony [given] at the proper time. For this I was appointed a preacher and an apostle (I am telling the truth, I am not lying) as a teacher of the Gentiles in faith and truth.”

The One to whom we pray is God the Father, but we pray through the Mediator, the man Christ Jesus. The scriptures teach that Jesus is both fully God and fully Man. In theological terms it is called the hypostatic union. But in layman’s terms it means that He is God in the flesh. And He was our Mediator in salvation by becoming our substitute, taking the wrath of God upon Himself that we might be given life and sonship in the family of God. But now, having risen from the dead and ascended to the Father’s right hand, He lives forever to make intercession for us. Rom 8:34 says “Christ Jesus is He who died, yes, rather who was raised, who is at the right hand of God, who also intercedes for us.”

Now He intercedes for us according to the Father’s will. He intercedes for us by application of His blood for our sins so that we might be counted as righteous as sons of God. But He also intercedes for us as we pray in His name. God seeing His righteousness applied to our account hears our prayers as being sanctified by Jesus Christ.

Heb 10:19-23 says, “Therefore, brethren, since we have confidence to enter the holy place by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way which He inaugurated for us through the veil, that is, His flesh, and since [we have] a great priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled [clean] from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful.” We come into the holy place to speak to God by the blood of Jesus Christ which cleanses us from all sin.

So what Paul says here to Timothy is that there is One Mediator between God and man, and only One Mediator is needed. We pray in the name of Jesus Christ, through the sanctifying power of His sacrifice, so that we may have full acceptance at the throne of God. There is no need for any other mediator. In fact, I would go so far as to say that if you attempt to go through another mediator, you are in effect blaspheming Christ. If you attempt to go to God through Mary, then you are taking the honor and glory that belong only to Christ and giving it to a person, and a person who is dead at that. If you pray to a so called saint, you are praying to a person, and taking away from what is Christ’s alone. Christ, who alone was holy and righteous, died and shed His blood so that He might be our Mediator, and we dare not take away that which He shed His blood to procure. You do not need to go to God through a priest, or Mary, or a saint, but you can only go through Jesus Christ. In Him alone we have the right to enter into the throne of God.

Paul began this passage about the ministry of prayer by urging prayers to be made for every man. And he bookends this section with a similar statement in vs 8, “Therefore I want the men in every place to pray, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and dissension.” And I think he is being in this case, deliberately redundant. He is emphasizing the importance and need for prayer by saying it twice.

Now some think that this reference to “every place” is a reference to the church. And so Paul is saying we should pray in the church. To that, I would agree without argument, that we should pray in the church. Jesus said “My house is to be a house of prayer.” Prayer, we have already said, is to be a priority in the church, and especially in corporate assemblies. Corporate prayer is powerful prayer. Remember how the church prayed for Peter to be delivered from prison and God sent an angel to release him.

But I think what Paul is saying is not limited to the church assembly. He wants men to pray in every place. You go back to Eph 6:18 and read that again, “With all prayer and petition pray at all times in the Spirit, and with this in view, be on the alert with all perseverance and petition for all the saints.” You can’t pray at all times and not pray in all places. Just be in a constant state of prayer. If we are walking in the Spirit, and living by the Spirit, then we must have constant spiritual communication irregardless of where we are or what we are doing. That doesn’t mean we have to fall on our knees at the bank and at the grocery store and at work, but it does mean we are in constant communication with God at all times, in all places, in all circumstances.

And as a reference back to the idea of praying for our enemies, or our persecutors, we pray without wrath and dissension. We don’t take our own revenge. We leave room for God to avenge us. James 1:20 says “the anger of man does not achieve the righteousness of God.”

Our goal in prayer is to see others saved. If we give way to our anger we are not going to achieve that. We want to work with God, not against God. So let’s pray, lifting up holy hands. That is not speaking of a posture of prayer. Some people seem to think that holding up your hands has something intrinsically holy about it. Most of the time in the Bible when you see someone come in the presence of God they are flat on their face. They aren’t holding up their hands and dancing around. Holy hands is a reference to consecrated hands. Hands refers to the work of our hands, to our deeds. As we are holy in our deeds, consecrated to live righteous, godly lives for Christ, then we can win the lost to Christ by our example and not give cause for the gospel to be slandered.

Our prayer life is affected by our sin or the lack of sin. David said if I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me. So we make sure that we have repented of any sin, that we are living godly lives, and we pray in every place at all times, joining with God in accomplishing His will on earth. That is our service of prayer, our ministry of prayer which we render unto God and men.

God’s will is that none should perish, but that all should come to repentance. He desires all men to be saved. I trust that if you have not accepted His free gift of salvation, then today would be the day that you surrender to Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior and receive new life in Him.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |
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