What an extraordinary scene this text contains. Jesus in glory is on full display. What specific aspects of His glory the Spirit has chosen to highlight here are most interesting and evocative.
Note first: The Savior’s humility. So little did Jesus stand out, it took Judas’ kiss to identify Him. How we flock to “stand outs”, and how He avoided standing out.
In a culture built upon celebrity today, celebrity which has spilled over into the Church – leaders are often trying to make their mark, stand out, do something to be seen apart. Not Jesus. He, in His humility is identifying with us: He comes in the likeness of fallen man. He cares nothing for recognition of self. He has no ego. He cares only that the Father be glorified, and that the Father’s will be done.
Heavenly Father, make this my own heart in all things.
Note second: The absolute wonder of grace.
He is every man’s friend, even when they are His worst enemies. He designs no harm, but reconciliation through the Cross. And yet, in due time, He will judge. Even His “friends”. “Today”, cries the writer to the Hebrews, “Today, if you hear His voice, do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion.” If you can read this, it is not too late to repent of your sin and flee to Christ. He remains “a friend of tax collectors and sinners.” (Luke 7:34)
Note third: How He remains utterly in control, when all appears to be cosmically out of control.
It is the feature of almost all anxiety, that we are faced with tings too big for us, and that we cannot change or impact.
News outlets spew hour upon hour of global crises we seem to have no power to effect in any way. Climate change. The economy. War in the Middle-east. Terrorism. The political landscape. Not to mention the demise of our own individual bodies and personal crises of all kinds. So we worry, fret and look for any person who appears to give us hope as a strong champion on our behalf; or for a movement, the unveiling of some gigantic conspiracy that once uncovered will restore all equilibrium, pundits and miracle cures.
All to no avail.
But not Jesus. He stands here, ready to face the horrors or unbridled human brutality and the full fury of The Father’s wrath against human sin – and He is perfectly in control. Not as though He is orchestrating the circumstances – but in perfect self-control. Nothing externally can rob Him of His reliance upon and trust in – the Father.
No wonder the fruit of the Spirit is self-control. God has not charges us with the duty to control the winds and the waves of human upheaval. He has gifted us to depend upon His indwelling Spirit for self-control. The Spirit never, never makes us out of control. He grants self-control while the world spins wildly.
Self-control, is the Spirit of Christ.
Note fourth: Jesus’ absolute confidence in the Father’s providence, in the fulfillment of The Scriptures.
He knows full well the Father’s love, and the Father’s power. And He is content then to commit Himself to the Father’s sovereign providence.
Oh how every Christian needs to see this in our Savior, and cry out to the Father for the same faith to fill our hearts each and every day.
We too, in the very worst of all circumstances, if, IF, we are His by the new birth, can rest in the same perfect love of the Father, knowing His power to keep, sustain and move where wisest and best, and trust His sovereign, providential care.
Heavenly Father – fill me with the Spirit of Christ.
It is in this most extraordinary account, which could only be ours by virtue of first hand witness, that we see the amazing self-disclosure of the Master.
Note first: How Jesus tells His disciples how it is the weakness of the flesh that makes prayer such an imperative.
Christians gain many new intentions toward good and godliness in our regeneration, but these new impulses are animated and protected only by prayer.
Without wading into these waters too deeply – I think one application of Preachers, Pastors and Teachers suffering together with our people is to let them know from time to time how it is we suffer too – not for sympathy’s sake – but so that we can more directly comfort them with the comfort wherewith we have been comforted. To let them know how He has met us in our sorrows and trials.
I am reminded of how Spurgeon closed one of his sermons: “I wish I could have spoken worthily on such a topic as this, but a dull, heavy headache sits upon me, and I feel that a thick gloom overshadows my words, out of which I look with longing, but cannot rise. For this I may well grieve, but nevertheless God the Holy Ghost can work the better through our weakness, and if you will try and preach the sermon to yourselves, my brethren, you will do it vastly better than I can; if you will meditate upon this text this afternoon, “Of him, through him, and to him are all things,” I am sure you will be led to fall on your knees with the apostle, and say, “To him be glory for ever;” and then you will rise up, and practically in your life, give him honour, putting the “Amen” to this doxology by your own individual service of your great and gracious Lord.” Spurgeon, C. H. “Laus Deo.” The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Sermons, vol. 10, Passmore & Alabaster, 1864, p. 312.
Personally, I am stunned every time I read this account.
What self-disclosure! And from the very Son of God!
And yet as preachers and teachers, we sometimes feel the need to put on a front that makes people think we are impervious to the same things they face.
No, we do not want to set ourselves forward as shining examples as though we never flag or have some sort of spiritual superiority.
Nor do we want to give the impression that we have become hopeless. But rather, let them see how we personally and truly depend upon grace in our own lives, the way we ask them to.
Think of 2 Corinthians 1:8-11 “we do not want you to be unaware, brothers, of the affliction we experienced in Asia. For we were so utterly burdened beyond our strength that we despaired of life itself. Indeed, we felt that we had received the sentence of death. But that was to make us rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead. He delivered us from such a deadly peril, and he will deliver us. On him we have set our hope that he will deliver us again. You also must help us by prayer, so that many will give thanks on our behalf for the blessing granted us through the prayers of many.”
Paul personally wants them to be very aware of what he had faced. He did not fain invincibility.
In the Puritan Papers, Paul Cook writes: “Preachers are tempted to moral cowardice more almost than to any sin. Too many ministers, says Bernard, are “men pleasers, not the servants of Christ…he that fears his people’s faces is the man that is most likely to murder their souls.” Cook, Paul. “The Life and Work of a Minister according to the Puritans.” Puritan Papers: 1956–1959, edited by J. I. Packer, vol. 1, P&R Publishing, 2000, p. 185.
I wonder if Jesus’ particular admonition here is in regard to the very same temptation He was facing: To faint in fear when facing the Lord’s appointments. To refuse to drink the cup of trial. To not stop submitting to the will of the Father no matter how daunting.
Note second: It is most informative that Jesus ties His prayer with the need for us to pray regarding temptation.
At this point, He knows full well what it means to die to self – literally. And we, enter into a shadow of that when we die to self in putting to death the deeds of the flesh. Resisting temptation is not an easy thing, it is not to be thought of lightly. We may well need to go back to the Father in prayer multiple times regarding the very same temptation in the midst of its duration. The flesh does not give up its lordship easily. It is a violent battle.
It is here too that we gain much insight regarding 1 Cor. 10:13 “No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.” The text does not imply that in prayer, God will make temptations to cease. This is a grave mistake by many, thinking God does not hear them. It is rather that in prayer, God will grant the strength to endure the time(s) of temptation – to continue in obedience while the temptation persists.
And so Jesus, in this dark hour, finds the weight of His multiple temptations so great, that He goes back to the Father over and over; modeling what He asks us to do.
Note thirdly: How gently Jesus ends this portion in regard to His Disciples. And thus, also toward us in our failures.
He is at this moment, already experiencing something of the Cross. He is already abandoned in some sense by His closest allies. But He never lashes out. He does not berate or condemn them. He simply says: “Rise, let us be going; see, my betrayer is at hand.”
How calmly and serenely He faces the next steps. He has committed all to The Father. He rests in The Father’s plans, purposes and providence. And in it, He demonstrates what it means to live in such a secure sense of the Father’s love, no matter what. And by example, calls us to the same.
vs. 17: “But the midwives feared God and did not do as the king of Egypt commanded them, but let the male children live.”
No, America’s abortion laws are not mandatory as that in our text today was. I do not want to make an unfair comparison. Yet, there is a fundamental, abiding principle undergirding what was happening in Egypt, and what is happening today in America. This cannot be overlooked.
Let us be absolutely clear here, abortion and infanticide can only exist where there is no fear of God.
Let that sink in.
This is not a legal issue.
It is not a personal issue.
It is not a women’s rights issue.
It is not a political issue.
It is not a medical issue.
It is not even a bare moral issue – thought is touches on all of these areas.
At the bottom, at the very root, it is a spiritual issue. One Scripture simply casts as – godlessness.
Godlessness.
Not that all who support these horrific practices deny God exists. But in the reality that in fact, they do what they do before the face of God, with no fear that they will be judged for it by Him in due time.
There is no true fear of God.
Where there is no fear of God, no regard for the truth revealed in His Word regarding the sanctity of human life – expedience and personal preference rule; even behind the curtain of the law.
Abortion and infanticide can only be curbed and stopped when men and women fear God as their Creator, Lord and Judge: Irrespective of fluctuating cultural movements for or against.
We work and cry out for laws to prevent these, in spite of whether or not others share that view, so as to save the lives of the murdered, and to spare the staining of the hands of their murders with blood. We care for both.
But make no mistake – no fear of God is the real issue. One solved only through the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and the transforming power of His Spirit.
From Matthew 26:30-35 Keeping the Main thing the Main thing.
Jesus, has just established the New Covenant, and instituted His supper. He has washed His Disciple’s feet. He has prophesied Judas’ betrayal and taken the final steps before Gethsemane. Now, He tells them that ALL of them will fall away from Him – at least in some way – before the night is over. One wonders what they were thinking.
In response, Peter, so much like me, jumps to his own defense, if not that of them all. “Even if I must die with you” he says, “I will not deny you!”. The text says they all said the same thing.
It is easy to be brave in theory. Several times in my life I’ve heard preachers press upon people something like: “If someone were to walk in here right now and under threat of death demand you renounce Christ – what would you do?” This is said as though 1-They know what they themselves would do (are they better than Peter and the rest?); and, 2-That Joe average Christian is to be shamed if they find any such weakness in themselves, as though it is somehow unthinkable.
In an effort to either stir up or display some sort of false bravado, emphasis is placed upon people rather than upon Christ. Upon our goodness, our bravery, our fortitude, rather than upon His. But not so Jesus. At this moment, He does not take the time to berate the men He knows far better than they know themselves. Larger things are at hand.
So it is I find it fascinating that Jesus did not argue with the Disciples at this point. He could have pressed the issue. He could have said “listen to me, I am the Lord and I am telling you…” But He left it. It makes me wonder how often I feel the need to press my understanding home when others are so obviously wrong – at least to me? Jesus knew there were larger issues to address at this moment than to correct their errant self-understanding. And it is the greater part of wisdom to know when and how to press certain points home, and when to leave them.
At this point, Jesus needed to go to The Garden to pray. He needed to pour out His own heart to the Father. He needed to face His own human reluctance to go to the Cross. He needed the angels to come and strengthen Him. These were all far more pressing than being “right.”
Heavenly Father – help me to have the wisdom of Christ in my own interactions with others. To able to see what is most necessary at the moment, and what is not. Especially in seeing what I need in my own soul at the moment of debate, over what I perceive is the other’s “need” – when winning that argument would mean nothing in the long run. When it would not end in the other actually growing in grace. Help me to fix my own eyes on the Cross. To seek the greater cause at hand. To submit myself to you, more than seeking that others submit to my opinions, views, understanding or knowledge. To not be distracted from my own obedience, by trying to press others to take up theirs. Let me be more like Jesus. To remember the Kingdom will not suffer if I don’t win my point. For the Kingdom rests in the Cross, and not in me. There is only one Hill to die on, and that one is Calvary. Christ, has already died there. For me, and for them.
Nothing seems sadder to me, than that the simplicity, beauty and profundity of Jesus’ institution of communion, should be the source of endless debates and division. Transubstantiation, Con-substantiation, mere memorial or remembrance, means of grace, etc., etc., etc.
All other discussions aside, nothing should more stimulate and make real to the heart and the mind of the Believer what Christ has done for us in respect to our sins – than this act together with others bought be grace, regenerated and indwelt by His Spirit.
Let us then in simple humility and inexpressible gratitude, partake – if we believe. And rest our souls in the finished work of the Cross. For only faith in His finished work satisfies, nourishes, refreshes, sustains and cheers the soul. He “loves us and has freed us from our sins by his blood and made us a kingdom, priests to his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.” (Rev. 1:5-6) Need we say more?
Yes, this is a re-post because the previous title may have been misleading.
When is a sign not a sign? When there is no unimpeachable nor unambiguous interpretive source to attach it to.
For instance, all of the “signs” that Jesus did, served as fulfillments of Old Testament prophecies.
The signs which occurred at Pentecost and beyond, were rooted in the same. But that didn’t stop others from trying to interpret the “signs” at Pentecost. The text says that everyone was amazed and tried to figure out what it all meant. And some said it was a sign that these people were drunk already at 9 in the morning!
Without the book of Joel as an infallible interpretive grid (along with other passages) – the “sign” was in the imaginations of the beholders.
It is still a problem.
When some event occurs in the world, or even in our own lives, we do not have the freedom to turn it into a sign at will and give it our own interpretation. This is not Biblically responsible.
Now let me apply this to the recent, wicked attempt to assassinate former president Trump.
Some, immediately began claiming his survival was some sort of sign. He must be “God’s man” if he was spared. It must mean something specific in terms of blessing for America. But we simply do not have Biblical precedent to make that jump, and to arbitrarily turn the failed attempt into a sign; beyond perhaps a sign of the continuing state of human depravity which incites men to senseless violence.
Can we say for certain in God’s providence he was spared? Absolutely. But even then, we do not know what he was spared for!
By the very same “signs” logic, shouldn’t we say that Deitrich Bonhoffer’s failed attempt to assassinate Hitler was a sure sign that God was pleased with Hitler and thought he should remain for the good of Germany?
I don’t think so.
Beware these random assignments (no pun intended) brethren. It is equivalent to seeking omens and using divination to make wild interpretations.
The old tale of the Chinese Farmer illustrates part of the problem.
“Once upon a time there was a Chinese farmer whose horse ran away. That evening, all of his neighbors came around to commiserate. They said, “We are so sorry to hear your horse has run away. This is most unfortunate.” The farmer said, “Maybe.”
The next day the horse came back bringing seven wild horses with it, and in the evening everybody came back and said, “Oh, isn’t that lucky. What a great turn of events. You now have eight horses!” The farmer again said, “Maybe.”
The following day his son tried to break one of the horses, and while riding it, he was thrown and broke his leg. The neighbors then said, “Oh dear, that’s too bad,” and the farmer responded, “Maybe.”
The next day the conscription officers came around to conscript people into the army, and they rejected his son because he had a broken leg. Again all the neighbors came around and said, “Isn’t that great!” Again, he said, “Maybe.”’”
So it goes.
Taking an isolated event, and trying to insert it into the greater fabric of human history and reading God’s providence that way is a fool’s errand. Above and beyond sparing the President’s life in that moment, we have NO idea what God’s larger plan in it all is. Only time will tell us that. Scripture, for certain, will not. And Scripture, must be our interpreter. Not our imaginations.
One thinks of the prayer of Hezekiah upon hearing from Isaiah that he was to die soon, and to put his house in order (2 Kings 20). Hezekiah cried out to God and was granted a reprieve of 15 years. “Fabulous!” we say. But wait! It was during those 15 years that Hezekiah fathered Manasseh – who went on to become one of the most wicked, idolatrous and brutal kings Judah ever was unfortunate enough to live under.
Praise God President Trump was spared. And how tragic for the one whose life was not spared and for the wounded.
What if the brave firefighter – Corey Comperatore – who died protecting his family – would have one day saved the life of the man or woman who would go on to cure cancer? What if the shooting was more about him and his family, and Trump’s injury was only incidental to that? Or what if it was more about the other two men wounded, David Dutch and James Copenhaver? What if God intends to use them and their families in some extraordinary way, and a wicked man incensed at the President was the means to accomplish what God wanted in their lives? What are the signs to be interpreted, and how? We cannot know.
What we CAN know is that God, in His providence, was and is working in and through all of their lives to His ends, and that over-interpreting this event to color in some line drawing of our own invention is utterly fruitless and without basis in fact.
Let me ask, why was it Trump was spared, when all the Apostles but one were martyred? Were their deaths somehow a sign that they were not as important as he? Not as good as channels of God’s grace to us far beyond Mr. Trump? Were not Peter and Paul of more value to the Church and all of Christendom than Mr. Trump even to America?
Neither their deaths nor Trump’s survival are specific signs to be read as omens of general good or bad in the moment. To do so, is to live in folly.
Stick to the Word, and eschew all forms of mystical interpretations and omen reading. Leave that to the pagans.
Follow Christ.
Follow The Word soundly interpreted.
Isaiah 8:20 To the teaching and to the testimony! If they will not speak according to this word, it is because they have no dawn.
Woe to us, if it is professed Believers who do not keep themselves to these.
From John 11:39-44 – “Then Jesus, deeply moved again, came to the tomb. It was a cave, and a stone lay against it. Jesus said, “Take away the stone.” Martha, the sister of the dead man, said to him, “Lord, by this time there will be an odor, for he has been dead four days.” Jesus said to her, “Did I not tell you that if you believed you would see the glory of God?” So they took away the stone. And Jesus lifted up his eyes and said, “Father, I thank you that you have heard me. I knew that you always hear me, but I said this on account of the people standing around, that they may believe that you sent me.” When he had said these things, he cried out with a loud voice, “Lazarus, come out.” The man who had died came out, his hands and feet bound with linen strips, and his face wrapped with a cloth. Jesus said to them, “Unbind him, and let him go.”
Three things we are commanded to do for those Christ is to raise up:
a. Remove the stone(s).
First, even before the day of resurrection, take away the stone(s). Clear the way. Remove any obstacles that men may encounter unnecessarily.
This is a profound need for both apologetics – where there are legitimate questions which need answered, AND the crying need for the Church to avoid placing obstacles in the way of those the Spirit is quickening by the voice of Christ.
Do not require them to be clean first.
Do not make them fit into a preconceived cultural framework.
Several years ago I had a conversation with a friend who evangelizes in predominately Muslim countries. When I asked him about the key “stone” he needs to clear away for those hearing the Gospel, it he told me that they feared they had to become Americans in order to be Christians. His BIG work was to disabuse them of that concept.
We need to help take away the objections their own fallen minds, the world and the enemy have placed in front of them as best we can.
And arrest all of their doubts by pointing exclusively to the Cross, to Christ! To faith in Him and His atoning work, and to nothing else.
We must labor to take away the stones.
And, we need to be sure not to put stones in front of them ourselves.
Don’t make them victims of Christian-speak.
Don’t connect their coming to Christ with a political point of view.
Don’t require anything of them Christ does not require.
I fear that right now in American Evangelicalism, we are making it seem (if not actually saying it) that one must be a Republican or a Trump supporter – or at the very least, a Biden/Democratic hater – in order to be a Christian.
God forgive us for such a conflation and for placing this monumental stumbling stone in front of the graves Christ is calling them out of.
b. Unbind, unwrap them.
People come to Christ with their old grave clothes still clinging to them. Some former sins still drag on them, and they need help getting extricated from them. They have the smell of death still on them.
They are bound in hand – for they do not yet know how to praise, nor how to work for the Lord. They are bound in their feet: How to walk with Him is still beyond them, even though they’ve taken the few feeble steps to exit the tomb. And their faces are wrapped in a cloth: They cannot yet see very well. The truth of God’s Word must be taught to them that they might truly know this Christ and His wonders.
c. Release them. Let them go.
Do not make them bound now to you – but make them free to follow Christ wherever He goes.
You did not raise them – Jesus did.
They do not belong to you, they belong to Him.
As long as they follow Him and serve Him and love Him, no matter that they leave you. Let them go.
Last evening, I had the privilege of speaking to 13 participants in the Pastoral Residents program hosted by Emanuel Community Church in Elmira NY. This is under the leadership of Matt and Mitch Bedzyk and the other elders at ECC.
My assignment was to spend time unpacking 2 Timothy 3. Others had already addressed the earlier chapters.
Below are the contents of my notes. I pray they may be of some use to others.
By this time, you’ve already been steeped in the material of 2 Tim. And hopefully, you’ve seen how important and informative it is for those in ministry.
Over the years, this letter has been my most cherished go-to when challenges, discouragement and and other “fainting fits” as Spurgeon called them – troubled me.
I could come back here to resharpen my focus, and get back to the grounding in what pastoral ministry is all about from God’s perspective, rather than models imposed upon me by the outside – by the Church gurus, growth experts and current trends.
What does God want me to be about in seeking to minister to men’s souls in the context of the local assembly?
Then, no matter what else may be happening, growth, decline, overwhelming cultural moments, trends, etc., I can make sure I have solid footing for maintaining and moving forward.
So in turning your attention to Paul’s 2nd letter, and to this 3rd chapter particularly, I am well aware I’m covering well trodden – tho still hallowed ground.
At the same time, I am reminded that one of the severest of the noetic effects of the Fall is how leaky our memories are when it comes to Spiritual and Biblical truth.
I once penned in the flyleaf of my Bible, that “it is in the aftermath of God’s manifested grace in a trial, that I craft a more accurate theology, which I promptly forget the next time I’m in trouble.”
Someone may have mentioned it already in this study, I am aware that some today argue that Timothy was not actually a pastor, but instead, an apostolic representative when this was written to him.
So be it.
But if the key directions we see here cannot be absolutely applied to those in pastoral ministry, then I am at a loss as to what instruction in the Scripture would be more finely useful than these powerful chapters.
That is not to say they do not have broader application to all in Christ – but in my estimation, they have a unique force of argument on pastors as we function as sheep leading other sheep.
As your handout shows, I once arranged a study of the whole letter around 20 imperatives contained in the text. Obviously, the list is not exhaustive. It grew out of times when I was questioning how I was to frame all of my pastoral ministry, and served as a useful organizing principle.
Perhaps you’ll find it so as well.
I might recommend for your own study, John R. W. Stott’s arrangement in his commentary “The Message of 2nd Timothy” as exceedingly useful:
Chapter 1: The charge to guard the gospel.
Chapter 2: The charge to suffer for the gospel.
Chapter 3: The charge to continue in the gospel.
Chapter 4: The charge to proclaim the gospel.
Tonight, even though chapter 3 neatly divides itself into two sections – 1-9 and 10-17, I am going to add a 3rd subsection.
In the process, hoping to point out some things which have stood out to me, and refreshed, clarified and reinforced my own soul in times when my pastoral focus grew fuzzy, my heart grew faint, and when putting out fires claimed more of my attention than bringing the light of God’s glory to bear for those under my care.
Section 1: Recognize the Times –2 Timothy 3:1–9 – Recognize the Times / “understand this” so you don’t get disheartened or discouraged.
The simple truth is, that in ministry, difficult, or “dangerous” times will come. They are to be expected.
I would imagine that most of you here agree that the “end times” began with Jesus crucifixion and ascension, and stretch until His return. At least that is my understanding of Matt. 24 and other places. So we should neither be surprised, nor disheartened by what is cataloged here.
What is the chief characteristic of these difficult times of concern to Paul?
The Economy? The Culture? Ecology? Geo-political upheaval? Politics Pandemics?
None of the above. PEOPLE! Perhaps, all of the above can be rolled into that one word – people.
When men are lovers of self – and especially affluent so as to indulge self – they will be proud & self-congratulatory at every turn – just watch the preoccupation with selfies;
arrogant – If you are at all active on social media, you know in reading the comments, that no one can possibly be wrong about, anything – especially political pundits. We arrogantly imagine we can discern everyone else’s motives.
abusive – the same word as slanderous below – but more likely toward God here, blasphemous and arrogant toward God. Judging Him.
disobedient to their parents and all authorities;
ungrateful because spoiled;
unholy because self is god;
heartless, more literally unfeeling – toward all who are not them;
impossible to make happy – utterly unappeasable if offended in any way; Hence the rise of the ubiquitous Kevins and Karens –
quick on the draw to slander anyone and everyone – especially behind the anonymity of a keyboard;
slanderous of others. They cannot just disagree, they must paint all others as evil.
utterly given over to their lusts and desires;
utterly brutal to any who oppose them – savage. Look at the rise in blood-sports and the proliferation of even Christians joining venues like mixed martial arts competitions. And note how many women are now engaged in that as well.
Look at the riotous responses to real or imagined social injustices.
having no natural affection for good – probably the public good is meant here;
treacherous – devoid of genuine loyalty;
reckless – impetuous, thoughtless, rash;
swollen with conceit – distorted by their own self-image;
seeing pleasure apart from any reference to God as the chief good above all other things;
(v19) And all this – even in people who proclaim themselves to be spiritual or even Christians – but utterly without the Spirit of God within them.
The $64,000 question is – what are we to do with such people who will in time bring trouble upon the Church?
And in short, Paul’s answer is – AVOID THEM!
Avoid them.
This is a favorite admonition of Paul’s in no less than 6 places: Rom.; 1 & 2 Tim.; Titus.
Do not spend hours and hours engaging them, avoid them.
I really would have expected some tactic to combat them. But no.
The chief tactics if any are – prayer and the preaching of the Gospel and thereby demonstrating that we do not have truck with those attitudes and traits.
Look at what Paul says in 8 – in citing the account of Jannes and Jambres – 2 Timothy 3:8–9 / “Just as Jannes and Jambres opposed Moses, so these men also oppose the truth, men corrupted in mind and disqualified regarding the faith. But they will not get very far, for their folly will be plain to all, as was that of those two men.”
We glean 3 things from this –
1 – This is nothing new. As long as people are people, we’ll be facing this.
2 – These are not the traits of Christians, so do not align yourself with them in the Church. They are disqualified regarding the Faith. Right now, the rise of the pugnacious preacher is much in vogue. Don’t get sucked in.
3 – They won’t get very far. They will be exposed in due time.
Summarizing this portion might look something like this in 5 statements regarding those he’s referring to –
1 – Note Their CHARACTER: (1-5) 19 Traits – culminating in: “having the appearance of godliness, but denying its power = Void of the Spirit’s influence. The Last one: They are even Religious! Or “Spiritual” as many have it today.
Verse 13: calls them “Imposters”
2 – Note Their TACTICS:(6) 2 Insidious methods.
a. “Creep” Slyly, not openly. b. “Capture” Take captive, not deliver.
3 – Note Their PREY: (6-7) 4 Descriptive terms.
a. “Weak women” – Weak WILLED. His point is not that they are weak willed BECAUSE they are women, but merely that women who are weak-willed are easy prey.
b. “Burdened with sins”.
Either: Loaded with them and wanting relief, but not content with the Gospel – or: Loaded with them and wanting an excuse not to abandon them.
Either way – Looking for something other or more than – the Gospel.
c. “Led astray by various passions” Making decisions by feeling rather than truth. “Sensual” in Peter and Jude as well.
d. “Ever learning – never arriving”. The pursuit is the constant titillation of one new thing after another. No satisfaction – No constancy / Just like the Athenians of Acts 17:21.
This COULD be the source of the worst kind of discouragement:
“HOWEVER” – Paul lays out a powerful and clarifying portrait doesn’t he?
Keep these focii in mind – you know:
1 – What I believed and taught (doctrine – Biblical truth)
2 – Was the basis for how I lived (conduct)
3 – It informed my goal(s) (aim)
4 – Fueled my faith (faith)
5 – Gives me (patience)
6 – Gives me (love)
7 – Gives me (steadfastness)
8 – Even in persecutions and sufferings.
And we’re right back to something Paul has raised several times already – you’ve seen how I suffered.
6 times Paul brings up suffering in this connection, and we need to learn it well. Back in Ch. 2 he admonished Timothy to “share in suffering”. To not become soft.
And if you are anything like me, sometimes, we grow weary in our work even if we are not weary of it.
Spurgeon remarks: “a minister, wherever he is, is a minister, and should recollect that he is on duty. A policeman or a soldier may be off duty, but a minister never is. Even in our recreations we should still pursue the great object of our lives; for we are called to be diligent “in season and out of season.” There is no position in which we may be placed but the Lord may come with the question, “What doest thou here, Elijah?” and we ought to be able at once to answer, “I have something to do for thee even here, and I am trying to do it.” The bow, of course, must be at times unstrung, or else it will lose its elasticity; but there is no need to cut the string. I am speaking at this time of the minister in times of relaxation; and I say that even then he should conduct himself as the ambassador of God, and seize opportunities of doing good: this will not mar his rest, but sanctify it.” Spurgeon, C. H. Lectures to My Students: A Selection from Addresses Delivered to the Students of the Pastors’ College, Metropolitan Tabernacle. Passmore and Alabaster, 1875, pp. 181–82.
And just as it pertains to spiritual growth for all God’s children, that there is no such thing as stagnancy – it is like climbing up the down escalator; the moment we stop, we actually go backward – so it is especially for we in ministry.
I know you’ve already covered it, but let me remind of that section in Ch. 2 again.
Paul draws on 3 similes there.
vs. 3: “Share in suffering”: a. As a good soldier.
No solider is in the army by him or herself, we serve together. Both with fellow ministers, AND with our people.
So the unique word he uses here emphasizes suffering WITH others, not just suffering generically.
Not only is suffering to be expected, we need to remember that we do not suffer alone, nor do those we minister to.
And part of our suffering, is entering into the suffering of others, the way Jesus entered into ours.
Additionally, it takes much to remain a single-minded soldier, set on serving the commander and prosecuting His battle amid all the distractions that come our way.
But that’s the point.
Our people are fighting those battles too and must strive against the World, the Flesh and the Devil the same as us. And we, the same as them.
Being in ministry offers no exemptions. Just the opposite, it opens us up to even more.
I have a dear pastor friend (who shall remain nameless) – who in a moment of passive-aggressive weakness, frustrated with some in his congregation who didn’t show up at services regularly because too much of life got in the way – did the following.
He stepped into the pulpit, dressed in greasy work clothes and announced: “There will be no sermon today. This week our washer broke down, and I’m still waiting on the part to fix it; I needed to put new brakes on my wife’s car; we needed to take one of the kids to emergency when he fell off his bike – so you’ll just have to do without.”
Maybe you’ll be tempted to do something similar too. I know I have. Obviously I recommend this to no one.
I wonder what would have happened if he had stepped in the pulpit and commiserated with his people in that moment – told them he knows how they struggle because he struggles too, and comforted them with the comfort the Lord comforted him with in those difficult times?
Could he instead have pointed to the exhausted Jesus in Mark 4? That our great Redeemer knows just how whipped we can be at times?
And then turned their attention to the God of Ps. 121 who never sleeps nor slumbers and who will not break the bruised reed nor snuff out the faintly burning wick?
Are there times for rebuke? Sure.
But it is helpful to remember that we are ALL serving our commander, from the greatest to the least of us – and to suffer WITH one another – even as Christ in His incarnation suffered with us.
Of course, Paul’s solider metaphor is aimed at this ultimate point: If we are going to really serve well, we will have to willingly give up those extraneous things which might hinder us from single-mindedness.
The Enemy deploys one of his most potent weapons by means of simple distraction. Distraction especially from remembering that we are in a perpetual war.
Battle, nearly constant battle, is to be expected.
b. As an athlete.
The self-disciplined athlete Doesn’t just want to participate or run, he looks to win. He sets his mind wholly on it. Frames his entire life, including his personal habits around being ready to compete. He has a goal.
And here, the lack of ministerial metrics rises to the surface once more – We suffer with some ambiguity in measuring our ministries.
So our goals have to be clear. Goals I would advance as chiefly 2: Personal growth in the character and image of Christ and assisting others in the same.
It’s what I hear Paul alluding to when he says self-referentially later: He has kept the faith. Faithful to follow, faithful to press on.
c. As a hard working farmer.
The picture is of one who is hands-on in the dirt (if I can say it that way) but who also looks for a reward based upon what he grows – i.e. spiritual rewards for spiritual labors.
In all three there are these things:
Give up thoughts of “career” – Even in ministry
Give up thoughts of “civilian life” where you don’t have to be on the forefront of defending Scripture truth, being an apologist for Christ, pouring over Scripture, not worrying about having a great private life filled with recreations and lots of pass-times and fringes. Give yourself to this work.
This triad emerges:
The soldier battles the enemy – The Devil and his minions.
The athlete battles himself – The flesh.
The farmer battles the environment which threatens the crop. And he does so rigorously on every front.
Ministry is WAR!
And might I add one side note here in terms of a debate about whether or not as preachers, we should ever be self-referential in our sermons.
Without wading into those waters too deeply – I think one application of suffering together with our people is to let them know from time to time how it is we suffer too – not for sympathy’s sake – but so that we can more directly comfort them with the comfort wherewith we have been comforted. To let them know how He has met us in our sorrows and trials.
I am reminded of how Spurgeon closed one of his sermons: “I wish I could have spoken worthily on such a topic as this, but a dull, heavy headache sits upon me, and I feel that a thick gloom overshadows my words, out of which I look with longing, but cannot rise. For this I may well grieve, but nevertheless God the Holy Ghost can work the better through our weakness, and if you will try and preach the sermon to yourselves, my brethren, you will do it vastly better than I can; if you will meditate upon this text this afternoon, “Of him, through him, and to him are all things,” I am sure you will be led to fall on your knees with the apostle, and say, “To him be glory for ever;” and then you will rise up, and practically in your life, give him honour, putting the “Amen” to this doxology by your own individual service of your great and gracious Lord.” Spurgeon, C. H. “Laus Deo.” The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Sermons, vol. 10, Passmore & Alabaster, 1864, p. 312.
Personally, I am stunned every time I read the account of Jesus in Gethsemane in Matt. 26:37-38 “And taking with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, he began to be sorrowful and troubled. Then he said to them, “My soul is very sorrowful, even to death; remain here, and watch with me.””
What self-disclosure! And from the very Son of God!
And yet we sometimes feel the need to put on a front that makes people think we are impervious to the same things they face. No, we do not want to set ourselves forward as shining examples as though we never flag or have some sort of spiritual superiority. Nor do we want to give the impression that we have become hopeless.
But rather, let them see how we personally and truly depend upon grace in our own lives, the way we ask them to.
Think of 2 Corinthians 1:8-11 “we do not want you to be unaware, brothers, of the affliction we experienced in Asia. For we were so utterly burdened beyond our strength that we despaired of life itself. Indeed, we felt that we had received the sentence of death. But that was to make us rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead. He delivered us from such a deadly peril, and he will deliver us. On him we have set our hope that he will deliver us again. You also must help us by prayer, so that many will give thanks on our behalf for the blessing granted us through the prayers of many.”
Paul personally wants them to be very aware of what he had faced. He did not fain invincibility.
Stott also advances that in today’s parlance, Timothy might well have been classified as an introvert.
Sharing that trait with Timothy, I also know how that leads me to flee confrontation, and at times even to cave into cowardice.
“Preachers are tempted to moral cowardice more almost than to any sin. Too many ministers, says Bernard, are “men pleasers, not the servants of Christ…he that fears his people’s faces is the man that is most likely to murder their souls.” Cook, Paul. “The Life and Work of a Minister according to the Puritans.” Puritan Papers: 1956–1959, edited by J. I. Packer, vol. 1, P&R Publishing, 2000, p. 185.
So I feel the prick of this particular admonition quite keenly, and have had to revisit this place at times when I have been quite tempted to shrink back from necessary confrontation.
All this given, it’s no wonder then that Paul immediately moves to calling us to really think these things over – AND, so quickly injects the next section:
You’ve known my –
a. Teaching / It was consistent, plain and always in accord w/extant Biblical truth.
b. Conduct / Public, not sneaking into houses – Synagogues, Mars Hill, Market Place, Public Prayer (Lydia)
c. Aim / Announced, never covert – anchored in The Great Commission – Remember him before Agrippa? Acts 26:29 “And Paul said, “Whether short or long, I would to God that not only you but also all who hear me this day might become such as I am—except for these chains.””
Even there he was clear about his aim.
d. Faith / Whom I believe – WHO it is I’ve trusted all along.
e. Patience / Forbearance w/others.
f. Love / How I consider my ministry to have been betrothing other to Christ and not myself – 2 Cor. 11:2.
g. Steadfastness / No deviation. I’ve stuck to the main things.
h. Persecutions / No compromise.
Remember how in Antioch – I was driven out by the Jews?
Then in Iconium – how I was driven out by the Jews & Gentiles together?
And then in Lystra – How I refused to be worshiped AND as a result was stoned?
i. Remember the example of my own endurance / How? No sinful response to any who mistreated me.
Paul has certainly served up a full plate of counsel thus far, but he’s not quite done yet.
The Holy Spirit does not just spin out maxims, platitudes and raw data. Our Great Shepherd Jesus, through His Spirit in Paul is ever about supporting us to the full.
So we move to our last 5 considerations in this text.
To me they are so encouraging and refreshing because they are so focused and concise.
These are the true metrics by which we can measure ourselves in ministry.
Are we faithful to our Master in these? Then we will be fulfilling our call no matter what anyone else may think.
And rightly we can look at this last portion as some keys to remaining faithful in the face of all.
1. Teaches us what we OUGHT to believe and live out.
2. It offers Reproof – telling us what we ought NOT to believe and not to live out.
3. It corrects us – Fixing what we believe WRONGLY and live out wrongly.
4. And all this so that we might live RIGHTEOUSLY. How it prepares us to meet our God.
SO:
1 – DON’T GET DISCOURAGED / Leadership needs to be aware that there will ALWAYS (until Christ comes) be such dangerous seasons.
They may come and go – but they will not cease to come and go.
2 – DON’T BE DECEIVED / Profession & Character must always go hand in hand.
No matter how righteous some may appear, if they do not teach rightly – do not regard them.
Isa. 8:20 “To the teaching and to the testimony! If they will not speak according to this word, it is because they have no dawn.”
And no matter how orthodox they may appear, if they do not walk in holiness, they have disqualified themselves from the faith. 2:8.
Christ came to save us FROM our sins, not to leave us IN them.
Where Christian character does not accompany a profession of faith – something is wrong: 2 Cor. 11:4 provides a wonderful 3 fold test of who we receive as teachers, leaders, etc.
A – Do they bring us the Jesus of Scripture? Son of David? Born of a Virgin Sinless? Crucified – Dead – Risen? Coming again? God in human flesh?
B – Do they come in the Spirit of Christ? Is the pursuit of the character of Christ evident both in how they live, and what they teach? He is not called the HOLY Spirit for nothing. It is His chief characteristic, and it is the chief characteristic of those under His influence.
C – Do they bring the Gospel of Christ? Grace alone, through faith alone, because of Christ alone?
3 – SO – DON’T GET DISTRACTED
Fighting and correcting these types will be a never ending temptation.
Stick to the Word.
Aim at betrothing men to Christ.
Help the Saints grow in grace – in Christ’s character.
Help men become Heavenly minded.
These are the AIMS of Scripture
DON’T GET DISCOURAGED
DON’T BE DECEIVED
DON’T GET DISTRACTED
This is what RETAINING THE ESSENTIALS does – They will keep us on solid ground
We might take a page from The history of the English Reformation in regard to Retaining the Essentials, while also maintaining a goodly breadth of fellowship with other men of God. From D. Martin Lloyd-Jones’ 1969 Lecture on the Puritans – The Puritans, Their Origins and Successors, pages 234-235.
“In 1654 Oliver Cromwell – with his idea of Toleration – and the Parliament called upon the divines to define what should be tolerated or indulged among those who profess the fundamentals of Christianity. If effect they said, we have all these division and sects and groups; what are the fundamental of Christianity on which we can have fellowship together? So a committee was set up and the members of the committee were these: Mr. Richard Baxter, Dr. John Owen, Dr. Thomas Goodwin, Dr. Cheynel, Mr. Marshall, Mr. Reyner, Mr. Nye, Mr. Sydrach Simpson, Mr. Vines, Mr. Manton, Mr. Jacomb. As I said earlier, Baxter tried to short-circuit the whole proposal at the beginning by saying that nothing was necessary but the Apostles’ Creed, the Lord’s Prayer, and the Commandments. But that was rejected. Then they proceeded to work, and they produced 16 Articles which they felt stated the fundamentals on which, and on which alone, true fellowship is possible between Protestant Evangelical people. Here they are –
1 – That the Holy Scripture is that rule of knowing God and living unto Him which whoso does not believe cannot be saved.
2 – That there is a God who is the Creator, Governor and Judge of the world, which is to be received by faith, and every other way of knowledge of Him is insufficient.
3 – That this God who is the blessed Creator is eternally distinct from all creatures in His Being and Blessedness.
4 – That this God is One in Three Persons or subsistences.
5 – That Jesus Christ is the only Mediator between God and Man without the knowledge of whom there is no salvation.
6 – That this Jesus Christ is the true God.
7 – That this Jesus Christ is also true man.
8 – That this Jesus Christ is God and Man in one Person.
9 – That this Jesus Christ is our Redeemer, who by paying a ransom and bearing our sins has made satisfaction for them.
10 – That this same Lord Jesus Christ is He that was Crucified at Jerusalem, and rose again and ascended into Heaven.
11 – That this same Jesus Christ being the only God and Man in One Person remains forever a distinct Person from all saints and angels notwithstanding their union and communion with Him.
12 – That all men by nature were dead in sins and trespasses, and no man can be saved unless he be born again, repent and believe.
13 – That we are justified and saved by grace and faith in Jesus Christ and not by works.
14 – That to continue in any known sin upon what pretence or principle soever is damnable.
15 – That God is to be worshipped according to His own will, and whosoever shall forsake and despise all the duties of His worship cannot be saved.
16 – That the dead shall rise, and that there is a day of judgement wherein all shall appear, some to go into everlasting life and some into everlasting condemnation.
”They were the 16 points. We have the authority of Richard Baxter for saying that it was Dr. John Owen who worded those Articles, that Dr. Reynolds was the scribe and that Mr. Marshall, a sober, worthy man did something, but the rest were little better than passive.”
”Now these Articles were designed and intended to exclude not only Deists, Socinians and Papists, but also Arians, Antinomians, Quakers and others. What I am asking is this: Cannot we accept those as fundamentals? Are those not sufficient? We remember, of course, that bishops, deans, etc., etc., had been abolished at hat time, and therefore did not need to be mentioned; and also that they did not have to contend with a ‘higher critical’ attitude to the Scriptures. They were agreed also in their attitude toward ‘tradition’, Their object was to define the irreducible minimum on which evangelical people could work together. We, today, need to elaborate some of these statements in view of our peculiar circumstances; but, still, I suggest, we should seek the minimum definition and not the maximum. Then, united on that basis, we can as brethren work together, and meet together for discussion of the matters on which we differ, and for our mutual edification.”
Section 1: Recognize the Times
Section 2: Remember My Example
Section 3: Retain the Essentials / “continue in what you have heard” – Don’t move from the Scriptures!
(Out of Spurgeon’s Devotional Bible, Based upon Deut. 33:25)
Afflicted saint, to Christ draw near Thy Savior’s gracious promise hear, His faithful Word declares to thee, That as thy days thy strength shall be.
Let not thy heart despond and say “How shall I stand the trying day?” He has engaged by firm decree, That as thy days thy strength shall be.
Thy faith is weak, thy foes are strong, And if the conflict should be long, The Lord will make the tempter flee, For as thy days thy strength shall be.
Should persecution rage and flame, Still trust in thy Redeemer’s Name; In fiery trials thou shalt see, That as thy days thy strength shall be.
When called to bear thy weighty cross, Or sore affliction, pain, or loss, Or deep distress or poverty, Still as thy days thy strength shall be.
From Proverbs 3:1-3 “My son, do not forget my teaching, but let your heart keep my commandments, for length of days and years of life and peace they will add to you. Let not steadfast love and faithfulness forsake you; bind them around your neck; write them on the tablet of your heart.”
I so love coming back to this passage in my regular reading. I love being reminded to “keep” this commandment – to not let “steadfast love and faithfulness” be forsaken.
As His Bride, what sweeter thing can the Church do?
The idea here may be, to be sure to be a loving and faithful person as the Father’s commandments lead us. But some posit to think of it in terms of resting in the love and faithfulness of our God. The one who rests content here, who lavishes in knowing these graces are poured out upon them, will live a life far different than those languishing in the hopelessness that captures so many.
It is a pre-echo of “keep yourselves in the love of God.”
It is a call to never let the wonder, the mystery, and glory, the reality of God’s steadfast love and faithfulness toward you ever escape your consciousness.
When we imagine His love to be vacillating or indistinct – or when we doubt the absolute certainty of His commitment to see all of His promises to come to pass – faith suffers its most devastating blows.
We MUST see our God as constitutionally incapable of any of the defects of human love.
In the darkest of hours, He cannot love you any more, nor can He love you any less.
See Him as ontologically unable to fail to keep His word, or to break His promises. He does not merely carry out His promises faithfully, He IS faithful. This is the One with whom we have to do. This is our God. Loving and faithful beyond anything the human mind can imagine. This is the One in whom we place our trust.
Know for yourself Believer, and remind yourself often, of the steadfast love of the Lord, and of His faithfulness. That He cannot fail. And in that, you will become one of steadfast love and faithfulness yourself.
This belongs to all who are in Christ. And it is a treasure we begin to enjoy even here and now – part of the “downpayment” of the Holy Spirit that is ours.
The NKJV renders “steadfast love and faithfulness” – Mercy and truth. And what a glory this is. That our Father always knows the real truth about us, and always reveals the truth about Himself, and He alone knows the full truth about all things. But in knowing the truth about us, He still deals with us in unspeakable mercy. Nothing hidden even in the darkest recesses of our souls turns His heart of mercy against us. We are His – in truth and in mercy.
In vss. 1-5, three things show themselves as absolutely necessary to true understanding (seeing all things as God does) and growing close to the Father:
a. Knowing and TREASURING God’s Word. “Keeping” His Word throughout Scripture is not as much observing the letter of it, as it is seeing it as precious. That which is precious to us, will capture our devotion.
b. Seeking to understand God’s Word, studying it – not simply preserving it like an ancient artifact.
Having a Ming vase that is never used AS a vase, but merely as a work of art, is a good analog. Many approach God’s Word this way. They know it is “precious” but precious in the sense that it is to be put on a self and admired – but not as though it is to be employed in the fabric and situations of every day life.
We cannot approach God’s Word in this way and hope to be truly impacted by it. We must study it not as a curiosity, but as the study of life itself. We must employ it. It will resist being turned into a religious, social or intellectual artifact.
c. Prayer (3). If we are not interacting personally and regularly with our Lord – we cannot hope either to understand Him, or His Word. We must never allow knowledge about Him to eclipse firsthand knowledge OF Him in living discourse. Lose this aspect, and religion freezes into form and mere doctrine at best, and random subjectivity at worst.
Following this – The Writer give us four promises if we will pursue the previous 3.
5-8 / We will come to an understanding the fear of the Lord.
9-15 / We will come to an understanding true righteousness, justice and equality.
16-19 / We will find deliverance from temptation.
20-22 / We will learn how to walk in righteousness.