Posts Tagged 'Pastoral Epistles'

GOD’S CHURCH, GOD’S WAY, Part 1

Where I live, the only buildings you see with more frequency than churches are drug stores.   There are drug stores everywhere in southwest Virginia.  That means that the good people of southwest Virginia are either the sickest, least spiritual people in America or the healthiest, most spiritual people in America.  When you drive into the community in  which my church is located, by the time you get to my church you have passed two hospitals (each with their own pharmacy), three large pharmacies, one small pharmacy, and some 16 churches; all these drug stores and churches serving less than 5,000 people.   Beyond my church are even  more churches!

As far as all those drug stores go, to be honest, they all look the same to me.  They all peddle the same drugs and sundries for about the same price.  I’m not sure why we have so many drug stores because the competition is pretty much nil. The situation with all those churches is a bit different, however.   Each church does things slightly different.  Some sing hymns that sound like dirges, others sing the same peppy chorus over and over and over again.  Some have song leaders and worship leaders, some have small bands and some sing only the psalms with no musical instruments.  Some churches have their members standing up, then sitting down, then standing up several times during the service; others have their members sitting down throughout the service while people dance around the front of the church waving flags and such.  Some of these churches are pastored by men, others by women, and others are run by a committee.   In some of these churches, the pastor wears a suit, and in others he wears a robe and a clerical collar.   Sometimes the sermon is short, in other churches it goes on forever.   Have you ever wondered why there has to be so many churches?   Does a small town of under 5,000 people really need all those churches?   What church is the right church?  What church is doing it God’s way?

Brief introduction to the Pastoral Epistles

Mind-numbing questions to be sure, but very important ones to discover the answers to.  As with 95% of life’s questions, the answers are found in God’s Word; specifically in what we call the Pastoral Epistles.  1 Timothy, Titus, and 2 Timothy are known as “the Pastoral Epistles,” and were probably written in that order.  They are very similar in content, written by an elderly Paul to two young pastors, Timothy and Titus.  The fact that the content of the letters is so similar suggests, to me at least, that all pastors face similar challenges.  So, if we want to assess our churches to see if they measure up to the only standard that really matters—God’s standard—then the Pastorals is where we need to start.

As was stated, Paul wrote these letters very late in his life and career.  Most scholars suggest the first two Pastorals were written shortly after Paul was released from his Roman imprisonment, sometime around 61 or 62 AD.   Tradition tells us that Paul was again imprisoned in Rome and martyred on or near to 68 AD, and that he wrote 2 Timothy very near to the end of his life.  So we can be fairly certain that Paul’s letters to these young pastors were written throughout the 60’s.

Brief introduction to 1 and 2 Timothy

Paul’s first letter to young Timothy was written from Macedonia and his second letter was, in all probability, written from Rome, from a prison cell, very shortly before the apostle’s death.

The Pastoral Epistles are a veritable treasure trove of information on how to pastor a church.  Every young pastor (and those of us who used to be young!) should regularly read and study these short letters.  Every seminary student should pour over Paul’s letters to his young colleagues.  But these letters are not just for the professional minister; anybody who loves the Church of Jesus Christ should know what Paul taught concerning the purpose of the Church and the responsibilities of those called to shepherd the hearts of a congregation.

In short, according to Paul’s theology, the main purposes of the Pastor of a church are to defend and teach sound doctrine and to maintain sound discipline within his church.   Specifically, in regards to Timothy, we read this in 1 Timothy 1:3—

As I urged you when I went into Macedonia, stay there in Ephesus so that you may command certain men not to teach false doctrines any longer.

Throughout 1 Timothy, Paul deals with other problems a Pastor may encounter and gives Timothy the benefit of his experience in offering priceless advice to the young Pastor.

2 Timothy is a different kind of letter all together, for it is intensely personal.  Paul knew his days were numbered and that his execution loomed just ahead.  His friends had either deserted him or had gone on in their work for the Lord; he was lonely and he was cold.   Nobody can read 2 Timothy without a tear in their eye as they read verses like these—

9Do your best to come to me quickly, 10for Demas, because he loved this world, has deserted me and has gone to Thessalonica. Crescens has gone to Galatia, and Titus to Dalmatia. 11Only Luke is with me. Get Mark and bring him with you, because he is helpful to me in my ministry. 12I sent Tychicus to Ephesus. 13When you come, bring the cloak that I left with Carpus at Troas, and my scrolls, especially the parchments.  (2 Timothy 9—13)

Here was Paul, once a fiery preacher of the Gospel, asking for his favorite cloak.   No doubt he was cold.  Perhaps that coat had been a gift from one of the churches he started.  Maybe he didn’t want to be publicly executed wearing the old, tattered clothes he had with him.  And he wanted his scrolls.  What do you suppose those scrolls contained?  Like any preacher, Paul probably loved scrolls, or books.  In his last days, he wanted is books nearby.  Maybe they were things he had written, things other scholars of the early church had written, or maybe some of the scrolls belonged to Luke, containing research he would later incorporate in his gospel and his historical record of the founding of the Church.  Maybe Paul just wanted to pass along those treasured books to the people who meant the most to him at this time in his life; Timothy and Mark.

The Salutation,1 Timothy 1:1—2

1Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the command of God our Savior and of Christ Jesus our hope,  2To Timothy my true son in the faith: Grace, mercy and peace from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord.

The first few verses of every Greek letter written during the first century began much like Paul began his first letter to Timothy.  The sender identifies himself—Paul—and mentions those to whom the letter is addressed—Timothy.  Even though this particular letter was a written exchange between two very close and dear friends, Paul maintained a formal and dignified tone.  John Wesley once remarked,

Familiarity is to be set aside where the things of God are concerned.

Paul’s authority, verse 1

In all but four of his letters (Philippians, 1 and 2 Thessalonians, Philemon), Paul refers to himself as an “apostle.”   Timothy was close to Paul, close enough for Paul to refer to him as his own “son,” yet Timothy needed to know this letter was not merely a communication from one friend to another, filled with timely, fatherly advice.  This letter floats above the purely human level; for even though Paul was a friend, he was first and foremost an apostle of Jesus Christ.

The word “apostle” comes from the Greek apostolos, which means literally, “one sent on a mission.”   This was the title Jesus gave to His original twelve disciples (Luke 6:13).  Matthias assumed the title of “apostle” after the death of Judas Iscariot (Acts 1:23—26), and the first two missionaries, Paul and Barnabas, were also called “apostles.”   While the Apostle Paul was never considered to be one of “the Twelve,” he did consider his apostleship as authoritative as theirs for the risen Christ had appeared to him, called him, and commissioned him into service.  Paul was endowed in special measure with the Holy Spirit and both signs and wonders accompanied his work.

The word carries with it great weight and significance, for an “apostle” in the deepest, fullest sense was an apostle for life, wherever he went.  He was literally clothed with the authority of the One who sent him, and that authority covered both doctrine and practice.  Furthermore, Paul was not an apostle by choice; he was marked out and called by “the command of God.”    What a marvelous way to view the call of God.  Here was Paul, raised and groomed to become a Rabbi in the strictest sense, suddenly thrown for a loop, his life turned upside down and almost without warning the reason for his life completely changed.  The presence of Jesus Christ in one’s life does that; He changes everything; He sets the course of your life and gives you a new purpose and power to fulfill that purpose.  In fact, there was nothing more important in Paul’s life than fulfilling his calling, as seen in what he wrote to the Corinthians—

Woe is unto me, if I preach not the gospel!”  (1 Corinthians 9:16, KJV)

Paul refers to God as “our Savior.”  That is an unusual way to refer to God.  We would expect Paul to write something like, “Jesus Christ, our Savior.”  Why refer to God in such a manner?   It is seen only in the Pastorals, nowhere else in the New Testament is God described as “our Savior.”   We cannot possibly know what was in Paul’s mind when he used the phrase “God our Savior,” but certainly it is the work of God that saves us!  God is the Prime Mover, calling all sinners to Himself.  But perhaps Paul is demonstrating the obvious and dynamic partnership of the three Persons in the Trinity in the work of man’s redemption; the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, all at work in perfect harmony and unity in saving human beings.

Paul goes on to describe Jesus Christ as “our hope.”  Elsewhere in Scripture, Jesus is referred to as “our peace” and “our life.”  But here He is presented as “our hope.”  Jesus Christ is the ground and the object of our confidence in both our future salvation and present salvation.  We will be saved from an eternity of separation from God and glory, and we are being saved from a life of purposelessness because He gives our lives purpose and meaning.

Taken together, “God our savior and Christ our hope” beautifully point back to a wonderful redeeming work and look forward to the fulfillment of many glorious promises.

So then, the authority with which Paul wrote this letter came from a Source greater than himself.

Timothy, the young preacher, verse 2

The letter is addressed to a man named “Timothy.”  The first mention of this person is in Acts 16:1, an account of Paul’s second visit to Derbe and Lystra during his second missionary journey.  Timothy was the son of a Greek father and a Jewish mother.  In all likelihood, Timothy’s mother, Eunice, and his grandmother, Lois, found Christ as Savior during Paul’s first visit to the area.  It was during this first visit that the Apostle was the victim of terrible persecution, and he was cared for by Lois.  It is not unreasonable to think that while he was recuperating in the home of Lois that a very young Timothy came to know Paul and Paul introduced the young man to Jesus Christ.

We know that Paul thought very highly of Timothy.  Consider how he referred to him elsewhere—

My son, whom I love, who is faithful in the Lord. (1 Corinthians 4:17)

Timothy has proved himself, because as a son with his father he has served with me in the work of the gospel. (Philippians 2:22)

Timothy must have been a remarkable man.  It is unfortunate we don’t know more about him, but what we do know is impressive.  He was converted some time around 47 AD and had matured so well as a Christian that barely two years passed when he was being trained by Paul as his apprentice.  He eventually became one of Paul’s most trusted associates in the work of the Lord.

I have no one else like him, who takes a genuine interest in your welfare.  (Philippians 2:20)

Timothy serves as a powerful example and challenge to every young Christian to follow in their relationship with Christ and their life of devotion and commitment.  The name, “Timothy” is actually made up to two Greek words which describe the man’s character perfectly:  his name means, “that which is dear to God.”  And he who was dear to God was also extremely dear to God’s servant, Paul.

Finally, Paul adds the traditional greeting.  In all ten of his other letters, Paul uses his standard two-fold greeting:  “grace and peace.”  Here, though, as in 2 Timothy, he adds the word “mercy.”  Why did Paul change his usual greeting when he wrote to Timothy?  John Wesley’s comments are helpful,

St. Paul adds “mercy,” the most tender grace towards those who stand in need of it.

Certainly Timothy’s health was not the greatest (5:23) and so he was definitely in need of special mercy from God.  But even more than that, Timothy was engaged in the greatest work a human being can be involved in:  caring for God’s people.  Anybody doing that needs mercy from the Lord.  Those who open themselves up to be used of the Lord in such a manner encounter difficulties and situations where God’s mercy and help are the only solutions.

“Grace” is one of Paul’s favorite words; he used it almost a hundred times in his letters.  It comes from a Greek word that means, among other things, “gracefulness” and “graciousness.”  As Paul used it though, it always referred to “God’s favor,” which He freely bestows on all who believe in Him and love Him.

“Peace” is something every human wants but can never seem to find.  We spend large amounts of money looking for it, we go to war to preserve it, we take drugs to induce it, and we always seem to just miss it.  In a world filled with war, uncertainty, and hate, this word is like a beacon.  In Christ, we can all have peace of mind and peace of heart.

It is so sad that the one thing lacking in a person’s life is the one thing they want the most and but they can never possess apart from a living relationship with Jesus Christ.  When grace and mercy are present in a person’s life, peace naturally follows.   Without the presence of Jesus Christ, a person has no grace and no mercy, and therefore no peace.   That which was destroyed by sin is restored, made whole, and found only in God’s grace.  When a person experiences this restoration and wholeness, only then can they know true and lasting peace.

In the midst of a tumultuous ministry during tumultuous times, tangible peace belonged Timothy.  I hope you have this peace, as well.  If you don’t, it can be yours for the asking.  All you need is a relationship with Jesus Christ.   If you know Jesus but don’t have this peace, reach out to Him in faith, ask Him for more grace and mercy, and devote yourself to a deeper walk with Him.

(c)  2010 WitzEnd

The Solid Foundation

An Analysis of Titus 2:11-15

11-14God’s readiness to give and forgive is now public. Salvation’s available for everyone! We’re being shown how to turn our backs on a godless, indulgent life, and how to take on a God-filled, God-honoring life. This new life is starting right now, and is whetting our appetites for the glorious day when our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ, appears. He offered himself as a sacrifice to free us from a dark, rebellious life into this good, pure life, making us a people he can be proud of, energetic in goodness.

15Tell them all this. Build up their courage, and discipline them if they get out of line. You’re in charge. Don’t let anyone put you down. (The Message)

11For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men. 12It teaches us to say “No” to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age, 13while we wait for the blessed hope—the glorious appearing of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ, 14who gave himself for us to redeem us from all wickedness and to purify for himself a people that are his very own, eager to do what is good.

15These, then, are the things you should teach. Encourage and rebuke with all authority. Do not let anyone despise you. (NIV)

In Deuteronomy 31:30-32:43, we read a hymn of Moses that challenges us to face the struggle of not turning our backs on God. Time and time again, the Israelites turned from God to serve idols. But before we start thinking how much better we are than they, we need to face the reality that we too can often struggle in our relationship with Christ.

As we study this chunk of verses from the pastoral epistle to Titus from Paul, I am reminded of the powerful words written by Edward Mote. You may not know who he was. He was born in 1797 in London, England and spent his early years as a cabinet maker. A fine Christian man, a major influence in his life was a preacher, John Hyatt. Mote would eventually become a baptist minister and serve for over 26 years at a large church in Sussex. So loved by his congregation, that they offered him title to the church building. He declined, saying:

I do not want the chapel, I only want the pulpit; and when I cease to preach Christ, then turn me out of that.

He would pen these words that are still sung in church today:

When He shall come with trumpet sound,
Oh, may I then in Him be found;
Dressed in His righteousness alone,
Faultless to stand before the throne.

On Christ, the solid Rock, I stand;
All other ground is sinking sand,
All other ground is sinking sand.

1. Some background information

Paul addressed this letter to “Titus, my true son in our common faith” (1:4). This shows a that there existed a very close and affectionate relationship between Paul, the elder statesman of the ministry, and the young pastor, Titus.

Titus is just short of a man of mystery. Considering how close he was to the great apostle, there is no mention of him in Acts, and aside from this letter addressed to him, his name is mentioned in only three Pauline epistles, 2 Corinthians, Galatians, and 2 Timothy.

These few and fleeting references to Titus show him to be trustworthy, efficient, and a valued co-worker. He apparently had a dynamic personality, was energetic in his work, resourceful and tactful in dealing with people.

Paul wrote this letter to Titus to encourage and strengthen the young preacher in his work on the island of Crete. Circumstances were difficult on Crete and Paul knew Titus would face stiff opposition to the Gospel there. The prevailing moral conditions were low and the Christians there seemed to be given to spiritual laziness and indifference to the sin around them. They seemed to feel like the grace of salvation had everything to do with their spiritual lives but was unrelated to their daily conduct. Titus was urged by Paul to insist on the need for sound doctrine and a high level of moral and social conduct by Christians. In other words, Christian conduct must be grounded in the fundamental truths of the Word of God.

2. The Foundation for Godly Living

The word “for” in verse 11(NIV) is small but significant because it shows that Paul was more than just a pastor but a masterful theologian. By using this one, three-letter word, Paul links all moral and ethical conduct to Christian doctrine and the teachings of Scripture.

(a) God’s grace, verses 11,12

Manifested. God’s great plan of salvation and the redemption of man is based on the manifestation of His grace. Only God’s free grace can transform a sinful human being and deliver them from the guilt of those sins. The remarkable phrase “has appeared” in an emphatic position at the beginning of this sentence, showing that this grace is a historical reality. How was God’s grace manifested to man? Christ’s entire earthly life: His birth, His life, His death, and His resurrection all resulted in an epiphany of God’s grace to man. In fact, that’s the word used in the Greek, epephane, which conveys the image of a blinding light appearing suddenly in the midst of a black void. What an apt description of God’s grace, breaking through the blackness of immorality and the spiritual darkness that engulfs all people.

On the subject of God’s grace, Hendriksen and Kistemaker make the following observation:

God’s grace is His active favor bestowing the greatest gift upon those who have deserved the greatest punishment.

And of course, that “greatest gift” is the forgiveness of sins and the purging of guilt from our souls. We who stand condemned before the Judge of the Universe are set free because of God’s grace manifested in Christ Jesus!

Trains. God’s grace was manifested to sinful man in the Person of Jesus Christ, and God’s grace is also active in man’s life as it trains him in the life of faith. In the Greek, the word translated “teaching” (NIV) and “has shown” (The Message) is the verb form of the noun pedagogue. A pedagogue in Bible times was the “school master” who taught young boys about life. In the same way, grace gently leads and guides believers. Grace never confuses believers. Grace does not force its views upon people. On the contrary, like the pedagogue of old, God’s grace works quietly in the background by teaching (Acts 7:22;22:3), chastening (1Tim. 1:20; 1 Cor. 11:32, etc.), counseling, comforting, encouraging, admonishing, guiding, convicting, rewarding, and restraining.

Negatively, God’s grace encourages us to renounce or reject all ungodliness (Rom. 1:18-32). When grace is allowed to take over a person’s life, that person repudiates ungodliness. It’s a daily action and definite decision a person makes. No one sleep walks into heaven.

Positively, God’s grace teaches us how to live in this present age. The lives of all believers need to be consistently, mindful of three directions:

Inward. “Self controlled.” This means making the proper use of our natural desires and drives which are not sinful in and of themselves and mastering those that lead to sin.

Outward. “Fairness” or “living righteously.” This means living right, treating others justly and honestly and living with honor and integrity.

Upward. This means being fully “devoted” to God, giving Him all the reverence and respect that He is due.

Such a life is possible even in this present age, and such a life is our duty as believers.

(b) Christ’s Return, verse 13

God’s grace trains us so that we may live holy and consecrated lives while we are waiting the “blessed hope,” the personal return of Christ. The verb “wait for” describes an eager expectancy and is written in the present tense, signifying that this “eager expectancy” of Christ’s return is to be an attitude that should mark the believer’s life. This attitude should give us strength and motivation to live right.

The phrase “the glorious appearing” is a little more complicated than it appears at first reading. The NIV’s use of the dash suggests that “the glorious appearing” is a definition of “the blessed hope.” Yet in the Greek the phrase looks like this: “the blessed hope and appearing of the glory,” all under one article. This suggests that the one event, the second coming, is seen from two aspects. For believers, the second coming truly is the blessed hope and the one event that we are all waiting for. But for Christ, His second coming will vindicate His character as the Lord of glory.

(c) Grace: The Purifier, verse 14

Moving from the eschatological future, Paul comes back to the work of Christ in human history: His redemptive work. The One who will come back in glory, is the One who gave Himself to redeem us. Jesus Christ gave nothing less than Himself, and this for us, for our interest and in our stead. Paul mentions this at this juncture because he wants his readers to reflect on this truth. When we realize what Christ did, it should result in a life lived to honor Him.

Christ’s giving Himself for us was the greatest of all gifts He could give. But because of our sinfulness, His work produced a dual result:

Negatively, He gave Himself to redeem us; to ransom us from an evil power. That ransom-price was His own blood (1 Peter 1:18, 19) and that evil power was lawlessness, that disobedient streak inside each of us.

Positively, He gave Himself so that He may purify us (through His blood and Spirit, Eph. 5:26; Heb. 9:14) so that we may become fit to be His people.

3. Summary, verse 15

With verse 15, Paul gives a fitting conclusion to this chapter. Titus must never grow slack in his duty. Indeed, Titus must never stop but continually present the practical instructions of this chapter to the people, ever mindful of their proper doctrinal setting. The Greek suggests that Titus’ central duty as pastor was to do three things, revolving around the verb “teach.”

He must continue to teach the people, encouraging them to a worthy life based on those teachings from the Word of God; He must rebuke, if necessary, any person who is lazy in their Christian life; He must do these things with authority (“all authority”). For Titus, and all ministers, that authority descends, not from their office in the church, but from the nature of the Message itself. No messenger is ever to be raised above the Message he delivers; the authority is the Message itself.

So, in these few verses, we see the solid foundation for living a godly life rests in a knowledge of the Word of God and putting that knowledge into work. Believers are enabled to do this by the grace of God. The grace of God is an amazing thing to contemplate. God’s grace is active in three dimensions:

Past: “The grace of God appeared,” verse 11;
Present: The grace of God “teaches” us, verse 12;
Future: The grace of God will be fulfilled in Christ’s “glorious appearing.”

When believers realize the power of grace, we will have the confidence to live a godly life and this is the message that need to be taught.

Structure For Success, Part Two

A Study of 2 Timothy 2:14-26

Keep reminding them of these things. Warn them before God against quarreling about words; it is of no value, and only ruins those who listen. Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a workman who does not need to be ashamed and who correctly handles the word of truth. Avoid godless chatter, because those who indulge in it will become more and more ungodly. Their teaching will spread like gangrene. Among them are Hymenaeus and Philetus, who have wandered away from the truth. They say that the resurrection has already taken place, and they destroy the faith of some. Nevertheless, God’s solid foundation stands firm, sealed with this inscription: “The Lord knows those who are his,” and, “Everyone who confesses the name of the Lord must turn away from wickedness.”

In a large house there are articles not only of gold and silver, but also of wood and clay; some are for noble purposes and some for ignoble. If a man cleanses himself from the latter, he will be an instrument for noble purposes, made holy, useful to the Master and prepared to do any good work.

Flee the evil desires of youth, and pursue righteousness, faith, love and peace, along with those who call on the Lord out of a pure heart. Don’t have anything to do with foolish and stupid arguments, because you know they produce quarrels. And the Lord’s servant must not quarrel; instead, he must be kind to everyone, able to teach, not resentful. Those who oppose him he must gently instruct, in the hope that God will grant them repentance leading them to a knowledge of the truth, and that they will come to their senses and escape from the trap of the devil, who has taken them captive to do his will.

The recent General Assembly closed this past week with the usual amount of controversy. Rev. Cindy Rigby preached a sermon on the theme of this year’s Assembly, “do justice, love mercy and walk humbly with your God.” As if to emphasize every problem the PC(USA) has, Rev. Rigby made this astonishing comment, which is baffling to say the least.

“God isn’t very specific about what it is that we should do”

What a curious statement for a minister of the Word to make. Perhaps her Bible doesn’t have the Great Commission in it. Or the book of Acts. Or this group of verses which is just a small part of Paul’s theology of Ecclesiology.

Far from God “not being very specific about what…we should do,” the truth is, God was very specific about what both individual believers should do and the Body of Christ should do as they seek to live lives that glorify God. In doing so, success is guaranteed. As we are obedient to God’s will for our lives and for our church, we will move into the mainstream of His will and experience success like we could never have imagined.

1. First piece of advice: seek the Lord’s approval and know His Word, verses 14, 15

As Paul gives guidelines to the young preacher Timothy, his first bit of advice and instruction involves advice for Timothy the preacher to pass along to “reliable men” and to the people under his charge. Paul challenges Timothy to be “an approved workman” who is to “keep on reminding” believers of all the things Paul dealt with in the previous verses.

  • Don’t quarrel over words. In other words, God’s people are to stick to the essentials and defend them. Arguing over mere words is a waste of time; it is of no value. How bad is fighting over empty words or philosophies? Paul says it “ruins” people. That’s a serious consequence: the Greek word for “ruin” is katastrophe, from which we get our word catastrophe.
  • Know the Word. Rather than wasting time endlessly debating useless words, believers should put forth an effort to know the Word of God. Paul says to Timothy to “do your best,” which the Greek word spoudason, suggests that a person “make haste” and should be “zealous.”

There is a parallel verse in 1 Timothy 6:3-5 which is helpful understanding such “word quibbling”:

If anyone teaches false doctrines and does not agree to the sound instruction of our Lord Jesus Christ and to godly teaching, he is conceited and understands nothing. He has an unhealthy interest in controversies and quarrels about words that result in envy, strife, malicious talk, evil suspicions and constant friction between men of corrupt mind, who have been robbed of the truth and who think that godliness is a means to financial gain.

Far from getting sidetracked into endless arguments, Timothy must give a powerful personal example to leaders within the church and without. Hendriksen and Kistemaker make this astute observation:

Timothy must exert every effort so to conduct himself that even now before the bar of God’s judgment he stands approved.

Notice that Timothy will stand approved before God if he reaches two conditions:

a workman who has nothing to be ashamed of,
rightly dividing the word of truth

To “rightly divide with word of truth” is a very interesting phrase in the Greek. The word is orthotomounata and is found only here in the whole New Testament. It really means “holding a straight course.” Elsewhere in ancient secular writings, the word has been used to describe “a plowman who drives a straight furrow.” The meaning here, then, becomes very clear, especially in the Dutch Bible, where the phrase looks like this:

He who cuts the Word of God straight

Of course, this means handling the Bible in a proper, straightforward manner. This is so much more preferable to the useless words we should all avoid.

2. Second piece of advice: steer clear of false teaching, verses 16-18

The proper handling of God’s Word means that we must reject whatever teaching is in opposition to it. And so Paul continues his admonition against godless “chatter.” Lock paraphrases the phrase like this:

But to all these irreligious and frivolous hair-splittings give a wide birth.

Believers are to avoid getting caught up in “profane empty chatter.” It seems like Paul is overstating his case, but verse 17 is all-important:

Their teaching will spread like gangrene.

Getting caught up in discussions and debates that are best avoided will lead one deeper and deeper into more serious heresies. It all starts with seemingly unimportant discussions over seemingly trivial matters. But all the devil needs is a foothold.

Paul lists a couple of false teachers by name, and without going into detail, their false teaching involved the notion that the resurrection had already happened. Of course, it’s a silly teaching to those of us grounded in our faith, but to those with a weaker faith, their false teaching caused them to doubt their faith. What’s worse is that these two false teachers professed to be Christians! And they claim to know more than they really do. But, as if to give credence to the phrase “little knowledge is a dangerous thing,” we read this:

They want to be teachers of the law, but they do not know what they are talking about or what they so confidently affirm. (1 Tim. 1:7)

The question that comes to mind is, How can people believe such blatantly false teaching? Christians want to believe the best in people, and these false teachers were subverting the faith of some by their clever words. Ralph Earl suggests this:

They were evidently explaining the resurrection in a spiritual sense, equating it with regeneration, on the new birth. 1 Corinthians 15 is Paul’s extended answer to this false teaching, which was propagated by some at Corinth.

It’s easy to see how the truth can be manipulated by some to the detriment of others. Little wonder Paul warned Timothy to stay clear of all useless chatter! If it infects the hearer, it can spread through the body of their faith, like gangrene or cancer.

3. Third piece of advice: a word of encouragement, verse 19

Despite the seriousness of false teaching and the terrible consequences of dabbling in it, nothing can destroy the true Church of Jesus Christ. In spite of the subversion, the “solid foundation of God stands firm.” What does Paul mean by “solid foundation?” Given the context, Paul probably has in mind the solid foundation of God’s Word and the doctrines it contains. No false teacher is strong enough in himself to tear down what God has built up. Jesus Himself declared that not even the “gates of Hell” can quash the Church.

4. Fourth piece of advice: be kind and don’t argue, verses 22-26

Timothy, despite his youth, must be mature and avoid the pitfalls of youth. Even though he was probably in his early 30’s Timothy must continue to flee youthful lusts. The verb is in the present tense, meaning it must be continuous action. But fleeing from sin isn’t enough. Timothy must “flee to” something positive. Paul lists four things worth pursuing: righteousness, faith, love and peace. When one is busy striving for those things, avoiding what should be avoided will be easy.

Verse 23 is a powerful verse. Timothy is told to have nothing to do with “foolish and stupid arguments.” “Foolish” refers to the nerves, being dull or sluggish, and to the mind, being slow. “Stupid” means “uninstructed” or “ignorant.” “Arguments” is from a word that refers to “questions” or “debates.” Of these things, Paul advises Timothy simply to refuse involvement with. Again, Earl’s insight is priceless:

Such questions will be brought before you: refuse to even discuss them. Sometimes the wise pastor has to do this. Why? Because “they produce quarrels” and tend to divide the church and so destroy it.

But what do you do with a troublesome person who wants to argue? While this is addressed to Timothy as a pastor, this is good advice for all strong believers. Every believer must NOT quarrel with such a troublesome person, but rather he must be “kind” to him. The word also means “gentle.” And, with God’s grace, the believer needs to be willing to be patient with and instruct the erring person.

Conclusion

This is the “structure for success” as Paul outlines for the individual believer. If the believer could follow Paul’s teachings, they would experience success in their daily Christian walk and witness. But, as a final note. Verses 25 and 26 are worth considering as a summation for being obedient to the Word:

Those who oppose him he must gently instruct, in the hope that God will grant them repentance leading them to a knowledge of the truth, and that they will come to their senses and escape from the trap of the devil, who has taken them captive to do his will.

Even a troublemaker, while his empty words need to avoided, he himself should be approached and “gently instructed.” This really means that the troublemaker needs to be taught “in meekness” by those who have the knowledge. The reason for this is not so Timothy or the pastor can be proven right, but so that the person in the wrong may find correction and that they may “return to soberness” (that’s the thought of the Greek behind “come to their senses”). And it is knowledge that will change the person’s heart. Nobody needs to be “given up on” until the Lord indicates it’s time to do so.

What an awesome responsibility the mature believer has. He must avoid useless arguments, immerse himself in the Word, and gently confront the argumentative person and try to persuade them with knowledge of the Word. This is the structure for success.

Structure For Success: The Body of Christ

A Study of Acts 6:1-10

In those days when the number of disciples was increasing, the Grecian Jews among them complained against the Hebraic Jews because their widows were being overlooked in the daily distribution of food. So the Twelve gathered all the disciples together and said, “It would not be right for us to neglect the ministry of the word of God in order to wait on tables. Brothers, choose seven men from among you who are known to be full of the Spirit and wisdom. We will turn this responsibility over to them 4and will give our attention to prayer and the ministry of the word.”

This proposal pleased the whole group. They chose Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit; also Philip, Procorus, Nicanor, Timon, Parmenas, and Nicolas from Antioch, a convert to Judaism. They presented these men to the apostles, who prayed and laid their hands on them.

So the word of God spread. The number of disciples in Jerusalem increased rapidly, and a large number of priests became obedient to the faith.

Now Stephen, a man full of God’s grace and power, did great wonders and miraculous signs among the people. Opposition arose, however, from members of the Synagogue of the Freedmen (as it was called)—Jews of Cyrene and Alexandria as well as the provinces of Cilicia and Asia. These men began to argue with Stephen, but they could not stand up against his wisdom or the Spirit by whom he spoke.

Chapter six of Acts opens with a seemingly innocuous verse, but this verse has led centuries of speculation surrounding what Luke meant when he wrote “Grecian Jews” and “Hebraic Jews.” The purpose of this study is not settle this argument, but rather to examine the amazing success of the early church in light of the structure God ordained for it. It was not accident that the church grew so fast in those early years, and we will see that obedience to God’s instructions and employing His godly wisdom resulted in that undeniable success.

1. The Problem, verse 1

In those days when the number of disciples was increasing, the Grecian Jews among them complained against the Hebraic Jews because their widows were being overlooked in the daily distribution of food.

Luke is vague as he begins this chapter. We aren’t sure exactly when “In those days” refers to, but it seems likely that he has in mind the days immediately following the trial of the apostles and their concerted effort to preach and teach the Gospel of Jesus Christ in Jerusalem. A result of this hard work and concentrated effort was that the Christian church in that city grew at an astonishing rate. Because Luke doesn’t give us exact figures, we can only surmise what the membership of the Jerusalem church was by now. Kistemaker estimates that “the church doubled in size from the last figure Luke provided: five thousand men.”

Notice that the new converts to Christianity were called “disciples” by now. It is used here for the first time in Acts and means literally “learners.” Early on in the development of the Church, it was used only of the Twelve, but as the Church grew and grew, the word came to describe all believers in general. F.F. Bruce notes:

“Disciples” is perhaps the most characteristic name of the Christians in Acts.

In our modern minds we think of “discples” as “followers,” but they were not merely followers of Christ or followers of the Twelve. They were students; they were ones who learned the teachings of Christ through the words of the Apostles. To be a disciple was not merely signing the Jerusalem church register, but being an active learner of the ways of Christ.

That should describe church members today, but all too often it does not. Our churches seem to be populated not only by lazy preachers behind the pulpit, but but lazy pupils in the pews as well.
The number of the disciples was growing at a continual rate, as suggested by the Greek. It is a “golden rule” of Ecclesiology that the more members a church has, the more potential problems is has. This certainly was the case in Jerusalem at this time. The church grew, and the “complaining” started. The Greek word is often translated as “murmuring” and suggests the buzzing sounds bees make.

The complaining came from “Hellenists,” or Greek-speaking Jews. We know from the early chapters of Acts that many Jews came to Jerusalem from all over the world at Pentecost to worship. Apparently many of these devout Jews were elderly and wanted to live out the remainder of their lives in the holy city. Many, also, had accepted Christ’s Gospel and had become believers. Because they spoke Greek, they worshiped in their own synagogue and read from their own Scriptures, the Septuagint, the Greek Old Testament.

On the other hand, there were the Hebraic Jews, or Jews that spoke Aramaic. They worshiped in their own synagogues and read from the Hebrew Scriptures.

And the problem involved the daily distribution of food for widows, primarily food for the Hellenistic Jewish widows. Apparently with the increasing number of believers came an increasing number of Hellenistic widows dependent on relief from the Church. The Aramaic-speaking Jews were the majority in Jerusalem, but the widows in the minority group felt overlooked. Because of their newfound faith in Christ, they could no longer ask for or expect help from their Synagogues.

The first problem in the Church, sadly, is a common problem to this day. Many commentators note the prejudice that existed between these two groups, but the problem was a much deeper one and it has to do a prevailing attitude of envy. One person sees what another has and feels they are entitled to it. It is entirely probable that the Greek-speaking Jewish widows were unintentionally neglected, but their responsibility was not to complain, but to approach the leaders of the Church with their concern.

2. The Simple Solution, verses 2-3

So the Twelve gathered all the disciples together and said, “It would not be right for us to neglect the ministry of the word of God in order to wait on tables. Brothers, choose seven men from among you who are known to be full of the Spirit and wisdom. We will turn this responsibility over to them.

What is particularly noteworthy is that the moment the Apostles were made aware of the problem, they gathered the believers together to propose a solution. They did not ignore the problem; they dealt with it straightway. Implicit in the Apostle’s swift action is the realization that spiritual and material needs are often intimately connected in Christian experience, and one affects the other.

At the meeting of all the believers, the Apostles presented a God-ordained solution and a simple lesson in pastoral theology: “It is not right for us to stop teaching the word of God to serve at tables.” In other words, the primary duty of the Apostles was to teach and preach the gospel of Jesus Christ. That is also the primary task of the pastor today. All other duties are secondary no matter how important they may be. Funerals, marriages, baptisms, committees , food banks, all these things are important, but they all take a backseat to the ministry of the Word of God to the people of God.

The solution was remarkably simple: qualified men in the church are able to perform certain duties, including the distribution of food to the Greek-speaking widows. Therefore, the Apostles proposed that seven men be appointed to this job.

Some observations about this solution.

  • Why seven? In the Bible, the number seven represents “fullness” or “completeness.”
  • While Luke does not refer to these men as “deacons,” the Apostles did ordain seven men to look after this particular need.
  • The qualified men had to meet two basic requirements: they had to have a good reputation and be full of the Holy Spirit and wisdom.

These are still the qualifications essential in Christian workers today. The seven candidates were to be chosen by the whole congregation. This was important so as to head off any complaints from any member of favoritism or preference for one person or group above another.

3. The Intentional Result, verse 4

[We] will give our attention to prayer and the ministry of the word.

The immediate result of this action was that the Apostles could devote themselves to the two most pressing needs of the Church, and the primary purposes for it’s very existence: prayer and the preaching the Word. F.F. Bruce offers an interesting take on this intentional result. Concerning prayer, Bruce wrote: “The regular worship of the church is what was meant.” In other words, whatever else the Church of Jesus Christ can be involved with, nothing takes precedence over the ministry of the Word of God.

4. Unintended Results, verses 5a, 7

This proposal pleased the whole group. So the word of God spread. The number of disciples in Jerusalem increased rapidly, and a large number of priests became obedient to the faith.

Because the Apostles’ decision and solution was ordained by God and they were simply following God’s will, all the people were in accord with them, and they chose, curiously enough, seven men, all with Greek names, in an obvious attempt to make an overture to the Hellenistic Jewish believers. Luke writes that the solution “pleased” the church in Jerusalem. The word suggests a basic harmony between leaders and members. Whenever there is obedience to God and His Word, there will be harmony within the Church. This is one minor unintentional result of the Apostle’s decision.

Strife and disunity follow when church leaders work in opposition to God’s will and God’s Word.

As a sidelight, the first one chosen and mentioned was Stephen. The fact that Luke places him at the head of the list is likely due to the fact that he would become the first Christian martyr. Appropriately, Stephen means “crown,” and he was the first to receive the martyr’s crown.

Verse seven gives us the major unintentional results of this godly decision: The word of God spread and the number of disciples increased rapidly.

First, the Word of God spread. This was a natural result when those who were best qualified to preach and teach it were now free to do so because they weren’t mired in the day-to-day management of church business.

In a bygone era, ministers used to put the initials V.D.M. after their name. This was not some kind of academic or professional degree, but was an abbreviation of the Latin phrase Verbi Domini Minister, which means “minister of the Word of the Lord.” In the strictest sense, a pastor is not a minister of a local congregation, even though the Session or board of a local church oversees his work and the local church pays his salary. A pastor is a minister of Christ’s Gospel, he is a servant of God’s Word, and as such he must devote fully to the task of proclaiming the Good News.

And second, the church grew even faster because the Word was promulgated. It is the Word causes the Church of Christ to grow. The Church may be engaged in many, many worthy and worthwhile activities, and it should be, but it is the Word of God, preached faithfully, respectfully, and honorably that the Lord honors.


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