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"Motives for Sacrificial Ministry--Part 2"
2 Timothy 2:10-14a
by
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be obtained
by calling 1-800-55-GRACE)
The ministry has not been easy. Timothy is young. He is
naturally timid. He has his own sins to deal with. He tends to
be a little bit weak in some areas of defending the faith against
some high powered philosophy. And so he's really struggling. It
would be a time in his life when he's looking for sympathy, a
time when he's crawling into a corner and expecting somebody to
come in the corner and soothe his brow and give him a cold drink
and pat him a little bit and endeavor to sort of raise his sense
of worth. It's a time in his life when he's licking his wounds.
There may be a little bit of a "poor me" mentality, even self
pity may have sort of overwhelmed him because of the difficulty.
And in that situation he is confronted by the Apostle Paul
who doesn't give him sympathy at all, but rather gives him
strength. He says, in effect, what you need, Timothy, is not
sympathy for the difficulty of your situation, what you need is
strength for the difficulty of your situation. And this is not
the first time such an infusion of strength into a waning servant
has taken place. In fact, as I was sitting back thinking about
that, I was reminded of an amazing and beautiful passage of
Scripture in Jeremiah which is a very good parallel. So let's
begin by looking at Jeremiah chapter 11.
To give you a little bit of background about Jeremiah,
Jeremiah was unquestionably the greatest religious and righteous
personality in Israel in his day. He was the supreme example of
godliness in his time. He did not have a happy life. He would
have been a very poor advertisement for the prosperity gospel.
His entire life was a life of sorrow and sadness and pain and
persecution. He was a very unique character. He was born a
priest but called to be a prophet. His sufferings were more poignant and painful and more
long-lasting than any other Old Testament prophet. His life
could be characterized, really, as one long martyrdom. And, in
fact, if God hadn't spared him and the text of Jeremiah says
this, he would have died again and again. Perhaps a thousand
times he would have died, so hated, despised and rejected was he
by the people to whom he spoke.
He ministered for about forty years. The whole forty years
in sorrow. The people were apostate. They wanted nothing to do
with his condemning confronting message which called them to
holiness and called them to repentance. They didn't want to hear
it. They didn't want to listen to it. They wanted to shut
Jeremiah up. At times he felt as if God had forsaken him. He
cursed the day that he was born because of the unending and
unmitigated sorrow that he bore. One of the kings who reigned
during his tenure as prophet, Jehoiakim, was so angry with what
he said that he took the scroll of Jeremiah's prophecy, cut it in
pieces and then burned it. Jeremiah became a fugitive from the
king's wrath. Jeremiah ultimately ended up imprisoned. He had
far more opposition cumulatively than any other Old Testament
prophet. He suffered greatly.
Part of it was due to the fact that his message was always a
message of unconditional commitment to God. He stressed nothing
but total abandonment to the service of Jehovah. He called for
complete surrender. And because of that ultimately tradition
says he was stoned to death. He faced persecution upon
persecution. Suffering, pain, he endured incredible trials, he
endured rejection, he was sorrowful all of the time so that he
became known and is still known as the weeping prophet. In his
prophecy he talks about how he could wish that his eyes were like
a fountain so they could pour out water in weeping for the
destruction of his people who were facing the judgment of God.
As we come to chapter 11 and the end of the chapter, one of
the many sorrows in the life of Jeremiah takes place. He was
originally from a town of Anathoth. And now we read in verse 21
that the men of the town he came from, his own friends, his own
familiar friends, those who were a part of his life were seeking
his life and they were saying, "Do not prophesy in the name of
the Lord that you might not die at our hand." In other words,
Jeremiah's own townspeople were saying if you don't stop this
condemning prophecy, we're going to take your life, we're going
to kill you.
And so, here is Jeremiah, righteous, godly, virtuous,
faithful in proclaiming the truth and never relieved from an
incessant life of trials and suffering and persecution. And now
when it comes to the point where even the people from his own
home town are after his life if he doesn't silence his message,
he's had about all that he can take and he cries out to the Lord
and his prayer is recorded in the first four verses of chapter
12. Listen to what he says. "Righteous art Thou, O Lord, that I
would plead my case with Thee."
Now he goes to the Lord recognizing that God does right and
says, "I want to plead my case to You, You're a righteous God."
"Indeed," he says, "I would discuss matters of justice with
Thee." I want to talk about what's fair, God. And the
underlying attitude is what's happening to me, frankly, isn't
fair. "Why has the way of the wicked prospered? Why are all
those who deal in treachery at ease?" Why are all the wicked
having it so good and I am so faithful and my life is so filled
with sorrow? It just doesn't fit. You're a just God. And so,
in a sense, he storms the gates of heaven with a holy
familiarity. He's not accusing God of anything, he's just
pleading with God. He's concerned that the wicked are prospering
and in contrast to that he tells God about his own heart, verse
3, "But You know me, O Lord, You see me and You examine my
heart's attitude toward You, You know the difference between what
I am and what they are. And how is it that they prosper and I,
in a sense, perish? You know my heart, You know I'm no hypocrite
while they deal in treachery...as he said in verse 1 and in verse
2...You planted them, they took root, they grow, they've even
produced fruit. You are near to their lips but far from their
minds." I'm true and they're false, I'm genuine and they're
hypocritical, but I'm suffering and they're prospering. He's
really under the pain of his persecution. He's enduring with
great difficulty. And what he wants out of God is some sympathy.
"The wicked," verse 4 says, "are even mocking God."
Jeremiah says, "How long is the land to mourn and the vegetation
of the countryside to wither for the wickedness of those who
dwell in it? Animals and birds have been snatched away because
men have said, He will not see our latter ending." In other
words, they're mocking God...we can do anything we want, we can
devastate this land, we can act in any way we want, God will
never see the end of it. In other words, they're denying the
omniscience of God, that He knows everything. They're mocking
God.
And so, Jeremiah says, "Lord, how can You deal with these
wicked mocking hypocrites and allow them to prosper while I'm in
an incessant condition of suffering?" And frankly that's not a
question that has not since been asked by those who serve the
Lord God and endured the same kind of seeming incongruity. I
mean, I think there have been times in my life when I confess to
you that I've asked the same question. "Lord, why is it that I
always seem to be struggling through things and other people seem
to have so few struggles? Why is it that others are not
persecuted while we who preach the truth are accused of all kinds
of things that aren't true?" I mean, that's only a minor thing
compared to what Jeremiah endured. But any servant of God who
goes through the low point of suffering on a prolonged basis is
going to cry out to God in a prayer not unlike this..."Lord, how
is it that this fits in with Your justice?"
So, Jeremiah wants some sympathy. And he's kind of pleading
for it. He's impatient. He would like his suffering to end and
he would like things to be reversed. God's answer is very
interesting. God doesn't give him sympathy. In fact, just the
opposite. In effect God says to him. "You think you've suffered,
you ain't seen nothing yet." Just the opposite of what he wanted
to hear. Look at verse 5, he had just said You ought to
slaughter all these wicked people, at the end of verse 3, and You
ought to set them up for a day of carnage. But on the other
hand, look at verse 5, God says, "If you have run...and you ought
to circle verses 5 and 6, they're fascinating, put a mark by
them...if you have run with footmen and they have tired you out,
then how can you compete with horses?" What a statement.
You say, "What in the world is He saying to him?" Here is
this poor beleaguered battered and bruised prophet who crawls up
somewhere in a moment of silent meditation and cries out to God
and says, "I cannot take anymore of this. I have a pure heart.
I am living to Your glory. I'm trying to do it right. I'm
preaching the truth and I am literally being killed all the day
long," to borrow Pauline terminology. "On the other hand, the
unrighteous who hate You, who use Your name, it's near their lips
but who do not care about You at all, they're hypocritical and
they ought to be slaughtered like sacrificial animals in a day of
carnage are prospering all over the place. Lord, I'm getting a
little impatient, how about some sympathy?" And the Lord's
answer is...Hey, if you can't run with the footmen and not get
tired, what are you going to do when you've got to run with the
horses? In other words, Jeremiah, rather than being so consumed
by this particular effort, you better realize that the worst is
yet to come. You're only running with the footmen now.
I don't know how it would be, I've never tried to race a
horse. I've raced a lot of human beings in my life, but I've
never tried to race a horse. But I remember watching on
television one time a man who thought he could race a horse and
win. That man was a fool. And that's essentially behind this
imagery here. Jeremiah, if you can't handle the difficulty of
running with the footmen, what are you going to do when I bring
out the horses and make you run against them? The idea is it's
going to get worse. And what Jeremiah needs is not sympathy,
what he needs is greater...what?...strength...greater strength.
And then He says to him also in verse 5, "If you fall down
in a land of peace, how will you do in the thicket of the
Jordan?" That's most fascinating. Down by the Jordan River in
ancient times before the denuding that we now have seen take
place throughout history that has basically skinned the land,
down at the Jordan River it was thick with growth. And it was
the place where the wild beasts occupied themselves and lived.
And what He is saying to Jeremiah is, "Look, if you cannot stand
up and hold your ground in a land of peace, what are you going to
do when you get caught in a jungle?" metaphorically. What in the
world are you going to do when you get in the thicket with the
wild beasts? You haven't seen anything yet. You're just
learning how to endure.
Boy, what a statement! But that's so instructive for us.
And he talks about brothers in the household and those who are
close to him dealing treacherously with him, crying against him.
In other words, the people closest to you reject you and hate
you. If you can't handle that, you'll never be able to handle
what's to come. Instead of sympathy he gets a call to strength.
And that is precisely what Paul is doing. Now let's go back to
2 Timothy.
Timothy is kind of folding up under the pressure and Paul is
saying to him, to borrow Jeremiah's concept, to "Hey, Timothy, if
you can't run with the footmen, what are you going to do when the
horses come? If you can't stand up in a land of peace before the
heat is really on, what are you going to do when you get caught
in the thicket with the wild beasts?" This is a call to strength
to a young man who is not unlike a Jeremiah, a spokesman for God
in a time of trouble.
Timothy is facing trials. He's facing persecution. And
he's whimpering like Jeremiah whimpered and he wants to be
pampered and he wants to be stroked and instead the Apostle Paul
calls for strength. He calls for courage. He calls for him not
to be ashamed. He calls for him to be properly committed, to be
a soldier and an athlete, and a hard-working farmer. He calls
for him to teach the Word of God no matter what happens. And
here in verses 8 to 13 he gives him the motives that underlie the
fulfilling of that call.
I was reading a sermon by Hugh Black who was one of the
great Scottish preachers of a century past. He was looking at
the church in this sermon and looking at its suffering. And he
wrote this, "Christ's church has survived through her power to
endure. She was willing to give up anything to hold her ground,
willing to pour out blood-like water in order to take root. The
mustard seed planted with tears and watered with blood stood the
hazard of every storm, gript tenaciously the soil, twining its
roots around the rocks, reared its head a little higher and
spread out its branches a little fuller. And when the tempest
came held on for very life and then never hastening, never
resting went on in the divine task of growing and at last became
the greatest of trees, giving shelter to the birds of the air in
its wide-spreading branches. So is the Kingdom of heaven," says
Black, "it is a true parable of the church. She conquered
violence not by violence but by virtue. She overcame force not
by force but by patience. Her sons were ready to die, to die
daily. It was given unto them not only to believe in Christ but
also to suffer for His sake, Philippians 1:29. They would not be
stamped out. When their persecutors thought they were scattered
like chaff, it turned out they were scattered like seed. The
omnipotent power of Rome was impotent before such resolution.
The battle not the barracks is the place to make soldiers. The
church met the Empire and broke it through the sheer power to
endure. She was willing to suffer and to suffer and to suffer
and afterward to conquer," end quote.
Scattered like chaff but it turned out to be seed. You're
here today because believers were willing to endure. And they
have endured and endured and endured and endured through all the
centuries. And they endure even today. I was reading yesterday
about the church in Romania. The president of Romania, Nicolai
Kosesque(?) who heads up the Communist government was being
discussed in this article and it said the Romanian communist
government violates virtually every area of human rights.
Religious believers, particularly evangelicals, are targets of
abuse. Churches have been bulldozed, Bibles have been
confiscated pulped and turned into toilet paper. Believers are
not permitted to evangelize and some groups are not permitted to
assemble. Religious activists have been imprisoned, beatened,
and tortured and still the church goes on because there are those
godly people who will endure anything. They can run with the
footmen and they can run with the horses. They can stand true in
the day of peace in the land of peace and they can survive in the
thicket of the Jordan. And it's on those kinds of people that
Christ has built His church. All the rest are sort of along to
benefit from the sacrifice of the few.
Jesus, of course, set the original example of that kind of
devotion. "Consider Him," the writer of Hebrews says in 12:3,
"who has endured such hostility by sinners against Himself so
that you may not grow weary and lose heart. You have not yet
resisted to the point of shedding blood in your striving against
sin. Consider Christ and what He endured without growing weary
before you let yourself grow weary in the battle." Thank God for
a courageous church. Thank God for those who are willing to
understand what it was to be a disciple, that being a disciple
as, Jesus said, meant leaving everything, facing persecution. In
Matthew chapter 10 verses 24, 25, that section there, he says,
"You don't expect the servant to be above his master and you
don't expect the teacher to be above...the student rather to be
above his teacher," and the implication is if the teacher and the
master are persecuted, so will the student be and so will the
servant be. Persecution is to be expected. You need to be ready
for that. You need to be willing for that. You need to not lose
heart. In that same tenth chapter he says, "Do not fear" three
times. Do not fear. Why? Because your God knows, your God
cares, your God oversees, your God will vindicate you in the end.
That's your calling.
The call then to endurance is part of the call to
discipleship. Jesus in the same passage says you may have to say
goodbye to father, mother, sister, brother. You may be set at
variance, after all I came not to bring peace but a sword, to cut
a family in half, animosity and persecution may come right out of
a family. You must make very personal sacrifices. They may even
involve taking up a cross, they surely will involve denying
yourself, losing your own life in order that you may find it.
All of that kind of teaching. You read of the heroes of the
faith in Hebrews chapter 11 who endured all kinds of conceivable
persecution and then he says, "Of whom the world was not worthy."
So that the life of the church has been built on those who were
able to endure.
Now the point of all of this is to call Timothy and us to
that endurance. And that has to come from deep within a person.
Something has to be motivating us more than our own well-being.
If you're looking for your own well-being, you're not going to
endure any persecution. More than your own comfort, if you're
looking for your own comfort you won't endure persecution. More
than your own prosperity, success, reputation, fame, or whatever.
If you are the issue then you will compromise whatever has to be
compromised to gain whatever you want for you. That's the way it
is. But those who are willing to give their life and to give
their whole energies toward the service of Christ and endure
whatever comes along, those people have a higher agenda. They're
motivated by something other than themselves. And that's what we
want to talk about this morning.
What motivates one to endure? What is to motivate Timothy?
Well let's remember what we said last week. The first thing that
Paul says must motivate you is the preeminence of the Lord, verse
8. "Remember Jesus Christ risen from the dead, descendant of
David according to my gospel." In other words, remember the Lord
of the gospel. Remember who you serve. Remember who you preach.
Remember for whom you live. I mean, if you are self-consumed
then you're going to be compromising, you're going to be avoiding
conflict, you're going to not want to get into confrontation, you
won't speak the truth, you'll hedge it so you don't offend
because it's you you're worried about. I mean, you're in the
office and you know you ought to speak a word for Christ, the
moment is perfect, it's the exact time to do it, or you're in
your family gathering and they're about to do something you know
is wrong, you should confront that lovingly in the name of
Christ. You know it's time for you to speak the gospel in a
given situation, you know you ought to tell your boss who is
about to do something that's illegal and unfair and you ought to
tell him that it's wrong and that God is dishonored by that. But
you back up. Why? Because you're concerned more about you than
you are the cause of Christ.
So what Paul is saying here to Timothy is, people who endure
without compromise are not self-preservationists. Daniel is a
classic illustration. He was willing to endure the lion's den
rather than to compromise his commitment of worship to the true
and living God. John Bunyan said, "I have loved my Lord and
wherever I have seen the print of His shoe in the earth, I have
covenanted to put my own also." I want to walk in the footsteps
of Jesus and he endured without compromise. So you remember who
you serve. The preeminent Lord has the preeminent cause. And if
you remember Jesus Christ, the risen living Christ, the Christ of
the gospel and that you serve Him, that is a high and
constraining motivation.
In the eleventh century there was a hymn penned most likely
by Bernard of Clairvaux who was somewhat mystic but nonetheless a
devoted follower of Jesus Christ and one who endured a tremendous
amount of suffering in his life. He wrote these lovely and
heart-searching words that are familiar to many of us, "Jesus,
the very thought of Thee with sweetness fills my breast, but
sweeter far Thy face to see and in Thy presence rest. No voice
can sing, no heart can frame, nor can the memory find a sweeter
sound than Thy blessed name, O Savior of mankind. O hope of
every contrite heart, O joy of all the meek, to those who ask how
kind Thou art, how good to those who seek. But what to those who
find, Ah this, nor tongue nor pen can show the love of Jesus what
it is none but His loved ones know." And then this, "Jesus, our
only joy be Thou, as Thou our prize wilt be, in Thee be all our
glory now, and through eternity." Now that's the idea, to live
for Christ, to be consumed with the sweetness of Christ.
We sung it this morning. "When morning gilds the skies, my
heart awaking cries, may Jesus Christ be praised." And if that's
really what your heart awaking in the morning cries, that
controls your life.
In 1943, December, eleven missionaries were martyred on the
Isle of Pines in the Philippines, martyred for the cause of
Christ. One of them was a Dr. Francis Rose. Sometime prior to
that martyrdom he had written these magnificent words to express
his commitment to Christ against persecution: "All human progress
up to God has stained the stairs of time with blood. For every
gain for Christendom is bought by someone's martyrdom. For us He
poured the crimson cup and bade us take and drink it up, Himself
He poured to set us free, help us, O Christ, to drink with Thee.
Ten thousand saints came thronging home from lion's den and
catacomb, the fire and sword and beast defied for Christ their
King they gladly died. With eye of faith we see today that
cross-led column wind its way up life's repeated Calvary, we
rise, O Christ, to follow Thee." It's a wonderful association to
belong to, frankly, those who live for the preeminence of Christ.
And that's what Timothy must understand. He must know that
he serves the Lord Christ who is most worthy and therefore whose
cause is the worthiest of all.
Secondly, last time we saw that motive comes not only in the
preeminence of the Lord but motive for suffering in our ministry
comes from the power of the Word, verse 9. At the end of verse 9
you remember after talking of his own imprisonment, he said, "But
the Word of God is not imprisoned, not bound." And so Paul says
I understand that I can move ahead and though they take me and
put me in jail, the Word of God will go forth. So there's no
need to feel like a preservationist. You don't have to guard
your life or protect your reputation or make sure nobody's ever
offended because you might lose your freedom. Listen, preach
boldly, Paul says, don't worry about what happens, they may put
you in jail, they may take your life but the Word of God is not
bound. That's so wonderful.
We can speak the truth. We can speak it boldly. We can
speak it forthrightly. We can say what ought to be said, what
has to be said for the glory of Christ and not fear any
repercussions no matter how antagonistic the society may be
because even if we're imprisoned the Word of God is not bound.
That brings us to our two final points for today. We are
motivated in sacrificial service to Christ because of His
preeminence, because of the power of His Word and thirdly, the
purpose of the work. Notice verse 10, so basic. And Paul is
rather explicit here, very direct. "For this reason, dia(?), on
account of this, I endure all things." Now here is his reason.
Why do you endure all this? Why do you allow yourself to go
through all of this? Well, I endure all of this for the sake of
those who are chosen. Who are they? Well that's the elect. I
endure, the word means to remain under suffering, all things
relates to hardship, sacrifice, persecution, chains, prison, all
that kind of stuff. I endure all of that continually. I
continually endure it all for the sake of those who are chosen,
the elect.
And again we are reminded, beloved, and we cannot escape it,
that God identifies people who have been chosen for salvation
from before the foundation of the world as the chosen ones, the
elect. Paul says the reason I'm willing to give my life is for
the sake of the elect. You say, "Well now wait a minute. Why do
you need to be giving your life in regard to the elect if they're
the elect? Won't God save them? Why don't you just back up and
say...Whoa, I don't need to get involved in this deal, these
people are elect, they're going to get saved anyway? I'm not
going to put my neck on the line." I mean, if all we had was a
one-sided, lop-sided doctrine of election, it would be an excuse
for all of us to do absolutely what? Nothing. We just say,
"Well, whoever is going to be saved, that's chosen by God,
Ephesians 1, you know, 4, 5, 6, that whole passage, chosen in Him
before the foundation of the world, predestined in love to be
adopted as sons, all done by the free choice of God, nothing of
ours. You know." We could say, "Well, since we're all elect,
and we're chosen by God, and He's done that before the world
began, and our names are written in the Lamb's Book of Life from
before the foundation of the world, as it says in Revelation a
couple of places, we sure don't need to get uptight about
evangelism. I mean, why am I going to be a martyr if they're
going to get saved anyway, right?"
That's pretty fair thinking, reasonably logical. And so he
adds this most important statement in verse 11...I'm sorry, in
verse 9, "For which I suffer hardship, even to imprisonment as a
criminal, the Word of God is not imprisoned for this reason I
endure all things for the sake of those who are chosen in order
that...that's a hina with a subjunctive which is a direct purpose
clause...in order that they also may obtain the salvation which
is in Christ Jesus and with it eternal glory."
Why do you do what you do, Paul? Because I want to reach
the elect. Why do you want to reach the elect? In order that
they may obtain what they've been elected to obtain. The point
is this, God has chosen them to be saved but God also gives us
this incredible privilege of being the human agency by which the
saving gospel is brought to their hearts. That's the issue.
So what compels Paul is not that he is responsible to save
people. God forbid. But that he has the high and holy privilege
to be the instrument by which God saves people.
Long ago, years ago, and I suppose this has been asked to me
a couple of times, but I remember one lady said to me one time
and she was somewhat uninitiated, we were talking about a certain
meeting and she said, "Well did you save anybody?" You know,
when someone says that to me, I just...that's a very...that's not
the way you put the question, but anyway that's the way she put
it. I've never saved anybody in my life. Nobody on the face of
the earth has ever come to Jesus Christ as a direct result of the
effectiveness of John MacArthur. Anybody who comes to Christ
comes to Christ because God in His incredible and marvelous and
gracious power draws them, right? Jesus said, "No man comes unto
Me except the Father draws him." And so no one has ever been
saved because of John MacArthur but John MacArthur has had the
wonderful privilege of being the agent God has used when He set
out to save someone. And that's the issue. It's the privilege.
We could even say for the sake of the privilege involved Paul is
willing to suffer. It's incredible.
Now people may be elect but the other side of it, they have
to obtain the salvation to which they are chosen. So there is an
obtaining here and they obtain it how? How do you obtain
salvation? "For by grace are you saved through faith..." that's
the act of believing in the Lord Jesus Christ and following Him.
And so you call people to obtain that salvation.
I tell you this, folks. I was saying this to someone
recently that if I believed for a moment that people were saved
by the effectiveness of my sermons, I would be in an insane
asylum because I couldn't live with the guilt of ineffective
sermons. If I believed that people were in the Kingdom of God
because of my cleverness or my power in preaching, I would be a
basket case because I would feel responsible for people being
damned because the week they came here I wasn't very good. I
mean, I wouldn't want to live with that. But I don't believe for
one moment that anybody will be in heaven or hell because of John
MacArthur. They will be in heaven because they are elect by God
in His sovereign grace and I have this tremendous privilege to be
the spokesman for the consummation of that elective purpose when
they obtain the salvation which has inherent in it eternal glory.
What a privilege...what a calling...what a lofty purpose for
your life. And so, instead of having to live with some kind of
frenzied mind, fearing that people are being damned because I'm
not good enough, I have the privilege of living a kind of joyous
life that says even though I'm utterly inadequate, God in His
infinite grace not only redeems people but uses me as a vessel to
do that. Boy, what a thought.
And that's what's in the heart of Paul here. He says, "I'll
endure anything for the sake of those that are chosen in order
that they also may come by faith to obtain that for which they
have been chosen, namely the salvation which is in Christ Jesus
and with it eternal glory." What a statement. And there is
salvation in no other name, right? Acts 4:12, "Neither is there
given any other name whereby you must be saved." None other name
under heaven and the name Jesus Christ. Salvation here comes
exclusively in Christ Jesus. No one will ever enter the Kingdom
of God, the presence of God, eternal life or heaven apart from
the salvation provided in Christ Jesus.
Just think about what your life is for. And then look at
your life very honestly. What do you do with your life? What do
you see as your highest goal? Move up the corporate ladder? Get
a better job? Make more money? Buy your camper? Go on a longer
vacation? Get new furniture for the living room? Paint the
house? Buy a new house? What are your objectives in life? Can
you think of anything higher as an objective than to be used by
the eternal God as an agent by which He brings the obtaining of
eternal salvation to one who is chosen in Him before the
foundation of the world? What a lofty calling. I mean, that
puts ministry in perspective. That's what we're all about. What
a thrill.
Yes, salvation from God's viewpoint is through election.
From man's viewpoint there must be an obtaining by faith. And we
can be the instrument.
In Romans 10, do you remember the wonderful wonderful
statement, "Whosoever will call on the name of the Lord will be
saved?" Remember that? Verse 13, listen to 14, "But how then
shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed and how
shall they believe in Him whom they have not heard? And how
shall they hear without a...what?...a preacher? And how shall
they preach unless they are sent? And no wonder it is written
how beautiful are the feet of those who bring glad tidings of
good things." What a wonderful calling. Whoever calls will be
saved but how they going to call if they don't hear, how they
going to hear if they don't send a preacher? That's basic.
So, his sufferings have an evangelistic purpose. The fact
that God is using his preaching to save the elect enables him to
endure anything...anything. What a thrilling calling. This is
the preacher's joy, beloved. This is the preacher's joy.
I was reading again this week about some of the preachers of
the past, John Wesley, he parted company with ease early in his
ministry. He parted company with money all the time in his
ministry, he lived very simply on little and gave away nearly
everything he had. He said, "I also leave my reputation where I
left my soul, in the hands of God," because he was continually
maligned in his day. John Wesley traveled by foot or horseback
225 thousand miles, preached over 2400 sermons that we know of,
amid misrepresentation, abuse, never knowing the delights of love
at home, subject to incessant attacks by the mobs, by other
preachers, by the press, yet he never lost the joy of his service
until he died at the age of eighty-eight. Because he always knew
who he was serving and all the rest of the stuff was just a lot
of falderal around at the foot and never really touched the
heart. In fact, Ferrar(?) said, "To Wesley was granted the task
which even an archangel might have envied."
It was said of George Whitfield, also God, of course, used
him mightily here in America after He used him in England for
years, in 34 years he crossed the Atlantic 13 times and preached
18,000 sermons. As a soldier of the cross he was humble, ardent,
devote, put the whole armor of God on, preferring the honor of
Christ to his own interest, his own repose, his own reputation or
his own life. And William Calper wrote this in tribute to
Whitfield, "He loved the world that hated him. The tear that
dropped upon his Bible was sincere, assailed by scandal and the
tongue of strife, his only answer was a blameless life."
And you'll be assailed, I know it. It happens to me all the
time. Most recently I confronted another pastor in this area, I
decided I needed to go and confront him face-to-face because he
had decided to run an ad in the L.A. Times at least a half a page
calling me a heretic. And I felt that I needed to confront that
because not because I want to protect me but because I want to
protect the honor of Christ. And the only argument you have
against that kind of thing is like that man Calper said of
Whitfield, the answer of a blameless life. You want to be sure
that when you're slandered and persecuted, they have to make it
up. They have to fabricate it because there isn't any truth that
they can use against you.
And why would you be willing to endure all of that? Because
the work is so incredibly marvelous. You have the privilege of
being the agent of God to bring together sovereign election and
human volition in the saving work. What a thought, what a
privilege. Any man who understands the preeminence of the Lord,
any woman who understands the power of the Word and the purpose
of the work will be compelled to sacrificially serve in boldness
for the cause of Christ. People say, "Well, I don't want to say
anything, I might offend somebody." And what they do is take
themselves out of the picture of being used by God and God brings
someone else to reach that elect person. In the book of Acts God
said to Paul, "You have to go into that city, I have much people
there. Get in there, Paul, and be the instrument when I reach
those elect."
Finally, the fourth point he makes to Timothy is you should
be motivated by the promise of the reward. There's a reward
coming and this is in verses 11 to 13. "It is a trustworthy
statement if we died with Him we shall also live with Him, if we
endure we shall also reign with Him, if we deny Him He will also
deny us, if we are faithless He remains faithful for He cannot
deny Himself."
Now what does that mean? Well first of all it's a
trustworthy saying, or a faithful saying. That little phrase,
that little introductory phrase is used five times in the
pastoral epistles and nowhere else in the New Testament. And
apparently the best we can understand it, it was a way of
introducing something that was axiomatic in the early church,
that is something that was a truism that everybody knew and
repeated, common knowledge. The church by the time Paul writes
these epistles had developed a certain creed, had summarized its
basic important doctrines and teachings. And so when Paul says
this is a faithful saying and sometimes adds the phrase of
"affirmation and worthy of all acceptance," he is referring to
something that everybody knows, it's common knowledge. In this
case, this trustworthy statement because it has such parallelism
and such rhythm was probably a hymn. It probably was sung by the
early church. We have similar things in other forms that have
been found in other places than in the New Testament that would
sort of verify that this was a common kind of hymn they sung.
Now remember the church had experienced some persecution.
There was the reality of the animosity of the world very vivid in
their minds. And this is the kind of faithful saying, or truism
or axiom, the kind of hymn that they might commonly sing. If we
died with Him, we shall also live with Him, if we endure, we
shall also reign with Him. Now in the face of persecution that
would be very comforting, wouldn't it? Very comforting. All
these lines are first-class conditionals, that is they indicate
that this is how it really is, if we died with Him, we shall also
live with Him. That aorist tense "if we died" views the action
as a whole, if at any time we have or shall have died with Him,
we will...in the future...live with Him. What he's talking about
here is something that happens in time and something that happens
in eternity. The contrast between the aorist and the future
splits this thing into two different time zones...the present and
the future. And so if we have died in the present and I take it
that he has martyrdom in mind, if we go to the extent where we
lose our life, in the future we'll live with Him. In other
words, losing your life here simply means gaining your life
there. You're just going into the presence of Christ. If for
the cause of Christ you lose your life, the promise is you'll
receive it right back in glory, you'll live with Him. Paul says
it's far better to depart and be with Christ, absent from the
body is present with the Lord, this was the hope that filled his
heart. Jesus on the cross, "Into Thy hands I commend My Spirit."
Stephen under the stones in Acts 7:59, "Lord Jesus, receive my
spirit." If you die with Him, you live with Him. What a
comfort.
Oh it may...it may have the implication also of Romans 6
that we who have died in Christ by faith also live and walk in
newness of life. But I think the stronger sense is that he's
talking here about martyrdom. And on the other hand he says in
the beginning of verse 12, "If we endure, if we patiently endure
persevering under trials," it's a present-active indicative,
continual present endurance, patience, if we keep on enduring,
"we'll also reign with Him." Not all of us will be martyrs, some
of us will just endure the persecution and if we do, we'll reign.
And if we'll die we'll live with Him immediately.
So, think of the reward. So if you stick your neck out
there and you're bold and you preach the truth of Jesus Christ
and you wind up losing your life, you're going to live with Him.
And if you give your life in the service of Christ and you endure
persecution and animosity and bitterness and whatever else,
realize that you may be under it now but you're going to be over
it then. You may be submitting now but you're going to be in
authority then, you're going to reign with Christ in His Kingdom.
What a promise. The idea is that loyalty to Christ, endurance in
persecution is rewarded with eternal glory, eternal reigning with
Christ. Wonderful promise.
He already mentioned that eternal glory in verse 10 at the
very end. And we may endure here but we are going to receive in
the life to come, we're going to reign together with. That's the
word "to reign," that word is
connected here with sum which is a preposition meaning together
with. And so we're going to reign together with all the other
believers who have likewise endured.
Now let me give you a little thought here before we go on,
catch this. This is a statement not only about faithful service
but about the perseverance of the saints. If you die with
Christ, you'll live with Him. Why? Because in a sense if you
have gone all the way to death in faithfulness to Christ, that's
proof positive that you're a genuine Christian and you're going
into His presence to live. On the other hand, you may not have
died but if you've endured all the persecution, continually
endured it and never abandoned the faith, then you're going to be
one who demonstrates that you're a genuine believer who will
reign forever with Christ. That's the perseverance of the
saints.
How do you know a person's genuinely saved? They persevere.
They go through the trials, the struggles, the persecutions, the
difficulties, and they stay true to the Savior. Oh there are
lapses, there are times when they're like Peter and they...they
deny the Lord momentarily, but they go out and weep bitterly.
And Peter, you remember, died eventually as a martyr true to the
faith. The Lord told him he would and tradition says he did. No
one is elect who doesn't endure. We are secure in our salvation
from the divine side because God has chosen us and we are secure
from the human side because by His power we persevere. All
throughout the New Testament that doctrine of perseverance is
taught. "If you continue in My Word, then are you My true
disciple," John 8:31. First Corinthians says the same thing,
chapter 15, I don't know if you remember how he starts out
preaching the gospel, "Now I make known to you, brothers, the
gospel which I preached to you, and which you also received, in
which also you stand, by which also you are saved if you hold
fast the Word which I preached unless you believed in vain."
It's possible to believe for nothing. That's that easy
believism. That's that "make a decision." I was talking to my
Dad yesterday about this and we were discussing the fact that
making a decision for Christ is not a biblical term, the word
"decision" doesn't even appear in the Scripture. Accepting
Christ is not really used in Scripture. What the Scripture does
in inviting a person to Christ is call them to be a follower of
Jesus Christ. That's the issue. You don't say to someone,
"Jesus died and Jesus rose again and He wants to change your
life. If you just accept Him He'll change your life." That's
simply a short-term kind of thing, you just do this and you'll
get that. That is a very confusing thing and that kind of
evangelism, I think, has produced a lot of still-births. What we
should say to people is if you believe that Jesus is the Son of
God who died and rose again, if you believe that He's the Savior
who paid the penalty for your sin, if you believe that He desires
to forgive you and you are willing to follow Him in obedience and
live to His glory, then come and follow Christ. We should be
calling people to discipleship, not to decisions. We should be
calling people to follow Christ, not accept Christ. And we see
here again that you will reign if you continue under persecution
faithful to Christ, if you're a follower. No one is elect who
does not endure.
So he says you may die. But if you die you'll live with
Him. On the other hand, if you endure, the fact that you have
endured proves that you're genuine and you will reign with Him.
Colossians 1, do you remember verses 21 to 23? It says you were
formerly alienated, hostile in your mind and He's reconciled you
in His fleshly body through death. And then it says this in
verse 23, "If indeed you continue in the faith, firmly
established and steadfast and not moved away from the hope of the
gospel." See, if you continue faithful. If you're a follower of
Christ.
So he says there on the first point, if you're going to die
you're going to live with Him, and if you have to endure it all,
that's all right, in the end you'll reign with Christ. That's
the reward. Oh what a wonderful thing.
But on the other hand, he doesn't stop there. He gives us
the whole faithful saying, he gives us the whole verse out of the
hymn, notice it, verse 12, "On the other hand, if we deny Him, He
also will deny us and if we are unbelieving, He remains faithful
for He cannot deny Himself." If we deny Him, future tense, if
some time in the future, now we name His name, Oh yes we believe,
but sometime in the future under persecution, stress, difficulty,
we deny Christ, that one...emphatically...that one, that is
Christ Himself will also deny us. The word means to reject or
disown or renounce. He'll reject you.
In Acts 3:13 it's used when it says, "The God of Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob, the God of our fathers has glorified His servant
Jesus, the one whom you delivered up and disowned in the presence
of Pilate." In other words, it's used of the rejection of the
Jews against Jesus Christ when they took Him to Pilate. That's
what it means, to disown, to denounce, to reject. It is used in
Titus 1:16, "They profess to know God but by their deeds they
deny Him." It is a word with reference to rejection. Some
people who profess but then reject, that's its use there in Titus
1:16. For a while it all sounds good, it sounds like they really
believe, but they deny. It's the same word used in 2 Peter 2
verse 1 of those who name the name of Christ but deny the Master
who bought them. On the one hand they claim to be teachers
representing Him, but on the other hand they truly deny Him.
So, if you deny Him somewhere along the line, like the rocky
soil kind of people, there's a little bit of life there, and all
of a sudden when the persecution begins and the trouble comes,
and there's a price to pay, you reject Christ, you wither, you
die. The one who continually then carries on that denial...oh
there may be moments like Peter's moment when your words come out
and you deny what you know to be true, and you repent and you go
on believing. But when you come to a point in your life where
even having named the name of Christ you move into a mode that
goes on denying Him and disowning and renouncing and rejecting
Him, He'll deny you, He'll renounce and reject and disown you.
That's what it says. And that is taken, by the way, right out of
Matthew 10. Can I read it to you because I want you to make the
connection? Matthew 10:32, "Everyone therefore who shall confess
Me before men, I will also confess him before My Father who is in
heaven, but whoever shall deny Me before men, I will also deny
him before My Father who is in heaven."
In other words, this is where, no doubt, the thought of the
Apostle Paul is drawn from. There are those people who faithfully
continue to confess their belief in Christ and there are those
who deny. The ones who are faithful to confess, He will confess.
The ones who are unfaithful and deny, He also will deny. They
are the Demases of the world who having loved this world forsake
Christ. They are those like the disciples in John 6 who follow
Jesus for a little while and then walk no more with Him. And so
he says if in the process of persecution you back out, deny
Christ, walk away, it proves you never were genuine and the Lord
will deny you and maybe some day you'll hear, "Depart from Me, I
never knew you," even though you may say, "Lord, Lord," in the
day of judgment.
And then lastly he says, the second parallel of the
unbelievers, if we are unbelieving, you come to the place of
faithlessness and unbelief and it's a continual state, that one,
again emphatic, Christ Himself will remain faithful. He cannot
deny Himself. You may have named the name of Christ but now you
come to be disbelieving. I know many people like that...many
people, people I grew up with who today reject Christ. We do not
believe in Jesus Christ, we've rejected the whole thing. They are
unbelieving.
Well I'll tell you what, they may not have been faithful to
their promise to Christ, but Christ will be faithful to His
promise to them. And what was His promise to them? That if
you're an unbeliever you'll be damned. So when it says "He
remains faithful, He cannot deny Himself," it means you will come
under the judgment that a just God will bring because that's the
way He keeps His Word. You have a denial of Christ in the third
statement and you have unbelief in the fourth, two negatives to
go with the two positives of dying with Him and enduring.
What does it mean to continue in unbelief? Well it's the
word apistia, it means to not believe. It's in the sense of
continual unbelief and he is saying you may name the name of
Christ then you fall into unbelief, you go on in that unbelief
and the Lord will not be unfaithful like you were, He'll be
faithful to His word and His word says that such unbelief is
punished by eternal judgment. And we are, John 3 says, condemned
because we believe not. Any less and He would cease to be God.
God's going to carry out His threats. I'll tell you, He's going
to carry out His threats. And if He said He would judge
unbelief, that's exactly what He'll do, He'll judge unbelief.
And unbelievers will be condemned as He said they would be
condemned.
Oh this is very strong. That little trustworthy statement,
that little hymn that comes out of the early church points up the
future. And he is saying you serve Christ with all your heart.
Why? Because you're willing to die with Him that you may live
with Him, because you're willing to endure with Him that you may
reign with Him. The other alternative is somewhere along the
line you begin to deny Christ and if that pattern keeps up it
shows an unregenerate heart and He'll deny you. You fall into a
period of prolonged unbelief where you reject the truth, and He
will remain faithful to what He's going to do to unbelievers.
So think about your reward. If you're a true Christian and
you're faithful to the Lord, you have the promise of that eternal
life, the promise of that eternal reigning. And in the light of
that promise you can serve in this life and endure anything, even
death because it means life and endurance because it will be
transformed into glory.
How could we do less than give everything to Christ when we
understand the preeminence of the Lord, the power of His Word,
the purpose of the work, the promise of the reward? And so he
says in verse 14 at the very beginning, and I close with this
phrase, "Remind them of these things." Remind the people.
Remind the faithful and able men. Remind everybody. Remind the
teachers. Remind them of these things. Remind them to be loyal,
to be faithful, to be consistent, to endure, to sacrifice, to
serve because these are the motives.
Let me ask you this in closing, what's the passion of your
life? What is it? What are you really after? What do you
really want to do with your life? I mean, are you looking for
prosperity? Is that where you are? Is that it? Are you after
comfort? Is that your main agenda? Do you want security, is
that what you spend all your energies concerning yourself with?
That's not what built the church, by the way, people who were
concerned about themselves. In fact, the church for all of its
growth and through all of its years has seem to walk over the
bodies of the fanatics who died to preserve it.
A favorite little quote from Theodore Roosevelt occupies a
prominent place in my home because it is a tremendously profound
reminder to me. This is what Theodore Roosevelt said, "It is not
the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong
man stumbled or where the doer of deeds could have done better.
The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose
face is marred by dust and sweat and blood who strives valiantly,
who errs and comes short again and again because there's no
effort without error and short coming, who does actually try to
do the deed, who knows the great enthusiasm, the great devotion
and spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the worst if he
fails at least fails while daring greatly. Far better is it to
dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checked
by failure than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy
nor suffer much because they live in a gray twilight that knows
neither victory nor defeat."
I don't want to live in a gray twilight. I want to use my
life to count for God and if I die I die to live and if I endure,
I endure to reign. And I am moved by the preeminence of the Lord
and His cause and I am moved by the power of His Word no matter
what men may do, and I am moved by the preeminence of the work we
do to think that we could be a part of God completing redemptive
history. What a thrill. Let's bow together in prayer.
I'm reminded, Father, of the words of George Whitfield who
said, "Lord, when You see me in danger of nestling down, put a
thorn in my nest." Lord, help us not to nestle down, help us not
to get comfortable in this world, but help us always to be on the
cutting edge, to be all that You want us to be. We thank You
that we can learn from our dear brother, Timothy, who today lives
with You in Your glorious heaven and with whom some day we'll no
doubt commune and sing the songs of redemption. And we thank You
for all the other great men and women of the ages who gave
themselves sacrificially for the cause that has given us our very
life this day. We pray that we might be faithful and sacrificial
in whatever ministry You've given to us, give us boldness and
courage in the cause of the Savior in whose name we pray. Amen.
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