We have taken up the letters from Paul to Timothy as containing
and representing a very great crisis and turning point in the
course of Christianity. And we are moving into those letters to
see, firstly the nature of the crisis, the change which was coming
about, and then how the Lord moved to cover, to provide for that
tremendous turning of a corner. We began to take note of the
indications of crisis in these letters, observing that all these
fragments with which we are so familiar, the favourite passages,
are really set in a very much larger setting than just things said
to help the Christian in their own personal life at any given time
of need. These things are written in relation to very far reaching
issues. But let us continue for a few minutes with this line of
indications of there being a real crisis on when Paul wrote these
letters.
We have noted the first feature of that big crisis in the
imminent departure and withdrawal of Paul himself from the scene.
We might add a few words to that particular matter because
undoubtedly the apostle was writing largely for that very reason.
The things he was saying to Timothy were largely because he was
going. These things needed to be said, because the whole thing was
going to be left to others, and to Timothy in a particular way.
That constituted a very big change, that Timothy and the faithful
men mentioned by the apostle (you will remember the fragment)
these are to take up the work and the responsibility, and stand in
the place that Paul had occupied. And so the apostle was laying
the burden very heavily upon Timothy and upon these others,
because of his near-at-hand departure.
And then we took note also of that to which he refers in that
secession from him; all those which were in Asia being turned from
him, no longer prepared to follow Paul, no longer standing with
him in the truth and purpose for which he had given his life, no
longer faithful to the great revelation which God had given.
Perhaps not having an adequate apprehension of how great a thing
had come through Paul, for it is difficult to believe that anybody
who had an adequate apprehension of the greatness of things, could
in this way turn away. However, here it is, they were leaving
Paul, which meant they were leaving what Paul had sought to
realise.
And then we were beginning to note the change in the nature in
things indicated by the content of these two letters: a real state
of spiritual depreciation. I cannot take the time to turn you to
every fragment and every passage in the letters indicative of these
things, but it does not take you very long to read them, and I would
suggest that, after having had it pointed out, you do take up these
letters anew and read them carefully again and again. I would that I
already had basis with you upon which I could build, but however...
there are not a few indications in these letters of a state of moral
decline. The apostle refers to some things which are worse than sad
or grievous - they are quite evil as things creeping in and having a
place amongst Christians: moral laxity. Moral laxity - carelessness
in moral conduct and relationships; truly a sign of a lowering of
spiritual temper, temperature, standard. The beginnings of it, so
far as the church, so far as Christianity was concerned, are
traceable in these letters. And the apostle is saying, in effect:
"The two things cannot go together: a real true spiritual life,
spirituality - and moral laxity".
Perhaps you'll think that that's a terrible subject even to
mention in a conference of Christians. I don't know whether that
is so, but dear friends, the world is a terrible place, a terrible
place, morally, and we all have to live here. The atmosphere is
full of it, the papers are full of it, and it is not always easy
to keep that atmosphere, if not that kind of life, altogether at
bay. It insinuates itself, but perhaps the least or the most that
I should say here is this: that that is a very, very
persistent means employed by the Devil to ruin the spiritual life.
Moral laxity. The enemy is always trying to catch Christians on
that ground, on that line, and if he can do it with the people of
God, he has ruined their testimony.
Now, we began this afternoon, you'll remember, by referring to
the Tabernacle as the shrine of the testimony of God, and God's
recognition of the need to reinforce the corners, the turning
points - to reinforce spirituality against the perils and
dangers of a corner, a change-round from one line to another. It's
the testimony that's involved. It is. And let me say this
and pass on: that rather than being the least involved, or the
most immune, Christian people are more in danger of this very
thing than anyone else. If the enemy can get a Christian on that
low level of life, at that point, he's struck a master blow. And
if he can get a servant of God overcome there, he has surely
consolidated his ground against the testimony of Jesus. Therein is
a long and terrible history; it explains much. Hence - "Timothy,
Timothy, flee, flee," says the apostle, "youthful lusts... flee!"
Beware of the encroachment and inroads of this moral laxity that's
in the world - we've got to reinforce things against
anything like that for the testimony's sake. Is that an
unnecessary word to you? Forgive me, if you think so. But here it
is.
But that's not the whole of it. I... I'm compelled to say some
things that I would rather not say and if, dear friends, they don't
apply to you, any of you individually, for your enlightenment and
being made aware, it may be helpful to some others in danger. For
another feature of the change and the lowering level of
spirituality marked in this letter, is unbecoming behaviour in the
House of God.
Unbecoming Behaviour in the House of God
The House
of God is mentioned, as you notice here, and one of Paul's
emphatic words here is "how men ought to behave in the house of
God"; that's why he wrote, he said; behaviour in the House of God,
and there is unbecoming behaviour. He touches upon the women
- the women with unbecoming dress, or lack of it. Now that's an
unpleasant thing to talk about, but isn't it something to be
talked about? It's a mark of poor spiritual life when that
happens, a lowered spiritual level. You see, spirituality is
pre-eminently practical. When we speak of that and use the word
"spiritual" and "spirituality", sometimes people make a joke of it
and say, "Oh, they're so spiritual!" Well, if you, if you
can think or talk like that, you haven't got any idea of
what spirituality is! Spirituality is tremendously practical: it
touches your dress, it touches your behaviour, your conduct as a
Christian! Spirituality says, "Look here, you will not overdo it
and you will not underdo it; you will have a proper, dignified
means". That's what's here.
Isn't it a pity that these things which Paul wrote, you see,
concerning women, sisters, for instance, have been taken out and
made subjects in themselves? Thrown up like that, and so it comes
back on Paul, that he ever said such things. See? It's a complete
mishandling. Why not recognise that this is set in a decline of
Christianity, and these things are marks of spiritual decline?
That's why they ought to be spoken about; they're not things in
themselves! Naturally, naturally you might have your own
feelings about these things. You might be old-fashioned, for
instance, and be called not up-to-date; you haven't moved with the
times. Or naturally you may have an argument for this kind of
thing, but if you're spiritual, you'll have another kind of
argument. You'll not be behind the times, and you'll not be moving
with the times; you'll be moving with Heaven, and that's a
different standard altogether. You see what I mean? This laxity
and this behaviour which is not becoming, not becoming to a
Christian, and it touches all sorts of practical things. Take
note. Take note. It does matter, it does matter. It is a
barometer of spiritual life: how we behave. Is that enough? But
you see, it's in a second: things are changing. You'll see before
we get much further, what happened; what happened.
Then note other indications in these letters: the beginning of an
altogether new situation with Christianity itself, on the
outside. You here have quite clearly indicated the beginning of
ecclesiasticism, the beginning of clericalism, the beginning of
formalism, the beginning of officialdom in Christian orders. It's
all here! It's started in. Paul died, Paul was executed. There was a
period of some twenty-five years without any historical record of
how things went on or what happened. Then you come to John, to the
writings of John, and then silence; silence again. And then men
began to write, and we have the writings of the men called the
"fathers". And what do we have? Immediately they began to write, at
the end of the first Christian century, clericalism is in full
force and so is ecclesiasticism. The whole system of spiritual
men as overseers has been resolved into prelates, bishops, and
what-not; a non-New Testament system. Officialdom: men in high
position ecclesiastically, governing in an official way. Well, it's
come; it's come. Here are the beginnings. So that what was spiritual
- spiritual men as overseers of the Church and the churches,
functioning because they were spiritual men, men of God -
has now given place to men who are officials, ecclesiastics,
clerics, and so on. A tremendous change has taken place, and that
has come right down with all the history.
The Christian ordinances were changed and the Christian doctrines
were changed. The ordinance of baptism was changed at the end of
the first century. I'm not going to enlarge upon it; I'm taking
them as indications of change - the turning of a corner - the
coming in of something now organised in the place of that
which was organic, something institutional which was once
spiritual - a change from what was spontaneous. And how
spontaneous it was; the Church just springing up and pressing on
and expanding and growing by the sheer life that was in it; now
it's organised, now it is a self-conscious entity, making its own
appointments, and so on, and so on. Well, what's the point? The
Holy Spirit saw this encroachment, saw this thing beginning, and
sought to react to it and through Paul wrote these letters, and
pointed out, "Look here, elders and overseers in the Church must
be essentially spiritual men: they must be known for their
moral character, for their spiritual character and life and for
their spiritual measure!" And everything, everything in the House
of God must be spiritual in its nature and value, and not
official. The change led to infinite loss of power and all the
unhappy conditions that we have today. And so the Lord's word, the
Lord's word then, ever, and now is: "Oh, recover spirituality if
you want to recover the power of testimony in this world!" If you
want to have that impact and registration which existed at the
beginning you must recover the spiritual state which existed at
the beginning. Everything must be like that, not like
this. How much there is in that; some will see more than others.
These are very practical applications. A man's position in the
House of God depends, where God is concerned, on his spiritual
value and nothing more. You may dress him up and decorate him and
laud him, and call him by this name or that, and you may do
anything you like, but with God it is no more than that man's
spiritual value that counts.
And what is true in the realm of those in place of responsibility
is true, is true of everyone; true of everyone. Paul calls
Timothy, "man of God" and makes it personal, and says, "Oh man of
God..." That's because of Timothy's particular position of
responsibility; but, mark you, Paul uses that phrase of all others
too, in the same writing! Why are the Scriptures given, and to
whom are they given? Are they only given to Timothy, and to
overseers, and men in particular responsibility? No. "All
scripture given by inspiration of God is good for this and
that, and that; that the man of God...". Who is
that? Every one to whom the Scripture is given is called a "man of
God". See that? So, if you have the Scriptures, you come into that
designation; you are supposed to be a man of God, a woman of God.
As God's man, God's man... we're all supposed to be that: 'God's
men'.
What Are God's Men?
What is the man of God? Again, that
title only belongs to those who are in a spiritual position, not
in any formal, official position, but a spiritual
position. They are where they are because of their spiritual
life, measure, and value. We cannot underline that too
strongly.
Well, you see, the move, the crisis, the change was from what was
inward, to everything being outward. Everything being outward -
offices, and functions, and positions, and titles - outward,
formal, the introduction of formalism. Paul is bringing it back to
where it ought to be: the person himself, the person herself.
That's where he fastens it, to safeguard, to recover, to protect,
it must be spiritual men and women.
Well, these are indications of the course of things; the change
that was coming over Christianity. But as I said a few minutes
ago, there is so much proof of this. Paul went somewhere, John was
going on, and you know that Paul went in the terrific holocaust of
persecution which led to John's exile. Somewhere, John is - and
then he writes; he writes his gospel, the gospel of pre-eminent
spirituality, isn't it? You don't need that I should stay to show
that the gospel written by John was written with the object of
bringing things back to spiritual principles. And then he wrote
his letters. And what are his letters? Well, John's letters are
just full, from beginning to end, of spiritual essentials, aren't
they? Life, light, love, and so forth. Spiritual essentials
for revelation. Read the beginning then again of the book of the
Revelation, the chapters of the Lord's challenge to the churches
in Asia - Paul's churches - and what have you? Full development of
those things of which we have been speaking! Moral laxity: "thou
hast there that woman Jezebel"; "thou hast a name to live and art
dead"; formalism... formalism, empty shell... and so on. It's come
about. But, again, what is the Lord's reaction? It is a reaction to a
spiritual position, isn't it?
What Are Overcomers?
What
are overcomers? Well, overcomers are simply those who have
recovered or maintained spiritual ground; that's all. It's not
easy in a world like this, in the course of things, in
Christianity as it has become, it's not easy to recover or to
maintain purely spiritual ground. You will suffer for it, so the
Lord said. You will suffer for it. I venture to say, dear friends,
that it is far, far more difficult to keep a clear, straight
spiritual course in the Christian life, than it is to live just as
a Christian in this world. It may be difficult to live as a
Christian in this world, but you will find there are difficulties
that you'll never encounter from the world which you'll find in
Christianity. Am I right? Am I right? Yes, "a man's foes shall be
those of his own household" has a very much larger meaning. A
spiritual course in Christianity is exceedingly difficult
- because of Christianity. Christianity has very largely become
the enemy of spirituality.
These are strong things, but, you see, it is a matter of the effectiveness
of testimony, the purity of testimony. I am not at the
moment touching upon the doctrinal side of things in these
letters. There's a large, large measure of these letters given up
to departure from former doctrine, I come to that in some measure
later on. But what I am concerned with is to prove two things: to
prove that this kind of crisis happens, it's the kind of thing
that happens again and again, and this is the kind of besetting
peril all along the line: to drop away from the full, high,
spiritual level to which the Lord has called onto something lower
and something less; to lose spirituality and then to see that God
has ever and always and still does react by trying to get His
people onto a more spiritual level of things, that is, to increase
their spiritual measure, their
spiritual life. It's the only way to overcome.
It's the only way to get through and at last (to come to
the letters again) to hand back the deposit to the Lord unspoilt:
"Oh Timothy, guard that which hath been committed..." - Divine
trust. Hand it back at the end, unsullied, unspoilt, undiminished,
here it is intact [?]. Paul, on that very matter, says: "I have
finished the course, I have kept the faith - Timothy, take it up
and do the same." That's the effect of it: "Guard that which has
been committed to thee" - the deposit of God.
I come then to the Divine reaction more particularly and
specifically. And I want you to take note of this. Timothy himself
is at this point being marked out as the instrument of the Divine
reaction to this trend of things. And Timothy, therefore, assumes
the role of a sign. Now, that is not a new idea in the Bible, is it?
Ezekiel was told by the Lord that He had made him a sign for the
house of Israel - a sign. And Timothy comes into that position and
into that vocation, or function, as a sign so that he must himself
become indicative of what spiritual features are, what spirituality
is. Well, first of all look at Timothy, shall we say, negatively. He
is a symbol of things essential to recovery. He himself is a symbol
of things essential to recovery. We're going to find a lot of
comfort and help here, all of us. What are they?
Weakness.
You can despise Timothy, if you like; they did that when he was
alive. Paul said to him: "Let no man despise thy youth", literally
despised; weakness.
Dependence. It looked as though Paul was
providing him with a set of crutches to help him to keep on his
feet! Dependence. Discount. Discount, why, so much of this that Paul
said to Timothy indicated these things about him.
Speaking of Timothy naturally, you would say that he was evidently a
very timid, nervous sort of young man who needed all the time to be
bucked up. Surely, Timothy must have been very weak, seeing all
these things were necessary! Look at it that way,
if you like; but there are other ways of looking at it. This, this
is the most suitable and promising ground for spirituality -
indeed, it is absolutely essential to the thing that
God is after and Paul was after! And yet, what about Timothy? What
about Timothy? Paul thought a lot of him; Paul made a lot of him,
and Paul, who did not, did not usually err in the matter of wisdom
and discretion, put Timothy into a very, very important place.
Timothy was an apostle, although he was never called that. Timothy
was an elder, although he was never called that. But Timothy was
more. There was in Timothy a combination of all the
functions from an evangelist to a church-builder. "Do the work of an
evangelist". From an evangelist to a church builder he was, he was the
elder amongst the elders at the church at Ephesus - no small
responsibility! Think of Ephesus. What was Paul up to, sending
someone like Timothy to put things right in Ephesus, to take
charge in Ephesus, to correct and to build in Ephesus? Preposterous
to send a young fellow like that, of this kind!
Well, spiritual and natural abilities are altogether in different
worlds! And when God reacts to recover, or acts to provide against
a threat, a peril, a danger which has these characteristics, He
brings His instrument down to nothingness - He empties it out and
makes it more conscious of its weakness and of its dependence than
of anything else. He is a symbol of God's reacting methods. I say
that there is some comfort for us here. You know, you know in this
greatest of all works of God - maintaining His testimony in
absolute purity and truth - there is no place amongst those who
are concerned, no place whatever, for assumption; assuming
that you're something, or
assuming that you can do something, assuming that
you are called to this or that. There's no place for assumption;
getting in, getting in by assuming - no place for that. There is
no place for presumption - that is, running ahead of God, running
ahead of the Spirit. There is no place for self-importance, for
self-sufficiency, for self-assertiveness - no place at all. And if
you and I are going to be used for spiritual purposes, God will
take us in hand to drain us of the last drop of anything like that
so that we know that of all men we are the most unfit and unsuited
to the thing to which God has called us, that from all natural
standpoints we have no right to be in that position. That's God's
way of making spiritual men and women. He just does let everything
out that is not of Himself. Yes, no place for anything like this
if Timothy was to be all that Paul said he must be.
Now note, note because you may, if you're acute in your mental
activity, you may have been thinking you're catching me up on
this, because in these letters Paul is telling Timothy he must be
strong, and I have just said he must be weak! Paul is as good as
telling him he must be full, and I have said he must be empty! Ah,
yes, but if Timothy was to be all that Paul said he must be, then
it would be all spiritual and not natural. Is that borne out by
the context? Of course it is! "Be strong" - but he doesn't stop
there, "in the grace that is in Christ Jesus" (2 Tim.
2:1). That is not self-strength, that's not natural strength of
any kind. "The grace that is in Christ Jesus" - be strong in that.
And so you note the strength, the strength in the case of Timothy
as the symbol of God's reactionary method and means in a day of
declension, the strength is to be spiritual strength.
Well it works both ways. It is a word of encouragement to those
who are conscious of no strength, who only feel their weakness,
"Look here, that is not the criterion, how weak you feel, at all:
the criterion is 'the grace that is in Christ Jesus'". And it
works the other way. If any of us should feel that we can do it,
and press into the situation and into the position, and take it
on, assume or presume, then we are in for a bad time under the
hand of God - that is, if we are going to be of any use to the
Lord. That's going to be emptied out.
"Let no man despise thy youth". Well, then, well then what is to
be the reaction of Timothy to an attitude and mentality amongst
men of that kind? How would you young men react if you were there,
and men were despising you, and I said: "Don't you let them despise
you!" What would you do? "Don't you let them have that attitude
towards you!" You know you could act very much in the flesh,
couldn't you? You could begin, as they say in America, to be
'chesty' - peacockish, they mean - to spoil it all by a false
dignity, by an artificial personality that's not yourself. Authority
is spiritual in the House of God.
There's an authority about the man or a woman who has real
spiritual measure, that weighs, weighs, and counts, and has
influence. They may naturally be despised, but find spiritual
measure and you'll find that in the time of difficulty it's to those
people that those in difficulty turn. The authority... I'd like to
dwell much upon spiritual authority, but we'll touch it again, not
tonight, later.
The knowledge and the understanding (and note, I'm keeping to the
book) the knowledge and the understanding were to be spiritual.
Spiritual! I go on.
The Office
If you still like to use
that word, the "office", whether it be elder, overseer, teacher,
evangelist - whatever it is, it's to be spiritual, not official.
You do that because you are that. It simply comes
out because that is how you are spiritually constituted -
it's how the Holy Spirit has constituted you. And it is a poor
thing to try and be an evangelist if the Holy Spirit hasn't
constituted you one, or a teacher. Oh, what tragedies we know of
and have seen by people trying to be teachers, or something like
that, because they like it, it appeals to them, and the Holy Ghost
has not qualified them for it and it's just like the peacock's
tail when it has gone - still strutting about, but there's nothing
behind it! There's nothing more pathetic, is there? Lost it! Yes,
what's the good of it all, if it isn't of the Holy Ghost?
And so it is with Timothy, "Endure hardness, hardship, as a good
soldier". Endure? Endure? Well, just think for a moment of what
Timothy was called upon to endure at that time. My dear friends,
you, you perhaps haven't any idea of the situation. I have re-read
lately the account of those persecutions which came about through
Nero and the Jews against the Christians - the perfectly unspeakable
horrors of cruelty to women, to children, to men, to families. I
wouldn't shock you by mentioning them, but they are inhuman
atrocities, indescribable, that literally hundreds of thousands of
Christians suffered at the hands of those Roman Emperors. Because
when Nero commanded the burning of Rome, a scapegoat had to be
found upon whom the blame could be laid, and it was laid upon the
Jews, and the Jews said, "No, it was the Christians!" and so the
Christians were taken. You're not surprised at the sufferings of
the Jews, are you? Not only Christ, but hundreds of thousands of
His precious children were simply tortured in unspeakable agony,
for many decades.
Timothy was in the presence of that growing shadow. He knew that
his father in Christ was in prison and shortly to suffer death. He
knew that those who had been near Paul in Rome had left him. And
Paul said: "At my first defence no man stood by me, they all
forsook me". Timothy was in the presence of that! Endurance? Who could
endure but by the mighty power of the Spirit? You want
spiritual measure for that, you need the enduring power of
Christ for that; that spiritual endurance, not just natural
courage.
Well, have I said enough to prove one thing, that the Lord, the
Lord at all times of peril to His Church, at all times of danger,
when things are threatening, and a change seems to be coming
about, He always tries to get His people on to a higher spiritual
ground: He always seeks to increase spiritual measure, He seeks to
bring things over from the merely professional and formal on to
the ground of spiritual life and spiritual character and to remind
us that we are God's men; we are God's men. We are not the
men of a system, not men of the world, not men of our own natural
ambitions - we are God's men. I don't make much of it, but it is
significant, isn't it, that Timothy's name means "honouring God"
or "Timo-theus" - honouring God. That's the key to everything,
with him, with us - honouring God - that's spirituality. And so we
leave it there for tonight.