A VETERAN’S COUNSELS
TO A YOUNG SOLDIER
2 Timothy 1:1-7
2 Timothy 3:14-17
PAUL’S heart had been drawn to Timothy
long before this letter was written, as far back as the beginning of his
second missionary journey, and Timothy had cherished the enthusiastic
devotion of a young man for his great leader. He seems to have been the best
beloved of the circle which the magnetism of Paul’s character bound to him.
The tone of the two epistles suggests
that Timothy needed to be braced up, and have a tonic administered. Probably
he inclined to be too much affected by difficulties and opposition, and
required the ‘ soul-animating strains’ which Paul sounded in his ears.
Possibly the Apostle’s imprisonment and evidently impending death had
discouraged and saddened the younger and weaker man. At all events, it is
beautiful and pathetic that the words of cheer and brave trust should come
from the martyr, and not from the sorrowing friend. Timothy should have been
the encourager of Paul, but Paul was the encourager of Timothy.
The verses of this passage embody
mainly two counsels. Verse 6 exhorts Timothy to ‘stir up the gift’ that was
in him; 2Timothy 3:14 bids him ‘abide in the things which’ he has learned.
These two — diligent effort to increase his spiritual force and persistent
holding by the teaching already received — are based on Paul’s knowledge of
his faith and on Timothy’s knowledge of the saving power of that truth. But
Paul loved him too ardently to give him cold counsels. The advices are
wrapped in the softest covering of gracious affection and recognition of
Timothy’s inherited faith and personal devotion to Paul.
I. Before dealing with the advices,
look at the lovely prelude in verses 1-5. Paul does not lay aside his
apostolic authority, but he uses it to make his greeting more sweet and
strong. What had he been made an apostle by? The will of God. What had he
been made an apostle for? To make known the promise of the life which is in
Christ. Thus clothed with authority, and bearing the great gift of life, he
takes Timothy to his heart as his beloved child. The captain stoops to
embrace the private. Christ’s apostle pours his love and benediction over
the young servant, and when such lips wish’ grace, mercy, and peace,’ the
wish is a prophecy as much as a prayer.
The flow of Paul’s love outstrips that
of his words, and there is some verbal obscurity in verses 3-5, but the
meaning is plain. Paul’s thankfulness was for Timothy’s ‘unfeigned faith,’
but when he is about to say that, other tender thoughts start up, and insist
on being uttered. The language of love in absence is the same all the world
over. It comes across all the intervening centuries like the speech of
today: ‘I never forget you.’ But love should be sublimed by religion, and
find its best expression in ‘supplications.’ Think of the prisoner in Rome,
expecting a near death by violence, and yet telling his young friend that he
was always thinking about him, Timothy, and wearying for him with a great
yearning.
How beautiful is that touch, too, that
the remembrance of Timothy’s tears, when he had had to part from Paul, fed
the Apostle’s desire to see him again! And how graceful, and evidently more
than graceful, is the contrast between the tears of Timothy at parting and
the hoped-for joy of Paul at meeting! No wonder that such a leader kindled
passionate enthusiasm.
One can fancy the throb of pleasure
with which Timothy would read the recognition of his ‘unfeigned faith.’ It
is always a memorable moment to a young beginner when a veteran lays his
hand on his shoulder and acknowledges his devotion. Nor less fitted to warm
Timothy’s heart was the praise of his grandmother and mother. It would not
only do that, but would make him feel that his descent added force to the
exhortation which
followed. Whoever might become careless, one who had such blood in his veins
was called on to be true to his ancestral faith. One can well understand how
such a beginning prepared Timothy for the succeeding counsels. But this was
not art or rhetorical advice on Paul’s part, but deep affection. The soil
thus watered by love was ready for the seed.
II. The counsel thus delicately
introduced is delicately expressed, as putting in remembrance rather than as
enjoining authoritatively. Paul gives Timothy credit for having already
recognised the duty. The ‘gift of God’ is the whole bestowments which fitted
him for his work, and which were given from the Holy Spirit, through the
imposition of the hands of Paul and of the elders (1 Timothy 4:14).
But whilst there was a special force
in the command to Timothy, the principle involved applies to all Christians,
and in a wider aspect to all men; for every Christian has received the gift
of that self-same Spirit, and every man is endowed with some gifts from God.
All God’s gifts are held on similar conditions. They may be neglected, and,
if so, will cease as surely as an untended fire dies down into grey ashes.
The highest and the lowest are alike in this. An unused muscle atrophies, an
uncultivated capacity diminishes. The grace of God itself wanes if we are
unfaithful stewards. The gift of the Spirit is not a substitute for our own
activity, and the extent to which we possess it is determined by our rousing
ourselves to tend the sacred flame.
Timothy had probably been depressed by
Paul’s imprisonment and the prospect of his death. He had been accustomed to
lean upon the Apostle, and now the strong prop was to be withdrawn, and he
was to stand alone, and, worst of all, to take up some of the tasks dropped
by Paul. Therefore the Apostle tries to brace up his drooping spirit with
his clear clarion note. The message comes to us all, that discouraging
circumstances and heavy responsibilities are reasons for gathering ourselves
up to our work, and for ‘stirring up’ smouldering fires kindled by God in
our hearts, and too often left untended by us.
Paul points to the proper effects of
the gift of God, as the ground of his counsel That Spirit does not infuse
cowardice, which blenches at danger or shrinks from duty, as probably
Timothy was tempted to do; but it breathes ‘power’ into the weak, enabling
them to do and bear all things, and ‘love,’ which makes eager for service to
God and man, at whatever cost, and ‘self-control,’ which curbs the
tendencies to seek easy tasks and to listen to the
voices within or without whispering ignoble avoidance of the narrow way.
Surely this exhortation in its most general form should come to all young
hearts, and summon them to open their doors for the entrance of that Divine
Helper who will make them strong, loving, and masters of themselves.
III. The second exhortation in 2
Timothy 3:14-17, like the first, presupposes Timothy’s previous Christian
character, and draws some of its persuasive force from his home and the dear
ones there — an argument which, no doubt, Paul knew would tell on such a
clinging, affectionate nature. We note the double reason for
steadfastness-the teachers, and the early beginning of the knowledge of the
truth. It is thought a sign of independence and advancement by many young
people nowadays to fling away their mother’s faith, just because it was
hers, and taught them by her when they were infants. The fact that it was is
no bar against investigation, nor against the adoption of other conclusions,
if needful; but in the present temper of men, it is well to remember that it
creates no presumption against a creed that some white-haired Lois, or some
tender mother Eunice has striven to engrave it on the young heart.
But the great reason adduced for
steadfast grip of the truth is that the ‘sacred writings’ (by which are to
be understood the Old Testament) have power, as Timothy had experience, to
give a wisdom which led to salvation, and to ‘furnish’ a Christian,
especially. the Christian teacher, for ‘every good work.’ In either of the
two usually adopted renderings of verse 16, the divine origin of Scripture
and its value for the manifold processes for perfecting character are
broadly asserted. That origin and these uses are unaffected by variety of
view as to the methods of inspiration or by critical researches. It will
always be true that the Bible is the chief instrument employed by the Spirit
of power and of love and of self-control to mould our characters into beauty
of holiness. He who has that Spirit in his heart and the Scriptures in his
hands has all he needs.
The one exhortation for such is to
‘abide in’ what he has received. That counsel as given to Timothy was
probably directed chiefly against temptations very unlike those which attack
us. But the spirit of it applies to us. It enjoins no irrational
conservatism, scowling at all new thoughts, but it bids us aim at keeping up
our personal hold of the central truths of Christ’s incarnation, sacrifice,
and gift of the Divine Spirit, which hold is
slackened by worldliness and carelessness twenty times for once that it is
so from intellectual dissatisfaction with the principles of Christianity.
Timothy was relegated, not only to his
early memoriam, but to his own experience. He had not only learned these
things from revered lips, but had been ‘assured of’ them by the response
they had found and the effects they had produced in himself. That is the
deepest ground of our holding fast by the gospel, and it is one we may all
have. ‘He that believeth hath the witness in himself,’ and may wait with
equanimity while the dust of controversy clears off, for he ‘knows in whom
he has believed,’ and what that Saviour has done for and in him;
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WHAT KIND OF MEN CHRIST MAKES
2 Timothy 1:7
‘For God hath not given us the spirit
of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a
sound mind.’ — 2 Timothy 1:7
THE parts which we should naturally
have expected Paul and Timothy to fill are reversed in this letter. ‘Paul
the aged,’ a prisoner, and soon to be a martyr, might have been expected to
receive encouragement and consolation. But Timothy seems to have been of a
somewhat weak and timid nature, and this letter of the dying man is one long
trumpet-blast to stir his courage. My text is the first of the
‘soul-animating strains’ which he blows. In it the Apostle would have his
down-hearted young companion and helper remember what God has given him by
the laying on of Paul’s hands. Whether the word ‘spirit’ in my text be
regarded as meaning the Divine Spirit which is given, or the human spirit in
which that divine gift is received, the qualities enumerated in the text are
those which that Divine Giver creates in that human recipient by His
indwelling presence; or to put it into shorter words, my text tells us what
sort of people Christianity has a tendency to make, and it tells us, too,
how it sets about making them.
The enumeration is by no means
intended to be either complete or scientific. It is meant to embrace,
mainly, the points which Timothy wanted most. And so it dwells predominantly
on the stronger, ‘manly virtues,’ as men complacently call them.’ ‘God hath
not given us the spirit of cowardice, but of power, and of love, and of a
sound mind,’ which last word does not stand precisely upon a level with the
other three, hut rather expresses the notion of self-control.
I think I shall best, in the few
remarks that I offer you, bring out the meaning of the words before us if I
simply follow the Apostle’s rough and ready enumeration, and try to learn
what he says about each of these points.
I. The first thing, then, that he
would have us understand is that Christ makes fearless men.
‘God hath not given us the spirit of
cowardice.’ Now, of course, courage or timidity are very largely matters of
temperament. But then, you know, the very purpose of the gospel is to mend
temperaments, to restrain, and to stimulate, so as that natural defects may
become excellences, and
excellences may never run to seed and become defects. So whilst we have to
admit that religion is not meant to obliterate natural distinctions in
character, we must also remember that we insufficiently grasp the intention
of the gospel which we say we believe unless we realise that it is meant to
deal with the most deeply rooted defects in character, to make the crooked
things straight, and the rough places plain.
So I venture to say that any man who
lives in the realisation of the truths which the gospel reveals, and in the
use of the gifts which the gospel communicates, will (whatever his natural
disposition of apprehensiveness) be stiffened into a fearless man; and be no
longer a reed shaken with the wind, but a brazen pillar, and an iron wall,
amidst all dangers and enemies.
One sometimes feels as if nothing but
clearsightedness were needed to drive men into insanity. When you think of
the possibilities of every life, and of the certainties of every life, of
what may come .to any of us, any time, and of what must come to all of us
one time, the wonder is that men live without a perpetual tremor of heart,
and do so largely manage to ignore the evils that ring them round. Think of
our relation to God, think of what must be the result of the collision of
the perfectly righteous will of His with our wayward rebellions; of what
must be the consequence — if there be a God at all, and if there be such a
thing as retributive acts on His part — when He sets us down to drink of the
brewst that we have brewed, and to reap the harvest that we have sown.
Surely, ‘he troubled, ye careless ones,’ is His exhortation of wisdom to
men.
And then if we bring in all the other
possibilities which to many of us have become in some measure past
experiences, but still hang threatening on our horizon, like the
half-emptied clouds of a thunderstorm, that is sure to come back again,
dread seems to be wisdom. For what have we that we shall not have to part
with? What do we that will not disappoint in the fruit? What dangers are
there possible to humanity, concerning which you and I can say we know that
‘when the overflowing scourge passes by it will not reach us’? None! none!
You may remember having seen a gymnast
that used to roll a ball up a spiral with the motion of his feet. That is
how we are set to roll the ball of our fortunes and prosperities up the
twisting ascent, and at every moment there is the possibility of its
hurtling down in ruin, and one day it certainly will. So is there anything
more empty and foolish than to say to a man whose relations with God are not
right, whose command of the world is so
uncertain, as it-surely is, and who has frowning before him the grim
certainties of loss and sorrow and broken ties, and empty houses and empty
hearts, and disappointments, and pillow stuffed with thorns, and souls
wounded to the very quick, and, last of all, a death which has a dim some.
thing behind it that touches all consciences — to say to such a man ‘Don’t
be afraid’? If he is not a fool he ought to be.
But then Paul comes in and says, ‘God
hath not given us the spirit of cowardice.’ No, because He has given us the
only thing that can exorcise that demon. He has given us the good news of
Himself, whereby His name becomes our dearest hope instead of our ghastliest
doubt. He has given us the assurance of forgiveness and acceptance and
hallowing in Jesus Christ, whereby all the things whereof our consciences —
which do ‘make cowards of us all’ — are afraid, are rectified, and some of
them swept out of existence. He has given us truths which only need to be.
grappled and laid upon our hearts and minds to make us brave. He has assured
us that ‘all things work together for good,’ that He Himself will never
leave us. And the Master who spoke on earth so often, and in so many
connections, His meek and sovereign encouragement, ‘Fear not!’ speaks it
from the heavens to all that trust Him. ‘He laid His hand upon me, and said,
"Fear not!" I am the first and the last,’ from whom all changes originate,
by whom all events are directed, unto whom all things tend. Therefore,
whosoever is wedded to Him need fear no evil, for nothing that does not hurt
Christ can ham Him,
II. Christ makes strong men.
‘He hath not given us the spirit of
fear, but of power.’ Again we have to remember a previous remark as to
temperament. There are differences among us in this respect. Some of us, of
course, are naturally far more facile, sensitive and yielding than others;
some of us have natural force denied to our brethren. These differences will
remain, and yet ‘the weakest may be as David,’ and although the weakest
shall be made strong, the strongest shall be stronger still, ‘as the angel
of God.’ The difference between the hind and front ranks will remain, but
the whole battalion, as it were, will be shifted forwards.
Let me remind you how a condition of
all that is worth doing and being is the cultivation of strength of will and
of moral nature. To be weak is to be wicked nine times out of ten. I believe
that the bulk of men that go wrong, that ‘go to the devil,’ as you say, do
it, not so much because of a bias towards evil as of a fatal feebleness that
is incapable of resistance; and I know of nothing that is more needed to be
dinned into the ears — especially of the young who have their chances before
them yet — than this truth: the man that cannot say ‘No!’ is doomed to say
‘Yes!’ to all bad things that may solicit him. To be weak is to be wicked in
such a world as we live in; and many of you know how fatally, facilely, and
feebly you have yielded, for no other reason than because the temptation was
there and you were not man enough to stop your ears to it, and let it hum
past you without touching you. What is the reason why half the men in the
world that are drunkards are so?
Pure weakness. And so you may go all
round the circle of vices and you will find that weakness is ordinarily
wickedness, and it is, always misery. As Milton’s Satan tells us, to be
‘weak is to be miserable, doing or suffering.’ And it is generally failure,
as witness the experience of thousands of men who have come into this city
and been beaten in the race.
How then is a man to get strength?
Brethren, I do not want to exalt the gospel of Jesus Christ by depreciating
other and lower means by which feeble natures may get a dose of steel into
their system. There are such ways, and they do help men. But if you want to
have a power within you that will enable you to ‘stand foursquare to every
wind that blows,’ believe me the surest way of getting it is by faith in
Jesus Christ, to open your hearts to the entrance into them of that ‘strong
Son of God’ who sends His mighty Spirit into every spirit that will accept
it, to be the source of uncreated and triumphant strength. If we would only
keep near to Jesus Christ, and live with hearts open for the influx of His
great communications, we should need nothing else to make us strong for all
service, against all temptation, in the midst of all suffering. There is a
gift offered to every one of us in the gospel of Jesus Christ which will
make our weakness into strength. A piece of sponge put into a so-called
petrifying well is turned into a mass solid as iron by the infiltration of
stony particles. So our yielding softness may be converted into firmness
which will resist every pressure if we receive into our hearts the grace
which Christ gives. He who is strong in the Lord and in the power of His
might, and he only, is truly strong. If then you want power learn where it
is stored. —
‘His strength was as the strength of
ten,
Because his heart was pure.’
There is part of the secret. But how is the heart to be made pure? By the
entrance into it of the purifying Christ. Christ makes fearless and strong
men.
III. Christ makes loving men.
‘Tis excellent to have a giant’s
strength ‘Tis tyrannous to use it like a giant!’
And power ever tends to be tyrannous.
The consciousness of strength is ever. apt to degenerate into insolence,
uncharitableness, want of sympathy with, and contempt for, weakness. And so,
very beautifully, side by side with power, Paul puts love. There are some
great moral teachers of this generation, and of the last, whose whole
teaching has been fatally vitiated, for this amongst other reasons, because
they lost sight of the fact that the strongest thing in the universe is
love. But Paul, not a philosopher, and not in the least degree trying to set
forth scientifically the relations or the limitations of the virtues that he
speaks about, like a skilful painter, instinctively knows what tint will
best bring up the one that is laid beside it, or like some jeweller with an
eye to effect, understands how to dispose the stones in his bracelet, that
the cool green of the emerald may be set off by, and set off, the flashing
red of the ruby and the deep blue of the sapphire. So he says, Christ makes
strong men, but He makes loving men too. ‘Quit you like men, be strong. Let
all your deeds be done in charity.’ And cultivate no strength for
yourselves, nor admire any in others, in which power is divorced from pity
and tenderness.
I need not remind you of the one
sovereign way by which Jesus Christ in His gospel wins men from that
self-centred absorption in which they live, and which is the root of all
sin, into that love which is the child of faith and the parent’ of all
virtue. There is only one thing that makes men loving, and that is that they
should be loved. And Jesus Christ, the incarnate Love, and Lover of all our
souls, comes to us and shows us His hands and His side, and says,’ God — I
in Him and He in Me — so loved the world, as these wounds tell.’ We have
known and believed the love that God hath to us. Christ makes us love Him
because He assures us that we are loved by Him.
IV. And lastly, Jesus Christ makes
self-governing men.
I need not trouble you with any
vindication of the rendering which for ‘sound mind,’ substitutes
‘self-control.’ I need only, in a word, ask you to
consider how manifestly we are made so as to need the exercise continually
of firm and resolute self-government. We have tastes and desires rooted in
the flesh, and others, of which the gratification is perfectly legitimate,
but which to make the guides of life, or to gratify without stint and
without restraint, is ruinous. Blind passions are not meant to guide seeing
reason; but if reason be the eye it is meant to guide the blind. And the men
who live ‘by nature,’ which is a polite way of saying ‘live by the worst
half of their nature, and their animal passions,’ are sure to land before
long in the ditch.
We have only to look at ourselves and
see how there are in us a whole clamorous mob of desires, like nine-days’
kittens, with their eyes shut and their mouths open, yelping for their
sustenance; and, further, to mark how in each man there is a voice that
says, ‘Thou shalt, thou shalt not; thou oughtest, thou oughtest not’ — we
need only, I say, look at ourselves to know that he is meant to coerce and
keep well down under hatches all these blind propensions and desires, and to
set sovereign above them a will that cannot be bribed, a reason that will
not be deceived, and a conscience that will be true to God. Govern
yourselves, or you will come all to pieces.
Yes, and what is the use of saying
that to men who cannot govern themselves, whose very disease is that they
cannot; and who cry out often and often, sometimes before they have gone
wrong and sometimes afterwards,’ Who shall deliver me from the body of this
death?’ It is no use to tell a discrowned and deposed monarch to rule his
kingdom. The mischief is that it is in full revolt, and he has no soldiers
behind him. As Bishop Butler says, ‘If conscience had power, as it has
authority, it would govern the world.’ But authority without power is but a
jest. So it is no good for conscience to give forth proclamations that are
worth no more than the paper that they are written on, when my will has been
talked over or enfeebled, and my desires and passions have got the bit
between their teeth, and are tearing down the road to the inevitable
collision.
Brethren, there is only one thing that
will give complete self-command. If you make trial, I will guarantee that it
will not fail. Trust to Jesus Christ; ask Him to govern, and He will help
you to control yourselves. That is the noblest conquest that any man can
make. ‘Every man is a king, and crowns himself when he puts on his own hat,’
says our quaint moralist. Wherever you are master, be you master inside your
own soul. And that you may, be the servant of Him who alone will make you
master of yourself and of the
world. In Christ the most timid may ‘wax valiant in fight,’ the’ weakest may
be made strong,’ the most self-centred heart be opened for love which is
peace and joy, and the wildest revolt in the little kingdom within may be
subdued. If we will only go to Him, and trust Him with ourselves, and live
in true communion with Him, and in patient exercise of the gifts that He
bestows, then He will say to us as of old, ‘Fear not! My strength is made
perfect in weakness.’ His love will kindle answering flames in us; and He
who brought the raging maniac, whom no chains could bind, to sit quietly at
His feet, will give us authority over the one city which we have to govern,
and will make the flesh the servant of the emancipated and enfranchised
spirit.
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A QUIET HEART
2 Timothy 1:12
‘... I know whom I have believed, and
am persuaded that He is able to keep that which I have committed unto Wire
against that day.’ — 2 Timothy 1:12.
THERE is some ambiguity in the
original words of this text, lying in that clause which is translated in our
Bibles — both Authorised and Revised — ‘that which I have committed unto
Him.’ The margin of the Revised Version gives as an alternative reading,
‘that which He hath committed unto me.’ To a mere English reader it may be a
puzzle how any words whatever could be susceptible of these two different
interpretations. But the mystery is solved by the additional note which the
same Revised Version gives, which tells us that the Greek is ‘ my deposit,’
or I might add another synonymous word, ‘my trust.’
Now you can see that ‘my trust’ may
mean either something with which I trust another, or something with which
another trusts me. So the possibility of either rendering arises. It is
somewhat difficult to decide between the two. I do not purpose to trouble
you with reasons for my preference here. Suffice it to say that, whilst
there are strong arguments in favour of the reading ‘that which He has
committed unto me,’ I am inclined to think that the congruity of the whole
representation, and especially the thought that this ‘trust,’ whatever it
is, is something which God has to keep, rather than which Paul has to keep,
shuts us up to the adoption of the rendering which stands in our Bibles.
Adopting it, therefore, though with
some hesitation, the next question arises, What is it that Paul committed to
God? The answer to that is, himself, in all his complex being, with all his
fears and anxieties, during the whole duration of his existence. He has done
what another Apostle exhorts us to do, ‘committed the keeping of his soul to
Him in well-doing, as unto a faithful Creator.’ Now that was a long past act
at the time when Paul wrote this letter. And here he looks back upon life,
and sees that all the experiences through which he has passed have but
confirmed the faith which he rested in God before the experiences, and that,
with the axe and the block almost in sight, he is neither ashamed of his
faith, nor dissatisfied with what it has brought him.
I. Notice, then, in the first
place, ‘the deposit’ of faith.
You observe that the two clauses of my
text refer to the same act, which in the one is described as ‘In whom I have
trusted’; and in the other as ‘committing something to Him.’ The metaphor is
a plain enough one. A man has some rich treasure. He is afraid of losing it,
he is doubtful of his own power to keep it; he looks about for some reliable
person and trusted hands, and he deposits it there. That is about as good a
description of what the New Testament means by ‘ faith’ as you will get
anywhere.
You and I have one treasure, whatever
else we may have or not have; and that is ourselves. The most precious of
our possessions is our own individual being.
We cannot ‘keep’ that. There are
dangers all round us. We are like men travelling in a land full of
pickpockets and highwaymen, laden with gold and precious stones. On every
side there are enemies that seek to rob us of that which is our true
treasure — our own souls. We cannot keep ourselves. Slippery paths and weak
feet go ill together. The tow in our hearts, and the fiery sparks of
temptation that are flying all round about us, are sure to come together and
make a blaze. We shall certainly come to ruin if we seek to get through
life, to do its work, to face its difficulties, to cope with its struggles,
to master its temptations, in our own poor, puny strength. So we must look
for trusty hands and lodge our treasure there, where it is safe.
And how am I to do that? By humble
dependence upon God revealed, for our faith’s feeble fingers to grasp, in
the person and work of His dear Son, who has died on the Cross for us all;
by constant realisation of His divine presence and implicit reliance on the
realities of His sustaining hand in all our difficulties, and His shielding
protection in all our struggles, and His sanctifying spirit in all our
conflicts with evil. And not only by the realisation of His presence and of
our dependence upon Him, nor only by the consciousness of our own
insufficiency, and the departing from all self-reliance, but as an essential
part of our committing ourselves to God, by bringing our wills into harmony
with His will. To commit includes to submit.
‘And, oh, brother! if thus knowing
your weakness, you will turn to Him for strength, if the language of your
hearts be
‘Myself I cannot
save,
Myself I cannot keep,
But strength in Thee I surely have,
Whose eyelids never sleep.’
And if thus, hanging upon Him, you
believe that when you fling yourself into necessary temptations, and cope
with appointed heavy tasks, and receive on your hearts the full blow of sent
sorrows, He will strengthen you and hold you up; and if with all your hearts
you bow, and you say,’ Lord! keeping me is Thy business far more than mine;
into Thy hands I commit my spirit,’ be sure that your trust will not be
disappointed.
Notice, further, about this deposit of
faith, how Paul has no doubt that he has made it, and is not at all afraid
to say that he has. Ay! there are plenty of you professing Christians who
have never got the length which all Christian people should arrive at, of a
calm certainty in the reality of your own faith. Do you feel, my brother,
that there is no doubt about it, that you are trusting upon Jesus Christ? If
you do, well; if the life confirms the confidence. But whilst the deepened
certitude of professing Christians as to the reality of their own faith is
much to be desired, there is also much to be dreaded the easy-going
assurance which a great many people who call themselves Christians have of
the reality of their trust, though it neither bows their wills to God’s
purposes, nor makes them calm and happy in the assurance of His presence.
The question for us all is, have we the right to say ‘I have committed
myself to Him’? If you have not, you have missed the blessedness of life,
and will never carry your treasure safely through the hordes of robbers that
lurk upon the road, but some day you will be found there, lying beggared,
bleeding, bruised. May it be that you are found there before the end, by the
merciful Samaritan who alone can bind up and lead to safety.
IX. Now note, secondly, the
serenity of faith.
What a grand picture of a peaceful
heart comes out of this letter, and its companion one to the same friend,
written a little before, but under substantially the same circumstances!
They are both full of autobiographical details, on which some critics look
with suspicion, but which seem to me to bear upon their very front the token
of their own genuineness.
And what a picture it is that they give! He is ‘Paul the aged’; old, if not
in years — and he probably was not an old man by years — yet old in thought
and care and hardships and toils. He is a prisoner, and the compulsory
cessation of activity, when so much was to be done, might well have fretted
a less eager spirit than that which burned in his puny frame. He is alone,
but for one faithful friend; and the bitterness of his solitude is increased
by the apostasy of some and the negligence of many. He is poor and thinly
clad; and he wants his one cloak ‘before winter.’ He has been before the
emperor once, and though he ‘was delivered from the mouth of the lion’ then,
he knows that he cannot expect to put his head into the lion’s mouth a
second time with impunity, and that his course is run. He has made but a
poor thing of life; he has disappointed all the hopes that were formed of
the brilliant young disciple of Gamaliel, who was bidding fair to be the
hammer of these heretical Christians. And yet there is no tremor nor
despondency in this, his swan-song. It goes up in a clear burst of joyful
music. It is the same spirit as that of the Psalmist: ‘There be many that
say, Who will show us any good? Lord, lift Thou up the light of Thy
countenance upon us.’ And serenely he sits there, in the midst of dangers,
disappointments, difficulties, and struggles, with a life behind him stuffed
full of thorns and hard work and many a care, and close before him the
martyr’s death, yet he says, with a flash of legitimate pride, ‘I am not
ashamed, for I know whom I have trusted, and that He is able to keep that
which I have committed unto Him against that day.’
My brother, you must have Paul’s faith
if you are to have Paul’s serenity. A quiet committal of yourself to God, in
all the ways in which I have already described that committal as carried
out, is the only thing which will give us quiet hearts, amidst the dangers
and disappointments and difficulties and conflicts which we have all to
encounter in this world. That trust in Him will bring, in the measure of its
own depth and constancy, a proportionately deep and constant calm in our
hearts.
For even though my faith brought me nothing from God, the very fact that I
have rolled my care off my shoulders on to His, though I had made a mistake
in doing it, would bring me tranquillity, as long as I believed that the
burden was on His shoulders and not on mine. Trust is always quiet. When I
can say, ‘I am not the master of the caravan, and it is no part of my
business to settle the route, I have no responsibility for providing food,
or watching, or anything else. All my business is to obey orders, and to
take the step nearest me and wait for the light,’ then I can be very quiet
whatever comes. And if I have cast my burden upon the Lord, I am not
delivered from responsibility, but I am delivered from harassment. I have
still tasks and duties, but they are all different when I think of them as
His appointing. I have still difficulties and dangers, but I can meet them
all with a new peacefulness if I say, ‘God is Master here, and I am in His
hands, and He will do what He likes with me.’ That is not the abnegation of
will, it is the vitalising of will And no man is ever so strong as the man
who feels ‘it is God’s business to take care of me; it is my business to do
what He tells me.’
That, dear friends, is the only armour
that will resist the cuts and blows that are sure to be aimed at you. What
sort of armour do you wear? Is it of pasteboard painted to look like steel,
like the breastplates and helmets of actors upon the stage in a theatre? A
great deal of our armour is. Do you get rid of all that make-believe, and
put on the breastplate of righteousness, and for a helmet the hope of
salvation, and, above all, take the shield of faith; and trust in the Lord
whate’er betide, and you will stand against all assaults. Paul’s faith is
the only recipe for securing Paul’s serenity.
And then, further, note how this same
quiet committal of himself into the loving hands of his Father — whom he had
learned to know because he had learned to trust His Son — is not only the
armour against all the dangers and difficulties in life, but is also the
secret of serene gazing into the eyes of close death. Paul knew that his
days were nearly at an end; he was under no illusions as to that, for you
remember the grand burst of confidence, even grander than this of my text,
in this same letter, with which he seems to greet the coming of the end, and
exclaims, with a kind of Hallelujah! in his tone, ‘I have fought a good
fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith. And there is
nothing left for me now, now when the struggles are over and the heat and
dust of the arena are behind me, but, panting and victorious, to receive the
crown.’ He knows that death is sure and near; and yet in this same letter he
says, ‘I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion, and the Lord shall
deliver me from every evil work, and save me into His everlasting kingdom.’
Did he, then, expect to escape from the headsman’s block? Was he beginning
to falter in his belief that martyrdom was certain? By no means. The
martyrdom was the deliverance. The striking off of his head by the sharp axe
was the ‘saving of him into the everlasting kingdom.’ His faith, grasping
Jesus Christ, who abolished death, changes the whole aspect of death to him;
and instead of ,a terror it becomes God’s angel that will come to the
prisoner and touch him, and say, ‘Arise!’ and the fetters will fall from off
his feet, and the angel will lead him through ‘the gate that opens of its
own accord,’ and presently he will find himself in the city. That is to say,
true confidence in God revealed in Jesus Christ is the armour, not only
against the ills of life, but against the inevitable ill of death. It
changes the whole aspect of the ‘shadow feared of man’
Now I know that there is a danger in
urging the reception of the gospel of Jesus Christ on the ground of its
preparing us for death. And I know that the main reasons for being
Christians would continue in full force if there were no death; but I know
also that we are all of us far too apt to ignore that grim certainty that
lies gaping for us, somewhere on the road. And if we have certainly to go
down into the common darkness, and to tread with our feet the path that all
but two of God’s favourites have trod, it is as well to look the fact in the
face, and be ready. I do not want to frighten any man into being a
Christian, but I do beseech each of you, brethren, to lay to heart that you
will have to grapple with that last enemy, and I ask you, as you love your
own souls, to make honest work of this question, Am I ready for that summons
when it comes, because I have committed my soul, body, and spirit into His
hands, and I can quietly say, ‘ Thou wilt not leave my soul in the grave,
nor wilt Thou suffer Thy servant to see corruption’?
Paul’s faith made him serene in life
and victorious over death; and it will do the same for you.
III. So note, further, the
experience of faith.
In the first clause of our text the
Apostle says: — ‘I know whom I have trusted.’ And it is because he knows Him
that therefore he is persuaded that ‘He is able to keep.’
How did Paul know Him? By experience.
By the experience of his daily life. By all these years of trial and yet of
blessedness through which he had passed; by all the revelations that had
been made to his waiting heart as the consequence and as the reward of the
humble faith that rested upon God. And so the whole past had confirmed to
him the initial confidence which knit him to Jesus Christ.
If you want to know the worth of
Christian faith, exercise it. We must trust, to begin with, before
experience. But the faith that is built upon a lifetime is a far stronger
thing than the tremulous faith that, out of
darkness, stretches a groping hand, and for the first time lays hold upon
God’s outstretched hand. We hope then, we tremblingly trust, we believe on
the authority of His word. But after years have passed, we can say, ‘We have
heard Him ourselves, and we know that this is the Christ, the Saviour of the
world.’
Further, none who truly commit
themselves to God ever regret it. Is there anything else of which you can
say that? Is there any other sort of life that never turns out a
disappointment and bitterness and ashes in the mouth of the man that feeds
upon it? And is it not something of an evidence of the reality of, the
Christian’s faith that millions of men are able to stand up and say,’ Lo! we
have put our confidence in Him and we are not ashamed?’ ‘This poor man cried
and the Lord heard him, and delivered him out of all his troubles. They
looked unto God and were lightened, and their faces were not ashamed.’ You
cannot share in the conviction, the issue of experience which a Christian
man has, if you are not a Christian. My inward evidence of the reality of
the Gospel truth, which I have won because I trusted Him when I had not the
experience, cannot be shared with anybody besides. You must ‘taste’ before
you ‘see that the Lord is good’ But the fact that there is such a
conviction, and the fact that there is nothing on the other side of the
sheet to contradict it, ought to weigh something in the scale. Try Him and
trust Him, and your experience will be, as that of all who have trusted Him
has been, ‘that this hope maketh not ashamed.’
IV. Lastly, note here the goal of
faith.
‘Against that day.’ The Apostle has
many allusions to that day in this final letter. It was evidently, as was
natural under the circumstances, much in his mind. And the tone of the
allusions is remarkable. Remember what Paul believed that day was — a day
when he ‘and all men would stand before the judgment’ bar of an omniscient
and all-righteous, Divine Judge, to receive ‘the deeds done in the body.’ A
solemn thought and a firm conviction, and a profound impression as to that
day, were in his mind. And in the face of all this, he says, ‘I know that He
will keep this poor soul of mine against that day.’
Ah, my brother! it is easy for you to
shuffle out of your thoughts the judgment-seat before which we must all
stand, and so to be quiet. It is easy for you to question, in a so-called
intellectual scepticism, the New Testament revelations as to the future, and
so to be quiet. It is easy for you
to persuade yourselves of the application there of another standard of
judgment than that which Scripture reveals, and to say, ‘If I have done my
best God will not be hard upon me,’ and so to be quiet. But, supposing that
that certain tribunal blazed upon you; supposing that you could not get rid
of the thought that you were to stand there, and supposing that you realised,
further, the rigidity of that judgment, and how it penetrates to the
discerning of the thoughts and intents of the heart, would you be quiet
then? Should you be quiet then?
This man was. How? Why? Because, in
patient trust, he had put his soul into God’s hands, and a lifetime had
taught him that his trust was not in vain.
If you want like peace in life, like
victory in death, like boldness in the Day of Judgment, oh, dear friend! —
friend though unknown — let me plead with you to seek it where Paul found
it, and where you will find it, in simple faith on God manifest in His Son.
*********************************************************
‘SOUND
WORDS’
2 Timothy 1:12
Hold fast the form of sound words,
which thou hut heard of me, in faith and love which is in Christ Jesus.’ — 2
Timothy 1:12.
ANY great author or artist passes, in
the course of his work, from one manner to another; so that a person
familiar with him can date pretty accurately his books or pictures as being
in his ‘earlier’ or ‘later’ style So there is nothing surprising in the fact
that there are great differences between Paul’s last writings and his
previous ones. The surprising thing would have been if there had not been
such differences. The peculiarities of the so-called three pastoral Epistles
(the two to Timothy, and the one to Titus) are not greater than can fairly
be accounted for by advancing years, changed circumstances, and the
emergence of new difficulties and enemies.
Amongst them there are certain
expressions, very frequent in these letters and wholly unknown in any of
Paul’s other work. These have been pounced upon as disproving the
genuineness of these letters, hut they only do so if you assume that a man,
when he gets old, must never use any words that he did not use when he was
young, whatever new ideas may have come to him. Now, in this text of mine is
one of these phrases peculiar to these later letters — ‘sound words.’ That
phrase and its parallel one, ‘sound doctrine,’ occur in all some half-dozen
times in these letters, and never anywhere else. The expression has become
very common among us. It is more often used than understood; and the popular
interpretation of it hides its real meaning and obscures the very important
lessons which are to be drawn from the true understanding of it, lessons
which, I take leave to think, modern Christianity stands very sorely in need
of. I desire now to try to unfold the thoughts and lessons con-rained in
this phrase.
I. What does Paul mean by a ‘form of
sound words’? I begin the answer by saying that he does not mean a doctrinal
formula. The word here rendered ‘form’ is the same which he employs in the
first of the letters to Timothy, when he speaks of himself and his own
conversion as being ‘a pattern to them that should hereafter believe.’ The
notion intended here is not a cut-and-dried creed, but a body of teaching
winch will not be compressed within the limits of an iron form, but will be
a pattern for the lives of the men to whom it is given. The Revised Version
has ‘the pattern; and not ‘the form.’ I take leave to think that there were
no creeds in the
apostolic time, and that the Church would probably have had a firmer grasp
of God’s truth if there had never been any. At all events the idea of a
cast-iron creed, into which the whole magnificence of the Christian faith is
crushed, is by no means Paul’s idea in the word here. Then, with regard to
the other part of the phrase — ‘sound words’ — we all know how that is
generally understood by people. Words are supposed to be ‘sound,’ when they
are in conformity with the creed of the critic. A sound High Churchman is an
entirely different person from a sound Nonconformist. Puritan and
Sacramentarian differ with regard to the standard which they set up, but
they use the word in the same way, to express theological statements in
conformity with that standard. And we all know how harshly the judgment is
sometimes made, and how easy it is to damn a man by a solemn shake of the
head or a shrug of the shoulders, and the question whether he is ‘sound.’
Now, all that is clean away from the
apostolic notion of the word in question. If we turn to the other form of
this phrase, which occurs frequently in these letters, ‘sound doctrine,’
there is another remark to be made. ‘Doctrine’ conveys to the ordinary
reader the notion of an abstract, dry, theological statement of some truth.
Now, what the Apostle means is not ‘doctrine’ so much as ‘teaching’; and if
you will substitute ‘teaching’ for ‘doctrine’ you get much nearer his
thought just as you will get nearer it if for ‘sound,’ with its meaning of
conformity to a thee-logical standard, you substitute what the word really
means, ‘healthy,’ wholesome, health-giving, healing. All these ideas run
into each other. That which is in itself healthy is health-giving as food,
and as a medicine is healing. The Apostle is not describing the teaching
that he had given to Timothy by its conformity with any standard, but is
pointing to its essential nature as being wholesome, sound in a physical
sense; and to its effect as being healthy and health-giving. Keep hold of
that thought and the whole aspect of this saying changes at once.
There is only one other point that I
would suggest in this first part of my sermon, as to the Apostolic meaning
of these words, and it is this: ‘healing’ and ‘holy’ are etymologically
connected, they tell us. The healing properties of the teaching to which
Paul refers are to be found entirely in this — its tendency to make men
better, to produce a purer morality, a loftier goodness, a more unselfish
love, and so to bring harmony and health into the diseased nature. The one
healing for a man is to be holy; and, says Paul, the way to be holy is to
keep a firm hold of that body of teaching which I have presented.
Now, that this tendency to produce
nobler manners and purer conduct and holier character is the true meaning of
the word ‘ sound’ here, and not ‘ orthodox’ as we generally take it, will be
quite clear, I think, if you will notice how, in another part of these same
letters, the Apostle gives a long catalogue of the things which are contrary
to the health-giving doctrine. If the ordinary notion of the expression were
correct, that catalogue ought to be a list of heresies. But what is it? A
black list of vices — ‘deceivers,’ ‘ungodly, sinners, ‘unholy,’ profane,’
‘murderers,’ ‘man-slayers,’ ‘whoremongers,’ ‘man-stealers,’ ‘liars,’
‘perjured’ persons. Not one of these refers to aberration of opinion; all of
them point to divergences of conduct, and these are the things that are
contrary to the healing doctrine. But they are not contrary, often, to sound
orthodoxy. For there have been a great many imitators of that king of
France, who carried little leaden images of saints and the Virgin in his hat
and the devil in his heart. ‘The form of sound words’ is the pattern of
healing teaching, which proves itself healing because it makes holy. Now,
that is my first question answered.
II. Where Paul thought these
healing words were to be found.
He had no doubt whatever as to that.
They were in the message that he preached of Jesus Christ and His salvation.
There and there only, in his estimation and inspired teaching, are such
words to be found. The truth of Christ, His incarnation, His sacrifice, His
resurrection, His ascension, the gift of His Divine Spirit, with all the
mighty truths on which these great facts rest, and all which flow from these
great facts, these, in the aggregate, are the health-giving words for the
sickly world.
Now, historically, it is proved to Be
so. I do not need to defend, as if it were in full conformity with the
dictates and principles of Christianity, the life and practice of any
generation of Christian people. But this I do venture to say, that the world
has been slowly lifted, all through the generations, by the influence,
direct and indirect, of the great truths of Christianity, and that today the
very men who, in the name of certain large principles which they have
learned from the gospel, are desirous of brushing aside the old-fashioned
gospel, are kicking down the ladder by which they climbed, and that, with
all the imperfections, for which we have to take shame to ourselves before
God, still the reflection of the perfect Imago which is east into the world
from the mirror of the collective
Christian conduct and character, though it be distorted by many a flaw in
the glass, and imperfect by reason of many a piece of the reflecting medium
having dropped away, is still the fairest embodiment of character that the
world has ever seen. Why, what is the meaning of the sarcasms that we have
all heard, till we are wearied of them, about ‘the Nonconformist
conscience’? The adjective is wrong; it should be ‘the Christian
conscience.’ But with that correction I claim the sarcasms as unconscious
testimony to the fact that the Christian ideal of character and conduct set
forth, and approximately realised, by religious people, is far above the
average morality of even a so-called Christian nation. And all that is duo
to the ‘pattern of health-giving words.’
Now, the historical confirmation of
Paul’s claim that these health-giving words were to be found in his gospel
is no more than is to be expected, if we look at the contents of that gospel
to which he thus appeals. For there never has been such an instrument for
regenerating individuals and society as lies in the truths of Christianity,
firmly grasped and honestly worked out. Their healing power comes, first,
from their giving the sense of pardon and acceptance. Brethren, there is
nothing, as I humbly venture to affirm, that will go down to the fountain
and origin of all the ills of man, except that teaching ‘God was in Christ
reconciling the world to Himself, not imputing unto them their trespasses.’
That reality of guilt, that schism and alienation between man and God, must
be dealt with first before you can produce high morality. Unless you deal
with that central disease you do very little. Something you do; but the
cancer is deep-seated, and the world’s remedies for it may cure pimples on
the surface, but are powerless to extirpate the malignant tumour that has
laid hold of the vitals. You must begin by dealing with the disease of sin,
not only in its aspect as habit, but in its consequence of guilt and
responsibility and separation from God, before you can bring health to the
sick man.
And then, beyond that, I need not
remind you of how a higher and more wholesome morality is made possible by
these health-giving words, inasmuch as they set forth for us the perfect
example of Jesus Christ, inasmuch as they bring into operation love, the
mightiest of all powers to mould a life, inasmuch as they open up for us,
far more solemnly and certainly than ever else has been revealed, the solemn
thought of judgment, and of every man giving account of himself to God, and
the assurance that ‘whatsoever a man soweth here, that,’ a thousand-fold
increased in the crop, ‘shall he also reap’ in the eternities. In addition
to the example of perfection in the beloved Christ, the mighty motive of
love, the solemn urgency of judgment and retribution, the health-giving
words bring to us the assurance of a divine power dwelling within us, to
lift us to heights of purity and goodness to which our unaided feet can
never, never climb. And for all these reasons the message of Christ’s
incarnation and death is the health-giving word for the world.
But, further, let me remind you that,
according to the apostolic teaching, these healing and health-giving effects
will not be produced except by that gospel. Some of you, perhaps, may have
listened to the first part of my sermon with approbation, because it seemed
to fit in with the general disparagement of doctrine prevalent in this day.
Will you listen to this part too? I venture to assert that, although there
are many men apart from Christ who have as clear a conception of what they
ought to be and to do as any Christian, and some men apart from Christ who
do aim after high and pure, noble lives, not altogether unsuccessfully, yet
on the whole, on the wide scale, and in the long-run, if you change the
‘pattern of health-giving words’ you lower the health of the world. It seems
to me that this generation is an object-lesson in that matter. Why is it
that these two things are running side by side in the literature of these
closing years of the century — viz., a rejection of the plain laws of
morality, especially in regard of the relations of the sexes, and a
rejection of the old-fashioned gospel of Jesus Christ? I venture to think
that the two things stand to each other very largely in the relation of
cause and effect, and that, if you want to bring back the world to Puritan
morality, you will have to go back in the main to Puritan theology. I do not
mean to insist upon any pinning of faith to any theological system, but this
I am bound to say, and I beseech you to consider, that if you strike out
from the ‘pattern of health-giving words’ the truth of the Incarnation, the
sacrifice on the Cross, the Resurrection, the Ascension, and the gift of the
Spirit, the ‘health-giving words’ that you have left are not enough to give
health to a fly.
III. Lastly, notice what Paul would
have us do with these’ health-giving words.’
‘Hold fast the form.., in faith and
love, which is in Christ Jesus.’ Now that exhortation includes three things.
Your time will not allow me to do more than just touch them. First it
applies to the understanding. ‘Hold fast the teaching’ by letting it occupy
your minds Brethren, I am unwillingly bound to acknowledge my suspicion that
a very large number of Christian people scarcely ever occupy their thoughts
with the facts and principles of the gospel, and that they have no firm and
intelligent grasp of these, either singly or in their connection. I would
plead for less newspaper and more Bible; for less novel and more gospel. I
know how hard it is for busy men to have spare energy for anything beyond
their business and the necessary claims of society, but I would even venture
to advise a little less of what is called Christian work, in order to get a
little more Christian knowledge. ‘Come ye yourselves apart into a solitary
place,’ said the Master; and all busy workers need that. ‘Hold fast the
health-giving words’ by meditation, a lost art among so many Christians.
The exhortation applies next to the
heart. ‘Hold in faith and love.’ If that notion of the expression, which I
have been trying to combat, were the correct one, there would be no need for
anything beyond familiarising the understanding with the bearings of the
doctrinal truths. But Paul sees need for a great deal more. The
understanding brings to the emotions that on which they fasten and feed.
Faith — which is more than credence, being an act of the will — casts itself
on the truth believed, or rather on the Person revealed in the truth; and
love, kindled by faith, and flowing out in grateful response, and
self-abandonment, are as needful as orthodox belief, in order to hold fast
the health-giving words.
The exhortation applies, finally, to
Character and conduct. Emotion, even when it takes the shape of faith and
love, is as little the end of God’s revelation as is knowledge. He makes
Himself known to us in all the greatness of His grace and love in Jesus
Christ, not that we may know, and there an end, nor even that knowing, we
may feel, and there an end, though a great many emotional Christians seem to
think that is all; but that knowing, we may feel, and knowing and feeling,
we may be and do what He would have us do and be. We have the great river
flowing past our doors. It is not only intended that we should fill our
cisterns by knowledge, nor only bathe our parched lips by faith and love,
but that we should use it to drive all the wheels of the mill of life. Not
he that understands, nor he that glows, but he that does, is the man who
holds fast the pattern of sound health-giving words.
The world is like that five-porched
pool in which were gathered a great multitude of sick folks. Its name is the
‘House of Mercy,’ for so Bethesda means, tragically as the title seems to be
contradicted by the condition of the cripples and diseased lying there. But
this fountain once moved gushes up for ever; and whosoever will may step
into it, and immediately be made whole of whatsoever disease he has.
*********************************************************
GOD’S STEWARDS
2 Timothy 1:14
‘That good thing which was committed
unto thee keep by the Holy Ghost which dwelleth in us.’ — 2 Timothy 1:14.
THE Apostle has just been expressing
his confidence for himself that ‘God is able to keep that which I have
committed’ unto him ‘against that day.’ Here, with intentional parallelism,
he repeats the leading ideas and key-words of that great confidence, but in
a wholly different connection. Whether we suppose that the rendering of our
version in the twelfth verse is correct or no, there still remains the
intentional parallelism between the two verses. In discoursing upon that
twelfth verse, I gave reasons for adhering to the translation of our version
and regarding the parallel as double. There are two committals. God commits
something to us; we commit something to God. But whether that be so or no,
there are, at all events, two keepings. God keeps, and we have to keep. And
if, on the other hand, in both verses the Apostle speaks of a charge
committed to men by God, then the contrasted parallel between the two
keepings remains and is even increased, because then it is the same thing
which God keeps and which we keep. So the whole connection between man’s
faithfulness and God’s protection is suggested here. The true Christian life
in its entirety may either be regarded as God’s work or the believer’s. We
keep ourselves when we let God keep us, and God keeps us by making us able
to keep ourselves.
I. Note then, first, our charge.
The Apostle is evidently thinking
mainly of the gospel message which was entrusted to Himself and to Timothy.
That is shown by the whole context. The previous verse is, ‘ Hold fast the
form of sound words, which thou hast heard of me, in faith and love which is
in Christ Jesus.’ And the same connection appears in the First Epistle to
Timothy, where the same exhortation is repeated: ‘Keep that. which is
committed to thy trust, avoiding profane and vain babblings, ‘which some
professing have erred concerning the faith.’ The same idea of the gospel as
the deposit committed to the trust of Christian men lies in other words of
the first epistle, where the Apostle speaks of the ‘gospel of the glory of
the blessed God which was committed to my trust.’ And it crops up in other
expressions of his, such as that he was ‘put in trust of the gospel.’ It
also underlies the very common representation of himself and his colleagues
as being ‘stewards of the mysteries of God.’ But all these expressions
describe no prerogative of an apostle, or of a teaching office or order in
the Church, but declare the solemn responsibility laid by the great gift
bestowed upon all Christian men. Whosoever has accepted the message of
salvation for himself is, ipso facto, put in charge of that message for
carrying it to others. The trust which I place in the gospel makes the
gospel a trust which is committed to me. And every believer, howsoever
imperfect may be his grasp of the truth, howsoever narrow may be the sphere
of his agency, has given into his hands this great charge, that the Word of
God is committed to his trust.
You Christian people are responsible
in this connection for two things, for the preservation of the truth and for
the diffusion of the truth.
You are responsible for its
preservation. Some of us, in a special manner, have it given to us in charge
to oppose prevailing tendencies which rob the gospel of its glory and of its
power, to try to preach it to men, whether they will hear or forbear, in its
simplicity and its unwelcomeness, as well as in its sweetness and its
graciousness. But for most of us, the responsibility for the preservation of
the truth lies mainly in another direction, and we are bound to keep it for
the food of our own souls, and to see that the atmosphere in which we live,
and the prevailing tendencies around us, the worldliness, the selfishness,
the absorption in the things seen to the exclusion of the things that axe
unseen and eternal, do not rob us of the treasure which we say that we
value. See to it that you keep it as what you profess that it is, the anchor
of your hope and the guide of all your lives, binding it upon the palms of
your hands that all your work may be sanctified; writing it between your
eyes that all your thoughts may be enlightened; and inscribing it on the
posts of your doors and your gates that, whensoever you go forth to work,
you may go out under its guidance, and when you come back to rest and
solitude, you may bear it with you for your meditation and refreshment. The
charge that is given to us is the preservation of God’s Word, and the gospel
which we have received we have received with this written upon it, ‘Hold
fast that which thou hast; let no man take thy crown.’
And then, further, all of us Christian
people are responsible for the diffusion of that Word. It is given to us
that we may spread it, and this is no exclusive prerogative of an apostolic
class, or of an order of ministers or clergy in God’s Church, but every
Christian man and woman who has the Word is thereby bound to tell the Word
faithfully.
And then, subordinately and connected
with this, I may put another thought, that the reputation and character of
our Master are committed to us to keep. People take their notions of Jesus
Christ a great deal more from you than from the Bible, and the Christian
Church is the true scripture which most men know best. The written
revelation is often negatived, or at all events neutralised, by the
representation which we Christians make of Christ. He has given into our
hands His reputation, as if He said: ‘Live so that men may know what sort of
a Christ I am; and so set forth the spirit of life that was in Me that men
may be led to believe that there is something in the truths and principles
which make men like you.’
But there is a wider application
legitimately to be given to the words of my text, on which I touch for a
moment. The great trust which is committed to us all is ourselves; and in
connection therewith we are responsible for two things — first, for the
development of character; and second, for the exercise of capacity.
We are responsible for the development
of character. We have to cut off and suppress, or, at least, to subordinate
and regulate, a great deal within us in order that the true self may rise
into sovereign majesty and power. We have to cultivate shy graces, unwelcome
duties, sides of our character which are not naturally prominent. The faults
that we have are not to be cured simply by the repression of them, but by
the cultivation of their opposites. All this is given to us to do, and
nobody can do it for us. We are stewards of many things, but the most
precious gift of which we are stewards is this awful nature of ours, with
possibilities that tower heaven-high, and evils that go down to the depths
of hell, shut up within the narrow room of our hearts. The man who has
himself put into his own hands can never want a field for diligent
cultivation. And we are responsible for the use of capacities. God gives
these to us that we may by exercise strengthen them. And so, brother, as a
man, your natural self is your charge; as a Christian, the word which brings
your’ better self, is that which is committed to you to keep.
II. Now, secondly, notice our keeping
of our charge. The word rendered here ‘to keep’ rather means ‘to guard’ than
to keep in the sense of preserving. ‘Keeping’ is the consequence of the
‘guarding’ which my text enjoins. We may get a picture which may help us to
understand the drift of the apostolic exhortation, if I remind you of two of
the uses of the word in its non-metaphorical sense in Scripture. It is the
expression employed to describe the occupation of the shepherds on the
upland slopes of Bethlehem on Christmas Eve. They were ‘keeping watch over
their flocks by night.’ That is how you have to watch yourselves and the
word that is committed to your care. Again, it is the word employed to
describe the vigilant watchfulness of the sentry outside the prison gates
where the apostles lay immured; or of the four quaternions of soldiers that
had to take charge of Peter when he was chained to them. And that is how we
have to watch, as the shepherd over his flock, as the sentry over the prison
house, or as the guard over some treasure. So Christian men and women have
to live, exercising all the care needful to prevent the stealing away some
of the flock, the escape of some of the prisoners, the filching from them of
some of their treasure. Let me expand the apostolic exhortation into two of
three precepts.
Cultivate the sense of stewardship. It
is a very hard thing for us to keep fresh the feeling that all which we are
and have is given to us, and that not for ourselves, but for God. The
beginning of evil is the weakening of that sense of responsibility, and the
dawning of the dream that we are our own. The prodigal son’s downfall began
with saying, ‘Give me the portion of goods that falleth to me.’
And the next step came naturally after
that: ‘He gathered all together and went away into a far country.’ And the
next step came just as naturally after that: ‘He wasted his substance in
riotous living.’
If sense of stewardship and
responsibility is weakened within us, the mainspring of all good is weakened
within us, and we shall become self-willed, self-indulgent, self-asserting,
God-forgetting. If we think that the talent or the pound is ours, we shall
spend it for our own purposes, and that is ‘waste.’
And is it not a sad commentary on the
tendency of human nature to forget stewardship, and to lose the impression
of responsibility, that that very word ‘talents,’ which is borrowed from
Christ’s parable, is used in common speech without the slightest sense that
it suggests anything about stewardship, faithfulness, or reckoning? Let us,
then, take care to cultivate the sense of responsibility.
Again, let us exercise unslumbering vigilance. A great political thinker
says, ‘The price of liberty is eternal vigilance.’ The price of keeping the
treasure that God has given us is the same. There are old legends of
fabulous riches hid away in some rocky cave amongst the mountains, guarded
by mythological creatures, of whom it is said that their eyes have no lids.
They cannot shut them, and they never sleep. And that is what Christians
need to be, with lidless, wide-opened, vigilant eyes; watching ever against
the evils that are ever around us, and the robbers who are ever seeking to
drag the precious deposit from our hands. Live to watch, and watch that you
may live.
Then, again, familiarise yourselves
with the truth which you have in charge. I am not half so much afraid that
intellectual doubts and the formulated conscious disbelief of this
generation will affect Christian people, as I am afraid of the unconscious
drift sweeping them away before they know. The writer of the Epistle to the
Hebrews has a solemn figure in regard of this matter. He says: ‘Let us take
the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any time we
should drift past them.’ And that is exactly what befalls Christian men and
women who do not continually renew their familiarity with God’s Word and the
gospel to which they trust. Before they know where they are, the
silent-flowing, swift stream has swept them down, and the truths to which
they fancied they were anchored are almost invisible on the far horizon. For
one man who loses his Christianity by yielding to the arguments of the other
side there are ten who lose it by evaporation. ‘As thy servant was busy here
and there,’ was the lame excuse of the man in the Old Testament for letting
his prisoner run away, ‘he was gone!’ And God knows how he has gone and
Where he went.
That is true about a great many who
are professing Christian people. The Word has slipped out of their hands,
and they do not know how, nor exactly when it escaped from their slack
fingers. If you will put plucked flowers into a glass without any water you
cannot but expect them to wither; and if you will refrain from refreshing
your belief and your trust by familiarity with the truths of the gospel, and
by meditating upon these, you cannot wonder that they should shrivel up and
lose their sweetness for you. Keep that word hid in your hearts that you sin
not against Him and it.
And then, further, exercise your
gifts. The very worst way to keep the talent is to keep it in a napkin. The
man who buried it in the earth, and then dug it up and presented it to his
lord, did not know how much weight it
had lost by rust and decay while it was hidden away. For though gold does
not rust, the gold of the talent that we possess does; and the sure way to
make our gifts dwindle is that we neglect to use them. It seems an odd way
to keep corn, to fling it broadcast out of a basket over the fields, but
‘there is that scattereth, and yet increaseth.’ Live your faith; let what
you believe be the guide of your practice; increase your grasp upon it by
meditation and by prayer, use your capacities, exercise your faculties, and
they will grow, and you will be strong.
III. Lastly, note our Ally in our
keeping of our charge.
‘Through the Holy Ghost which dwelleth
in us.’ Then all is to be done, not in our own strength, but in the strength
of the great indwelling Guest and Helper. So, then, there arise two thoughts
from this.
The one is that we keep ourselves best
when we give ourselves to God to keep us. The Apostle has just been doing
that for himself, and he now would exhort Timothy to do the same. Our faith
brings this great Ally into the field. If we commit to God what God has
committed to us, then, as the patriarch, upon his dangerous and doubtful
path, beheld in the heavens above him the camp of the angels hovering over
his little camp, so, if we commit the keeping of ourselves and of all our
responsibility in connection with God’s work, to Him, we too may be sure
that ‘the angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear Him,’ and
that He will keep us. Then there will be a fourth in the furnace like unto
the Son of Man, and no fire shall consume anything but the bonds of those
who, in the very fire, trust themselves to the strong hands of God. We best
keep ourselves when we give ourselves to God to keep.
But another thought here is that God
keeps us by enabling us to keep ourselves. ‘Through the Holy Spirit that
dwelleth in us’ — so His protection is no mere outward wall of defence
around us, nor any change of circumstances which may avert danger, but it is
the putting within us of a divine life-principle which shall mould our
thoughts, regulate our desires, reinforce our weakness, and be in us a power
that shall preserve us from all evil. God fights for us, not in the sense of
fighting instead of us, but in the sense of fighting by our sides when we
fight. A faith which says, ‘God will take care of me,’ and does not take
care of itself, is no faith, but either hypocrisy or self-deceived
presumption. Faith will intensify effort instead of leading to shirk it; and
the more we trust Him, the more we should ourselves work. We keep ourselves
when God keeps us; God keeps us
when we keep ourselves. Both things are true, and therefore our fitting
temper is the double one of self-distrusting confidence and of earnest
diligence.
Dear brother, we travel on a dangerous road. We never can tell from behind
what rock a gun barrel may be levelled at us, or where the highwayman may
swoop down upon us to rob us of our treasure. That is no country to travel
through carelessly, in loose order, with our gun upon another horse away at
the back of the caravan, and we ourselves straying hither and thither
gathering flowers, or seeking easy places to walk in; but it is a land in
which we must be unslumberlngly vigilant, and screw ourselves up to all
effort. And it is a country in which we shall certainly be robbed unless we
commit ourselves unto Him who alone is able to keep us from falling.
‘Still let me guard the holy fire, And
still stir up Thy gift in me.’
If we say, in life and in death,
‘Father! into Thy hands I commit my spirit,’ then we may be humbly, but not
idly confident that the old promise will be fulfilled to us:
‘The Lord will keep thee ever
more.’
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THE TRUE AIM OF LIFE — PLEASING CHRIST
2 Timothy 2:4.
‘No man that warreth entangleth
himself with the affairs of this life; that he may please him who hath
chosen him to be a soldier.’ — 2 Timothy 2:4.
PAUL had enough to do to infuse some
of his own vigour into the feebler nature of Timothy. If we may judge from
the prevailing tone of the Apostle’s letters to him, his young assistant
lacked courage and energy; was easily beaten down, needed tonics for the
‘often infirmities’ of his mind as well as of his body. The delicate
ingenuity with which this letter accumulates all conceivable encouragements
for the drooping heart that was to take up the old lion-heart’s nearly
finished work, is very beautiful. One topic of encouragement is conspicuous
by its absence. There is no rosy painting of the Christian life, or of a
Christian teacher’s life, as easy or pleasant to flesh and blood. On the
contrary, none of Paul’s letters give more emphatic utterance to the fact
that suffering is the law of both.
That is wise; for the best way
to-brace people for difficult work and hardship is to tell them fairly what
they will have to face. It will act as a filter and Gideon’s test, no doubt,
but it will only filter out impure matter, and it will evoke latent
enthusiasm; for there is always fascination to generous natures or fervent
disciples in the thought of danger and toil, undertaken for a beloved cause
or favourite pursuit. Boys are made sailors by the stories of wreck and
hardship told them to keep them ashore.
So Paul encourages’ son Timothy’ by putting before him all the toil and the
peril which are the conditions of the work to which he has set his hand. In
this context we have a number of illustrations and analogies, according to
all of which self-denial and persistent work are indispensable. The wrestler
has not only to brace every limb in his struggle till the muscles stand out
like whipcord, but he has to abide by the laws of the arena. The farmer has
to exercise long patience, and to labour hard in the field and wild weather,
before he can sit down and eat of the fruit of the harvest. The soldier has
not only to take his life in hand, but to abandon his civil pursuits and
make the pleasure of his commander the law of his life. The diligence of
other people in their worldly callings may well put us to shame; and if that
is not enough, our own diligence in the one half of our life may shame our
laziness in the other. All fire there, and all ice here !
Ready for any sacrifice of time and pains in that, grudging every such
sacrifice in this!
Our text constitutes the first of that
series of illustrative metaphors, each of which adds something of its own to
the general idea. In it we have a whole series of striking thoughts
suggested, which can be but very imperfectly worked out in the brief space
at our disposal.
I. The first thing that strikes one
in the words is their grand statement of the all-comprehensive life’s aim of
the Christian soldier.
There is savagery and devilry enough
about the soldiers’ trade to make it remarkable that it should be so
constantly chosen to illustrate the life of the servants of the Prince of
Peace. But there are grand qualities brought out in warfare, which need but
to be transferred to their most worthy object; and for the sake of these,
the metaphor is used here. The one great peculiarity of military discipline
is prompt, unquestioning obedience. Wheresoever inferiors may discuss their
superiors’ will, or reason on the limits of obedience, or allow themselves a
margin of delay, all that is mutiny in the army, and short and sharp work
will be made of it, if it appear. ‘Their’s not to reason why,’ but to do
what they are bid, when they are bid, as they are bid. Their only standard
of duty is their commander’s will, and men have been shot as mutineers for
doing grand deeds of heroism contrary to orders. The highest guerdon of
courage and faithfulness is the general’s praise, and men have gladly flung
away their lives for a smile or a ‘well done’ from some Alexander or
Napoleon, counting the gain far greater than the price paid.
Such an attitude towards a fellow-man
makes men machines, and yet there is something in that absolute obedience
and out-and-out submission to authority very noble in itself, and going a
long way to ennoble even warfare. To obey may he bad or good, according to
the master and the service; but obedience is fitting for a man, and there
can be no attainment of the highest dignity, beauty, or force of character
in lawless ‘self-pleasing, but only in willing submission to a law and a
lawgiver, discerned by the will to be authoritative, by the conscience to be
morally good, and by the heart to be love-worthy. If, then, we can find one
ruler, leader, and commander of the people, whose authority is rightfully
supreme, whose commands coincide with our highest wisdom and lead to our
purest felicity, to obey him must lift a life into dignity. Then we have
found the secret which will make little things great, and great things
small; which will dignify all life, and make the most absolute service the
truest freedom, the kingliest rule.
So our text lays hold of the great
central peculiarity of Christian morals, when it makes pleasing Christ to be
the great, all-comprehensive aim of the Christian soldier. It is this which
makes the law of morality, as re-fashioned by Christianity, altogether new
and blessed. How entirely different a thing it is to give a poor, feeble,
solitary man a living, loving Lord to serve and to please, and to set him
down before a cold, impersonal ‘ideal’; and say to him, ‘There! live up to
that, or it will be the worse for you.’ The gospel sets forth Jesus Christ
as the Pattern and Law of duty, in whom all the statuesque purity of the
marble is changed into the warm, breathing flesh and blood of a brother. It
sets Him forth as the power for duty, who stoops down from His height to
reach forth a helping hand to us poor strugglers in the bogs at the
mountain’s foot, while Law but looks on with pure and icy eyes at our
flounderings, and counts the splashes on our dress. It sets Him forth as the
Motive for duty, who draws us to what is right by ‘the cords of love and the
bands of a man,’ while the world’s morality knows only how to appeal either
to low motives of whips and pay, or to fine-spun considerations of right and
obligation that melt like October’s morning ice before the faintest heat of
temptation. Finally, it sets Him forth as the Reward of obedience, teaching
us that the true recompense of well-doing lies in pleasing Him, and that to
win a smile, an ‘honourable mention,’ from the General, life itself would be
wisely paid.
Such are the great characteristics of
Christian morality. Everything clusters round a living Person. All the
coldness and remoteness and powerlessness which incurably weaken all law,
whether it be that of a statute-book, or of conscience, or of moralists, are
changed into their very opposites. Christ is duty; Love is law. Christ is
power; Christ is impulse. Christ is motive; Christ is reward. Therefore the
hearts and wills that found no attraction, nor owned any constraining
authority in any tables of stone or any voice of conscience or any systems
of ethics, yield glad obedience to Him who makes His law love; and feeble
hands are strengthened to do His will by His own power breathed into them;
and the hope of recompense is freed from selfishness when its highest object
is His word of praise and His look of pleasure? This, and this alone, is the
morality that will work. This is the new thing in Christianity, not so much
the contents of the conception of duty, though even these have been changed,
but the new form in which Duty appears, in a Person who being what all men
should be, is the new power for its fulfilment which He brings, and the new
motive whose touch moves all our conduct.
How much more powerful this thought of
pleasing Christ is, as a motive, than that of a bare Theism, needs scarcely
be named. ‘Thou, God, seest me’ grandly restraining and stimulating as it
is, may easily become a trembling before ‘the great Taskmaster’s eye,’ or
may fade into a very dim thought of a very far-off God. But when we think
that the divine eye which rests upon us wept over the sinful city, and
sought the denier with the look of sorrowing reproach, untarnished by one
glitter of anger, we need not fear His knowledge, nor doubt that He is as
near to each of us, as glad at our obedience, and as grieved by our hardness
of heart, as ever He was to the little group that lived on His smile long
ago. It is no remote God whom we have to please, but our very Brother, the
Captain of the Lord’s host, who knows all the conditions of the fight.
The thought implies the reality of
Christ’s present knowledge of each of us. Who, then, is this, who is
supposed to know so accurately the true characters — not only the actions,
but the motives which determine the worth of the actions — of men in every
age and country to the world’s end? Who can exercise such an office, and be
the centre of such observance, but One only? This must be God manifest in
the flesh. Else it is stark nonsense for people, nineteen centuries after
His death, to think of pleasing Him; and it is blasphemy worse than
nonsense, to set aside all other law and commandments in order to take our
duty from His life, and our reward from His approbation. But when we see in
Christ the Word made flesh, then it is reasonable to believe that He knoweth
the hearts of all men, and reasonable to ‘labour that, whether present or
absent, we may be well-pleasing to Him.’
Such singleness of aim contributes in
many ways to make life blessed and noble. It simplifies motives and aims,
because, instead of being dragged hither and thither by smaller attractions,
and so having our days broken up into fragments, we have one great object
which can be pursued through all the variety of our occupations, making them
all co-operant to one end — and there is blessedness in that. It lifts us
above many temptations, which cease to be temptations to a heart intent on
pleasing Christ, as glacial plants and animals fled to the north when cosmic
changes put an end to the ice age in England. It delivers from care for
men’s judgment, for the opinion of the crowd matters very little to the
soldier whose fame is to be praised by his commander. It gives energy for
work, and turns hard, dry duty into a joy, for it is ever blessed to toil
for One we love, and the work that is done with love for its motive, and
with the hope of gi