Sunday, May 8, 2022

The ministry of the church, 1 Timothy 1:12-20


We are all probably very familiar with the word ministry.  It’s often used as a synonym for the church.  It’s derived from the root word minister, which often is used as a title or job description for a pastor.  But ministry is really just another word for service.  Depending upon the translation you use, you will see either ministry or service used in vs twelve.


Vs12 “I thank Christ Jesus our Lord, who has strengthened me, because He considered me faithful, putting me into service, or ministry.”  I think I prefer the translation as service. Because ministry is a word that has connotations of something pious, perhaps a little lofty, sort of out of the realm of mundane day to day things, and indicating something religious and spiritual.  And of course, ministry should be religious and spiritual, but that can sometimes lead us to think of it as detached from the realm of day to day life.


But when you say service, that has an altogether different connotation.  That is something that borders on the mundane, the practical, even, God forbid, duty.  We sometimes speak of our men and women in uniform that they are in the service.  And we know what we mean by that, don’t we?  It means they are in one of the armed services of our country. They are in the service of our country.  They are under the authority of the Commander in Chief.


But that word service can have an even lowlier connotation.  It is very much associated with the word servant.  To be a servant is to be someone who is in service to someone else.  He is at their command.  Sometimes in old houses, you would see a sign around the back  indicating “service entrance.”  That could mean the servants entrance, or it could mean those that serviced the house for whatever mechanical needs  there might be.


So in the original language, the word translated ministry does not indicate some high, pious position, but it simply refers to working for and serving someone.  And to that extent, we are all called to serve Christ.  In this new life, we have been given a ministry, we have been called to be servants to the kingdom of God.  Not all have the same position in service, but all are called to serve, even as soldiers in spiritual warfare.  Not all soldiers are given the same rank, the same responsibility, yet they all serve the same King.


Paul said he was grateful for this ministry which he had been given.  I would say that gratefulness was his primary motivation in ministry.  And that was because God had saved him from a person dedicated to destroying the church, and by God’s grace and mercy had made him someone who would establish the church.


So how are we put into the service of Christ?  The answer is, the same way as Paul was entered into service.  Now what follows in vs 12-15, is a sort of resume by Paul.  And as is typical of most resumes, the job title you are presently in is listed first, and the order that follows goes backwards in your career.  So most resumes usually read from the greatest to the least.  You list that at present you are working as a graphic designer for some big design firm, and then the job you had before that, and so forth until way down at the bottom of the page,  the first job you had, which was a French fry cook at McDonald’s.


Paul’s resume sort of follows that pattern.  But I would like to look at it in reverse.  Let’s start with vs15, because this is where we all start as well.  This is one area that we all have in common.  Paul says in vs 15, “It is a trustworthy statement, deserving full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, among whom I am foremost [of all.]”. 


This is all of our condition prior to salvation.  There is none righteous, no not one.  All have sinned and come short of the glory of God.  All of us were enemies of God.  All of our righteousness was as filthy rags before God. None of us were any better than any one else, or more deserving of heaven than anyone else.  Paul said he was the chief of sinners.  I said last week, that was until I came along. But the fact is, there really isn’t any difference between you and me or Paul, for that matter when it comes to the matter of sin.  We all were enemies of God under the condemnation of death.


Paul said he was a former blasphemer and persecutor and violent aggressor of the church.   In Acts 26:9 Paul said of himself and these activities against Christ and against His church, "So then, I thought to myself that I had to do many things hostile to the name of Jesus of Nazareth. And this is just what I did in Jerusalem; not only did I lock up many of the saints in prisons, having received authority from the chief priests, but also when they were being put to death I cast my vote against them. And as I punished them often in all the synagogues, I tried to force them to blaspheme; and being furiously enraged at them, I kept pursuing them even to foreign cities.”


So Paul was indeed the chief of sinners, in that he not only persecuted the church, but he tried to get them to blaspheme Christ and deny Christ.  But as great as his sin was, God’s grace was greater.  He says, “Yet I was shown mercy because I acted ignorantly in unbelief; and the grace of our Lord was more than abundant, with the faith and love which are found in Christ Jesus.”  That phrase ‘more than abundant” is the idea of super abundant. As Romans 5:20 says, “Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound.”  


But what I like about Paul’s confession here is that he says he was “formally a blasphemer and so forth.”  When Paul was converted on the road to Damascus, he was changed, converted.  What he was formerly, he was no longer practicing.  What he was ignorant of, he now knew.  What was done in unbelief, now he by faith believed the truth.  The point is salvation is conversion.  It’s like the line in Amazing Grace, “I once was lost but now am found, was blind, but now I see.” A change in belief results in a change of behavior.


When I was a kid growing up in church, we used to have an evangelist named Billy Kelly who would come do a series of nightly meetings every couple of years or so.  Billy Kelly probably weighed 400 pounds, and was a freckled face red haired giant of a man from the hills of West Virginia.  And as a preacher’s kid I had to sit through many a long night of preaching as I was growing up, but when Billy Kelly came to our church he was one preacher I looked forward to hearing.  He played the piano as well, and he was known for singing one song in particular, which is called “Thanks to Calvary.”  He always sang it after giving his personal testimony of being the town drunk and how some men dragged him to a revival meeting one night after sobering him up with coffee and he was saved after listening to the message.  He used to sing that song with tears rolling down his face, which told the story of his little boy hiding behind the door when he would come home drunk, but now that he was saved, he said, “Son, have no fear, you’ve got a brand new daddy now. Thanks to Calvary I’m not the man I used to be.  Thanks to Calvary things are different than before.”  After he got done singing that song, he had the whole church in tears.


But the truth is that when God saves you, he changes you.  And in Paul’s case, he who was the foremost persecutor of the church, was made the foremost establisher of the church, as a testimony to the super abundant grace of God.  And so Paul explains in vs 16, “Yet for this reason I found mercy, so that in me as the foremost, Jesus Christ might demonstrate His perfect patience as an example for those who would believe in Him for eternal life.”  


What we can learn from Paul’s salvation, is that no matter how great your sin, God’s mercy is greater.  There is no degree of sin that you can sink to that God cannot save you from.  There is no depravity that God cannot redeem you from.  As much as you have descended into depravity, God is able to raise you up to greater heights than you can imagine.  He is able to make the lost, found.  The blind to see.  The lame to walk.  The dead to live.  There is no sin that is beyond His ability to save you from.


But there is just one caveat to His mercy and grace.  And that is, you must recognize and repent of your sin. When Paul was confronted with the truth, when he saw his sin, he repented of it and was forgiven of it.  He didn’t try to excuse it, or to cover it up, or to say that it wasn’t really sin.  No, he said my sin is worse than anyone else’s.  I am the worst of sinners!  And that is the key.  There is no sin which is confessed and repented of, that cannot be forgiven.  Christ came to save sinners.  That is a trustworthy statement.  You can bet your life on that statement.  But you better recognize you are a sinner if you want Christ to save you.  Because He came to save sinners, not the self righteous.


That realization brings Paul to express a confession of faith in Christ and praise Him for His mercy towards sinners.  He says in vs 17, “Now to the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God, [be] honor and glory forever and ever. Amen.”  Paul said in Romans 10:9, “that if you confess with your mouth Jesus [as] Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved;  for with the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation.”


That confession is what Paul states in vs 17, “the King” is Jesus Christ the King, the Lord, our Sovereign.  To confess Jesus as Lord is to confess Him as your King, as the One to whom we owe our lives, to whom we honor and serve and obey.  We lay down our lives in service to our Lord and King.  And this King is eternal, immortal, He was raised from the dead and now stands at the Father’s right hand.  To Him deserves all honor, all glory, as we give our lives in service to Him forever.


That comprehension on Paul’s part was the impetus for his ministry, his service.  And God would use him and enable him and strengthen him and equip him to do what he called him to do.  So that all the praise and glory go to God, and not Paul.  But Paul’s gratitude for what God had done for him, was the motivation for his service to the church.


Now there were other ministers in the church.  Paul’s office as a minister was an apostle.  These were other offices or positions.  As I said, in the service not everyone has the same office or position or area of duty.  The next one mentioned in Paul’s letter is Timothy.  Timothy is a minister, a servant of the gospel.  I suppose we might call him the pastor of the church in Ephesus. I think he was perhaps more like a regional pastor, but we can’t be dogmatic about such things.  But my understanding is that there were more than one church in Ephesus.  They were house churches, each with their pastors/teachers. And Timothy was acting as an agent of the apostle Paul, as overseeing the churches in Ephesus. I can’t say that for sure, but that’s what I pick up from reading between the lines. 


But nevertheless, we do know that Timothy was in service to the church at Ephesus, and he had a position like a senior pastor over the church or churches there.  So Paul says to him in vs 18 “This command I entrust to you, Timothy, [my] son, in accordance with the prophecies previously made concerning you, that by them you fight the good fight,  keeping faith and a good conscience, which some have rejected and suffered shipwreck in regard to their faith.”


So what is this command, or this charge to Timothy that Paul refers to?  It is the charge given in vs 3-11 of this chapter, the command to stay on at Ephesus, and to instruct certain men not to teach strange doctrines, nor to pay attention to myths or endless genealogies that give rise to speculation rather than faith, to instruct them not to teach a twisted version of the law, about which they make confident assertions, but which they don’t know what they are talking about. So in short, Timothy’s ministry to the church is to teach the teachers, to correct them, to rebuke them.


Paul gives a similar command or charge to Timothy at a later date in 2 Timothy 4:1-5 “I solemnly charge [you] in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by His appearing and His kingdom:  preach the word; be ready in season [and] out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction.  For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but [wanting] to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires,  and will turn away their ears from the truth and will turn aside to myths. But you, be sober in all things, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry."


Now one more thing to note about this command to ministry that Paul gives to Timothy, is he says it’s in accordance with the prophecies previously made concerning you.  What exactly Paul is talking about we’re not sure, but he speaks of it again in chapter 4 vs 14  “Do not neglect the spiritual gift within you, which was bestowed on you through prophetic utterance with the laying on of hands by the presbytery.” He goes on to say, persevere in your teaching, pay attention to it, take pains with it, for as you do this you will ensure salvation both for yourself and for those who hear you.”  So we can surmise that preaching and teaching is the spiritual gift that was given to Timothy by the Lord, and was confirmed by the laying on of hands by the elders, presumably the elders of the church in Jerusalem, which is a reference to the apostles.  He was commissioned as an evangelist, a preacher of the gospel, by the Lord and confirmed by the apostles.  So that was Timothy’s ministry.


But there is one more category of ministry that is alluded to in vs 19, and then the perpetrators named in vs 20. Let’s pick it up again in vs 19, “keeping faith and a good conscience, which some have rejected and suffered shipwreck in regard to their faith.  Among these are Hymenaeus and Alexander, whom I have handed over to Satan, so that they will be taught not to blaspheme.”


These are ministers that have suffered shipwreck in regards to their faith.  That’s a pretty scary thing to say about teachers in the church.  I don’t know if you’ve ever seen a shipwreck, or been involved in one. From the little I know about boats, things can go wrong pretty quickly on a boat and yet at the same time seem like they are happening in slow motion.  One problem is that the boat is in motion due to the wind or current or even from the motor, and there are no brakes on a boat.  So once something is in motion it keeps on going even though it is destroying itself.  If you want to have some fun, search for ships hitting the dock on YouTube and you will see what I’m talking about.  They can’t stop, and they just destroy more and more until they sink or are absolutely ruined.


Paul had been on a few shipwrecks in his life, real ones. There is a really frightening description of one in particular in Acts where they end up having to grab a plank of wood and try to swim ashore in the middle of a fierce storm while the ship is stuck on a shoal being torn apart by the waves.  So Paul knew what a shipwreck looked like and the damage that can happen from losing your bearings.


These men, Hymaneus and Alexander, have suffered shipwreck in regard to their faith.  That means that they had abandoned or abused the truth in favor of another gospel, a more speculative gospel, a more dramatic gospel that was not founded on the truth.  And the thing that Paul is very concerned about was they were teaching that false doctrine to the church and leading others astray.  


Isn’t that what he said about these men in 2Tim. 4:3-4 “For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but [wanting] to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires,  and will turn away their ears from the truth and will turn aside to myths.”  


There was another element to  their false teaching  which was it had become blasphemy.  Blasphemy is speaking evil of Christ.  I would think that somehow their doctrine had deviated from the truth to the point that they attributed some sin to Jesus.  There are people today that teach that Jesus had a wife, usually saying it’s Mary Magdalene.  That’s the sort of speculation that these teachers seemed to be guilty of, contriving myths and speculation from some vague reference in scripture.  The point of such blasphemy though would be to excuse their own sin.


And so Paul says he is handing these men over to Satan so they will be taught not to blaspheme.  I think a lot of people don’t like to consider the reality of what Paul is saying there.  But he speaks of the same sort of thing in 1 Cor. 5, about a man who was committing immorality with his father’s wife, and was blatantly unrepentant about it.  And so Paul says there in vs “5 [I have decided] to deliver such a one to Satan for the destruction of his flesh, so that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus.”


What that means is for the person that continues in sin, there may be a time when God releases you from His protective care as a child of God, to suffer the consequences of sin.  And the devil is free to destroy your flesh through that sin.  Because that is what the devil does.  He is the destroyer.  He goes about as a roaring lion seeking someone to devour.  The sin that so easily besets us will eventually destroy us.


Paul indicates these men are saved, but they have returned to their sin like a pig that has been washed returns to the mire.  And the key is that they are unrepentant.  They claim that God doesn’t care about this little peccadillo.  What I’m doing isn’t really bad.  God made me this way( there is where the blasphemy comes in) or God made this and so it really can’t be wrong. And so God allows Satan to destroy the flesh, though the spirit is saved in the day of judgment. That’s why in the verses that talk about the sanctify of taking the Lord’s Supper, Paul says many of you are sick and a number sleep.  Sleep there refers to the death of the believer.


Listen, if you became a servant of the King through conversion, then you have been set free from the captivity of sin and cleansed from sin.  But when you return to it, you trample underfoot the blood of Jesus Christ, you regard it as worthless.  And God will discipline those who are His.  If you’re not His, then you are already condemned to death, and under the captivity of Satan who will destroy you. But if you are a child of God, and you choose to go back into sin, and are unrepentant of it, then you are given over to the control of Satan by your own free will, and God gives Satan permission to sift you like wheat, with the goal of destroying you.  God’s purpose in allowing that is not to destroy you, though if you persist that may happen.  But God’s purpose is to restore you, to use suffering in the flesh to bring you to repentance.


We that are saved have been given a ministry, we are servants of the King. Our life is not our own, we are bought with a price. Therefore, we cannot return to our prior captivity without suffering the consequences of that dominion of darkness. But as Paul has pointed out so clearly in this passage, God is  merciful and gracious and  desires to restore us and make us the polar opposite of what we were by nature, if we will just repent and surrender to the Lord, confessing Him as Lord of our lives.


Let us make this Psalm of David our prayer this morning as we examine our heart before God. David wrote in Psalm 139:23-24 “Search me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts:  And see if [there be any] wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.”

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