06.28.12
2 Timothy 3.2-4 2 ...preach the word; be ready in season
and out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and
instruction. 3 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, 4 and will turn away their ears
from the truth and will turn aside to myths. NASB
Two things stood out to me in reading this today:
1.) Reprove, rebuke, exhort. Notice, Paul didn’t say,
coddle, caress, and cuddle – no, his words were forceful and imminent. We
Christians need to be routinely smacked upside the heart so we get it; because
the world will politically-correct us right into a grave of inaction if we’re
not careful. The life of the believer is to be a life of active discipline and self-discipline.
Notice, it isn’t to be a life of punishment. It’s: eat your peas, do your
sit-ups, wash your elbows, and behind your ears. Take care of your heart, be
concerned about the things of God.
2.) [They] will turn aside to myths. What are some modern
myths? What are some flat-out lies that we comfortably believe to be the truth?
They’re out there: and many believe them.
One popular myth: some sins aren’t all that bad. Another
is: I’ll be okay all by myself if I don’t have to interact with too many others
– I can go it alone. Another is: I can improve myself. Another is: I’m okay
because I live in America. Another is: there are some things in this life that
are too big to fail.
Paul told Timothy, as Timothy led his congregation, that
believers need to be treated with godly dignity and respect by being slapped
around by the hard truth so they won’t fall into comfortable myths as a result.
Soft myths will make us fall into the sound sleep of error if we’re not
careful. The Christian-life is hard enough by itself without the life-saving
effects of self-discipline. We need to be reproved, rebuked, and exhorted to
withstand what is daily coming at us so that we have the strength and
wherewithal to attend to the Master’s purposes. One small indicator of our spiritual
strength is simply: what is the content, frequency, and quality of our
prayer-life? Feeling guilty yet? I do!
What myths do I hold as true? What have I comfortably embraced
as truth that is, in reality, toxic? In myself I can certainly name a few. Paul
told Timothy the stark truth because that is the only way to approach life as a
Christian (and as a pastor). People are just like a lot of other things in
life: like moving water they will always follow the course of least resistance.
If there’s one thing we need in this life as believers it’s resistance against
the things that lead us away from the truth.
Today, I am rebuked, reproved, and reminded that without
diligence I will lapse into indolence with regard to my spiritual well-being. I
need to be slapped around because the regular blows of truth will protect me
from the subtle kisses of sin. Lord, help me!