2 Timothy 3:10--4:8 · Paul’s Charge to Timothy
An Excellent Epitaph
2 Timothy 4:6-8
Sermon
by Bill Bouknight
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Today is All Saints Sunday, an occasion when we remember with gratitude those Christians who have transferred from the Church Militant (that is, this world) to the Church Triumphant (that is, heaven). We are especially mindful of those who have died in the past year.

On such an occasion it is only natural that we consider the fact that one day we will transfer from this world to the next. What will those who know us best say about us when we are gone? Whatever our age may be, how do we evaluate our own lives? If you could write your own epitaph, what would it be?

Some would write frivolous things, of course. The late Lewis Grizzard, humorist, author, and great lover of the Georgia Bulldogs and golf, wanted these words etched on his tombstone: “I once shot par.” He wanted to be cremated and have his ashes scattered between the hedges in Sanford Stadium.

On a tombstone in Nova Scotia, we find these words: “Here lies Ezekiel Aikle, age 102, the good die young.” (1) I wonder who wrote that epitaph, hopefully not his wife.

A far better epitaph is on the tombstone of James Lewis Pettigru in Charleston, South Carolina. It reads: “Unawed by opinion, unseduced by flattery, undismayed by disaster, he confronted life with antique courage and death with Christian hope.”

The most famous epitaph in the Bible is in our text for today. St. Paul’s 16-word statement has to rank as one of the great valedictory addresses of all time. He was in a dungeon in Rome. Death was stalking him like a sniper. He was in the cross-hairs of the pagan Emperor Nero. But Paul’s epitaph includes no expression of fear or desperate plea for release. It is a statement of quiet confidence. He makes three summary comments about his life. If we can honestly make these same claims at the end of our earthly lives, then the angels will sing for joy and the heavenly hosts will stage a “welcome home” celebration in our honor.

First, said St. Paul, “I HAVE FOUGHT THE GOOD FIGHT.” The word “fight” is “agon” in the Greek. This is the root of our word “agony.” It’s a word from the wrestling and boxing matches of Greece and Rome, suggesting an intense struggle. Paul looked back over thirty years of labor as an apostle. During those years he had confronted evil courageously and had preached the gospel fearlessly. Along the way, Paul had been stoned, whipped, shipwrecked, and jailed for the cause of Christ. He was persecuted by the Jews and the Romans, but he kept up the good fight.

A Christian is supposed to fight for heavenly causes. A Christian is a fighter, but not with the methods of the world. A Christian always hates evil, but never hates people. As Martin Luther King, Jr. said, “No man can pull me down so low as to make me hate him.”

What issues are you willing to sacrifice and struggle for? Using Paul’s language, what are your “good fights”? Every Christian must decide his or her battlefields. Here are a few stands I am willing to take.

All Christian employers, including churches, should pay a living wage to their employees. If you employ someone full-time, he or she should earn enough to live a decent lifestyle. I do not want this living wage mandated by law. It ought to be mandated by the law of love planted in each Christian’s heart. If I am a Christian employer living an affluent lifestyle, how will I respond to God one day when he asks me why I paid an employee so little that he couldn’t afford the necessities of life? You might say, “Brother Bill, if I do that, my company will be at a competitive disadvantage with other companies that pay the minimum.” My response is this: Don’t you believe that if you do the right thing, God will bless you in ways that will make up for that disadvantage?

Several of the other “good fights” for me relate to the general election this coming Tuesday. I will not vote for or against a candidate on the basis of his race. A Christian’s evaluation of a person should not be raised or lowered by race. Our goal, as expressed by Martin Luther King, Jr., is to evaluate people by the content of their character, not by the color of their skin. We Christians must lead our society toward that goal. I will try to evaluate each candidate on the basis of character, record, political philosophy, and vision, but I will not allow race to be a factor.

Another “good fight” on Election Day is for the traditional, historic, biblical definition of marriage. I will support Proposition # 1 which will define marriage in our state constitution as a relationship between one man and one woman. Unless it is so defined, some activist, secular judge will surely redefine marriage as a sexual alliance between any two or more persons. If that happens, future generations will suffer and the institution of marriage will be degraded. Furthermore, God may begin to withdraw his protective mantle from this blessed republic. As God’s word declares, “Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a disgrace to any people.” (Prov. 14:34)

There is another “good fight” that we Americans cannot avoid. America is locked in a long-term struggle against terrorism. Our radical enemies hate freedom, hate women’s rights, hate America and Israel, and will kill innocent civilians without hesitation or guilt.

God is not neutral in the battle between freedom and terrorism. Jesus said that part of his mission was “to proclaim freedom for the prisoners.” (Luke 4:18) St. Paul declared that “where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.” (2 Cor. 3:17)

We Christians must not hate our enemies. Indeed, we should pray for them, asking God to liberate them from their ideology of hate. We Christians can disagree about the wisdom of invading Iraq and the tactics used in that war, but we must not be naïve about terrorism or indulge in wishful thinking. When we leave Iraq and Afghanistan, either liberty or terrorism will have the upper hand. If liberty is the perceived winner, other nations in the Middle East will bend toward democracy. If terrorism is the perceived winner, other nations in the Middle East will tilt toward Islamic radicalism. If a safe haven is created in the Middle East for the production of weapons of mass destruction and the training of terrorists, then Israel and America will be in great peril.

Though we Christians almost instinctively hate war, this is a war we cannot avoid. The enemy claims publicly that Americans are too soft and lacking in character to hold out very long. The calling of this generation is to prove them wrong. Our men and women in uniform are setting a marvelous example. Two of our young lieutenants just returned from Iraq. They and their buddies are the heroes of our time. With God as our helper, we must persevere and we must prevail.

You may choose other places to take your stands than I do. That’s fine. Every Christian must choose his own battlefields. But surely every Christian with gumption and courage will find certain issues worth sacrificing for.

The great South African author, Alan Patan, understood that Christian disciples must always pay a price. He wrote these words: “I don’t worry about the wounds. When I get to heaven, which is my intention, the Big Judge will say to me, ‘Where are your wounds?’ And if I say I haven’t any, he will say, ‘Was there nothing worth fighting for?’ I couldn’t stand that question.”

The second part of St. Paul’s epitaph was this: “I HAVE FINISHED THE RACE.” This language comes straight out of the world of track and field, which Paul loved. It suggests a marathon, a long-distance race. Paul is not claiming to have won the race, but to have completed it. He is saying, “I am not a quitter. I saw it through.” Jesus said the same thing on the cross just before he died, “It is finished.” (John 19:30). He was saying, “I have completed my appointed task.”

In the inspirational movie, “Facing the Giants,” a high school coach named Grant Taylor is trying to convince his football team that if they love God, they must not be quitters. One day at football practice, he selects a player who is the natural team leader. Coach Taylor challenges him to perform a very difficult drill. This player gets down on his hands and feet, and another player gets on his back. It is difficult to carry that player for ten yards, without dropping to his knees. The coach challenges this young man to carry that player fifty yards. All the way the coach is urging, daring, challenging him, “You can do it! Don’t give up! Keep going! Don’t quit on me!” When the player finally collapses, he has carried that buddy, not for fifty yards, but one hundred yards. He has crossed the goal line. Suddenly the entire team caught the spirit of endurance, perseverance, determination. It became a different team.

Is there a struggle in your life that is so tiresome, so demanding, so draining that you wonder how long can you keep going? If it is a worthwhile struggle, a God-glorifying struggle, God is challenging you, “Don’t give up! Don’t surrender! I’ll help you. Just don’t quit on me.”

I have a slogan framed and resting on my desk. It was written by the late great Secretary-General of the United Nations, Dag Hammerskjold. It reads, “Life only demands the strength you possess. Only one feat is possible—not to have run away.”

St. Paul could honestly say, “I have not been a quitter. Whatever challenge God has put in front of me, I have seen it through.”

Here is the third part of St. Paul’s epitaph: “I HAVE KEPT THE FAITH.” The word for “faith” is “pistis” in the Greek. It refers to an accurate account of the Gospel and an honorable sharing of it. If Paul had just been willing to declare “Caesar is Lord!” rather than “Jesus is Lord”, he could have avoided the death penalty. But he would not.

Dear friends, there are intelligent, educated people in your work places who will try to persuade you that the Bible is an antiquated book that must be corrected by modern wisdom. They will tell you that all religions are just different versions of the same song, and that if there is a heaven, all people are going there whether they believe anything or not. Dear friends, those are lies. At the core of our faith is the belief that the Bible is God’s inspired word. It is the true rule and guide for faith and practice. And faith in Jesus Christ is the only way to be saved. Don’t waver in those core commitments. Keep the faith!

One of the truly great Methodist bishops was Nolan B. Harmon. He was over 95 years old when he died. At the age of 90 he wrote a book entitled, “Ninety Years and Counting.” In it he said this: “I have had my doubts as we all do, have had some unanswerable problems thrown at me, but the certainty that there is a Living Christ, whose I am and whom I serve, is my psychic anchor in any storm.” (2) Bishop Harmon kept the faith!

I don’t find any verse in Scripture demanding that we be successful. But everywhere in Scripture is the challenge to be faithful.

In the play “The Man from La Mancha,” Don Quixote captures the quest of every Christian in these inspiring words:

“To dream the impossible dream,
To fight the unbeatable foe,
To strive with the last ounce of courage
To go where the brave dare not go.

And the world will be better for this,
That one man, bruised and covered with scars,
Still strove with his last ounce of courage
To reach the unreachable star.”

That’s not a bad epitaph. But the finest one I know is this: “I have fought the good fight. I have finished the race. I have kept the faith.”

What will be your epitaph?


(1) Moore, James W., At the End of the Day, (Dimensions for Living: Nashville, 2002), p.8.

(2) Harmon, Nolan B., Ninety Years & Counting, (Upper Room: Nashville, 1983), p. 44.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Bill Bouknight