2 Timothy 3:10--4:8 · Paul’s Charge to Timothy
Fulfill Your Ministry
2 Timothy 3:10--4:8
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Last words are important.

There is a little country Baptist church down in Perry County, Mississippi. It’s called the Eastside Baptist Church. It is the church in which I was converted. Behind it is a cemetery where I’ll be buried someday. It’s about two hundred yards up the hill from our old home place.

Mom and Dad – whom in my adult life I affectionately called “Mutt” and “Co-bell” (his name was Murdock; hers, Cora) -- are buried there. Co-Bell died seven years ago and Mutt five years ago, and I still miss them. On Co-bell’s tombstone are the last words she spoke to Mutt from her deathbed, “I’ll see you.” On his tombstone is his response: “I’ll be there.” A great witness to their confidence in eternal life and heaven as our home.

Last words are important. This is not my last word to you – but is my last chapel service as your president

Last words are important. So here in our Scripture lesson are some of Paul’s last words. He is concluding his letter to Timothy, but his conclusions are those of his entire life.

These words are dictated, probably to Luke, perhaps within a few days of his beheading by his executioner . . .for the past thirty years (Paul) traveled, witnessed, worked, and preached throughout the Mediterranean world. He has been loved and hated, supported and attacked, praised and cursed. Whatever else can be said of his life, it certainly wasn’t dull! Anticipating the executioners, he passes the baton to his young friend, Timothy, and entrusts to him the next lap of his race. (Gary W. Demarest, The Communicator’s Commentary, I and II Thessalonians, I and II Timothy, Titus, Word Books, 1984, p 285).

The words are a charge – a charge to Timothy: and if you understand Scripture as I do, a charge to us. So I want to join Paul in charging you. ”I charge you,” Paul said. It’s like a judge in the courtroom – or like a general giving orders to his troops as they are about to engage in battle. It’s a charge – from a dying man – or one who knows that death is imminent – laying on the heart of his friend the passion and priority of his life. The authority of Paul to make this sacred charge is Jesus Christ. Listen to him in verse one: “In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of His appearing and His Kingdom, I give this charge.”

I

If Paul were verbally speaking to us, after this opening solemn statement of accountability and judgment in verse one, he would shout it. The specific commands in verse two would ring out like military order: “Preach the Word. Be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage – with great patience and careful instruction.”

What a charge. Preach the Word! He sounds that first – because it is first. There is no higher calling. You know what I have missed most in these ten years as your president? I have missed preaching to the same people Sunday after Sunday – and the ministry that follows in the wake of pastoral preaching.

I remember my first visit to China in 1978. The Bamboo Curtain had been drawn just slightly. The Christian church was still primarily underground. It was dangerous for Christians to be with foreigners. But we had some of those meetings. I remember being in a hotel room in Beijing with three Christian couples. They had survived the oppression, the persecution – two of the group had spent time incarcerated. They were thrilled to have Christian visitors, even though they knew the risk of it. We talked quietly – we quoted Scripture together – they nad no Bibles, but they had memorized certain texts, among them the 23rd Psalm. Then, would you believe it? They wanted to sing! So we sang softly their favorite hymns which they knew by heart. Do you know what those favorites were? “What a Friend We Have in Jesus” and “Amazing Grace.” I asked them what they missed most about their life before the revolution and the outlawing of the Church. Without hesitation, they said, “We miss gathering for worship and hearing the word of God preached.”

Isn’t it ironic that the revolutionists knew the power of preaching more than most of us – so they outlawed it? The same thing happened in Russia and the former Soviet Union – preaching was outlawed. It is outlawed in many places around the world today. Why? Preaching is powerful.

Among all the things you do, if you are a pastor, nothing should have more of your attention, time, and energy than preaching the Word. Nobody else in all the world has access to the minds and hearts of people as a pastor does. Don’t allow yourself to become dull to this great opportunity that is yours. So Paul admonishes us, “Preach the word.” This charge grew out of his own passion. “Woe is me . . .” and that passion should characterize all our ministry, whether pastors or not.

Would you turn to your neighbor now and say, “I must preach the Gospel.”

II

Paul’s next word may be an elaboration of his charge to preach the Word, but it also describes a style and a stance for our preaching, teaching, and presence among our people. Listen to him: “Be prepared in season and out of season.” The word here translated “Be prepared” is also translated as “Be ready,” “be urgent,” and “be instant.” The New Revised Standard version says, “Be persistent,” whether the time is favorable or unfavorable.

I think of John Wesley’s advice to his preachers: “Be ready,” he said, at all times – “ready to preach, pray, or die.” Friends, there is nothing about the Christian life, our calling, or our ministry that we can be casual about. Every single day that you’re in ministry there is the potential of life-and-death encounters, the possibility of a word or an act that will impact the destiny of a person. So, be ready in season and out of season.

Turn to your neighbor and say, “I am ready to preach, pray, or die.”

In the translation I am using, The New International Version, it says, “Correct, rebuke, and encourage.” Other translations use the word convince as the first word in that line-up. It is also sometimes rendered reprove. It is related to the word translated “reproof” in chapter 3, verse 16 of this letter. You remember that passage? “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.” (II Timothy 3:16)

The emphasis may be upon the idea of reasoning in order to convince the unbeliever of the truth of the gospel. This suggests the apologetic task of the preacher.

There was a day when our apologetic task was to provide a rational, reasonable argument for the faith in order to convince people to believe. That task is still ours, but it is more than rational argument. Ours is a spiritually starved age. People are searching and believing everything and anything. The thriving New Age movement, and the shelves of books in secular bookstores dedicated to so-called “spirituality” are ample witness to this fact. People want to believe, and they will believe anything. Our apologetic task is to provide a convincing case for Christianity. This case will not be made simply by reason. There must be an apologetic of experience. People must be able to see the difference it makes in your life.

Robert Murray McCheyne: “The greatest need of my congregation is my own personal holiness.” It may be a heavy burden to bear, but if we are going to follow God’s call and fulfill our ministry, we must accept the fact that there is a demand that goes with our call – a demand for distinctive moral and spiritual qualities of leadership. The transforming power of the Holy Spirit must be demonstrated in our lives. So, Paul’s charge is challenging. “Convince” . . . convince with your preaching and teaching, but more, convince with your life. St. Francis of Assisi used to tell his brothers, “Go everywhere preaching the gospel, and if necessary use words.”

III

Move on new in the text. Listen to verses 3 and 4:

For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears have to hear. They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths.

What a designation: “itching ears.” So, tragically the Church is full of ear-tickling preachers – those who filter the content of the message so people will not be offended.

We

. . . slight the Holy Spirit, unwilling to affirm anything that might hint at supernatural intervention – or accept any spiritual dynamic that might convict of sin, righteousness and judgment.

We

. . . spend more time offering comfort, rather than calling for obedience.

We

. . . water down the notion of eternal punishment, despite the fact that the New Testament is scathingly clear on this. Ear-tickling preachers eliminate the “H” word from their vocabulary.

Earlier in the second letter to Timothy (II Timothy 2:17), Paul warns his young friend that “false doctrine will spread like gangrene.” We are seeing that in our day, aren’t we? Not only in such obvious expressions as the New Age movement, the Jesus Seminar, and the extreme radical feminism that turns to Sophia worship and preoccupation with goddesses – but also in the mainstream of the church, revisionist leaders like Bishops Spong and Sprague who would diminish Scriptural authority and denigrate the doctrine of the triune God – God who is our Father, God’s Son who is our Savior, and God the Holy Spirit, who guides, gifts, and empowers us for ministry. Ideology has become more important than theology. Diversity and inclusiveness are seen as redemptive within themselves. A leader of the United Methodist Church: “We can’t depend on a 2000-year-old book to guide us in the 21st century.” So the fabric of the Church is ripped almost beyond repair and schism is a real threat.

In I Timothy 6:20, Paul said, “O Timothy, guard what was committed to your trust, avoiding the profane and idol babble and contraction of what is falsely called knowledge.”

Judgment is upon us, friends. How well did Paul know. Listen again to him, verse 4: “They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths.” It is in this kind of ear-itching world, where there are plenty of ministers who will give themselves to “ear-tickling” that we are called to fulfill our ministry.

Repeat after me: “I will not – I will not – I will not be an ear-tickling preacher.”

IV

Move now to what I believe is the key verse in our text – verse 5: “But you, keep your head in all situations, endure hardships, do the work of an evangelist, discharge all the duties of your ministry.” Another translation of that closing word is simply, “Fulfill your ministry.”

I’m not sure that all parts of this verse are necessarily distinctive calls – all of them have to do with discharging all the duties of our ministry. However, I believe Paul’s conviction was that we could not fulfill our ministry without doing the work of an evangelist. Do we need to remind ourselves of what the work of an evangelist is? An evangelist is one who shares in word, deed, and sign, the good news of Jesus Christ – the good news that redeems us from sin, makes us whole, and transforms us into participants in God’s Kingdom enterprise. I like the way Paul expresses the work of God in our lives, Colossians 1:13-14: “God rescued us from the power of darkness, and transferred us into the Kingdom of the Son of His love, in whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins.”

There’s nothing casual about this, students. You can’t approach this calling – this ministry – as a profession that you carefully prepare and plan for – calculating every move with your superintendent, bishop, or congregational leaders. We’re talking about vocation here – passion – a fire burning in your belly that shapes every move you make.

There’s a vivid picture of it in the prophet Ezekiel. God made Ezekiel responsible for the souls committed to his care. In fact, if Ezekiel allowed the wicked to die unwarned, Yahweh threatened to require their lives at the prophet’s own hands. So, Yahweh says to him, “And you, son of man, groan! With trembling loins and bitterness shall you groan before their eyes!” (Ezekiel 21:11).

We don’t groan – so the world groans! We don’t groan, so the Christian faith is presented simply as another option among many to make us more “healthy, wealthy, and wise.” We don’t groan, and so the Gospel is not seen as a life alternative over death. We don’t groan, so people around us continue to experience the Church as a possibility to fill their need for connection and fellowship, rather than a call to repentance and reformation of character – holiness of heart and life.

Listen to the Lord, students. You are on a ministry journey with heaven and hell implications. “Son of man, groan. With trembling loins and bitterness shall you groan.”

One of my favorite Mother Theresa stories is of a young man – a member of a religious order, who came to her complaining about all the work the Abbot of his community was requiring of him. He felt that he was being diverted from his call. He said, “I want to give my life serving lepers.” Mother Theresa looked at him with those sharp, brown eyes and with her disarming smile. “Young man,” she said, “your vocation is not to serve lepers – your vocation is to love Jesus.” If we could remember that – if we could burn and groan with the love of Jesus – those whom we serve would hear and see the Gospel and we would do the work of an evangelist and fulfill our ministry.

I close with this. Back in 1716, King Charles the Twelfth of Sweden announced to the little town of Ystad that he was going to come and visit them and that he would worship in the village church. The pastor of the church got all excited about the presence of the king in the congregation. He decided to put aside the prescribed text for that Sunday and deliver a sermon in the form of a eulogy on the greatness of the royal family. So he did, and he did it well. He was proud of himself.

Three months later a gift arrived at the church – a big box. The pastor was thrilled. It was a present from the king. But he wasn’t ready for that particular present. Inside the box was a life-size crucifix, a life-like statue of Jesus hanging on the cross, with this instruction: “Place this on the pillar opposite the pulpit, so that the one who stands in the pulpit to preach will always be reminded of his proper subject.”

That is the bottom line, friends. If we would fulfill our ministry, we must stay centered on our proper subject – Jesus Christ, and our vocation to love and serve him. And our stance for such loving and serving is always one of two positions – on our knees praying, “Lord, have mercy,” or standing erect and ready, saying, “Here am I, send me.”
MaxieDunnam.com, MaxieDunnam.com, by Maxie Dunnam