2 Timothy 1:1-2:13 · Encouragement to Be Faithful
Guarding the Treasure
2 Timothy 1:1-14
Sermon
by Charles L. Aaron
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Most of us have a long list of passwords, PINs, and usernames to type into our cell phones, our computers, our ATMs, and a host of other gadgets. We need these to protect ourselves. Identity theft has become a serious problem. We have all seen the commercials on television of the person bragging about a dream vacation, but the voice coming out of the character's mouth is another person's voice. The character in the commercial is portraying an identity thief. In real life, identity theft is not as funny as the commercials. People's lives have been ruined; some have seen their credit rating destroyed or their bank accounts wiped out. Some viruses are simply for meanness' sake. The perpetrator doesn't gain anything from it, just the perverse pleasure of hurting another. We use shredders, virus protection, and spy-catching software to guard against identity theft and to keep others from accessing our bank accounts and credit cards. We need all of these things because people wish to steal from us and to harm us.

Do we ever understand our participation in church as acting like a virus filter? That's part of the way 2 Timothy sees us. Our passage for today covers a lot of territory. It talks about faith, suffering, the work of Christ. It is all over the map. The last line, verse 14, ties all of this disparate material together. "Guard the good treasure entrusted to you, with the help of the Holy Spirit living in us." We are the virus software, guarding the treasure of the gospel.

The first place we guard that treasure is within ourselves. The passage calls us to "rekindle the gift of God that is within you." This verse may refer to Timothy's ordination. The image behind the term, "rekindle" is fanning something into flame. At some of their meetings, Boy Scouts have a contest on building a fire. Teams of scouts will be stationed at a campfire with a frame over the fire. The frame holds a pot of water. The goal is to start a fire, then build the fire up to the point that the water boils over the sides of the pot. The team that causes the water to spill over the side first wins. Watching such a contest can be exciting. The scouts fan with whatever they find handy as fast and furiously as they can. The flames of the fire leap up, the water in the pot begins to stir until finally a bubble leaks to the top. The water rolls with more energy until at last some of it splashes over the side. That's fanning into flame!

Where is the energy level in our faith? Is the water in the pot cold and still? Sometimes our faith needs to be rekindled. Stress, work, fatigue, disappointment, and heartache can all cause our flame to die down. We poke around in the embers, but we don't find much spark. Prayer, worship, and opening ourselves to the Holy Spirit can give us that energy. We should not mistake fanning the flame for mere emotionalism. Some leaders in the church try to whip us into pure emotion. We may not need to be like the water in the pot boiling over the sides. A good, strong flame that gives us energy is more what we need. Let us draw from the Holy Spirit as we fan the flame of our faith.

The passage mentions three specific gifts of the Spirit: power, love, and self-discipline. Each of the three is important, and all three reinforce each other. When we feel weak, we need God's power. We need power to overcome temptation. We need power to break free from the things that control us. We need power to grow in grace. We need power to keep the world from defining us. Love is the second gift mentioned. Love is healing and transforming. Perhaps love comes after power in the verse for a reason. We need power in order to love properly. Love needs strength. Love needs the strength of forgiveness and commitment. Love is not easy, but we should never underestimate what it can do. Self-discipline seems to be a lost art in our country. We eat too much, we spend too much, we exercise too little, we read too little, and we pray too little. As we said, the three things reinforce each other. We need power to love. We need self-discipline in order to have power. If we practice the discipline of keeping in shape, we have physical power. If we practice the self-discipline of feeding our faith, we will have spiritual power. The first way we guard the treasure is within ourselves.

When we guard the treasure in ourselves, when we fan the flames of our faith, we do so for a larger purpose. The church guards the treasure for the world. The passage mentions Timothy's grandmother, Lois, and mother, Eunice. Timothy is third generation. The letter of 2 Timothy reflects a situation that confronted the church by the third generation. What happens when all of the disciples who had been with Jesus are gone? What happens when Paul is gone? Who will continue the mission work? Who will make sure the teaching of the church is sound?

This passage gives a brief thumbnail sketch of some of the essentials of Christian doctrine. We are saved by grace not works. We are called according to God's purposes. Jesus abolished death and brought life. From very early times in the church, good teaching has been twisted out of shape and turned inside out. The essence of heresy is to take a complex doctrine and oversimplify it. The church must guard the treasure of its teaching against heresy. Heresy and false teaching pose the genuine risk of the church losing its identity.

As examples of the heresies that the early church faced and that the church today still faces, we can look at the understanding of Christ, sin, and resurrection. When the church teaches about the nature of Jesus the Christ, we must always affirm that Christ was fully divine and fully human. We cannot adequately explain how that is so, we can only bear witness to it. Heresy oversimplifies the doctrine of Christ by teaching that Christ is only partly divine or partly human. In some cases, people in the early church completely dissolved either the human or divine nature of Christ. Teaching that Jesus is not fully divine or fully human makes the understanding of Christ easier to grasp, and so it is attractive. If we deny either part of Jesus' nature, we diminish Christ's act of salvation. That is the danger of heresy. It sounds good, but it is not really Christian teaching. Concerning sin, the church teaches that we are forgiven sinners. Some in the early church taught that once we became Christian we no longer sinned. Others taught that if we sinned, we could not be forgiven. Once again, we have to hold two ideas in our head that seem not to fit. To emphasize only one side of the doctrine of sin and forgiveness is to make it easier to understand. Misunderstanding the doctrine of sin can have two dangers. First, we might not take our sin seriously enough and not seek forgiveness. Secondly, we might not take forgiveness seriously enough and be trapped in our guilt. Even if sin and forgiveness are hard to explain and understand, the church must proclaim that we are forgiven sinners. When the church teaches about resurrection, it says that we will be fully raised in the afterlife, but that the joy of resurrection begins now. Some in the early church taught that the joy we experience now is all that we will have (see 2 Timothy 2:18). That is easier to understand, but it shortchanges the indescribable joy of the coming resurrection and the dominion of God. One of the ways the church guards the treasure is to uphold sound teaching, holding in balance the complexity of our understandings of such doctrines as Christ, sin, and resurrection. The temptation is to twist doctrine around so that people are not so confused by it. Another temptation is to forget doctrine and just try to make people in church feel good. Sound teaching gives responsible witness to what God is doing in the world.

Part of the reason we are in church today is to prepare ourselves to guard the treasure. We have a gift to offer the world. We sometimes do not fully appreciate the gift we have. A few years ago, some archivists discovered that pictures stored in the Library of Congress were more than they first appeared to be. The pictures had been mislabeled. They were really pictures of President Lincoln's second inaugural address. They were a treasure for historians. For years, the archivists had not known what they had. That is often the danger of the church. We don't realize the treasure we have to give the world. Sometimes we fall into a pattern in church. We pay our bills, we have our meetings, we chair our committees, we set our budgets, but we don't appreciate how valuable our work, our very presence in the world is. God has entrusted us with the message of the gospel. God has placed a treasure into our hands and called us to guard it. We guard hope in a world bent on self-destruction. We guard love in a world seething with hate. We guard God's affirmation of life in a world fascinated with death.

We may do our ministry in an increasingly secular and even pagan culture. We may feel as though we are losing ground or that our influence is diminishing. Nevertheless, let us continue our ministry. Let us continue to sing, to preach, to teach, to take care of each other, and to reach out. Let us fan the flames of our faith into a transforming energy. Let us share our treasure with the world. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Middle Third): Faith, Hope, and Love: From Paul and After Paul, by Charles L. Aaron