1 Timothy 2:1-15 · Instructions on Worship
Mentor, Mediator, Master
1 Timothy 2:1-15
Sermon
by King Duncan
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When Karen Morse of Henniker, New Hampshire was about to graduate from high school in 1984, she revealed a startling fact she could not read or write at even the most basic level! Karen was in the National Honor Society, in "Who ™s Who in American High Schools," was class president, and was student council president. She was known as a superb orator and a model student. Yet, Karen-a severe dyslexic had developed elaborate ruses through 12 years of school to cover the fact that she couldn ™t even read street signs!

For her whole life, Karen had lived in fear that people would unmask her inadequacy. Her energy went into concealing the truth. She had become a slave to protecting her false image. (1)

Many people play the same game in their relationship with God. In their hearts they know the hidden sins that prevent a real relationship with their Lord. Deep down they know that their spiritual activities are a facade. They know that things are not at all what they pretend them to be, but it has become more important to maintain the image than to possess reality.

Karen had no possibility of learning to read until she dropped the facade and asked for help. Likewise, it is impossible in the spiritual realm to have an adequate relationship with God while trying to maintain a dishonest front, a pious lie.

If we wish to walk with God, we abandon the lie and admit our need. If we prefer to pretend that everything is o.k., then our hunger for God will always go unsatisfied.

Thus we come to our text for the morning: "This is good, and it is acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth. For there is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men, The man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all...."

It is God ™s will that we drop our masks and become authentic in our faith and in our living. And there is only one way that can happen, and that is when we come to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ, His Son. In Him is true knowledge, in Him is salvation, in Him is the power to live. Let ™s consider for a few moments how Christ helps us in our search for authenticity.

FIRST OF ALL, CHRIST IS OUR MENTOR. "Mentor" is an "in" word nowadays. It means "one who is a trusted counselor and friend." But more than that. It means one who guides us, instructs us, inspires us. A mentor is more than a teacher, more than an example. A mentor is one whose very life is a model for our life. God desires, says St. Paul, for us all "to come to the knowledge of truth." And for this reason, first of all, we come to Jesus.

It is sad when somebody no longer feels the need to grow. There is a story about a wealthy gold miner who had a son destined to take over the family business. The father sent his son back East to study in the finest engineering school and to learn all he could about managing the mines.

The young man studied hard and proudly received his degree and diploma. On his graduation he said to his father, "Dad, I'm ready to go to work. Give me your best mine, and I'll show you how to run it."

The father replied,"No, Son, first you must change into your work clothes and go down into the mine. There you will gain experience. You may start at the bottom and work your way up."

But the son insisted, "Look, Dad, I've been to school. I've received my diploma. With all due respect, I know more about mining than you will ever know. And if you will just give me your best mine, I will prove it to you."

And so the father, against his better judgment, gave his son the most productive mine. For a while it did well. Then one day the father received a letter, stating, "Dad, you know that the mine I am working is backed up to the lake. Well, the water is seeping in. We've shored it up, but the shoring does not seem to hold. What do you think we ought to do?" The father did not answer.

In a few more weeks the son wrote again, "Look Dad, this is serious. We are not able to stop the water. What do you think we ought to do?" Still no answer from the father.

Finally the son frantically wired his father: IF YOU DO NOT GIVE ME AN ANSWER SOON, WE ARE GOING TO LOSE THE ENTIRE MINE. WHAT SHOULD I DO? The father wired back: TAKE YOUR DIPLOMA AND SHOVE IT INTO THE LEAK. (2)

It is sad when somebody thinks that he or she has already arrived. Surely one of the reasons Jesus told us that we should become like a little child is that a child is teachable. They called Jesus, RABBI, TEACHER, and so he is. We learn from him. We study his words, we marvel at his example, and by the power of the Holy Spirit, we walk in His presence. We learn from Him in a way that we can learn from no other. He is our Mentor.

IN THE SECOND PLACE, HE IS OUR MEDIATOR. He is the one by whose life and death we become acceptable to God. That is a difficult concept for many of us. In a permissive culture such as ours, we cannot even conceive of God punishing sinners.

Fairly or unfairly, in the 1988 Presidential campaign, attention focused at times on the prisoner furlough program and the liberal attitude of criminal justice in the state of Massachusetts--the famous "Willie Horton" case. A recent newspaper story from Northampton, Mass., makes the picture even a little more titillating.

A homeless man of that area, Samuel Gallezzo, wanted to be housed for a while in jail. He first tried throwing a newspaper vending machine through a window, but the arriving officers merely handed him a summons to appear at court later on charges of misdemeanor vandalism. Gallezzo next stole a $175,000 Western Massachusetts Bus Lines bus and took it and himself down to the police station. After turning himself in and taking the desk sergeant outside to see the bus, he was finally arrested. However, he was released 24-hours later on his own recognizance. (3)

You can't get arrested in Massachusetts even when you try! We are kidding, of course. Such stories amuse us. But there is nothing amusing about our casual attitude toward sin. Sin destroys people. God hates sin. Sin separates man from God. We take the atonement seriously because we take sin seriously. We need a Mediator to intervene in our behalf!

One of the more dramatic (but lesser-known) scenes of American history took place on August 4, 1735 in New York City. It occurred at the start of the trial of Peter Zenger.

Peter Zenger was a German immigrant and local printer who had dared to take a stand against the very corrupt New York Governor, William S. Cosby. As Gov. Cosby's acts became more outrageous and Zenger's newspaper spoke more harshly against those acts, Cosby had Zenger jailed. Cosby's Supreme Court justice then had the lawyers disbarred who had stepped forward to defend Zenger. Although no charges were placed against Zenger, his bail was set at an enormous 800 pounds. Two months later Zenger still sat in jail, although the grand jury refused to indict him for anything.

After 9 months, Zenger want to trial for publishing "false, scandalous, malicious, and seditious libel." His original attorneys had been disbarred, his current lawyer had been appointed by a Cosby man, and the jury had been instructed to rule only on whether Zenger did or did not publish the newspaper. His "guilt" as to the "libel" in the paper had already been decided by the appointed justice. Zenger did not have a chance of acquittal.

Then it happened! From the back of the courtroom a dignified and well-dressed gentleman arose and walked forward to the front. He announced that he would represent Zenger. The court immediately recognized the man as Andrew Hamilton, a respected member of the Pennsylvania Council and the Philadelphia Assembly and also the most celebrated lawyer in the New World. Hamilton admitted that Zenger was the publisher but pled for the right of men everywhere to be able to publish the truth--and Zenger was acquitted.

Somehow that scene seems reminiscent of something else that happened in history, although much farther back. All the individuals throughout time stood on trial for their sin and the outcome of the case was certain. The sentence was death. However, this time the verdict was not the outcome of a crooked court. Every man stood justly accused of his sin. Then a man stepped forward on our behalf. He did not plead our innocence; we had none. He pled the right to take our guilty place and have us pardoned. He pled the right to be the sacrifice in our place. (4)

What a beautiful portrait of the love of God. "While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us...." Writing years ago in the SATURDAY REVIEW, John Ciardi told of the influx of synthetic emeralds that had flooded the market. So perfect were the synthetics, an expert told him, that there was only one way to tell them from the real thing. If you want to know which of two emeralds is synthetic and which is genuine, heat both stones to a prescribed temperature and give them both a tap with a small hammer. The one that breaks is the real one. (5) We know God's love is real. We can see His heart break on the hill of Calvary. He is our Mentor. He is our Mediator.

FINALLY, HE IS OUR MASTER. Abraham Lincoln went down to the slave block to buy back a slave girl. As the slave girl looked at the tall, homely-looking white man bidding on her, she figured he was just another white man, going to buy her and then abuse her. Lincoln won the bid, and as he was walking away with his property, he said, "Young lady, you are free." She said, "What does that mean?" He said, "It means you are free." "Does that mean," she said, "that I can say whatever I want to say?" Lincoln said, "Yes, my dear, you can say whatever you want to say." "Does that mean," she said, "That I can be whatever I want to be?" Lincoln said, "Yes, you can be whatever you want to be." She said, "Does that mean I can go wherever I want to go?" He said, "Yes, you can go wherever you want to go." And the girl, with tears streaming down her face, said, "Then I will go with you."

That is our response after we have experienced Christ as Mentor and Mediator. We gladly call Him Master, for He has set us free. No more facade. No more pretense. Free to be all he created us to be. That is why our hope is in Him. Our Mentor, our Mediator, our Master, our Savior, our Lord, our Friend.


1. Allen, Mel. "The Cost of Karen Morse's Education," Yankee (January, 1988), pp. 66-69, 149.

2. Adrian P. Rogers, GOD'S WAY TO HEALTH WEALTH AND WISDOM, (Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman Press, 1987).

3. "Man Steals Bus But Still Walks," The Knoxville News-Sentinel: (April 28, 1989), Section A, p. 7.

4. Robbins, Peggy. "The Trial of Peter Zenger," AMERICAN HISTORY ILLUSTRATED (Dec., 1976), pp. 9-17.

5. Eugene W. Brice, BOOKS THAT BRING LIFE, (Lubbock, Texas: Net Press, 1983).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan