2 Timothy 3:10--4:8 · Paul’s Charge to Timothy
The Authority of Scripture: God's Breathed Word
2 Timothy 3:10--4:8
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Our father of the Methodist movement, John Wesley, had an attention-getting way of expressing truth. Though he was very wordy in his sermons, he could gather up a world of truth in a few words. His pithy sayings are often quoted and are a source of truth and inspiration. Listen to him:

“Earn all you can, save all you can, give all you can.”

The best way to resist the devil is to destroy whatever of the world remains in us. Every new victory a soul gains comes as a result of prayer. The essential part of Christian holiness lies in giving your heart wholly to God.

“If your heart is as my heart, you are my brother. Give me your hand.”

One of my favorites is the one in which he compared the church as a fellowship in which “one loving heart sets another heart on fire.”

Then there is the oft-repeated one, “As to all opinions which do not strike at the root of Christianity, we think and let think.”

I wish Wesley had never said that. It has given too many people an excuse for straying from the Gospel. Folks use the word to argue that Methodists are unconcerned about doctrine and theology. So you hear it all the time. You can believe anything and be a Methodist – and that also translates, you can do anything and be a Methodist. Not so! Those who would say such things don’t understand the Wesleyan movement.

We have a problem at that point among contemporary United Methodists and also and other mainline churches. I believe the problem of the Church in every age can be traced to a loss of identity – and this is especially true in United Methodism. There is a sense in which we have lost our identity. We don’t know who we are. We have become preoccupied with side issues – minor matters, institutional structures and functions. We are a one-issue church today and another-issue church tomorrow. We substitute ideology for theology. For at least three decades we have prided ourselves in being a pluralistic church – and we have interpreted that to mean that we are pluralistic in our doctrinal understanding. Taken to an extreme, we can believe anything we please to believe – after all, all roads lead to heaven – so why be so narrow – why set up anything that would look like a barrier to anybody? So, we have diminished the authority of Scripture. We have denigrated the uniqueness of Jesus – His incarnation, life, teaching, death and resurrection. We have relativised the Gospel and we have no absolutes. We have no passion for sharing the Gospel because, since one religion is as good as another is and everybody is going to be saved, why get be so passionate about anything?

The problem that is raging through the church today, and threatens to tear us a part is the problem of homosexuality. The strident battle of some to have the church affirm the practice of homosexuality – to ordain practicing homosexual persons, and to perform same-sex marriages -- that is a raging problem – and will be at the center of all that takes place at our General Conference which begins this week. But behind that problem is the larger one – the authority of Scripture and our understanding of who Jesus is. This is what a few years ago led me, along with Bishop William Cannon and Dr. Tom Oden to begin what became the Confessing Movement. I’m so happy that this church and so many of you are committed to this effort at doctrinal renewal and reinvigoration. Bill Bauknight is providing outstanding leadership as chair of this movement.

Our United Methodist Church is in deep trouble. This will be reflected in our General Conference and I urge you to be fervent in prayer this next two weeks. The root of our problem came home to me in a dramatic way last February (1999). I was invited to an all-day consultation on the Bible and the 21st Century. One of the sponsors was the American Bible Society. The focus was on technology and how we will get the Word out in the 21st century, how technology will shape the Word. One session was on authority. I was shocked – dismayed by most of the discussion. Let me give you just two quotes:

(1) “The Bible is not essential for critical reflection. In the end, I don’t attach much authority to the Bible.”

(2) “Biblical authority needs to be exploded. ‘Sola Scriptura’ that was the cry of the Reformation – Scripture alone) Sol Scriptura gets us all into trouble.”

Those two quotes came from professors in seminaries that are training men and women for the Methodist ministry. Is it any wonder that our church is in turmoil? When men and women preparing persons for ministry and mentoring students of our faith, who disregard the very foundational documents and diminish the Bible as God Word.

I believe the church will continue to hemorrhage and diminish in membership and influence. We will not be renewed and revival will not come to the world unless and until we recapture a passion for this Book – this one book which is God’s gift to us.

In fact, this is God’s breathed Word. And that brings us to our text. Listen to verses 16 and 17 again:

All Scriptures is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, so that everyone who belongs to God may be proficient, equipped for every good work.

Some translations have that, “all Scripture is God-breathed.” God-breathed. This is God’s Word, my friends, and there is no higher authority than this. All that we need for our salvation is here. All that we need for growth in discipleship is here. All that we need for teaching and reproof and correction and training in righteousness is here. All that we need to be equipped for every good work is here.

I heard a story of a young fellow who desperately wanted a car for his sixteenth birthday. That is all he talked about and he knew his parents had gotten the message. When the day finally arrived, he looked out the window hopefully thinking that surely his new car would be there. But to his great disappointment, it wasn’t. There was no car at all.

He asked his parents why he hadn’t gotten the car. The father responded, “Son, there are three reasons. First, your grades are bad and you never seem to study like you should. Secondly, you don’t go to church any more and you don’t read the Bible every night. And thirdly you have got that long hair and you won’t cut it.”

“Well, what do I need to do,” asked the son, “to be able to get my car?” “It is very simple,” the dad said, “You need to study hard and raise your grades. You need to go to church and read your Bible every night and you need to get that long hair cut.” Six months passed and the young man came back to his father. “Dad, It has been six months now and I want you to know I’ve made a lot of improvements. In fact, I am getting three A’s and a B this semester. So you see, I have been studying hard. And I have been going to church every Sunday and reading my Bible every night.”

The father’s said, “I know son, and I am proud of you. But you still haven’t gotten your hair cut.”

The son’s face lit up. “Yes, dad, I know, but I have discovered in reading the Bible that Jesus had long hair too.”

The fathers reply was really disarming. “Yes, son, I realize that, but if you will keep reading the Bible, you will also discover that Jesus walked everywhere He went!”

Well, that is not all we’ll discover if we keep reading the Bible. When Paul says to Timothy, “All Scripture is inspired by God,” he is literally saying: “Scripture is God’s breathed Word.” That means it is more than a book. Let’s use that rubric to reflect on what Scripture means for your and me.

First of all the Bible is more than a book, it is a revelation and encounter with the living God.

Moses experienced that encounter when he was confronted by the burning bush that was not consumed and out of that burning bush heard the voice of God.

The revelation came to Elijah when fleeing Jezebel. He was caught in the tumultuous upheavals of nature. But God was not in the shattering earthquake or the torrential rains or the blistering winds – he heard God in the still small voice that thundered in his soul.

Isaiah met God in the temple – mourning the death of King Uzziah. He experienced God in the setting of worship, and God confronted him with his eternal call: “Whom shall I send and who will go for us?”

John the Baptist, in his heart of hearts, had experienced the revelation. Flocks of people came out of the desert and Galilian hills to be baptized by him in the Jordan. But no messianic complex overcame John as it does too many of us religious leaders. He had been confronted by the eternal God who had an ultimate plan – so he could humbly say, “I baptize with water unto repentance, but He that is coming after me is mightier than I; He will baptize with the Holy Spirit and with power.”

More than a Book, the Bible is a revelation and an encounter with the living God.

We serve many gods: wealth, materialism, greed, money, but the Bible says, “For what does it profit a man, to gain the whole world and lose his own soul?” (Mark 8:36)

We worship the god of sex and pleasure, but the Bible says, “Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit with you, which you have from God? You are not your own; you have been bought with a price. So glorify your God in your body” (I Corinthians 6:19-20).

We serve the god of power, prestige, worldly influence, but the Bible says, “But many that are first will be last, and the last will be first” (Mark 10:31).

Listen, friends, if you read this book, you will meet the living God who will lay His claims upon your life.

And that leads me to my next point.

More than a book, the Bible is an invitation – an invitation to life.

The great events of the Old Testament – creation, covenant and exodus – all reflect the Gospel. The movement of God is a movement of love toward us. The big story of the Bible is the story of God staying with us – through His grace, wooing us, loving us, seeking to restore us to our created image and bring us back into fellowship with Him. When we are converted, it doesn’t mean that salvation is complete. It means we are justified, accepted by God, saved for new life and eternal life with Christ. Our salvation, -- growing into the likeness of Christ, brought by the – growing into the likeness of Christ, brought by the Holy Spirit to maturity – that process continues. We Methodists call it sanctification.

We had a three-day “revival” at the seminary back in march. It was a powerful time of renewal and healing. Though many of our students have had dramatic conversions, are certain of God’s call, and have a passion for ministry, there is a great deal of brokenness – debilitating residue left over from their life as prodigals in the far country. I wish you could have heard the testimonies. I wish you could have been privileged to pray with these students at the altar. All the problems of life:

-- estrangement and dysfunctional families

-- emotional and sexual abuse

-- sexual brokenness, including homosexual

practice and bondage to pornography

As I listened to and prayed with these students I thought of Paul’s word to the Corinthians, “Such were some of you.” Listen to I Corinthians 6:9-11:

Do you not know that wrongdoers will not inherit the Kingdom of God? Do not be deceived! Fornicators, idolaters, adulterers, male prostitutes, sodomites, thieves, the greedy, drunkards, revilers, robbers – none of these will inherit the Kingdom of God. And this is what some of you used to be. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and in the Spirit of our God.

There was story after story after story of new life received, of being saved, literally saved from a path leading to death – justified, washed, cleansed, sanctified. But there are other stories – no less dramatic.

-- Persons caught up in the rat race for material security

-- in meaningless ruts of lifeless religion

-- in superficial glamour and selfish worlds of me, me, me.

I sat with a young couple just a week ago

(FINISH STORY)

The Bible is more than a book -- it is an invitation and a gift of life.

But note one other thing – more than a book if we accept the authority of Scripture, we find in it a blueprint for living. Listen to Paul again in our text:

All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.

See the words there: teaching, reproof, correction, and training. And for what purpose? “That the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”

Let me lodge two sentences in your mind: When our minds are open to understand the Scripture, our hearts are open to receive God’s grace – that is what the revelation and encounter and invitation are all about. Let me say it again: When our minds are open to understand the Scripture, our hearts are open to receive God’s grace. But then there follows this profound truth. When our hearts are open to receive God’s grace, our wills are softened to do God’s bidding. Get the movement now. When our minds are open to understand the Scripture, our hearts are open to receive God’s grace. And when our hearts are open to receive God’s grace our wills are softened to do God’s bidding.

We could pursue that in a lot of different ways – let me focus on God’s call to holiness – nothing illustrates what I am talking more than this. Listen, friends, holiness is not an option for God’s people. God makes it clear in His Word: “Be holy as I am holy.” There ought to be about us Christians, something that distinguishes us. In our ethical understanding, in our moral life, in the way we do business, in how we relate to others, in the way we look at and regard the poor and the oppressed.

We seem to forget – that though God’s grace accepts us where we are, it does not leave us as we are.

There is a story about a man who was tired and weak all the time, drained of energy. He went to the doctor, “I feel totally drained – constantly exhausted – I feel worn out all the time. What is the best thing I can do?” The doctor knew something about this man’s fast-paced lifestyle. “What is the best thing you can do? You can go home after work every day, eat a nutritious meal, get a good night’s sleep, and stop running around and carousing all night – that is the best thing you can do.”

The man pondered that for a moment, then asked, “What is the next best thing I can do?”

That is our stance. We want to be in, but not completely in. We want the Bible to provide us a way to salvation, we want to hear and respond to the invitation of Christ, but we don’t want to use God’s Word as a blueprint for living. But we really have no choice. If we are going to accept the authority of Scripture – then we are going to have to accept it for the whole of life – and that means we are called to holiness.

Here is a story, challenging us to holiness. A while ago there was a news paper article about a teacher who had taught in the public schools in Los Angeles. She had been a good teach, but then she wanted to start her own family so she left the profession. She and her husband had three children. They raised them well and not too long ago they sent the last one off to college. This teacher decided she wanted to go back to the teaching profession. She applied and was accepted, and she wrote in the Los Angeles Times about her first day back in a 7th grade class, after nearly twenty years.

She spoke about her anxiety. Would she be up to the task? Would she be able to handle the kids? She talked about nervously walking into the classroom that first morning then putting her books down on the desk and say, “good morning, class.” That would kind of quiet the class and they would respond, “Good morning, Mrs. Jones.” She would then get on with teaching. So, she put her books down on her desk, feeling a little bit more confidant, and she said,

“Good morning, class.” Some kid in the front row shouted back, “Shut up, bitch!” and everybody in the classroom laughed.

Well, who is going to do something about it? On the Church and God’s people who get their blueprint for living and know that holiness is not an option for God’s people, can provide an option for the debauched culture that is ours in this country.

Our campus in Wilmore has a beautiful quad. In a prominent place there is a life-size statue of John Wesley preaching in the market place at Bristol. He is holding his Bible and because he was a man of one Book.

When we placed the statue there I had one of Wesley’s words printed on a bronze plaque. I not only want our students to be constantly reminded of Mr. Wesley and our heritage he inspired, I want them to read often this word.

“I am not afraid the people called Methodists should ever cease to exist either in Europe or America. But I am afraid lest they should only exist as a dead sect, having the form of religion without the power. And this undoubtedly will be the case unless they hold fast both the doctrine, Spirit and discipline with which they first set out.”

Could it be that his concern has become reality?

The same thing is true of each one of us. We are as holy as we want to be.

So, do you believe in the authority of scripture? If you do, you know that the Bible is more than a book – it is the revelation and an encounter with the Living God. It is an invitation – an invitation to salvation and eternal life. And it is a blueprint for living. Within it is the guide for the way we are to pattern our life – and at the heart of that is the call to holiness.

Let me share a portion of my own journey. There are some experiences and encounters that are so solidly lodged in our memory that they continue to invade our consciousness – to haunt us – to hinder our Christian walk, to call and challenge us to be more than we are.

John Birkbeck is a person around whom for me a whole cluster of memories is gathered…memories that invade my immediate awareness now and then. John was a Scot Presbyterian preacher. During a part of my tenure as the World Editor of The Upper Room, he was the Editor of the British edition of The Upper Room. He was a marvelous preacher in the classic style of the Scot Divines.

I remember long walks in the evenings through streets of Edinburgh and Glasgow and Aberdeen. I remember extended hours across the table in cafés over coffee – talking and talking, listening and listening. We were never together without my probing him about Christian doctrine, his own insight into Biblical truth and preaching, and the wisdom of the Scot Divines. It was John who introduced me to the Scottish preacher, Robert Murray McCheyne. I hope I will never forget what John called to my attention in one of McCheyne’s books. Listen to him:

“The greatest need of my congregation is my personal holiness.”

I want to solidly lodge that in all of our minds. I have found it true in all my years of pastoral ministry… “The greatest need of my congregation is my own personal holiness.” I believe that is the greatest need of the seminary as it relates to my leadership – my own personal holiness.

I remember a time in my life back in the early 60’s when I was confronted with this shocking fact: I am as holy as I want to be. I was a young Methodist preacher in Mississippi. I was the only organizing pastor of a congregation, which had known amazing growth and success. The fellowship of that congregation was splintered by my involvement in the civil rights movement. I didn’t think there was anything radical about my involvement, but many folks in the church could not understand my commitment and participation. I couldn’t understand their lack of understanding. The Gospel seemed clear. The pressure, stress, and tension wore me out. I was physically, emotionally, and spiritually exhausted – ready to throw in the towel. Then I went to a weeklong Christian Ashram led by the world-famous missionary evangelist E. Stanley Jones. It was Tom Carruth, that beloved mentor of many folks who have been to Asbury Theological Seminary and have lived here in Wilmore, who led me in that direction. I will never forget going to the altar one evening, to have Brother Stanley lay hands on me and pray for me. He knew my story – we had counseled together that week. As I knelt, he asked me, “Maxie, do you want to be whole? Do you want to be holy?” That was a signal, sanctifying experience in my life – changing forever the direction of my ministry. In fact it may very well be that I am here at ATS because of that. Through the years since that time, I have constantly asked myself: “Do you want to be holy?” And I have constantly reminded myself that I am as holy as I want to be.

The same thing is true of each one of us. We are as holy as we want to be.

So, do you believe in the authority of Scripture? If you do, you know that the Bible is more than a book – it is the revelation and an encounter with the Living God. It is an invitation – an invitation to salvation and eternal life. And it is a blueprint for living. Within it is the guide for the way we are to pattern our life – and at the heart of that is the call to holiness.

MaxieDunnam.com, MaxieDunnam.com, by Maxie Dunnam