2 Timothy 3:10--4:8 · Paul’s Charge to Timothy
When to Hold On
II Timothy 3:14-4:5
Sermon
by Mark Trotter
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Our text for this morning is from II Timothy. I have to say up front that II Timothy is not considered by biblical scholars to be one of the great masterpieces of biblical literature. Some have even raised the question of why it is there at all. The main problem that they have with it is its conservatism. It defines faith as holding on to the past. By the time II Timothy was written, faith had become a tradition. Faith is now a set of doctrines. In other words, faith had become a noun. It's "The Faith."

In the rest of the Bible, faith is always a verb. Faith is going on an adventure. The very first example of faith we have is in the Book of Genesis, the example of Abraham and Sarah leaving their comfortable existence to go on a journey to a Promised Land, promised to them by a God they can't see.

That is what faith looks like. Faith is an adventure. Faith is risk-taking. Faith is sacrifice. Jesus said, "If you be my disciple, then you must give up something." Maybe a lot. Maybe even your life, in order to find your life. Give up this life that you are living, in order to discover what real life is about. That is an act of faith. It's a risk. It takes courage.

Jesus told parables in which people risk everything in order to gain a prize. Faith is courage. Faith is David, little David, going before Goliath. The whole Bible is like that. It is about underdogs who, with little chance, but with courageous faith, go forth to some great challenge to receive the prize. In the Bible, faith is a verb. It is doing something that you didn't quite think that you could do.

That is why the Letter to the Hebrews defines faith as "the assurance of things hoped for." You don't have it, but you move toward it. That definition is offered before listing all of the heroes of the Bible, who are lifted up to us as our examples. They all had faith. "Faith is the assurance of things hoped for." That is what faith looks like. Faith is going out and face giants...or the Yankees.

I am very much aware of what everybody is thinking about in San Diego. I am as excited about it as everybody else. I was disappointed in the game last night, as everybody else, so I am tempted to talk about baseball. In fact, I am tempted to switch the sermon from this text in II Timothy, to the Gospel lesson, which is the Parable of the Importunate Widow, who keeps banging on the door of the judge, pleading for justice. He won't give it to her, so she keeps banging. She's importunate. She keeps on going, never gives up, no matter what everyone says to her. They say, "You might as well give up. You can't win this. You are just a poor widow, and judges don't pay any attention to people like you." But she won't give up.

She is also the model of the biblical understanding of history, that the poor, and the forgotten, and the overlooked, will be vindicated in history. That is the meaning of the Magnificat, that wonderful song that Mary sings when she learns that she is going to have a baby.

My soul doth magnify the Lord, for he has regarded the low estate of his handmaiden....He has knocked down the mighty from their thrones, and exalted those of low degree.

Now that is a text for the Padres. They need to hear that. So I was tempted to talk all about that, because everyone is caught up in the plight of the lowly Padres, perennial underdogs. Nobody takes them seriously. Going up against the great legendary Yankees. The Yankees have been in the Series thirty-five times. That means about every three years they are in the World Series.

But I am resisting that temptation, as you can see, and take you back to II Timothy, to the Epistle lesson, because we are about more important things here than the World Series. We belong to a community that believes that there are more important things in life than sport, although sport has its place in our life as a diversion. But sport can become demonic if it diverts us from what is essential in life. And II Timothy takes us back to what is essential for the Church.

Paul is writing to Timothy, his colleague in the faith. Timothy accompanied Paul on his missionary journeys. He is like an apprentice to Paul. Timothy is now back at his church at Lystra, and Paul is giving him some advice. He writes, "Continue what you have learned and have firmly believed." He is saying, hold on to the tradition, continue in what you have learned, hold on to it.

This letter is in the New Testament because it has a message that the Church is supposed to hear: "Hold on to what you have learned." That means the Church has a tradition. The Church has a tradition that has been handed on to it from generation to generation. The mission of the Church is to preserve that tradition. There are times when faith is a verb, encouraging you to go out into the world as faithful disciples. But there are other times when faith is a noun, and it refers to that tradition that we have received. "The Faith," that is what it is called, is a noun, what we have received. The Church's job is to preserve it, and make sure it is passed on to the next generation.

I want to talk about that in light of our church, and in light of the contemporary church in our time. It is common knowledge that the old traditional mainline churches are declining in membership. There are a number of reasons why that is happening. I have my own opinion about it. You need to go to First Forum at 11:00 a.m. Sherry Root is going to review Bishop Spong's book. He says the Church ought to change. It may be. I don't want to talk about that. I want to talk about what the Church can do to reestablish itself in its traditional role as Church.

Many people are making changes in the Church, quite successfully, because they turn to the world, and ask, "What do you want? We will try to accommodate you." You see books now all the time written for churches on how to appeal to the baby boomers, and Generation X, different segments of the market. That is the way they talk about it. They approach the population and seek to find what the desires and the needs are of those various audiences, and then shape the Gospel to speak to them.

There is some wisdom in doing that. I will admit that. There is even a biblical precedent, where Paul says, "I am a Jew to the Jews, and a Greek to the Greeks." What he means is, I will try to speak in a way so that people will understand what I am saying. That is all right. But the danger is to turn to the world for the content of the message, not just the technique, but the message itself, and let that be shaped by what the world wants to hear.

That is what Paul is talking about to Timothy. He says, don't do that. Stick instead to the tradition. Because, Paul writes, there are those who shop around for what they want to hear. The way he puts it is, "I solemnly urge you, proclaim the message. Be persistent, whether the time is favorable or unfavorable. Hold on to what you have received." He adds, "For the time is coming when people will not put up with sound doctrine, but will have itching ears. They will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own desires." So hold on to what you have received from the tradition, whether the time be favorable or unfavorable for it. Whether, that is to say, it is fashionable or unfashionable. For this reason. It is not the time that should determine the message, it is the message that is supposed to redeem the time.

That has happened. In every period of genuine church renewal the Church didn't ask the world what it wanted. It went to the tradition to find out what the world needed. Augustine saved the Church from the collapse of the Roman Empire by turning to the tradition. Luther lifted the Church out of the collapse of the Middle Ages by turning to the tradition. Wesley revived the Church in England from apathy by returning to the passion of the tradition. In our century the European church survived the madness of wars and oppression by holding on to the tradition. "Hold on to what you have received."

Then it says this. "Remember from whom you have received it." There is a fascinating detail in this letter. You turn to the first chapter and you will see from whom Timothy has received this tradition. They are named there. It says, "You have learned this from Lois and Eunice." They are Timothy's grandmother and mother. They raised Timothy in the Christian faith. Lois and Eunice are mentioned also in the Acts of the Apostles. They were the head of the Church in Lystra. It meets in their house. That is where Paul first met Timothy. He visited them, stayed in their house, met their son, Timothy. He was so impressed with the quality of Timothy's Christianity that he invited him to travel with him as his companion.

Timothy is one of the first of the second generation of Christians. That makes him significant, because he now has something in common with us. Like Timothy, we are Christians because somebody told us about it. We are Christians because somebody taught us the Faith. We are Christians because the Church had a tradition and saw to it that its children receive the tradition.

When I read about Lois and Eunice, I think about the Church in Russia, back in the days of the Soviet Union. People used to visit Russian churches and come back and say, the Church is dying in Russia because there are only old women in the churches.

Now I confess that when I first heard that I bought it. But later I realized that it was both sexist and faithless. It would be like going to Lystra 2000 years ago and seeing just two women there, Lois and Eunice, and say, this church isn't going to last.

Lois taught Eunice the Faith. Eunice taught her son Timothy the Faith. Timothy helped change the world. Paul writes to them now, saying, "Remember how you did that. You did that by holding on to what you had learned." The fact of the matter is that in Russia, the faith was kept alive by women, who like Lois before them, held on to the tradition, and taught the children.

There was another phenomenon reported out of Russia by Malcolm Muggeridge, before he died. He visited Russia, too. He saw that there was a yearning among intellectuals in Russia for something deeper, something transcendent in their lives. He said the Communists were able to eliminate religion from public life, and they were able to narrowly constrict religion in church life, but they couldn't ban two of Russia's greatest novelists, Leo Tolstoy and Feodor Dostoevsky.

Muggeridge said that the educated classes didn't go to church, but they read Dostoevsky and Tolstoy, two devoted Christians who permeated their writings with the Orthodox Russian Christian tradition. As a result, the longing for that tradition, that religion, was passed on from generation to generation.

Sometimes faith is a verb. It encourages you to go out to do great things. But other times faith is a noun. It is the tradition that we have received, and we are called to pass on to the next generation.

We are committed to do that in this place. The shape of the worship of the Church is tradition. That is why we worship. We worship to rehearse the tradition. But as important as worship is, equally important is Christian education and fellowship. What the early church called, "building up the body." What we call around here, "family," on this day. We do that in many ways. This year we have put a strong emphasis on children's ministry. As you can see, if you go out the front door of the church, the renovation that is going on in the Christian education facilities for children. We are almost finished with this phase. We will then go on to the next phase. The result of which will be a sign of our commitment to pass the tradition to the next generation.

Stephen Carter in his book, Civility, talks about the cultural crisis in our nation. He defines it as a loss of civility. He says civility is more than just good manners. Civility is the way society respects one another. Carter put it in this marvelous phrase: "Civility is a way of loving the stranger." Which is not only a command that has been given to us by Jesus, but is a necessary part of being a civilized nation, to love the stranger, to be concerned about people we don't even know but who are fellow citizens, fellow human beings. Loving the stranger.

He says that civility is taught by three institutions in any society, and three that are in crisis in our time. One is the home, another is the Church, and the third is the school. He used the analogy of the three-legged stool. He said, if one of the legs is broken, then there is jeopardy in that society. But if two legs are broken, there is collapse of the civilization.

In my opinion the Church is the most critical part of that trinity, because the Church is the steward of the tradition of loving the stranger, without which there is no civility. The Church proclaims the importance of fidelity, without which marriage and family will not survive. The Church proclaims the divine worth of each child in this society, which is the motivation for public education. It has always been the motivation for public education, that we have a responsibility to see to the fulfillment of the potential of all the children. It is the engine that supports public education.

I hear people say, "My children are now grown. I don't have responsibility anymore for public education." My goodness. That's not civilization, that's tribalism. Educating all the children, others children, is the surest test of civilization. It is loving the stranger. Because the Church is here, holding on to the faith, passing on its values to the society, society is able to hold itself together. Without those values of loving the stranger, of fidelity to one another, and the sacred worth of every individual, democracy will not work.

We ask you to get involved in the mission of this church in this community. Go to the festival next door and find a place where you can serve. Or, find a place where we can serve you. If you have needs, look over there. We have means of meeting the needs of people. But we will also challenge you to give your service to others. You can be a contributing member of this family.

Our culture is in crisis. The celebration of sport enables us to forget it for a little while, at least. The World Series in baseball has pushed aside the scandal in Washington, but the crisis is still there, and it is a crisis in values. I am betting that the institutions that see themselves as stewards of those values, and see a responsibility to pass those values to the children, will be the source of the renewal of our society.

Annie Dillard wrote about the Eskimos in Canada, in the great tundra west of Hudson Bay. She said, as they traveled across that tundra they will get some rocks and make a tower, about the height of a man. They will walk until they can no longer see that tower, then gather more rocks and make another tower. That is the way they make their way across that white desert. They do this so that if they should ever get lost in their journey, they will be able to find their way home.

That is what a tradition is for. A tradition is there to prevent us from getting lost. "So remember what you have learned and where you learned it."

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mark Trotter