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Scripture Text (NRSV)

 

2 Timothy 3:14-4:5

 

3:14 But as for you, continue in what you have learned and firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it,

3:15 and how from childhood you have known the sacred writings that are able to instruct you for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.

3:16 All scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness,

3:17 so that everyone who belongs to God may be proficient, equipped for every good work.

4:1 In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and in view of his appearing and his kingdom, I solemnly urge you:

4:2 proclaim the message; be persistent whether the time is favorable or unfavorable; convince, rebuke, and encourage, with the utmost patience in teaching.

4:3 For the time is coming when people will not put up with sound doctrine, but having itching ears, they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own desires,

4:4 and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander away to myths.

4:5 As for you, always be sober, endure suffering, do the work of an evangelist, carry out your ministry fully.

 

Comments:

 

At the little church I pastor, we face an end, as we will lay down our gathering, and the 9 or so beyond my family of 5 will find other communities of faith. Over the remaining 5 weeks, I hope that we will do the "heavy lifting." Yesterday, remembering the leper who acknowledged his healing, we listed all the beauty they had known in that congregation--it has been the spiritual home for one woman for nearly 69 years. Perhaps next week I will encourage them to list those whom God has placed in their lives, and what those individuals have taught as lessons of faith. We cry, we hurt, but that is how it should be, when one sees that an end to something so very dear, is near. It will be left to all of us to "...carry out our ministries fully." lkinhc


Perhaps the title in our bulletin will be: "PRESSING ON WITH SCHOOLWORK" .

preaching points : . 1. (v14) The Teachers; (ref. 1:5) .... .2.(v15-16) The Textbook;... .3.(v17) The Lesson;.... . .......Galveston Teacher


ooohhhh ... I'm liking this so far!

Proclaim: be persistent and patient even in unfavorable times! Put up with rebuke and keep to the sound doctrine ... because people will seek out teachers who tell them what they want to hear.

The holes this opens up are worthy of a dissertation! So OPEN! Whose "sound doctrine?" Which "teachings to suit (our) own desires?" Heck, we can't agree what "sound doctrine" is ... because even our most fundamental(ist) brothers and sisters use interpretation, even though many deny it. And, I maintain that even "fundamentalists" or "evangelicals" are using "teachings to suit their own desires" every bit as much as "universalists" or "liberals" or (fill in the blank). You get the idea.

To say that doctrine is from a "literal" reading of scriptures is, in and of itself, an interpretation of Scripture. But, I digress...

Reality says that there are a bazillion doctrines out there ... I have a friend who's currently disillusioned with her UU church and is approaching meeting her spiritual needs by considering whom to worship. I hate for her that she's in this place - because it must feel lonely and without a center. Still, I know that the old-fashioned "testifying with sound doctrine" will turn her off all the more. There's a REASON she left the Christian church.

I preach what I believe to be sound doctrine all the time ... and there are a good many around who believe that my preaching AT ALL is specifically UN-sound doctrine.

... and then, Paul says something of profound value, too. (or whoever it was) ... don't we all accumulate for ourselves teachers to suit our own desires? and don't our congregations????? There are 2 SS classes that use the same curriculum ... and they refuse to merge ... and as best I can tell, they've been having the same conversation for 20 + years. Their "teachers" are suiting the desires of their classes, which conveniently happen to be their own.

Maybe a general rule might be: If people are too rigid, lighten them up with sound doctrine, and if people are too "out there," then rein them in a bit with sound doctrine.

I hope other folks come here to ponder along with me! This could be fun.

Sally in GA


4:2 was the topic verse for my ordination, but I have to say I dislike greatly this translation. It is not just "the message," that must be proclaimed, but all of the "logon," the "Word." On this, the context is clear. The sacred writings instructed Timothy for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. All scripture is inspired by God. Scripture makes those who belong to God proficient and equipped for every good work. Fearful times are ahead when people will not put up with sound doctrine. It is the Word of God alone which accomplishes the purposes of 3:14-17, and which guards against the errors of 4:3-4.

JG in WI


Just to muddy the water a little, what is the "scripture" that Paul is referring to? What did he have other than the Old Testament. The Pauline Corpus (a collection of the letters of Paul) was the earliest known collection of New Testament scripture at about 90 AD (or CE if you prefer). The Gospels of Mark and Matthew may have been around at the time if Paul wrote this letter but there was no New Testament as we now think of it at that time.

How often do we wander off to myths even in our modern churches? (What were the names of those 3 wise men again?) Maybe this is why Paul claimed that he stuck to preaching Christ and Him crucified. Paul stuck to preaching what he knew. Mike in Soddy Daisy

PS to lkinhc, I was speaking to a couple at a funeral on Friday whose little church had closed about 4 years ago. A congregation from another denomination is renting it for now but they said it was a little rough that it had closed on their shift. I asked how old the church was and was told that they had a list of pastors that dated back to the 1840's. Having been to that church site, I doubt it could have held 75 people at best in the present building. I reminded them was how that church had been a constant part of that community for so long and to consider how many people through the years had found faith and salvation there. That church didn't fail. It was just time for a change. Jeremiah 29:11 "For I know the plans I have for you, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, to give you hope and a future."


JG in WI - which translation do you prefer, and why?

Sally


The message points remain the same, (The Teachers:, The Textbook:. The Lesson:,) but the title now is "Higher Education" !!!

(Special Music is "Every Moment of Every Day")

Hope you have a great week. Galveston Teacher


How many people have hunted down specific scriptures to pursue their cause?

I am thinking of the church hoppers who look for the church or the preacher that says what they wish to hear.

Vs. 3-4 sound a lot like the United States at this point.

sorry for the randomness. Just thinking with my fingers.


Sally

Thank you for asking. I tend to examine many versions for study. I use the NIV for preaching because most of my congregation has it and it's easier for them.

For study, I use the American Standard, New American Standard, New English, and several others when there is a difficult passage (I have software for this). I prefer these because the translator were very particular about verb tense (especially the old American Standard) and exact wording. The NIV provides dynamic equivalency but has its flaws. My congregation often finds me re-translating passages using the other translations.

Look at 2 Timothy 4:2 in ASV - "preach the word; be urgent in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching." In Greek, the conjunction "kai" (and) is not present. The meaning here, in the words of John Chrysostom, is to preach in season, but to make "out of season" times into "in season" times. This is just a tidbit.

Thank you again for asking.

JG in WI


Thinking with the fingers:

I'm not sure I agree ... at first you appear to be dead-on about the "itching ears" verses and the USA.

It's just that it's not as clear as we wish it were. I think even the most biblical of people have their own form of 'itching ears.'

Not to rouse up a bunch of controversy, but take, for example, the war in Iraq. Many "conservative" Christians (as defined in contemporary society) believe that this war is sanctioned by God. Many other conservative Christians (such as the Amish) believe that NO war is sanctioned by God. Both can quote Scriptures supporting their case.

Some Christians believe that it's immoral to be Republican, and others believe that it's immoral to be Democrat (and we haven't even injected the green party influence). And they can justify their arguments ---

Women preachers, racial integration, homosexuality, abortion when mothers' lives are at stake (and yes, one of my best friends from college died from breast cancer and lost her unborn son in the process - she chose not to end the pregnancy to take chemo, but if she had, I wanted for it to be ok for her to do so - there was nothing pro-life about losing them both), the church & state issue, what freedom of religion really means .... just name your hot topic.

Just because we believe we're right doesn't make our "opponents' wrong.

Sally in GA


JG in WI -

thanks. It's interesting that I've heard the opposite about the ABS and the NASB. I prefer the NRSV, though fully admitting it has its problems.

If the RSV and the NIV and the NRSV didn't have their theological axes to grind with each other, they'd be able to get together and come up with something really good. As it stands, it's ended up being a way we identify who's on the left and who's on the right. I just hate that.

Trying not to grind axes...

Sally in GA


When it comes to figuring out sound doctrine, what's "the truth" we can grind just about any axe that suits our fancy...that's a given. I like the notion that it is the entire message that informs the particular message, in other words it's not a super market where we buy what we like. In addition, it also seems to me that the word is dynamic...and we do best when we make use of the Kerygma of corporate reading and study and prayer.

Frequent reader...not so frequent contributor. Thanks for the insights...


The phrase "itching ears" from the NSRV has caught my attention--I wish The Message used it!

My dogs frequently scratch their ears, and our vet recently told us that ear infections can be common in dogs, especially if they swim in ponds (like ours do). One sign of the infection is constant itching.

Our ears have been assaulted for months by campaign rhetoric (in the USA), and we have trouble discerning what is truth in what we hear. Do our ears itch from too much information?

How can Scripture soothe that itch? SHOULD Scripture soothe that itch? Shouldn't we always itch to hear more, even, and especially, if it stretches us from our liberal/conservative, comfortable stances (theologically as well as politcally)?

Hmmmmmm............Sybil in KS


Sermon title... Itching Ears and Stomach Aches (from the Message translation of Jeremiah).

Sybil in KS


I recently read the DaVinci Code. I LOVED it, as a work of fiction. I FEAR it, as something people who are not grounded in the Word of God will read and take to be factual, historical, information. I recently sat down with some young friends (they are 4 and 13) to watch "The Prince of Egypt." I was absolutely DELIGHTED when this 13-year-old started to point out the parts of the movie that were filled in and not actually based on the Bible story of Moses! How many adults can't do that? This gospel says to me "Learn all you can about and from the Word of God so that when you are confronted with an idea, you can know whether it is real and true or corrupted somehow." The good news in this is that we have available for our use, "Good News"! Pastor Janel in ND


Sally in GA

I may not have been clear about the ASV (American Standard Version). It is the 1901 translation sometimes called the American Revision (there was a British one done about the same time). It was so literal and particular in its usage that it was considered stiff and woody. Currently, it is not readily available except online (though I am blessed to have two old copies which my father had). Another source, surprisingly, is the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. They have purchased publishing rights to it and they have not altered the text. You can always buy one (at cost) from a visiting Jehovah's Witness (and, I might add, some professors of Greek tell their students to do so in order to show them proper verb parsing). The New American Standard Version, a 1963 translation attempting to correct some of these problems, and though it partly succeeded, it still does't flow very well.

I agree with you that the NIV and NRSV are grinding axes which is why I don't use the NIV in my study and preparation - I just live with the fact that my people have them. I actually do like how the NRSV translates some segments - this one bothered me however. I know what they're trying to say, but I fear they've gone a bit far afield with their attempt at dynamic equivalency at least here (which the NIV also does frequently in other places).

Wouldn't it be interesting to see what would come if our two traditions - the more liberal and the more conservative - got together to translate a Bible that avoided axes?

JG in WI


Pastor Janel in ND,

I too, have concerns about my parishioners reading the DaVinci Code. And for good reason. I've had many of them tell me they didn't "know" that Jesus and Mary had a relationship. These dear folk had accepted this book as truth.

I have recommended to them, and I recommend to all who look for a clear response to Brown's book, an excellent resource:

"Cracking DaVinci's Code" by James L. Garlow and Peter Jones. breakingthedavincicode.com www.jimgarlow.com

Standing Firm, Janet in PA


Paul continues his instruction of Timothy, his younger colleague in ministry, by emphasizing the importance of faithful teaching despite opposition.

It is the story of God's relationship to humanity contained in the Hebrew Scriptures that Paul commends to Timothy. There is urgency in Timothy's ministry to proclaim the message with which he has been entrusted. For many it will be easier to find messages that suit them than to hold to the truth.


JG in WI -

Ohhhh.... I obviously though "American Standard Bible," a favorite among Southern Baptists 'round these parts. Thanks for clearing it up for me.

Sally


Sybil in KS

I think our ears itch from too much MIS-information - from both sides.

Sally