“Laws
for the Lawless”
1
Timothy 1:1-11 (Message #1 in 1 Timothy Series)
INTRODUCTION:
The
three little NT letters known as “The Pastoral Epistles” are First Timothy,
Second Timothy, and Titus. Although small and sometimes neglected, they are
some of the most important books of the NT for the Church in this age because
they deal, at least in part, with the problems of church administration. I can
think of at least seven (7) good reasons why we should study these letters:
- Because
of the practical light they shed on the problem of how a local church
should operate.
- Because
they stress sound doctrine.
- Because
they call us to consecrated living.
- Because
they answer the question, “Are religious creeds of any value?”
- Because
they give added details concerning the last years of Paul the apostle.
- Because
they provide us with valuable information about the condition of the Early
Church in the third quarter of the 1st Century AD.
- Because
through these little letters God still speaks to us today.
TRANSITION:
Timothy
was the pastor in charge of the church at Ephesus. However, false teaching had
begun to creep into that church. Paul wrote to Timothy to warn of these errors
and to encourage him to stand firm against them, and against those who were
promoting them. Furthermore, Paul wanted Timothy to see the importance of the
application of the Christian message to the personal life of a disciple. Timothy
may have been a bit reticent to take a stand for the Gospel and in this Paul
encouraged him strongly. In addition, Paul instructed him concerning matters of
church life and worship. In 1 Timothy we have a small, yet powerful package. Divided
into 6 chapters, with only 113 verses, Paul gives us much meat to chew on.
MAIN BODY:
Verses
1-2: Paul, an
apostle of Christ Jesus according to the commandment of God our Saviour, and of
Christ Jesus, who is our hope, 2 to Timothy, my true child in
the faith: Grace, mercy, and peace from God the Father and Christ Jesus our
Lord.
- “An apostle” Literally a “sent one.” Paul was asserting his authority as an
ambassador sent by Christ. “…according to the commandment”
This word refers to a royal order, given by a King. He is referring to the fact that God
sovereignly commissioned him. He states this fact in a powerful way in
Gal. 1:1, “Paul, an apostle (not sent from
men nor through the agency of man, but through Jesus Christ and God the
Father, who raised Him from the dead).”
- In fact, in both Galatians and 1 Timothy Paul
says that his authority came from two sources: from “God, our Saviour” and
from “Christ Jesus, our hope.” This might take you by surprise—saying that
God is our Saviour. We usually refer to Jesus as our Saviour. But remember
this, Jesus came to do the will of His Father. The Scriptures tell us that
the Father was the Architect of the plan of salvation (cf. Luke 1:47;
Titus 1:3; 2:10; 3:4). Paul speaks of Christ as “our hope” because He is
the reason that we can look expectantly toward spending eternal life in Heaven.
- “…to Timothy, my true child in the faith.” Timothy was the young
disciple from Lystra who travelled with Paul during his 2nd and
3rd Missionary Journeys. This title, “true child” is a legal
expression referring to a legitimate child who possesses all the rights
and privileges of membership in the family. Paul is saying to Timothy that
he accepts him unreservedly.
- “Grace, mercy, and peace” All three are gifts from God. Normally in his
letters Paul just uses “grace and peace” in his greetings. Only here in
the Pastoral Epistles does he add the word, “mercy.” There are three
biblical words that are very closely related; yet each is distinct.
- “Justice” = God gives me what I deserve, my
“just desserts”
- “Mercy” = God does not give me all that I
deserve
- “Grace” = God gives me what I do not deserve
at all
Verses
3-4: As I urged you upon my departure for Macedonia, remain on at
Ephesus so that you may instruct certain men not to teach strange doctrines,
4 nor to pay attention to myths and endless
genealogies, which give rise to mere speculation rather than
furthering the administration of God which is by faith.
- “…that you may instruct certain men…” This word “instruct” is a strong military term meaning to
drill it into the troops until it becomes rote, muscle-memory. That
requires constant repetition. Paul is telling Timothy that he cannot afford
to let up on this because it is that important.
- Specifically, Timothy is to instruct these men
not to teach certain things or to get caught up in unproductive arguments.
But what things specifically? Paul mentions four (4) things here in verses
3-4 and two (2) more down in verses 6-7.
1.
“Strange
doctrines” – Paul is not talking about UFOs or zombies
but about doctrines that are not part of the Christian faith handed down to us.
By “strange” he means foreign to sound doctrine.
2.
“Myths”
(KJV, “fables”) - This is the same word used in Titus 1:14
in connection with Jewish fables.
3.
“Endless
genealogies” – Paul is not talking about the current
Family Tree hobby that is so popular with amateur family historians. Rather,
the errors that Paul is instructing Timothy about involved the constant and
unrestrained wrangling and speculation about genealogies and allegorical
interpretations of the Scriptures like those found in all the rabbinical
literature. Moreover, in Ephesus this was probably combined with Gnostic
speculations as well.
4.
“Mere
speculation” – It is fine to ask questions and even to
discuss the things we are not sure of in the Scriptures, but it is better to
spend our time learning and discussing the things we do know, and finding
practical ways to live them out, instead of having stupid and unfruitful
arguments about things like, “Can God make a rock so big that even He cannot
lift it?” or “How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?”
- “…rather
than furthering God’s provision which is by faith.” As Christians we dip into the blessings that God has
promised and provided not by endlessly speculating on the things that God
has not told us, but by accepting by faith and obeying the things that He
has told us. The Christian life is about walking by faith, not by sight.
Verse
5: But the goal
of our instruction is love
from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith.
- “…the
goal of our instruction is love” God is love, and love should permeate our lives and
exude from every aspect of our ministry. One of the most profound comments
made regarding the Early Church came from the lips of a man named
Aristides, sent by the Emperor Hadrian to spy out those strange creatures
known as “Christians.” Having seen them in action, Aristides returned with
a mixed report. But his immortal words to the emperor have echoed down
through history: “Behold! How they love one another.”
- Jesus
prayed that His disciples would have this kind of love. In John 17:20-21
Jesus said this to His Father: “I do not ask
on behalf of these alone, but for those also who believe in Me through
their word; 21 that
they may all be one; even as You, Father, are in Me and I in You,
that they also may be in Us, so that the world may believe that You sent
Me.” But it is not enough
that we love one another—we also must love the world, the way God loves
the world, and we must love sinners the way God loves sinners. Only then
will the world really begin to believe our report.
- Notice that
this love comes from three (3) sources:
1.
Love from a pure heart
= an outward focused love, that has an “others first” priority
2.
Love from a good conscience
= an inward element, that sees others as deserving of the same grace we have
received
3.
Love from a sincere
faith = an upward look, remembering that God is the source of grace,
mercy, and peace (cf. v. 2)
- N.B. without a “pure heart,” a “good
conscience,” and a “sincere faith” we will never, on our own, be able to
produce genuine agape love. Never!
Verses
6-7: For some men, straying from these things, have turned aside to fruitless
discussion, 7 wanting to be teachers of the Law, even
though they do not understand either what they are saying or the matters about
which they make confident assertions.
- Paul does not name names here, but I
have no doubt that both he and Timothy knew exactly to whom he was
referring. Apparently, there were some hard-headed professing Christians
in the Ephesian church who were stirring up trouble and leading other
people astray.
- Notice here we have the last two
“BEWARE OF” warnings. The other four were up in verses 3-4.
- Beware of those
who have turned aside to “fruitless
discussion,” meaning theological arguments that produce no light,
just heat and smoke and a bad smell. KJV says, “idle talk.” The word he
uses here literally means “empty chatter.” Gossip, speculation, and
criticism are not spiritual gifts and should never come from the mouths
of Christians.
- And beware of
those who make “confident
assertions” concerning things about which they know little or
nothing. You see, just saying something in a loud and forceful manner
does not make it true. Truth is what we are after!
- Paul points out that there are lots of
people who are drawn to the ministry like flies to a carcass, because they
get a thrill out of people looking up to them as authorities. He says they
“want to be teachers of the Law (i.e. the Scriptures) even though
they do not understand it or even what they are saying about it. In other
words, they are clueless, yet that does not stop them from trying to
pretend that they know what they are talking about. Paul makes it clear
that Timothy needs to deal with these kinds of people when they come into
the church and begin making trouble. Loveless instruction impelled by
impure hearts and motives always leads to legalism. Remember: the law is
good, but legalism is always bad!
Verse
8a: But we know
that the Law is good, if one uses it lawfully, 9 realizing
the fact that law is not made for a righteous person, but for those who
are lawless and rebellious…
- This is an interesting statement. “The Law is
good, if we use it lawfully (i.e. justly, correctly, judiciously).”
For you see, the Law can also be used as a hammer to crush people. Hitler
used the law and the legal system in Germany to accomplish all his goals. In
fact, everything he did was perfectly legal, but it was still immoral and
ghastly and sinful.
- “Law is not made for a righteous person,
but for those who are lawless and rebellious…”
A truly righteous person, guided by God’s revealed Word and led by His
Holy Spirit will automatically do the right, moral, and honourable thing,
motivated by faith, love and kindness. Law is the fallback for those who
do not know God and who do not govern their lives by His Word. Paul
tells us that the proper function of the law is to make sinners aware of
their sinfulness. In other words, the wicked need laws. The unrighteous
require a moral compass with severe consequences to keep the fabric of our
society from unravelling completely. Without law we would be left with
anarchy and chaos.
Verses
8b-11: …for the ungodly and sinners, for the unholy
and profane, for those who kill their fathers or mothers, for murderers
10 and immoral men and homosexuals and kidnappers
and liars and perjurers, and whatever
else is contrary to sound teaching, 11 according to the
glorious Gospel of the blessed God, with which I have been entrusted.
- Paul continues with his sample list of
various kinds of unrighteous people. He has already mentioned the
“lawless” [= without law] and the “rebellious” [= disobedient,
insubordinate]. Now he continues
his horrific list with more examples of kinds of wickedness:
- “Ungodly”
[literally, “a-theists,” without God]
- “Sinners” [sins of
all kinds, general word]
- “Unholy” [having
no piety, irreligious, totally polluted inside and out]
- “Profane” [men who
treat the holy things of God with contempt, mockery, or scorn]
- “Parent-killers”
[a crime so heinous that there was not even a Roman law against it
because no one thought it possible]
- “Murderers”
[manslayers, general term for deliberate murderers]
- “Immoral”
[fornicators in general]
- “Homosexuals” [sodomites/male
prostitutes – cf. 1 Cor. 6:9]
- “Kidnappers”
[slave-traders? sex-traffickers?]
- “Liars” [general
term]
- “Perjurers”
[promise-breakers/vow-breakers]
- Now here is where we discover that
Paul is not supplying us with an unabridged list of all the things God
hates. No, this is just a sample list and we could add to it. “…and whatever else
is contrary to sound teaching” Paul
is not singling these things out as the worst of the worst. They are just
examples that come quickly to mind, but we could add things like… gossips,
church-wreckers, pornographers, child-molesters, wife-beaters, forgers,
embezzlers, human-traffickers, etc. His point is that all these things are
“contrary
to sound [healthy, life-giving] teaching.”
- And Paul explains what he means by
“sound teaching” in verse 11: “…according
to the glorious Gospel of the blessed God, with which I have been entrusted.” Paul says that the standard for “sound teaching” is
the Gospel of Jesus Christ, given to us by God Himself. You see God’s Word
is the plumb line, the straightedge that we use to test
every teaching, every theory, every questionable assertion, and every kind
of conduct. We measure everything against God’s Word and the Gospel.
CONCLUSION:
Look
again at the last words of verse 11: “…the Gospel…with which I have been entrusted.”
In our next study we will look more closely at this word but for now just
recognize that Paul sees the Gospel as a priceless treasure that has been
carefully placed into his hands by Almighty God for a divine purpose.
But
was Paul the only one entrusted with this Gospel? NO! You and I have been given
the same commission, to tell the Good News, to share the Gospel, to make
disciples. The Gospel is not a treasure to be hoarded and hidden, but to be
shared. And make no mistake, we Christians will be judged as stewards on
how well we have invested what has been entrusted to us. As farmers we will
be measured on how faithfully we have planted seed and watered. As
soldiers we will be evaluated on our courage under fire, or our cowardice. I,
for one, do not want to stand someday shamefaced before my Lord. How about you?
“He who has
ears to hear, let him hear.”
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