Categories
2 TImothy

The unfaithful, the faithful, the restored, and the condemned

As we near the end of this letter, Paul mentions several different types of people, the unfaithful, the faithful, the restored, and the condemned.

Demas, unfortunately, was one of the unfaithful. He had worked with Paul previously (Colossians 4:14, Philemon 1:24), but Paul now says of him,

Demas, because he loved this world, has deserted me and has gone to Thessalonica. (2 Timothy 4:10)

What exactly pulled Demas away, we are not sure.

Perhaps it was the lure of money and wealth. Perhaps it was falling in love with a non-Christian woman.

Or perhaps it simply was that he was tired of suffering for the sake of Christ. He had seen Paul go through much suffering, and after suffering along with him for many years, decided he had had enough.

Others, however, were faithful not only to Paul, but to Christ. We see this in Crescens and Titus who apparently were sent by Paul to do the Lord’s work elsewhere, and Luke, Paul’s constant companion and perhaps personal physician.

Then there’s Mark. This is the same man that Paul once argued with Barnabas about in Acts 15.

Paul had considered Mark unreliable because he had deserted them on an earlier missionary journey, but Barnabas wanted to give him a second chance.

As a result, Paul and Barnabas went their separate ways.

But now, Paul says of Mark,

Get Mark and bring him with you, because he is helpful to me in my ministry. (11)

Mark had proven Paul wrong, and learning from his past failures, now had shown himself to be a faithful servant of the Lord, and Paul acknowledged him as such.

Finally, we see Alexander. What harm exactly he caused Paul, we don’t know.

If he was the same Alexander from I Timothy 1:20, perhaps his excommunication from the church had caused him to turn Paul into the Romans who were now persecuting Christians openly under Nero.

Whatever the case, Paul said of him,

The Lord will repay him for what he has done. You too should be on your guard against him, because he strongly opposed our message. (14-15)

Here we see two principals concerning those who oppose us and the gospel. First, place them in God’s hands. Don’t let bitterness consume you or cause you to try to take revenge.

But second, forgiveness doesn’t mean you just let someone hurt you again and again. We need to keep our guard up against such people until they repent

But the main question is, what kind of person are you?

Are you like Demas? You came to faith in Jesus, and at first things were great. But now, other things are pulling you away from Christ.

Are the things of this world causing you to be unfaithful to him? Are hardships causing you to think about giving up?

Don’t give in to those temptations. This world, with its pleasures and trials are only temporary. So be faithful. Shoot for the eternal, not what will last only a short time.

Are you like Mark? Have you failed in the past and feel like you can’t be used anymore for the Lord’s work.

Remember that God is the God who restores.

He restored Peter and the rest of the disciples when they failed Jesus before the cross.

He restored Mark.

And he can restore you. All you need to do is repent.

Are you like Alexander, hardened against God and the gospel?

Be warned. God is patient, but as things are you stand condemned. Repent before it’s too late.

And for all of us who are in Christ Jesus, through everything we go through in life, let us as Paul said in Romans,

Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer. (Romans 12:12)

Categories
Jeremiah

Marred

It’s hard to believe another year is coming to a close.  Mine is not exactly coming to an ideal end.  I caught my third cold in the past month or so. 

I suppose it doesn’t help to have a daughter who keeps spreading the germs she catches from nursery school.  All part of a broken world, I suppose.  And all of us are a part of it.

But here, we see that God can take something that is broken or marred and turn it into something beautiful. 

God told Jeremiah to go to a potter’s house, and as Jeremiah observed, he saw a potter shaping a pot.  When Jeremiah looked carefully however, he saw that the pot was marred. 

But the potter didn’t throw it away.  Rather, the potter formed it into another pot, shaping it as he saw fit.  Then God told Jeremiah,

“O house of Israel, can I not do with you as this potter does?” declares the Lord. 

“Like clay in the hand of the potter, so are you in my hand, O house of Israel.”  (Jeremiah 18:6)

The house of Israel was marred by their sin.  But God let them know that as badly marred as they were by their sin, they could still be shaped into something beautiful.

And he tells us the same. 

Maybe you look at your life and think that you’re worthless.  Maybe you look at your life and think that it’s so bad that even God couldn’t possibly love you.

But no matter how marred you are, God can take the scars of your life and heal them.  He can take your brokenness and restore you.

It was for that purpose that Jesus himself was marred.  As Isaiah 53:5 says,

But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed.

Do you feel you are damaged goods?  God can forgive you and restore you.  All you have to do is turn to him.

As the old song goes,

Something beautiful, something good.
All of my confusion, he understood.

All I had to offer him was brokenness and strife,
But he made something beautiful of my life.

— Bill Gaither