Hand of Help Ministries
Menu Icon to drop down Hand of Help site links and menu
Image to head and show on ministry pages

Homeward Bound View on blogspot.com

The Last Days Of The Church XL

 If Paul had adopted the mindset of do as I say, not as I do, perhaps his message to Timothy would not have resonated the way it does. The instruction Paul lays out is not theoretical. The man practiced what he preached and brought the receipts to prove it. It’s the difference between an academic in a tweed blazer describing the storming of the beach at Normandy and a soldier who was actually there and lived it. Paul lived it, and he was not shy about reminding Timothy about his lived experiences and all the things he had to endure for the sake of the gospel.

I’m not saying you necessarily have to endure persecution or go through suffering in order to understand God more deeply, but it sure does help. Between someone who understands the theory of faith on paper and someone whose faith carried them through the bleakest, darkest times imaginable, I’ll take the person with the lived experience of having seen the hand of God at work in their lives.

They may not be as pretty to look at, and there will be battle scars and barely healed wounds, but having lived it, they will not romanticize battle nor minimize the effort it takes to push ever onward toward victory. It’s called spiritual warfare for a reason, but far too many clueless harpies with a platform have convinced many in the church that it’s as easy as yelling ‘basta!’ and never at any time are they in any danger of being wounded or worse. This has created an entire niche subculture, wherein everyone and their aunt Rosie is a part-time demon hunter chomping at the bit to go ham on the devil. That they’re still at it only proves they haven’t run across a real one yet, but when they do, they quickly realize there is quite a bit more danger involved in this than in knitting or amateur pottery.

Just as I don’t believe the pink-haired lady or her gaggle of clucking hens never encountered a true demonic power they had to contend with, I’ve also come to think that the reason many pastors and preachers are so flippant and lackadaisical about God is because they never truly encountered Him. They know of Him, have read of His works, and perused His word on occasion. They’ve taken classes on homiletics, eschatology, or theology, perhaps even got around to writing a doctoral thesis on the genealogy of Rahab, but as far as having an encounter with the God they’ve been studying or knowing the feeling of freefalling with no safety net only to be caught up in His arms, the best they manage is reading the testimonies of others in third world countries.

I’m not throwing shade or discounting the benefits of education. I’m not even questioning the sincerity of those who attend these institutions of higher learning. The sheltered, coddled upbringing of most in the West made knowing suffering or persecution impossible and the notion of trusting God an option rather than the only option.

This freedom we’ve abused and taken for granted is itself a two-edged sword because it never compelled us to count the cost of serving Jesus, just the cost of tuition, and there were always student loans for that.

If Jesus insists that following Him has a cost, we must consider that cost and acknowledge its reality. What am I willing to forfeit for the excellence of the knowledge of Christ? Is it time, friends, relatives, prominence, wealth, my home, or my life? What’s the cutoff, and is there one?

In his letter to the Philippians, Paul tells us he suffered the loss of all things and counted them as rubbish that he might gain Christ. For many today, even the thought of setting aside an hour each morning to spend time with God and in His word is a heavy lift, never mind suffering the loss of all things.

Paul isn’t trying to soften the blow or make ministry seem like something it’s not. He presented an authentic portrait based on personal experience, warning Timothy that he should expect no less in terms of hardship, persecution, and travail. That seems like quite the departure from what’s being peddled today, wherein sunshine and lollipops await beyond uttering a prayer.

This is the way. The way is rife with persecution and afflictions, with hardship and travail, and if not for the last words Paul penned to Timothy, it would seem downright unassailable. Yes, he went through all these things and more, yet his testimony remained that the Lord delivered him out of all of them.

Walk with God long enough, and you will not be deterred by afflictions or persecution because you know that your deliverance is only a matter of time. God’s promise isn’t that you will be spared hardship if you remain steadfast and unmoved in the truth but that He will be an ever-present help in such circumstances. He is your deliverer. He is the one that walks with you through the fire and the flood, that His name might be glorified, and that those who will later hear your testimony will understand it was not by your strength, ingenuity, or prowess that you were delivered, but by His mighty had.

Collectivism is not biblical. The Word clearly tells us that the soul that sins will die. Everyone else around you might be doing something, validating it, co-signing it, but if the Bible says we ought not to practice such things, then the Word will judge us as lone individuals when we stand before the Almighty. Your neighbor’s righteousness will not be imputed upon you, nor will their sins. Hence the reason Paul makes the distinction between others within the household of faith that have given in to all manner of debilitating, destructive practices and the young man to whom he is penning the letter, namely Timothy.

He wants Timothy to be aware of the dangers of compromise from within, then begins his next thought with ‘but you.’ All these others might be lovers of self, despisers of good, and having a form of godliness, but you, you should be different, set apart, firmly established in the way you must go because you’ve seen the difference between a life of compromise and a life of obedience. You know the distinction between those paying God lip service and those living for God.

The overarching theme of Paul’s second letter to Timothy was to learn how to spot the real from the fake, turn away from the one, and have continued fellowship with the other. Using the eat the meat and spit out the bones analogy, some among us stay under a teaching or in a church far longer than we ought to, even though they see the writing on the wall, and the inconsistencies become so evident that they are glaring.

I know change is hard. I know trying to find a new fellowship or new brothers and sisters with which to come together is time-consuming and in itself taxing, but that never figured into Paul’s equation when he said to turn away from such people. Your spiritual health must take precedence, and if you’re not growing, maturing, drawing ever closer to Jesus, and learning to walk by faith and not by sight, it is incumbent upon you to find a fellowship where you are.

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr. 

Posted on 19 August 2024 | 10:57 am

Page processed in 0.037 seconds.

Print this page graphic with printer and Printer Friendly text

Print this page graphic with printer and Printer Friendly text

Michael's Blog

Featured Content




SSL secure. Privacy, Security, Refunds
Login or Register to keep track of donations.