The Ordinary Means of Grace


Sermon by J. Ligon Duncan on September 19, 2004 1 Timothy 4:11-16

The Lord’s Day
Morning

September 19, 2004

I Timothy 4:11-16

“The Ordinary Means of Grace”

Dr. J. Ligon
Duncan III

If you have your Bibles, I’d invite you to turn with me to
I Timothy, chapter four. We’re working through three letters written by Paul
that have been called for a couple of hundred years now “the pastoral letters,”
or the “pastoral epistles”: I Timothy, Titus, and II Timothy. Some of the last
things that Paul ever said in his life to the church, they’re written from a
veteran pastor, an apostle, a missionary, church planter to a young man who has
been his apostolic assistant in missions work, and to a man who is now pastoring
a local congregation, facing all the challenges of not only ministering to the
local congregation, but in a time of persecution where Christians were marginal,
endangered, and few. And these are Paul’s–not only words of advice and
counsel–but Paul’s divine directions for how ministers ought to be and do, and
how the local church ought to be and do. Paul has made it clear, for instance,
in chapter three–we’ve already studies this–that Paul is not simply giving good
advice; he is telling us what life is to be like in what he calls “the household
of faith, the church of the living God.” He’s telling us how all local churches
ought to pattern their ministries.

Now, in the passage before us today Paul has some
words, very personal words, for a man that he knew and loved very well:
Timothy. And it would be very tempting for us…and you’re going to hear the
“personal-ness” of this message in the pronouns that he uses. He’s speaking
“you, you, you, you, Timothy,” and even some of the instructions that he gives
are couched in the distinctive personality of Timothy. Timothy was a man who
was constitutionally weak, he had stomach problems. He was temperamentally
meek, he was given to deference. He had been Paul’s right-hand man, and
frankly, he was having a hard time transitioning into the role of leadership
where “he was the man.” He was young, and all of those combined to bring about
certain characteristics and dynamics in the way that Paul speaks to him in this
passage.

So it would be very tempting for us to say, “Well,
good. We’re getting ready to listen in on what Paul has to say to one minister,
and what this says doesn’t say anything to me today.” You, if you took that
posture, would be in the wrong position! Because every word of Scripture is
given by inspiration and every word is profitable for you, for reproof and
correction and training in righteousness.

Now, how should you listen to this conversation that
you’re going to be allowed to eavesdrop on? Well, let me suggest two or three
things. First of all, in this passage what Paul says to Timothy is not only
applicable to Timothy; it is applicable to everyone who is a minister of the
gospel. So, every Christian here…but let me just ask the ministers and elders
who are here, think about these words directly in terms of what God wants you to
be and do…but everyone, even those of you who are not called to be ministers,
elders in the church of the Lord Jesus Christ, you can say, “Lord, this is what
You want a minister and elder to look like.” You can pray for your ministers
and elders to look like this. You can encourage them to look like this. When
the Lord relocates you to another place, and you’re looking for a place to
fellowship under the Scriptures, you can look for a church that has ministry
that looks like this. That’s one thing you can do.

Secondly, however, even in the things that Paul
tells Timothy to do here, there is much that is said about what the ministry
pattern of the local church is to be, if Timothy does the things that Paul tells
him to do in I Timothy 4:11-16. There are going to be certain things that are
going to be central to the ministry of the church. As a Christian, you should
long, then, for the local church to be like Paul says it ought to be, based on
this passage.

But finally, you as a believer can learn much about
what you are to be and do from this passage to a Christian minister.
Why? Because in this passage Paul says, Timothy, you are to do this in order to
be …what? an example to the flock. Well, look. If he’s to do certain things
in order to be an example to you, what are you supposed to do? You’re to follow
that example. And so even though these words in the first instance are spoken
to a minister, they’re applicable to every Christian.

And if you are here today, and you have not embraced
Jesus Christ by faith, if you don’t know Him savingly, you can learn from this
passage, too. Because this passage is talking about the means, or the ways,
that God does two things: saves sinners, and build up disciples. And so if you
don’t know Jesus Christ, you can learn here the way that God goes about doing
that.

So let’s hear God’s word. Before we do, let’s pray
and ask for His help and blessing. Let’s pray.

Heavenly Father, this is Your word. It’s not
Paul’s word, it’s not the idea of a godly religious man about You; it’s Your
word to us. In it You reveal Your heart, Your ways, and Your will. Help us to
see that. Lord God, help us to receive this word as it is, as Your word, not as
the words of men. By Your Spirit, open our eyes to understand it. We
acknowledge that spiritual things are only perceived through the work of the
Spirit in us, enabling us to perceive them. So Lord God, open the eyes of the
blind. We need Your help, all of us. And Lord God, move us not only to
understand, but also to embrace this truth and to live it. We ask this in
Jesus’ name. Amen.

Hear the word of God in I Timothy 4.

“Prescribe and teach these things. Let no one look down on your youthfulness,
but rather in speech, conduct, love, faith and purity, show yourself an example
of those who believe. Until I come, give attention to the public reading of
Scripture, to exhortation and teaching. Do not neglect the spiritual gift
within you, which was bestowed upon you through prophetic utterance with the
laying on of hands by the presbytery. Take pains with these things; be absorbed
in them, so that your progress may be evident to all. Pay close attention to
yourself and to your teaching; persevere in these things; for as you do this you
will insure salvation both for yourself and for those who hear you.”

Amen. And thus ends this reading of God’s holy, inspired
and inerrant word. May He add His blessing to it.

What’s a minister supposed to be and do? And
what is the heart of the ministry of the local church? You know, over
the last hundred years in America, there have been more answers given to that
question than I can even begin to list for you today. Just about everybody
studying the church today agrees that ministers are expected to be more things
now than they’ve ever been expected to be before. Historically, the Christian
church expected ministers to preach, they expected ministers to lead in worship,
and to pastor.

Today ministers are expected to be
jacks-of-all-trades: salesmen, fund-raisers, leaders, counselors, therapists,
cheerleaders, coaches….and then along the way somewhere, preach every once in
a while, disciple and minister to the people of God in times of need. There’s
been a multiplication of the expectations on the part of those in the pew for
the ministers of the word. That’s just something that sociologists tell us.
Everybody seems to be telling us that.

What, then, ought to be the job description of the
minister? Paul has something to say about that in this passage today. What
ought to be the model, the pattern of ministry in the local church? Again, if I
were to list all the options that are out there today, we wouldn’t have time
just to list the options! There is a model for how the church ministry ought to
be conducted on every…there are ten models on every bookshelf that you
find on “Ministry” in a local Christian bookstore. The church needs to be
completely remodeled in order to appeal to seekers. No, the church needs to be
completely remodeled in order to be welcoming to seekers. And there’s a model
for every…there’s a philosophy for church life on every bookshelf–gobs of
different approaches. What, then, should be the pattern of ministry in the
local church? Paul says in this passage today what it ought to be.

I want you to see six things, very briefly, that he
directs to Timothy and to all ministers: six things that have something to say
to all of us here gathered under the hearing of the word today. The first
thing is this. You’ll see it in verse eleven.

I. Speak with authority and
instruct your flock with these truths.

Paul wants Timothy’s proclamation to be
authoritative. The first point that Paul makes to Timothy is that his ministry
should be authoritative. He’s talking about authoritative proclamation. Notice
what he says in verse eleven: “Prescribe and teach these things.” Some of your
translations may say “command and teach these things.” That’s a perfectly good
translation. It’s a military word that’s being used. “Command” or “prescribe”
here is the word that is used to speak of the orders that are given by a
superior officer to inferior officers. Paul is saying to Timothy that his
proclamation needs to be authoritative.

Do you realize how counter-cultural that is? I’m
told by everybody around me today that the pattern of ministry in the Christian
church needs to be changed because people don’t like to be “preached at.” They
don’t like a sermon. They like dialogue. They like advice. They’re more into
the give and take of therapy than they are in the direct proclamation of a
lecture or a sermon. And so we’re told on every side the way we go about doing
church needs to change, because people don’t like that. Well, I’ve got some
news for you: people have never liked this!! There’s never been a
time when people liked to have their hearts probed
. There’s never been a
time where people liked to have somebody discover where they have been weighed
in the balance and found lacking. There’s never been a time where people liked
to be told ‘you’re dead wrong; you need to go another direction.’

And Paul says that’s exactly what people have
always needed
, whether they like it or not. So he says, “Timothy,
prescribe and teach these things.” In other words, in your preaching, be
authoritative. You’re not speaking for yourself. You’re not sharing your
opinions. You’re not burdening people with your own idea about life. You’re
speaking God’s word to them, so be authoritative about it! And you know what?
Because all faithful Christian teaching has with its view the production of a
life of fellowship and obedience to God, it’s got to be authoritative because
we’re not just speaking the word in order to tell you something new or
interesting. We’re not just giving you some fun facts to know and tell.
Christian teaching has in view the transformation of life. And so it’s got to
be authoritative.

And as Christians, we ought to want to sit under a
ministry that is faithful in the authority of its proclamation. That’s
something that, if the Lord moves you from this place to another place, that’s
something you ought to look for. Not a ministry that’s ‘dialoguing’ with you;
not a minister that’s doing a late-night talk show chat on a bar stool; but
someone who’s proclaiming authoritatively God’s word. That’s what Paul says we
ought to do. This isn’t the opinion of up-tight Presbyterians: this is Paul,
under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit telling you what God wants in ministry
.

II. Prove your office by your
life.

Secondly, notice what he says in verse 12.
It boils down to this: he says, “Timothy, practice what you preach. Let no one
look down on your youthfulness, but rather in speech, conduct, love, faith and
purity, show yourself an example of those who believe.” Or, show yourself an
example to believers. What’s Paul saying? He’s saying practice what you
preach, Timothy. Prove your office by your life. Timothy, you’re young. There
are older and more experienced people in your congregation. It would be
possible for them to say, “Boy, that preacher’s kind of young….” And Paul
says, “Timothy, you show that you have every business being a minister of the
word of God by the way you live. You practice what you preach.”

And he zeroes in on five specific areas. He
says, ‘Timothy, first…notice, first…with your speech show that you’re
qualified to be a minister of God.’
This isn’t his preaching speech, this
is his day-to-day speech. In the way that you talk, Timothy, in the respectful
way that you talk to people, in the serious way that you talk to people; in the
appropriate way that you talk to people, you show with your language that you’re
a minister of the gospel.

And, in your conduct, in your manner of life,
show that you are qualified to be a preacher of the gospel.

Twenty-four/seven, with your life outside of the pulpit on Sunday morning and
Sunday evening, the rest of the week, you show with your manner of life that
you’re called to be a preacher of the word of God.

And Timothy, you show with your love. You show
in the way that you serve others in love that you put their interests before
your own; that you serve them even at your own expense.
You show in the way
that you love that you’re a minister of the gospel.

And Timothy, you show by your faith. Does
Paul mean your trust in the promises of God, or does he mean your fidelity to
the truth of God? I don’t know. It’s kind of hard to say. Sometimes he uses
this word to mean “faithfulness;” sometimes he means it to be “faith.” Either
would be a true exhortation, wouldn’t it? Timothy, by your faith show that
you’re called to be a minister of the word.

And Timothy, by your purity…and Paul has
especially in view Timothy’s sexual purity.
The way he relates to the
female members of his congregation. As one older minister in the Lord exhorted
me and other younger ministers, he said, “Brothers, love the sisters, but take
no pleasure in them.” Meaning, you love them like a sister in Christ. You
serve them. But do not lust for them. Do not treat them as an object for
your gratification. You love them purely, like a sister in Christ. That’s what
Paul’s saying to Timothy.

And he’s saying, Timothy, you be an example.
Timothy’s preaching, his authoritative preaching, is to be preceded by a life
that exhibits the fruits of that authoritative preaching. He is to practice
what he preaches. And my friends, all true Christian profession shows itself in
how we live. And so if Timothy is to be an example to us as believers in these
five areas, then we ought to be examples to one another in these five areas. Are
you praying that the Lord would grow you in those five areas? Are you praying
for your brothers and sisters in Christ here at First Presbyterian Church that
they would grow in these areas and be an encouragement to you? And that we
collectively would be a witness to the world that God has done a work in our
hearts, and therefore in us there is appropriate godly speech and conduct, and
love and faith and purity? That’s a good prayer to pray for one another, and
it’s certainly something for us all to aspire to, whether we’re ministers or
not.

Ministers, elders here today, are you striving to
adorn your life with this godliness? That’s what Paul’s calling us to do. We
have an especial burden to strive after this holiness, by the grace of the Holy
Spirit.

III. Make the focus of your
ministry the reading/preaching/teaching of the word.

Thirdly, look at verse 13. Notice that Paul
says OK, Timothy, here’s going to be the focus of your ministry: give attention
to the public reading of Scripture, to exhortation and teaching. In other
words, Paul is saying, “Timothy, make the Bible the source, the stuff, the
center of your ministry.” Minister, in other words, by the ordinary means of
grace. God has given you the means whereby you are to minister to His people,
and here’s what they are: the read word; the preached word. Make the focus of
your ministry the reading and preaching and teaching of the word.

Let me just say that in many Bible-believing
churches today you will hear very little or none of the Bible read in the public
assemblies of the church. That is a contradiction of the Bible’s instruction
for what we’re supposed to do when we gather together, because even if the
minister with the best intentions wants to give a message which is in accord
with Scripture, but doesn’t read Scripture, we will begin to associate the
minister’s message with the minister and fail to see that he is simply the
messenger for a greater Speaker and Author, the Lord God. That is why we always
read the word of God in the service of worship by itself, that we may all
recognize that it is the final source and rule of life, and everything that the
minister says, pray God, is simply drawn from and in accord with that word, and
takes nothing and adds nothing to it. And so the word of God is to be read.

But notice also he goes on to say, “and to
exhortation and teaching.” He combines those things. Throughout this letter
there has been an emphasis on Timothy’s giving himself to doctrinal instruction,
to teaching people the truth of the word. But notice how Paul emphasizes
exhortation here. In faithful Bible preaching there are always three things:
there is the explanation of the Bible, so that you can understand it; there is
the application of the Bible, so that you will understand how what the Bible
teaches connects to your life. But then there is exhortation. That is, there
is a compelling call to you to respond to the word of God
.

I’ll never forget, one of my preaching teachers in
seminary, the man who taught us preaching. He said, “Men, if I ever come to
your church, I’m going to be sitting on the back row with my arms folded. At
the end of your sermon, I’m going to be asking you a question: what do you want
me to do.” And he was saying that our preaching ought to impel the person to
appropriate the application of God’s word to their life. And Paul is saying
that Timothy is to give himself to this kind of exhortation. He is to explain
the word. He is to apply the word. And he is to exhort the people of God to
embrace the word. And all wise Christians will value the ministry of the reading
and preaching and teaching of the word above all else. Show me a church where
those things are being squeezed out of the public assembly, and I will show you
a church that will be a dead church in a little while, no matter how many people
are in it. When the word of God is squeezed out of the worship of God, you can
be sure that trouble in on the way, In fact, trouble is already there.

IV. Don’t neglect your spiritual
gifting.

Fourthly, notice verse 14. We need three weeks to
do justice to verse 14, and I’ve got about a minute and a half. Do not neglect
your spiritual gifting. What does Paul say? “Do not neglect the spiritual gift
within you which was bestowed on you through prophetic utterance with the
laying on of hands by presbytery.”

Let me just say one thing
about this passage. This passage shows us that even a divine, extraordinary
spiritual endowment from the third person of the Trinity can be neglected in the
life of a preacher. That’s why Paul says to Timothy, “don’t neglect that
spiritual gift.” Now if that’s true of a divine, extraordinary endowment from
the third person of the Trinity, how much more true is it of the divine ordinary
endowments of the Holy Spirit? If Timothy needs to be careful that he
cultivates this extraordinary endowment of the Holy Spirit, how much more should
we cultivate the ordinary endowments of the Holy Spirit?

All Christians should
take heed to the cultivation of and reliance upon divine spiritual gifting,
because what God has called us to do as Christian witnesses is beyond the
native inherent power of any human being
. What does God call us to do? Be
witnesses to those who are spiritually dead, and call them to life. Now, how
many of you have the power to raise the dead? That’s right. And that’s what
God says you’re to do in your witness–raise the dead. Speak the word of truth
so that the dead will live. You don’t have the power to do that. Only the Holy
Spirit can do that. Timothy must be dependent upon that, and to be dependent
upon that he must cultivate the gift of the Holy Spirit in him.

V. Be
absorbed in this gospel business.

Fifthly, look at verse
15. Paul says to Timothy that he is to be engrossed with these things, with a
view to making progress. Look at what he says in verse 15–‘Take pains with
these things, be absorbed in them so that your progress will be evident to
all.’ In other words, Paul is saying to Timothy, “Timothy, be absorbed in this
gospel business of right teaching and sound doctrine, and faithful living.” Be
absorbed with these things, be engrossed with them, and make these doctrinal and
didactic and ethical concerns such a priority in your life that people can
actually watch you grow.

He’s saying, “Timothy,
people ought to be able to see that because you’ve been in the word and under
the word yourself, that you’re growing; and that because you care about holiness
of life, you’re growing in godliness.” And that’s an example to all of us.
There ought to be progress made in our growth in the Christian life. There
ought to be maturation, there ought to be maturity; we ought to be growing in
grace. And so Paul says to Timothy, be absorbed in this gospel business.

VI. Pay
attention to your life and teaching.

And sixth and
finally, look at verse 16. Let me say this provocatively. Paul said to
Timothy, “Timothy, live and teach as if salvation depended upon it.” Now, I
said provocative. I don’t’ know whether that’s any more provocative that
what Paul says in verse 16:

“Pay close attention to yourself and to your teaching; persevere in these
things; for as you do this you will insure salvation both for yourself and for
those who hear you.”

Is Paul telling Timothy that he will save himself by
preaching? No. Is he saying that he will save others by his preaching? Or that
his preaching will be the ground of their salvation? No. In all of Paul’s
writing he makes it clear that salvation is of God. God is the one who saves;
it is God’s grace that saves. But Paul also makes it clear that God uses
means, means of grace
. He talks about it in Romans 10. Do you remember
what he says? “Faith comes by hearing, and hearing through the word” (through
the message preached). God’s sovereignty in salvation is not in
contradiction to our being faithful to the means that God has given us
, and
so Paul is saying this to Timothy: “Timothy, pay close attention to your life
and to your teaching, because that will be the instrument that God has chosen
for your own salvation and for the salvation of others.”

Now, that’s a sobering thought. You know, it would
be a terrible thing, wouldn’t it be, for a minister of the word to spend his
life pointing people to Jesus, and never to go to Jesus himself. It would be a
terrible thing for a minister of the gospel to spend his life telling people the
way of salvation, and never to enter into the narrow gate himself. And my
friends, it’s an occupational hazard, because when you talk about God and you
talk about loving God, and you talk about trusting God all the time, you can
talk yourself into thinking that you’re doing it when you’re not. And so Paul
says to Timothy, pay close attention to your life and teaching, so that as you
preach the word (that means of grace appointed by God), not only becomes the
instrument that God uses for the salvation of those who embrace Christ through
your ministry, but as your own salvation.

Six sobering words to a young minister: six words
that tell us what ministers ought to be and do; six words that tell us what
ministry is. What’s the focus of ministry in the church? It’s the ministry of
the word. When a church goes off kilter on the center of its ministry, when it
veers from the ministry of the word as the center of its ministry, it’s deviated
from biblical direction, from God’s direction about the health of the local
church. When a minister of the gospel doesn’t have a life to match his
teaching, or is kind and faithful in life but refuses to teach the meat of the
word of God, ministry is off kilter. And Paul has these words for us so that we
will know what a faithful minister looks like, and so that we will know what a
faithful church looks like, and so that we ourselves will grow in grace, in
doctrine, and in life.

Let’s pray.

Our Lord and our God, grow us by Your word. Make
us into the very image of God. Make us like the Lord Jesus Christ, through the
work of Your Spirit, in accordance with the word of truth. Help us to
understand the importance of the word, and to long and to revel in the glory of
the word of salvation given from God to sinners. We ask this in Jesus’ name.
Amen.

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