Sketches From The Life of Paul
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 31: Paul's Last Letter
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In this his last letter to Timothy, Paul held up before the younger worker a high ideal, pointing out the duties devolving on him as a minister of Christ.
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From the judgment-hall of Caesar, Paul
returned to his prison-house, knowing that he had
gained for himself only a brief respite; his [p. 319] enemies would not rest until they had secured his
death. Yet he knew that truth had triumphed
for the time, and that to have proclaimed a
crucified and risen Saviour before the vast throng
who had listened
to his words, was in itself a
victory. A work had that day begun which
would increase and prosper, and which the
emperor of Rome, with all his pomp and power,
would seek in vain to destroy or hinder.
The apostle's speech had gained him many
friends, and he was visited by some persons of
rank, who accounted his blessing of greater value
than the favor of the emperor of the world.
But there was one friend for whose sympathy
and companionship he longed in those last trying
days. That friend was Timothy, to whom he
had committed the care of the church at Ephesus,
and who had therefore been left behind when
he made his last voyage to Rome. The affection
between this youthful laborer and the apostle
began with Timothy's conversion through the
labors of Paul; and the tie had strengthened as
they had shared together the hopes and perils
and toils of missionary life, until they seemed
to be as one. The disparity in their age and the
difference in their character made their interest
and love for each other more earnest and sacred.
The ardent, zealous, indomitable spirit of Paul
found repose and comfort in the mild, yielding,
retiring character of Timothy. The faithful
ministration and tender love of this tried
companion had brightened many a dark hour of
the apostle's life. All that Melancthon was to
Luther, all that a son could be to a loved and
honored father, that was the youthful Timothy
to the tried and lonely Paul. [p. 320]
And now, sitting day after day in his gloomy
cell, knowing that at a word or nod from the
tyrant Nero his life may be sacrificed, Paul
thinks of Timothy, and determines to send for
him. Under the most favorable circumstances,
several months must elapse before Timothy can
reach Rome from Asia Minor. Paul knows that
his own life, for even a single day, is uncertain,
and he fears that Timothy may arrive too late,
or may hesitate through fear of the dangers to
be encountered. He has important counsel and
instruction for the young man to whom so great
responsibility is intrusted, and while urging him
to come without delay, he dictates the dying
testimony which he may not be spared to utter.
His soul is filled with loving solicitude for his
son in the gospel, and for the church under his
care, and he earnestly seeks to impress upon him
the importance of fidelity to his sacred trust.
The words of Paul to Timothy apply with
equal force to all the ministers of Christ, to the
close of time: "I charge thee therefore before
God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge
the quick and the dead at his appearing and his
kingdom: Preach the word; be instant in season,
out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all
long-suffering and doctrine."
This solemn charge to one so zealous and faithful
as was Timothy, is an emphatic testimony to
the great importance and responsibility of the
gospel ministry. The apostle summons Timothy,
as it were, before the bar of infinite justice, and
in the most impressive manner charges him to
preach the word; not the customs or sayings of
men, but the word of God; to preach it as one
in earnest,—"instant in season, out of season,"— [p. 321] whenever an opportunity was presented; at stated
times and occasionally; to large congregations,
to private circles; by the way, at the fireside;
before friends and enemies; to one as well as to
many; whether he could speak with safety or
would be exposed to hardship and peril, reproach
and loss.
Timothy suffered from physical infirmities, and
the apostle, tender and compassionate as he was,
felt it necessary to warn him to neglect no duty
on this account. And fearing that his mild,
yielding disposition might lead him to shun an
essential part of his work, Paul exhorts him to
be faithful in reproving sin, and even to rebuke
with sharpness those who were guilty of gross
evils. Yet he is to do this "with all long-suffering
and doctrine;" he must manifest the patience
and love of Christ, and must explain and enforce
his reproofs and exhortations by the word of
God.
To hate and reprove sin, and at the same time
to manifest pity and tenderness for the sinner,
is a difficult attainment. The more earnest our
own efforts to attain to holiness of heart and
life, the more acute will be our perception of sin,
and the more decided our disapproval of any
deviation from right. We must guard against
undue severity toward the wrong-doer. But
while we should seek to encourage him in every
effort to correct his errors, we must be careful
not to lose sight of the exceeding sinfulness of
sin. While there is need of Christlike patience
and love toward the erring, there is constant
danger of manifesting so great toleration for his
error that he will consider himself undeserving
of reproof, and will reject it as uncalled-for and
unjust. [p. 322]
Ministers of the gospel whose characters are
otherwise almost faultless, frequently do great
harm by allowing their forbearance toward the
erring to degenerate into toleration of their sins,
and even participation with them. In this
easygoing way they excuse and palliate that which
the word of God condemns; and after a time
they become so blinded as even to commend the
very ones whom God commands them to reprove.
The only safe-guard against these dangers is to
add to patience godliness,—to reverence God, his
character and his law, and to keep his fear ever
before the mind. By communion with God,
through prayer and the reading of his word, we
should cultivate such a sense of the holiness of
his character that we shall regard sin as he
regards it.
Godliness leads to brotherly kindness; and
those who do not cherish the one, will surely
lack the other. He who has blunted his moral
perceptions by sinful leniency toward those whom
God condemns, will erelong commit a greater
sin by severity and harshness toward those whom
God approves. Viewed through the perverted
medium of an unconsecrated spirit, the very
integrity and faithfulness of the true-hearted
Christian will appear censurable.
By the pride of human wisdom, by contempt
for the influence of the Holy Spirit, and
disrelish for the humbling truths of God's word,
many who profess to be Christians, and who feel
competent to teach others, will be led to turn
away from the requirements of God. Paul
declared to Timothy: "The time will come when
they will not endure sound doctrine; but after
their own lusts shall they heap to themselves [p. 323] teachers, having itching ears; and they shall turn
away their ears from the truth, and shall be
turned unto fables."
The apostle does not here refer to the openly
irreligious, but to professed Christians who have
indulged inclination until they are enslaved by
their own ungoverned passions,—"led away with
divers lusts." Such desire to hear doctrines that
will not interfere with their sinful course, or
condemn their pleasure-loving propensities. Hence
they are offended by the plain words of the faithful
servants of Christ, and choose those teachers
who will praise and flatter them instead of
rebuking their sins. These teachers "they heap
to themselves" as special favorites. Even among
the professed ministers of Christ, there are many
who do not preach the word, but the opinions of
men. They have turned away their ears from
truth. The Lord has spoken to them in his word;
but they do not care to hear his voice, because it
condemns their practices.
In his ten holy precepts, God has given a rule
for man's life, a law which Christ declares is not
to abate one jot of its claims upon men through
all their generations, to the close of time. That
law is still the believer's rule of life, the sinner's
condemnation. That law Christ came to magnify
and make honorable. He showed that it is
based upon the broad foundation of love to God
and men, and that obedience to its precepts
comprises the whole duty of man. In his own life
he gave men a perfect example of obedience to
the law of God. In his sermon on the mount he
showed how its requirements extend beyond the
outward acts, and take cognizance of the
thoughts and intents of the heart. That law, [p. 324] obeyed, will lead men to deny ungodliness and
worldly lusts, and to live "soberly, righteously,
and godly, in this present world."
But the enemy of all righteousness has taken
the world captive, and has led them to make void
the law of God. As Paul foresaw, the people
have turned away from the plain, searching
truths of God's word, and, having itching ears,
they have heaped to themselves teachers who
present to them the fables that they desire.
These teachers trample under their feet the
fourth commandment, and instead of the day
which God has blessed and sanctified, they honor
a day which he has not commanded, and upon
which he did not rest. The first day of the
week, whose sacredness rests wholly on the
authority of the papacy, "the man of sin," is
observed as a holy day by Catholics and Protestants
alike, instead of the day which God has
set apart, and upon which he has placed his
blessing. Thus the Creator of the world is
insulted, and Satan laughs in triumph at the success
of his devices.
With the growing contempt for God's holy
law, there is an increasing distaste for religion,
an increase of pride, love of pleasure, disobedience
to parents, and self-indulgence; and thoughtful
minds everywhere anxiously inquire, What can
be done to correct these alarming evils? The
answer is found in Paul's exhortation to
Timothy: "Preach the word." In that word are the
only safe principles of action. It is a transcript
of the will of God, an expression of divine
wisdom. It opens to man's understanding the great
problem of life. It will prove a guide to all who
heed it, so that their lives will not be wasted in [p. 325] misdirected efforts. God has declared his will,
and it is absolute madness for men to change or
even question that which has gone out of his lips.
After Infinite Wisdom has spoken, there can be
no doubtful questions for man to settle, no wavering
probabilities for him to adjust. All the
interests of time and of eternity are involved in a
frank, earnest concurrence of the mind and will
of men with the expressed will of God. Obedience
is the highest dictate of reason as well as of
conscience. Those who choose to listen to other
voices and to follow other guides, will be turned
unto fables, and, trusting to these, they will in
the day of God meet with infinite loss.
Paul continues his charge: "Watch thou in
all things, endure afflictions, do the work of an
evangelist, make full proof of thy ministry."
Now that Paul is called to finish his course, he
would have Timothy supply his place, and guard
the churches from the fables and heresies with
which Satan and his agents would in various
ways endeavor to seduce them from the simplicity
of the truth. He therefore admonishes him to
shun all temporal pursuits and entanglements
which would prevent him from giving himself
wholly to this work; to endure with cheerfulness
the opposition, reproach, and persecution to which
his faithfulness would expose him; to "make full
proof of his ministry," by employing to the
uttermost every means of doing good to the souls
of men for whom Christ died.
Paul had never been afraid or ashamed to
confess Christ before men. He had stood in no
doubtful position, but under all circumstances
had unhesitatingly committed himself upon the
side of justice and righteousness. His own life [p. 326] was a living illustration of the truths he taught;
and herein lay his power with the people. The
voice of duty was to him the voice of God.
Cherishing in his own soul the principles of truth,
he never shrank from maintaining them in full
view of the world. His soul was ever pervaded
with a deep and abiding sense of his responsibility
before God; and he lived in close and
constant communion with Him who is the fountain
of justice, mercy, and truth. He clung to the
cross of Christ as the only guarantee of success.
The love of Christ was the omnipotent, undying
motive which upheld him in his conflicts with
self and the power of Satan, in his struggles
with spiritual wickedness in high places, in his
life-long labors, as he pressed forward against the
unfriendliness of the world and the burden of
his own infirmities.
What the church needs in these days of peril
is an army of workers, who, like Paul, have
educated themselves for usefulness, who have a
deep experience in the things of God, and who
are inspired with earnestness and zeal in his
service. Cultivated, refined, sanctified,
self-sacrificing men are needed; men who will not shun
trial and responsibility, but who will lift the
burdens wherever they may find them; men who
are brave, who are true; men who have Christ
formed within them, and who, with lips touched
with holy fire, "will preach the word" amid the
thousands who are preaching fables. For the
want of such workers, the cause of God,
languishes, and fatal errors, like a deadly poison,
taint the morals and blight the hopes of a large
part of the human race.
As the faithful, toil-worn standard-bearers [p. 327] are offering up their lives for the truth's sake,
who will come forward to take their places?
Will our young men accept the holy trust at the
hand of their fathers? Are they now preparing
to fill the vacancies made by the death of the
faithful? Will the apostle's charge be heeded, the
call to duty be heard, amid the incitements to
selfishness and ambition which allure the youth?
Paul concludes his letter with various personal
messages, and again and again repeats the
urgent request that Timothy use all diligence to
come to him soon, and if possible to come before
winter. He describes his loneliness from the
desertion of some friends and the necessary absence
of others, and lest Timothy should still hesitate,
fearing that the church at Ephesus demanded his
labors, he states that he has already despatched
Tychicus to fill the place of Timothy in his
absence. And then he adds the touching request,
"The cloke that I left at Troas, with Carpus,
when thou comest, bring with thee, and the books,
but especially the parchments." At his second
arrest, Paul was seized and hurried away so
suddenly that he had no opportunity to gather up
his few "books and parchments," or even to take
with him his cloak. And now winter was
coming on, and he knew that he would suffer with
cold in his damp prison-cell. He had no money
to buy another garment, he knew that his end
might come at any moment, and with his usual
self-forgetfulness and fear to burden the church,
he desired that no expense should be incurred on
his account.
After describing the scenes of the trial already
past, the desertion of his brethren, and the
sustaining grace of a covenant-keeping God, and [p. 328] sending greeting to faithful fellow-laborers, Paul
closes by commending his beloved Timothy to
the guardianship of the Chief Shepherd, who,
though the under-shepherds might be stricken
down, would still care for his servants and his
flock.
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"Martyrdom of Paul and Peter"
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