The Acts of the Apostles
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 49: Paul's Last Letter
This chapter is based on the Second Epistle to Timothy.
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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 cell,
realizing that he had gained for himself only a brief respite. He knew that his
enemies would not rest until they had compassed his death. But he knew also
that for a time truth had triumphed. To have proclaimed a crucified and risen
Saviour before the vast crowd who had listened to him, was in itself a victory.
That day a work had begun which would grow and strengthen, and which Nero and
all other enemies of Christ would seek in vain to hinder or destroy. {AA 498.1}
Sitting day after day in his gloomy cell, knowing that at a
word or a nod from Nero his life might be sacrificed, Paul thought of Timothy
and determined to send for him. To Timothy had been committed the care of the
church at Ephesus, and he had therefore been left behind when Paul made his
last journey to Rome. Paul and Timothy were bound together by an affection
unusually deep and strong. [499] Since his conversion, Timothy
had shared Paul's labors and sufferings, and the friendship between the two had
grown stronger, deeper, and more sacred, until all that a son could be to a
loved and honored father, Timothy was to the aged, toilworn apostle. It is
little wonder that in his loneliness and solitude, Paul longed to see him. {AA 498.2}
Under the most favorable circumstances several months must
pass before Timothy could reach Rome from Asia Minor. Paul knew that his life
was uncertain, and he feared that Timothy might arrive too late to see him. He
had important counsel and instruction for the young man, to whom so great
responsibility had been entrusted; and while urging him to come without delay,
he dictated the dying testimony that he might not be spared to utter. His soul
filled with loving solicitude for his son in the gospel and for the church
under his care, Paul sought to impress Timothy with the importance of fidelity
to his sacred trust. {AA
499.1}
Paul began his letter with the salutation: "To Timothy,
my dearly beloved son: Grace, mercy, and peace, from God the Father and Christ
Jesus our Lord. I thank God, whom I serve from my forefathers with pure
conscience, that without ceasing I have remembrance of thee in my prayers night
and day." {AA 499.2}
The apostle then urged upon Timothy the necessity of
steadfastness in the faith. "I put thee in remembrance," he wrote,
"that thou stir up the gift of God, which is in thee by the putting on of
my hands. For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of
love, and [500] of a sound mind. Be not thou therefore ashamed
of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me His prisoner: but be thou partaker of
the afflictions of the gospel according to the power of God." Paul entreated
Timothy to remember that he had been called "with a holy calling" to
proclaim the power of Him who had "brought life and immortality to light
through the gospel: whereunto," he declared, "I am appointed a
preacher, and an apostle, and a teacher of the Gentiles. For the which cause I
also suffer these things: nevertheless I am not ashamed: for I know whom I have
believed, and am persuaded that He is able to keep that which I have committed
unto Him against that day." {AA 499.3}
Through his long term of service, Paul had never faltered in
his allegiance to his Saviour. Wherever he was—whether before
scowling Pharisees, or Roman authorities; before the furious mob at Lystra, or
the convicted sinners in the Macedonian dungeon; whether reasoning with the
panic-stricken sailors on the shipwrecked vessel, or standing alone before Nero
to plead for his life—he had never been ashamed of the cause he was
advocating. The one great purpose of his Christian life had been to serve Him
whose name had once filled him with contempt; and from this purpose no
opposition or persecution had been able to turn him aside. His faith, made
strong by effort and pure by sacrifice, upheld and strengthened him. {AA 500.1}
"Thou therefore, my son," Paul continued, "be
strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus. And the things that thou hast
heard of me among many witnesses, the same commit [501] thou
to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also. Thou therefore endure
hardness, as a good soldier of Jesus Christ." {AA 500.2}
The true minister of God will not shun hardship or
responsibility. From the Source that never fails those who sincerely seek for
divine power, he draws strength that enables him to meet and overcome
temptation, and to perform the duties that God places upon him. The nature of
the grace that he receives, enlarges his capacity to know God and His Son. His
soul goes out in longing desire to do acceptable service for the Master. And as
he advances in the Christian pathway he becomes "strong in the grace that
is in Christ Jesus." This grace enables him to be a faithful witness of
the things that he has heard. He does not despise or neglect the knowledge that
he has received from God, but commits this knowledge to faithful men, who in
their turn teach others. {AA
501.1}
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. "Study to show thyself approved unto God," the
apostle wrote, "a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing
the word of truth." "Flee also youthful lusts: but follow
righteousness, faith, charity, peace, with them that call on the Lord out of a
pure heart. But foolish and unlearned questions avoid, knowing that they do gender
strifes. And the servant of the Lord must not strive; but be gentle unto all
men, apt to teach, patient, in meekness instructing those that oppose [502]
themselves; if God peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledging
of the truth." {AA 501.2}
The apostle warned Timothy against the false teachers who
would seek to gain entrance into the church. "This know also," he
declared, "that in the last days perilous times shall come. For men shall
be lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers,
disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy; . . . having a form of
godliness, but denying the power thereof: from such turn away." {AA 502.1}
"Evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse,"
he continued, "deceiving, and being deceived. But continue thou in the
things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of, knowing of whom thou
hast learned them; and that from a child thou hast known the Holy Scriptures,
which are able to make thee wise unto salvation. . . . All Scripture
is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof,
for correction, for instruction in righteousness: that the man of God may be
perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works." God has provided
abundant means for successful warfare against the evil that is in the world.
The Bible is the armory where we may equip for the struggle. Our loins must be
girt about with truth. Our breastplate must be righteousness. The shield of
faith must be in our hand, the helmet of salvation on our brow; and with the
sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God, we are to cut our way through
the obstructions and entanglements of sin. {AA 502.2}
Paul knew that there was before the church a time of great
peril. He knew that faithful, earnest work would [503]
have to be done by those left in charge of the churches; and he wrote to
Timothy, "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." {AA 502.3}
This solemn charge to one so zealous and faithful as was
Timothy is a strong testimony to the importance and responsibility of the work
of the gospel minister. Summoning Timothy before the bar of God, Paul bids him
preach the word, not the sayings and customs of men; to be ready to witness for
God whenever opportunity should present itself—before large
congregations and private circles, by the way and at the fireside, to friends
and to enemies, whether in safety or exposed to hardship and peril, reproach
and loss. {AA 503.1}
Fearing that Timothy's mild, yielding disposition might lead
him to shun an essential part of his work, Paul exhorted him to be faithful in
reproving sin and even to rebuke with sharpness those who were guilty of gross
evils. Yet he was to do this "with all long-suffering and doctrine."
He was to reveal the patience and love of Christ, explaining and enforcing his
reproofs by the truths of the word. {AA 503.2}
To hate and reprove sin, and at the same time to show 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
the right. We must guard against undue severity toward [504] the
wrongdoer, but we must also be careful not to lose sight of the exceeding
sinfulness of sin. There is need of showing Christlike patience and love for
the erring one, but there is also danger of showing so great toleration for his
error that he will look upon himself as undeserving of reproof, and will reject
it as uncalled for and unjust. {AA 503.3}
Ministers of the gospel sometimes do great harm by allowing
their forbearance toward the erring to degenerate into toleration of sins and
even participation in them. Thus they are led to excuse and palliate that which
God condemns, and after a time they become so blinded as to commend the very
ones whom God commands them to reprove. He who has blunted his spiritual
perceptions by sinful leniency toward those whom God condemns, will erelong
commit a greater sin by severity and harshness toward those whom God approves. {AA 504.1}
By the pride of human wisdom, by contempt for the influence
of the Holy Spirit, and by disrelish for the 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 teachers, having itching ears; and they
shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables."
{AA 504.2}
The apostle does not here refer to the openly irreligious,
but to the professing Christians who make inclination their guide, and thus
become enslaved by self. Such are willing to listen to those doctrines only
that do not rebuke their sins [505] or condemn their pleasure-loving
course. They are offended by the plain words of the faithful servants of Christ
and choose teachers who praise and flatter them. And among professing ministers
there are those who preach the opinions of men instead of the word of God.
Unfaithful to their trust, they lead astray those who look to them for
spiritual guidance. {AA
504.3}
In the precepts of His holy law, God has given a perfect
rule of life; and He has declared that until the close of time this law,
unchanged in a single jot or tittle, is to maintain its claim upon human
beings. Christ came to magnify the law and make it honorable. He showed that it
is based upon the broad foundation of love to God and love to man, and that
obedience to its precepts comprises the whole duty of man. In His own life He
gave an example of obedience to the law of God. In the 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. {AA 505.1}
The law, obeyed, leads men to deny "ungodliness and
worldly lusts," and to "live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this
present world." Titus 2:12. But the enemy of all righteousness has taken
the world captive and has led men and women to disobey the law. As Paul
foresaw, multitudes have turned from the plain, searching truths of God's word
and have chosen teachers who present to them the fables they desire. Many among
both ministers and people are trampling under their feet the commandments of
God. Thus the Creator of the world is insulted, and Satan laughs in triumph at
the success of his devices. [506] {AA 505.2}
With the growing contempt for God's 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
are anxiously inquiring, What can be done to correct these alarming evils? The
answer is found in Paul's exhortation to Timothy, "Preach the word."
In the Bible are found 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 problems of life, and to all who heed its precepts it
will prove an unerring guide, keeping them from wasting their lives in
misdirected effort. {AA
506.1}
God has made known His will, and it is folly for man to
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 possibilities
for him to adjust. All that is required of him is a frank, earnest concurrence
in the expressed will of God. Obedience is the highest dictate of reason as
well as of conscience. {AA
506.2}
Paul continued his charge: "Watch thou in all things,
endure afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of thy
ministry." Paul was about to finish his course, and he desired Timothy to
take his place, guarding the church from the fables and heresies by which the
enemy, in various ways, would endeavor to lead them from the simplicity of the
gospel. He admonished him to shun all temporal pursuits and entanglements that
would prevent him from giving himself wholly to his work for God; to endure
with cheerfulness the opposition, reproach, and persecution [507]
to which his faithfulness would expose him; to make full proof of his ministry
by employing every means within his reach of doing good to those for whom
Christ died. {AA 506.3}
Paul's life was an exemplification of the truths he taught,
and herein lay his power. His heart was filled with a deep, abiding sense of
his responsibility, and he labored in close communion with Him who is the
fountain of justice, mercy, and truth. He clung to the cross of Christ as his
only guarantee of success. The love of the Saviour was the undying motive that
upheld him in his conflicts with self and in his struggles against evil as in
the service of Christ he pressed forward against the unfriendliness of the
world and the opposition of his enemies. {AA 507.1}
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 filled with earnestness and
zeal. Sanctified, self-sacrificing men are needed; men who will not shun trial
and responsibility; men who are brave and true; men in whose hearts Christ is
formed "the hope of glory," and who with lips touched with holy fire
will "preach the word." For 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. {AA 507.2}
As the faithful, toilworn standard-bearers are offering up
their lives for the truth's sake, who will come forward to take their place?
Will our young men accept the holy trust at the hands of their fathers? Are
they preparing to fill the vacancies made by the death of the faithful? Will
the [508]
apostle's charge be heeded, the call to duty be heard, amidst the incitements
to selfishness and ambition that allure the youth? {AA 507.3}
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Paul concluded his letter with personal messages to
different ones and again repeated the urgent request that Timothy come to him
soon, if possible before the winter. He spoke of his loneliness, caused by the
desertion of some of his friends and the necessary absence of others; and lest
Timothy should hesitate, fearing that the church at Ephesus might need his
labors, Paul stated that he had already dispatched Tychicus to fill the
vacancy. {AA 508.1}
After speaking of the scene of his trial before Nero, the
desertion of his brethren, and the sustaining grace of a covenant-keeping God,
Paul closed his letter by commending his beloved Timothy to the guardianship of
the Chief Shepherd, who, though the undershepherds might be stricken down, would
still care for His flock. {AA
508.2}
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"Condemned to Die"
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