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Please remain standing and open
your scriptures to 2 Timothy 3, starting at verse 10. 2 Timothy 3, verse 10, going through chapter 4, verse
5. But you have carefully followed
my doctrine, manner of life, purpose, faith, long-suffering,
love, perseverance, persecutions, afflictions, which happened to
me at Antioch, at Iconium, at Lystra, what persecutions I endured. And out of them all, the Lord
delivered me. Yes, all who desire to live godly
in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution. But evil men and imposters will
grow worse and worse, deceiving and being deceived. But you must
continue in the things which you have learned and been assured
of, knowing from whom you have learned them, and that from childhood
you have known the holy scriptures, which are able to make you wise
for salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. 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 complete, thoroughly equipped for every
good work. I charge you, therefore, before
God and the Lord Jesus Christ, who will judge the living and
the dead at his appearing and his kingdom. Preach the word. Be ready in season and out of
season. Convince, rebuke, exhort with
all long-suffering in teaching. For the time will come when they
will not endure sound doctrine, but according to their own desires,
because they have itching ears, they will heap up for themselves
teachers, and they will turn their ears away from the truth
and be turned aside to fables, But you, be watchful in all things. Endure afflictions. Do the work
of an evangelist. Fulfill your ministry. You may
be seated. All right, if you don't have
the handout, please raise your hand so we can make sure we can
get you one. There's one over there for Mr. Boyston. All right, so go with me to page two in
the handout. We talked last time about these
verses, and I emphasized to you verses really 10 through 14. We talked about learning from
whom. We talked about the fact that
Timothy learned from God. But this idea that God uses instruments,
he uses means, he uses men. And so we have in chapter three,
verse 10, there is this idea of carefully following what Paul
brought. The doctrine, the manner of life,
his purpose, his faith, his long-suffering, his love, his perseverance, even
his persecutions and afflictions. And so we recognize the fact
that Paul trusted in God to be delivered out of these troubles. And the example that's given
there, God uses godly men to set a godly pattern and to be
able to deliver things, but only the Lord Jesus Christ is a perfect
pattern. And so all of us are in a condition
where we have to deal with the reality that our pastors, our
leaders are going to be sinners. They're going to be imperfect.
And so we always have to judge and test by the scriptures. And so we recognize that there
is a danger of apostasy and heresy and of persecution. And so in
verse 12, we're reminded of the fact that everybody who desires
to live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution. Verse
13 reminds us that evil men are going to grow worse and worse,
deceiving and being deceived. But not just evil men. It's not
just wolves in wolves clothing. It's imposters too. And so there
are wolves in sheep's clothing. Those that seek to put on the
appearances, the impostering of sheep. and they grow worse
and worse, which means more and more elaborate methods of seeking
to hide their false gospels, false doctrines, evil practices,
and the church has to mature. And so the church has to deal
with things like the controversies that occurred around Nicaea,
where there's a debate about the doctrine of the Trinity,
or around the time of Chalcedon, dealing with the doctrine of
the incarnation. Or we deal with the Reformation and having to
deal with all sorts of controversies relating to the doctrine of authority,
and how men are saved, and how worship ought to be ordered.
And the complications of opposition that pile up make it so that
we have a duty to deal with more and more error more and more
clearly and well. And so now, with the blessings
of the maturing that have occurred in the church so far in history,
we are able, using the catechetical tools that have been given to
us by our fathers in the faith, to teach plainly and clearly
the doctrine of the Trinity, and the Incarnation, and how
to worship, and how to live, and the doctrine of the authority
of Scripture, and all of these things far more easily So that
our children are able to deal with presenting and putting forward
doctrine in an orderly and clear way by the time they leave our
homes. And so there's great advancement.
And there's a need to hold on to the things that have been
attained to. And so chapter three, verse 14. But you must continue
in the things which you have learned and been assured of,
knowing from whom you have learned them. So ultimately, Timothy
did not learn these doctrines from his mother or his grandmother.
He did not learn these doctrines ultimately from Paul. He learned
them from God. And so we all must recognize
that there is one teacher, the Lord Jesus Christ. And we must
continue in the things which we have learned and been assured
of. That word there for being assured
of is just literally the word faith really as a root. The things
that you've learned and been given faith in. Knowing from
whom you have learned them. And that from childhood you have
known the holy scriptures which are able to make you wise for
salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. You know,
when we think about the Scriptures, some people seek to deride the
Scriptures as a tradition. And it is the case that we have
received the Scriptures in the sense that they've been handed
down to us across generations. But we need to remember that
the Protestant doctrine is not that there is some tradition
that was handed down and then made into the Word of God. The biblical doctrine and the
Protestant doctrine are laid out for us in the Westminster
Confession in chapter one, section eight, which says that the original
scriptures, the Old Testament in Hebrew, the New Testament
in Greek, were immediately inspired by
God. They were immediately breathed
out by God. Which means that these are the
words of God. When we read the Scriptures,
we are not merely reading the words of men. We are reading
the words of God. These are not simply things that
men wrote that were later viewed as acceptable and matched up
with what God would want to reveal. These are the words of God through
His instruments through His servants, the prophets and apostles. And
so these words are immediately inspired by God. Think about
that word immediately. You go, wait, wait, wait, that
doesn't really make sense. Aren't these mediated through
a prophet or an apostle? Aren't these words mediated through
the hand of a man and a pin? That's all true that there's
men involved. It's all true that there's a
pen involved. It's true that it's put upon
paper. But the words that are put down on paper, every jot
and tittle of it, are the words that God intended to put there. God created the Apostle Paul,
every element of his personality, so as to make him the perfect
instrument that He predestined to use to get exactly the wording
that He wanted on the page. Those words God planned, and
God put the means in place to get there, so that those words
are immediately God-breathed. And then He uses instrumentality
to get there. They are the words of God. They
don't become the Word of God. They are the word of God, the
words of God. And so these words, the holy
scriptures, they are able to make you wise for salvation through
faith which is in Christ Jesus. Now these words that are immediately
inspired by God have been kept pure. in all ages by God's care
and providence. He's given it a singular or special
care to preserve his word, which makes it so that we have the scriptures now, that they
are not lost. Now we need to go back to the
original languages when there's some controversy about a detail
about the actual meaning of a text. And so there's an importance
to caring about the original languages, but it's also important
that the scriptures be translated into every language, to every
nation that the scriptures come to, so that the people of God
would be filled with the knowledge of God and be able to worship
God acceptably. And furthermore, by having the
Scriptures brought to a people in a way where they're able to
read them themselves, they, through patience and through patient
enduring, seeking to understand through the ordinary means what
the Scriptures say, they can grow in the comfort of the Scriptures
and they can have hope in the promises of God. The Scriptures are able to make
you wise for salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.
Look at page three. At the top of page three, remember,
here's the Protestant doctrine of tradition. The apocrypha is
used to teach us that there is a false tradition that comes
And the apocrypha is not of divine inspiration, and it is not a
part of the canon of scripture, and therefore it's of no authority. It's of no authority. So when
we think about a tradition that is the apostolic tradition, we
need to remember that the apostolic tradition is captured for us
in the scriptures, which is immediately breathed out by God. Now, when we recognize that we're
learning from God, We deal with what we talked about last time,
which was the doctrine of illumination. And we have to deal with the
fact that the Word of God is the authority, the scriptures
are the authority, and they're the thing from which we argue,
but there's also the reality that God causes us to be illuminated
to understand and believe the Scriptures. So we have these
two things. What do we argue from? The Scriptures.
And how do we come to believe? What's the cause in terms of
metaphysics or the thing that brings about faith in us? It's
the work of the Holy Spirit. Now, Jump with me to page 5. There's a lot here in page 4
and stuff that I'd love to encourage you to read on your own and to
be aware of these doctrines. I have quotes from Calvin for
you to look at and I have a quote from the Shorter Catechism to
emphasize. I want to take you to page five where there's the
quotes from Proverbs. And I want to remind you that
we have learned from God, and we do not have any knowledge
apart from God's giving us a word. Proverbs 1.7 says, the fear of
the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise
wisdom and instruction. Proverbs 9.10 says, the fear
of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, and the knowledge
of the Holy One is understanding. Psalm 111 verse 10 says, the
fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. A good understanding
have all those who do his commandments. His praise endures forever. So notice that we're told three
times that wisdom begins with the fear of God. That's implicit
in the fact that knowledge begins with the fear of the Lord. Wisdom
is a subcategory of knowledge. And so therefore, if knowledge
begins with the fear of the Lord, wisdom does. So, these points
are plainly laid out in scripture, and there's a lot that I have
here laid out for you to understand that there's a historical basis
for that in the church as well. But what I want to do is to spend
time really focusing on the next few verses. So I'd like you to
jump to page eight. 2 Timothy 3, verse 14, at the top
of page 8. But you must continue in the
things which you have learned and been assured of, knowing
from whom you have learned them, and that from childhood you have
known the holy scriptures, which are able to make you wise for
salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. From childhood you've known the
Holy Scriptures. We have this background of the way knowledge
comes. But furthermore, the Holy Scriptures
are able to make you wise for salvation through faith which
is in Christ Jesus. The Holy Scriptures are able
to make you wise. Let's think about that for a
second. The Scriptures are able to make you wise because they
carry the information of wisdom to you. They're able to make
you wise because of the means that God normally uses to bring
wisdom into your mind. They're able to make you wise
because there's a promise of the Holy Spirit giving wisdom
to the people of God with the Scriptures. That the preaching
of the Word is that which gives wisdom. We're taught in Romans,
faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God. So the way
that we are built up in faith is by the Word of God coming
to us. And the Holy Spirit causing us
to hear it. Our age is so controlled by humanistic
thought and by mechanistic views of the way externals and mechanics
work, that we think when we hear about hearing, we think about
the senses of the ear being able to pull in sound. But what is
taught here is that it's about the work of the Holy Spirit to
cause you to understand and to believe. And that makes us dependent
upon God for wisdom. Dependent in terms of scriptures,
but dependent also on the internal and invisible work Wisdom is the knowledge of what's
good and how to get it. Knowledge of what's good and
how to get it. So what's the highest good? What's the best
thing? What's the highest value? Well, God is. How do we possess
God? By knowing Him. So God's the
good and Jesus is God. We're taught in John 17.3 that
everlasting life is the knowledge of the true God. and of Jesus Christ whom he sent.
Now the point there is not to say that Jesus isn't God. The
point there in that text is to say everlasting life is the knowledge
of the true God, that is to say the knowledge of Jesus Christ
who was sent by the true God and who is the true God. He who
is the promised seed of the woman. He who is the eternal God. Now
this wisdom saves. Where does this save us from?
It saves us from foolishness by displacing foolishness and
replacing it with wisdom. It saves us from the guilt of
sin and the just wrath of God by being the instrument that
connects us to the righteousness of Christ and his suffering the
wrath of God in our place instead. It saves us from the power of
sin by being a lamp unto our feet to know the way to go. And
it saves us because wisdom is faith in God's Word. When you
believe God's Word, when you believe God, you are believing
in the Lord Jesus Christ. Because faith in God's Word is
faith in Christ. So this is the scriptures are
able to make you wise for salvation through faith, which is in Christ
Jesus. Now, verse 16. 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 complete,
thoroughly equipped for every good work." Now, this doctrine
that all Scripture is given by inspiration of God is not the
main emphasis of this text right below. The emphasis is the idea
that the scriptures are sufficient to make us complete. to be thoroughly
equipped for every good work. The inspiration is the emphasis
that most people give on this text. It's the reason why the
next part follows. Because it is breathed out by
God, therefore it is authoritative. And because it's breathed out
by God, who is all wise, it is sufficient. He's able to reveal
sufficiently what we need to know and what we ought to do. So this sufficiency is the real
point of this text. Yet it is not the emphasis that
most people give when talking about or preaching on this text.
So all scripture is breathed out by God. Amen, hallelujah,
praise the Lord. But we build from there and we
find that all Scripture is profitable. It's useful for something. God gives these texts. He gives
these words. And all of them, all of them
are useful. All of them are profitable. There
is no passage in Scripture except that it is useful. Those lists
of names that you like to skip over. The lists of stuff that
people take from place to place that sometimes are difficult
to find utility out of. All of these things, all of those
passages are useful. They are profitable. And so the
question is, as we're considering them, as we're mulling them over,
as we meditate upon them, as we try to consider their meaning,
we need to be looking for their usefulness. There is not a single
sentence, not a word in Scripture that is not useful. And so if
we take passages of Scripture and make them into meaningless
texts, We make them useless. So much of our time that's spent
by people who claim to be teachers of the Scriptures, people who
are in seminaries or who go to seminaries, so much of their
time is spent trying to figure out how to make passages that
are offensive to men not mean what they say. And when we try
to take passages that are offensive to men and make them not mean
what they say, we take things that are useful to show us our
own stupidity and we turn them into things that are useless
to help us to die in ignorance and sin. Passages that are offensive
to us. are the passages we ought to
spend time trying to figure out what's wrong with us in. When there's a passage that you're
offended by, it's an indicator to you that you need to figure
out what's wrong with you. That's what offensive passages
are for. They're offensive because of
a problem with you. Now I'm not trying to pretend
like I don't have any problems. But I'm talking to try to help
you. And so when you are offended
by the word of God, that's what you should do. That's what I
should do too. We should, when we're offended
by it, we should wrestle with it and try to figure out what
does this mean? Why am I offended by it? What falsehood am I believing
that makes this thing offensive? All scripture is given by inspiration
of God. It's God's word and it's profitable. It's useful. Useful for what? Well, it's useful for doctrine,
which means it's useful for teaching us the truth. God's words are
true. Every one of them, every proposition
of the scriptures is true. And so when we read something
and we don't believe it, it is us not believing what God has
said. And if you have to choose between
God being wrong or you being wrong, you pick you every time.
And when that's the case, you try to figure out what is it
that you're believing that's wrong, and how is it contrary
to the Scriptures. And then, as you understand what
God's Word is saying, and you believe it's true, but you still
find something about it that makes you uncomfortable, you
pray, Lord, I believe, help my unbelief. You ask God to help
you to understand more clearly and to be taught the truth more
fully, that you might have right doctrine and put off lies and
falsehood. Go to page 9. 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 complete, thoroughly equipped for every
good work. All Scripture is profitable,
not only for doctrine, for the general teaching of the truth,
for the systematic arrangement of the truth, for the giving
of the truth in terms of the laying out of what God's Word
says, but it's also profitable for reproof. It's profitable
for rebuke. That is to say, to censure things
that are evil, to give criticism for what is wrong. The Word of
God is profitable for refutation of error, The Word of God is
profitable to convict you of sin. The Word of God is profitable
to show you what you should put off. The stuff you should throw
away and get rid of. The things to be pruned of. The Scriptures are profitable
for reproof. J. Adams in his Counseling Work
does a great job of explaining this, especially in How to Help
People Change. If you want a copy of that book,
by the way, it's a fantastic book. It is the one book that
I would most recommend to anybody who wants to be introduced to
how to offer biblical counseling. Just you as a Christian person
seeking to counsel one another, his little book, How to Help
People Change, is essentially him walking through this text
of Scripture and explaining how to use and apply Scripture for
yourself and for other people. It is a beautiful little book. In it, he talks about how this
word, translated as being reproof, He likes to emphasize that the
Scripture is profitable, all of Scripture is profitable, for
convicting people of sin. People go, well, I mean, isn't
that the Holy Spirit's job, to convict of sin? Well, yeah, it
is. And you know how He typically
convicts people of sin? Through the teaching of His Word. So when you bring the Scriptures,
it's useful to bring about a sense of subjective conviction, or
you might call it guilt feelings. But people can feel guilty about
things that are wrong, right? Sometimes you can feel guilty
about rebuking a person for sin. You ever done a duty and felt
bad about it afterwards? That's because there's something
that we value that we're losing there. maybe pain that we're
causing to somebody else. As we mature, we will feel more
and more joyful in the performance of our duties and less and less
have conflicted feelings about doing our duties. So we can feel
bad about doing the right thing sometimes, and that's wrong.
We should have properly ordered affections. But what's more important
is that the scriptures bring objective conviction. If somebody's
in a court case, the court can convict a person of sin, of a
crime, and say, you're guilty. And the person might say, they're
not guilty. You know, everybody in prison
is innocent. If you ever visit one, I don't
recommend it, but if you ever do, you talk to people there,
you'll find a remarkably high percentage of wrong convictions,
according to the inmates. Just a shockingly high rate.
So, what's the deal? Are they just lying to themselves?
Well, some of them are, and some of them probably are wrongly
convicted. But you have this idea that there's external objective
conviction, declaring a person to be guilty. And what the Word
of God does is it comes and it shows objective guilt. And you can prove to people that
they're in sin from the Word of God. That proof that something is
sin is the argument by which you're able to see that you need
to put this thing off. And that ordinarily is what's
used to bring about the internal sense of conviction. And that
part is the part that the Holy Spirit does. Our duty is to bring
the scriptures and to rely upon the Holy Spirit to bring the
inward conviction. We bring external conviction,
proving something to be sin by the scriptures. And we rely upon
the Holy Spirit to bring about the internal conviction, a sense
of guilt. Now this is important because
a sense of guilt, we all go, I don't want that. But the sense
of guilt, the sense of pain, of conscience, is what helps
us to discipline ourselves to put off sin. We go, the misery
of sin, the pain of conscience, God brings us to repentance through
pains like these. It is the loving chastisement
of a father to bring about the pain of conscience, being convicted. That pain is brought about for
our good. It's the same reason you discipline your children.
You don't discipline your children because you hate them. You don't
bring them temporary discomfort because you hate them. You bring
them temporary discomfort to bring them long-lasting comfort.
You bring them temporary discomfort because you love them and you
want what is good for them. The pain of conscience is brought
about by the work of the Word and Spirit for the good of God's
people to put off unrighteousness. And the Scriptures, all of the
Scriptures, are profitable for this convicting work They're profitable for this convicting
work in a sufficient way to make the man of God complete, thoroughly
furnished for every good work. You know, if you know any expert
hikers or climbers or soldiers, knowing which equipment to not
take is as important as knowing what equipment to take. Over
miles, ounces are like pounds. And pounds exhaust you and consume
your energy so that you can't do the task. Knowing what not
to fill your time with, what not to equip yourself with, is
as important as knowing what to equip yourself with. And the
Word of God is sufficient to show you what to throw away,
what to put off. Now the Scriptures are profitable
also for correction. All of Scripture, every passage
of Scripture, the whole of Scripture is profitable to show you positively
what you ought to put on, what to improve in, what to do instead
of, what to set right. And this putting on, that's what
correction is. So the scriptures are profitable,
all of the scriptures are profitable, for teaching the truth, for showing
you what to put off, and showing you what to put on. And in case
this wasn't clear enough already, because putting off and putting
on should be a sufficient set of things to show you the fullness
of how to be instructed, the passage says, All Scripture is
given by inspiration of God and is profitable for instruction
in righteousness. And instruction in righteousness,
this word instruct is padean. The word padea is a word that
talks about this idea of enculturation, instruction, the rearing of a
child, the raising of a child, the education of a man, the full
discipleship that should be given to a student. And so this instruction,
this discipleship, this enculturation in righteousness, the point here
is to say that the scriptures are profitable. Every single
proposition of scripture is profitable to rear you in righteousness,
to raise you up in righteousness, to train you in righteousness.
And so here we have the truth being given, the training being
given, and the way in which the truth is used to show you what
to throw away and to show you what to grab and hold on to.
And that together provides the fullness of what's necessary
for training. And you have, at verse 17, what
is called a khinna clause. Now if you start to study Greek
at all, you will be introduced to Henna clauses. Henna clauses are clauses that
are goal-oriented clauses. In other words, this is in order
that. So when you read in verse 17,
it says, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped
for every good work. You could replace the word that
with in order that. You could say so that. This is
the goal. The goal to be achieved. So we
have the scriptures, and the scriptures are inspired by God. They're breathed out by God,
and they're profitable, because God is all-wise, and every word
he speaks is a word worth hearing, and it's useful. So these profitable
words are given to us in order that the man of God may be complete,
thoroughly equipped for every good work. And this part right
here, this little passage of Scripture, verse 17, is so important
because it shows us that the Scriptures give us the full list
of equipment that we need to carry. Because there's all this
danger that what we're going to do is we're going to load
up our backpacks with a bunch of junk we don't need for the
hike, and then we're going to be exhausted, having used up
all of our energy, carrying stupid stuff. There's all this danger
that on the way to go meet the enemy in battle, we'll be carrying
useless things into battle and be exhausted by the time we get
there. The Middle Ages was largely the story of people calling themselves
Christians and putting lots and lots of things into their backpacks
that they didn't need. And so you had pilgrimages, auricular
confession, You had all of this stuff that wasn't necessary.
And in fact, not only not necessary, but they were poisons. These
were things that would kill you. They were soul-murdering errors. And so we don't just put useless
things in. No, we put things in that are
self-destructive. Because our supposed wisdom about
what we need and what's good for us is lies that are self-destructive. And so the Scriptures, you need
the Scriptures as sufficient to govern yourself, and you need
the Scriptures as sufficient to judge the teaching that you
receive. The scriptures are breathed out
by God. All of it is breathed out by God. And it's all profitable
for doctrine. And it's all profitable for reproof. And it's all profitable for correction.
And it is all profitable for instruction in righteousness.
And it serves to accomplish this goal. That you would be complete. That you would be thoroughly
equipped for every good work. There are no good works missing
here. There is no equipment missing here. There's nothing that you need
to be a mature man or woman that's missing here. You know this because
God wrote it. The God that designed you, the
God that has predestined all of history, the God who has designed
the purpose of creation and fixed it to an end. That God is the
God that wrote the book. That God is the God who gave
us the instruction manual for us and the instruction manual
for creation. The scriptures give us everything
we need to know to do our duties. They are given in order that
the man of God may be complete. They are given in order that
the man of God may be thoroughly equipped. for every good work. People will try to attack that
last passage. And they will try to say, well,
complete doesn't really mean complete. I've given you the Greek word.
It's put right there. If you want the digital version
so you can copy and paste it, I'll happily give it to you.
And you can research the Greek word yourself. It really does
mean complete. It really does mean having all
the stuff that you need. Thoroughly equipped, it's put
at the end. The way this is really written out in the Greek is it's,
that the man of God may be complete for every good work equipped,
or thoroughly equipped. This equipping is equipping for
all the good works. All of them, not just some of
them, all of them. You can see right there in the Greek, pan,
which means all. Ergon, which is to work, something
ergonomic. It's meant to help you so that
you can work without causing injury. And then we have this Agathon,
which is good work. You get the name Agatha from
that, which is just a Greek word for good turned into a feminine
name. So this idea of every good work, every work that's good,
every work that's good. Matthew Poole, says this about
this passage. He says, the man of God may be
perfect, that the man of God may be perfect, that both ministers
and all godly men may be as perfect as they can be in the state of
mortality, fitted for the duties of their several callings and
places, thoroughly furnished unto all good works, and be prepared
to every work which is good, acceptable, and well-pleasing
unto God, whether it be a work of piety or justice and charity. The scripture as to all is so
full of direction that Christians need not go down to the Philistines
to wet their tools. And there's this passage that's
obscurely referred to there. This is a key passage for us
to understand. In the book of 1 Samuel, we have
the place, the first time that's referenced for us, this idea
of weapons control. the Philistines were occupying
Israel and they made a law. You can't own a sword and you
can't own a spear. And in fact, in order to regulate,
to make sure that nobody had these spears or swords, they
made a law that if you're Israelite, you actually can't even be a
blacksmith. So actually you have to go to Philistia to get your
sword sharpened. But, oh wait, you're not allowed
to take a sword. So what is it they were saying you could go
and sharpen? It was so you could sharpen your plow or your pruning
hook. The idea that you couldn't own
any weapons of warfare. And so Israel is largely without
weapons, which is one of the reasons why you remember the
story where Jonathan and his shield bearer, they go and attack
the camp of the Philistines by themselves. Nothing can hinder
the Lord from saving by many or by few. That story, you remember
it? The reason it's just the two of them is because nobody
else has a sword. Because the New York Democrats had taken
away all their swords. That's what the Philistines did.
They took away all their swords and all their spears. And so
this idea that, you know, you have to go to Philistia, you
have to go outside of the people of God in order to get your equipment
and to make it ready for use. That's the idea there. So what
Matthew Poole is saying, he's saying, God didn't fail to provide
us with men to sharpen our swords. He didn't fail to provide us
with the weaponry of our warfare. No, The word of God makes us
that we're thoroughly furnished unto all good works and to be
prepared for every good work that is acceptable and pleasing
unto God, whether it's a work of piety or justice or charity.
The scripture as to all is so full of direction that Christians
need not go down to the Philistines to wet their tools. So that's
a reference to. nor be beholden to unwritten
traditions or to the writings of pagan philosophers for directions
what to do, how to worship God, or manage any part of their conversation. The conversation, we think of
the word conversation, we think of like talking to each other. Conversation
used to be used to refer to behavior, how you behave. The scriptures are sufficient
to show us how to do all those things, how to behave, either
as to their general callings, the stuff we're supposed to do
in general, or to their particular relations, our duties to any
person that we have to deal with. A son, a daughter, a parent,
a church officer, a congregant, a person in authority in the
state, somebody who's under your authority. All of that, all of
it's covered. The general duties as well as
the particular duties based upon station. All of it is covered
in the Scriptures. There's nothing missing. We don't
have to go to the Philistines to get equipment. We don't have
to go to pagan philosophers to get the equipment. We don't have
to go anywhere but to God, in his holy word, the writings,
the scriptures. Now, I'm out of time, but on
page 10, I provided for you Ephesians 4. Because I want you to look
at it side by side, and I encourage you in your Sabbath, in between
the services, or in your family worship tonight, to take a little
bit of time and to look at Ephesians chapter 4, and to look at the
maturing work there. In this text from 2 Timothy,
we talk about the Word of God being sufficient to make the
man of God complete. But also in Ephesians 4, the
Word of God is sufficient to make the church mature. So this
is true of us as individuals, And it's true for us as a corporate
body. And so the wholeness that we
need as individuals and as a group is provided for us in the scriptures.
My hope is for you to walk away from this sermon and to have
a high view of the sufficiency of scripture and to see that
it really is sufficient for all controversies of religion. and
that religion covers all of our duties of thought and all of
our duties of practice. Comments, questions, objections
from the voting members and those with speaking rights? Mr. Price. I've come running to when discussing
that is various translations from the Bible. Yeah, so the question is, with
translations, how do we deal with that claim that the Scriptures
are God-breathed? So first of all, remember in
the Confession it lays out the idea that it's the autographs,
in other words, it's the original Greek, it's the original Hebrew,
that was preserved by God, that is without error. we need to recognize that that's
what we ultimately have to go back to in terms of arguments.
When we deal with translations, there's a question of, okay,
what textual basis is being used? There's the question of how accurately
is that textual base being translated? And there's the question of how
easy is it for that translation to be understood by its audience?
And so those three things, that varies. I would suggest that
as language in a society is used differently, things like when
I just read to you from Matthew Poole, conversation, the average
modern hearer is going to read that and think, oh, we're talking
about conversation as in what we're talking about, as opposed
to conversation meaning behavior. So you have to explain that.
So different things are going to have more or less that you
have to explain to a particular audience. And so what I would
suggest is that you're trying to make sure that you're lining
up with the correct textual base, which in the New Testament is
the majority text. And when you look at the New King James, it
is using what's called the received text, which is very close to
the majority text. And you use the footnotes, right,
to be able to find what the majority text is saying. And so there
are many modern translations that do a decent job of translating. And if you're able to use the
footnotes to be able to look at that and to find where there's
the majority text, you're going to be able to get that accurately.
But generally speaking, I'm going to advise people to look at,
you mentioned the Geneva Bible, or the King James, or the New
King James. But study is required to really
understand it. And God willing, we'll have better
and better translations over time, where there's less and
less explanation needed as more and more excellent translation
occurs. The problem is you just have
to deal with the reality that we have to study and deal with
work. And so if people say, well, I don't want to have to study,
you just go, let me get this straight. You want to know God
and you want to know about everything you need in life for wisdom,
and you'd prefer it if nobody made you study. I find that people
typically turn a little bit green, if you can put it in that way,
and realize that they're being lazy and they're trying to just
come up with excuses. But they have problems in their lives
and they know it and they need answers. And so I think showing them the
goodness of wisdom and the need to study is kind of the answer
to that in terms of their motivation But the excuse making is resolved
by the majority text and by the need to study and to compare
to what is originally written. And there's lots of tools to
be able to study that. So I can talk to you more about that if
you need anything else on it. But does that answer? Okay. Thank
you. All right. Then seeing none other, let's
pray. Father, we ask that you would
bless the preaching and reading of your word, and that you would build
us up, that you would make us complete, that you would cause us to receive
all of the rebuking that we need to put things off, and all of
the correction to put things on, and that you would train
us up in righteousness. We pray this in Jesus' name,
amen.
Knowing from Whom - Pt. 2
Series 2 Timothy
In this message, Pastor Reece expounds on 2 Timothy 3:10-4:5, emphasizing the sufficiency of scripture for equipping believers for every good work. He explores the authority, inspiration, and usefulness of God's Word in guiding our lives, correcting errors, and training us in righteousness.
Key Points Explored:
- The Authority of Scripture: All scripture is God-breathed and immediately inspired.
- The Purpose of God's Word: Equips believers for doctrine, reproof, correction, and instruction in righteousness.
- The Sufficiency of Scripture: God's Word is complete, thoroughly equipping believers for every good work, without reliance on external traditions or philosophies.
- The Power of Scripture in Conviction: Showing us our sin, leading to repentance, and building faith through the Holy Spirit's work.
- Encouragement: Embrace the Word of God as your ultimate authority and sufficient guide for life, equipping you for godliness, wisdom, and every good work.
Scripture Reference: 2 Timothy 3:10-4:5
Sermon Date: 22nd of December in the Year of our Lord 2024 - A.M.
| Sermon ID | 122624161831814 |
| Duration | 50:46 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | 2 Timothy 3 |
| Language | English |
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