Friday, April 28, 2023
1 Peter 1:10-12
Thursday, April 27, 2023
1 Peter 1:8-9
Today, we return to the epistle of 1 Peter where the Apostle Peter is giving us a blueprint on how to navigate through this life that presents us with many multifaceted trials. Essential are these trials because they aid at helping us to know God more intimately. We think that trials should not be a natural thing for us as Christians but they are musts in order for us to grow in our walk with the Lord. These trials serve to force us to seek with the Lord with all of our hearts, something we do not naturally do on our own.
Biblical faith, which is a product of our response to God's faithfulness is becoming more convinced that God is in control and is rendering His will in our lives. There are no more dangerous people in the world than those who have no fear of the outcome! Because of this, we can realize and experience a radical, counter cultural life because we have courage in Him. When we leave everything in God's hands we will eventually see God's hands in everything.
Sometimes we think the answer is to have enough of whatever this world offers us but Peter is saying there is nothing in this world that can compare with the greatness of knowing Christ. The surety of God's promises gives us an amazing contentment right now, because everything we will ever need or could ever need is ours in Christ. The key is that God defines us, and He uses discomfort to get us to this place. Our trials perform an integral part of our joy. When we experience trials, the good thing they do for us is to prove the genuineness of our faith and the development of our love for the Lord. The combination of these two: trust and love result further in His joy come to bear in our lives.
The arena of our justification is our spirits which is where we are born again; having believed on the Lord Jesus as our savior, our spirits have been made alive to God. The battlefield where our sanctification takes place is in our souls. Sanctification is the changing of our minds, wills and emotions by the thoughts of God. Our sanctification leads us to the kind of life God is calling us to live for our benefit and the benefit of others. It is God's desire to use our lives in the process of others coming to know Him, and He rarely blesses us with only us in mind.
Wednesday, April 26, 2023
1 Peter 1:6-7
Today, we return to our study of 1 Peter where the Apostle Peter provides us with a blueprint on how to handle suffering. He did this for the recipients of this letter who had been enduring persecution due to their obedience to the God of the Bible. Persecution ensures that the very things that we tend to trust in the most like comfort and ease and affluence and prosperity and safety and freedom becomes less of a crutch for the believer. When these crutches are removed, we discover what is really real, and we invest accordingly.
In today's passage, the Apostle makes the point that all of our trials potentially produce at least one purpose. In addition to getting us to investing in the really real, our trials serve to create a roadway into the hearts of those upon whom we have influence. In today's passage we learn of the two things which we must have in order to growth in our faith in the God of the Bible. This faith is best described as our heart's ability to see God.
Today's passage begins with: "In all this..." The word "this" modifies "the suffering" mentioned in the previous verses. When we come to understand the purpose behind our troubles, we will inevitably rejoice because the presence of God is magnified in and through our lives. According to Romans 10:17, when we hear with our hearts the spoken word of God, the other ingredient to a growing faith is brought to bare in our lives. When out of our trials we turn to God, we will experience the purpose of our trials which is a heightened awareness of His presence which is designed to enable our faith to grow even stronger than we ever thought it could be.
In v.7 of today's passage we read, "These have come so that the proven genuineness of your faith—of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire—may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed."
Our faith in the God of the Bible is much like our muscles, if we do not exercise them, they will not grow. In fact, unused faith will atrophy. This is the design of our troubles: they serve in pushing us into a deeper reality with the Lord Jesus Christ. And the trials are helpful in that. The key isn't just faith, the key is that the God of the Bible is the object of our faith. And our trials hone our heart's ability to see and hear God.
The Apostle Peter uses the metaphor of a refining fire. The purified gold is the product of the distress caused by intense heat. Similarly, suffering has the same effect on our faith in the God of the Bible. Our suffering enables us to see our utter inadequacy. It also enables us to see His utter adequacy. And, when we are let down enough by those inadequacies, it is then that we are granted the opportunity to place our lives more increasingly in the hands of our adequate heavenly Father. When we are overwhelmed and cry out to Him for help, we discover His presence and His involvement in the details of our lives. We eventually will notice even a design to our trials and our troubles.
Our suffering deepens our appreciation for the sufferings of the Lord Jesus on our behalf. Like gold that is refined by the intense heat of fire, we will embrace a disposition that will be less self absorbed and more dependent upon the One who has our best interest at heart. When we withdraw from Him due to these intense fiery trials, we limit our heart's ability to see and experience Him for ourselves. And, as a result, we forfeit the opportunity to learn His definitions of things and we will not be trained in His culture.
Tuesday, April 25, 2023
1 Peter 1:5
Today, I include v.3-4 in with today's verse for the sake of context. In this letter, the Apostle Peter is providing us with a blueprint on how to live the Christian life in the context of suffering. In v.3-5 the Apostle provides us with three buoys that enable us who are now of another world to navigate the treacherous waters of this world. In v.3-4 we have considered two results of our new birth: a living hope and an enduring inheritance. Today, we consider the next result of our new birth found in 1 Peter 1:5 that we are shielded by God's power.
The believers to whom Peter wrote this letter were being persecuted intensely. They struggled in the midst of their trials to discover God's purpose in it. In order to comfort these suffering believers, Peter reminds them they were shielded by the power of God. The word "shielded" means "guarded" in the same way as a military post is guarded by soldiers. The military guard, in this case, is the Holy Spirit who has the responsibility to guard or protect the believer and his inheritance in Christ for eternity.
The believer in Christ and our inheritance is being "shielded by God’s power." Interestingly, this is the same power that God used to create all things, and it is the very same power that raised the Lord Jesus from the dead. God does not promise us the absence of suffering, However, He does promise something much greater; He promises us the ability to transcend and to live according to His precepts. And, when we are living in this way, we discover how suffering serves us. This is why the Apostle Paul references our blessings in the book of Ephesians as being accessed in the heavenly realms. And, when we live according to God's culture, we transcend to the place where we see that what we thought was a curse was actually a blessing.
I know a young lady very close to me who is incredibly skilled at solving problems; she can solve any problem. This young lady has the ability to see well in advance in order to straighten out that which has been made crooked. And the amazing part of it all, she acquired these valuable and very sought out skills by going through many family related trials while growing up. She and her sisters had it rough growing up without a father in the picture. If you look closely enough, you will notice the same is true in your life. Your strengths were acquired through going through many unwanted difficulties and learning from them.
Monday, April 24, 2023
1 Peter 1:4
The inheritance that the Apostle Peter is writing about is really the inheritance of the Lord Jesus, and He has chosen to share His inheritance with us who believe. This inheritance is mentioned in Revelation 21-22, where the Apostle John describes the new heaven and the new earth as a place where believers in the Lord Jesus Christ will inhabit the kingdom of God.
In the New Earth all living things will find their sustenance in the presence of our God, the Lord Jesus Christ. In heaven, every longing that we have ever known will be realized. Christ's promised inheritance is guaranteed to the believer in Christ and it is secured in heaven by God's power through the resurrection of Christ! In eternity, we will fully experience ultimate fulfillment that we were created to know partly due to the fact that there will be nothing to hinder us of the pursuits of our hearts.
Peter describes this inheritance as never perishing, never spoiling, and never fading, because it is kept by God's power in heaven for us. The word "kept" means "to guard." The believer's inheritance in Christ is guarded in heaven. Here the Apostle Peter used a perfect passive participle meaning the already existing inheritance is presently under guard in heaven. And, heaven is the safest place there is because it does not suffer from the presence of sin and death.
It is so easy for us, especially while we are suffering persecution, to lose sight of this eternal perspective that Peter is describing here. We most often lack an appreciation for the future because we so quickly forget the terrors of hell from which God has saved us through the sacrifice of His Son on the cross. The earth as we know it will end in flames, and God will make a new heaven and a new earth.
As believer's we sometimes develop a myopic view of what time is in the context of the eternal. Time, with reference to eternity, is just a speck of sand. This temporal earth is, in comparison to the eternal, nothing. To be defined by the nothing as opposed to the eternal is like settling for a five hundred thousand dollar home here on earth rather than a multi-gazillion dollar home in eternity. There simply is no comparison. And this inheritance is locked up in the bank vault of heaven, guarded against every intruder who might desire to take it from us.
Finally, think of those whom you admire the most. Think of the qualities that each of these people possess. Think of why you enjoy their presence. The Lord Jesus Christ is all of those qualities and more. You see, He is our inheritance, and He is the One who will complete us. It is hard for us to wrap our minds around this concept right now, but He is everything we have ever desired and more. In heaven, we will know, in a perfect and an eternal way, an authentic and lasting union with Him. That's a prize to keep our eyes on while here on this fallen earth. This all means that heaven, although the coolest place ever, is far more than just a destination. Heaven truly is a person and His name in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Friday, April 21, 2023
1 Peter 1:3
Most Christians fail to recognize there is no way for our old lives can be transformed. In fact, when we try to change our old selves and are to some degree successful at it, we become more moral beings. But, morality and spirituality are not one in the same. In fact, we waste our time trying to "moralize" ourselves. No, the answer is dying to the old life and yielding to God's transformative work in our spirit. Our new birth is our living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. When the Lord Jesus rose from the grave, He whipped sin and death. He, at that moment, made it possible for us to receive His life into ours and then to live a new life which renders the life everyone on this earth is seeking.
The Apostle Peter refers to our hope as a "living hope" because it is the very life of the Lord Jesus that has come to bear on our existence from the inside out. It is His life that is our living hope. As He lives His life in, to, and through us, we experience eternal life. This kind of life enables us to love when we want to hurt. It enables us to forgive when we want to get revenge. And, in so doing, we become the people that we want those who hurt us to be. His mercy defines us as we experience His life. If we embrace the way of the old life, we will be defined by it with all of its smelly grave clothes. This new life is the life that Jeremiah speaks of in Jeremiah 31:33 which reads, "But this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: I will put My law in their minds, and write it on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people."
Thursday, April 20, 2023
1 Peter 1:2
As we mentioned in the last two blogs/podcasts, in 1 Peter 1:1-2 the Apostle Peter identifies the follower of the Lord Jesus Christ with three descriptors: Exiles, Elect, and Chosen. Having considered the first two descriptors, today, we consider the third.
In today's passage, the Apostle Peter makes clear the involvement of the Trinity in the redemption of fallen man. The Father foreknew us, while the Holy Spirit sanctified us, and the Lord Jesus died for us. God the Father is the One who has elected or chosen the believer in Christ according to His "foreknowledge." The Greek word translated "foreknowledge" is only used five times in the New Testament and it simply means "thought-out in advance."
Abraham is an example of this. He, the father of Israel, was foreknown by God the Father, not because of anything he did or he would do. When Abraham came to faith in the God of the Bible, he did so on the heels of his earthly father's death. It was then, after his father died that God intercepted Abraham's life. Up until that time, all Abraham knew was polytheism which did not include the God of the Bible. Having foreknown Abraham, God introduced Himself to him through his pain. This merely underscores the fact that our pain attracts the attention of God. It is our pain that serves us as stepping stones to a personal relationship with God. The question is always the same: Will I be defined by my pain or will I be defined by God? The design of our pain is to drive us into seeking God. Just like Abraham, Israel had nothing to offer God, but God chose them so that He could demonstrate to all of mankind what it looks like to have a personal relationship with God.
God the Father extended His love toward us by sending His Son to pay the penalty for our sin on the cross. God the Holy Spirit trains us in the thinking God's thoughts so that we may live the lives the Lord Jesus died to give us. God, the Holy Spirit convinces us that we need a Savior. He brings us to a place where we are willing to receive the free gift of the forgiven son through Jesus Christ as Lord.
By using the phrase, "sprinkled with His blood," the Apostle Peter highlighted the days when the Old Testament priest offered an unblemished lamb on the altar of God. The Old Testament believers knew that the penalty for their rebellion against God was the shedding of innocent blood. Annually, on the Day of Atonement, the priest would then sprinkle the lamb's blood on the altar to cleanse the sin of the people. What began as one sacrificial lamb per person in the Garden of Eden became one sacrificial lamb per family in the wilderness after the Exodus. It was all the foreshadowing of the day that the Father would send His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, would is the one sacrificial lamb who takes away the sin of the world.
This is what frees us from a life of serving the flesh or the sinful desires that are yet within us. Paul tells us in Galatians 6:8 the flesh is out to destroy us, and when we feed the flesh, we aid it in our own destruction. John the Baptist said, "Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world." Once we beheld the Son, we gained the desire to believe in Him. And, out of our forgiven state, we desired to obey Him, not because we had to but because we wanted to. We love Him in response to His love for us, recognizing that there is no greater love than that to lay down your life for your friends.
Wednesday, April 19, 2023
1 Peter 1:1-2
Today, we continue our new study in the book of 1 Peter. In 1 Peter 1:1-2 the Apostle Peter identifies the follower of the Lord Jesus Christ with three descriptors: Exiles, Elect, and Chosen.
The Greek word "ekklesia" often translated "church" in the Bible is best translated "called out ones" as we have already noted. When we are mindful of this better definition, we come to see the static nature of our relationship with the Lord and with one another. The words of the Lord Jesus, "Come, follow me" are revolutionary and have rerouted the trajectory of many lives. These words radically changed our orientation upon life, because instead of being defined by our limited understanding or that of others, now we are learning to be defined by God. And, His definition of things is radical and sometimes frightening. His definition of how our lives should be lived is unpredictable and therefore frightening. This is why most reject His claims and His definition of life.
Across the generations this invitation has not changed but it continues to change everything. Modern day believers still answer the call to follow the Lord Jesus Christ into this new life that He defines, leaving a trail of transformation in His wake. Many miss His call upon their lives because He uses some of the most unanticipated, unusual and most often unwanted means to call and to define us.
For me, He used, among other experiences, the death of my mother when I was five years old, and, the death of my father when I was seventeen years old. Through these two life-changing events the Lord garnered my attention. In many ways I was backed into a corner rendering belief in the God of the Bible. I have often wondered where I would be if He had not intercepted my life.
As "called out ones," God expects us to be involved in the work of "calling others out." The believer in the Lord Jesus who is learning to walk with Him on a daily basis will be motivated to target others with whom we can share the gospel. We must be diligent to pray that the Lord would call them out of being defined by this world to being defined by Him. I always find it amazing to watch Him do the work in the lives of those for whom I pray. All He asks us to do is to be available and to share our story with Him with them. Loved people love people!
Tuesday, April 18, 2023
1 Peter 1:1b
In 1 Peter 1:1-2 the Apostle Peter identifies the follower of the Lord Jesus Christ with three descriptors: Exiles, Elect, and Chosen. Today, we will consider just the first of these three descriptors.
Before we trusted Christ as our Savior, we felt at home in this world. After we trusted the Lord Jesus as our Savior and we were "born again" we were given a whole new take on this world. You see, until we were baptized in God's Spirit, we were under the domain of Satan himself, and, we did not even know it. And, when we were born again, it was the presence of the Holy Spirit who gradually, day by day, began to change our understanding of all things including our understanding of this world.
In AD 60, the Apostle Peter wrote this letter to Christians who were being persecuted by the Romans who ruled the world at that time. The Romans were known for strapping Christians to stakes, doused them in oil, and light them as lamps. Christians all over the known world were in great danger, and they did not feel at home here on earth. Persecution has a way of causing us to feel out of sorts, insecure and quite alone. Billy Graham once spoke of a conversation that he had with a leader of a foreign country. He said, "In a country where Christians were looked upon with suspicion and disfavor, a government leader said to me with a twinkle in his eye, 'Christians seem to thrive under persecution. Perhaps we should prosper them, and then they would disappear.'"
Today, we live in a culture undergoing a major cultural shift in how we, as Christians, are viewed. There once was a day in America that Christianity was far more accepted than it is today. When persecution, which is growing, comes upon us, we can take courage that we are citizens of another kingdom, the kingdom of the God of the Bible. And, as believers in the Lord Jesus Christ, we have a very different value system than that of this fallen world. Having been born again, we now operate out of a much different value system. Our default mode is now different than it was before we met Christ. This explains the trouble we experience with the world's value system. And, this should give us a greater sense of anticipation for the day when Christ shall return and take us to be with Him in heaven for eternity.
Meanwhile, God has given us the task of sharing the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ with all who will listen in hopes that they, like us, will be awakened to a personal relationship with God. As Jude tells us in Jude 22-23: "22 Be merciful to those who doubt; 23 save others by snatching them from the fire; to others show mercy, mixed with fear—hating even the clothing stained by corrupted flesh."
Monday, April 17, 2023
1 Peter 1:1a
Today, we begin a brand new study in the first epistle written by the Apostle Peter to believers in the Lord Jesus Christ who lived during the first century in what is known today as modern-day Turkey. These believers were victims of the Dispersion which was a term that Peter used to describe the fact that these first century believers in Christ had been dispersed from their homes. They were under intense pressure and persecution in a world that had been turned upside down by the teachings, death, burial and resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Peter's life teaches us the secrets of God which render a man a leader. These secrets are easily unrecognizable, because they are not found in the many success books that we would find in our local bookstore. A year after meeting Peter, the Lord Jesus called him to "Come and follow me and I will make you a fisher of men." For the next three years, Peter, along with several others, followed the Lord Jesus. At the end of those three years, Peter failed miserably by denying that he even knew the Lord Jesus. In fact, the third time he denied having a relationship with Jesus, Peter dropped what was the equivalent of the "F" Bomb.
Peter's life illustrates that failure is not the opposite of success with God. As we will discover in this great book, Peter experienced his failure so that he would be able to speak authentically into the lives of hurting people each day. Then, some 40 days after his failure, on the Day of Pentecost, Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, is used of God to lead 3,000 people to faith in Jesus by preaching the Gospel in Jerusalem.
Peter realized life-changing power because he experienced so much trouble. As is clear in this first chapter, Peter's powerful faith was the product of his many trials. Thirty years after he began to follow Jesus, Peter became a great leader, who was hardly recognizable from the fisherman become failure. This is the secret of God for becoming a great leader: great trials create great faith. We must be wise to welcome the unwanted, knowing that it is through the unwanted God does His greatest work in and through us.
Friday, April 14, 2023
Romans 16:25-27
Click here for the Romans 16:25-27 PODCAST
25 Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began 26 but now made manifest, and by the prophetic Scriptures made known to all nations, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, for obedience to the faith— 27 to God, alone wise, be glory through Jesus Christ forever. Amen. ~ Romans 16:25-27
Today, we come to the end of the book of Romans which was written by the Apostle Paul while he was in the city of Corinth. It was very likely that at this point the Apostle Paul took the pen and wrote the closing paragraph in his own hand. Paul told us in 2 Thessalonians 3:17 that this was his custom. He did this to protect his letters from forgery. Scholars agree that Paul probably suffered from a serious eye problem as indicated in his letter written to the Galatians. As a result, the Apostle Paul wrote these final words in large letters with his own hand.
In v.25 of today's passage we read, "Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began."
We serve a God who is truly the Supreme Being of all. This letter written to the believers in Rome begins and ends with the idea of the power of God. The Gospel of Jesus Christ is so powerful that it is used of God to rescue man from eternal damnation in hell. It also has the power to establish the believer for an eternity with God. God has the power to save and to sanctify the believer in Christ. It is not only God's responsibility to save us, it is also His responsibility to sanctify us. You and I are not given the final responsibility to bring about this change that God desires to bring about in our souls through the process of our sanctification.
Now, we are wise to walk in God's truth and His culture as spelled out in His word, and, if we walk in His truth, we will realize all of the blessings the Lord Jesus died to give us. I am sure, as Paul wrote these words, he had in mind all the instances and circumstances from the past that instruct us on God's sovereignty. Just this morning I went to a men's Bible Study and only one man showed up. I have experienced enough of God culture to recognize that He was up to something and He had something in mind that I did not anticipate. The two hour conversation that ensued would not have happened had all of the guys who were supposed to be there had showed up. It was designed of God for just the two of us to meet. All too often we accuse Satan for such things when in reality God is the one who is causing or allowing the disruption. When we are being defined by God, we will recognize such and we will fall in line with that which God is doing.
The word "establish" used here in v.24 means to set steadfastly in an immovable position. The result of this in the life of the believer in Christ is a mental settledness that causes us to be faithful to His call on our lives. This is what the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ accomplishes in the yielded life of the believer in Christ. Many mistakenly think that the gospel is just the doorway into Christianity; but the gospel is the mansion itself. As believers in Christ, we do not get the gospel and then move beyond it. We get the gospel and then we move into it. This is the way God strengthens the believer in Christ. We must be careful to preach the Gospel to ourselves on a daily basis because it is the very life of Christ in our lives that brings about the purposes and culture of God in and through our lives.
In the latter part of v.25 we read, "...according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began."
This mystery is the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. More specifically the mystery is Christ Himself living His life in, to, and through our yielded lives. This mystery includes the bad news and the good news. The bad news is that man violently rebelled against the God of the Bible. The good news is that from the foundation of the world, the Lord Jesus Christ willingly agreed to remedy man's rebellion and to die on the cross to remove the subsequent sentence of hell that we all deserve. By means of His virgin birth, His sinless life, His substitutionary death upon the cross of Calvary, and by means of the gift of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost, God has given the Lord Jesus Christ all that He is and all that He has to you and to me. He has done this in order to equip us to realize that which He has called us to on this earth.
In v.26 of today's passage we read, "but now made manifest, and by the prophetic Scriptures made known to all nations, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, for obedience to the faith."
Throughout the Old Testament Scriptures God hinted at the work the Lord Jesus eventually brought to pass while hanging on the cross of Calvary. The prophets spoke and wrote about it. Ezekiel had written about the fact that someday God would come and save His people and take away their stony hearts and give them a heart of flesh and He would write His law in their hearts and He would give them His Spirit. But, for a long time it was not made manifest. It was hidden and veiled. The gospel was the unfolding of this mystery, this mystery kept secret since the world began and now has been made manifest.
As the latter part of this verse clearly reveals, God did all of this "for the obedience to the faith." God didn't do all of this wonderful work so that we would continue to live in sin and rebellion against Him. God saved us to bring us into a wonderful personal relationship with Himself so that His culture would invade ours. And, He doesn't stop there. It is the nature of the truth to be used through our lives so that others might come into a personal relationship with God, as well. As a result, every born again believer is a part of the unveiling of the mystery which has been hidden from ages past and is now being revealed.
In v.27 of today's passage we read, "to God, alone wise, be glory through Jesus Christ forever. Amen."
And now, the Apostle Paul cries out in final conclusion, "to God, alone wise be glory." He did this because only the infinite mind of God could ever have designed such a plan. And, only He could bring it to fruition. There was no one who would be wise enough to ever accomplish such a saving work. This is what makes God the Supreme Being of all. And, just as through the yielded life of the Lord Jesus Himself, our yielded lives bring Him great glory as well. This is all part of the unveiling of the mystery that has been hidden from the foundation of this world.
Thursday, April 13, 2023
Romans 16:21-24
Click here for the Romans 16:21-24 PODCAST
21 Timothy, my fellow worker, and Lucius, Jason, and Sosipater, my countrymen, greet you. 22 I, Tertius, who wrote this epistle, greet you in the Lord. 23 Gaius, my host and the host of the whole church, greets you. Erastus, the treasurer of the city, greets you, and Quartus, a brother. 24 The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen. ~ Romans 16:21-24
Today, we return to our study of the letter written by the Apostle Paul to the believers in Rome during the first century. The main goal that the Apostle had in mind in writing this book was to challenge the believer in Christ to focus on being the servant of the Lord. Clear understanding of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ will cause us to embrace the role of the servant of Christ simply out of gratitude for what the Lord Jesus for him on the cross. When we serve others, we are chiefly thanking God for his goodness in giving his Son in our place.
In v.21 of today's passage we read, "Timothy, my fellow worker, and Lucius, Jason, and Sosipater, my countrymen, greet you."
Here, the Apostle Paul reveals those who were with him in Corinth as he wrote this letter. The first was Timothy who was Paul's son in the faith and his number one disciple. In Philippians 2 the Apostle wrote of Timothy that there was no one who was as like-minded with himself. All through all of Paul's epistles we learn of Paul's affection for Timothy.
And then there was Lucius of Cyrene who was also a Gentile. According to Acts 13, he was one of the five men who led the church at Antioch. And then Paul adds "Jason and Sosipater." According to Acts 17, Jason was Paul's host on his first visit to Thessalonica. He was a man who gave hospitality to him and he was saved at that time. Paul stayed in Jason's home when a riot broke out in the city. Sosipater was from the town of Berea and was probably one of those noble Old Testament students who studied the Scriptures. He was in Paul's group at this time as well and is mentioned in Acts 20.
Here were six members of Paul's family, kinsmen who had all become believers in the Lord Jesus. Some were Christians before him, but some Paul influenced toward Christ. They came from various places. Sosipater was the man from Beroea, mentioned in Acts 20 as "Sopater." Paul met him in Macedonia and may have accompanied him to Jerusalem with the offering to the churches there.
In v.22-23 of today's passage we read, "22 I, Tertius, who wrote this epistle, greet you in the Lord. 23 Gaius, my host and the host of the whole church, greets you. Erastus, the treasurer of the city, greets you, and Quartus, a brother."
Up to this point the Apostle Paul dictated this letter to Tertius, who wrote it down. His name indicates that he, too, was a slave, because his name means "third." In slave families they did not bother to think up names; they just numbered the children. The brother of Tertius, Quartus, was also with the Apostle in Corinth, as well. We know that these two were educated slaves because they could read and write.
These men were gathered together with the Apostle in the home of Gaius, this gracious, generous host of the city, mentioned in Paul's first letter to the Corinthians. Gaius opened his house to the entire Christian community, so here is Paul, sitting there with his friends. Tertius is writing down the letter, and the others are gathered around listening to Paul as he dictates, and profiting much from the writing of these great truths.
The final name is Erastus, director of public works in the city of Corinth. You can see how the gospel penetrated all levels of society, with slaves, public officials, consuls, leaders of the empire, all sharing an equal ground of fellowship in the church of Jesus Christ. All class distinctions disappeared within the church and that is what happens whenever the church works. All of these believers in the Lord Jesus were noted for their faithfulness to the gospel of the Lord Jesus.
In v.24 of today's passage we read, "The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen."
God has called us believers in Christ to participate in the ministry that He is bringing to fruition in this world. Without His grace operative in our lives, we will not be successfully involved in anything the Lord desires to do in and through us in this world. Two things in this world will last for eternity: the souls of people and the word of God. It is our calling to be involved in investing our time, talents and treasures in getting these two together. Be used for eternity in the lives of those with whom you have appointment with today! God is in it!
Wednesday, April 12, 2023
Roman 16:17-20
Today, we return to our study of Romans 16 where the Apostle Paul is showing us in practicals terms what it looks like to be the servant of the Lord. This is the goal of the believer in Christ who is growing in intimacy with the Lord, to be the servant of the Lord. This idea of selflessness will in the end be a part of the destruction of the self life that was introduced to man while in the Garden of Eden so long ago. The Apostle Paul begins this book with seven characteristics of the servant of the Lord and he ends this book with a portrait of what it looks like to be the servant of the Lord.
In v.20 of today's passage we read, "And the God of peace will crush Satan under your feet shortly. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you. Amen."