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All right, so we're gonna start
something new today in Sunday school. We basically finished
up Jude around a month ago. I didn't do much with the benediction.
I'm kind of saving the benediction for a Sunday morning service.
My thinking now is that it would make a really good New Year's
sermon on the first Sunday of the new year. So I'm kind of
saving the benediction. And so we haven't done much with
that. But other than that, we spent a good dozen weeks or so
in the epistle of Jude. And then we had Jonathan's application
of things the last three weeks with critical theory. And so
we need to start something new today. And so I've been wanting
for some time to take us through something of a introduction to
our church kind of Sunday school class. You might even call it
like a new members sort of class. This is something that we really
haven't done over the years. There was one time, a good 15
years ago or so, if I remember correctly, that Pastor McKnight
did this in a Sunday school unit. Just kind of took us through
a new members orientation, but the entire congregation. And
I thought it would be good for us to do that as well. Some of,
many of you, you know, have been here for longer than I have.
But we all have entered into the congregation at different
times. We don't have any sort of formal curriculum for a new
members class that we have people go through when they join. And
maybe something like this can help me formulate a curriculum
for that. It'll be recorded and so it's
something that can be used in the future for new members if
we're not actually meeting, we can give them the recordings
of these Sunday schools. And I just thought it would be
healthy for us to spend some weeks just thinking about what
the New Testament says about the church and church membership,
and then just orienting ourselves to our church, our beliefs, our
distinctives, why we do what we do, those sort of things. And so, What I have right now
is about eight topics in my mind that I want to cover over the
course of about 12 weeks or so. I don't want this to go on too
long. It could be that people out in the future listening to
this are snickering right now. As they see this as one of 25
or whatever, I don't know. But hopefully we can keep it,
you know, like our normal Sunday school units, about 12 weeks.
I think it's eight topics. Here are the kind of things I'm
thinking about that we ought to cover. I'm going to talk about
the history of our church and go through that. I'm going to
talk about the beliefs of our church and just kind of orienting
our church and the lay of the land in North American quote
unquote Christianity. Talk about the distinctives of
our church, what is it that separates our church from other churches
that may have a lot of things in common with us, but what makes
us a little bit different. I'm going to talk about some
ministry philosophy, just why we do what we do. We can talk
some about, you know, our worship services, our music, why we de-emphasize
the whole youth group scene and that kind of stuff, you know,
and our family-centered, you know, that sort of thing. So
why we do what we do ministry philosophy-wise. We'll talk about
just church government in general, not to go through the entire
book of church order like we did several years ago, but just
in general, how our church is governed with elders and stewards. what is church membership, and
then just talk through the various ministries of our church, the
school, our foreign missionaries, the other organizations that
we're a part of, or that we financially support, or prayerfully support,
that we're connected to. And so, those are some of the
topics that I've got in mind for going through over the next
12 weeks or so. And so this morning, by way of
introduction, I want to set out the context in which our church
ministers and the fundamental principle by which we operate. And so I've had us turn here
to 2 Timothy chapter three. 2 Timothy chapter three, and
I'm not going to take the time to do an extended scripture reading
here, but we'll kind of read and comment through this passage. So 2 Timothy chapter three begins
with this. This know also that in the last
days perilous times shall come. Remember that when the apostle
speaks of the last days here in verse one, He's not talking
about the apocalypse or something, right? When we talk about the
last days in the New Testament, we're just talking about all
the days since the incarnation, resurrection, and ascension of
Jesus Christ. These are the last days. And
so we know that if you want to cross-reference Hebrews chapter
one, talks to us about how God and time passed, spoke through
prophets, et cetera, et cetera. But in these last days, same
phrase, he has spoken to us by his son. So when you see the
last days in the New Testament, don't automatically think the
apocalypse, something out in the future. Right now are the
last days. We've been in the last days ever
since the ascension of the Lord Jesus. And the head of the church,
Jesus Christ, has omnisciently anticipated the times in which
we will minister. So he says there in verse one
that these days in which our church ministers, these last
days, will be punctuated by perilous times, by by times that are difficult,
that would be the sense of the word there. It will be difficult,
a difficult context in which to minister. And that is not
just true of the current day. That has always been the case
in the life of Christ's church. It has always been existing in
a context where there is this punctuation of difficulty in
the world in which they minister. He goes through and he characterizes
what these days are going to be like, and we'll get bogged
down here too much if we go through every single one of these phrases
and words that describe our context. You see, in general, verses two
and three and four, and that list of vices, that's part of
the difficulty, the culture out there that is prevalent with
law breaking and rotting more and more. There are these three
loves that will characterize the context in which we operate. Again, we're in 2 Timothy chapter
three. And these loves are, verse two, lovers of self. And certainly
we see that in our day with the self-esteem movement, lovers
of self. And then that second word, covetous,
is literally lovers of silver. So you got lovers of self and
lovers of money. And then down in verse four,
lovers of pleasure. And so just to pick out three
out of that list, these three loves out there in the world,
of self and money and pleasure. And yet, what makes it particularly
difficult to minister in this context is, verse five, that
there is a form of godliness. That there is a prevalence of
religiosity. And people think that they are
okay. And there is a general mindset
of spirituality, that things are okay. But what happens there
out in the culture in which our church ministers, this lawless
culture that has a form of godliness, what they do is they deny, they
resist the power thereof. And what is the power of true
godliness? The power is the gospel. It's the power of God unto salvation. The person of Jesus Christ, that's
what gets resisted. And you've experienced this in
conversations or in life out there in the world that, in general,
People don't mind you being religious, and you being church-going, and
you being moral, and you even being a monotheist, or you believing
in absolute truth, but once you turn the conversation to Jesus
Christ, and the exclusivity of Jesus Christ, and the true gospel,
that's when you get resistance. There's this form of godliness,
but there's a denial of the power thereof. The great head of our
church has anticipated this context in which we minister. And so
you keep reading down through there, and you come to verse
13 eventually. And he says, and so these evil
men and seducers, it's going to get worse and worse, deceiving. being deceived, there's this
snowball effect, there is this rotting of the culture in which
we are ministering. So how is a young preacher like
Timothy to respond to this? How is he to minister in these
difficult days? where there is this lawlessness,
yet this prevailing religiosity that resists the gospel and Jesus
Christ. How do you minister in a time
like that? Well, verse 14. He is to continue in the things
which he has learned and been assured of. He's not to compromise
with the culture. He's to continue down the old
paths that are laid out for him. You know, the wisdom of the day
is that desperate times call for desperate measures. And you've
got to do something new in order to win this culture. What worked
100 years ago doesn't work now. You can't do what you did then.
It's got to take something new. They've got a shorter attention
span now. You've got to do something new. They're so addicted to visual
and not audible, and so you've got to do something new now. The great head of the church
anticipated the times in which we lived. And his counsel to
his church is not to go off to fads or to new approaches. The counsel to his church is
to continue. It is to continue. Not compromise,
but a continuation. A continuation in what? Continue
in what? Well, you keep reading the sentence
there that begins in verse 14. and you eventually find that
he's to continue in verse 15, the holy scriptures. That's what he's to continue
in, the holy scriptures. Why? Because of what the end
of verse 15 says, first of all, they are able to make thee wise
unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. And
so there's one reason for continuing in the Holy Scriptures. They
are the only means of making people wise unto salvation, of
opening their eyes to the truth about themselves and about God
and about the gospel. They are, the scriptures are
the seed of the new birth, Peter says. The effectual call of God
does not just come out of thin air. It comes as the scriptures
are being ministered. It is the scriptures that have
life. The word of God is living and
powerful. It's able to discern, it's sharp. And so, continue in the scriptures
for that reason. And then verses 16 and 17, another
reason for continuing in the scriptures. It's because these
scriptures are God-breathed. They're given. by inspiration
of God, and you understand the wording there. We're not talking
about inspiration as in like a poet gets inspired or something
and has this, you know, like, oh, this eureka moment, the light
bulb comes on and he has this flurry of writing, okay? We're
talking about God breathing out the words of Scripture. All Scripture
is God-breathed, and it is profitable. And it's profitable for four
things. And each of those four words there are connected with
the last word, righteousness. So the scriptures are profitable
for doctrine in righteousness, reproof in righteousness, correction
in righteousness, and instruction in righteousness. And so there's
four words, the word doctrine there. The word doctrine refers
to the fact that there has to be this teaching of what the
standard is. Righteousness is God's standard.
So there's the doctrine, there's the teaching of what the standard
is, and then there is the reproof, and that is the convicting of
men and women of how they have fallen short of the standard,
reproving them, the conviction that comes when the scriptures
are taught. And then there is correction, and so that is the
raising up of the corrected man for for meeting the standard
again. So there's the teaching of the
standard. which then brings conviction
to the person, and then there's the lifting them back up off
the ground, again, with the scriptures, the correction, and then there
is the instruction, which is the child training, the pedagogy,
and the coaching that comes, again, through the holy scriptures. And so they are coached how to
keep the standard from now on, right? So there's the teaching,
That's what the standard is. Convicting of ways that you've
fallen short of the standard. The correcting and the raising
back up once you've been convicted of falling short. And then there's
the coaching of maintaining the standard from now on so that,
verse 17, the man of God may be perfect, complete, whole,
arriving at the goal, at the finish, right? The man of God
may be whole and complete, thoroughly furnished, throughly furnished,
equipped for every good work. So, the sovereign of our church
has omnisciently anticipated the difficult context in which
we minister. His counsel to us is not to look
for some new approach because desperate times call for desperate
measures. His counsel is to continue, to continue in the holy scriptures
because they are able to make you wise unto salvation and because
they are profitable so that the man of God may be complete and
completely equipped for right living. And so, turn back to
another passage, this time in 1 Timothy 3, and let's link up
this with what we just saw. 1 Timothy 3.15. So he's writing again to this
young pastor, Timothy. He speaks in verse 14 of hoping
to come to him shortly, but he's not sure how long it's gonna
take for him to actually see him. Right now he's in prison,
and so he's not exactly sure exactly what this is gonna look
like. And so, in case I tarry, in case it's a long time until
I get to see you, I'm writing to you so that, verse 15, you
may know how you ought to behave yourself in the house of God. And so, how to behave yourself
in the house of God, it's not really talking about your deportment. I mean, I do remember when I
was a child, a pastor, using this passage on a Sunday evening
to talk to the young people of the church, and one of his applications
was, we don't run in the sanctuary. We want to behave ourselves in
the house of God so we don't run in the sanctuary, right? And that is, that's a wonderful
application, but It's not quite what the verse is about. It's
not talking about not running in the sanctuary, don't chew
gum during the worship service. It's not talking that kind of
stuff, okay? What it's talking about, behaving in the house
of God, is what is the purpose of this church, which is called
a house of God? What is the goal and the aim? What is the foundation? What
is the principle by which we operate? So, he talks about the
church as a house. The church is a house of God.
The house of God, which is the church. So the church, these
called out people, not the building, but the people, and they're gathering
together corporately, is the called out people who belong
to the living God. And they are like God's house,
they're like a house. Okay, you can picture a house.
Okay, so the church is like a house. It's the pillar and the ground
of the truth. Now that's a difficult metaphor
to put together in your brain. So you've got a house and you've
got a pillar And the house is the pillar and the ground of
the truth. What does that mean? And you've
heard me go through this before probably. Let's start backwards
here, the word ground. The word ground here is a pretty
rare word, but the root has to do with a seat or a chair. The adjectival form of this word,
you turn the word into an adjective and you get the word steadfast. Like 1 Corinthians 15, be ye
steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the
Lord. That's the adjectival form of this word. So we're talking
about, does this make sense? The church is the place where
the truth is seated. The truth has its seat in the
church. If I told you that this week
I'm going to the seat of American government, you would assume
that I'm going to Washington D.C., and maybe even more particularly,
the Capitol building. That's where the seat of American
government is. All right, the church is where
the truth is seated. As a man walks through this world,
exposed to all of his deceptions and disillusioned and coming
away with the cynical question of Pilate, what is truth? He
ought to be able to find it here. This is the place in every community
where the truth has its settled seat. The church is the seat
of the truth. It's where the truth sits. And we always want to be a gathering
of believers that therefore makes much of the truth of the Holy
Scriptures so that it can be truly said of us that this is
the place where you come for truth. Truth. Now this is other
word here. The church is the pillar of the
truth. When you and I think of pillars,
we think of architectural design, where you have the pillar, and
the pillar holds up the weight of the roof, and you need the
pillar in order to hold the weight. But is that what Paul's saying?
So the church is holding the weight of the truth on it. Seems kind of backwards, actually.
The church is built on the truth, not the other way around. So
what does he mean by the church is the pillar of the truth? And
the way to get at this, I think, is to think about pillars in
scripture. The temple had two pillars out
front, remember them? There's these two 53 foot high
pillars out front of the temple. Were they holding up the roof?
They weren't. They were just there with nothing
on top, just a pillar. The pillars had names. One of
the pillars was named Joachim. The other one was named Boaz. The pillars were not holding
anything up. They were just there, conspicuous
to everyone who would go to the temple. They'd see these giant
pillars. Timothy is pastoring at Ephesus. Ephesus has a temple
dedicated to Diana. That temple had 127 pillars in
it, each one dedicated by some prominent person in the Roman
Empire. And the pillars did not hold the roof up. They were just
there, just ornate pillars, probably with an inscription of the person
who donated it. Because folks are folks, and that's what people
do. That's what rich people do, right? So they've got an inscription,
they've got some sort of ornateness to it, some kind of expense to
it, there's a wow factor to each of those pillars, 127 of them
in that building. Again, they didn't hold anything
up. So I think the idea here is that the church is supposed
to be displaying the truth, conspicuously displaying the truth. It is the
pillar of the truth. So what is the church's relationship
to the truth? First, that the church is the
place where the truth has its seat. And you ought to be able
to find the truth really easily every time you gather in that
church with those called out people who belong to God. And
second, the church conspicuously displays the truth. So through
the preaching of that truth, through the living out of that
truth, through the one another ministry that is following that
truth, the church conspicuously displays the truth. It's where
the truth has its seat and where it's where the truth is displayed.
That's the purpose of a church. So, our sovereign has sovereignly
anticipated our times. They are difficult times. The
church has always existed in a difficult context. These last
days have been punctuated by difficulty all along. His counsel
is to continue in the holy scriptures, and he calls us to be the place
where the truth finds its seat and where the truth is conspicuously
displayed. And so may God help us always
fulfill that purpose as a gathering of the Lord's people here in
Darlington, Maryland.
Foundations
Series RBC Membership Class
| Sermon ID | 123241645141934 |
| Duration | 26:32 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday School |
| Bible Text | 1 Timothy 3; 2 Timothy 3 |
| Language | English |
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