All right, 2 Timothy, we are
in the 4th chapter, verse number 16 says, Paul says in the Holy
Spirit's inspiration, at my first answer, no man stood with me,
but all men forsake me. I pray God that it may not be
laid to their charge. So Paul's on trial, and he's
standing before a Roman tribunal, and when that happens, you would be asked, in this case,
Paul would be asked three times to deny and reject the Lord Jesus
Christ as his only Savior. And so you would be given three
chances to change your mind. And if you don't, then you're
either gonna be, you're gonna have your head lopped off, or
you're gonna be burned at the stake, or you're gonna be skinned alive,
or you're gonna be fed to lions, And so Paul, he's heading to
martyrdom. And he says at Paul's first answer,
that's what that is, because we'll be asked a second time
and a third time. Now, I would have just loved to been there.
There's some parts in the Bible when I read and I'm like, man, I'd
love to be a fly on the wall. Now, you imagine, you imagine the
many sermons that Paul was given after his first answer. They
said, Hey, we want you to reject Jesus Christ. And you imagine
what he said to him. The Bible doesn't tell us, but
I just, in my mind, imagine, man, he must have loved him,
have it when he had the time. Just wanting to give every opportunity
for someone to hear truth. You know, Paul really got a hold
of, um, go to Colossians three. I think this verse ties in really
nice while we're here. Look at Colossians 3, watch what
it says in verse number one. If you then be risen with Christ,
that's Paul, that's us, if you're saved. Seek those things which
are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set
your affection on things above, not on things on the earth. I
bet that'd be pretty hard to do in a dungeon cell. And then
here's the verse, it says, for ye are dead. and your life is
hid with Christ in God. I really believe Paul got a hold
of a verse like this. He was able to do what we should
do, which is reckon our flesh spiritually dead. And so even
though folks forsook him, his Savior was forsaken. He was forsaken
by folks. He was ready like his Savior
came. Paul was following the example
of his Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, and he was ready to suffer
alone. Here's the question for us tonight.
Would we be ready to suffer alone if something like what's happening
to Paul befell us? But he also goes to say, watch
what he says next. Go back to the fourth chapter. Verse number 16 says that my
first answer, no man stood with me, but all men forsook me. I pray God that it may not be
laid to their charge. Watch this in verse 17. Notwithstanding,
the Lord stood with me. He had one defense attorney,
the Lord. That's the Lord. That's our Lord,
by the way, that says, hey, I am not going to leave you. I am
not going to forsake you. And you wanna talk about that
Hebrews verse that talks about being content with all things
that you have, and that's where the Lord says, I will never leave
thee nor forsake thee. That's something, that's something,
that's some contentment right there Paul's got. And then in
verse 17, not only does it say that the Lord stood with me,
but Paul writes, and strengthened me. It's amazing to me reading the
end of this chapter and hearing that Paul is the strong one.
I mean, he's the guy that's in jail. You would think that he'd
be the weak one, but he is the one that's strengthened by the
Lord. And he is the one who's praying for the weak. In other
words, the folks that forsook Paul He's praying for those weaker-willed
brethren, and he says in verse 16, look, it says, I pray, God,
that it may not be laid to their charge. Man, Lord, you know what? When their bill comes due, please
don't charge them. That's good. He is the strong
one, praise the Lord, to be a Paul. It's something when somebody
is full of the Holy Spirit and really being, I mean, we are
all full of the Holy Spirit, but to really submit to that
and be fully yielded, that's when we can say things like our
Savior said, Father, forgive them. Or like Paul said, don't
lay it to their charge. Man, when that bill comes, Lord,
don't charge them. And you think of verses like John 10, they
shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my
hand. That's some comfort, that's some strength. You think about
2 Corinthians 12, when it talks about my grace is sufficient
for thee, for my strength is made perfect in weakness. Most
gladly, therefore, will I rather glory in my infirmities that
the power of Christ may rest upon me. Now, Paul was writing
that under the Holy Spirit's inspiration, but 2 Corinthians,
Corinthians was penned at least 10 years before He's in that
jail cell writing that prison epistle that we're in now. That's Paul. That's Paul. Look at the other phrase in verse
17. It says, we'll read the entire verse. It'll be at the end. Notwithstanding,
the Lord stood with me and strengthened me that by me, the preaching
might be fully known, and that all the Gentiles might hear." He wants his preaching to be
known, and he wants the Gentiles to hear, and you gotta know that
news is traveling fast. Man, they got the Apostle Paul
in prison. You've got to know that news
is going around. You've got to know that when they are asking
him these questions, and he's standing before this Roman tribunal,
you've got to know that Paul is just giving the gospel and
just telling them about Jesus. And you know word's got to be
traveling fast. And Paul's like, hey, I'm in
jail, but the gospel's going out, and all the Gentiles are
going to hear, and it's going to go all around town. I'm right
where God wants me to be. That's good. That's good. that
all the Gentiles might hear. Anybody tells you there ain't
power in the blood, they just don't understand the power that's
in the blood. And another thing about this is, here's what no
man can take away from us. Our testimony. They can't. And Paul can give his testimony.
You and I can give our testimonies of how the Lord saved us, what
he did in our life, and nobody can take it away from us. So
that's what he's doing. And you just think about all
of the men and women who have given their lives for the cause
of Christ. And just to establish gospel truth in an area, it's
something that should keep you Keep you humble. Look at verse
18. I'm sorry, at the end of verse
17, it says, and that all the Gentiles might hear. And then
it says, and I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion. I mean, Paul's near death and
he's proclaiming that in the past, the Lord has delivered
me. And in the past, I wasn't fed the lions. And in the past,
I wasn't beheaded. And he's thanking the Lord, and
he's saying, I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion.
Cross-reference with 1 Peter 5. Keep your finger where you're
at in 2 Timothy. Go to 1 Peter 5. I want to run some cross-references.
and allow the Bible to define some things. Look at 1 Peter
5, verse number 8. Well, we're going
to come back to verse 7, so I want to save that verse. But look
at verse 8. It says, "...be sober, be vigilant,
because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about,
seeking whom he may devour." We know that verse, right? Well,
that adversary, our adversary was the same adversary
that Paul had, and the same adversary that's seeking us as a roaring
lion was seeking Paul as a roaring lion, and God didn't allow that
adversary, the devil, who was seeking as a roaring lion, God
didn't allow that roaring lion to touch Paul. He didn't allow
it. God protected him. Paul's body,
he reckoned it as dead, spiritually speaking. Pinch your flesh. Yeah,
your flesh is alive and it wants to drag you down. But spiritually
speaking, when you and I got saved, that's what we read in
Colossians. We are dead and our life is now
hid with Christ in God. Paul, he lived that way all the
time. Romans 6, how the old man is
crucified and our flesh, spiritually speaking, when you got saved,
your flesh spiritually is dead. That's why Romans 6 says, for
he that is dead, is freed from sin, that spiritual circumcision,
your soul circumcision made without hand spiritually has been separated
from your body. It's like ice cubes in an ice
cube tray. You crack the tray and boom. Well, your soul is
saved. And so when we read in Colossians
three, which we did earlier, it says for your dead, your life
is hit with Christ and God. Paul wasn't living for a dead
carcass. Most of us get in ruts. They say, man, the old man's
crucified. You know, the flesh is dead. And it's like, we know
that, but there's times when that flesh weighs you down. And,
you know, you think to yourself, why am I serving a dead carcass?
Like, why would I give any prudence to wanting to serve my flesh?
So Paul didn't serve his flesh. He reckoned it is dead. and the
Lord protected him and didn't let his adversary, that roaring
lion, take him out. Look at Hebrews, go back a book,
look at Hebrews 2. Look at Hebrews 2, verse 14. Look at Hebrews 2, 14, and the
question is this, who has the power of death? Let's find out.
For as much then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood,
he also himself likewise took part of the same manner, that
through death, that's Jesus Christ, he might destroy him, who's that? The devil, that had the power
of death. That is the devil, who has the
power of death. The devil does, according to
Hebrews 2, How did the Lord Jesus Christ defeat that power of death? He did it on the cross, dying
and then rising again, defeating death. He has conquered the grave
and we find victory in Jesus. We all know that. But the one
who had the power of death, Hebrews 2.14 tells us it's the devil. Well, the Lord protected Paul
and didn't allow that roaring lion, the devil, to take him
out before the Lord was done with them. Now, watch this Old
Testament passage before we go back to 2 Timothy. Watch this
Old Testament passage in 1 Kings. 1 Kings. 1 Kings 13. 1 Kings chapter 13. Okay, this is a chapter about...
Yeah, I'm at the right place. 1 Kings 13. So you have an unnamed
prophet. You have an unnamed man of God
who ends up disobeying God through this scenario here, through this
story. And we're not going to get into
that story because I want to tie this 2 Timothy 4 and I was
delivered out of the mouth of the lion in with this particular
verse that's found in the 13th chapter of 1 Kings. Look at verse
28. It says... Look at verse 25. And behold, men passed by and
saw the carcass cast in the way, and the lion standing by the
carcass. And they came and told it in
the city where the old prophet dwelt. When the prophet that
brought them back from the way heard thereof, he said, it is
the man of God who was disobedient unto the word of the Lord. Therefore,
the Lord hath delivered him unto the lion, This man of God was obedient
and then he wasn't obedient. And it ends up costing him his
life. And a lion devours him. He's
killed. And this lion is standing by
the carcass. And let me just say that Paul
was not a disobedient man of God. Paul was an obedient man
of God. Paul is a saved man. He's not
an Old Testament prophet. He's a saved man who has the
regenerative power of the Holy Ghost, and he has a carcass that
spiritually is reckoned dead, just like you and I. We are dead. Our flesh is dead. Now watch
what it says. Verse 26, it says in the middle,
Therefore the Lord hath delivered him unto the lion, which hath
torn him and slain him according to the word of the Lord, which
is spake unto him. And he spake to his son, saying,
Saddle me the ass. And they saddled him, and he
went and found his carcass cast in the way. And the ass and the
lion standing by the carcass, The lion had not eaten the carcass
nor torn the ass. And the prophet took up the carcass
of the man of God and laid it upon the ass and brought it back.
And the old prophet came to the city to mourn and to bury him. And he laid his carcass in his
own grave. And they mourned over him, saying,
Alas, my brother. And it came to pass after he
had buried him that he spake to his son, saying, When I am
dead, then bury me in the sepulcher where in the man of God is buried,
lay my bones. beside him, and the text goes
on. But I want you to see in verse
number 28, and he went and found his carcass cast in the way,
and it talks about the lion standing by the carcass, and the lion
had not eaten the carcass. It's that man of God. He was
killed by that lion. But now you have God controlling
that lion and that lion is just circling the carcass. He's circling
that dead carcass and he doesn't deliver it or devour it. Man,
I just think a second Timothy four, and it's like Paul, his
carcass is dead. Spiritually, you and I are our
life, we are dead, our life is hid with Christ and God. Romans
chapter 6, the old man's crucified. What does that mean? Man, your
flesh is dead. Why would you serve a carcass? It's like God had that adversary
as a roaring lion circling the carcass of Paul. His dead carcass. Yeah, he's alive, but spiritually
his flesh is dead. And he lived that way in obedience. Man, that'll help us. That'll
help us. And it's like God said, okay,
that roaring lion, yeah, he's right there. I'm going to let
him circle you. I'm going to let him circle you,
but I ain't going to let him deliver you and devour you. He
ain't touching your dead carcass. Spiritually, our flesh is dead
and we should live that way and stop serving it. Why would you
serve a dead man? We wouldn't. So go back to go
back to 2nd Timothy four. God kept Paul alive. Until. Paul was finished his
course. And I want the same for me and
I want the same for you. I want God to keep me alive and
I want Him to keep you alive until we finish the course that
He has for us. That should be our heart cry. And 2 Timothy 4, let's look at
verse 18 here. Um, it says in the Lord shall deliver
me from every evil work and will preserve me onto his heavenly
kingdom. That's the first time that phrase
heavenly kingdom shows, shows up in our Bible right there.
The prophet Isaiah refers to it as that high and lofty place
or that high and holy place where the high and lofty God and habitus
eternity. It's, It's the third heaven,
it's God's dwelling place. It's the heavenly kingdom. When
we say absent with the body to be present with the Lord, that's
where we're at. The heavenly kingdom. But I want you to look
at this in verse number 17. At the end of it, I was delivered
out of the mouth of the lion. You see that past tense? I was
delivered, see that? Now watch. And the Lord shall
deliver me from every evil work That's the present tense. And
will preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom. That's the future tense. You see that? It don't matter
if it's past. It don't matter if it's present.
It don't matter if it's future. God will deliver, preserve, keep. Nobody can pluck you out of the
Father's hand. He's gonna keep us. Now, here's what's awesome. Look at 2 Corinthians 1. How
long, I said this earlier, about how many years pass between the
book of Corinthians and then the prison epistles of 1st and
2nd Timothy? It's about 10 years. It's about
10 years. 1st and 2nd Corinthians was penned
first, 50 or 55 AD. Paul pens it under Holy Spirit's
inspiration, penned first. The prison epistles, about 65
AD, I believe that's about right. So we've got about a decade of
time that passed between the book of 1 and 2 Corinthians,
and then the book of 1 and 2 Timothy. Now, keep in your mind, remember
we just read the past, the present, and the future? Watch this in
2 Corinthians 1. And look at verse number 10,
2 Corinthians 1. Watch the exact same order that
Paul wrote 10 years earlier in 2 Corinthians 1, we'll start
in verse number 9. But we had the sentence of death
in ourselves. that we should not trust in ourselves,
but in God, which raiseth the dead. We are raised in newness
of life, brothers and sisters in Christ. Now watch verse 10.
Who delivered us from so great a death, past, and doth deliver,
present, and whom we trust that he will yet deliver us future. All in the same verse written
10 years earlier, no man could have put this book together,
folks. This is a supernatural book and Paul's hand was inspired
by God. These words are God breathed. The exact same ordering. It's almost Paul being prophetic
on Paul. He's got 2 Corinthians 1, verse
10, and you cross-reference that with 2 Timothy 4, verse 17 and
18, and he was fully trusting God who raised him from the dead
in his past, present, and future deliverance. Praise the Lord
for it. All right, so that's the doctrinal thought for the
night. Go back to 2 Timothy 4 and then get 1 Peter 5. I want to look at that 1 Peter
5, 7 verse in a minute. But first, I'd like to read 2
Timothy 4. We're on the end of verse 18. Watch what it says. to whom be glory forever and
ever, amen. Praise the Lord, he'll preserve
us. And now watch, he has nine more names that he's gonna mention.
Salute Prisca and Aquila and the household of Onesephorus,
Orestes abode at Corinth, but Trophimus have I left at Miletum
sick. Do thy diligence to come before
winter, Eubulus greeteth thee, and Pudens, and Linus, and Claudia,
and all the brethren. The Lord Jesus Christ be with
thy spirit. Grace be with you. Amen. Now, I want to read that with
1 Peter 5, verse 7. Back up at verse 6. No, back
up at verse 5. Likewise, you younger submit
yourselves unto the elder, yea, all of you be subject one to
another and be clothed with, what's the word? Humility. For God resisteth the proud and
giveth grace to the, what's the word? Humble. Humility and humble,
one verse. Look at verse six. What's the
first word? Humble yourselves therefore under
the mighty hand of God that he may exalt you in due time. Now here's the verse. casting
all your care upon Him, for He careth for you." It's amazing to me that Paul
is... How are you in a situation like
that, and then you're thinking of others? I mean, if you're
in a dungeon, if you're in a real hot mess, Are you thinking about
others? Or are you just thinking, how
in the world am I gonna get out of this? The book closes with
Paul naming nine more names because he cares about people. Christ, I can cast all my cares
upon him. And Paul's like, because of that,
I'm just gonna name some people I care about. That's spiritually
humbling when you read it. This is Paul. This is the guy
who didn't need any external motivation to go door knocking.
It's like, he's just showing up. This is the great and mighty
Apostle Paul who didn't need prodding to go all after living
for God. It's that guy. who is naming
and caring for people at the end of this book. He cared for
people. You see, to Paul, it wasn't just
about preaching. To Paul, it wasn't, I'm called
to preach. No, it was, I'm called to care. Like Christ can care for me and
I can lay all my cares upon Him. That was the heart of the apostle.
It wasn't about just bring me my cloak and my books and my
parchment. I need study time. I've got a witness to the loss.
He did all of that, but it wasn't just that. He cared for people. He cared for others. I hope that
we are the church that goes out of our way to extend
a handshake to a new brother or sister. to greet someone and
make eye contact and say, hey, it's great to have you here.
And to not be the avoidance type. Well, we're too good, or we're
too busy, or we're too this, or we're too that. Look, I understand
that there is a lot of sickness going around, and if you are
sick, it is best to stay home, get well, and I think we all
understand that. So I don't mean if you're sick
when I say this comment, I just mean if you're missing church
because you're tired, or you don't feel like getting up, or
there's a ball game on that you don't want to miss, or it's a
nice day, I can get to the lake early before all the others do. That's not caring for people. Caring for people says this,
you know what? I'm tired, I work late, and there's something I'd
rather do to satisfy my flesh. But you know what? I bet the
Lord has somebody there that needs my encouragement. I don't really like the preacher's
messages are dry and boring. Well, there might be somebody
there whose life is dry and boring and they need you to be there
to encourage them because their life is dry and boring and the
preacher's dry and boring. Maybe they need you to just be
there with a warm smile. and a handshake and a pat on
the back and a great to see you brother. That was Paul. You don't care for people until
you first care about people. And Paul's listing some names
and I think we need to learn, we're being reminded of this.
I believe we're a caring church, but I also believe all of us
need to be reminded that it's okay to be, it's okay. We have to step out of our comfort
zone. We have to be comfortable being
uncomfortable to go out of our way to show someone that we are
concerned and we care about them and Brother, God comes down,
God, the one who inhabiteth eternity, the one who is in the heavenly
place, he comes down here and he suffers and dies on a cross. You really think God benefited?
You really think the body of Christ benefited when you or
I got saved? You really think like it benefited
God? Oh, I got saved. That really benefited you, God.
No, he came down because he cares. He cares for people. He loved
the world. It's not like God benefits because
you got saved. We benefit. So we can get off
the sofa and we can come to church and we can get out of our high
and lofty place and we can go and and just show people we care. And this is why he's naming these
names. He has a heart for people. I don't want people to come to
Pilgrim. I don't want us to be the church. Well, I just go there
cause it's really nice. And it looks like the old fashioned
little house on the prairie look, you know, it just looks so nice.
And I want it to look nice. And I want it to have that, you
know, we're, we're, we're making it look like a church. Amen.
That's a good thing. And I don't want it to just be,
well, I'm just here just to hear the sermon. I'm not. I'm here for the people. I want us to be the church that
actually cares about people. I don't want it to be just, well,
we're just looking at names on a prayer list. I hope we're not
just looking at names on a prayer list. I hope we care about those
names. It shouldn't be about checking
boxes off. I know this isn't us, but I think
all of us can be reminded to continue going down the road
of caring, because it's easy to step off that road. It's easy
to change lanes, the lanes right there. There's always a lane
and an exit to get off of. Never get off of caring for people.
The Lord just cares. And so did Paul. Well, I can't
ever do that preacher. I've just been church hurt so
much. I'm glad someone was thinking that because right in this same
chapter, Paul talks about Demas hurt him. Alexander hurt him. Paul's not using that excuse. Don't use I've been church hurt
as an excuse to not care for the people that are right here
in front of us. Well, I've been hurt. And I mean,
if I say I've been church hurt, I just can't do it anymore. You
have to put up your hand and say, but preacher, I'm here.
Why am I going to take out on you what someone else did to
hurt me? Why would I then hurt you by
not caring for you? Does that make sense? Look at verse 19. Once I get there. Salute, that's a respectful and
kind greeting. We talked about that. It says
Prisca and Aquila. Prisca, that's just Priscilla,
the wife of Aquila, and they opened their home for Paul. And
then it says in the house of Onesephorus. In 2nd Timothy 1,
we read about him. It says, he oft refreshed me,
Paul says, and he was not ashamed of my chain. And it says the
household of Onesiphorus. So he's probably already went
home to be with the Lord. And Paul says, you know what?
I want his family to receive a kind greeting. Look at verse
number 20. It says, Erastus abode at Corinth,
but Trophimus have I left at Miletum sick. So you got Trophimus, this guy's
sick, he's ill. We read earlier, as we went through
this book, how Timothy suffered with infirmities, right? And
in 1 Timothy 5, remember that verse? Paul recommends medicine
for Timothy. Take a little wine for what?
Thy stomach's sake. It was a medicinal exclusion
to be used to help with his stomach. And earlier in this chapter,
in verse number 11, we see Paul is with, it says, only Luke is
with me. Paul's being waited on by Luke. He's with Luke, who's a physician.
You know what's happening at the end of this book? Those apostolic sign miracles
and wonders have left. Paul and Timothy can no longer
lay hands on someone and heal their sickness. They're leaving. They've just about left. The
apostolic age of miraculous signs, wonders, and miracles is now
coming to a close. They've ceased. Why? Why have they ceased? because it's a hearing, not a
seeing. Jews require a sign, sign wonders
and miracles, confirm that it was the word of God. Now we've
moved to, it's been confirmed. Now we move to faith cometh by
hearing and hearing by the word of God. We aren't in a seeing
mode right now. This is why those phony fake
healers and the deliverance movements and the Benny Hinn word of faith
movements, that's why all of that is false heretical teaching. It is not a seeing age, it is
a hearing age. And in Acts 28, it says the salvation
of God is sent unto the Gentiles and that they will hear it. It turned from the Jews to the
Jews first, now to the Gentiles, because they will hear it. The Jews had all the signs they
could ever see. Now it's faith cometh by hearing. God gave them everything they
could see and they didn't want to believe. So we are in a hearing,
not a seeing age. Last verse. Well, two more verses,
but verse 21, do thy diligence to come before winter. It's a
bit more dangerous traveling in the winter. When we talked
about Carpus who had Paul's coat, and Carpus ran errands for Paul,
and, well, Paul sends Timothy. Last week we talked about Paul
sends Timothy to Carpus. You go find him. He's got my
cloak. He's got the books. He's got the parchments. You
just go find him. And then, Timothy, I want you to bring those items
to me. Well, he says here, do thy diligence
to come before a winner. We don't know if those things
got to Paul before he died. Think about you being Timothy
for a minute. We're in the dead of winter right now. You make
that trip, you go get the stuff, you come back, and you're standing
in the snow with the books, the parchments, and his cloak, and
you're just standing there, and there's nobody to give them to,
because Paul already went home to be with the Lord. It doesn't tell us if he made
it back. But I do know this. Only one life will soon be fast
passed. Only what's done for Christ will
last when the door of opportunity opens. A lot of times it's there. That's the opportunity. Once
it's gone, once it's passed, you can't go back and recall
that opportunity. Is there a lost family member?
Is there a lost friend who you haven't witnessed to? You better
do it before winter hits. Is there something in your life
that just isn't right? You better get it right before
winter hits. Are you not saved this evening?
Do you just know some Bible facts? Do you just have some verses
memorized? Are you just in a Christian home?
Are you just sitting in church on a Thursday and a Sunday? You
better trust Christ. Honestly, before winter hits,
might not be another opportunity. You're not guaranteed tomorrow.
Trust Christ before winter hits. Is your character off? Does it
need some chiseling? Do you need to get some things
right and mold yourself into a good, upstanding Christian
young lady or Christian young man who has Christ-like character? You better start working on it
before winter hits. Serve God when opportunity knocks. How many times you knock on the
door when you go door knocking? once and then you're on to the
next house. You can't call back a lost opportunity. Last verse, and this will be
it for the book. The Lord Jesus Christ be with
thy spirit. Grace be with you. Amen. Our key to happiness is having the Lord Jesus Christ
with our spirit. Every single blessing in our
life can be traced right back to and is found in the person
of the Lord Jesus Christ. Grace be with you. Amen. That's how the book closes. And
that's how we'll close the last few words on this book. Grace be with you. Amen and amen.