Chapter 5
The doctrine of the royal family of God
1. Definition. The royal family is
the family of the King, Jesus Christ. As God and as deity He is a sovereign
King. As humanity, by physical birth He is a King; He is the son of David. He
is descended from the royal family — the tribe of Israel, the family of Jesse,
the son of David. As the God-Man seated at the right hand of the Father as a
result of the ascension He is spiritual royalty. There are many who are
descended from the human royalty of David, many ancestors in the human royalty
of David, but only those who are born again in the Church Age are a part of the
spiritual royalty which comes from the strategic victory which comes from the
right hand of the Father. So the royal family is the family of the King. The
family of God includes all persons in human history who have believed in Jesus
Christ. The royal family of God is made up of believers from Pentecost to the
Rapture or believers in the Church Age only.
To whom much is given much is
expected. Everything has been given to us and therefore everything is expected
from us under God’s plan. We are royal family, we have been given things that
no-one ever possessed before — spiritual blessings, temporal blessings. Our
briefing day by day in Bible class is the means by which we fulfil the
expectations of grace in the establishing of a royal family of God. The
principle is that regeneration means to be born again. While regeneration has
occurred in every dispensation it is only in the Church Age that the royal
family of God is actually formed. All believers of the Church Age are then
known as royal family.
2. The setting for the royal family
of God.
a) The first advent of
Christ occurred in the dispensation of Israel. This includes the death, burial,
resurrection, ascension and session of Jesus Christ at the right hand of the
Father.
b) Ten days after Christ
was seated at the right hand of the Father the Age of Israel was interrupted
before its conclusion and a new dispensation was started. The Age of Israel was
brought to a halt in order to insert a dispensation whose sole purpose was to
call out a royal family for Jesus Christ. So a royal family is in the process
of being called out today.
c) Jesus Christ was
royalty by birth, royalty by deity, and He became royalty by strategical
victory — session at the right hand of the Father.
d) The spiritual royalty
of Christ occurred as a result of His ascension — His death on the cross for
our salvation, followed by His physical death, followed by His resurrection,
ascension and session. All of these things occurred in order to provide a spiritual
royalty.
e) Seated at the right
hand of the Father Jesus Christ has a new title — King. That makes Him King of
all kings, a super royalty. He is Lord of all lords. Because He is King of all
kings and Lord of all lords, as a man, He is a new type of royalty, a superior
royalty, a permanent royalty, and a spiritual royalty. At this moment His title
of King of kings and Lord of lords means that even though Satan rules this
world, and even though Satan often administers through various world rulers,
the Lord Jesus Christ is superior to all of these as the God-Man and that He is
now a new type of royalty and a permanent type of royalty.
f) Therefore as the King
of kings and Lord of lords Jesus Christ must have a royal family to share His
reign. It is unthinkable that a royal family would exist with only one person
in it.
g) Therefore the Age of
Israel had to be halted in order to introduce a dispensation in which the
specific objective is to form a royal family for Jesus Christ, a royal family
forever.
3. The documentation for this royal
family. The documentation is so extensive that it covers the entire book of
Ephesians as well as Hebrews. It covers many passages of the scripture but two
areas of documentation alone pretty well cover it. Ephesians emphasises the
position of the royal family forever; Hebrews emphasises the priesthood of the
royal family forever.
4. The formation of the royal family
of God. There are three basic principles in the formation of the royal family.
The first of these is the baptism of the Spirit, the second is positional
truth, the third is some of the principles found in sanctification. The
formation of the royal family from the standpoint of its inception, i.e. the
baptism of the Holy Spirit. There are many different kinds of baptisms in the
scripture. Seven are mentioned specifically. The baptism of the Holy Spirit as
a forming principle is the unique activity of God. It occurred for the first
time with those who were adult believers beginning the new dispensation. Only
in one spot did it occur and God took Jerusalem, the place of the crucifixion,
and took a group of believers — the eleven disciples to Israel plus about 200
other people — to fulfil the prophecy of the baptism of the Holy Spirit. These
believers were taken by God the Holy Spirit, totally apart from their human
merit, and entered them into union with Christ. Immediately the royal family
went from one to roughly two hundred and something. So now the royal family is
off to a start. This took place on the day of Pentecost and at that time the
Age of Israel came to a halt. The thing that causes everyone to be royal family
is the baptism of the Holy Spirit which enters everyone into union with Jesus
Christ. Jesus Christ Himself foretold the baptism of the Holy Spirit — John
14:20; Acts 1:5. The Bible takes time to explain the mechanics of the baptism
of the Spirit — 1 Corinthians 12:13. The baptism of the Spirit occurs at
salvation — Colossians 2:12. Positional truth means that we are royal family of
God. This is also known as salvation or phase one sanctification which enters
us into the royal family of God.
5. The royal family relationship
then becomes an issue. The spiritual royalty of Jesus Christ is unique. As God
He is sovereign, as man He is Jewish royalty, but as the God-Man seated at the
right hand of the Father in His resurrection body of His humanity He is a new
type of royalty — spiritual royalty, permanent royalty, King of kings, Lord of
Lords. Jesus Christ in hypostatic union at the right hand of the Father was
also alone when he arrived there. There was no royal family. He had no royal
family at the moment of His session and so God the Father makes provision ten
days later to establish a royal family for the Lord Jesus Christ. Just as the
first Adam in the garden was alone and God provided a help meet, so the last
Adam was alone and God the Father provides a bride for the Lord Jesus as King
of kings. That bride is made up of the entire royal family, believers of the
Church Age. The Age of Israel was interrupted and the purpose of forming a
royal family then becomes obvious. There are two designations of this royal
family used in a technical sense in the Bible. The word “body” is for the royal
family on earth, the word “bride” is for the royal family in resurrection body
in heaven prepared to return with our Lord. The first term is a pre-Rapture
term, the second is a post-Rapture term. When the body of the royal family is
completed the dispensation is terminated with the Rapture of the Church, the
resurrection of the royal family, both living and dead. During the Tribulation
the bride will be getting her new dress, the removal of all human good, all
legalism, and so on. The Tribulation will continue its course, finishing the
Age of Israel, and when Christ returns we return as His bride, royal family.
Positional truth is the result of
the baptism of the Spirit. The baptism of the Spirit occurs at salvation, we
enter into union with Christ by means of the ministry of the Spirit. The
baptism of the Spirit means the Holy Spirit enters us into union with Christ;
that is called our position in Christ. The baptism of the Spirit is the
mechanics, positional truth is the result. Our position belongs to all kinds of
believer, the carnal as well as the spiritual believer, to the mature believer
and the immature believer, to the reversionist, to the believer under the
influence of evil. It belongs to all believers regardless of their category in
time, every believer is in union with Christ. This positional truth makes it
possible for us to be royal family. It never existed before the Church Age, it
will never exist after the Church Age. Positional truth, then, belongs to all believers,
it guarantees that there will be no judgment for any of us in eternity — Romans
8:1. It guarantees that we have eternal life and also explains the mechanics by
which the righteousness of God is imputed to us in this dispensation. It is the
key to election and predestination, both of which are related to positional
truth and to nothing else. It also explains why we are new creatures in Christ
Jesus and even though we are new creatures in Christ Jesus we are still very
sinful and we fail many times. Being a new creature is strictly a positional
concept, it is a synonym for the royal family. When it says, “Therefore if any
man be in Christ he is a new creature” is has no experiential connotation.
Positional truth makes us new
creatures, says 2 Corinthians 5:17. It also guarantees eternal security, it
means that nothing can ever separate us from the love of God which is in Christ
Jesus our Lord. It has all kinds of implications. But when you take the baptism
of the Holy Spirit and its results in positional truth and put it all together
you have to note certain characteristics.
a) For example, the
baptism of the Spirit and positional truth is never an experience. It is not an
emotional experience, it is not ecstatics, it is not speaking in tongues, etc.
b) It is not
progressive, you can’t improve upon your salvation, you can’t improve on what
God does; and the implications are that these people who give up everything are
improving on what God has done.
c) It is not related to
human merit, ability, or good. It is not related to getting involved in
anything by way of social action. The implications of retroactive positional
truth indicate that there is no place in the plan of God for “getting
involved.”
d) It is eternal in
nature. Once you believe in Jesus Christ the baptism of the Spirit occurs and
you will be a member of the royal family of God forever, nothing will ever
change it. You are royal family of God and there is no act on your part, no
sin, no failure, no power in this world or in heaven that could ever change
that.
e) The whole concept of
the baptism of the Spirit and positional truth that causes us to be members of
the royal family is taught by the Word of God. It is known only by the Word of
God, it is a part of divine revelation. It is obtained all at the moment of
salvation so that what you do after salvation has nothing to do with the fact
that you are royalty forever. It is obtained en tot at that moment and is one
of the 36 things at salvation and nothing is ever going to change it.
5. The royal family relationship.
The spiritual royalty of Jesus Christ is unique. As God He is sovereign, at the
point of physical birth He was royalty because He was related to David, but as
the God-Man seated at the right hand of the Father He is a new type of royalty.
In eternity past Jesus Christ as sovereign God was royalty. At the moment of
the virgin birth He was human royalty — the son of David. The Son of God and
the son of David is a double royalty system. He went to the cross, was resurrected,
ascended, seated at the right hand of the Father, and there is where He had the
unique royalty as spiritual royalty. But He was alone and that is where we come
in. The Age of Israel was halted, the Church Age was begun so that a royal
family of God might be formed. This is the royal family of God concept. Jesus
Christ in hypostatic union at the right hand of the Father is alone, there is
no royal family with Him at the moment He was seated at the right hand, and
therefore the Church Age was begun with the baptism of the Spirit and from that
point on the royal family is being formed. We are a part of the formation of
that royal family.
6. The escutcheon or coat of arms of
the royal family. Inasmuch as the royal family lives in the holy of holies [the
royal palace] forever God the Holy Spirit sets up an escutcheon for us. He
indwells the body of every believer — 1 Corinthians 6:19,20. Never before in
human history has God the Holy Spirit made His residence in the body of any
believer. This is the escutcheon or the coat of arms of the royal family of
God. And again, we must distinguish between the indwelling of the Spirit and
the filling of the Spirit. They are different concepts. The scripture never
commands indwelling but the scripture does command the filling of the Spirit.
The filling of the Holy Spirit means the Holy Spirit controls the soul. When
the believer is out of fellowship we grieve the Holy Spirit, we quench the Holy
Spirit; He doesn’t control the soul. But He is always in the body. The coat of
arms will not be removed because you and I are royal family forever. Once royal
family, always royal family; doctrine of eternal security, you cannot lose your
royalty. It is the work of God and the work of God is permanent, it is never
dependent upon us.
7. The security of the royal family.
The 36 things accomplished at the point of salvation provide perfect security
for every member of the royal family. God is perfect; His plan is perfect. That
is the basis of our security. The perfection of God’s grace plan is seen in the
fact that there is nothing man can do to gain salvation, there is nothing man
can do to lose salvation. Positional sanctification and the sealing of the Holy
Spirit are the testimony to this principle. God the Holy Spirit not only
indwells us but He seals us to the day of redemption — receiving a resurrection
body.
8. The royal family in time — phase
two.
a) The objective of the
royal family in time is to follow the colours to the high ground of the
super-grace life, establishing a command post of Bible doctrine resident in the
soul. Or, if you prefer, it is to grow in grace until you reach spiritual
maturity.
b) The believer must
move to maturity through the daily function of GAP. This is the tactical
victory of the angelic conflict and it is achieved not by works or even
Christian service, it is achieved by cognisance. We must have maximum doctrine
in the soul.
c) God is glorified when
he can provide each believer his paragraph SG2. This is where He
pours into the cup. The categories are three: i) the spiritual blessings of
occupation with Christ, sharing God’s happiness, the inner residency of
doctrine to meet every exigency in life, capacity for life, for love, for
happiness, for blessing; ii) temporal blessings — promotion, success, wealth,
prosperity of every kind, leadership dynamics; iii) dying blessing. These are
all a part of paragraph SG2 and every believer who is consistent in
taking in the Word of God eventually reaches the point of where he reaches the
high ground and God provides these things.
9. The royal family of God in
eternity is also an important principle. After the Rapture every member of the
royal family of God will possess a resurrection body exactly like that of
Christ. This resurrection body will be minus the old sin nature, minus human
good, minus the lake of fire or any condemnation. The royal family will return
with Christ and share in His coronation, His millennial reign, as well as His
eternal rule. Those members of the royal family who reach maturity through the
daily function of GAP will have great rewards and decorations through all
eternity. There is a wide variation among believers in eternity. While all have
a resurrection body that is where all common things stop. Some will be highly decorated
and blessed to a greater intensity than those who failed in time. There is a
vast difference in rewards.
The outline of chapter five is very
simple:
Verses 1-7 — royal family
relationships
Verses 8-16 — royal family
responsibility.
Verses 17-25 — royal family
authority.
In royal family relationships, which
is the first paragraph, we not in verses 1 and 2 that relationship is among
varying age groups. Most people seek those of their own age for any kind of
social life, relaxation, or fellowship of any kind. It is only in the royal
family where fellowship can actually exist between people of wide age
variations and people of vastly different personalities. It does not exist
anywhere else.
Principles
1. It is inevitable that every local
congregation of believers will be composed of varying age groups of both sexes.
2. Variation is personality,
variation in activity of life, and variation in age could lead to personality
conflicts. These conflicts would distract from the consistent function of GAP
which is the major factor of the local church.
3. Consequently certain procedures
are set up by the scripture to anticipate these problems.
4. General concepts are found in
other passages dealing with academic discipline, recognition of then pastor’s
authority, loving the brethren and other functions of the royal priesthood when
gathered together or assembled.
5. In this context reference is made
to age variation.
6. Male and female members of the
royal family of God are handled separately in this context.
7. In anticipation of verse 1
dealing with male variations notice the parallelisms that are set up as
guidelines . In verse 2 in the
variations of age between women notice that guidelines are set up which are
familiar — father, brother; mother, sister.
Verse 1 — “Rebuke not” is the aorist
active subjunctive from e)piplhssw. The word means to punch, to
rebuke, to reprove, to reprimand. It means to reprimand here — “Do not
reprimand.” Sons do not reprimand their fathers. The aorist tense is a
constative aorist, it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. The
active voice: this is a general concept for members of the congregation. The
subjunctive mood is the subjunctive of prohibition with the negative mh. An elder is not a pastor here. The word is presbuteroj but it is non-technical presbuteroj. It refers to anyone who is older than you are.
“but entreat” — the adversative
conjunction a)lla which sets up a contrast
between a younger person and an older person, plus the present active
imperative of the verb parakalew which means here to appeal.
The present tense is a customary present which denotes what should habitually
occur when a younger man is in some kind of a conflict with an older man. There
should be some deference with regard to age where certain little problems will
arise. The active voice: the young person is free from blind arrogance and so
he easily produces the action of the verb. The imperative mood is a command to
younger people, and a command to youthful pastors.
“as a father” — the adverb o(j is used as a conjunction of comparison to set up a
standard, plus pathr which is correctly
translated “father.”
“Do not reprimand an older man [in a
congregation], but appeal to him as a father.” Here is a principle of respect
for age. Humility and grace orientation provide the younger set with
objectivity toward the older members of the congregation.
Principles
1. The possession of authority
should never be abused.
2. Thoughtfulness and courtesy
toward older men keep them concentrating on Bible teaching in the critical
sunset years of their life.
3. Young people full of ambition and
arrogance often distort their own importance into a system of bullying and
abusing older people in the congregation.
4. Unless the older man is just a
total ass he is entitled to a certain amount of respect and veneration because
of his advancing years.
“and the younger men” — the
accusative masculine plural from newteroj. It is the comparative of neoj, meaning young or youthful, and so this should be
translated “younger men.”
“as brethren” — the accusative
plural of a)delfoj, used here for members of
the family. This means in the presence of authority, and you are in the
presence of authority when you come to church. Therefore you treat men who are
your contemporaries as you would treat men in your own home when the parents
are present. In other words, everyone has a right to their privacy, everyone
has a right to be here without someone making fun of them, someone ridiculing
them, someone making life miserable for them.
This emphasises the importance of
several things. First, as far as Timothy is concerned, the importance of a
young pastor establishing his authority by consistent Bible teaching rather
than by being a rank-happy martinet. This also provides the emphasis on grace
since God has provided the authority of the pastor-teacher. No pastor ever
earns or deserves the authority given to him by God in grace, therefore he is
to use the authority in a grace manner. Therefore since the authority of a
pastor is the only authority in the devil’s world it should be guarded by grace
function rather than by taking ego trips and being carried away by one’s own
self-importance. In the case of one’s own contemporaries in youthful vigour in
the congregation, if you have avoided blind arrogance and have listened to
Bible teaching then you are going to respect the privacy and individuality of
the other members of the royal family present in such a way as not to interfere
with their life or in any way cause them harm or concern.
Translation: “Do not reprimand and
older man [in the congregation], but appeal to him as a father; younger men as
brothers.”
Verse 2 — “The elder women” is
really “the older women.” It is the accusative feminine plural of presbuteroj and it refers to the fact that women also get old.
How should the older women in the congregation be treated? Here again we set up
standards to make it clear that this is over and above loving the brethren.
Loving the brethren doesn’t mean to even pay any attention to them, it just
means that you are free from any mental attitude sins toward them.
“as mothers” is o(j denoting a comparison, setting up a parallel
standard to help us out; plus mhter which means “mother.”
So what is the real suggestion here?
Mothers should always be treated with respect by their children. Whether they
are good mothers or bad mothers is totally inconsequential.
“the younger as sisters” — the
accusative plural feminine from newteroj is the comparative of neoj which means “youth,” and in the feminine gender it
means “the younger ladies” or “the younger women”; “as sisters” means to treat
them with respect.
The passage says so far, “Older
women as mothers; younger women as sisters.” Notice that we have the absence of
the definite article emphasising the quality of the royal family in the eyes of
God. It must be remembered, then, that what this is saying by the absence of
the definite article in front of “older” and “younger” is calling attention to
quality, and whatever you think of older ladies or younger ladies in the
congregation God says they are the highest quality in His eyes. Therefore you
treat ladies in the congregation through the eyes of God, not through your own
judgment. God views each lady in the congregation as being of supreme value.
You treat them the same way, they are valuable to God. If they are valuable to
God then you are to show them the same deference, that is what it is all about.
Remember that it is the divine viewpoint that counts in everything. This
principle of doctrine must be kept in mind for true royal family sensitivity.
It is being sensitive to the divine viewpoint. It is not only looking at life
from the divine viewpoint but operating from that basis.
The final phrase has to do with
women; men toward women: “with all purity” is e)n
plus the instrumental singular of paj plus the instrumental
singular of a)gneia.
Paj is the
word “all” ; a)gneia is used primarily for purity
of mind. Your attitude should be purity of mind. This often causes people to
stumble a bit because they don’t really understand what purity of mind is.
Purity of mind is integrity and honour in the soul of a man that gives him
enough poise to be a gentleman under every circumstance of life where the
ladies are concerned. Ladies can be obnoxious, ladies are often obnoxious, but
it takes a lot of character, poise, honour and integrity to maintain a calm
relaxed attitude toward ladies when they get that way. In the Attic Greek this
noun a)gneia always refers to a state of
purity. But we are dealing with the Koine Greek where it came to mean purity of
mind in the sense of integrity of the individual’s soul, based on Bible
doctrine resident. Actually in the Koine Greek there are two words for purity.
We also have kaqaroj which is used for purity of
life; a)gneia is used for purity of soul
in the sense of integrity of soul, honour of soul. Kaqaroj can apply to believers or unbelievers, and often does, but a)gneia applies to believers only. It is Bible doctrine in
the soul that produces the integrity, the attitude.
Translation: “Older women as
mothers; younger women as sisters, with all purity [integrity].”
This is not only a generalisation
for the congregation but it has to do with Timothy too. These two verses have
another application, they emphasises the importance of mutual respect between a
pastor and his congregation as well as congregation and congregation.
Principles
1. Mutual respect is not based on
social life, sexual life, legalistic bullying, or austere fanatical leadership.
Mutual respect between a pastor and his congregation is based upon the
consistent function if GAP.
2. Mutual respect is centred in the
most important function of the royal priesthood, the daily assembly of the
church for the purpose of transferring Bible doctrine from the printed page of
the canon to the right lobe of the Church Age believer.
3. The pastor respects the believers
who are positive toward doctrine, those who consistently show up for the intake
of the Word and who demonstrate that academic discipline that indicates inner
positive volition.
4. The congregation respects the
pastor who through diligent study presents Bible doctrine which nourishes the
soul and produces the spiritual growth necessary to glorify God in time.
5. Therefore mutual respect is
centered in the communication and reception of the Word of God.
6. No church program, no
effervescent pastor or personality, no system of gimmicks, no display of
emotion, will ever replace the primary system of worship in the royal family of
God. The primary system of worship is the function of GAP. Remove expository
Bible teaching from the local church and the local church has no excuse for
existence. It becomes a hollow shell of religionism.
7. Insert expository Bible teaching
into the local church and the church becomes the basis for both personal and
national blessing. It becomes the basis for national blessing without
interfering in national government.
8. Therefore, as goes the function
of GAP so goes the historical trend in any generation. The mutual respect
portrayed in these two verses has an application to the pastor, his
communication of doctrine, the congregation, and their response to doctrine.
The doctrine of old age
1. Definition. Old is a term of time,
it connotes having exited a long time, having advanced far in years and having
lost the vigour of youth. The age of sixty is the line of demarcation as a
general principle — 1 Timothy 5:9.
2. Old people are to be respected —
Leviticus 19:32; Proverbs 23:22; 1 Timothy 5:1,2. There is one category who
will never respect older people: invading armies. That is why the military must
always exist to keep them out. Invading armies destroy older people —
Deuteronomy 28:50; 2 Chronicles 36:17.
3. The problems of old age. a) Old
age is a time of being unteachable (generally, though there are exceptions) —
Ecclesiastes 4:15; b) Old people are also helpless — John 21:18; c) Old people
are more vulnerable to disease — 1 Kings 15:23; d) Old people become security
conscious — Psalm 71:9.
4. Divine discipline makes people
old before their time — Psalm 6:7; 32:3.
5. However doctrine learned in youth
is profitable in old age — Proverbs 22:6; Psalm 71:17,18.
6. The blessings of old age. These
blessings are primarily to the super-grace believer. The believer who has
followed the colours to high ground of maturity and has established a command
post in the soul not only has dying grace when dying comes but he has a
marvellous and wonderful old age. Therefore there are many blessings set up for
him. For example, old people join all categories of super-grace believers in
praising the Lord and occupation with Christ. Old people with maximum doctrine
have fantastic capacity to enjoy the Lord in their sunset years — Psalm 148:12-14.
Old people in super-grace status have great security and blessing from that
super-grace status — Psalm 37:25. Old people in super-grace status also have
honour — Proverbs 17:6. Grandchildren are the crown of old men and the glory of
the sons of their fathers — Proverbs 20:29. Old men in super-grace have
blessing in dying — Job 42:17, “full of days” means full of blessing; 1
Chronicles 23:1; 29:28. Old age is used as an analogy for blessing in Isaiah
46:4.
7. Old age is blessed in the
Millennium — Isaiah 65:20; Joel 2:28; Zechariah 8:4.
8. Those in authority have been
ruined by ignoring the advice of older people — 1 Kings 12:6-8,13.
9. Standards for old people in the
royal family are found in many passages. E.g. Titus 2:2,3.
In verses 3-6 we have relationship
with widows in the local church.
Verse 3 — “Honour” is the present
active imperative of the verb timaw. The present tense is the
present tense of duration, it has the connotation of linear aktionsart, and it
means a continuous function throughout the Church Age. The active voice: the
royal family in the local church produces the action of the verb. The specific
reference to authority in the local church, like Timothy as pastor-guardian, is
very much in view. It is not just Timothy but the entire that fulfils this
function. The imperative mood is a command.
“widows” — the accusative plural of
direct object from the noun xhra. There is a place for
honouring of one of the more helpless categories in the human race.
“that” — the accusative plural of
the definite article used as a relative pronoun. The antecedent to the pronoun
is the word “widows” or xhra. So we now change the word
“that” to “who.” “Honour widows who.”
“are” is the present active
indicative of e)imi, the state of being verb.
The word is not actually found in the text but it definitely is implied. The
adverb o)ntwj demands the existence of
the verb to be. It means “really.” And then we have the word “widows” again.
Translation: “Honour widows who are
really widows.”
The adverb implies that all widows
are not widows. Some women are divorced and not really widows. As will be
pointed out in verse 6 these women are troublemakers. The verb timaw means more than just to honour in this passage, it
means also to treat graciously as well as to honour. It also demands charity
from the “shepherding committee” under certain conditions. At the time of
writing widows were often destitute and helpless because of the persecution to
the early church. So in the following verses Paul categorises those who can
legitimately claim support and those who cannot. Every local church should have
what could be called a charity fund.
The doctrine of widows
1. Definition. A widow is a woman
who has lost her husband by death. A widow is also a woman who has legitimately
divorced her husband under one of four kinds. A widow is also someone who has
divorced her husband under no legitimate count. But a widow is a woman who has
had at least one husband. She is then the female survivor of a marriage. In our
context she represents a very helpless situation on the one hand and a very
dangerous situation on the other.
2. The principles of protection of
the helpless apply to widows and children — Exodus 22:22. God Himself protects
widows and orphans in the helpless category — Psalm 68:5,6; 146:9. God punishes
those who attack or abuse the helpless — Psalm 94:6-12. Divine judgment is
pronounced on those who bully and abuse the helpless — Malachi 3:5.
3. The law of the levirate marriage.
a) It was considered a
tragedy in Israel for a man to die without an heir.
b) It was desirable to
perpetuate the name of everyone in Israel and avoid the inheritance
transferring to another family.
c) Therefore a law. The
law is derived from the Latin word levir
which means the dead man’s brother or the husband’s brother.
d) It was the custom
when a Jew died without male issue or male heir that his nearest relative,
generally his brother, should marry his widow and continue the family of the
deceased man so that every family in Israel would be perpetuated.
e) The firstborn son of
the marriage between the deceased man’s brother and his widow would be the
man’s heir to perpetuate his line.
f) Therefore the family
name is perpetuated through this stated law which is found in some detail in
Deuteronomy 25:5-10.
g) A pre-Mosaic law
illustration. The levirate marriage actually occurred before the law was stated
— Genesis 38:6-11. This same levirate law of marriage was used by the Sadducees
to attempt to discredit the Lord Jesus Christ in Matthew 22:23-33. The
Sadducees did not believe in resurrection so they used the levirate law to try
to trip up our Lord regarding resurrection.
4. Widows are used in the
condemnation of the Pharisees. The Pharisees who were highly religious and full
of all kinds of pious activity had abused the most helpless class, the widows.
So: Matthew 23:14. The same principle is found in Mark 12:40 and Luke 20:47.
5. Widows and the origin of deacons.
The origin of deacons in the local church came out of a problem regarding
widows — Acts 6:1-6.
6. The apostle Paul advises widows
to remain unmarried — 1 Corinthians 7:8,9.
7. Paul indicates widows qualified
for support in the local church — 1 Timothy 5:3-16.
Verse 4 — “But if” is e)i de. These are two conjunctive particles. The first one,
e)i, introduces a first class
condition. The second, de, emphasises a contrast
between widows in the local church who are honoured and supported by the
charity list, and those who are exceptions because they are troublemakers, and
so on.
“any widow” — an enclitic indefinite
pronoun tij, it is used to represent a
specific category of widows who are not to be supported. They are instead
troublemakers. With this we have the nominative singular again of xhra for widows, and the two together means “if any
widow by category.”
“have” is the present active
indicative of e)xw and should be translated
“has.” The present tense is a customary present to denote what ordinarily
occurs. The active voice: a certain category of widows produce the action of
the verb, namely those with children or grandchildren in this particular verse.
The indicative mood indicates the first class condition.
“children” — the accusative plural
direct object of teknon; “nephews” is an incorrect
translation. It is the accusative plural direct object from e)kgonaj and it means “grandchildren.”
“let them learn” — present active
imperative third person plural of monqanw.
Monqanw
means to learn by practice or experience, to learn from someone as a teacher,
and sometimes just to learn by hard knocks. Here it means to learn by practice
from someone who passes on this great tradition. The present tense is a
customary present from what may reasonably be expected to occur under the
circumstances. A woman is a widow, she is helpless, she is over sixty, she has
no means of support; her children or grandchildren should provide that for her.
The active voice: the children or grandchildren learn from the experience of
supporting the widowed mother or grandmother — a very wonderful principle. The
imperative mood: this is a command, so this particular category is not to be
enrolled on the charity list of the local church.
“first” is an adverb, prwton. It is used three ways in the Greek. It is used of
time, of sequence, and of degree. Degree is the meaning here. Therefore it
should be translated, “above all.”
“to shew piety” — present active
infinitive of e)usebew, the verb for godliness.
There is the balance of residency again. First of all, the body is always
indwelt by the Holy Spirit, this is a sign of royal family. The Holy Spirit
does not indwell the soul, only the body. The relationship to the soul is
called the filling of the Holy Spirit. The first function is to assimilate
Bible doctrine. All believers start out minus doctrine, so there is no balance.
But when this minus becomes a plus you have balance of residency. To show piety
means devoutness, but it means because one is occupied with Christ he is
willing to assume responsibility where even establishment demands
responsibility. In other words, the believer who has reached spiritual maturity
assumes all of his obligations and responsibilities, whether it is the fact
that his word is his bond or whether it is the fact that someone in his family
is helpless and needs help, he assumes responsibility for his own. It can be
translated, “let them learn above all to assume responsibility [or to show
respect].” The present tense of duration or the retroactive progressive present
denotes something begun in the past and continues into the present time. This
is something that all super-grace believers do, they take responsibility
wherever they have to no matter what the conditions. The active voice: the
children and grandchildren of the widows actually produce the action here. The
infinitive is an infinitive of result. However, there are three categories of
infinitive of result. There is the infinitive of actual result, there is the
infinitive of conceived result [assuming as a consequence], there is the infinitive
of intended result which fulfils a deliberate aim. We have here number three,
this is an intended result. It also blends purpose and result. And since this
is the protasis of a first class condition it is fulfilled.
“at home” means “to their own
family,” literally — ton
i)dion o)ikon.
“and to requite” is the present
active infinitive of a)podidomi.
A)podidomi
means to give back, to recompense, to give out. It has the connotation here of
charity. It has with it the accusative plural from a)moibh which means remuneration, monetary support. Put the infinitive and the
noun together and you have, “and to provide monetary support.”
“to their parents” — progonoj which means both parents or grandparents. This is a
dative of indirect object which indicates the ones in whose interest the action
of charity or remuneration is performed.
Then we have an explanatory word,
the conjunctive particle gar is used to explain why all
of this.
“that” is the nominative neuter
singular from the demonstrative pronoun o(utoj
and it should be “this deed [of remuneration].” The demonstrative pronoun
always emphasises something near in the context, and that something near in the
context is providing support for a widowed mother or widowed grandmother. It
demonstrates the respect for parents or grandparents, mother or grandmother who
is widowed. So the demonstrative pronoun places a tremendous emphasis on
providing charity or support for those in your own family who are helpless.
“is” — present active indicative of e)imi, “keeps on being.” The word “good” is not found in
the original MSS, the word “acceptable” is — predicate nominative, neuter
singular from a)podektoj, and it means to be
pleasing.
“before God” is literally, “in the
sight of God,” the improper preposition e)nwpion plus the genitive of qeoj.
The principle is quite obvious. God
is pleased with children or grandchildren who support that widow. Here is a
place where doctrine and establishment actually meet. This shows that the
welfare state is totally rejected by the Word of God. Charity is acceptable but
the welfare state is completely and totally out and, in effect, evil. It
destroys the population, it destroys the mortal fibre or the character and the
integrity of the population of a national entity. Welfare states either produce
slaves or degenerate people.
It is both evil and sinful for the
believer to neglect destitute members of his own family. The Bible always
rejects socialism. Socialism inevitably leads to the intrusion upon the privacy
of the national entity and therefore destroys its freedom.
Translation: “But if any widow has
children or grandchildren, let them learn above all to show respect to their
own family, and to provide monetary support: for this deed [function] is
pleasing in the sight of God.”
Summary
1. While not apparent on the surface
this verse has a dynamic impact on the field of Bible doctrine.
2. Not only does this verse
recognise the principle of divine establishment (laws of establishment from
God) but it emphasises the importance of charity as originating not even in the
church. Charity originates in the family. Divine Institution #3 is the origin
of true charity.
Charity spreads to other places.
Charity and welfare are not the same. Welfare stems from socialism; charity
stems from truly helping the helpless. There is never anything wrong with
helping the helpless but someone who can get out and work for five cents an
hour is not helpless.
3. The responsibility for the
members of one’s own family providing charity is a principle of Christian
doctrine as well as a principle of divine establishment.
4. Where the widow has no surviving
family she becomes the responsibility of the local church — that is, the
believing widow. If not a believer then she becomes a legitimate ward of the
state, she is truly a helpless person. Remember in Israel every third year they
took up an additional tithe as a tax for the poor of the land, so that is a
bona fide function.
5. This is bona fide charity in
contrast to socialism or the welfare state.
6. There are three areas of
responsibility in charity. a) The immediate family; b) The local church for
believers in its local church; c) The state government for truly helpless
people.
7. This principle is clearly
understood by certain ethnic groups, such as the Jews, the Japanese.
8. This passage deals only with the
responsibility of the family in charity.
.Verse 5 — “Now she that is a widow
indeed.” The adversative use of the post positive conjunctive particle de
should be translated “But.” This is to indicate a contrast. Then we have a word
that is very deceptive, it is actually an adverb, o)ntwj.
It looks like a participle but it is actually an adverb based on present active
participle of e)imi, and it should be
translated “really.” Then there is a definite article used as a relative
pronoun, and finally the nominative singular of the word xhra for “widow.”
“But the one who is really a widow.”
“and desolate” — the ascensive use
of the conjunction kai and it is always translated
“even.” The perfect passive participle of the verb memow
is the word for “desolate,” but “even the one who has been left alone” is what
it really means. The perfect tense is an intensive perfect which emphasises the
results of the action in that here is a real widow past her peak who has no one
to support her, she has really been left desolate. The passive voice: through
no fault of her own the widow receives the action of the verb which is
aloneness. The participle is circumstantial.
“trusteth” — the perfect active
indicative of verb e)lpizw which is this particular
tense means to have confidence. The word generally means to hope but in the
perfect tense it means to have very strong confidence. Again, it is an
intensive perfect indicating the fact that her confidence in doctrine is more
real than the adversity of her aloneness. The active voice: the widow in
super-grace status produces the action of the verb from doctrine resident in
her soul. She demonstrates a strong faith-rest.
“in God” is a prepositional phrase, e)pi plus the accusative of qeoj.
“and continueth” — she occupied with
a great ministry of prayer. One of the things that is so dynamic in the life of
many older people is their prayer ministry. We have proj menw in the present active indicative meaning to persist. The present tense
is the present tense of duration, it that it started in the past and has
continued right up to the present time. It has strong linear aktionsart. The
super-grace widow cut off from the mainstream of life actually produces the
action of the verb. The declarative indicative mood is reality for absolute
reality in the dynamics of her prayer life.
“in supplications and prayers” —
both of these words are locative plurals indicating the sphere of her
effectiveness. The first one is dehsij which is a prayer for her
own personal needs. It means that she legitimately has the right to bombard the
throne of grace on behalf of whatever needs she has at the moment. The rest of
it is strictly intercessory — proseuxh.
Translation: “But the one who is
really a widow, even the one who has been left alone, has confidence in God,
and persists in petitions and intercessions night and day.”
Principles
1. The widow represents those
believers who have matured spiritually and at the same time have been cut off
from the normal social life and normal function of life, out of the mainstream
of life.
2. However, being a super-grace
believer she is occupied with Christ, she has maximum doctrine resident in the
soul and is using it with maximum effectiveness.
3. It becomes obvious that when a
person is in this state of maturity she does not depend upon people or things
or circumstances for her happiness.
4. She has passed the point of
useless lust for life and things but she has not passed the point of capacity
for life or capacity for happiness; she has both.
5. Such people as the widow here are
neither to be pitied nor deprecated.
6. They are not the subjects for
condolence but congratulation.
7. Their priestly life is occupied
with persistent, effective, dynamic prayer.
8. Her service in the royal
priesthood is maximum, her recognition by others minimum. Which all goes to
point out that recognition by others doesn’t mean a thing. It is what God
thinks that counts.
9. But these widows are totally
content. They have won the greatest victory of old age. God is the total source
of their blessing and no person on planet earth can contribute an iota to their
happiness.
10. Therefore they have reached old
age and helplessness without being obnoxious. They have avoided all the
problems of old age.
What are some of the problems of old
age — especially if you fail to take in doctrine?
1. No capacity for life. Old people
minus doctrine lose the power of thinking and concentration. They have a
tendency to doze and dream and become vegetables.
2. Old people are disoriented to
life, they have no capacity for love, for blessing, for happiness or grace;
they seem to have passed all these things and become indifferent to them.
3. They have intensification of
mental attitude sins with emphasis on vindictiveness and implacability.
4. They have a lack of a sense of
security, they are unstable and poorly motivated.
5. In old age one of the problems is
thoughtlessness, selfishness in demanding attention.
6. Old age is a time of being
critical and unteachable.
7. Old people are defeated by time,
become bored, and in some cases even troublemakers.
— but not this
widow.
Verse 6 — we have the post positive
conjunction de again, used as an adversative
conjunction to set up a contrast between this widow qualified for financial
help from the local church and one who is not qualified for help from the local
church.
“she that liveth in pleasure” —
present active participle from spatalaw. The word means to live
voluptuously, to live riotously, to live in indulgence. With it is the definite
article used as a feminine pronoun, and it should be translated, “But the widow
who constantly indulges is sensual or wanton pleasure.” The participle is
circumstantial. The active voice refers to any widow who spends her time in
sensual, sexual pleasures to the exclusion of everything else. This is a
retroactive progressive present, it denotes what has begun in the past and has
continued into this point of old age.
“is dead” — the perfect active
indicative of the verb qneskw, used here for that
category known as reversionistic death, the believer under the influence of
evil.
The doctrine of the classification of death
1. Spiritual death, the first death
we experience. We experience it when we are born. Spiritual death is no
fellowship with God in time. It means no relationship with God in time because
we are born with an old sin nature, born with the imputation of Adam’s sin.
Spiritual death is the original penalty of sin — Genesis 2:17. Cf. Ephesians
2:1,5; Romans 5:12.
2. Physical death which is
separation of the soul from the body — Matthew 8:22, Let those who are
spiritually dead bury the ones who are physically dead. Cf. Philippians
1:20,21.
3. The second death is the
perpetuation of spiritual death into eternity. It is eternal separation from
God in the lake of fire. The second death is for unbelievers only in the human
race, plus fallen angels in the angelic sphere — Hebrews 9:27. The act of judgment
is the second death. Cf. Revelation 20:12-15. The second death perpetuates
spiritual death.
4. Positional death. Through the
baptism of the Holy Spirit the Church Age believer or the royal family of God
is identified with Christ in His death. This is known also as retroactive
positional truth, it is the subject of Romans chapter 6 and it is mentioned
briefly in Colossians 2:12. Cf. Colossians 3:3.
5. Reversionistic death. This is the
believer in reversionism under the influence of evil — James 2:26; Ephesians
5:14; Revelation 3:1.
6. Carnal death. This is the
believer out of fellowship through sin or being in the status of carnality, but
it is not the same as reversionistic death even as evil and sin are not the
same. It must be distinguished, then, from operational death which is the
believer in reversionism. Romans 8:6,13; James 1:15. The prodigal son is an
illustration of this. he was a son when he started, he was a son when it was
all over. There never was a time when he wasn’t a son and there never wasn’t a
time when his father wasn’t his father. But when he recovered from his
carnality the father said in Luke 15:24, “For this son of mine was dead, he has
now come to life again; he was lost and has been found.” Carnal death is in
view here.
7. Sexual death which is the
inability to copulate — Romans 4:17-21 is the illustration of this.
“is dead” — the perfect tense is a
consummative perfect, it recognises the completed action and the existing
results but emphasises the process which was consummated. In other words, she
has gone through a process of being out of fellowship, carnality through
reversionism, until she is totally under the influence of evil. This widow is
saved, she is negative toward doctrine, she is under the influence of evil, she
is under reversionistic death. The active voice: the reversionistic widow
produces the action of the verb in the function of reverse process
reversionism. The indicative mood is declarative for the reality that certain
widows become reversionistic in their frustration of widowhood and eventually
come under the tremendous influence of evil.
“while she lives” — present active
participle of the verb zaw. Zaw is used for the function of
life. The descriptive present tense indicates what is now going on. It presents
to the mind a picture of an event in the process. The woman so involved is in
wanton pleasure. In other words, she has totally given herself up to a
completely selfish idea that excludes doctrine and actually destroys her life
so that she is dead while she is living. The active voice: the reversionistic
widow produces the action of the verb. The participle is a temporal one.
Translation: “But the widow who
constantly indulges in wanton pleasure has died while she is still alive.”
Summary
1. This not only applies to the
specific case in context of a widow but this also applies in other areas of the
spiritual life which runs parallel to this. Believers who live for pleasure and
self-gratification are in effect the living dead.
2. In this passage the category is
widow, but the principle applies to all categories of the royal family of God
who become involved in reversionism.
3. Reversionism involves a frantic
search for happiness and coupled with the influence of evil results in the
Christian zombie or the living dead believer.
4. Without Bible doctrine in the
soul, the believer has no capacity for life, no capacity for love, no capacity
for happiness or prosperity. So no capacity to appreciate God, no capacity for
grace and all the other capacities produces a zombie.
5. The sooner that life becomes
occupation with Christ the better life is. Occupation with Christ is maximum
category #1 love, the experience of the super-grace believer.
6. Occupation with Christ is the
status of the mature believer, the royal family with maximum doctrine resident
in the soul.
7. Obviously the Christian zombie
has both rejected and neglected the principle of the daily function of GAP. 8.
We might call this, as stated in this verse, zombie reversionism.
9. Zombie reversionism is a believer
so glutted with pleasure in the status of reversionism, and so under the
influence of evil, that any pleasure in life or all accumulated pleasure in
life leaves him totally dissatisfied.
10. To be minus Bible doctrine and
its accompanying capacities is to be the living dead, waiting under divine
discipline for the inevitable maximum discipline of the sin unto death. So the
living dead are waiting to die miserably.
This brings us in verse 7 to the
pastor’s responsibility in the field of human relationships.
Verse 7 — “And these things” is the
adjunctive use of the word kai which means also, plus the
accusative neuter plural from the demonstrative pronoun o(utoj. O(utoj emphasises the field of human relationships
as portrayed in this passage. The demonstrative pronoun is the direct object of
the verb.
“give in charge” — present active
imperative of paraggellw which means to command.
When things get bad Timothy has to use his authority, he has to step in and
command. As the pastor-guardian he has the authority to straighten things out
and it demands giving commands. The present tense is a customary present, it
denotes what habitually occurs and what should be expected to occur. The active
voice: Timothy as the pastor must produce the action, he must straighten things
out by the use of his authority. The imperative mood is a command. So we
translate this, “Also be commanding.”
“that” is the conjunction i(na used in the final sense to denote a purpose, a
gain, a goal, objective.
“they may be” — present active
subjunctive of the verb e)imi. The present tense is a
static present, it represents a condition taken for granted as a fact. The
active voice: the royal family of God in Timothy’s congregation produces the
action of the verb. The subjunctive mood goes with i(na
to form the final clause.
“blameless” — a predicate nominative
plural from the adjective a)nepileptoj, and it means to be
irreproachable. This has to do with the administration of the deacons with
regard to widows.
Translation: “Also be commanding
these things in order that they may be irreproachable.”
Once again the emphasis is placed on
the pastor taking command of the local church, enforcing biblical principles,
whether they have to do with privacy or good manners or administration. A
pastor must inevitably be responsible for his own congregation.
Verse 8 — “But if” is e(i de. E(i is a conjunction introducing a first class
condition; de is a post positive particle used in a rare way as an emphatic
particle. It should be translated “If however.”
Next is an enclitic indefinite
pronoun tij which always refers to a
category. A negative category is coming up — reversionism.
“provide not” — present active
indicative from the compound pronoew — made up of pro which means before, and noew
which means to think. It means to think beforehand, to foresee something, to
provide beforehand, to anticipate, to provide something ahead of time. (There
is a cognate noun that goes with it: pronoia which means foresight,
forethought, vision, and providence) With this is a negative o)uk. “If anyone does not provide.” The present tense is
retroactive progressive present, plus the negative denoting that here is a head
of a family, the man of the house, and he has not provided for his family. The
active voice: certain reversionistic male believers under the influence of evil
have failed to provide for their families. This evil can be operation bleeding
heart altruism. The indicative mood indicates that this is a first class condition.
“for his own” — a genitive plural of
the definite article used as a possessive pronoun, plus the genitive plural of
relationship from i)dioj used here for family.
“and especially” is the ascensive
use of kai plus the adverb malista which is the superlative of mallon, and it should be “and most of all those of his own
family.” This is a first class condition, this actually occurs among believers.
All of this is a protasis of a first class condition, it is known as a
supposition from the viewpoint of reality. In every generation of born again
believers this actually occurs. The indicative mood of a verb assumes the
premise the premise is true. The protasis which began with e)i and includes the indicative mood is the protasis of
a first class condition. It is assumed to be true and it is true in every
generation that certain believers in reversionism under the influence of evil,
for one reason or another, do not support their immediate family because
they’re involved in something that prevents them from doing it, something that
is evil, something that is related to reversionism. Christian giving was never
designed to cause one’s family to be starved or poorly clothed.
So what is the divine attitude
toward men who are responsible for providing for their wife and family and they
fail to do so?
“he hath denied” is the perfect
middle indicative of a)rneomai which means to deny, to
refuse, to repudiate. The perfect tense here is the intensive perfect, it
represents a completed action with existing results. This is the emphatic way
in the Greek of presenting a fact or a condition. It is a strong way of saying
that a thing is. The believer in view has rejected or repudiated Bible doctrine
with the result that his reversionism leads to his rejection of responsibilities
to his family. The middle voice describes the subject as participating in the
results of the action. The active voice emphasises the action, the middle voice
emphasises the agent. The middle voice relates the action, therefore, very
intimately to the subject and this is what is called an intensive middle. It
emphasises the part taken by the subject in the action of the verb. The
indicative mood is declarative for the reality of both reversionism and the
influence of evil in the life of some male believer who is married, who has
children. For some reason or another — emotional giving, compulsive gambling, a
drunkard, etc. — his family is deprived and destitute.
“faith” — the accusative singular
direct object from pistij refers to doctrine.
Principles
1. Two doctrines are pertinent to
understanding this verse: reversionism and evil. Both explain why men come to
this situation.
2. These two doctrines are two sides
of the same coin. The coin is called apostasy. One side is reversionism, the other
side is the influence of evil.
3. Reversionism is the mechanics of
apostasy while the influence of evil is the result of apostasy.
4. This believer has entered into
some stage of reversionism where he is giving or spending money which deprives
his family of food, shelter, and clothing.
5. In the second stage of
reversionism it could be exhausting his financial resources in a frantic search
for happiness.
6. In the second or fourth stages of
reversionism it could be emotional — emotional giving, compulsive gambling,
which exhausts the family treasury and causes starvation.
7. The influence of evil always
results in one man either giving or gambling or spending his money so that his
entire family is impoverished, starving, in rags, suffering because of his
stupidity in the handling of money.
8. This is why compulsive gamblers
should never marry.
9. This is why emotional revolt is
incapable of any relationship in life, incapable of taking responsibility.
10. On the other side is the fact that
insurance programs give poor and moderate income men a chance to provide for
their families.
“and is worse” is wrong. The word
“and” [kai] is adjunctive — “also”
present active indicative of e)imi, “he keeps on being; plus
the comparative xeirwn, it is the comparative of kakoj which means “evil.” It should be translated, “also
he is more evil.”
“than an infidel” — a)pistoj is an unbeliever.
Translation: “If, however, anyone
does not provide for his own, and especially for the members of his own family,
he has denied the doctrine with the result that he has repudiated Bible
doctrine; also he is more evil than an unbeliever.”
Principles
1. There are numerous cases within
the framework of reversionism where believers under the influence of evil are
more evil than the unbeliever. There are at least seven cases that we have
already observed:
a) Emotional giving from
emotional appeals. Emotional giving from an emotional basis keeps a man from
providing for his own.
b) Evil altruism which
deprives a family of needs. Operation bleeding heart.
c) A frantic search for
happiness by spending in a way that deprives the family of necessities.
d) Compulsive gambling,
compulsive drinking and drug addiction.
e) Loss of a sense of
responsibility through reversionism.
f) Irresponsible
stupidity in getting married when you shouldn’t and then making a botch of it
after you do — a sexual relationship that produces more children than you can
afford.
g) Overextension in
business or business investment without using capital for making provision for
family or loved ones.
2. Whatever the mechanics the cause
is always the same. A male believer is involved, he rejects Bible doctrine,
enters into some stage of reversionism, comes under the influence of evil and
does not provide for his own.
3. The growing believer or the
mature believer never falls into this rat race.
4. The reversionistic believer
practicing any form of evil becomes more evil than an unbeliever — says verse
8.
5. Why? Because the believer has
more safeguards against evil than the unbeliever. The believer has doctrine as
well as the laws of establishment to protect him from this. While the
unbeliever is limited to his own integrity and the laws of establishment the
believer who repudiates Bible doctrine always becomes more evil than any
unbeliever. Note that while this believer is more evil than the unbeliever he
does not lose his salvation, he cannot lose his salvation.
Verses 9 and 10: the enrolment of
qualified widows. Remember that the widow is taken as a category of helpless
individual. However, we have noted that some widows are not helpless at all,
they are totally capable of taking care of themselves.
Verse 9 — “Let not a widow be
taken.” The present passive imperative of katalegw doesn’t mean anything about taking at all, it is an incorrect
translation here. The subject is xhra, widow. What it is actually
saying is “Widows may be enrolled on the church charity list.” The present
tense is a futuristic present, it denotes an event which has not yet occurred
but widows enrolled for support is regarded as so certain in thought that there
will be a need for it and therefore a principle must be passed in favour of
certain qualified widows. The passive voice: qualified widows receive the
action of the verb. The imperative mood is the mood of command. “Widows may be
enrolled on the charity list.”
“into the number” is not found in
the original, it was just an attempt on the part of the early translators to
indicate the fact that the Word of God for the Church Age authorises a charity
list.
“under threescore years old” — mh e)latton e)twn e(ckonta which means “not less than
sixty years old.”
Notice:
1. This passage does not teach the
existence of deaconesses.
2. The enrolment is for charity or
support of widows over sixty who are otherwise destitute.
3. The age of sixty indicates that
by that time all other sources of income have disappeared and in the case of a
believing widow who is otherwise qualified she become a ward of her local
church.
4. Her helplessness which requires
financial help from the charity committee of the local church would only occur
after sixty.
5. This also implies that women
under sixty should not be given charity as they will up to that time have other
means of support.
6. Widows to be qualified for the
charity list, then, must be over sixty years of age.
“having been” is the perfect active
indicative of ginomai. The verb goes with the
previous paragraph. It should be translated, “Widows may be enrolled on the
charity list having become not less than sixty years of age.” The perfect tense
is an intensive perfect which means that they must arrive at sixty before they
are eligible.
“the wife of one man” — the
nominative singular of gunh plus the descriptive
genitive singular from e(ij, plus a)nhr for husband. Literally, “the wife of one husband.”
It is an idiom that means married only once. Apparently some women had more
than one husband. This qualification is obviously designed to indicate some stability
factor. The principle was that a widow who had been married once and had
successfully served a housewife under that marriage had a certain amount of
stability. She had the stability to stay with it whether it was a good or a bad
marriage. Secondly, this would imply also maturity, lack of promiscuity or
approbation lust. The enrolment of widows on the charity list implied some
function around the local church which required stability. A widow can have
just as wonderful life as anyone else, and under the principles of Bible
doctrine and capacity for life all of these things add up to the fact that no
one should feel sorry for a widow, that in effect a widow can have just as
wonderful a life as anyone else.
Verse 10 — “Well reported” is a
present passive participle from the verb marturew, and this doesn’t mean “martyr.” In the active voice means to bear
witness in a trial. In the passive voice it means to be approved, to be well
attested, to be verified, or to be certified. The present tense is retroactive
progressive present which denotes what was begun in the past and continues into
the present time, the time of her enrolment. She is well certified as a mature
believer. The passive voice: the qualified widow receives the action of the
verb — verification of her dynamic spiritual life. The participle is
circumstantial, it acts as the apodasis of five first class conditions which
are in the passage. “She is certified” is the apodasis. To certify means to
endorse as a part of administration as being under the right standard for
qualification.
“for good works” is the preposition e)n plus the instrumental of e)rgon which refers to occupation or deed or
accomplishment. With it is the adjective kaloj,
modifying e)rgon, and kaloj means here “honourable accomplishments.” In other
words, her honourable super-grace production from maximum doctrine resident in
her soul is certification of her qualification. Honourable accomplishment or
occupation is a sign of maturity in the spiritual realm. Maximum doctrine in the
soul will reveal itself over the long haul by kaloj
or integrity.
The standards for certification are
based on the content of the following first class conditions. The word “if”
brings the prodasis in last instead of the usual first. It starts out with the
conjunction e)i. This introduces a first
class condition.
A conditional clause is always a
statement in the Greek of supposition, the fulfilment of which is assumed to
secure the realisation of a potential fact. The clause containing the
supposition is called the protasis. It generally occurs first and is introduced
by the English word “if.” There are four different types in the New Testament:
1st class — if and it is true; second class — if and it is not true; 3rd class
— if, maybe yes, maybe no; 4th class — if, I wish it were but it isn’t true.
Always they have a great deal to do with the understanding of a given passage
where they are used.
So the clause containing the
supposition is called the protasis. This is the introduction of a protasis. The
clause containing the statement based on the supposition is called the
apodasis. This is where we get our conclusion. This rarely ever comes first.
Here is verse 10 we have one of the cases where it does.
We have here a first class
condition, it is a supposition from the viewpoint of reality. In other words,
these five realities must be fulfilled before being qualified to be helped
financially by the local church. It is a legitimate function but there are
certain administrative standards which are set up in the Word of God,
indicating a principle: Administration is not some helter skelter emotional
activity. The key to understanding conditional clauses, then, is not just the
conjunction here, e)i which introduces it but the
mood of the verb. The mood of the verb is indicative which indicates reality.
“if she have brought up” is the
aorist active indicative of a hapax legomena verb teknotrofew. This is made up of two words: teknon
is a child; trepw means to support, educate,
or to rear. It means, “if she has reared children well.” The aorist tense is a
constative aorist and it gathers together into one entirety her rearing of a
family. She doesn’t have to have children but this particular one comes in if
she does have children. The active voice: the widow over sixty must have been
at some time in her life a good mother. The indicative mood is declarative for
the reality of the first class condition.
What does it mean to be a good
mother? It means training, teaching, influencing, inculcating in both physical
and spiritual areas of life. That means a lot of things. It means, for example,
that where the son is concerned, when a woman has a male child that man’s
attitude toward the female of the species for the rest of his life is going to
depend upon how well he respected his mother and how beautifully she trained
him in those first years of his life when he was highly impressionable. Many
men are not born gentlemen but they grow to be gentlemen because their mothers
did such a magnificent job.
Again, the constative aorist gathers
into one entirety her rearing of the family. The active voice: the widow over
sixty must have been a good mother. The indicative mood is declarative for the
reality.
“if” — this time we have e)i, the conjunction introduces the first class
condition; “she have lodged strangers” — the aorist active indicative of cenodoxew which actually means to exercise hospitality, to
show hospitality. Here in the aorist tense it means to demonstrate hospitality.
This is a constative aorist which covers her adult life from the time that she
began as a wife or a mother or as a woman in her home, and right up to the
point of her qualification for being on the charity list of the local church.
The qualified widow produces the action of the verb. This is a declarative
indicative mood for the first class condition. What does it really mean? It
means the type of character which is outgoing. (Inhospitable people are
subjective people) Hospitality is an attitude of soul. It is integrity of soul,
it is an attitude of being outgoing, thoughtful of others, and sensitive to the
needs of others without being subjective in any way or without seeking to gain
anything from it.
“if she have washed the feet of
saints” — “if” is a first class condition and is a qualification; “she have
washed” is the aorist active indicative of niptw
which means to wash, to bath. It is a constative aorist, it would cover the
entire the entire realm of her life, it is a general characteristic. The active
voice: she must do it. The indicative mood: first class condition; “the saints”
refers to the royal family of God, male and female — the possessive genitive of
a(gioj; “feet” is the accusative
plural direct object from pouj — “if she has washed the
feet of the saints.”
Summary
1. This does not refer to the foot
washing ceremony practised by the River Brethren, a famous German group.
2. The foot washing ceremony
accomplished by our Lord in John 13:4-20 has nothing to do with the Church Age.
It was to teach a principle of doctrine for every dispensation but it was not a
command to continue the process of washing the feet of believers.
3. In John 13 the disciples had been
guilty of a breach of etiquette. They had been guilty of entering the upper
room where they would hear one of the greatest messages ever with unwashed
feet. That means that they went through the streets of the city where they
accumulated dust and dirt on their feet. They came to the upper room where they
were about to observe the Passover in this condition. They had what might be
classified as stinking feet. They were an offensive group to the Lord, not only
from the standpoint of etiquette but they were also malodorous.
4.
Consequently the disciples were also occupied with a debate as to which of them
was the greatest, that none of them would wash anyone else’s feet when they
came in. They refused to take the place of a servant and wash the feet of
anyone else before entering. Cf. Luke 22:24.
5. So Jesus washed their feet
demonstrating the principle of doctrine that greatness cannot exist apart from
flexibility, grace humility. Great people are never degraded. In their souls
they have those principles of doctrine, character and integrity so they cannot
be degraded. Even degrading circumstances cannot degrade a great person. Only
blind arrogance is degraded by degrading circumstances.
6. Furthermore, there was an analogy
in our Lord’s washing of the disciples’ feet. The disciples are bathed before
coming to the last supper — a picture of salvation. The idea in salvation is
once bathed, always bathed.
7. It was customary to wash one’s
feet before entering a home or a hall in the ancient world. This is analogous
to rebound. The principle by analogy: one salvation, many rebounds.
8. In coming to the upper room the
filth of the streets has accumulated on the feet of the disciples, analogous to
carnality.
9. The disciples could not have
fellowship with the Lord and have dirty feet simultaneously. So Jesus washed
their feet. This is analogous the provision for rebound on the cross.
10. Therefore the analogy which
emerges: One bath — salvation; many foot washings — rebound.
11. Jesus commanded rebound in John
13:15, not literal foot washing. The heritage of grace is perpetuated through
rebound is the principle of the foot washing ceremony.
12. If the significance of foot
washing had been in the literal ceremony then Peter would have understood the
Lord’s command.
13. But Peter did not understand
because the significance of foot washing is not in the literal ceremony, it is
in the doctrinal analogy to the rebound technique.
14. Jesus, in John 13:16, emphasised
the importance of grace orientation, taking the place of the servant.
15. To the widow, “if she has washed
the feet of the saints” refers purely the fact of her grace orientation. Her
grace orientation refers to the content of doctrine in her soul — if she has
taken a place of serving without feeling degradation, if she has maintained her
poise through degrading circumstances of life. These could never be degrading
because they could never touch her soul when she has doctrine.
“for” — e)i
for the first class condition; “she has relieved” is the aorist active
indicative of e)parkew which means to help or aid
someone, to be of assistance. The constative aorist gathers into one entirety
all the help given to others in distress, whether it is a mental distress or a
physical distress. The active voice: the qualified widows produce the action of
the verb. The indicative mood is declarative for the reality of a supposition
from a first class condition.
“the afflicted” — present passive
participle from qlibw which means to be oppressed
or to be afflicted. The present tense of qlibw
is an iterative present, it describes what recurs occasionally at certain
intervals, it is the present tense of repeated action. The passive voice:
believers receive suffering, pressure, affliction. The participle is
circumstantial. It is in the dative case which is the dative of advantage. It
is to our advantage to have adversity, pressure, and difficulty. This is also
the dative of indirect object indicating that the one’s in affliction for whom
she performed the acts of aid were benefited by this.
“if she have diligently followed” — e)pakolouqew which means to devote one’s self to something. The
aorist tense is the constative aorist, it gathers into one entirety the
application of resident doctrine in the soul producing devotion to all
intrinsic good production. The active voice: the qualified widow produces the
action of the verb.
“every good work” should be “every
intrinsic good production.” This does not means that there is any such thing as
a perfect widow for there is no such thing as a perfect person. These are
administrative guidelines.
What does it mean?
1. This means production totally
divorced from every form of evil and every stage of reversionism.
2. It means production based on
Bible doctrine resident in the soul under the principle of balance of
residency.
3. It means production from the
super-grace life — the filling of the Spirit plus maximum doctrine.
4. It means production which is
sacrifice on the altar of the royal priesthood. The altar itself is doctrine in
the soul. The sacrificing is the actual offering on the altar — production.
5. This means production totally
divorced from any form of apostasy, religionism, legalism, reversionism.
Translation: “Certified by
honourable accomplishments; if she has reared children well, if she has
demonstrated hospitality to strangers, if she has washed the feet of the
saints, if she has helped those being afflicted, if she has devoted herself to
every intrinsic good production.”
Verse 11 — “But” is the adversative
use of the conjunctive particle de to set up a contrast between qualified
widows and young widows not qualified for the shepherding fund of the local
church.
“the younger widows” — the
accusative feminine plural direct object of newteroj; it is taken from neoj which means young, and this
is the comparative.
“refuse” — present middle imperative
of paraiteomai which means to excuse one’s
self, to avoid, to decline, to reject, to refuse. The present tense is a
pictorial present which actually depicts refusing certain ones. The middle
voice is a deponent verb, it is actually active in meaning. It means that the
deacon board must definitely refuse non-qualified types. The must be no
emotional involvement, it must be based upon biblical principles. The
imperative mood is a command. “But keep rejecting younger widows.”
“for” is an explanatory use of gar —
“for you see.”
“when they have begun to wax wanton”
— the aorist active subjunctive of katastrhniaw which means “when they have
maximum libido.” It means to have strong or unusually strong sexual impulses.
The present tense is a constative aorist for a pattern of strong libido,
intense sexual desire. The active voice: younger widows have waves of strong,
intense desire. The subjunctive mood is potential.
With this is a temporal particle, o(tan, it is used for an action which is conditional,
which is repeated; it is always used with the aorist active subjunctive for a
subordinate clause which precedes the main clause and it is temporal in its
connotation.
“against Christ” is wrong. It is the
ablative of separation for Xristoj used here for alteration in
status of occupation with Christ. It should be translated, “which separates
them from Christ.” That is, the younger widows and their maximum libido become
so distracted by their sexual impulses that they become apathetic toward
doctrine, toward Christ and they enter into the worst thing that could ever
happen to an older woman: an adult stage of being man-crazy. The whole
principle is that they lose occupation with Christ , they enter into
reversionism, they become involved in the adult stage of being man-crazy.
“they will marry” is not what the
Greek says: “they will” is a present active indicative of qelw and it means a strong emotional desire here. It is
not a rational desire because they under the condition of being man-crazy, but
it is a strong emotional desire. The present tense is a static present
representing perpetual libido which makes the woman emotional instead of
rational. The active voice: many young widows produce the action of the verb.
The indicative mood is declarative for perpetual desire from intense libido —
“they keep desiring.” Then there is the present active infinitive of gamew which means to marry. The present tense is a
perfective present, it means the continuation of existing results. The result
is the fulfilling of a deliberate aim on their part.
Translation: “But keep rejecting
younger widows: for you see when they have maximum libido which is separating
them from Christ, they keep desiring to marry.”
Principle
1. Category #2 love can be a
distraction to category #1 love. This is true in the category of young widows.
2. The young widow in the stage of
man-craziness is the worst of all.
3. The widow so afflicted loses all
of her perspective and discernment from doctrine or from common sense.
4. She usually makes a mistake in
marriage or has an affair with a total jackass.
5. However, the only reason for
category #2 distraction from category #1 love is reversionism, neglect of
doctrine.
Verse 12 — “Having” is the present
active participle from e)xw, meaning as a rule to have
and to hold. The present tense is a present tense of duration which denotes
reversionism begun in the past and continuing into the present time, resulting
in the extreme libido and the desire to marry. The active voice: women under
the influence of reversionism under the influence of evil, and having intense
libido, produce the action of the verb. The participle is circumstantial.
“damnation” — the accusative
singular direct object from the noun krima which refers to judgment,
and here it refers to the various stages of divine discipline for the
reversionists.
The doctrine of divine discipline
1. Definition. Divine discipline is
the sum total of punitive measures by which God corrects and judges the
believer in time. All believers receive a certain amount of divine discipline
administered from God Himself. Discipline is always the alternative to blessing
in the Christian way of life. Two areas of discipline actually exist in phase
two. There is discipline for carnality and there is discipline for
reversionism. Discipline for carnality is always temporary, it is cancelled by
the rebound technique. Discipline for reversionism is a permanent type of
discipline, it always terminates in the sin unto death. Divine discipline never
implies loss of salvation no matter how severe the discipline may be. The
purpose of divine discipline in time is to correct the believer, to bring the
believer to the point of reality with regard to either carnality or
reversionism, to produce rebound for carnality and to produce recovery for
reversionism.
2. The principle of divine
discipline is found in Hebrews 12:5,6. The punitive action from God is for the
believer only. Divine discipline is actually an extension of God’s love to the
believer, it is an indication of relationship. Discipline is for children — “my
son.” Proverbs 3:12 — “For whom the Lord loves he judges by punitive action;
therefore like a father to a son in whom he delights.”
3. The purpose of divine discipline
— Revelation 3:19. “Those whom I love I punish and correct...” The purpose of
the discipline there is to get them to change their mind about doctrine and
recover from reversionism. This is called the warning stage of divine
discipline.
4. Divine discipline never implies
loss of salvation — Galatians 3:26. Once a child, always a child.
5. Divine discipline is confined to
time — Revelation 21:4. No one will ever be disciplined in eternity.
6. Discipline, therefore, is
designed to turn cursing into blessing — 1 Corinthians 11:30,31. Rebound
generally cancels discipline which is related to carnality. However, if the
believer and suffering continues the purpose of that suffering is blessing, it
no longer has any punitive connotation — Job 5:17,18.
7. Divine discipline or reversionism
includes self-induced misery — Psalm 7:14-16.
8. The principle of triple-compound
discipline where there is self-induced misery with divine discipline. Remember
that everything that happens to you which can be regarded as punitive is not
necessarily from God. Much punitive activity is self-imposed. First of all in
triple-compound discipline you have three areas of failure and there is
discipline in each area. The first is in the area of mental attitude sins.
These sins always motivate verbal sins. Verbal sins are of a very peculiar
nature in that if you gossip or malign or speak disparagingly about someone
else — speaking in terms of sins which you allege they have committed — you
have committed ma verbal sin for which there is divine discipline. But more
than that, your verbal sins have mentioned sins which you have ascribed to
others — they may be real or imagined. Whether you have told the truth or have
told a lie you are the one who is out of line and therefore whatever sins you
mention in your judging of others, each one of them carries a divine discipline
which is also added to you. The first stage of triple-compound discipline —
mental attitude sins, some reaction to someone mentally. Secondly, the verbal
sins are the basis for further punitive action from God — Matthew 7:1; Psalm
64:7,8; James 4:11; 5:9. The third category: whatever sins are attributed to
the victim of your maligning or judging carry a discipline which is transferred
to the maligner, the gossipper, the judge. God has a perfect sense of justice.
9. Three categories of discipline in
reversionism. a) The warning stage — Revelation 3:20. This is a warning that
the judge is standing at the door ready to judge, as per James 5:9. The warning
stage has a relatively simple recovery involving rebound and the persistent
function of GAP. In this warning stage too much doctrine has not been lost in
the right lobe; b) The intensive stage — Psalm 7:14; Psalm 38:1-14; c) The
dying stage — Revelation 3:16.
“Constantly having discipline” — the
worst thing that can happen is to get to the sin unto death.
The sin unto death
1. Definition. The sin unto death is
the means by which the reversionistic believer is transferred from time to
eternity. It is dying by means of maximum punitive measures from God. Dying is
horrible, painful, miserable, the obvious exception to dying grace which is the
way the super-grace believer is transferred from time to eternity. There will
be no rewards in eternity.
2. Documentation. Psalm 118:17,18; 1
John 5:16 — “there is a sin unto death.”
3. The cause of the sin unto death:
Prolonged and unchecked reversionism is always the cause. When you get into
prolonged and unchecked reversionism you are also under the influence of evil.
The combination of things leads to the sin unto death — Jeremiah 9:13-16;
44:12; Philippians 3:18,19.
4. The sin unto death does not mean
loss of salvation — 2 Timothy 2:11-13.
5. There are only four ways to
transfer from time to eternity: a) The sin unto death; b) Dying grace which is
for super-grace believers only; c) PCS under paragraph SG3 — e.g.
Enoch, the illustration in Hebrews 11:5; Elijah. This means crossing the high
golden bridge between time and eternity without dying physically. The Rapture
generation will have that opportunity; d) Resurrection, as the Rapture
generation.
6. Case histories of the sin unto
death. Monetary reversionism took Ananias and Sapphira in Acts 5:1-10. Phallic
reversionism took the incestuous Corinthian in 1 Corinthians 5. (He repented).
Ritual reversionism took the carnal Corinthians — 1 Corinthians 11:30-31.
Mental attitude reversionism such as Saul refusing to kill the enemy — 1 Samuel
13:9-14, and his neglect of the Word — 1 Chronicles 10:13,14. Hymenaeus and
Alexander through verbal reversionism — 1 Timothy 1:19,20. Anti-establishment
reversionism such as King Hezekiah was guilty of — Isaiah 30:1-3; Isaiah 38.
He, too, repented. In most of these cases the people were able to reverse it
once they were under the sin unto death by repentance and by reversion
recovery.
7. Rebound is also a factor in
reversion recovery — 1 Corinthians 11:30-31; James 5:20.
8. The consistent function of GAP is
absolutely necessary for reversion recovery — James 4:4-8.
“because” — the causal conjunction o(ti, explaining why they are constantly having
discipline. “they have cast off” —
aorist active indicative of the verb a)qetew which means to declare
invalid, to set aside or reject, to swerve from. It is a verb of negative
volition toward doctrine as related to reversionism. The constative aorist
gathers up into one entirety the various stages of reversionism involved in the
phrase “they have cast off.” The active voice: the reversionistic widows
produce the action of the verb. The indicative mood is declarative for the fact
that these widows are in reversionism and they have swerved from something.
“their first faith” — the accusative
singular of the definite article used as a possessive pronoun; the accusative
singular direct object of prwtoj.
Prwtoj is a
superlative of pro connoting rank or degree meaning first, foremost, or most
important. And finally we have the accusative singular direct object of pistij used here for Bible doctrine.
Translation: “Constantly having
divine discipline because they have swerved from [or rejected] their previous
doctrine [resident in their souls].”
Verse 13 — “And withal” is a post
positive conjunction particle de, it should be translated,
“And at the same time.” With it is the adverb a(ma
which indicates the coincidence of two actions in time.
“they learn” is the present active
indicative of manqanw which means to learn from
someone else. This verb emphasises reversionists associating with reversionism
and when this occurs it intensifies the reversionism.
“idle” is a predicate nominative
from the adjective a)rgoj with the infinitive
understood. The infinitive would be from e)imi
and the predicate adjective is correctly translated “idle,” it means lazy or
nothing to do, or useless. In fact they have to learn to be idle or useless and
this indicates that at one time they were in super-grace, they were productive,
and they did have great capacity for life and blessing. Now they have
retrogressed into reversionism associated with others who are reversionistic,
and they have learned from their association to be idle and useless. From
idleness and uselessness they become very harmful. No one ever stands still,
you are either moving forward or moving backward. Here is a picture now of
those moving backward.
“wandering about” — the present
middle participle of perierxomai. It means to wander without
having any objective or goal, merely trying to find someone to please you or to
make you happy. It has to do with a life of no direction. The present tense is
a present tense of duration, it denotes something begun in the past and
continuing into the present time. It is generally associated with the adverb a(ma and when it is it is always translated like a
perfect tense and should be translated “having wandered around.” The middle
voice is the indirect middle emphasising the reversionistic widows as producing
the action of the verb rather than participating in the results of the action.
The participle is circumstantial. With it is the accusative plural direct
object of the definite article used as a demonstrative pronoun, plus the
accusative plural of o)ikia. With this verb o)ikia means from house to house. Literally in the English
it would be “houses.”
Principle
1. The demonstrative pronoun is not
translated in the idiom, it emphasises the identity of the houses where the
idle widows are moving to and from. It indicates that they have associated with
those who are reversionistic. Like associate with like kind, and when this
occurs they influence each other. They have inbred idleness.
2. The wandering indicates a life
without direction or purpose or definition.
3. There is no preposition here, the
idiom is rendered into the English “from house to house” rather than “houses.”
4. It is inevitable that people
whose life has become meaningless and without purpose become idle, have nothing
to do, and inevitably become trouble makers.
5. There is never enough time in a
day for those who have a meaningful life. For the super-grace believer with
doctrine in the soul he has the capacity for life, for happiness, for blessing
and there never is enough time in the day.
“and not only idle — this is the
first step in retrogression from uselessness. They are not only idle. Idleness
is merely a status quo, a temporary place from which they go down. The
circumstances for every kind of trouble making always are based upon idleness
or uselessness — no enthusiasms in life of any kind. Idleness becomes a supply
base or support base. It becomes a fire support base for both mental attitude
and verbal sins as well as a variation in the function of evil.
In this case these widows who have
now come to this stage of reversionism are now declared to be “tattlers also” —
the conjunction a)lla for once is not used in its
usual adversative sense, but it is used here when a whole clause is compared.
So we have a comparison on the downward trend. There is also the adjunctive kai to indicate that this is retrogression. It is
translated “also.”
“busybodies” — the nominative plural
of fluaroj and it means “gossips.” The
verb fluarew is the source of this noun
and it means to throw up bubbles. From there it came to mean empty and foolish
talk. It finally came to be a more serious type of thing — maligning,
gossiping, unjustified charges or motivated by mental attitude sins to run down
someone else. We translate this, “but also gossips.”
The doctrine of the sins of the tongue
1. Definition.
a. Sin is defined as transgression
of the law of God.
b. A known sin is a transgression or
violation of divine law.
c. An unknown sin is likewise a
transgression of divine law.
d. In both cases the violation is
involved. Whether you know it or not you’ve done it and your volition is
involved.
e. The difference between an known
and unknown sin is cognisance of divine law [Bible doctrine], especially in the
field of hamartiology.
f. Whether the divine law is known
or not human volition is involved in transgression of the law.
g. All sin, therefore, combines the
function of the old sin nature’s area of weakness with human volition.
h. Three categories of sin exist in
the human race:
i) The imputation of
Adam’s sin to each member of the human race directly.
ii) The perpetuation of
the old sin nature through physical birth, causing the individual to be
physically alive at birth and simultaneously spiritually dead.
iii) Personal sin which
occurs after birth and before physical death.
i. There are three categories of
personal sin:
i) Mental sins such as
envy, pride, arrogance, jealousy, bitterness, vindictiveness, hatred, etc.
ii) Verbal sins such as
gossip, slander, maligning, judging, lying.
iii) Overt sins such as
adultery, murder, stealing, drunkenness, and so on.
j. All personal sins originate from
the old sin nature involving the human volition.
k. This means that verbal sins originate
from the old sin nature and are activated by human volition.
l. Human volition is involved in all
sins.
m. The instrument of verbal sins is
that portion of the human anatomy called the tongue — James 3:6.
2. Out of the list of the seven
worst sins three of the worst sins are sins of the tongue — Proverbs 6:16-19.
3. Verbal sins and reversionism.
Verbal sins are always motivated by mental sins. Sins of the mental attitude
which motivate verbal sins are generally pride, jealousy, bitterness, vindictiveness,
implacability, hatred, pettiness — Psalm 5:8,9; James 4:11.
4. The sins of the tongue produce
triple compound discipline. First of all there is discipline for the mental
attitude sins, there is discipline for the verbal sins which result, and
whatever sins are mentioned with regard to the victim whatever the judgment is
for that sin it is transferred to the one who judges.
5. God protects the super-grace
believer from verbal sins — Job 5:19-21.
6. The congregation and the tongue.
a) Control of the tongue
plus avoidance of verbal sins is a sign of spiritual maturity — James 3:2.
b) Verbal sins can
destroy an entire congregation — James 3:5,6.
c) Since the sins of the
tongue can destroy an entire congregation of believers it is the solemn duty of
the pastor-teacher to warn against them — 2 Timothy 2:14-17.
d) Trouble makers in the
congregation are characterised by sins of the tongue — Psalm 52:1-4.
e) Separation from those
guilty of the sins of the tongue is commanded — Romans 16:17,18.
7. Blessing from the avoidance of
the sins of the tongue is mentioned in Psalm 34:12,13. The “lips from speaking
deceit” refers to gossiping, maligning or judging.
“and busybodies” — the nominative
plural from the compound adjective periergoj [peri: around; e)rgon: work], hence working
around someone in a sneaky way is what it connotes. It means to be meddlesome,
to intrude into things that do not concern you. it means violating the privacy
of others. We can translate this, “and invaders of privacy.”
Every believer is protected by a
double privacy. First of all being a member of the human race he is protected
by divine institution #1. He is entitled to his privacy as long as he is not a
criminal. Secondly, as a member of the royal priesthood he is entitled to
privacy to live his life as unto the Lord. All born again believers have a
double privacy.
The doctrine of privacy
1. Privacy is a state of being apart
from observation and the company of others.
2. Privacy is the innate right of
the human race to seclusion.
3. Privacy is that principle of
freedom whereby the individual member of the human race has the right to retire
from the company of others, remaining in seclusion from the knowledge or
observation of others.
4. Privacy and property and life are
the basic concepts of human freedom.
5. The laws of divine establishment
guarantee the privacy of every member of the human race so that he can exercise
his freedom uncoerced. Exception: criminals.
6. In addition to freedom and establishment
every believer has additional privacy from his royal priesthood to fulfil the
principle of living his life as unto the Lord.
The principle of privacy and the
royal priesthood — 1 Peter 2:9.
The royal priesthood must have
privacy to fulfil its mission in phase two. It must be able to function so as
to live individually as unto the Lord — Colossians 3:17 demands privacy.
No believer has the right to intrude
into the privacy of another believer.
Violation of privacy means judging.
When you judge other people you are violating their privacy — Romans 14:4,10.
Privacy includes, then, the
principle of live and let live — 2 Thessalonians 3:11,12.
Reversionists always violate the
privacy of others — 1 Timothy 5:13.
Violaters of the privacy of others
is comparable to other freedom violations. In other words, when you stick your
nose into someone else’s business you are violating the very principle by which
you live — freedom. Property is violated by stealing. Intrusion into the
privacy of others in effect is compared to murder and stealing in 1 Peter 4:15.
“speaking” is the present active
participle of the verb lalew which means to speak. It
includes here sins of the tongue as well as nosiness and other soul kinks. The
present tense in the Greek is a customary present, indicating what habitually
occurs when a busybody starts trying to live some one else’s life. The active
voice: the meddler or the busybody produces the action of the verb through
violation of privacy by means of the sins of the tongue. The participle is
circumstantial.
“things” is the accusative plural of
the definite article which is used here as a demonstrative pronoun. The
demonstrative pronoun emphasises the sinful and evil content of gossip.
“which they ought not” — present
active participle from the impersonal verb dei.
With it is the negative mh. The participle is in the
accusative, it is a direct object, and it should be translated, “those things
which ought not to be spoken [mentioned].”
Translation: “And at the same time
also they learn to be idle, having wandered around from house to house; and not
only idle, but also gossips and invaders of privacy, constantly saying those
things which ought not to be mentioned.”
Verse 13 — “And withal” should be
“And at the same time.” The word “withal” is a post positive conjunction de used as a transitional particle, translated “and,”
plus an adverb a(ma meaning “at the same time.”
We also have an adjunctive kai, translated “also.”
“they learn” — present active
indicative of the verb manqanw which means to learn from
someone else, to learn by imitating someone else, to learn by association. The
present tense means that they are in bad company and learning rapidly from
them. They are concentrating on their bad company instead of concentrating on
doctrine. The active voice means that these widows are producing the action.
The indicative mood is for the historical reality of their condition. The verb
emphasises reversionists associating with reversionists.
“to be idle” — the verb to be is the
infinitive that follows manqanw and it doesn’t actually
occur, but in the idiom it demands it. We have a predicate nominative adjective
a)rgoj. It should be translated
“idle, useless.” The fact that they have to learn to be idle or useless
indicates that at one time these ladies were in super-grace, were productive,
were enjoying a life full of blessing and activity. Now they have retrogressed
from that point into reversionism, are associated with other reversionists, and
they are learning from their association to be idle and to be useless — idle in
the sense of having nothing constructive to do and useless in the sense of
having no capacity for life, so no matter what they do they don’t enjoy it.
From idleness and useless they also become harmful. Remember the principle: No
believer ever stands still.
Verse 14 — “I will” is the present
active indicative from the verb boulomai. This is a verb used for
the decision of the will after careful deliberation. Always when used by an
apostle, as it is in this case, it is tantamount to a strong command decision.
The present tenses is a static present for circumstances which perpetually
exist. The active voice: the apostle Paul under the ministry of the Holy Spirit
produces the action of the verb. The indicative mood is the reality of such a
command decision.
“therefore” is a post positive
inferential conjunction, o)un. It refers back to the
younger widows and states a conclusion about them. Since they are not qualified
for charity from the local church, since they have their own brand of problems,
since some of them are in reversionism, we have now reached a decision about
them, says the apostle. “Therefore it is my decision that” is the way it should
be translated.
“the younger women” — the accusative
feminine plural from newteroj. This is an accusative of
general reference and it acts as the subject of the infinitive. The infinitive
is the verb “marry,” the present active infinitive of gamew. This is a customary present, what is reasonably
expected for some woman who is out of line; a man has to straighten her out.
The active voice: the younger widows produce the action of the verb by getting
under their right man — authority. The infinitive expresses purpose.
Principles
1. It is assumed that the younger
widows have not necessarily married their right man. If they had they wouldn’t
be in the shape they are in now that they are widows. They would have learned
something from their first husband.
2. They are commanded to marry again
for several reasons. The first reason is obviously to avoid the influence of
evil described in verses 11-13.
3. It is obvious that they needed to
be under the authority of a man who is a man.
4. This also helps them to recover
from reversionism because a reversionist is always in conflict, even with his
right pastor.
5. Having accepted the authority of
her husband who is either her right man or a real man who assumes the spiritual
leadership of the family she will also accept the authority of and the teaching
of the pastor from whose messages she recovers.
6. They will enjoy all of the
benefits and all of the blessings of category #2 love which keeps a woman out
of trouble.
7. Therefore here is a case where it
is beneficial to the spiritual as well as the physical life of a certain
category of woman to get married.
8. This command has exceptions of
all kinds in widowhood. It also has exceptions for anyone who has the gift of
celibacy or the law of supreme sacrifice.
“bear children” is the present
active infinitive from the compound teknogonew. The present tense is a
customary present for what would be reasonably expected to occur. The active
voice: obviously these are younger widows, they produce the action of the verb
in their second marriage. This is the antithesis of verses 11-13. It is an
infinitive of purpose. We do not say “bear children” any more, we say “have
children.”
“guide the house” — present active
infinitive from o)ikodespotew.
Despotew
means to rule, to administer; o)ikoj is “house.” Together they
mean “manager of the house,” but it doesn’t mean that at all here, it means “be
mistress of the home.” The present tense is a customary present for what is
reasonably expected to occur in the second marriage. The active voice: the
younger widows produce the action of the verb, instead of the action in verses
11-13. Again, it is an infinitive of purpose. She is now going to advance
spiritually instead of retrogress.
“give none occasion” — the word
“give” is a present active infinitive of didomi.
The present tense is a customary present for what may be reasonably expected to
occur. The active voice: again the younger widow produces the action. The
infinitive is not the infinitive of purpose this time, it is the imperative
infinitive. In other words, added to the authority of a real man whom she
marries or a right man there is an additional authority, this is a command to
those ladies in case they do not quite catch on as to what that second marriage
is all about. “None occasion” is the accusative singular direct object from mhdeij, which can be not, none or no; and with it is the
accusative feminine singular direct object a)formh, and it means “opportunity” — “give no opportunity.”
“to the adversary” — dative singular
from the articular present active participle a)ntikeimei. A)nti means against; keimai means to occupy against,
and it comes to mean “enemy.” The participle should be translated like a noun.
This is a dative of reference referring to Satan himself.
The doctrine of the devil
1. The person of the devil.
a) The devil is the
highest of all angelic creatures — Matthew 8:28; 9:34; 12:26; Luke 11:8,19.
b) The devil is the
prehistoric super creature — Isaiah 14:12-17; Ezekiel 28:11-19.
c) The devil has three
falls — Isaiah 14; Ezekiel 28; Revelation 12 and Revelation 20. His first fall
was his revolt; he led the angelic revolt. His second fall is when he loses
rulership of the world, and his third fall is when he is cast into the lake of
fire forever.
d) The devil also has
two advent. In his first advent he came into the garden, found man in perfect
environment and led him astray. The second advent of the devil: again he comes
in perfect environment at the end of the Millennial reign of Christ and he
leads another revolution. These two advents are related to two revolts against
God.
e) The devil is the
central antagonist of the angelic conflict. He is the enemy; all demons are enemies; all unbelievers are the enemies
of God; all reversionists are the enemies of God; but the devil is the enemy — Hebrews chapters 1 & 2;
Genesis 6; 1 Peter 3:18-22.
f) The devil has an
organisation — Ephesians 6:10-12.
g) The devil is a
murderer — John 8:44.
h) The devil is the
opponent to Bible doctrine — Matthew 13:9,39.
i) The devil is the
enemy of the Church, the royal family of God — Revelation 2:9,13,24.
2. The principle that the devil is
the ruler of this world — Luke 4:5-7; John 12:31; 14:30; 16:11; 2 Corinthians
4:4; Ephesians 2:2. He took over the rulership at the fall of man and will continue
to rule until the second advent.
3. Therefore the devil has a
strategy regarding the nations of the world — Revelation 12:9; 20:3,8. The
strategy generally makes him the opponent of doctrine and the opponent of
establishment. He either tries to duplicate in a pseudo way what God has accomplished
or he is directly opposed to what God has given.
4. Therefore the devil has a
strategy regarding unbelievers in the world. This is stated in many passages —
2 Corinthians 4:4, to blind the unbeliever to the true principles of the
gospel. This is illustrated in 2 Peter 2. His strategy regarding the unbeliever
is found also in Luke 8:12; 2 Thessalonians 2:7-10; Colossians 2:8; the entire
17th chapter of Revelation. Religion is the devil’s ace trump. It isn’t his
only system, every system of evil is a part of Satan’s strategy in blinding the
unbeliever but the ace trump of all and the worst thing that ever happened to
this world is religion.
5. Therefore the devil has strategy
regarding the believer as well. We are a challenge to Satan in this Church Age.
We are the royal family of God, we are the ambassadors of Jesus Christ.
Therefore he has a sevenfold strategy:
a) To accuse us — 2
Corinthians 2:11; Job 1:6-11; Zechariah 3:1,2; Revelation 12:9,10; 1 John
2:1,2.
b) He is the sponsorer
of reversionism — 1 Corinthians 10:19-21; 2 Corinthians 11:3,13-15.
c) To frustrate the will
of God under 3 categories. He frustrates the mental will of God by means of the
influence of evil in one’s life — Ephesians 4:14; he frustrates the
geographical will of God — 1 Thessalonians 2:18; he frustrates the operational
will of God — James 4:7,8.
d) To neutralise
doctrinal application, especially in the field of worry and anxiety — 1 Peter
5:7-9.
e) To destroy the
believer’s focus as a believer, to destroy the believer’s perspective —
Jeremiah 17:5, getting eyes on people; 1 Kings 19:10,14, getting eyes on self;
Hebrews 13:5,6, getting eyes on things.
f) To get the believer
to become involved in some form of evil, especially the improvement of the
devil’s world. The believer under the influence of evil becomes humanistic,
occupied with temporal solutions to life, altruistic, advocating systems to
improve man’s environment, he becomes socialistic, becomes involved in social
action, and becomes a bleeding heart.
g) The inculcation of
fear regarding physical death — Hebrews 2:14,15. This only works with the
reversionist and/or the believer under the influence of evil.
6.
Religion is a part of the devil’s strategy. Basically religion has been created
by the devil to
counterfeit the plan of God. Christianity is not a
religion; Christianity is a relationship with God through faith in Jesus
Christ. It is always a grace relationship, a relationship by which the believer
enters the royal family of God forever through the baptism of the Spirit.
Religion, by way of contrast, is man seeking to gain the approbation of God
through his own plans, his works, his merits, his systems, his deeds. While
religion as a principle represents the evil genius of Satan it is viewed here
from the standpoint of its many counterfeits. Religion has a counterfeit gospel
— 2 Corinthians 4:3,4; it has a counterfeit system of ministers [clergy] — 2
Corinthians 11:13-15; it has counterfeit doctrines — 2 Timothy 4:1; it has a
counterfeit communion table — 2 Corinthians 10:19-21; it has a system of
counterfeit spirituality — Galatians 3:2,3; it has a counterfeit righteousness
— Matthew 19:16-28; it has a counterfeit modus vivendi — Matthew 23:13-26; it has
a counterfeit power, dynamics [tongues] — 2 Thessalonians 2:8-10; it has
counterfeit gods — 2 Thessalonians 2:3,4.
7. False teachers are a part of the devil’s strategy. Most of the
clergy today are false teachers.
a) False teachers always
have a phoney and hypocritical facade. You will never meet a false teacher but
what he will give you the impression that you are the most important person in
the world. He’ll make you feel wanted, he will stimulate your ego to the point
where you will be arrogant until you will think he is the nicest man! But he
does that to all of the people and you are just one of the many victims of his
con-artistry. Matthew 7:15; Romans 16:18.
b) False teachers use
human public relations systems and legalistic flirtations to court believers —
“I never do it that way, I think that’s wrong.” In this way they always court
the legalistic. “You know Reverend, you’re right,” and they form a mutual admiration
society; and they’re both full of hot air.
c) False teachers appeal
to human pride — 2 Corinthians 10:12.
d) False teachers
promote idolatry as a part of the devil’s communion table — Habakkuk 2:18,19.
e) False teachers
promote legalism and self-righteousness — 1 Timothy 1:7,8.
f) False teachers
continue throughout the intensive period of the angelic conflict, which is the
Church Age — 1 John 4:1.
“to speak reproachfully” — a
descriptive genitive singular from loidoria which means abusive, abuse,
or reproach; plus the accusative singular from xarin
which is not an adverb. It is erroneously translated in the KJV and it should
be, to reproach or abuse grace.”
Translation: “Therefore it is my
decision that the younger widows marry, have children, be mistress of the home,
give no opportunity to the enemy to abuse grace.”
The doctrine of Grace
1. Definition.
a) Grace is all that God
is free to for man on the basis of the work of Christ on the cross.
b) Grace is God’s
freedom and God’s consistency to express His love to mankind without
compromising or jeopardising His essence.
c) No one can truly give
and rightly give apart from freedom, total freedom without compromising His
character. All of this is because of the cross.
d) Consequently grace is
the plan of God on behalf of man beginning at the cross.
e) Grace is both God’s
plan and God’s policy regarding mankind.
g) Grace therefore is
the plan, the policy, the function, the mechanics of divine modus operandi.
h) Under grace God does
all the work, all the providing. Man does all the receiving and all the
benefiting, totally apart from merit.
Concept:
Grace depends on the
essence or character of God, therefore grace always depends on who and what God
is. Grace is what God can do for man and be consistent with His own essence.
Grace is God’s relationship with the believer as well as God’s way of salvation.
Grace is all that God can do for man from salvation to eternity, totally apart
from man’s merit, ability, his talent or his plan. Grace in the genius of God
and grace is the manifestation of that genius. The issue, then, is God doing it
[grace] versus man doing it [legalism]. Legalism is man’s intrusion into the
plan of God by his ability, works, talent, schemes, etc. The believer must
learn therefore to sort out the difference between grace and legalism. The
believer often clings to something that he thinks will impress God because so
many people are impressed by it. Grace and legalism cannot exist together. They
are mutually exclusive, antagonistic.
2. Grace and the new contract for
the Church. The church is under a special contract, this is a special
dispensation. The Age of Israel was interrupted, so the glorification of Jesus
Christ by resurrection, ascension and session — the strategic victory of the
angelic conflict — was the victory which interrupted the Jewish Age in order
that the royal family of God might be formed. The royal family of God is formed
by means of the baptism of the Spirit, and the new covenant or the new contract
to the Church is related to Bible doctrine in the field of sanctification.
Grace found a way to take man created inferior to angelic creatures and make
them superior. This is accomplished in the three phases of sanctification.
First of all, there is positional
sanctification that makes us in union with Christ higher than angels. Paragraph
one of the new contract (the entering paragraph) provides for royalty the fact
that every member of the royal family is positionally higher than angels. This
is grace, we didn’t earn it. In addition the royal family have signs of that
royalty in the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, the sealing ministry of the
Spirit, and so on.
The second stage is experiential
sanctification, the second paragraph of the new contract, and here again we
have strictly grace provision. God in His grace has provided numerous things
for the tactical victory. He has provided, for example, living grace by which
we remain alive and well in the devil’s world. He has provided a
pastor-teacher, the local church which is the classroom, and the Bible as the textbook.
He has provided a grace apparatus for perception of doctrine so that no matter
what a person is by way of human IQ he can receive the Word. He has also
provided the ministry of the Holy Spirit to take the doctrine in the soul, put
it in its proper categories and relate it to life and application. He has
provided the perpetuation of wonderful blessings which glorify God. So
experiential sanctification is actually the balance of residency between the
filling of the Spirit and maximum doctrine in the soul.
The third paragraph deals with
eternity where we have the believer in a resurrection body, living under
perfect environment forever and ever. This is a place of grace and blessing
even though we do not earn it or deserve it, and even though some will not be
decorated.
3. Review of the concept.
a) Saving grace. Every
believer has tasted grace at least once — Hebrews 6:4; 1 Peter 2:3. The moment
a person believers, not matter how he felt or where he was, he believes 36
irrevocable things.
b) Living grace. Because
of propitiation every believer is also under maximum love from God — 1 John
2:2. This maximum love frees God to pour out maximum grace, and grace can only
benefit where there is capacity for grace. Living grace falls into two categories.
God can express His love to you in grace in one of two ways, thanks to
propitiation. He can express His love in blessing or He can express His love in
discipline. It all depends whether the believer is influenced by doctrine or
influenced by evil. Living grace means that God keeps us alive in order to
provide blessing and in order to be glorified. When God can bless any believer
totally apart from cosmos diabolicus, this glorifies Him.
c) Super-grace or
reaching the high ground. This is the point of maturity where we receive
various categories of blessing — Paragraph SG2, spiritual blessings:
occupation with Christ, capacity for category #1 love based on doctrine, the
sharing of the happiness of God, maximum application of doctrine, great
capacity for love and happiness blessing in life; temporal blessing: wealth,
success, promotion, various types of prosperity; dying blessing. The only way
to reach maturity is maximum doctrine in the soul. Paragraph SG3 is
the area of eternity.
4. The modus vivendi of grace.
a) Grace is the means of
growth — 2 Peter 3:18. Grace is the basis for stability — Hebrews 12:28; 13:9;
1 Peter 5:12.
b) Grace is the basis
for production — 1 Corinthians 15:10; 2 Corinthians 6:1.
c) Failure to utilise
grace means discipline — Galatians 5:4; Hebrews 12:15. That discipline falls in
three categories: warning, intensive and dying.
d) Grace is also related
to blessing in suffering — 2 Corinthians 12:7-10.
5. The axioms of grace.
a) God is perfect, His
plan is perfect.
b) A perfect plan can
only originate and function from the source of a perfect person — members of
the Godhead.
c) If mankind can do
anything meritorious in the plan of God it is no longer perfect. Man is
imperfect, he cannot therefore contribute to a perfect plan.
d) A plan is no stronger
than its weakest link. There is no weak link in God’s plan because God does all
the work.
e) Grace excludes all
human merit and ability, all human good and legalism, all self-righteousness
and arrogance.
f) Legalism is the enemy
of grace. There is no place for legalism or human good in the plan of God. g) All legalism and human
good is associated with the greatest of mental attitude sins, the original sin
of Satan himself which is pride or arrogance.
6. Therefore there are four areas in
which pride or arrogance rejects grace.
a) The pride of the
believer who rejects the doctrine of eternal security. Anyone who rejects
eternal security has to be arrogant, he always assumes that his sins are
greater than the grace of God and greater than the plan of God.
b) The pride of the
believer who succumbs to pressure or adversity. He always thinks that his
sufferings, his adversities, his difficulties are greater than the grace
provision of God.
c) The pride of reversionism.
The reversionist assumes that his form of reversionism is greater than
super-grace blessing. He assumes that his ecstatic experiences, his functions
of legalism, are more important than Bible doctrine.
d) The pride of pseudo
spirituality, the pride of the believer who thinks that his system of
spirituality is greater than the filling of the Holy Spirit.
Verse 15 — “For” is the explanatory
conjunction gar, “For you see”; “some” —
the nominative plural of the indefinite pronoun tij.
This pronoun is always used to emphasise a special category, a certain category
of believers. This category might be classified by the rest of the verse as
reversionistic believers, believers under the influence of evil.
“already” — the adverb of time h(dh, indicating that these people are already in
reversionism.
“are turned aside” is the aorist
passive indicative of the verb e)ktrepw. It means to turn away, to
turn away from, to swerve, to avoid. The implication is that some believers
have already swerved away from doctrine and therefore are in some stage of
reversionism. The aorist tense is a constative aorist which always contemplates
the action of the verb in its entirety, regardless of its extent or duration,
and gathers it up into a single whole. The passive voice: this is a deponent
verb, passive in form, middle in connotation. It emphasises the reversionistic
believer as producing the action. The indicative mood is declarative
representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of reality. In every generation
there will be certain believers who swerve from doctrine and enter into
reversionism, coming under the influence of evil. When they do they have turned
aside to Satan.
“turned aside after Satan” — they
are Satan’s servants even though they are born again and are members of the
royal family of God. Technically they are the Lord’s servants but they are
actually serving Satan.
The word “after” is an adverb, o)pisw. This is an adverb used as an improper preposition.
The object of the improper preposition is the genitive of the word satanaj, referring to the devil/Satan. The prepositional
phrase implies the present active participle of the verb a)kolouqew. It has great linear aktionsart — “following after
Satan.” In other words, all reversionists come under the influence of evil.
Evil is the policy of Satan. A person may be a believer but if he is
functioning under Satan’s policy he is Satan’s servant.
Translation: “For certain believers
[reversionists] already have turned aside [from doctrine], following after
Satan.”
Verse 16 — the division of
responsibility. “If” is the conjunction e)i,
it introduces a first class condition. This is the protasis and it assumes it
to be true; “any man or woman that believeth” is not really what the Greek
says. It says “if any believer” — tij
pisth. Tij
is the indefinite pronoun and pisth is only one word, so
obviously we don’t have any man or woman in here. Tij
is the nominative masculine singular of the indefinite pronoun, and the
indefinite pronoun represents a specific category. This category may be
classified as those having widows in their family. The word pisth is the nominative feminine singular of the
adjective pistoj. The adjective actually
means believers male or female. “If any believer.” We see a potential failure
coming up. There are widows and there are believers related to them.
“have” — present active indicative
of e)xw which means to have and to
hold. The present tense of duration denotes what has begun in the past and
continues into the present time. The active voice: certain believers produce
this action. They have related to them widows. The indicative mood is
declarative representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of reality.
“widows” is the accusative plural of
direct object of xhra. “If any man has widows
[dependent on them].”
“let them relieve them” — present
active imperative of e)parkew which means to aid, to help
financially, to assist. The present tense is a customary present. This is what
you would expect from someone with a sense of responsibility in this field. The
active voice: the believer with dependent widows produces the action. The
dependent widows may be members of his own family, or it may be an aunt, or a
servant who is a widow and who has faithfully served over the years. The imperative
mood is a command and it should be translated, “be assisting them financially.”
We also have the accusative plural direct object of the intensive pronoun a)utoj for these helpless widows. The intensive pronoun is
in the feminine gender referring here to widows, it empahsises the identity of
these helpless and dependent people.
“and let not the church be charged”
— in other words the church will always have certain people who have no
relatives. We have a connective conjunction kai,
the nominative singular e)kklhsia for the local church, the
negative mh, the present passive
imperative of barew which means to be burdened
and this is a customary present for what may be reasonably expected not to
occur. In other words, if a widow has relatives they should assist financially
and the church should not have to carry that extra burden, the church will have
sufficient who are totally dependent upon the charity list. The passive voice:
the local church receives the action of the verb of not being burdened. The
imperative plus the negative becomes an imperative of prohibition. It should be
translated, “do not let the local church be burdened.”
“that” introduces an important final
clause — i(na, “in order that.” This
final clause always denotes a purpose, an objective, an aim or a goal.
“it may relieve” — e)parkew, meaning to help financially, but this time it is
in the aorist. The constative aorist contemplates the action of the verb in its
entirety, which means that from the time the widow qualifies until the time
that she dies it is gathered up into one entirety. The active voice: the church
produces the action. The subjunctive mood introduces a purpose.
“them that are widows indeed” — this
is actually, “those who are really widows.
Translation: “If any believers has
widows dependent on him, be helping them financially, and do not permit the
local church to be burdened; in order that it [the local church] may help
financially those who are really widows.”
Verse 17 — “Let the elders that rule
well” — the nominative plural of presbuteroj, “pastor-guardian.” There
are a lot of pastors, but only one per church. The definite article in Greek is
used as a demonstrative pronoun and should be translated, “Those
pastor-guardians.” The verb: “that rule well” — proisthmi which means to rule or to govern. This is a perfect tense, perfect
active participle. The perfect tense is a dramatic perfect, the rhetorical use
of the intensive perfect. It describes the existing state of honourable rule by
a pastor in an unusual and dramatic way. It emphasises both the existing state
and the results of the action of the verb. This is the status quo and this is
the way it will always be. You will never grow unless you are in a local
church, and in a local church there is only one final authority and that is the
pastor. There is in essence only one teacher, only one declarer of policy, and
that is the pastor and he communicates it all through Bible doctrine. He
communicates with authority, he has a spiritual gift which makes it possible
for him to teach doctrine. Scripture must be transferred to the soul as
categorical doctrine and there is only one person who can do it, your right
pastor. He does it by study and teach, study and teach. That is the perfect
tense. He rules, he has to rule to communicate, to be the policy-maker. The
active voice: certain pastors in each
generation produce the action of the verb. The participle is circumstantial.
“Well” is the adverb kaloj which means “honourably” or
“well.” “Those pastor-guardians who have ruled well with the result that they
keep ruling honourably.” That is the intensive perfect.
“be counted worthy of double honour”
— present passive imperative of a)ciow. The present tense is a
retroactive progressive present or the present tense of duration denotes what
has begun in the past and continues into the present time. In other words, in
every generation pastor guardians must be given double honour. They are the
highest authority extant in the Church Age and therefore they are worthy of
double honour. The passive voice: the pastor-guardians who have ruled well
produce the action of the verb. The imperative mood is a command to the
congregation whose pastor has ruled well. It should be translated “be
considered worthy of”; the word “double” is the adjective diplowj, and with it the noun timh.
Both are in the objective genitive. The translation so far: “Those
pastor-guardians who have ruled well with the result that they keep ruling
honourably, they must be considered worthy of double honour.” Double honour is
“respect” which goes with authority, “remuneration” which is how their time is
liberated to do their job.
Remuneration: The pastor’s income
must come from congregational giving. This is the primary purpose for the
worship function of the royal priesthood called giving.
Respect: The pastor has the highest
authority and the purest authority in the world today. Respect for the pastor’s
authority is related to positive volition toward his teaching. What you think
of him personally is of no consequence. What God thinks of him personally is of
every consequence. So respect for the pastor’s authority is related to your
attitude toward the Word. From here evolves the positive volition principle
into respect for the policy which emerges from Bible teaching. From the divine
viewpoint this phrase has another connotation by way of application. The pastor
receives double blessing when he is straight and double discipline when he is
out of line.
“especially” — malista is the superlative of the adverb mala and it means “above all.” The pastor who should
receive double honour is “above all.”
“they who labour” — is defining the
pastor who is worthy of double honour. His function is the issue here — study
and teach. This is the articular present active participle from kopiaw which means to work to exhaustion. The present
tense is a customary present for what may be reasonably expected of an
honourable pastor. His honour comes from his hard work. The definite article is
used as a relative pronoun referring to pastors only. The active voice: the
pastors produce the action of the verb. The participle is circumstantial. It
should be translated, “those who work hard.” That means study and teach, not
visiting hospitals, calling on people, counselling, etc. It is the teaching of
doctrine that counts.
“in the word” is the preposition e)n plus the locative of logoj,
and it means “in the sphere of the word” or in the sphere of doctrine.”
“and doctrine” is a continuation of
the prepositional phrase — didaskalia. What is the difference
between logoj and didaskalia? The word is where you find it, the textbook. Logoj refers to the page of the book. But didaskalia is having it in your soul. Doctrine in the page of
the Bible must be transferred to your soul, the only place it is any good — “in
the study of the word and teaching.”
This is the story of the pastor’s
life, his primary function to which all other activities are totally secondary.
The pastor much be a student and communicator of the Word of God.
Translation: “Those pastor-guardians
who have ruled well with the result that they keep ruling honourably, must be
considered worthy of double honour, most of all those who work hard to the
point of exhaustion in the study of the word and the teaching of doctrine.”
Principles
1. The two basic functions of the
pastor are mentioned in this verse: ruling honourably, which is the exercise of
his authority; studying and teaching, which is the exercise of his spiritual
gift.
2. Both the gift and the authority
were sovereignly given by the grace from God.
3. Therefore the entire life of the
pastor is based on grace gifts from God plus grace provision for his daily
life.
4. The pastor, then, is the maximum
product of grace in the Church Age.
5. To whom much is given much is
expected. Therefore we have the principle of double honour, double blessing, as
well as double discipline.
Verse 18 — We have here biblical
documentation for that part of the pastor’s double honour known as
remuneration. The double honour of the previous verse is respect and
remuneration. “For” is the explanatory use of the conjunctive particle gar which elaborates one of the two points of double
honour. Double honour is really the subject of the next few verses and gar is going to give us an elaboration.
“the scripture” — the nominative
singular of grafh refers to the canon of
scripture as it existed at that time in writing. The canon was not completed,
it was in the process of being completed and so at this particular moment it is
referring actually to the Old Testament scriptures. The citation recognises the
fact that the Old Testament has the same honour as the New Testament as far as
being canonical.
“saith” is the present active
indicative of the verb legw. The present tense is the
static present and recognises the eternity of the scripture. The active voice:
the subject produce the action of the verb, and the subject is the Old
Testament canon now in writing and now recognised by the Church as a part of
their holy scripture. The indicative mood is declarative representing the
verbal action from the viewpoint of dogmatic reality. Paul quotes from the Old
Testament and he also quotes something that has already been quoted in other
passages in the New Testament. Part of the New Testament has already been
formed and in this way the New Testament is considered on a par with the Old
Testament and the Old Testament is considered on a par with the New Testament,
and that satisfies both the Old and the New dispensations. It also verifies the
fact that the Old Testament and the New Testament together form the sacred
canon of scripture.
There are two quotations actually
given in this passage. The first is taken from Deuteronomy 25:4 but it is also
quoted in 1 Corinthians 9:9. The very fact that Paul uses a word that he has
already quoted in a previous epistle indicates that Paul himself was aware that
what he was writing was a part of the scripture.
“Thou shalt not muzzle” — future
active indicative of qimow plus the strong negative o)uk. The future tense is called the imperative future
and with the negative it means the imperative future of prohibition. In other
words, in the Greek it carries the same strength as the decalogue “Thou shalt
nots.”
“the ox” is the accusative singular
direct object of the masculine gender of the noun bouj
which is a bull, a hardworking bull around the farm.
“that treadeth out the corn” is
wrong. it is a present active participle of a)loaw
which means to thresh. We have a threshing bull, he is actually pulling an
instrument for threshing. The present tense is the aoristic present for
punctiliar action in present time. The active voice: the owner of the bull
produces the action, he remunerates him by not muzzling him. The participle is
temporal and it should read: “For the scripture says, You shall not muzzle the
bull while he is threshing.” This is the principle of remuneration. The same
thing is true of the congregation. The church releasees the time of the pastor
so he can study and teach, and as a result he feeds himself while he studies.
He feeds himself spiritually by taking in the Word and he feeds himself by
being remunerated for studying the Word.
The second quotation is also found
in Deuteronomy 24:15. It is quoted in Luke 10:7. The word “and” is incorrect.
This is the adjunctive use of the conjunction kai
which should be translated “also.” In other words, also from the two references
where this is previously used.
“the labourer” — the nominative
singular e)rgathj which means a person who is
working for someone else for wages. It means “labour” as a principle.
“is worthy of his reward” — “worthy”
is a predicate adjective of a)cioj; “reward” is misqoj which means wages. This indicated that in the
ancient world management set up standards and then paid on the basis of the
standards being fulfilled. The word “worthy” means that there were previous
standards which were fulfilled.
Translation: “For the scripture
says, You will not muzzle the bull while he is threshing. Also, the labourer is
worthy of his wages.”
Summary
1. The passage teaches, first of all
from its surface examination, the principle of fair remuneration. This
principle is quoted here as documentation for remuneration of the
pastor-guardian of the local church.
2. However, the principle applies to
every facet of life. The dignity of humanity, the poise of mankind, is related
to productive capacity.
3. In other words, man must work for
a living since the fall of Adam.
4. Management must apply this
principle in dealing with labour.
5. People must apply this principle
in paying their doctor bills, their dentist bills, their plumber bills, or any
profession or trade where knowledge or skill is required. In other words, we
are not only talking about remuneration of the pastor, we are talking about
remuneration as a principle in life.
6. This means paying your bills to
doctors, lawyers, dentists, engineers, or any professional category where years
have been spent in acquiring this knowledge or profession. They have a right to
charge.
7. In effect, this bill should pay
for knowledge and education of the professional type, his skill, his honour,
his integrity.
8. This means that the Government
should pay well its honourable profession, such as the military category.
9. This means that local government
should pay well its professional employees — police and fire-fighters, for
example.
10. This means that the individual
should pay well the tradesman, the professional, who has acquired both
technical knowledge and skill in a specific field. The abuses of labour do not
change the principle of remuneration.
Verse 19 — the principle of
reprimand of the pastor. “Against an elder” — the words “plurality of elders”
equals apostasy. There is no such thing as plurality of elders in a local
church. There was a plurality of elders in Ephesus but there were numbers of
local churches. There is only one elder for a local church. So we start out
with a prepositional phrase, kata plus the genitive of presbuteroj, and it means a pastor-guardian of a local church.
This is minus the definite article, and the absence of the definite article
says you may have a complaint against the pastor but not to push it too much.
The absence of the definite article refers to the high authority of the
individual involved, and if you are just wrong in one count then you are going
to get the whole thing right back in your face. The reprimand from the
congregation must be handled in such a way so as not to bring discipline on the
congregation or any individual. But there is a way to handle this. Since the
pastor-guardian is responsible to God, God disciplines him. Reprimand or
censorship would only exist where someone in the congregation has been wronged.
“receive not” is incorrect. It is
the present middle imperative of paradexomai and is addressed to the
representatives of the congregation which would be the board of deacons. This
is a command to the board of deacons since it is in the imperative mood, but it
is in the imperative mood plus a negative. The imperative plus the negative
means a prohibition. Paradexomai means to acknowledge or to
accept. The present tense is an aoristic present for something that might occur
at some time, so it is a punctiliar concept in present time. The middle voice
is the direct middle which refers the results of the action directly back to
the agent.
“an accusation” — the accusative
singular direct object from katagoria. It does mean accusation.
The congregation or some portion of the congregation may approach the
administrative representatives of the congregation, the board of deacons. They
are never to acknowledge or entertain an accusation against the pastor from one
person in the congregation. This is a principle that also applies to law.
Principle
1. There is always someone in the
congregation who is dissatisfied. There are two very real types of antagonism:
a) He is doing a good job and yet steps on someone’s toes; b) He is doing a
very bad job.
2. These antagonisms should never be
permitted by the congregation as a means of rejecting the authority of the
pastor.
3. Again the principle: The pastor
is responsible to God who knows all the facts in the case and not only
disciplines him in a just manner but where you get single discipline he gets
double discipline.
4. In fact, from God the pastor
receives double discipline.
5. Those who seek to malign or
accuse a pastor receive intensified discipline for their efforts.
6. Therefore in the normal course of
action in the congregation maligning, gossiping, judging, accusing, condemning
a pastor is prohibited by the Word.
7. The exception is stated in the
rest of this verse but first there must be some emphasis on the actual
prohibition.
8. Remember that the pastor should
receive double honour — respect and remuneration. In the previous verse
remuneration is covered, in this verse respect is covered by this prohibition.
9. A liar, an implacable or jealous
person, may malign a pastor to someone else. This someone else may be impressed
with the person who maligns and believes the lie. This someone else has no
discernment or common sense to detect the vindictiveness or the jealousy.
Therefore this someone else believes what is said.
10. This causes someone in the
congregation to lose respect for the pastor, thus depriving the pastor of half
of his double honour — respect.
11. Furthermore, this is the half of
the double honour which produces spiritual growth in you. Therefore maligning
and gossiping about the pastor of any local church, whether he is good or bad,
is forbidden in very strong terms.
“but” is the Greek e)i mh and should be translated “except.”
“before two or three witnesses” —
the preposition e)pi plus the genitive, and it
should be translated “except of the basis of testimony of two or three
witnesses.” As soon as we get into the “two or three witnesses” we get into the
biblical laws of evidence as stated in Deuteronomy 19:15 — “A single witness
shall not rise up against a man on account of his iniquity, or any sin which he
sins; on the evidence of two or three witnesses an indictment will be
rendered.” One person saying it makes it hearsay, and hearsay is not admissible
as evidence. The testimony of one person is never conclusive. The reprimand or
discipline of a pastor demands a formal procedure in which true evidence is
introduced by a group of witnesses.
Verse 20 — now we come to the
discipline of the congregation. We all understand that the discipline is first
of all from the Lord but when a congregation comes together and there is
someone who is disruptive as far as the function of the local church is concerned,
then that person is disciplined within the framework of the local church. This
is a biblical principle.
“Them that sin” — the accusative
plural of the definite article is used as the direct object of the verb. The
definite article is used for a relative pronoun to indicate the congregation of
the local church. The congregation in assembly are students without portfolio.
Their purpose in assembly is to take in the Word of God, there is no other
objective. This intake and perception of the Word results in spiritual growth.
Spiritual growth results in glorifying God as well as receiving blessings
designed in eternity past. God knew that in this stage of human history Satan
would be the ruler of the world. Therefore it is God’s objective to provide
blessing for you totally apart from the Satanic system. The Satanic policy is
called in the Bible, evil; and totally apart from evil and apart from any
system under evil, you can receive wealth, success, prosperity, every type of
material blessing and spiritual blessing. “Those in the congregation who
continually sin” is the meaning of the present active participle of a(martanw. This is not referring to the general realm of
carnality which is divided into three categories: mental sins, verbal sins,
overt sins. So we have all categories of personal sin but they are not involved
in the function of this particular verb. The present tense here is a
retroactive progressive present or a present tense of duration, and it indicates
what has begun in the past and continues into the present time. The active
voice: the believers in the congregation produce the action of the verb through
maligning and gossiping about people in the congregation or the pastor or
someone. In other words, this particular type of sin is the invasion of the
privacy of other members of the royal family of God. The principle that applies
to this area is the principle of live and let live. Everyone has a right to his
privacy.
The sinning that is in this passage
is related to the general context. It has to do with the violation of someone’s
privacy — either gossiping or maligning or judging them, or some intrusion upon
their privacy.
The participle is circumstantial for
various sins committed by the congregation in rejection of the pastor’s
authority and teaching. In other words, members of the congregation who
continually sin in this matter is what is being said. That is. the congregation
who rejects one half of the pastor’s double honour, respect and remuneration.
This particular section is dealing with respect for the pastor, for when you
respect his authority you respect the privacy of the congregation as well as
the privacy of the pastor. Mental sins which reject the pastor’s authority
include arrogance, jealousy, vindictiveness, implacability, bitterness, hatred,
antagonism. Verbal sins such as gossip, maligning, judging, accusing, are all
included as being sinning in this matter. Since the pastor’s double honour
includes respect it is his responsibility to use his authority for the
maintenance of the privacy of the royal priesthood.
“rebuke” is a present active
imperative from e)legxw synonymous with our English
word “reprimand” or to expose to discipline. It is the pastor’s responsibility
to discipline anyone in the congregation who is intruding upon the privacy of
someone else. This is talking about privacy as it relates to the assembly of
the local church. The word should be translated “be reprimanding.” This is an
aoristic present for punctiliar action in present time. The active voice:
Timothy must now begin a counter attack. He is on the floor, he has been
trampled by everyone in his congregation, he is a “mouse” and now he must
suddenly become a roaring lion. Every pastor-guardian of the local church in
every generation must be aggressive. He must be aggressive in studying the Word
of God, he must be aggressive in teaching the Word of God, and he must be
aggressive in his counterattack of any type of bullying. A congregation must be
protected by the aggressiveness of the pastor in cutting off this type of
thing. The imperative mood is a command to all pastors.
“before all” — when the pastor’s
authority is challenged it must be handled in public. This is an improper
preposition, e)nwpion plus the genitive plural of
paj. E)nwpion is an adverb used as a preposition so it is called
an improper preposition — “reprimand [or discipline] before all [the entire
congregation].” The pastor must reprimand or discipline recalcitrants before
the congregation or lose his authority over the congregation. No pastor can
fulfil his ministry of study and teach without the double honour principle, and
this is an attack upon the first phase of double honour which is respect. No
pastor can teach without authority just as no pastor can devote his time to
study without remuneration. Therefore to study the pastor must be paid; the
pastor must have respect or authority to teach. The recalcitrant not only
undermines the pastor but he undermines others as well.
“that” — the conjunction i(na introduces a final clause stating the purpose for
the objective, “in order that.”
“others” — o(i loipoi is a nominative plural and it means the rest of the
congregation. Then we have the adjunctive use of the conjunction kai which means “also.”
“may fear” — this isn’t even there.
First of all is the present active subjunctive of e)xw which
means to have something. The present tense of e)xw
is the perfective present, it denotes continuation of results from the present
reality. The active voice: the o(i
loipoi, the
rest of the congregation, produced the action. The subjunctive mood goes with i(na as a potential subjunctive for future reference,
and also to denote the objective. They must have something. The accusative
singular direct object of the substantive foboj
is what they must have. It not only means fear but it means respect. The
subjunctive mood indicates that this is the purpose.
Translation: “Those of the
congregation who continually sin in this matter reprimand {discipline] them
before the entire congregation, in order that the rest of the congregation also
may have respect.”
What does this mean?
1. We have now come to a full
explanation of the double honour of verse 17.
2. Double honour refers to respect
and remuneration. The pastor must have respect from the congregation to
communicate doctrine to them. The reason is that doctrine is controversial, it
cuts like a knife. Doctrine challenges, rips apart and rebuilds.
3. The pastor must have respect in
order to effectively communicate doctrine to the congregation. He cannot do so
otherwise.
4. Any attack upon the authority of
the pastor from the congregation must be met with emphatic, vigorous,
aggressive reprimand.
5. Timothy had lost control of his
congregation, therefore he could not teach them the many wonderful doctrines
which he knows.
6. Every revolution, every
conspiracy in the congregation must be vigorously suppressed if the pastor is
to continue having a ministry with the congregation.
7. No taper or member of this
congregation should ever be guilty of revolt wherever he goes, no matter how
bad the pastor is.
8. It is true that many pastors are
ineffective in their teaching. This does not give tapers the right to malign or
revolt, it gives them only the option of quiet departure without stirring up
any fuss, without detracting from the authority of the pastor.
9. God must discipline such a
pastor. Leave that to God! He does a better job. Do not bring discipline on
yourself by starting a conspiracy, a revolution, or appointing yourself to be a
committee to discipline the pastor.
10. This means that the matter of
double honour has been settled at this point. There must be double honour for
effective leadership in any local church.
Verse 21 — the objectivity of
leadership. “I charge” is the present active indicative of diamarturomai, it means to solemnly warn or to solemnly charge.
The present tense is a descriptive present to indicate what is now going on.
The form is middle voice but it is middle in form, active in meaning — a
deponent verb. The apostle Paul is now using all of his authority as an apostle
to command Timothy to a course of action. The indicative mood is declarative
for the reality of the fact that Paul is pulling his rank on Timothy. This is a
verb of command.
The command is made in three
categories: before God, before the Lord Jesus Christ, and before the elect
angels.
“before” is the same improper
preposition having three objects in the genitive case, e)nwpion, which is an adverb used as a preposition; “God” —
the genitive of qeoj refers to God the Father.
He is mentioned because He is the author of the divine plan. As the author of
the divine plan called grace He is often mentioned in this connection.
Furthermore, He is the ultimate source of all provision to the royal family of
God; “the Lord Jesus Christ” — literally, “and Christ Jesus,” who is the second
person of the Trinity and the prince ruler of the Church. He is the head of the
royal family of God. He is the high priest. So why don’t we have the Holy
Spirit and round out the entire Trinity? Because the Holy Spirit remains in the
background during the Church Age. His objective is to glorify Jesus Christ, to
form the royal family, to shape up the royal family, to empower the royal family.
Therefore it is the ministry of god the Holy Spirit to stay in the background
and not be mentioned in order to glorify Jesus Christ. This is why many times
only the two members of the Trinity are mentioned in the epistles.
“and the elect angels” is also in
the genitive and is a reference to the angelic observation of mankind during
the course of human history, and especially during the intensified stage of the
angelic conflict in which we find ourselves today.
“that” — again we have that same
conjunction i(na which introduces a final
clause. The final clause is used in a periphrastic sense for the infinitive to
denote the purpose, the objective, and it can be translated like an infinitive.
“thou observe” — the aorist active
subjunctive of fulassw which means to guard, to be
alert as a sentry. It should be translated “guard” — in the sense of protect
and preserve or in the sense of alertness. The aorist tense is a constative
aorist, it gathers the action of the verb into one entirety. It takes the entire
ministry of Timothy and demands that that ministry be characterised throughout
his lifetime as a ministry of alertness, a ministry of protection and
preservation of the Word of God. The active voice: Timothy as the
pastor-guardian produces the action. The principle is that in every generation
pastor-guardians are to produce the action. The mood is subjunctive. It is
potential and is used with the conjunction to denote the objective of the
pastor’s leadership.
“these things” — the accusative
plural direct object of the demonstrative pronoun o(utoj
which emphasises the principles of leadership in context.
“without preferring one before
another” is not correct. There is here another adverb used as an improper
preposition — xwrij which means “apart from” or
“without.” The object in the genitive case is prokrima which means “prejudice.”
What does this mean?
1. No one can have the extensive
authority possessed by the pastor of a local church and be guilty of prejudice.
2. Authority demands maximum objectivity
in dealing with personnel. Authority is abused when pride intrudes. Pride means
prejudice.
3. The pastor can never allow his
personal feelings, his likes or his dislikes, to influence him in the function
of his ministry.
4. The pastor can never judge cases
or administer discipline or handle false doctrine when he has the attitude “my
friends, right or wrong.” He must also be free from doctrinal prejudice,
legalism.
5. His sole criteria for everything
includes the principles of Bible doctrine as he has studied them and as he has
taught them, and as they become the grace policy of the local church. This, in
effect, is the quintessence of objectivity in spiritual leadership.
“doing nothing” — the present active
participle of poiew. It is linear aktionsart,
it means habitually doing. The word “nothing” is the accusative neuter singular
the direct object from mhdeij, a compound: e)ij is one; mh is not, and it comes to
mean nothing.
“by partiality” — preposition kata plus the accusative proskrisij, and it should be, “doing nothing in a spirit of partiality.”
Principle
1. There is no function in the
ministry that calls for partiality or bias or prejudice. The life of the pastor
is the Word and what the Word says is the only thing that counts.
2. While a minister may be closer to
some members of the congregation than others he must exercise his authority in
fairness and justice to all members of the congregation.
3. Personal relationships or
friendships must never be a factor in policy, in command decision in the
function of authority. That is true for life anywhere.
4. The greater the authority in
leadership the greater the freedom from bias, the greater the freedom from
partiality and prejudice. In other words, the higher the leader goes the more
he must be absolutely stripped of any kind of prejudice.
5. No decision, judgment, policy, is
made on the basis of influence by friends, loved ones, or relatives.
6. A pastor must use his authority,
make his decisions, establish his policy, on the basis of what the Bible
teaches.
7. Personal friendships have nothing
to do with policy or the administrative functions of the local church.
8. People should never underrate the
influence of doctrine.
Translation: “I solemnly charge you
before the God, and Christ Jesus, and the elect angels, that you guard
[protect, preserve] these principles [of leadership] without prejudice,
habitually doing nothing in a spirit of partiality.”
Verse 22 — “Lay hands suddenly on no
man” has to do with the fact that a pastor is often conned by other people into
thinking they are something that they are not. “Lay hands” is the present
active imperative of the verb e)pitiqhmi. The present tense is a
customary present for what habitually occurs in recognition of a young man who
is now qualified to enter the ministry. The active voice tells us that Timothy
must avoid the action of the verb — not hurriedly ordaining young men. It must
be done after proper and careful deliberation. This verse, therefore, is the
result of the previous verse where impartiality is commanded. The imperative
mood plus the negative is the imperative of prohibition, and Timothy is
prohibited from ordaining unqualified in Ephesus from entering into the
ministry.
“suddenly” is the adverb taxewj which means “too quickly,” and it is used in an
unfavourable sense. “Do not ordain anyone too hastily.”
“on no man” is the dative singular
masculine of the adjective mhdeij, “no one” or “anyone.” The
dative case is the indirect object.
This means:
1. This is the first sign of
instability in the pastor’s leadership when on the basis of partiality, on the
basis of emotional appeal, on the basis of a smoke screen of sincerity, the
pastor feels compelled to ordain someone. This is really partiality and on the
basis of partiality he is too hasty in the ordination of someone in his
congregation.
2. Stability of leadership demands
that all personnel administration in the local church be accomplished from good
judgment without prejudice and without partiality.
3. Timothy had been over impressed
with some of the young men in the Ephesian congregation. This is because he has
a strong trend toward asceticism and because he is ordaining those who are just
like he is. He has been over impressed with the wrong people in the
congregation and some of them have been ordained too soon. Therefore the first
area in which he is attacked for being unstable in this context is in his
personnel selection. Ordination is taken as an illustration but personnel
selection can go to any facet of a local church.
“neither” is a negative disjunctive
particle mhdh, and it goes from one
negative to another — the purpose of the disjunctive particle. Each prohibition
is a sign of instability in some area of leadership. The first prohibition was
the sign of poor judgment in the field of personnel. The second prohibition is
a sign of instability by being erroneously influenced, by being led instead of
leading — “and stop.”
“be partaker” is the present active
imperative from koinwnew, a verb meaning to
participate, to contribute, to share in — “and stop participating.” The present
tense is retroactive progressive present, it denotes something that happened in
the past and continues into the present time. The active voice plus mhdh means to stop participating. The imperative mood is
a command to Timothy and all unstable pastors in every generation of the Church
Age.
“of other men’s sins” — literally,
“the sins belonging to others.” It means don’t participate in someone else’s
sins. Timothy indicates that he is unstable as a leader because he is easily
influenced by others. No one in leadership can be influenced by anything but
Bible doctrine and grace policies which are found in the scripture. To be
influenced by others is a sign of weakness. To be influenced by the sins of
others so as to participate in them is a sign of maximum instability.
The third prohibition is also
related to instability in leadership:
“keep” is the present active
imperative of terew which means to guard. It is
the customary present for what may be reasonably expected of a pastor. The
active voice: Timothy as a pastor must produce the action. It is the imperative
mood of command, and also a prohibition.
“thyself pure” — the word “thyself”
is the accusative singular direct object of the reflexive pronoun seautou. In the reflexive pronoun the action of the verb is
referred back to the subject. It bounces back on Timothy. “Pure” is the
adverbial accusative masculine singular a)gnoj
which has to do with mental pureness. There is no such thing as a pastor or
anyone else refraining from sin. There is no such thing as sinless perfection
in this life, we have and we carry to the grave and old sin nature, and this
means that we are going to sin as long as we live. But a pastor must be pure in
one area, and he must have sinless perfection in this one area. It refers to
mental pureness in the sense of freedom from mental attitude sins. The
adverbial accusative performs a limited function which does not directly
complement the verb, it qualifies it instead. It qualifies it in an indirect
way. In other words, Timothy is to guard himself but he is to guard himself in
a certain way which implies that he has been failing. Inadequate people always
move to mental attitude sins. Mental attitude sins compensate for their
inadequacies. Mental attitude is definitely related to leadership
qualification. No one can exercise authority and be impure in the field of
mental attitude sins.
Translation: “Do not ordain anyone
to hastily, and stop participating in sins belonging to others: be guarding
yourself with reference to a pure mental attitude.”
Summary
1. There are three weakness in
Timothy which form a triad of leadership weakness, leadership instability.
2. Each one of these sentences
relates to a different problem of instability in leadership, and also a
different problem in the life of Timothy.
3. Timothy had strong partiality
resulting in rashness with regard to hasty ordination of unqualified persons.
4. Weak Timothy was attracted to
weak persons who impressed him as qualified for the ministry.
5. Timothy was creating a clergy of
weak sisters, unstable legalists, an order of ascetic wimps.
6. Though obviously avoiding overt
sins Timothy was petty, small, vindictive, prone to mental attitude sins which
he shared with his weak, wimpy clique.
7. In his clique he accepted the
attitudes and evaluations of his friends, resulting in more pettiness and more
ascetic legalism.
8. Timothy needed to become alert
with regard to the fact that he had an Achilles heel.
9. His mental attitude sins were
destroying his leadership in the local church.
10. He needed to be a guardian and a
watch dog on his own soul because of his vulnerability to mental attitude sins.
11. Timothy was, in fact, much like
a person with the sword of Damocles dangling over his head, while walking on
the edge of a volcano and nursing a viper in his bosom.
Verse 23 — prescription. This is not
a prescription for all. “Drink no longer water” — a very strong negative adverb
mhketi which means “no longer”;
plus the present active imperative of a compound verb, u(dropotew: potew means to drink; u(dror
is water. Timothy has been drinking water all of his life, he was a total
abstainer from alcohol. The present tense is a descriptive present to indicate
what is now going on. The active voice: Timothy who had been abstaining from
alcohol and drinking only water is now prohibited from water. The imperative
mood is an imperative of prohibition.
“but” is the strong adversative
conjunction a)lla which sets up a contrast
between drinking water and drinking alcoholic beverage.
“use” — present active imperative
from the verb xraomai which means to employ, to
make use of. The present tense is an iterative present, it describes what
recurs at certain intervals, hence the present tense of repeated action. In
other words, this is not linear aktionsart. The active voice: Timothy must drink
moderately. The imperative mood is a command to drink moderately.
“a little wine” — the dative
singular advantage from o)inoj which is alcoholic
beverage, not grape juice; plus the quantitative adjective o)ligoj which means a small amount.
“for thy stomach’s sake” — dia plus the accusative of stomaxoj. This is the area of the stomach and it can be translated “stomach.”
It is translated “stomach” here but it is really a transliteration. Apparently
it is referring to the central nervous system in the solar plexus which is
above the stomach.
“and thine often infirmities” — the
connective kai which continues the
prepositional phrase plus the accusative plural of the definite article used as
a possessive pronoun, plus the accusative plural of the adjective puknoj which means “frequent.” He is not a relaxed person.
Translation: “No longer be a water
drinker, but be making use of a small amount of wine because of your central
nervous system and your frequent illnesses.”
The doctrine of drinking
1. The importance of objectivity.
a) We are interested in
this study in what the Bible says about drinking and alcoholic beverage.
b) Those who have had
personal problems because of drinking or are related to those with drinking
problems have difficulty in approaching this subject objectively.
c) Those who have been
reared in the atmosphere of Christian legalism will be shocked by what the
Bible teaches.
d) Those who are looking
for an excuse to get off the wagon will think they have smelled a cork.
e) No subject has more
prejudice and less reason than the subject of drinking alcoholic beverage.
f)
What we are about to study is not a booze sermon, nor is it an excuse for some
weak sister to start drinking again. It is none of these things.
g) The objective is not
to get believers on or off the wagon but to teach what the Bible says about
drinking.
h) The fact that the
Bible has a lot to say on the subject merely proves that drinking has long been
an issue in the history of the human race.
2. The classification of 20th
century beverage.
a) We live in a time of
human history when there are numerous categories of alcoholic beverage,
beverage which is not only available but made use of in many different ways for
many different purposes. For example, medicine. Or, on the other hand,
seduction. Or, escape or frantic search for happiness. Or stimulation. Also
relaxation and celebration.
b) It should be pointed
out immediately that alcohol is both toxic and beneficial; it is both
destructive and helpful; it is both a curse and a blessing.
c) Therefore a
classification of 20th century alcohol is helpful.
i) Medicine. Alcohol is very good in
compounding prescriptions, it is an excellent solvent and it is a preserving
agent.
ii) It also comes in the form of a
whiskey, and alcoholic liquor which is distilled from serial grains. The term
is derived from the Celtic “usquebaugh” and it means the plain spirit derived
from grain. Later it included compounded beverages which added both sugar and
flavourings, and finally it came to be called whiskey. Whiskey is often
classified by geographical location. There are three general classifications:
Scotch, Irish, and American.
All whiskeys are manufactured by
very much the same process. First of all there is the preparation of the liquor
known as wart, the mashing. Then there is the fermentation of the wart to
produce the wash, and thirdly there is the separation of the spirit from the
wash by distillation. Irish whiskey uses both malted and unmalted barley, oats,
wheat, rye. Scotch whiskey uses malted barley. These fall into four categories.
The highland malts which have been cured over peat fires. There are lowland
malts which have a full flavour but are not as distinctive as the highland so
they’re used for blends. A third category is the Islay malts, used primarily
for blends. Then there is the Campbelltown malts which have a more pronounced
flavour. Three categories are used for blends, the highland is not. US whiskey
falls into two categories: Bourbon and Rye. There is also a corn whiskey.
iii) Vodka. It is an alcoholic
beverage manufactured from potatoes and maze.
iv) Gin. It gets its name from the
juniper berry used as the principle flavouring. Gin is 76 per cent maze, 15 per
cent malt, 10 per cent rye. Sweetened gin is obtained by adding sugar or syrup.
v) Wine. This is the fermented juice
of the grape. There are four general categories of wine today: Table wine,
sherry, the fortified wines like port and Madeira, and then there are the
sparkling wines like Champaign.
vi) Brandy, which is fermented juice
of grapes and other fruits, aged for some time in wood. The most famous
brandies come from a district in France called Cognac. Brandy does not age in a
bottle, it has to age in wood.
vii) Liqueurs — flavoured spirits
sweetened by the addition of sugar or syrup.
viii) Beer. One of the oldest forms
of alcoholic beverage. It is fermented of malted serials, usually barley malt,
to which hops have been added. There is a record of Babylonian beer going back
to 4000 BC. Ramses III of Egypt consecrated to the god of Egypt 466,303 jugs of
beer. Historians like Herodotus, Pliny, Tacetus comment on beer in the ancient
world. The art of brewing became well-known throughout the ancient world. The
Chaldeans had it. The art spread to Egypt, Greece, and Rome, so that beer
became quite a famous alcoholic beverage.
3. The Bible condemns drunkenness
and makes it very clear that drunkenness is a sin — Isaiah 5:11,22; 28:7,8;
Proverbs 20:1; 23:20; Romans 13:13; 1 Corinthians 5:11; Ephesians 5:18.
Drunkenness is a handicap to those who are in authority, temporal authority
such as kings — Proverbs 31:4,5; spiritual authority such as pastors — 1
Timothy 3:3; Titus 1:7; or deacons — 1 Timothy 3:8. None of these categories
are forbidden alcoholic beverage but all must be very temperate in keeping with
the authority that they exercise. Those is authority, then, are not forbidden
alcohol but they are warned against drunkenness as a possibility of abusing
their authority. Not only is drunkenness a sin but people in that status abuse
their authority.
Drunkenness is also condemned in
certain Bible characters. Noah in Genesis 9:21; Nabal in 1 Samuel 25:36,37; Lot
is Genesis 19:32-36; the tribe of Ephraim in Isaiah 28:1.
4. The adverse effects of alcohol.
a) Drunkenness or
excessive use of alcohol leads to crime, suicide, divorce, traffic accidents,
economic and industrial losses, loss of health, miserable circumstances,
poverty, national disaster.
b) It should be
remembered that alcohol is not a stimulant, it is a depressant. As a depressant
it lowers inhibitions, dulls the reflexes, destroys common sense and good
judgment, and it stimulates mental attitude sins.
c) But drunkenness also
produces more than impulsive behaviour and social tragedy, it is the source of
quite a number of diseases. It is also weakening of the health which leads to
diseases not directly induced by alcohol.
d) Excessive alcohol
affects the brain in numerous ways, including cerebral hemorrhage, delirium
tremens which produce mental confusion, anxiety, terror, auditory and visual
hallucinations as well as delusions. Alcohol in excess also attacks the liver.
It is the cause of vernicese disease: a paralysis of the eyes, uncoordinated
walk, the clouding of consciousness, final coma and death. As a depressant
alcohol cooperates with the old sin nature to lower standards of resistance to
sins in all categories. This means that excessive drinking or drunkenness is
not only a sin in itself but has dire spiritual consequences as well as
physical. The Bible gives no encouragement and no excuse for excessive
drinking.
There are two types, however, of
excessive drinkers. The first type is the type who drinks a large amount at one
time. The other one goes for days and days, the one who drinks constantly day
in and day out. There are two kinds of people who have a drinking problem.
Those who can’t stop from the steady drinking and those who can’t stop from
heavy drinking in a short period of time. Both of these types should avoid any
use of alcohol except in medicine. The chemistry of the blood and individual
metabolism is related to how much a person can assimilate — how much alcohol
content in the blood, how much can your body take out per hour as to how much
you are taking in. Inebriation is a sin and there is no benefit from having an
alcoholic problem.
5. Proper and improper uses of
alcohol. Proverbs 34:4-7 — wine attacks authority of leadership; wine attacks
the function of leadership; the correct use of wine (Give strong drink to him
who is dying); to those whose life is bitter.
1 Timothy 5:23 —
a) This passage indicates that wine
or certain alcoholic beverages had both a relaxing and beneficial effect on
Timothy.
b) Paul is prescribing a moderate
amount of alcohol to relax the nervous high-strung Timothy.
c) A limited amount of wine acts as
a sedation; too much wine has a toxic effect.
d) Wine stimulates the appetite
through the increase of gastric juices while at the same time relaxing the
solar plexus, the area of the central nervous system, the stomach muscles, and
so on.
e) The benefits of wine, then, can
be summarised as follows: beneficial to brain and nervous system as a
depressant producing sedation; beneficial to the stomach in terms of appetite,
digestion; beneficial to the circulation, especially in the case of older
people.
Psalm 104:15 — “And the wine which
makes man’s heart glad, maketh his well-nourished face radiant, and food which
sustains man’s right lobe.” To have the heart glad refers to a limited amount.
The passage is actually saying a little wine with food is a good thing.
6. The incident where Jesus turned
the water to wine — John 2:1-11.
a) Jesus was invited to
a wedding in Cana of Galilee, along with His disciples — verse 2.
b) A crisis occurred
when they ran out of wine — verse 3.
c) Jesus replied to His
mother in verse 4. “What is this to me or to you?” I.e. What difference does it
make to us. Neither Jesus nor Mary were in any way hurt by the fact that they
arrived late and hadn’t had any wine.
d) However, Mary implied
that Jesus should have left before the wine ran out.
e) Jesus said to her, So
what! You and I do not have to depend on wine for anything.
f) Then Jesus challenged
Mary’s subtle hint about departure by saying, “Mine hour has not yet come.”
g) This was a reference
to His saving work on the cross, and it is mentioned on numerous occasions:
John 7:30; 820; 12:23,27; 16:32; 17:1. In other words, He begins with a very
strong vocative of rebuke. It states that neither Jesus nor His mother depended
upon wine for a good time. This verse states that His departure from the
wedding and from this life had not yet come. This is a double entendre.
Furthermore, Jesus implied that He would stay and rectify the situation. So His
mother understood that He would stay and that He would do something about it.
h) His mother said to
the servants, “… do it.”
What about the wine? It was a
wedding feast and they were serving alcoholic beverage, which was the custom.
They ran out of wine which did create a crisis for hospitality. So Jesus, to
indicate that drinking wine was not an issue with regard to eternal salvation,
now performs a miracle. Wine isn’t an issue. Now He provides more wine, and the
best wine that anyone ever had. Jesus truly turned water into wine. The
miracle, however, neither condones nor condemns drinking. Like all miracles,
its purpose is to focus attention on who and what Christ is. it is to point out
that Christ is the God-Man, the unique person of the universe. He is the son of
David. This is the first advent. The issue is salvation, not whether you drink
wine or not. The issue is Christ, not social crisis and not a social problem.
There were six water pots, each one
held 20-30 gallons. At 20 gallons that would be 120 gallons of water. Wine is
composed of 70-80 per cent water. There is 12-30 per cent grape sugar, 12-14
per cent ethyl alcohol, there are other alcohols. Wine has carbon dioxide,
organic acids, glycerin, organic colouring, microorganisms for fermentation. So
water into wine is unexplainable, it is not a miracle if you can explain it. It
was a miracle in which at least 120 gallons of water were turned into 120
gallons of wine.
Christ, not wine, is the issue here.
The miracle gave everyone in Cana a chance to be saved, for the miracle
presents God’s plan of grace in the person of Jesus Christ, the God-Man, the
only saviour. It was a miracle to focus attention on who and what Christ is.
7. Drinking should also be related
to the divine laws of modus operandi.
a) The law of liberty.
Every believer has the right to drink a moderate amount of alcoholic beverage,
it is not a sin. But then there are other laws that supersede at certain times.
b) There is the law of
expediency. It is expedient not to drink under certain conditions: witnessing,
and so on. Or when drinking becomes an issue to an unbeliever.
c) The law of love. It
becomes necessary to refrain from drinking when it becomes a means of leading
astray a weaker believer.
d) The law of supreme
sacrifice. Drinking is forbidden when it hinders a specific ministry or leadership
function in life.
8. Alcohol is also a part of
national disaster — Joel 1:4-6; Isaiah 28:1-9; Jeremiah 13:12-17.
9. The principle of common sense in
drinking. Not only does the Bible have a lot to say about drinking — pro and
con, when you should and when you shouldn’t — but even an unbeliever with an
average amount of common sense ought to be able to handle the problem.
a) Alcohol is wasted on
young people. Young people ought not to drink. They are neither smart enough or
wise enough to derive any benefit from drinking.
b) Young people pick up
all the pitfalls and none of the benefits of drinking.
c) Do not drink while
frustrated or unhappy. When you link emotion with drinking you are going to
have a problem.
d) Young ladies who date
strangers should be non-drinkers (on that date). Never drink with a stranger,
never drink at a strange place.
e) Never drink alone.
Moderate drinking is for social life.
f) Never drink on the
job or whole doing work.
g) Never drink while
operating a motor vehicle, flying an airplane, operating any type of machinery.
h) Never mix gunpowder
and alcohol. Never drink while hunting, plinking, shooting.
i) When you get a little
older drink moderately with friends whom you trust.
j) Drunkenness and
dissipation is a waste of time as well as life. While drinking is not forbidden
by the Bible drunkenness is stupidity as well as a sin.
k) The Christian lush is
a reversionist who has failed to utilise the grace provision for learning
doctrine, growing in grace, advancing to the objective.
Verse 24 — “Some men’s sins” is the
nominative plural of a(martia, plus the possessive
genitive plural of the indefinite pronoun tij
used to define a category, plus the possessive genitive plural from the noun a)nqrwpoj. Literally, it is “The sins of certain men.” This
is a general principle but it applies specifically to Timothy. It means, first
of all by interpretation, the sins of pastor-teachers. The indefinite relative
pronoun here simply shows the fact that pastor-teachers are the category, are
in the public eye, and therefore their failures and weaknesses as well as their
strengths are obvious to all. All pastor’s sin.
“are open” — the present active
indicative of e)imi. With it is a predicate
nominative plural from the adjective prodhloj which means “conspicuous,
obvious.” Everyone sins, so immediately we see two categories:
those whose sins are obvious and those whose sins are hidden.
Principles
1. Some pastors have conspicuous,
prominent, and obvious sins. Their congregations know their area of weakness as
well as they know it themselves. By application, many people have obvious sins
known to many; others have sins that are unknown.
2. You will note that this does not
hinder the ministry or the teaching of the pastor-teacher of the local church.
He has the gift of teaching, he recovers from his carnality, and under the
filling of the Spirit he goes right on in his function — just like anyone who
learns the grace principle of rebound and uses it.
3. Everyone knew Timothy’s failures
and weaknesses, and many believers in the Ephesian congregation took advantage
of them.
4. All believers after salvation
continue to have an old sin nature and all believers after salvation continue
to sin. Spiritual growth leads to change in the type of sins that are committed
but they continue to sin.
5. Through the grace provision of
rebound any believer can recover from carnality.
6. Sin is not the issue in the
Christian way of life, evil is the issue — doctrine versus evil. The
battleground is the soul and the devil seeks to control your soul through evil;
the Lord seeks to control your soul through doctrine. In both cases volition is
not in any way tampered with. You can choose what you wish to think and you can
choose the content of your soul.
7. Sin was resolved at the cross.
Evil and sin are not the same, though they occasionally overlap.
8. While the sins of the pastor may
be obvious to the congregation, just as certainly certain sins of the
congregation may be obvious to the pastor. This discernment of others’ sins
does not deter the function of GAP and does not deter the spiritual life.
9. The pastor’s ministry depends on
the Lord and no carnality has ever ruined a pastor’s ministry.
10. So while the pastor’s sins may
be obvious it does not hinder the royal family from learning doctrine from that
same pastor.
11. Again, sin is not the issue,
evil is the issue in phase two. A pastor can sin and still have a wonderful
ministry, courtesy of rebound. But he cannot be evil and have a ministry at
all.
12. You can learn from sinful
people. Everything you have ever learned you have learned from sinful people.
13. Everything you have ever learned in any realm of knowledge or category of
life you have learned from sinful people, all people are sinful.
The word “beforehand” does not occur
in the original.
“going before” is a present active
participle from the verb proagw. It is a compound verb. Pro
means before; agw means to lead. It comes to
mean to precede, to lead forward, to go forward. The present tense is a
futuristic present, it denotes divine discipline which has not yet occurred,
but because of obvious carnality it is anticipated as already occurring. The
active voice: obvious carnality on the part of a pastor, or anyone else who is
a believer, produces the action of the verb leading to divine discipline. The
participle is circumstantial. It should be translated, “The sins of certain men
are obvious, leading him.”
“to judgment” — prepositional phrase,
e)ij plus the accusative of krisij, correctly translated “judgment” or “discipline.”
It refers to divine discipline.
The doctrine of divine discipline
1. Divine discipline is the sum
total of punitive measures from God which are used to correct and also to judge
the believer in time. Discipline is for time only. Discipline is the
alternative to blessing. Two areas of discipline exist in phase two: discipline
for carnality and discipline for reversionism, being under the influence of
evil. Discipline for carnality is temporary and is cancelled by the rebound
technique. Discipline for reversionism is permanent and terminates with the sin
unto death. Divine discipline, however, never implies loss of salvation. The
purpose of divine discipline in time is really to correct the believer, to
bring the believer to the point of rebound or reversion recovery. Therefore to
bring the believer to the place of blessing, for God is only glorified in the
believer’s life when he reaches the high ground and he receives paragraph SG2.
2. Discipline as a principle. The
principle of divine discipline is stated, for example, in Hebrews 12:5,6. Note
that punitive action from God is for the believer only. Divine discipline is
based on God’s love for the believer plus His relationship — He is our Father,
we are His sons. Proverbs 3:12 says the same thing.
3. The purpose of divine discipline
is stated in Revelation 3:19.
4. Divine discipline does not imply
loss of salvation — Galatians 3:26 approaches this from the family viewpoint.
Once you are in a family you cannot get out. Cf. 2 Timothy 2:11-13.
5. Divine discipline is confined to
time — Revelation 21:4.
6. Discipline is designed, however,
to turn cursing into blessing. Job 5:17,18.
7. Divine discipline of reversionism
includes self-induced misery — Psalm 7:14-16.
8. The principle of triple compound
discipline — Matthew 7:2.
9. There are three categories of
discipline for reversionism. a) The warning stage — Revelation 3:20; b) The
intense stage — Psalm 7:14; 38:1-14; c) The dying stage — Revelation 3:16;
Jeremiah 9:16; 44:12; Philippians 3:18,19.
“and some” — the dative plural of
reference to the indefinite pronoun tij. There is nothing
indefinite about this, it merely means a category of individuals is involved
and the word “indefinite” comes from the fact that they are not named. Tij is emphasising a category of believers. Here, by
interpretation, the category is pastors like Timothy, but by application all
believers.
“and” is a post positive enclitic
particle de and it has an adversative
connotation. It should be translated “on the other hand.”
“they follow after” — the present
active indicative of e)pakolouqew which means to follow
after, to appeal in sequel.
Notice
1. In the second category of pastors
who are especially involved, and all believers really, his sins are hidden from
the congregation. Their sins are not obvious.
2. He sins but the congregation is
not aware how he sins. They regard him as a plaster saint.
3. The congregation first become
aware of the pastor’s carnality through his discipline from God in this case.
4. While his sins are obscure his
discipline is perspicuous.
5. The point is, it does not make
any difference whether you are cognisant or ignorant of someone else’s sins.
6. You are not the judge; you are
not the disciplinarian.
7. In the case of the pastor he is
responsible to God, just as you are responsible to God.
8. Therefore the pastor teaches you
whether his sins are obvious or hidden.
9. You learn doctrine from the
pastor whether you know his sins or not.
Translation: “The sins of certain
pastors are obvious, leading to divine discipline; on the other hand, with
regard to another category of pastors they follow after.”
“They follow after”
1. This is an evaluation of time or
phase two. This evaluation refers to a specific category of the royal family —
pastors. By application it refers to all believers.
2. The principle applies to all
categories of the royal family of God.
3. The evaluation deals with
carnality in time, it has nothing to do with eternity.
4. Where their sins and failures are
well-known this requires patience, occupation with Christ, correct application
of doctrine.
5. The concern of the congregation
should never be over the sins of the pastor but over the content of his
message.
6. The congregation must concentrate
on the message, never on the person. No believer can have capacity for life and
have his eyes on the pastor or someone else.
Verse 25 — “Likewise also” is an
adverb, w(sautwj, which means “In the same
manner.” With it is an adjunctive kai, correctly translated
“also.” “In the same manner also.”
“the good works” — the nominative
plural of e)rgon which means production,
plus the nominative plural of the definite article used as a possessive
pronoun, plus the adjective kaloj which means noble. “In the
same manner also their noble production.”
“are manifest” — an implied present
active indicative of e)imi, which doesn’t actually
occur here but is put in because next we have prodhloj as a predicate nominative, and it means “obvious.” What makes it
obvious? Growth. When believers start to grow then it is obvious that the
ministry of teaching the Word is having its proper effect. Noble production is
the spiritual growth of the congregation.
“and they that are otherwise” — it
should be “and those deeds [production] which are otherwise.”
“cannot be hid” — the negative o)uk plus the present active indicative of dunamai, is correctly translated “is not able.” The words
“be hid” is the aorist passive infinitive of kruptw
means really to be concealed [from God].
Translation: “In the same manner
also their noble production is obvious; and that production which is otherwise
cannot be concealed [from God].”
Summary
1. The evaluation of the ministry of
the pastor-teacher in the local church is God’s responsibility.
2. The congregation, therefore,
should avoid judging or maligning a pastor.
3. This is an attack upon the
sovereignty of God, upon God’s divine prerogative to evaluate His own slave.
4. Do not get out of fellowship by
confusing the man with the message.
5. Objectivity concentrates on the
message, subjectivity focuses on the person.
6. The pastor is a sinner but you
can learn from sinners.
7. God has provided the spiritual
gift of pastor-teacher. He does the providing, the congregation does the
concentrating, and everyone grows up together and avoids any problems.