Chapter 1

 

            Introductory principles

            The first Roman imprisonment is recorded for us in Acts 28:16. In that imprisonment Paul was placed under house arrest for two years, waiting for his trial before Nero. This imprisonment is mentioned specifically in Philippians 2:23,24 and Philemon 22. During that first Roman imprisonment Paul wrote the four prison epistles: Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Philemon. This was around AD 62. He was then released for lack of evidence against him and he entered into the final stage of his active life of freedom. It is at this time that we have very little scripture on which to go but enough to more or less trace out what is commonly known as the fourth missionary journey. It began when Paul was acquitted and released in approximately AD 63. Paul left Rome almost immediately and went east to Asia Minor, to Macedonia — Philippians 2:24. He went on to Ephesus and on to the Lycus valley which he had never visited. He had not previously visited there but he promised to do so in the prison epistles. In the Lycus valley Paul had the privilege of stopping Gnosticism. In the next year, AD 64, he travelled west all the way to Spain as he should have done many years before. Romans 15:24,28 tells us that was his intention and he had failed to do so because of emotional reversionism. The trip was made by sea across the Mediterranean from Ephesus. He spent two years in Spain. From there he went back to Ephesus. He left Timothy in Ephesus to take command and become the pastor there. The Ephesian church was the key church of the ancient world at this time, and by leaving Timothy there Paul assumed that he was leaving one of his finest pastors in command. However, it did not turn out that way at all. The Ephesian church was out of hand and primarily because Timothy did not have the command ability to take charge. When it came time to select someone for this key spot Paul made a mistake. The mistake was rectified by Timothy’s own reversion recovery. While Timothy will become one of the great believers of his age after Paul’s death, up to that time he was the wimp of all wimps, the failure of all failures, and this key church was out of hand because the man in command had no command ability, no leadership ability, no moral courage, no concept of teaching the Word of God and establishing his authority on that basis. Leaving Timothy in charge, not realising what would happen, Paul went on to Macedonia where he wrote two epistles — 1 Timothy in AD 66 because of Timothy’s failure in Ephesus, and he wrote to Titus in AD 67. Other trouble spots now appeared and caused Paul to leave Trophimus at Miletus, and to leave Erastus at Corinth. At this point Paul began to advance into that Balkan area of the world and found a spot that needed evangelising, and so he wintered there in 67 and 68 AD. At the close of that winter he was seized and arrested and exported to Rome for his second imprisonment. This last epistle, 2 Timothy, was written during this second imprisonment. These are Paul’s last words. Paul was condemned before his trial, according to 2 Timothy 2:9, so that it was Paul’s forgoing conclusion that he would not be released this time, that he would die. When he sits down to write this epistle he knows that he is going to die, that he is going to be executed, and therefore this epistle becomes the words of a dying man. At this time Paul is almost alone. His only companion is Luke — 2 Timothy 4:11. All of Paul’s friends and companions have been involved in the great peel-off. They had been needed in certain areas. Paul had trained them and now this training is going to pay off. Timothy has gone to Ephesus — 1 Timothy 1:3; Titus has gone to Crete — Titus 1:4,5; Trophimus has been left at Miletus — 2 Timothy 4:20; Erastus has been sent to Corinth — 2 Timothy 4:20; Crescens has gone to Galatia — 2 Timothy 4:10; Titus has gone to Dalmatia — 2 Timothy 4:10; Tychicus is now going to Ephesus to replace Timothy so that Timothy can come quickly to Rome — 2 Timothy 4:12. This leaves Paul practically alone. But Paul is never alone because he has the great inner resources of doctrine. What a person truly is is what that person is when he is isolated and alone. A brief account of Paul’s Roman trial is found in 2 Timothy 4:6-8, 14-17. It was during this second imprisonment, therefore, that Paul wrote to Timothy for the last time — 2 Timothy in AD 68.

            In verses 1 & 2 we have a preface which will bring out several things, one of which is that of all the members of the royal family there is no greater nobility than that man, the apostle Paul.

            Verse 1 — “Paul” is a Roman surname, Pauloj. His real name was Saul Benjamin Tarsus. Tarsus is the city from which he came. He was not of one of the original Roman families. His given name was Saul, his tribe was the tribe of Benjamin, he was a Jew. He came from the city of Tarsus, and Tarsus was the name of the city which they used instead of a family if you were not from one of the famous old families of original Rome. He is the human author of this epistle and he is one of the great believers of all time. Pauloj means “little.” In Rome surnames also designated special honour, and Paul considered it an honour to be little, this was his grace orientation.

            “an apostle of Jesus Christ” — a)postoloj is an appositional nominative and it indicates the highest-ranking spiritual gift that the royal family has ever known. It was used originally in the Classical Greek for Athenian admirals designated by the ruling council to command the fleet in any sweep that it was making. It carried the connotation of maximum authority. The spiritual gift includes the authority of absolute dictatorship over all members of the royal family, over all Christians in any locale at any time. But once the canon of scripture was completed in AD 96 when John wrote Revelation this particular gift ceased to exist. There must be a great distinction made between the apostles to Israel and the apostles to the Church. In Matthew chapter 10 those are apostles to Israel, having nothing to do with the Church Age. Paul was the twelfth apostle — 1 Corinthians 15:7-10.

            “of Christ Jesus” — the descriptive genitives of proper nouns have great significance here: Xristoj means “appointed one,” one who has been anointed or appointed and it refers to Christ as the Messiah, and is an exact equivalent of the Jewish word “Messiah”; I)hsouj means saviour, the equivalent of Joshua, it is a reference to the cross and it designates the battlefield royalty of Jesus Christ. Two types of royalty, then, are mentioned: Christ, His Jewish royalty, and Jesus, indicating that Paul understands thoroughly the change in dispensations. When Jesus Christ was seated at the right hand of the Father He had been rejected by Israel as their legitimate King, but He was appointed a new kind of royalty by being seated at the right hand of the Father. This brought to a halt the Age of Israel and now a royal family is called out for the Lord Jesus Christ. Paul recognises that he is standing at the beginning of a new dispensation that demands great explanation in every way.

            “by the will of God” — the preposition dia plus the genitive singular of qelhma. Qelhma is a strong word for purpose or design. Paul was appointed to apostleship for the purpose, design and will of God in eternity past.

            “of God” is a descriptive genitive from qeoj minus the definite article. The lack of the definite article emphasises the identity of God the Father, the quality of God is emphasised, the quality of divine essence. This is God’s plan.

            “according to the promise” — the preposition kata plus the accusative of e)paggelia. This is a reminder that your very life as a believer on this earth is a life of benefit through promise. You are under God’s promise forever. You have a promise or a pledge from God by virtue of the work of Christ on the cross and because you have responded to that work of Christ by believing in Him.

            “of life” — the descriptive genitive singular of zwh means eternal life. This eternal life began the moment you believed in Christ. It is also a guarantee that in eternity past God had you personally in mind and He provided for you a paragraph SG2, dying grace, paragraph SG3. All of this was provided in eternity past and awaits your spiritual growth for reality in time. You can lose this or you can have it, and this is another meaning of the word “pledge.” God has pledged this to you by reaching super-grace status.

            “which is in Christ Jesus” — we have the principle of union with the Lord Jesus Christ. We have all of the concepts related here to our perfect relationship with Him. This simply means, once again, that Jesus Christ is seated at the right hand of the Father. He is battlefield royalty. You and I are entered into union with Him and therefore we become royal family of God forever. We share His life which is eternal life, we share His destiny, we share His election, we share His righteousness, we share His priesthood, we share His royalty. We are in union with Christ forever and nothing can ever separate us from that union with the Lord Jesus Christ.

            Translation: “Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus through the will [purpose, design] of God, according to the promise of life [eternal] which is in union with Christ Jesus.”

            Verse 2 — “To Timothy.” The dative of indirect object indicates the original recipient of the last epistle, it means that this is for Timothy’s benefit as well as for ours that it becomes a part of scripture. This is therefore the dative of advantage. Timothy has moved from disadvantage to advantage. He has gone from wimpy reversionism into dynamic super-grace status, and he has accomplished this in the two years between the writing of 1 and 2 Timothy.

 

            The profile of Timothy

            1. Timothy is the son of an unbeliever Greek and a believer Jewess — Acts 16:1-3.

            2. He was reared by his grandmother Lois and his mother Eunice — 2 Timothy 1:5. Both were super-grace believers representing two generations of super-grace believers. Consequently Timothy had a fantastic spiritual heritage.

            3. Timothy was circumcised by the apostle Paul under unusual circumstances — Acts 16:3.

            4. He was ordained to the ministry in 1 Timothy 4:14; 2 Timothy 4:5.

            5. He went to Philippi with the apostle, along with Luke — Acts 16:12. He remained to supervise the main Philippian church. Timothy did a great job in Philippi. Those who were there were very responsive to his teaching ministry. He was himself at the time a believer advancing.

            6. He was left behind a second time with Silas at Berea — Acts 17:14. Since the Bereans were positive to doctrine, again for the second time he had a great ministry.

            7. Having joined Paul at Athens he next went to Thessalonica, according to 1 Thessalonians 3:2.

            8. From there he was sent to Corinth, and there he failed. For the first time he came up against negative believers, he came up against reversionism, and 1 Corinthians 16:10 tells us that he was a total failure. He was too soft, too weak to handle the Corinthians. This failure foreshadows his failure at Ephesus. Timothy was not tough enough with bullies, he lost control of the local church; thus becoming disillusioned with people he moved into reversionism when he got to Ephesus.

            9. He shared Paul’s first roman imprisonment — Philippians 1:1; 2:19; Colossians 1:1; Philemon 1.

            10. Afterwards he started out with Paul on his fourth missionary journey. He was left behind at Ephesus where he failed miserably.

 

            “dearly beloved son” — the word a)gaphtoj is an adjective. It does mean “beloved” and it does mean that he is an object of Paul’s category #1 love. Because of doctrine they have that mutual respect that developed into a fantastic friendship. He does not call him a son. The word teknon does not mean son here. It is used in a technical way. It is the word from which we get the English word “technical” and the word technical describes this word. It is used in the sense of a theological student. The dative of possession has no exact equivalent in English, it is a personal interest particularised to the point of ownership or supervision. Paul supervised Timothy as his former student. Hence it refers to permanent authority. Paul will always outrank Timothy as long as he lives. The point is that Paul is going to live long enough to see Timothy in super-grace. So it should be translated, “To Timothy, beloved student.” While teknon means a child it means a child under the discipline of the parent, and it comes to mean a student under the discipline of the teacher.

            “Grace, mercy, peace — Xarij, grace, describes the plan of God in principle. There is no place for works, for human ability, human ingenuity, for human function of any kind; “mercy” or e)leoj is simply grace in action; e)irhnh is the result of these two words and it means prosperity. It should be translated, “Grace, mercy, prosperity.” That is the normal function of a positive-toward-doctrine believer. He starts out with grace, grace is then administered to him as he takes in doctrine under the principle of mercy, and he reaches the point of prosperity in time, paragraph SG2.

            “from God the Father” — the preposition a)po plus the ablative of qeoj, indicating God the Father as the source of this blessing; we have a genitive of apposition, pathr, and it can be translated, therefore, ‘God, even the Father” or “God the Father.”

            “and Christ Jesus our Lord” — Xristoj is an ablative of source, a part of the prepositional phrase, and it indicates His Jewish royalty. The ablative of source “Ihsouj, battlefield royalty; “our Lord” is divine royalty. Every category of royalty is involved.

            Notice that there is no reference here to God the Holy Spirit, the third person of the Trinity in this salutation. This is compatible with the Church Age ministry of God the Holy Spirit which is to glorify Jesus Christ. He is not here to glorify Himself — John 7:39; 16:14; 1 Corinthians 6:19,20. In glorifying Christ the Holy Spirit, therefore, remains in the background providing the power and the ability for the royal family to glorify Christ — 2 Corinthians 3:3; Ephesians 3;16,17; Philippians 1:20,21.

            Translation: “To Timothy, beloved student: Grace, mercy, prosperity, from the source of God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord.”

            Verse 3 — “I thank God” is the present active indicative of the verb e)xw which means “I keep having.” The present tense is a static present, it represents a condition as perpetually existing. This is linear aktionsart. The active voice: Paul produces the action of the verb. He is filled with the enjoyment, the capacity for life. Nothing bores him. His circumstances are the quintessence of adversity but his attitude is one of great interest. The indicative mood is declarative representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of certainty and reality.

            The question arises immediately: What does he keep having? The answer is found in the accusative singular direct object of the noun xarij. “I keep on having grace.” There is the secret for capacity for life. And what is the means of having grace? The next phrase, is the instrumental of means from qeoj plus the definite article. It should be translated “by means of our God.” The definite article is used as a possessive pronoun. “I keep on having grace by means of our God.” There is capacity for life. How does one keep on having grace? By the daily intake of Bible doctrine.

            Grace is all that God is free to do for man on the basis of the work of Christ at the cross. Grace is God’s freedom and God’s consistency to express His love to mankind without compromising and jeopardising His divine essence. Consequently grace is God’s plan of behalf of each one of us, the plan, the policy, the function, the mechanics of divine modus operandi in relationship to each one of us. Under grace God does all of the work, all of the providing, and we receive all of the blessing and all of the benefiting. So by concept grace depends on who and what God is, on who and what Christ is, on the essence of each member of the Trinity. 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 after salvation throughout all eternity. Grace, therefore, is the genius of God and doctrine is the manifestation of that genius. No one can understand grace until he has maximum doctrine in his soul. The giver of life is the secret to life and the secret to life is grace. The secret to grace is doctrine. You can’t understand life until you understand grace, and you can’t understand grace until you have GAPed it daily under the principle of self-discipline. There is nothing in life that can give you blessing unless you have doctrine in your soul.

            “whom” is the instrumental singular of the relative pronoun o(j. The antecedent is God. “Through whom” would be a good translation of the instrumental of o(j.

            “I serve” — present active indicative from latreuw which means to serve with emphasis on the manner of service, to serve under a system of service. Here it refers to the serving under the system of grace. Paul served God under the system of grace — “through whom I am serving.” The active voice: Paul produces the action of the verb. The indicative mood is declarative, it represents the action of the verb from the viewpoint of reality, certainty, and dogmatic confidence.

            “from my forefathers” — the preposition a)po plus the ablative of progonoj which means ancestors. The ablative is not the regular case used to express means but it is used when the expression of means is accompanied by an implication of origin. What does he mean here? Is he referring to those in his immediate family? No, but he is recognising that in every generation of history that generation is carried by super-grace believers. He is in a generation of history, he is a super-grace believer, he is carrying his own generation. In every generation of Israel there were super-grace believers. On account of these super-grace believers the power of doctrine resident in the soul was seen in every generation. Paul is perpetuating the principle of his forefathers in his own generation. This refers to his understanding of and his perpetuation of the spiritual heritage. What makes history grow? The super-grace believer.

 

            Principle

            1. Paul does not allude to his own ancestors and his own family genealogy but he refers to the spiritual heritage of Israel in the past.

            2. This spiritual heritage is the existence of at least one super-grace believer in every generation.

            3. The implication is obvious. Paul has seen a great improvement in Timothy. He has seen Timothy go from reversionism to super-grace in two years. Since the first epistle was written in 66 AD, up to the time of the writing of this one in AD 68, he has seen Timothy go from zero to one hundred.

            4. Having recovered from reversionism Timothy has moved to the high ground of super-grace which is the only place he can receive from Paul the baton, the standard, and carry on for his generation.

            5. Paul is counting, therefore, on student Timothy to perpetuate the spiritual heritage of the royal family for the next generation.

            6. This can only be accomplished through maximum doctrine resident in the soul through the daily function of GAP.

            7. Paul, therefore, is encouraging Timothy to press on. Now that he has doctrine he must take in more and more and more. Note that Paul and Timothy have human family relationship. Paul is not Timothy’s father and Timothy is not Paul’s son. Paul is challenging to a more important principle. We have seen the principle that you can’t build your happiness on your children, and you don’t perpetuate greatness in another generation through your children. But there is the perpetuation of a spiritual heritage, doctrine passed from one generation to another.

            “with a pure conscience” — this does not mean that Paul has lived a good life, that Paul has always had clean hands. As an unbeliever Paul was the worst sinner who ever lived. As a believer Paul made one of the greatest mistakes that a great believer ever made when he refused to go to Spain and went back to Jerusalem in emotional reversionism. Yet he comes to his dying moment “with a pure conscience” — the preposition e)n plus the adjective kaqaroj in the instrumental, plus the noun in the instrumental suneidhsij. Doctrine resident in Paul’s right lobe is responsible for the purity of his conscience. “I keep on having grace by means of our God, through whom I am serving with a pure conscience as my ancestors did [literally, on account of my ancestors].”

            “that without ceasing” — the relative adverb o(j used as a conjunction to introduce a characteristic or quality of a person, translated “why,” plus the adverb a)dialeiptoj which means “constantly.” But here the adjective is used as a predicate accusative and that will change it a little. It is translated, “this is why I constantly.”

            “have” is the present active indicative of e)xw — “keep having.” We have a perfective present here, it denotes the continuation of existing results, namely Paul passing on to Timothy the spiritual heritage of human history. In every generation believers are challenged to the perpetuation of super-grace so that in every generation history will have those who hold up history. In every generation of history there can exist blessing from God based on Bible doctrine. The active voice: Paul has in his dying moments the memory of Timothy, a super-grace believer at this stage, one in whom he can pass the torch to carry for the next generation. The indicative mood is declarative for the dogmatic reality of the fact that once-wimpy Timothy can now be the Atlas for the next generation and hold up that generation.

            “remembrance” is the accusative singular direct object from mneia, and it means to have a memory.

 

            Principle

            1. Something has happened to Timothy in the two years since Paul wrote first Timothy. The wimp is now a super-grace believer, he has recovered from reversionism.

            2. This contributes to Paul’s dying grace. Now that Timothy has reached super-grace Paul can die peacefully. He could pass the torch to someone as he departs for heaven. He is therefore dying with wonderful memories.

            3. In every generation of history super-grace believers carry the torch, they carry that generation of history.

            4. Divine blessing is directly related to the remnant of super-grace believers according to the election of grace. And that remnant always has one torchbearer.

            5. Paul is dying and he sees history from the divine viewpoint.

            6. He rejoices that Timothy will be the torchbearer. There are other super-grace believers and they will have a part, but the colour bearer is always the important one. So in dying Paul can see hope for the next generation.

           

            “of thee” is the preposition peri plus the genitive of the personal pronoun su — “concerning you.” This is a personal pronoun, it refers to Timothy as the one who will carry the colours.

            “in my prayers” is e)n plus the locative plural of dehsij. Paul has a lot of time to pray and he has the privilege of passing on the colours to Timothy, and he is doing this in prayer.

            “night and day” — the genitive singular of nuc, and then h(mera. Paul prays when it is still light in the dungeon and when it is dark he is still praying.

            Translation: “I keep on having grace by means of our God, through whom I am serving with a pure conscience as my ancestors did. This is why I constantly possess a memory concerning you in my prayers day and night.”

            Verse 4 — “Greatly desiring” is the present active participle from the compound verb e)pipoqew. E)pi means over and above; poqew means to desire. This means to long for someone’s presence, to have true category #3 love. It means to have capacity for love and capacity for life and to have an object for those in a true friend. The present tense is a descriptive present, it portrays the action of the verb in the process of occurrence. The active voice: Paul, incarcerated in Rome, produces the action of the verb. The participle is circumstantial. Paul is dying and he has great capacity for life, and one more time he wants to see his very dear friend Timothy. We could translated this, “Having a great desire to see.”

            “to see thee” — the aorist active infinitive of o(raw. The aorist tense is a gnomic aorist in which a generally accepted fact is regarded as so certain that it is described by the aorist just as thought it was actually in occurrence at the moment. This is an idiom which is translated by the English present tense. The active voice: Paul produces the action. The infinitive is the infinitive of purpose. It is Paul’s purpose as well as his desire to once again see Timothy before he dies. Plus the accusative singular direct object from the personal pronoun su, referring to Timothy.

            “being mindful” — incorrect. It is the perfect middle participle of the verb mimnhskw which means to remember. The perfect tense of existing state emphasises the fact that Timothy’s reversion recovery has resulted in Paul’s pleasant memories of him. The middle voice is the dynamic middle, it emphasises the part taken by the subject in the action of the verb. This is the causal participle so it is translated, “because I have remembered.”

            “thy tears” — the objective genitive plural from dakruwn which refers to Timothy’s tremendous response to 1 Timothy. He didn’t get angry, he didn’t shake his fists at Paul, as it were, he didn’t condemn Paul. He realised how correct Paul was and he had a tremendous emotional response from his objectivity.

            “that” is the conjunction i(na used as a final clause to denote a goal, and objective, a purpose.

            “I may be filled” — the aorist passive subjunctive of the verb plhrow. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist, it views Paul’s great happiness in its entirety but regards it from the standpoint of existing results. Paul in prison has +H and one of the results is that Timothy’s recovery causes him to express this +H. He possesses something and it has great results. He can now be very stimulated and express his happiness with regard to Timothy. The passive voice: Paul receives the action of the verb, being filled with happiness at his memory of Timothy. The subjunctive mood is not a potential subjunctive but used to denote the purpose clause and the fulfilment of the purpose.

            “with joy” — the objective genitive singular from xara, meaning inner happiness, +H as a part of Paul’s super-grace package.

            Translation: “Longing to see you, because I have remembered your tears, in order that I might have been filled with happiness.”

           

            Principles

            1. Thanks to the grace and plan of God the human race will perpetuate itself physically.

            2. God has guaranteed that the human race will exist throughout human history, all the way to the conclusion of the angelic conflict. So there will always be people for another generation.

            3. This is a dogmatic fact dependent upon the sovereignty of God.

            No two generations are alike. Today’s generation is not like the last one. What makes the difference? There are always a few super-grace believers who carry a generation. The greater the number of super-grace believers the greater the blessing for that generation. The super-grace believers hold up that generation historically. Doctrine in the souls of a few people carry a generation.

            The perpetuation of spiritual heritage is dependent upon man’s response to grace in the area of his own non-meritorious volition. Spiritual heritage is perpetuated from the foundation of regeneration. Mankind must be born again to qualify for the perpetuation of spiritual heritage. In other words, it is not physical birth that perpetuates, it is spiritual birth. The number of super-grace believers in any generation determines the trend of that generation. The secret is Bible doctrine in the soul.

           

            Principle

            1. Thanks to the grace and plan of God the human race will perpetuate itself physically.

            2. God has guaranteed that the human race will exist throughout human history and all of the way to the conclusion of the angelic conflict.

            3. This dogmatic principle of the perpetuation of history and the perpetuation of the human race is a matter of the sovereignty of God.

            4. The perpetuation of the spiritual heritage is dependent not on the sovereignty of God but on man’s response to God’s grace, and always in an area of non-meritorious volition.

            5. Spiritual heritage is perpetuated from the foundation of regeneration. Mankind must be born again to qualify for perpetuation of spiritual heritage. Salvation means qualification, it doesn’t mean you have arrived.

            6. The key, then, to perpetuation is found in positive volition toward Bible doctrine, the daily function of GAP leading to the super-grace life.

            7. Paul is no longer ashamed of Timothy because while Timothy has been a wimp, a failure, he has now recovered from reversionism and has moved on to super-grace.

            8. Neither is Paul ashamed of Timothy’s mother, nor Timothy’s grandmother who represent one of the most unusual situations recorded in the Bible — a three-generation family and each one is in the spiritual heritage as well. Timothy is a third generation super-grace believer.

 

            Verse 5 — “When I call to remembrance” is an idiom. It includes the aorist active participle of the verb lambanw which means to receive. There is also the accusative singular direct object from the noun u(pomnhsij which means memory or remembrance — “When I receive remembrance.” This actually comes down to be an idiom which means “When I remember [or recall].” The aorist tense is a constative aorist, it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. Paul is recalling Timothy’s reversion, his reversion recovery, his arrival at super-grace status. He recalls that his mother went through the same thing. The active voice: Paul produces the action of the verb through the pleasant function of his memory centre during his dying moments. He has no regrets, he has perfect memory thanks to the fact that Timothy has recovered from reversionism. Timothy did it by his own consistent positive volition toward doctrine and Paul has a wonderful memory. The participle is temporal: “When I remember.”

            “the unfeigned faith” — whatever “unfeigned” is in the old English it is hiding a compound adjective in the objective genitive singular, a)nupokritoj, [a, negative; u(po, under; krithj, a mask] literally not under a mask. It means not speaking from under a mask. It means to be an actor. The idea came from Greek drama. An actor was a synonym in the Greek world for hypocrite. In fact the Greek word for an actor was u(pokrithj from which we get the English word hypocrite. Here, with an a in front of it, it means non-hypocritical. But in modern English it means real or genuine. The word “faith” is the objective genitive singular from the noun pistij meaning what is believed — doctrine. It should be translated, “the real [genuine] doctrine.” This is a reference to Bible doctrine, but it is also Bible doctrine located in a specific place…

            “that is in thee” — the preposition e)n plus the locative singular of the personal pronoun su — “in you.”

            So fare we have, “When I recall the genuine doctrine in you.” This is genuine doctrine in contrast to false doctrine, in contrast to evil. Here is a dying man and his pleasant memory is that once more Timothy has maximum doctrine in his soul and has recovered from his terrible case of reversionism. He has now joined the ranks of the next generation who will be the spiritual Atlases and will carry historically the generation coming up.

            “which” — the nominative singular from the qualitative relative pronoun o(stij. It emphasises the high quality of the doctrine inside of Timothy. Timothy has GAPed it to super-grace, he has recovered from reversionism. This is also an indefinite relative pronoun in contrast to a definite relative pronoun o(j. The indefinite pronoun plus its qualitative aspect it means we simply do not know what specific doctrine he had inside of him that made him a super-grace believer because the principle is being emphasised rather than the detailed content. Therefore the qualitative relative pronoun tells us that inside of Timothy at this moment is a maximum amount of doctrine that has put him in the super-grace bracket — “which resident doctrine.”

            “dwelt” is the aorist active indicative from the compound Greek verb e)noikew [e)n, inside : oikew, to dwell or to live]. It means to indwell, to inhabit, or to be resident. The aorist tense is a dramatic aorist, it states a present reality with the certitude of a past event. This Greek idiom is a device for emphasis. In fact, Bible doctrine in the soul resulting in super-grace is a very dramatic principle. The active voice: doctrine produces the action. The indicative mood is declarative, representing the verbal action from the viewpoint of historical reality.

            “first” — prwton is used in its obvious temporal sense. The same doctrine which made Timothy a super-grace believer first resided in his grandmother Lois.

            “in thy grandmother Lois” — e)n plus the locative of mammh which means grandmother, plus Lwij which means “agreeable.” Here is a woman who many years ago had believed in the Lord Jesus Christ. Not only had she believed but she had persisted in the function of GAP after her salvation. She reached the high ground of the super-grace life. Many grandmothers have been the basis for the perpetuation of a great spiritual heritage.

            “and thy mother Eunice” — E)unikh, which means “great victory.” Eunice was taught doctrine from early childhood.

            “and I am persuaded” — a transitional de without any contrast intended, translated “now,” plus the perfect passive indicative of the verb peiqw. It is interesting that grandmother Lois trained daughter Eunice so that grandmother Lois had no regrets. But she had the monstrous privilege of watching her daughter make a total ass of herself, do everything wrong, go in the wrong direction. There was nothing she could do, her daughter was now an adult. We have the perfect passive indicative of peiqw. This is the intensive perfect for a completed action with results going on and on. The passive voice: Paul receives confidence [the perfect tense means to have confidence]. The indicative mood is declarative contemplating the action from the standpoint of dogmatic reality — “now I am confident.” Peiqw means to obey in the present or the aorist. Sometimes it means to believe, but in the perfect it always means to have confidence.

            “that in thee also” — should be, “that it [doctrine] is also in you.” We have the adjunctive kai, “also,” plus the preposition e)n, plus the locative of the personal pronoun su; plus the present active indicative of e)imi.

            Paul is not ashamed of Timothy or his wonderful spiritual heritage. The best thing parents can leave their children is Bible doctrine but to be effective this doctrine must be resident in the soul of the individual believer.

            Translation: “When I recall the real doctrine in you, which doctrine first resided in your grandmother Lois, and your mother Eunice; then I am confident that it [the doctrine] is also in you.”

            This verse is a double illustration of Proverbs 22:6 — “Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it.” This is not when he is a teenage, that is when he will. All teenagers go off at some point. But that isn’t the promise. “When he is old,” old in the sense of mature.

 

            Principles

            The grandmother, Lois, became a super-grace believer and had the privilege of passing the baton or handing the colours over to her daughter. Here is a woman who is the antithesis of the women’s liberation mob. Here is a woman who carried her generation.

            1. Having trained her daughter in doctrine after salvation, what happened? In her early twenties Eunice reacted to her doctrinal training. She rejected what she had been taught.

            2. The result: She made a bad marriage to a Greek whose name is never recorded in the Bible — Acts 16:1.

            3. In reversionism Eunice married an unbeliever.

            4. Obviously the unknown Greek was not her right man, says the adversative particle de which sets up a contrast in Acts 16:1 between the fact that she was a believer and he was an unbeliever.

            5. However, the bad marriage in two benefits. God turns cursing into blessing where a person leaves reversionism and goes to super-grace. a) She recovered from reversionism and became a super-grace believer; b) She had a son whom she called Timothy, which means “he who honours God.” She name him Timothy because she knew Proverbs 22:6. She dedicated herself to training that child.

            This also bring in another principle. No matter how a child fails, if that child ever gets a hold of doctrine and goes with doctrine that child will never fail. There is no such thing as a child who cannot be recovered but they have to learn themselves. You cannot force doctrine on a child.

            6. She followed the colours to the high ground of super-grace and established a command post of doctrine resident in her soul.

            7. She had a son.

            8. Her how was to perpetuate not a natural but a spiritual heritage. She was smart, she name her son Timothy because she was going to emphasise spiritual heritage.

            9. She had to name him Timothy for she had dedicated herself to the principle that only through doctrine resident in the soul can there ever be happiness in this life.

            10. So grandmother Lois had the privilege of seeing the fulfilment of Proverbs 22:6, for when Eunice was old she did not depart from her spiritual heritage but she received from her mother Lois and she carried the colours for her generation.

 

            Illustration

            Eunice trained Timothy in doctrine, Timothy was saved and advanced in a remarkable way until Paul left him at Ephesus where he failed. Like his mother before him he failed. But his mother, like her mother, claimed Proverbs 22:6. Timothy was already hurting but the shock of the first epistle came at a time when he was hurting the most. The discipline awakened him and he began to think and assimilate, and he recovered. He moved out of reversionism to the high ground, and when he was old he did not depart from that spiritual heritage of maximum doctrine resident in the soul.

            1. Here is one of the most beautiful patterns of grace that helps to explain a great concept of history. Three generations related physically — grandmother, mother and son.

            2. But a thousand times more important than the genes passed down was the spiritual heritage which carried human history for three generations.

            3. We have three generations following the colours, three generations going from saving grace to living grace to super-grace to dying grace to surpassing grace. Three generations in the same family.

            4. Parents who have been faithful in teaching doctrine to their children, training them in the function of GAP, getting them under the right pastor when they are tender, should never be discouraged when their children appear to turn out bad.

            5. When their children begin to resist doctrine, become reversionistic, yield to the influence of evil, become apostate and blasphemous, if parents are believers with maximum doctrine they are believers with capacity and will never ever let their children ruin their life. They have to go right on living.

 

 

 

            The doctrine of historical interpretation

            It has to be remembered that interpretation of history is a very tricky principle and it has led many people down the path to evil and the influence of evil in reversionism. For example, historical interpretation generally depends on human viewpoint.

            1. Jesus Christ controls history. a) Direct control through His divine essence. That means that Jesus Christ as God never loses control of anything. b) Indirect control through the laws of divine establishment. Jesus Christ set up a system of laws to perpetuate the human race and to allow freedom in every generation for believing in Christ, and freedom to express positive volition in the function of GAP. c) Permissive control permitting human volition to function in this phase of the angelic conflict. In other words, the angelic conflict must go on and this is why Jesus Christ permits evil to continue in the world. That is why evil and human good were rejected at the cross.

            2. The Bible is the key to historical interpretation. Historical interpretation related to God, the unseen world of angels, and the visible world of mankind can only be put together properly through understanding Bible doctrine. Bible doctrine is the basis for the correct interpretation of history. To see history objectively one must possess the divine viewpoint. Through history is a series of facts about the human race but these facts can never be properly correlated unless one understands such simple doctrines as the old sin nature, power lust, materialism lust, and things of this sort. To correlate and interpret the facts of history Bible doctrine must be resident in the soul. This limits the unbeliever’s perspicacity in this field of his understanding, especially if he is out of the laws of divine establishment.

            To correctly interpret history one must understand evil, reversionism, apostasy, and be able to distinguish them from sin. Sin never kept a great man from being great; sin never kept anyone from doing anything. Sin never ruined a man’s ministry. But what ruins many a pastor’s ministry is evil and reversionism. Sin is not an issue because Christ destroyed it as an issue on the cross. He was judged for our sins. That is why we simply name our sins and we are forgiven immediately. In other words, carnality should never be a hindrance to anything, but evil is a hindrance to everything.

            To correctly interpret history one also must understand the doctrine of dispensations, the Church Age, the royal family of God. While many historians recognise, for example, simple facts like Rome as the centre of gravity in history, human genius is limited by ignorance of Bible doctrine and divine viewpoint.

            5. Each generation of history is sustained by super-grace believers. What holds up every generation of history? The super-grace believer is the spiritual Atlas of his generation. He is responsible for blessing by association and prosperity by association. He is himself blessed of God and those associated with him are blessed by the association. The super-grace believer is the salt of the land.

            6. And super-grace depends upon one category of the human race: pastor-teacher. There is no super-grace without pastor-teachers teaching the Word of God.

 

            Verse 6 — “Wherefore” is dia plus the accusative feminine singular from the relative pronoun o(j, and also the accusative singular, the object of the preposition dia, of a)itia which means “cause.” Literally this would be translated “Because of which cause.” In other words, dia plus the accusative is translated “because.” Then the object of dia is a)itia, meaning cause. There is also a relative pronoun translated “which.” This is an idiom meaning “For which reason.” Because of the spiritual heritage principle in history, because every generation depends upon its own spiritual heritage and draws from its spiritual heritage and is blessed or cursed by spiritual heritage — super-grace believers or lack of them. Because of the spiritual heritage of doctrine in the soul carrying that generation we are now ready to understand something about the axle. There must be someone who communicates doctrine. In his generation the apostle Paul was the axle.

            “I put thee in remembrance” — the present active indicative from the compound verb a)namimnhskw. A)na means again and again; mimnhskw means to remember. To remember again and again means to be reminded. Literally, “I remind you.” We also have the accusative singular direct object of the personal pronoun su. he is still talking to Timothy, he is passing the guidon, the regimental colours. This is a descriptive or pictorial present tense, it depicts the event in the process of occurrence. He is in the process of reminding Timothy. The whole of 2 Timothy is instructions to the next person who will carry the colours, instructions to the super-grace believer who will lead super-grace believers in the next generation. Paul produces the action of the verb, he is, as it were, passing the regimental colours on to Timothy. The indicative mood is declarative representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of reality.

            “that thou stir up” — present active infinitive from a triple compound verb, a)nazwpurew. A)na means again and again; zwh means life; pur means fire. It means to put life back in the fire or, as we would say, to fire up, to rekindle. It doesn’t mean to stir up. The present tense is an iterative present, it describes what recurs at successive intervals. Timothy has gone through a period of reversionism and by his subsequent recovery he now needs to fire up and start using the gift again. The active voice: Timothy must produce the action of the verb and can do it in only one way, by studying and teaching. The infinitive is the infinitive of purpose. This must be his purpose. Every generation historically depends upon the communicators of doctrine in that generation.

            “the gift of God” — the accusative singular definite article used as a demonstrative pronoun, calling attention to the fact that Timothy has the gift of pastor-teacher, plus the accusative singular direct object of the noun xarisma which means a spiritual gift in the Bible. Today it has been given an entirely different meaning in the English. It really means to be a communicator of doctrine, and the doctrine changes the life. It is translated “gift” but if we transliterated it we might even see it a little better” “that charisma.” “Of God” is an ablative of source from qeoj. The ablative always gives the connotation of original source. God is the original source of Timothy’s spiritual gift. This means that you cannot elect people to becoming pastors. It is a sovereign decision of God the Holy Spirit.

            Three things about Timothy’s life: a) He was a plodder; b) Then he was a failure in the status of reversionism; c) He came out of it and went to super-grace. Being a pastor-teacher he is now commanded to fire up his gift.

            Verse 6b — “by the putting on of my hands.” We have the preposition dia plus the genitive of e)piqesij. Dia plus the genitive means through; e)piqesij means the laying on, and then we have the possessive genitive plural xeir for hands — “through the laying on of my hands.”

            Note that only Paul was involved in the laying on of hands. It only took one person who had the gift to perform this ceremony and recognise it in someone else. So the laying on of the hands is the ceremony of identification. The apostle was not only recognising the fact that Timothy had the gift of pastor-teacher but he identified himself with him. When Paul laid his hands on Timothy he didn’t know at that time that in a future time in this epistle he would also pass on to him the colours, which means that the next generation is going to have a super-grace leader and that super-grace believers will exist in the next generation to carry that generation of history. In anticipation of the next verse he also indicates the importance of both the authority and the function of the gift which had been neutralised in Timothy’s immediate past by his reversionism, the fear that came from his reversionism. A pastor can never be afraid of people, he must never be afraid of anyone, he must never be afraid of anyone under all conditions.

            Translation: “For which reason I remind you to rekindle [fire up] that gift from God, which is in you, recognised through the laying on of my hands.”

            Verse 7 — this verse is to those who have the gift of communication, those who are going to be the hub of the wheel, those who are going to be the source for all super-grace believers in any generation. All super-grace believers are like spokes in a wheel, and the source of their super-grace is the faithful teaching of some pastor. No believer ever grows up unless he gets under the ministry of his own pastor-teacher.

            “For” is the post positive conjunctive particle gar used here as an explanatory conjunction. It delineates the conditions under which the gift of pastor-teacher must function. It explains how a pastor remains normal.

            “God” is o( qeoj — “the God.” God the Father, author of the divine plan, is the source the pastor’s authority without which no man could ever stay in the ministry. The only reason a person does stay in the ministry is because of who and what God is. The issue is relationship with God. The pastor is directly responsible to and answerable to God for the function of his gift.

            “hath not given” — the aorist active indicative of didomi plus the strong negative o)uk. The aorist tense is a dramatic aorist, it states a present reality with the certitude of a past event. It is used for a state which has just been realised by the reader. A pastor can neither cater to people nor be afraid of people. The gift of pastor-teacher demands moral courage above and beyond the ordinary courage and integrity of life. No pastor can protect a congregation and be a coward. The active voice plus the negative indicates the fact that God has made no provision for cowards in the ministry. The indicative mood is declarative for historical and dogmatic reality. There is no place in the ministry for cowards.

            “us” — dative plural indirect object from the personal pronoun e)gw. It is in the plural because there is more than one legitimate pastor in any given generation. The active voice plus the negative indicates that God has made no provision for cowards in the ministry. The indicative mood is declarative for dogmatic reality.

            “the spirit of fear” — the word “spirit” is the direct object of pneuma. Pneuma means something besides spirit. It means breath, sometimes to the human spirit, sometimes to the Holy Spirit, sometimes to life in general. Here it means the life or the state of mind. Then we have a descriptive genitive from the noun deilia which means “cowardice” — “a life of cowardice.”

            “but” — the adversative conjunction a)lla sets up a contrast between the negative cowardice and the positive power; “of power” — a descriptive genitive singular from the noun dunamij which means inner power. The inherent or inner power here refers to Bible doctrine. The primary reason for the pastor possessing so much authority is doctrine — teaching doctrine, learning doctrine. Above all else a man who is in the pastorate must be a man of doctrine, it must be #1 priority in his life.

            “and love” refers to another inner power. It is a)gaph which means a relaxed mental attitude which comes from the filling of the Holy Spirit. It means a relaxed mental attitude toward people. Cf Romans 5:5; Galatians 5:22. Power + love = doctrine + the filling of the Spirit. The positive side of this verse, therefore, describes the balance of residency in the soul. The filling of the Holy Spirit plus maximum doctrine in the soul [balance of residency] results from great self-discipline which is mistranslated here “soundness of mind.”

            “and of a sound mind” — descriptive genitive from a compound noun, swfronismoj. It means self-control or self-discipline, not sound mind alone. The meaning of a word is determined by its usage and this word is used in the sense of self-discipline.

            Translation: “For the God has not given to us [pastors] a state of mind of cowardice; but of power [maximum doctrine in the soul], and of love [filling of the Spirit], and of self-discipline.”  

            Suddenly the message changes from the self-discipline of the function of GAP to the greatest subject in the Word of God, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself. In verses 8-11 we have the principle of not being ashamed of Christ.

            Verse 8 — the relationship between category #1 and category #3 love. “Be not thou therefore ashamed” — the inferential enclitic particle o)un, correctly translated “therefore.” It is introduced as an inference from what precedes. We have an aorist passive subjunctive from e)paisxunomai which means to be ashamed. With the accusative it means to be ashamed of something. The aorist tense is a constative aorist, it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. With the negative mh it indicates “not ashamed of Jesus Christ” who went to the cross and was judged for our sins, who handed us the regimental colours of doctrine in departing from this life, who was raised the third day, who ascended and was seated at the right hand of the Father, at which point He received His battlefield royalty; and therefore this explains why we are royal family — union with Him, we are the royal family resulting from His battlefield royalty. So it gathers up into one entirety the attitude of any super-grace believer toward the Lord Jesus Christ. Whenever He is contemplated, whenever He comes into the memory centre of the soul, there is no shame there of any kind. There is no being ashamed when you have maximum doctrine in the soul. Why is Paul not ashamed of Christ? Because in His soul he has maximum doctrine. If he didn’t have that doctrine he would be, that is a part of the angelic conflict. A very short time ago Timothy was ashamed of Christ because he was in reversionism. This is the natural thinking of the reversionist. The passive voice here: the subject Timothy receives the action of the verb. As a reversionist he was ashamed, but with the negative and recovering from reversionism he is not ashamed. The subjunctive mood indicates the potentialities of this which no longer exist. “Therefore do not be ashamed.” In view of Timothy’s reversion recovery, in view of the fact that Timothy has now become a super-grace believer, in view of the point of doctrine that super-grace believers are spiritual Atlases carrying their generation of history, in view of the fact that Timothy is a third-generation super-grace believer now, he must never again be ashamed of the Lord, nor of his friend Paul.

            “of the testimony of our Lord” — this includes the accusative singular direct object from marturion which does not mean martyr, it means evidence given in court. If you understand “Call the next witness” as a technical courtroom word, then witness is all right, but it is someone who gives a witness or a deposition. The marturion is a person who speaks, he communicates information about a case now under trial in court. The one who speaks or the marturion is the pastor communicating doctrine. The congregation listens and judges, and accepts or rejects. Do not be ashamed of the evidence. “Of our Lord” is the descriptive genitive of kurioj, referring to the Lord Jesus Christ — “of our Lord” or “with reference to our Lord.” In other words, don’t be ashamed of doctrinal teaching. So this in a sense is a prohibition related to the numerous doctrines that are taught concerning our Lord. The prohibition implies that during his time of reversionism Timothy was ashamed of Christ, and now all of this has changed. So in affect Paul is saying, Never get back into reversionism again, never neglect doctrine. When you neglect the evidence then you become ashamed of the person. So the prohibition emphasises the fact that Timothy must refrain from any future apostasy because he has a job to do now that he is back in super-grace, he is to hold up the next generation.

            “nor of me his prisoner” — Paul has been severely criticised and he is now ostracised by Roman society. Pseudo love would shy away from Paul. No one ever takes a step forward without having the step challenged. The subtlety of the challenges may not be recognised.

            “but” is the adversative conjunction a)lla, it sets up the contrast. How do you meet the challenge?

            “be thou partaker” — aorist active imperative from sugkakopaqew, composed of the preposition sun which means “with,” the adjective kakoj for evil, and paqew is from the verb pasxw to suffer. It means to suffer evil with [Paul] — “to join with me in suffering evil.” If you are going to hold up the world in your generation you are going to suffer from the world. The word throws at you the worst pressure possible — evil. Paul is pressurised by evil. When you advance up that hill to super-grace you are going to face evil. The aorist tense is an ingressive aorist in which the action of the verb is contemplated as beginning. It means “begin to join me, now is the time.” It denotes the entrance into a status of expressing category #3 love toward Paul, category #1 love toward the Lord, and facing the same pressure that all super-grace believers face. Evil is the great enemy of the super-grace believer. The active voice: Timothy will produce the action of the verb through being under the pressure from evil. The imperative mood is a command.

            “of the afflictions” is not found in the original manuscript.

            “of the gospel” is a dative singular of reference — e)uaggelion means “with reference to the gospel.” Evil is not only opposed to the gospel but any manifestation of grace in history. The greatest historical manifestation of grace is the gospel and one’s attitude toward the gospel is one’s attitude toward grace. But remember that Satan and all of the fallen angels and all unbelievers have an attitude toward the gospel, and the attitude represents some facet of evil.

            “according to the power of God” — the preposition kata plus the accusative singular of dunamij which means inherent power, it is used for the omnipotence of God. The gospel is the manifestation of God’s perfect power. God offers everyone something free. Satan in his gross pride is opposed to such genius. Evil is the accumulation of Satanic arrogance, arrogance is angels and man which reject the gospel, reject what God has provided free. Since the gospel is doctrine obviously it will be opposed by evil. We also have the possessive genitive of qeoj minus the definite article. The absence of the definite article calls attention to the high and perfect quality of God.

            Translation: “Therefore do not be ashamed of the evidence with reference to our Lord, nor me his prisoner; but join with me in suffering evil with reference to the gospel according to the power of God.”

            Verse 9 — this verse is to make us realise that not only were we saved by grace but we are to live by grace. And not only are we living by grace but we are to grow in grace, and that means in the knowledge of our Lord and saviour. So the orientation to grace begins in this verse.

            There is an immediate question. What is the super-grace believer? James 4:6 tell us that God gives not “more grace,” as it is stated in the KJV, but meizona xarin which is actually two accusatives. One is the accusative singular direct object from a comparative adjective called megaj. Megaj means great. The comparative meizona means greater. With it is the object of the verb didomi, and with it is the accusative singular direct object of the noun xarij. This should be translated “greater grace.” Since grace in itself is an absolute the only thing that is greater than grace is super-grace. The only way you can glorify God is for God to take blessings which were designed for you in eternity past and give them to you in time. We God can bless you in time in the devil’s world, then God is glorified. He provides these for the super-grace believer. The super-grace believer is not the believer who has done something but he is the one who consistently takes in doctrine until he has his cup running over. He has doctrine and God fills his cup with blessings. These blessings are designed totally apart from the Satanic system.

`           It all starts with a great principle found here: “Who hath saved us and called us with a holy calling.” Not only were we saved but we were saved for a purpose which is called here “a holy calling.”

            “Who hath saved us” — descriptive genitive singular from the definite article, which is an articular participle, plus the aorist active participle of swzw which refers here to eternal salvation. The aorist tense is a constative aorist, it refers to a momentary action when the individual believes in Jesus Christ. The constative aorist gathers into one entirety the action of the verb, which took place here in less than one second. In one instant of time you believed in Jesus Christ. The active voice: God does the saving. We also have an accusative plural direct object from the person pronoun e)gw which refers here to Timothy and to Paul… “and called us.” So we have “The one having saved us,” and next it is going to say, “the one having called us.” So we anticipate this personal pronoun e)gw twice. “The one” is the definite article referring to God. E)gw is the word “us” and it refers to a specific kind of believer. All believers are saved and all believers are called, but in this context Paul is a super-grace believer and Timothy is a super-grace believer and therefore a certain kind of believer is involved. All grace orientation begins with salvation. No one ever reaches super-grace without a thorough understanding of soteriology.

            “The one having saved us” is a circumstantial aorist participle. He saved us in the moment of time we believed. In that particular moment the constative aorist says that He provided salvation. We believed; He saved us. He also called us, but “called” will go back to eternity past. In eternity past God knew that we would believe in time, and therefore He provided for us a tremendous blessing.

            There are three basic principles that we must understand: redemption, reconciliation, and propitiation. These are the three directional principles of soteriology. Each one goes in a different direction and each one summarises a part of the work of Jesus Christ on the cross.

            We will summarise the word “redemption” by saying it means to purchase from a slave market. All of the Greek words have a simple basic connotation. They all point out the fact that the person is shackled in a slave market. Only slaves are in the slave market. And someone comes along and purchases his freedom. That is what redemption means, to buy someone from slave market and then to free them. So by way of definition, redemption is the work of the Lord Jesus Christ on the cross which is directed toward sin.

            When Christ was on the cross His saving work went in three directions: toward God, toward man, toward sin. Redemption covers the principle of sin. The point is that the human race was born with a sin nature. We aren’t sinners because we sin, that is merely a result. We are sinners because when we were born into this world we had an old sin nature. We are in the slave market of sin because we were born with this old sin nature, we acquired it from our first parents. We are also born with the imputation of Adam’s sin, we are born with an old sin nature. So while we are physically alive at birth we are also at the same time spiritually dead, we are in the slave market. We are slaves to the old sin nature. No one with an old sin nature can help someone else get out of the slave market. The only way to get out is to have someone who is free buy their freedom. That someone is Christ.

            First of all, the virgin birth brought Him into the world minus the old sin nature, minus the imputation of Adam’s sin. Therefore, by living a perfect life He was qualified to go to the cross and to bear the sins of the world. The purchase price for freedom is to take the sins of everyone who ever lived and have them all poured out upon Christ on the cross, and there He bore our sins in His own body on the tree. That is called redemption, they way that we are purchased.

            The fact that Christ bore the sins of everyone who ever lived doesn’t mean that they are out of the slave market. They have to walk through the gate, and they walk through the gate by faith in Jesus Christ. Redemption, then, is the work of Christ on the cross toward sin. Redemption is the saving act of Christ by which He purchases our freedom from the slave market of sin, and the coin of the realm is called the blood of Christ. Jesus Christ, then, is the only qualified redeemer. The qualification begins with the virgin birth of Christ, His impeccability, and His humanity therefore is qualified. Romans 5:19 tells us that Christ was also willing to redeem us; Philippians 2:8,9. The blood of Christ is the ransom money — Ephesians 1:7.

            The doctrine of reconciliation is the work of Christ from the cross toward man. It merely recognises the fact that there is a great barrier between man and God. The barrier is made up of sin — “All have sinned and come short of the glory of God.” The penalty of sin is death, spiritual death — Romans 6:23. The barrier contains also the problem of physical birth, we are born physically alive but at the same time is spiritually dead.

            And this barrier includes some other problems. There is the problem of relative righteousness. Man at his best is minus righteousness (-R); God is (+R), and -R cannot have fellowship with +R. There is the problem of the character of God. God has perfect character, man does not. How can man have a relationship when he doesn’t have eternal life. Then there is the problem of position in Adam.

            There is no way to get past this barrier. That is what religion tries to do. Religion tries to build up a system of works so you can climb over the wall, of to build up a system of works that digs you under the wall, or find a crack in the wall where you can help God!

            So, once again, the great issue is grace. The one who has saved us is strictly the Lord Jesus Christ, He is the one who has removed every item in the barrier. The problem of sin was solved on the cross — doctrines of unlimited atonement, redemption. The penalty of sin was paid — doctrine of expiation. Physical birth — the cross provides for the basis for spiritual birth. The problem of relative righteousness is solved by the imputation of divine righteousness to the person who believes in Christ — imputation and justification. The problem of the character of God is solved by propitiation. Position in Adam is solved by position in Christ. And now between God and man there is no barrier, the barrier is removed by the cross and man, therefore, can simply step over the line by believing in Jesus Christ.

            This work of Christ on the cross is said to be manward, Christ has reconciled man to God on the cross.

            The third factor is propitiation, and propitiation is Godward. The problem is, how can a loving God give eternal life to man who is a sinner. The only way this can be accomplished is by some to go to the cross who has an equivalent righteousness to the Father. That someone is Jesus Christ, who in His deity and in His humanity is perfect. The justice of God says the wages of sin is death so Christ pays that penalty on the cross. That is spiritual death. Therefore the sins of the world are poured out upon Christ on the cross and judged. So the righteousness of Christ on the cross satisfies the righteousness of the Father. Bearing our sins satisfies the justice of the Father. The wages of sin was paid on the cross — Romans 5:8. That is spiritual death, taking our place. Now love and eternal life are free to come through the grace pipe to man, but only by way of the cross. God the Father is propitiated, He is free to express His love to the believer, He is free to give the believer eternal life and not compromise His righteousness and His justice. That is propitiation. Righteousness and justice are not compromised in giving eternal life to any member of the human race who will believe in Jesus Christ.

            We have three different principles here, all of them are tied up in the phrase “the one having saved us.”

            “and called us” — the continuative use of the conjunction kai, plus the aorist active participle from the verb kalew, the ordinary Greek word which means to call. It also has a technical meaning, it means to call for the participation in the privileges and the benefits of something. The privileges and the benefits here refer to grace, and so it is a call related to the privileges and the benefits of grace. It is translated, “and called us” or “and elected us.” We have the aorist tense in this verb always meaning an invitation, that is, and invitation here to privilege and blessing. God wants us to have the best of everything in life, and nothing short of the best will do. He designed our life in eternity past with that in mind. So we have another advance in the sense that this verb connotes the entire doctrine of election is designed to remind us that since we are believers in Jesus Christ God has a purpose for our life. That purpose is blessing. We are invited to enter a plan, to enjoy its benefits, its privileges, and the way it functions under grace. Kalew: The aorist tense is a dramatic aorist tense which states a present reality with the certitude of a past event. The present reality is the fact that salvation means sharing the election of Jesus Christ and being members of the royal family of God forever. There is another factor which is emphasised and it has to do with election. We have an invitation to enter into the plan of God and to enjoy its privileges and benefits. The invitation also has an alternative, not mentioned here, is divine discipline in time. The active voice: God the Father produces the action of the verb in eternity past when He planned election as a part of operation grace. This is what is called a telic participle, it denotes the purpose of God the Father in the royal family of God. The action of the aorist participle precedes the action of the main verb and the main verb in this verse will be “not being ashamed.” Inasmuch as we have been called we have been elected, we are not to be ashamed of the Lord Jesus Christ, the key to our election, the key to the invitation into a plan of blessing and benefit.

            “with an holy calling” — this really means a holy election. We have the locative singular from the adjective a(gioj. It is a counterpart to the word “saint.” Every believer is a saint by virtue of being in the plan, and therefore there is an adjective attached to each one of us, we are all called holy. The word “holy” actually refers to being set apart in the plan of God. Once you believe in Jesus Christ you are holy, you are set apart into the plan of God. That is what the locative of sphere is all about. With this adjective we have the noun translated “calling.” It is the locative of sphere from the noun klhsij. Klhsij has two meanings in this particular verse. It means a station of life. It also means technically election, which is our station in life. So we can translate, “and having elected us to a holy station of life,” i.e. into the royal family of God.

 

            The doctrine of election

            1. The etymology. The Hebrew word from Isaiah is bachir. It is found in Isaiah 42:1, one of the key principles in understanding the doctrine of election. If you understand election you can understand predestination. There are three nouns in the Greek that are directly and correctly translated election in the New Testament. The first is e)klektoj. This is where we get the English word “election.” It is found in Matthew 24:22,24,31 where it is used for super-grace believers in the Tribulation. It is used for all believers in Romans 8:33; Colossians 3:12; 1 Timothy 5:21; 1 Peter 1:2, and other passages. There is a noun which also occurs once, suneklektoj, meaning there are others in the plan with us — 1 Peter 5:13. The third noun which is directly translated “election” is e)klogh e)k means out from; logh is from logoj, the word: “out from the word,” and it emphasises the doctrine of election as related to toe doctrine of decrees. It is found in Romans 11:5,7.28; 1 Thessalonians 1:4. In addition, there is the noun which is usually translated “calling” but often is technically used for election — klhsij. It is derived from the verb kalew meaning to call or to be invited into a plan for benefit.

            2. Definition. There are several principles:

                        a) Election is that doctrine which relates the believer to the plan of God from eternity past. God knew in eternity past that you would believe in Christ and He did something about it long before you existed.

                        b) Therefore election is a part of the divine decrees.

                        c) God had omniscience, always has omniscience, and there never was and never will be in history any person who was unknown to God in eternity past. There never was a time when He did not know you personally and every decision you would ever make from your free will. He knew every person who would believe in Christ, He knew every person who would not. For those He knew would believe in Christ he made plans for them. Every blessing was designed for you in eternity past.

                        d) These plans are called decrees. They include provision, blessing, honour for believers in time and believers in eternity. Therefore election is defined as the plan of God for the believer predesigned in eternity past, fulfilled in time and in the eternal future. That is election.

            The key to understanding the doctrine of election is related to the fact that Jesus Christ was elected in eternity past — Isaiah 42:1. God the Father anticipated everything that Christ would need for the first advent and provided it then. God the Father can do no less for you, you are in union with Christ, you share His election.

            The election of the believer in the Church Age is different from the election of the Old testament saints because we are royal family. The Old Testament believers were family of God, they were regenerated, they were born again when they believed in Christ. But once Christ was seated at the right hand of the Father and was appointed battlefield royalty, at that moment He was minus a royal family. So the Age of Israel came to a halt and the age of the Church began in order to call out a royal family of God. We are royal family of God, that is why the baptism of the Spirit occurs only in this dispensation, and that is the mechanics by which we share His election and become royal family forever.

            3. The election of Jesus Christ — Isaiah 42:1; 1 Peter 2:4,6. While man rejected Christ during His first advent He is elected and He is important to God. Christ is described as elected and held in honour. Therefore the election principle from eternity past not only sustains Christ but He is said to be the elected one, He is also said to be the one who is held in honour. This means that if you are in union with Christ that God can hold you in no less honour. In the doctrine of election God doesn’t hold us in honour, He holds Jesus Christ in honour — just one person. There are millions of believers now and because Christ is held in honour, and because God the Holy Spirit entered us into union with Christ at the point of salvation, we are held in the same honour as Christ. That is election.

So it is inevitable, therefore, that members of the royal family of God share this election through union with Christ. This is the subject of Ephesians 1:3-6. Essentially, election is being in union with Christ and sharing everything that Christ is. This is Christianity, not religion.

            4. Election is the basis for Church Age royalty. At the moment of salvation God the Holy Spirit is responsible for five out of the thirty-six things which are accomplished. The first is regeneration. God the Holy Spirit is the agent in making us born again. The second is the baptism of the Spirit. God the Holy Spirit enters us into union with Christ. The third is indwelling whereby God the Holy Spirit comes to indwell our bodies. The fourth is sealing whereby we are sealed to the day of redemption, the day of our resurrection bodies. That means we have eternal security. The fifth is the presentation to each one of us of a spiritual gift. All of these are accomplished by the Holy Spirit at the point of salvation.

            So the baptism of the Spirit is the basis for election, for entrance into the royal status of the family of God. Therefore, 1 Corinthians 12:13 connected with 1 Thessalonians 1:4 tells us the whole story. 1 Cor. tells us the mechanics.

            Through resurrection, ascension, session, Christ was seated at the right hand of the Father. He became battlefield royalty but without a royal family. The royal family is in the process of formation, you are a part of that royal family. Mechanics: baptism of the Holy Spirit which never occurred before the Church Age and will never occur after the Rapture of the Church.

            The principle: Under positional sanctification we both share His election and His royalty.

            5. The election of the royal family of God [Church Age believer]. Union with Christ through the baptism of the Spirit means that we share the election of Christ, we share the royalty of Christ. Therefore, every Church Age believer is designated “called, saint, elected” — all interchangeable. Ephesians 1:4.

            The principle of this election is found in Romans 8:28-32. This is election related to every member of the royal family of God.

            6. The objective of election in time is to encourage the believer to attain the tactical victory of the super-grace life. Ephesians 4:1. Every time there is something about our station in life there is also something about our election.

            7. The Jewish believers also present problem. Today there are many Jews who have not accepted Christ and the question comes up: Has Israel lost out? In saying no to that answer election is discussed in Romans 11:1-7.             

            8. Election is used for super-grace believers of the Tribulation — Matthew 24:21ff, “...because of the elect.” This tells us that those who are under the plan of election who fulfil it in time always reach super-grace. And when they do they become a basis of blessing to all who are in their periphery. In other words, it is the believer in super-grace fulfilling the principle of election who is the spiritual Atlas in any generation of history.

 

            “not according to our works” — just as salvation is not according to works our election, the plan of God for each one of us, is not works either. It is not what we do, it is what he did, and He did it in eternity past. We have “not,” the strong negative o)uk, plus the preposition kata, plus the accusative plural of e)rgon, plus the possessive genitive plural from the personal pronoun e)gw. This refers to all believers in this dispensation. The plan, operation grace, excludes all human good, all legalism. There is no place in the plan of God for human ability, human merit, human planning, human good of any kind.

            “our works” — “our” is a possessive genitive plural.

            This anticipates the noun proqesij which means the plan purpose of God for each believer. In this plan all human thinking, all human merit is totally excluded. This is the word translated “purpose” — predetermined plan, prefabricated plan. We have, again, the preposition kata and the object is proqesij.

            “his own” — the adjective i)dioj which means privacy, private possession: “but according to his own privately possessed, predetermined plan.” God has a predetermined plan for each believer. As you grow in grace and as you take in doctrine this plan unfolds in terms of blessing, in terms of being able to cope with any disaster or any situation in life.

            “and grace” — the ascensive use of kai should be translated “even.” That means that whatever comes up after “predetermined plan” it has a synonym. That synonym is the word xarij, the accusative singular object of the preposition. The preposition kata has two objects: proqesij, the predetermined plan, and xarij which should be translated “even grace” — “but according to his own predetermined plan, even grace.” Grace is a simple title for the plan of God. Grace is not only the principle of the plan of God but the title, the concept, the mechanics.

 

            The doctrine of grace

            1. Grace is all that God is free to do for man on the basis of the work of Christ on the cross. Grace is God’s freedom and consistency to express His love to mankind without jeopardising the rest of His essence. Grace is all that God can do for man from salvation to eternity totally apart from man’s merit, man’s ability, man’s talent, man’s planning, man’s concepts. Grace, then, in one word is the absolute genius of God, and doctrine is the manifestation of that genius. The great enemy of grace is legalism, man’s intrusion into the plan of God with his works, with his thinking, with his ability, with his plans, with his schemes, and with his talents. The believer must learn to sort out the difference between grace and legalism.

            2. Grace and the new contract for the Church. The Church is the royal family of God and is not under the Old Testament contracts of which there are several. We have a new covenant, not an old covenant.

            The glorification of Christ by resurrection, ascension and session is the strategic victory in the angelic conflict. This dramatic victory interrupts the Jewish Age in order that the royal family of God might be formed to commemorate that victory. The royal family is formed by the baptism of the Holy Spirit in the Church Age. 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 angels, and make him superior. This is accomplished in the three phases of sanctification. The first of these is called positional sanctification. The greatest thing that God the Father can do for any one of us is to make a believer in Jesus Christ exactly like His Son, Jesus Christ. This is accomplished through positional truth at the point of salvation. God the Holy Spirit takes each believer and enters him into union with Christ. Positional sanctification is the beginning of God’s great plan whereby we are going to be made exactly like His Son.

            Positionally we are in union with His Son. This provides for royalty plus the fact that each member of the royal family is positionally higher than angels. This is grace, we do not earn it or deserve it. In addition the royal family possesses the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. This is the royal escutcheon, the sign of our royalty.

            Experiential sanctification is the second paragraph of the new covenant to the Church. This, again, is strictly grace provision. God in His grace has provided numerous things for our tactical victory: the principle of living grace by which the believer remains alive in the devil’s world; the provision of a pastor-teacher — something that every believer has, either by tape recorder or face to face; local churches; the canon of scripture; the provision of a grace system for perception of doctrine. Experiential sanctification is the attainment of spiritual maturity, the perpetuation of super-grace status through constant positive volition toward Bible doctrine. This tactical victory compliments the strategic victory of Jesus Christ and therefore makes it possible for each one of us in the devil’s world to glorify God.

            Ultimate sanctification is the third paragraph in the new covenant to the Church, it deals with eternity. The royal family of God receives a resurrection body exactly like that of Jesus Christ and becomes physically superior to angels forever. This occurs when the royal family is completed — the Rapture of the Church.

            3. There are five stages of grace, five stages involved in God’s plan.

            The first is saving grace. Every believer has tasted the grace of God at least once — Hebrews 6:4; 1 Peter 2:3. The tasting of grace is called the point of salvation at which we receive 36 irrevocable grace items which cannot be cancelled or destroyed. Because of propitiation every believer comes under the maximum love of God — 1 John 2:2. Maximum love frees God to pour out maximum grace. But grace can only benefit where there is capacity for grace. This is based on the amount of doctrine resident in the believer’s soul. The believer is saved by grace which is all the Trinity has done to accomplish salvation. The Father planned it, the Son executed it, the Holy Spirit reveals it.                  Next is the principle of living grace which has already been noted — all that God is free to do for the believer to keep him alive in the devil’s world in phase two.

            The third stage of grace is super-grace and/or spiritual maturity in time. In 1 Timothy 1:14 the super-grace believer is described as having an abundant life. Super-grace is the adult stage of life on this earth for the believer, the ultimate in spiritual growth in time and the basis for the normal function of the royal priesthood. It is also the point at which production becomes effective for the Lord. Super-grace is the sphere of life in which the royal family reaps what God sows in eternity past, therefore the fulfilment of Romans 8:28. Super-grace is described by James 4:6 — “He gives greater [super] grace.” Ephesians 1:6 — God pursues us with grace.

            The fourth stage is dying grace. This is for the super-grace believer only. The person who is negative toward doctrine goes out under the sin unto death. The worst experience that a believer can have is the sin unto death. The super-grace believer has the antithesis, he makes the transition from time to eternity through great blessing. Dying becomes a greater blessing than anything in his life. Dying grace, then, is the experience of physical death under special grace provision whereby death becomes a tremendous blessing. The principle of dying grace links the super-grace believer of time with the surpassing grace believer of eternity. Therefore dying grace is the extension of the whole grace principle. We can’t earn or deserve great blessing in dying, it comes to those who are in super-grace, it comes through doctrine but it comes through a principle we can neither earn nor deserve. Cf. Philippians 1:20,21.

            4. The modus vivendi of grace. It becomes obvious that grace is a means to many things. Grace is a means of growth — 2 Peter 3:18, we are commanded to grow in grace. Grace is the basis for stability — Hebrews 13:9; 1 Peter 5:12; Hebrews 12:28. Grace is the basis for production — 1 Corinthians 15:10; 2 Corinthians 6:1.

            5. The failure to utilise grace. Reversionism is basically the way of describing failure to utilise grace. It is described briefly in two passages — Galatians 5:4, drifting off course from grace; Hebrews 12:15.

            6. The principle of grace in suffering. There is no disaster, no difficulty, no tragedy, no heartache in this life too great for the super-grace believer — 2 Corinthians 12:7-10.

            7. The principle of axioms of grace.

                        a) God is perfect, His plan is perfect.

                        b) A perfect plan can only originate and function from a perfect source — perfect God.

                        c) If mankind can do anything meritorious in the plan of God it is no longer perfect. Man is imperfect, therefore if he contributes anything to the plan of God the plan of God is neutralised by his contribution, not advanced.

                        d) A plan is no stronger than its weakest link. There are no weak links in grace.

                        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 in the plan of God.

                        g) All legalism and human good is associated with the principle of arrogance or pride, and arrogance is also the great enemy of grace.

            8. Four areas in which arrogance rejects grace.

                        a) The pride of the believer who rejects the doctrine of eternal security. He thinks that his sins are greater than the grace of God.

                        b) Pride of the believer who succumbs to the pressure of adversity. He thinks that his sufferings and his adversities are greater than the plan of God — 2 Corinthians 12:7.

                        c) The pride of the reversionist. He assumes that his form of reversionism is greater than super-grace blessing. He assumes that the pseudo blessings that Satan provides are greater than anything that God could provide, and therefore until he is very close to death or under intense discipline he never gives doctrine a thought.

                        d) The pride of pseudo spirituality. This believer thinks that his system of energy of the flesh spirituality is greater than the true function of God the Holy Spirit in the life. In his arrogance he becomes a holy roller, becomes involved in observing certain taboos, in various categories of legalism.

 

            “which was given us” — accusative singular of the definite article used as a relative pronoun, and it refers to grace, plus the aorist passive participle of the verb didomi. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist, it views grace in its entirety but regards it from the viewpoint of existing results, namely the believer becoming the beneficiary of grace in time. The passive voice: the believer receives the action of the verb. The participle is circumstantial. We also have the dative plural of advantage from the personal pronoun e)gw referring to Paul the human writer, Timothy the recipient, and all super-grace believers. It is translated, “which has been given us.”

            “in Christ Jesus” — e)n plus the locative of I)hsouj and Xristoj.

            “before the world began” — the preposition pro plus the genitive plural of xronoj, plus a genitive plural from a)iwn — “before the times of the ages [dispensations].” This is an idiom which means before human history began.

            Translation: “The one having saved us, and having elected the royal family into the holy station of life, not according to our works, but according to his own predetermined plan, even grace, which has been given to us in Christ Jesus before human history.”

            Verse 10 — “But is now made manifest” is a Greek phrase beginning with an aorist passive participle from the verb fanerow. It is correctly translated to be manifest, to be visible, to become known, or to be revealed. We will use the verb to reveal here. “But at the present time grace has been revealed” is the concept for grace is the subject of this particular passage. The culminative aorist tense of the verb views the first advent in its entirety but regards it from the viewpoint of its existing results, namely the strategic victory which gives us a special meaning and definition to our own lives. The passive voice: the predetermined plan of God, even grace, receives the action of the verb. The participle is circumstantial. With this we have a post positive conjunctive particle de used as a conjunction of contrast. The contrast emphasised is the fact that the plan of God was prepared in eternity past as a part of the divine decrees but revealed in time by the first advent of Christ. In other words, the whole key to the divine decrees is that in eternity past God the Son agreed to become man and to come into the world. The entire detailed plan for the first advent, including all provision for the Son in hypostatic union, was made in eternity past. This sets up a parallel because at a point of time you received Christ as saviour and yet the provision for you, as for the Son, was made in eternity past. All of this is brought together by the culminative aorist of fanerow which means to be revealed. We also have an adverb of time here, nun, which means now or at the present time. When this is all put together it should read: “But at the present time grace has been revealed.” The revelation of God’s grace is based upon the pattern of Jesus Christ at the first advent.

            “by the appearing” — the preposition dia plus the genitive of e)pifaneia, correctly translated “through the appearance.” This is a reference to the first advent of Jesus Christ which both resolves the angelic conflict, as per Hebrews 1, and provides eternal salvation for mankind, as per Hebrews 10:5-14. Grace or the plan of God is revealed in a very specific way through the first advent of the Lord Jesus Christ.

            “of our saviour” — this definitely refers to the first advent rather than to some of the previous appearances or appearances after the first advent. It helps us to tell us which of the four categories of appearances of Christ is involved here — Theophany, first advent, Christophany, or second advent. This category is easy to identify here because we have the descriptive genitive singular of the noun swthr which describes the primary objective of the Lord Jesus Christ in the first advent — getting to the cross and providing a complete salvation: redemption toward sin; propitiation toward God; reconciliation toward man. The word “our” is a possessive genitive plural from the personal pronoun e)gw indicating the fact that people are saved in every generation, including the one in which Paul wrote.

            “Jesus Christ” — the Greek says “Christ Jesus,” the genitive of apposition Xristoj. The reason that “Christ” comes before “Jesus” is because the passage is dealing with appearances, is dealing with chronology, and Xristoj comes before I)hsouj because in the order of the royal of Jesus Christ He is Jewish royalty before He is battlefield royalty. The order of His royalty — category #1, divine royalty, title: Son of God; royal family: God the Father, God the Holy Spirit. Category #2, Jewish royalty, title: Son of David; royal family, the entire family of David, including his contemporaries, step brothers and step sisters. Category #3, battlefield royalty, title, King of kings and Lord of lords; royal family, the Church. This is all chronological. Xtistoj is used because it is equivalent to Messiah and indicates that Jesus Christ is the one anointed King, as David was before Him. The word for divine royalty is kurioj, “Lord,” which doesn’t occur in the passage. I)hsouj actually refers to the battlefield royalty, the cross and the subsequent events which resulted in battlefield royalty.

            He came to defeat Satan by the cross, resurrection, ascension and session where He was appointed battlefield royalty. He came to provide eternal salvation. So out of the four categories of appearances of Christ this passage refers to category #2 which is the field of the first advent.

            Theophany refers to the appearances of our Lord in many ways in the Old Testament. The Lord Jesus Christ appeared primarily in Theophany as Malak Adonai, “Angel of Jehovah.” A Theophany is any appearance of Christ before the first advent and must be distinguished from Christophany which is an appearance of Christ in resurrection body after the first advent.

            “who hath abolished” — the aorist active participle of katargew which means to cancel, to render useless or powerless, to abrogate, to abolish, to wipe out, to make ineffective, to release from the association of one thing from another. With it is the Greek affirmative particle men plus the correlative use of de, which means on the one hand and on the other. The aorist active participle is an aorist which is a little different from the constative aorist, it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety, it is a reference to the doctrine of expiation in which Jesus Christ released mankind from association with spiritual death. We were born in association with spiritual death because we were born possessing an old sin nature and the imputation of Adam’s sin. We are released from association with death the moment we believe in Jesus Christ.

            “death” is the accusative singular direct object from the noun qanatoj, referring to spiritual death.

            Next we have the particle de which means “and on the other hand.”

            “hath brought to light” — the aorist active participle from fwtizw which means to illuminate” : “he has illuminated.” This is a culminative aorist tense, it views the illumination of eternal life and immortality in its entirety but it emphasises it from the viewpoint of existing results. Life and immortality are illuminated by the death and resurrection of Christ. The active voice: Christ produced the action of the verb by illuminating eternal life and immortality. Eternal life is revealed by the cross; immortality was revealed by resurrection. So the death and resurrection of Christ are put together here.

            “life” — the accusative singular direct object from the noun zwh, used here for eternal life — 1 John 5:11,12 helps to explain this: “The deposition is this, that God has given to us eternal life and this life resides in his Son. He who has the Son has life; he who has not the Son of God does not have life.” Cf John 1:4; 14:6; 20:31. Eternal life was always there but we couldn’t see it. The cross illuminated it.

            “and immortality” — accusative direct object from the noun a)fqarsia — not spoil, corrupt. When the negative is added it means incorruptible: “not corruptible” or “immortality” as translated. This immortality is explained in terms of resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15:33. Immortality means a believer in a resurrection body.

            “through the gospel” — dia plus the genitive of e)uaggelion which means gospel or good news.

            The gospel is the means of communicating the work of Christ on the cross, plus His resurrection, ascension and session. The gospel communicates the strategic victory of the angelic conflict as well as the way of salvation for mankind. As a result of the first advent and as a result of breaking the back of Satan at the cross we now have the angelic conflict shifting gears, and this is the most intense phase of the angelic conflict.

            Translation: “But at the present time grace has been revealed through the appearance of our saviour Christ Jesus, who on the one hand released us from association with spiritual death, and on the other hand has illuminated eternal life and immortality through the gospel.”

            This brings us to the fact that if all of the objectives, including the one implied by illumination, are to be accomplished there must be communication for illumination. No communication, no illumination.

           

            Principles

            1. The strategic victory of Jesus Christ brings the Jewish dispensation to a sudden halt.

            2. With Christ seated at the right hand of the Father He was appointed battlefield royalty (the great unseen conflict, the angelic conflict).

            3. In this category of royalty Christ has the title of King of kings and Lord of lords but he does not have a royal family. In all other categories He has a royal family.

            4. Therefore because He has not royal family the dispensation of Israel is halted and the Church Age begins to call out and form a royal family for battlefield royalty of Christ.

            5. The interruption of the Jewish Age to form the royal family of God demands the communication of doctrine to that same royal family or Church Age believer.

            6, Therefore three categories emerge from the completed canon of scripture. Category #1, the communicator. The pastor teacher who is responsible for teaching Bible doctrine to the royal family of God during the Church Age. There are no prophets in this dispensation after the completion of the canon of scripture, the pastor is the communicator. Category #2, the reversionistic believer. This category is negative toward doctrine. Inasmuch as the great issue of this dispensation is attitude toward doctrine it is not surprising that all categories who resist Bible doctrine are found under this one principle of reversionism. Category #3, the super-grace believer. He is positive toward doctrine on a consistent basis.

            7. All three categories demand the transfer of Bible doctrine from the page of the Bible to the soul of the believer.

            8. This can only be accomplished by authorised communicators.

            9. Authorised communication is based upon the possession of the pertinent communication gift.

 

            Verse 11 — “Whereunto” is the preposition e)ij plus the accusative singular from the relative pronoun o(j. This should be translated “For which purpose.” For the purpose of communicating doctrine, for the purpose of tactical victory complementing the strategic victory of Christ, for the purpose of spiritual growth, for the purpose of fulfilling the very purpose for which all of us remain in this life, there must be communicators.

            “I am appointed” — aorist passive indicative of the verb tiqhmi. The aorist tense here can be translated like a perfect, “I have been appointed.” The constative aorist refers to a momentary action, the moment in which Paul believed in Christ God the Holy Spirit assigned to him the communication gifts of apostleship and pastor. The passive voice: Paul received the action of the verb in a moment of time at his salvation. The indicative mood is declarative representing the verbal action from the viewpoint of dogmatic reality.

            “a preacher” — there is no such thing as a preacher. The word here is the accusative singular direct object from the noun khruc which is the word for a herald, the communicator for a king. A pastor-teacher is a herald, a communicator for the King. The King is Jesus Christ. Khruc means the one who communicates for royalty.

            The official communicators of Bible doctrine are divided into two categories corresponding with the two phases of the Church Age — the pre-canon period of the Church and the post-canon period. The pre-canon period was from 30-97 AD; the post-canon period is from 96 AD to the Rapture, whenever it occurs. In the pre-canon period there were apostles and pastor-teachers, in the post-canon period there are only pastor-teachers.

            “and a teacher” — predicate nominative from didaskaloj. This word has quite a significant meaning. It carries a tremendous amount of weight, much more than appears on the surface. It actually means a communicator to a group of people. It means the communicator has authority and the group has none in the system of communication. The pastor must have complete authority as well as the proper spiritual gift and didaskaloj means a communicator in a public assembly. The public assembly is the meaning of the local church. In keeping with the principle of privacy the believer assembles with other believers. The believer also has a name. The pastor is called didaskaloj and there is both and noun and a verb for the believer. The noun is maqhthj, mistranslated “disciple.” It means one who learns doctrine under discipline. The objective of the pastor’s teaching under authority is that the believer might grow in grace, that he might have a tremendous amount of doctrine in the soul producing the ECS and leading to the super-grace life. This is the concept of didaskaloj.

            “of the Gentiles” — this does not occur in the original text.

            Translation: “For which purpose I have been appointed a herald, being both an apostle and a teacher.”  

           

            The principle of deposit analogies

            1. The analogy to evangelism. In the ancient world they had a system of banking similar to what we have today. There were two types. One was related to the heathen temples. All heathen temples were places where you could deposit money and the priests also acted as bank tellers. In the second system, great merchant systems of the ancient world also acted as bankers and you could carry a letter of credit from Rome to almost any part of the empire and receive cash. In this way commerce was carried on within the confines of the Roman empire. Therefore the word “deposit” was quite a prominent word and was used very extensively.

            Our first deposit is found in an analogy to evangelism. It is found in Acts 17:2,3. The deposit of doctrine this time is the gospel. The analogy is used for anyone who evangelises on a personal basis — sometimes, and perhaps mistakenly, called witnessing. The word “witness” as used in the scripture really refers to the principle of testifying in a courtroom and presenting truth. Therefore it is used more for the function of the pastor-teacher in the scriptures than for any other particular function. Consequently witnessing is really a misnomer. It should be personal evangelism, mass evangelism; but whatever type of evangelism is actually being used there is the sense in which the true concept of evangelism is to make a deposit of the gospel in the soul of another person or persons gathered together. When you make a deposit of the gospel it is God the Holy Spirit who actually does the work of making that gospel reality and bringing about the decision.

            2. The next analogy is directed toward both salvation and eternal security — 2 Timothy 1:12, “ … to preserve my deposit against that day.” Faith in Christ at salvation is the deposit. When we respond to the deposit of the gospel in our souls in a positive way we believe in Christ. Believing in Christ becomes the second deposit. This faith deposit is a total dependence upon the essence of God regarding salvation. Hence, the principle of eternal security emerges from this.

            The approach to eternal security, then, comes into view and there are ten legitimate approaches found in the scripture:

                        a) The positional approach of Romans 8:38,39. At the moment of salvation we enter into union with Christ, and we never get out.

                        b) The logical approach of Romans 8:32. This means that when you approach the cross you have the fact that God has provided the most at this point, and when you believe in Christ and become saved you have received at that point the most. The question arises, what more can God provide for you? The answer is much more than the most — Romans 5. That “much more than the most” includes eternal security.

                        c) The metaphorical approach called the anthropomorphism of God’s hand — John 10:28; Psalm 37:24.

                        d) The reversionistic approach — 2 Timothy 2:12,13. “If we are unfaithful [reversionistic, under the influence of evil] he remains faithful ...”

                        e) The family approach — John 1:12; Galatians 3:26. At the moment we believe in Christ we enter into the family of God. We are born into God’s family and once we are born into a family there is nothing we can do about it, we are there forever. The analogy is carried over into the spiritual realm.

                        f) The inheritance approach — 1 Peter 1:4,5. We have an inheritance which includes the fact that we are secure forever.

                        g) The divine essence approach — 2 Peter 3:9, which describes the Lord as not willing that any should perish but that all should come to a change of mind. Repentance is used to describe that. This passages emphasises the sovereignty of God in eternal security. Jude 24 emphasises the omnipotence of God in eternal security, He has the power to keep us saved forever.

                        h) The body approach — 1 Corinthians 12. All of us are pictured as members of a body. Christ is the head and we are the members. The differentiation of the members is based upon the concept of spiritual gifts. In Colossians 1:18 compared to 1 Corinthians 12:21 one of the great principles that is made is that the head, Jesus Christ, cannot say to any member of the body, I don’t need you. No matter how insignificant any member of the body may be there can never be such a statement from our Lord.

                        i) The royal family approach — 2 Corinthians 1:22; Ephesians 1:13; 4:30. This is the sealing of the Holy Spirit. The purpose of the sealing of the Holy Spirit at salvation is to guarantee eternal security.

                        j) The Greek tense approach, using the imperfect tense of swzw in Ephesians 2:8,9. The corrected and more expanded translation should read: “For by grace you have been saved in the past, with the result that you keep on being saved forever through faith...”

            3. The third deposit is actually related to the analogy to the function of GAP — Matthew 13:24, “… he deposited another parable with them, saying...” In other words, Jesus Christ in teaching the disciples was actually making a deposit. The same thing is found in 1 Timothy 1:18; 6:20; 2 Timothy 1:14. The guarding of this deposit includes the continuation of the function of GAP or the perpetuation of the super-grace status in phase two. The guarding of this deposit means the avoidance of reversionism and the influence of evil. In the mechanics of GAP every positive believer, therefore, has his own right pastor who communicates doctrine to him. As this doctrine is communicated it is deposited, and the believer’s guardianship of the deposit means perpetuation of GAP.

            4. The training of other pastors — 2 Timothy 2:1,2. Both the recognition of the gift of pastor-teacher and the preparation for using the gift are related to the function of GAP under the strict academic discipline of the local church.

            5. The faith-rest technique during any type of adversity — 1 Peter 4:19. There are some principles involved in this analogy that are very important. For example, there is no suffering for the believer in eternity — Revelation 21:4.

                        a) The devil’s world is unfair to the believer.

                        b) While the reversionistic believer is sometimes blessed by the devil as the ruler of this world this is a point of disgrace and failure. It is disgraceful to be blessed by Satan as a believer.

                        c) To be blessed by the devil is to be under maximum influence of evil in the soul.

                        d) This is pseudo maturity and the devil’s answer to super-grace.

                        e) The believer’s soul is the battleground for the angelic conflict.

                        f) Consequently the ore positive a believer is toward doctrine the more pressure from Satan.

                        g) This means that the super-grace believer sometimes endures maximum pressure from cosmos diabolicus.

                        h) This requires maximum use of the deposit of doctrine in the soul.

                        i) The faith-rest technique transfers doctrine from the soul to the adversities of life.

                        j) In the maximum use of the faith-rest technique believers in undeserved suffering [i.e. according to the will of God] must deposit their souls with the Lord Jesus Christ who is a faithful creator, who has provided living grace, super-grace, dying grace, and surpassing grace.

                        k) By depositing the soul with the Lord in time of maximum suffering and pressure the super-grace believer glorifies God in the production of divine good.

                        l) This divine good so produced under suffering will receive maximum reward in eternity.

                        m) Here, then, is the application of doctrine under pressure, that maximum use of the faith-rest technique which provides blessing in living, blessing in dying, blessing forever.

                        n) This is a specific application to that principle enucleated in the following verses: Psalm 55:22 — “Cast what has been given to you [pressure, adversity, difficulty, trial, etc.] on the Lord, and he will sustain you; he will never allow the righteous [super-grace believer under pressure] to be shaken.” 1 Peter 5:5-7; 4:19.

 

            Verse 12 — our first deposit in context, the deposit of salvation. “For the which cause” is the preposition dia plus the accusative singular of a)itia, plus the accusative singular of the relative pronoun o(j — “For the which cause.” This is literally, “Because of which cause” but it comes to be a Greek idiom meaning “For this reason.”

            “I also suffer” — the adjunctive use of the conjunction kai plus the present active indicative of the verb pasxw. The present tense is a descriptive present, it indicates what is now going on. Paul is suffering through Nero and the Roman empire through his incarceration. The active voice is the causative active voice in which the subject, Paul, is related to the action through an intermediary means. This is equivalent to the hiphil stem in the Hebrew. This idiom is a device of intelligent expression and is a form common to most languages. It often arises from the use of an intransitive verb in a transitive sense. The indicative mood is declarative from the viewpoint of reality. It should be translated, “Also for this reason I am caused to suffer these things.”

            “these things” — accusative plural from the demonstrative pronoun o(utoj. This is the accusative direct object and it calls special attention to and emphasises the fact that Paul is a herald of the King of kings as noted in the previous verse. The accusative case refers to the various types of suffering associated with his incarceration. These sufferings, however, do not hinder the blessings of dying grace, nor in any way do they detract from Paul’s paragraph SG2. Both the spiritual and temporal blessings of Paul’s surpassing grace, as well as his super-grace, are not in any way jeopardised.

 

            The doctrine of suffering

            1. The general causes for suffering in life — believers and unbelievers.

                        a) Loss of health, wealth, property, money, loved ones, or anything that you value.

                        b) Suffering from people. This includes gossip, ostracism, persecution, violence, crime, warfare.

                        c) Privation — hunger, thirst, cold, heat, storm, earthquake and other natural disasters, accidents in any variety.

                        d) Suffering from the administration of law — mostly to criminals.

                        e) Mental suffering — from sins, pride, arrogance, jealousy, hatred, bitterness, guilt reaction, neurosis or psychosis, worry, anxiety, fear, etc.

                        f) Suffering from rejection of authority. This includes rejection of authority in love. When the woman rejects the authority of a man she suffers. Failure in adulthood because of rejection of authority in childhood. Being fired from a job because of rejection of authority.

                        g) Suffering from reversionism resulting in reaping what you sow.

            2. Basic categories of suffering. a) In time; b) In eternity. For time, we now begin to break up into the categories of the human race. The human race is divided into two categories by John 3:36, believers in Jesus Christ and rejecters of Jesus Christ. The unbeliever suffers in time for rejection of the laws of divine establishment. He suffers through reversionism and other factors of self-induced misery. The believer also suffers in time. In eternity the unbeliever suffers forever the most intense of all sufferings, the lake of fire forever — Revelation 20:12-15. There will be no suffering for the believer in eternity — Revelation 21:4.

            3. The premise for Christian suffering.

                        a) All suffering is designed for blessing — 1 Peter 1:7,8; 4:14.

                        b) The exception is divine discipline — Hebrews 12:6, for carnality and for reversionism.

                        c) The exception is removed — 1 Corinthians 11:31 — for carnality: rebound; for reversionism: recovery through the consistent function of GAP.

                        d) Cursing is therefore turned to blessing — Romans 8:28. So the premise: All suffering is designed for blessing. The exception is divine discipline. Exception removed: the result is cursing turned to blessing.

            4. The categories of Christian suffering. There are two types of Christian suffering: a) Disciplinary suffering, called deserved; b) Suffering for blessing, called undeserved.

            A. There are ten categories of deserved [disciplinary] suffering:

                        a) Suffering from divine discipline [deserved] — Hebrews 12:6. This is the only way God can express His love to the carnal or reversionistic believer. For carnality — Psalm 38; for reversionism — Ecclesiastes. Psalm 38 was written by David after operation Bathsheba. He was a super-grace believer and he stayed a super-grace believer. What he did with Bathsheba was carnality, not reversionism. So he suffered a lot of discipline. In Psalm 38 he got around to rebounding which is how he broke out of carnality. This is a perfect illustration of divine discipline to a super-grace believer for his carnality. Suffering for reversionism is under a different system. There is warning discipline, sharp pains to let you know that something is not right. “Behold, I stand at the door and knock.” If that doesn’t work there is intense discipline. Then if that doesn’t work there is dying discipline — a horrible death. The entire book of Ecclesiastes is a perfect illustration of this type of discipline.

                        b) Suffering by association. One has to be carnal, one has to be reversionistic, or both has to be reversionistic, or both have to be carnal. This is a principle found in 1 Corinthians 12:26; Romans 14:7, illustrated by 1 Samuel 21.

                        c) Suffering caused by having the wrong priorities — again two illustrations: Ecclesiastes and Song of Solomon.

                        d) Suffering from guilt complex. This is isolated from other mental attitude sins which also cause suffering because a guilt complex is compounded suffering that you bring on yourself by reacting to your own failures — 1 Timothy 1:5,6,19,20; 3:9; 4:1,2; Titus 1:15.

                        e) Suffering through national discipline. Five cycles — Leviticus 26. Illustrations — Isaiah 33, 59; book of Hosea.

                        f) Suffering from rejecting the principle of right man, right woman. This is the type of suffering that can continue for the rest of one’s life because he has married the wrong person. It can be suffering for blessing or suffering for cursing: doctrine or carnality and reversionism. Ezekiel 16,23; Jeremiah 12:7; 15:7-12, 17,18.

                        g) Suffering from failure to isolate sin [chain sinning] — Hebrews 12:15.

                        h) Suffering from temporary loss of grace norms [when you get into legalism] — Jeremiah 2:24,25.

                        i) Suffering from historical disaster, war and revolution are two illustrations.

                        j) Suffering from reversionism — Psalm 77.

            B. There are ten categories of suffering for blessing [undeserved suffering].        

                        a) We often suffer to glorify God in the angelic conflict. There are other types of suffering for blessing that are related to it. Job; Luke 15:20,21; 1 Peter 1:12; 3:17. This is a noble and honourable type of pressure.                      b) Suffering to learn self-discipline — Hebrews 5:8. Our Lord Jesus Christ put Himself under discipline — Philippians 2:8.

                        c) Suffering to demonstrate the sufficiency of grace —2 Corinthians 12:1-10.

                        d) Suffering to eliminate the occupational hazard of pride and arrogance, and to relate it to the sufficiency of grace. You can never become an arrogant person without suffering horribly. If the purpose of the suffering is to eliminate arrogance it is suffering for blessing — 2 Corinthians 11:24-33; 12:1-10.

                        e) Suffering to develop faith-rest technique — enough faith to function in the faith-rest technique. You must have pressure for any kind of development.

            B. There are ten categories of suffering for blessing [undeserved suffering].        

                        a) We often suffer to glorify God in the angelic conflict. There are other types of suffering for blessing that are related to it. Job; Luke 15:20,21; 1 Peter 1:12; 3:17. This is a noble and honourable type of pressure.

                        b) Suffering to learn self-discipline — Hebrews 5:8. Our Lord Jesus Christ put Himself under discipline — Philippians 2:8.

                        c) Suffering to demonstrate the sufficiency of grace —2 Corinthians 12:1-10.

                        d) Suffering to eliminate the occupational hazard of pride and arrogance, and to relate it to the sufficiency of grace. You can never become an arrogant person without suffering horribly. If the purpose of the suffering is to eliminate arrogance it is suffering for blessing — 2 Corinthians 11:24-33; 12:1-10.

                        e) Suffering to develop faith-rest technique — enough faith to function in the faith-rest technique. You must have pressure for any kind of development. The trigger mechanism by which you apply doctrine in your soul to experience is faith, faith-rest; and it has to be developed, it has to be strong — 1 Peter 1:7,8.

                        f) Suffering to accelerate the construction of the edification complex of the soul and to enter into the super-grace status — James 1:1-6.

                        g) Suffering as a means of witnessing for Christ — 2 Corinthians chapters 3 & 4.

                        h) Sometimes suffering is very specialised. You suffer a special type of suffering ahead of someone else, using doctrine all the way, in order to be able to help some weaker believer when they go through the same thing. This is a specialised type of suffering in which God uses some stronger believers to encourage weaker believers — 2 Corinthians 1:3-5.

                        i) Suffering to learn the value of Bible doctrine. This is for the silly person who won’t come to doctrine until he has tried everything else and then says nothing else works so he might as well try doctrine. Psalm 119:67,68,71.

                        j) Suffering for the advance and impact of doctrine — 2 Timothy 1:12-14.

            5. The concept of family suffering.

                        a) Scripture for family suffering: Exodus 20:4-6; Deuteronomy 5:8-10.

                        b) The four-generation curse is specifically enumerated in two other passages — Exodus 34:3-7; Numbers 14:8 — where a curse in one generation goes down to the next, and the next, and the next.

                        c) There is an entire chapter on the mechanics of this curse — Proverbs 30:11-17.

                        d) The law of culpability — Proverbs 24:16. You are never included in the discipline of the next generation unless you become culpable under the same principle.

                        e) The problem of children. This includes two basic principles: 1. Fairness toward children — Deuteronomy 21:15-17; 2. If bona fide discipline in the home fails, and occasionally it does, then the Bible says that when those children step out of line as teenagers they should be executed — Deuteronomy 21:18-22.

                        f) Doctrine breaks the four-generation curse. This is a combination of four verses: Psalm 100:5; Deuteronomy 7:9; 6:6-13; 11:18-21, in that order.

                        g) The children’s gimmick — Jeremiah 31:15; Number 14:31. This is where the parents suffer because they use their children as an excuse. They used their children as an excuse not to enter the land even though God promised them to enter the land. People today use their children as an excuse not to come to Bible class. That means family suffering. Whenever you use your children as an excuse not to do something that is commanded by the Word you are going to produce suffering in your life.

                        i) The triumph of children with doctrine. It is possible that every category of suffering enumerated in the first six points can be eliminated by children moving to super-grace before they become adults. This was the case in Lamentations 3:21-31.

            6. The concept of economic suffering. When there is freedom in the economy ad runs its normal course of supply and demand of free enterprise you are going to have periodic depression. The doctrine is that depression is an enema that eliminates the unfit people in a nation. A nation is weakened by not destroying what is weak from time to time. A house gets dirty if you don’t clean it; a nation gets weak if certain types of natural disaster, like economic depression, do not come along and eliminate the weak. It has nothing to do with race or any other factor, it has to do with the law that if you do not have a periodic depression then your nation will eventually be so weak that it will destroy itself. Welfare is a weakener of a nation.

                        a) Inflation is a part of the fourth cycle of discipline — Leviticus 26:26.

                        b) Since depression should be a periodic thing the importance of solvency in a depression is the subject of Genesis 41.

                        c) Depression also strengthens spiritually for it acts as a test for the faith-rest technique — Genesis 12:10; 1 Peter 1:7,8.

                        d) Doctrine resident in the soul is the answer to depression rather than money in the pocket — 2 Chronicles 20:9.

                        e) Divine viewpoint is necessary to survive economic disaster — Psalm 33:17-20.

                        f) Depression is a part of divine discipline both to the nation and the individual reversionist under the influence of evil — Psalm 105:16; Jeremiah 11:22.

                        g) False teaching in time of depression intensifies that depression — Jeremiah 14:13-16,18.

                        h) God protects the super-grace believer in depression — Job 5:20; Romans 8:35.

                        i) Bible doctrine resident in the soul is the solution to depression. Consequently, advance to super-grace restores the economy — Isaiah 37:30,31.

            7. God can only demonstrate His love to the believers through suffering in time — 1 Peter 4:14,16. Whatever suffering is going to come to you it will only occur in phase two, time. Phase three, eternity, is minus suffering.

                        a) There is no suffering for believers in eternity — Revelation 21:4.

                        b) Furthermore, there is no suffering too great for the plan of God. The plan of God can meet any suffering in life.

                        c) Divine provision for suffering is greater than any pressure of life.

                        d) Super-grace is the status in which to experience this principle. You are fully prepared for suffering in super-grace; you are not prepared for suffering until super-grace.

                        e) The super-grace believer is qualified through doctrine resident in the soul to weather any storm of life.

            8. The unique sufferings of the Lord Jesus Christ on the cross — Isaiah 53. Since Jesus Christ reached super-grace at a very early age obviously all of the suffering that he had was suffering for blessing. He was perfect, born minus the old sin nature, minus the imputation of Adam’s sin. He lived a life of perfection — doctrine of impeccability. All of the suffering that came to Him was undeserved, for blessing. But the intensification of suffering when He reached the cross was absolutely unique. Christ is unique; His sufferings are unique.

            Verse 12 — “Therefore” is laken in the Hebrew. It is the combination of a preposition and an adverb used to demand a conclusion, correctly translated “therefore.” This is an inferential conjunction.

            “will I divide” — the piel imperfect of chalak. This is a distribution of spoils in the piel stem, it is a distribution of spoils after victory. Out of the unique suffering of Christ comes the victory of the angelic conflict. Therefore unique suffering turns to our blessing. He suffered in an intensity we will never understand, no one ever had such suffering as Christ had on the cross. It is impossible for anyone to have the suffering that occurred with regard to Jesus Christ on the cross. Every blessing you will ever have in time or eternity comes out of that suffering. Literally we have, “Therefore I will distribute.” This is a distribution of the spoils of victory.

            “to him” — to Jesus Christ the victor.

            “with the great” is correctly translated “because of the many,” referring to those who will believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and those who have in the past believed in Christ. “Therefore I will distribute the spoils to Christ because of the many believers.” The spoils or plunder are described in Ephesians 4:8-12. The strategic victory of Jesus Christ on the cross, followed by His resurrection, ascension and session, the honour to Him at the right hand of the Father, His battlefield royalty, means that there is a distribution of plunder. For Israel it meant transfer from the heart of the earth or Hades to the third heaven; from Paradise or Abraham’s bosom to the third heaven — Matthew 27:52,53. That was the distribution of spoils to Israel. The distribution of spoils to the royal family of God and/or the Church are phenomenal.

            “he shall divide the spoil” — again, the piel imperfect of chalak — “with the strong,” which is not quite correct, there is no preposition. There is a masculine plural adjective atsum, a reference to the royal family specifically but super-grace believers. We have therefore an order of distribution. God the Father distributes it to Christ, Christ distributes it to super-grace believers. All of this comes because of the suffering of our Lord on the cross.

            “because he hath poured out his soul to death” — this is a reference to physical death this time. After He died spiritually (three hours) He then died physically. In His physical death He said something which becomes the secret to the distribution of plunder. His last exhale was one breath, the length of one sentence. That one sentence is the heritage of doctrine passed on to the royal family in every generation. From this maximum suffering on the cross, which is also unique suffering, He now passes on to us a spiritual heritage. So that in dying physically He spoke, and what He said is very important. Prior to this He said that salvation was completed, “Finished.” Once He said that there is no more unique suffering, it is over. From that point on it was strictly a matter of dying grace all the way.

            We have in the Gospels a record of the various aspects of Christ dying physically. Each one of the Gospel writers developed a different aspect. In Matthew 27:50 we have Matthew emphasising one aspect, whereas Mark emphasises another. He emphasises the sound, that Jesus uttered a sentence and made a loud sound in doing so. Jesus, having shouted again with a loud voice sent away His breath [dismissed His spirit]. The thing that impressed Matthew was the loudness of His voice, He could be heard all over Golgotha. In Mark 15:37 we have the same subject covered but with a different emphasis. The thing that impressed Mark was the fact that He had perfect breath control in His last sentence, “And Jesus, having exhaled with a loud voice, expired.” This means He was in no pain. When you are in pain you do not have control of your breath, you automatically will gasp or groan. But Jesus Christ had perfect breath control. So Marks’ record is very important because it indicated no pain. He had just gone through the most unusual suffering that will ever occur in history. Then, when you get to Luke 23:46, you get for the first time the content of His last sentence in dying physically: “And having enunciated with a loud voice, Jesus said, ‘Father into you hands I deposit my spirit,’ and, having said this, he expired.” But it doesn’t give the whole message, it merely gives a hint as to what was actually said. So we actually have in the first three gospel writers enough that we can put together so that we can get the content of what was said. We know what was said from Psalm 31:5 which Jesus was quoting — “Into your hands I deposit my spirit, for you have delivered me, O Jehovah, God of doctrine.” Two words are important: deliverance and doctrine. They go together. It is the whole story, it is our spiritual heritage. It is the source of receiving our share of the plunder of the great victory of Christ on the cross.

            Is. 53:12 — “prior to this He was identified with offerings for sin [His spiritual, death]; because He Himself carried the sin of many, and about the offerings for sin the whole thing was caused to fall upon Him.”

            There is an emphasis in the 11th verse and a reemphasis in the 12th verse that in the spiritual death of Christ on the cross He suffered in an unusual and an intense way. In His physical death there was no suffering at all. The line of demarcation: “It is finished.”

            Translation of verse 12: “Therefore I [God the Father] will distribute the spoil [the plunder of victory] to him [Christ] because of many believers, then he [Christ] will distribute that spoil to the great ones [super-grace believers], because he [Christ] has poured out his soul to death [physical]; prior to this [physical death] he was identified with the offerings for sin; because he himself bore the sin of the many [on the cross], and about the offerings for sin the whole thing was caused to fall upon him.”

            There is no way we can ever completely enter in to what it means for the Lord to suffer in that way because none of us will ever suffer that way. The only thing that will come close is the unbeliever living forever in the lake of fire, and even that is not as intense as what our Lord went through during those three hours of darkness on the cross.

            Verse 12 — “For the which cause” is the preposition dia plus the accusative singular of a(itia, plus the relative pronoun o(j. It is an idiom which means “For this reason.”

            “I also suffer” — the adjunctive use of kai plus the present active indicative of pasxw. The present tense is a descriptive present, it indicates what is now going on. Paul is suffering pressure from the Roman empire through his incarceration. The active voice is a causative active voice in which the subject, Paul, is related to the action through an intermediary means. The declarative indicative mood represents the verbal idea from the viewpoint of reality. This is what is actually going on.

            “these things” — the accusative plural from the immediate demonstrative pronoun o(utoj which calls special attention to and emphasises the fact that Paul is a herald of the King of kings, both an apostle and a communicator of Bible doctrine. The accusative case refers to the various categories of suffering associated with being incarcerated in the Roman dungeon. “Also for this reason I am caused to suffer these things.”

            “nevertheless” — the adversative use of the conjunction a)lla. It sets up a contrast between Paul’s suffering and the wonderful blessings he possesses simultaneously. In other words, you can have great suffering and adversity and at the same time have great happiness. So that suffering and adversity is a circumstance that does not dictate to you on your mental attitude or any other problems. When you have maximum doctrine in the soul your mental attitude is not a slave to your circumstances.

            “I am not ashamed” — present middle indicative from the compound e)paiskunomai which means having a direction for your shamedness. It puts shame in a direction. We have with it the negative o)uk. Paul is not ashamed in his suffering. He has too much capacity for love, he is too occupied with Christ, he has too many wonderful memories, too many things going for him, to let any kind of adversity be disturbing.

            “for I know” — the perfect o)ida used as a present tense for doctrine residing in the soul. O)ida indicates the way in which all of us come to love Jesus Christ. You cannot love someone unless you know that person. Paul loves Jesus Christ because he knows Jesus Christ. This is inherent knowledge. The more the believer knows about doctrine (the written Word) the greater his capacity to love Jesus Christ. Maximum doctrine in the soul means maximum category #1 love or occupation with Christ.

            “whom” — locative singular from the relative pronoun o(j. This is the locative of sphere, translated “in whom.”

            “I have believed” — perfect active indicative of the verb pisteuw. Pisteuw is a little more than simply believing in Christ here. It means that, of course, but it also emphasises the results of believing in Christ for salvation. The perfect tense here is a dramatic perfect which is the rhetorical use of the intensive perfect which emphasises the action as being completed in the past. You believed in a second and the results go on forever — eternal life. The active voice: Paul produces the action of the verb, the point of salvation or when he believed in Christ. Paul believed in Christ with the result that he continued to be saved forever. The indicative mood is declarative, it indicates dogmatic assertion, dogmatic reality for salvation and eternal security.

            The next phrase goes on to express confidence: “and am persuaded” — perfect active indicative from peiqw. Peiqw in the present tense means to obey and to keep obeying. In the aorist tense it means also to believe. But here in the perfect tense it means to possess or have confidence. Again, it is a dramatic perfect and indicates that you have confidence in the past from doctrine in your soul with the result that you keep on possessing confidence from that same doctrine in your soul. The passive voice: the subject is Paul in prison, he receives the action of the verb through the daily function of GAP, the intake of doctrine, and he is now utilising that tremendous amount of doctrine resident in his soul. He exudes confidence, he has the inner resources of grace to the maximum. The indicative mood is declarative for the reality of the believer’s confidence in the super-grace status. The passive voice, by the way, with the implied intermediary agent of biblical doctrine resident in the soul, should be translated: “I have received confidence through resident doctrine.”

            “that he is able” — the conjunction o(ti used simply to indicate the content of that confidence, plus the present active indicative of the verb e)imi which has a static present, it represents a condition which is perpetually existing — eternal security. The active voice: God produces the action of the verb. The indicative mood is declarative for a dogmatic assertion of eternal security. Then we have a predicate nominative, dunatoj — “he keeps on being able.” Dunatoj refers to the omnipotence of God.

                “to keep” — aorist active infinitive of the verb fulassw which means to guard. This is a culminative aorist, it views the action of the verb in its entirety but emphasises the results. It views that one second in which he believed in Christ and it views it from the viewpoint of its existing results. The active voice: God does the guarding. The infinitive is the infinitive of actual result. The omnipotence of God guards your salvation forever, you can’t lose it.

                “that which I have committed” — there is not even a verb here, instead we have the noun paraqhkh which means deposit. We have the possessive genitive singular from the personal pronoun e)gw, translated “my” — “to guard my deposit.”

                “against that day” — the preposition e)ij plus the accusative singular of e)keinoj the distant demonstrative. The last judgment of the lake of fire is distant, the believer will never ever get to see it. This is the great white throne judgment.

               Translation: “Also for this reason I am caused to suffer these things: but I am not ashamed: for I know in whom I have believed, and I have received confidence [through doctrine resident in the soul] that he keeps on being able to guard my deposit against that day [of judgment].”

            Verses 13 & 14, the deposit of doctrine in the soul. Again, it explains why Paul is not ashamed.

            Verse 13 — “Hold fast” is not a correct translation. We have the present active imperative of the verb e)xw which means to have, to possess. Here it is correctly translated “Keep on having.” The present tense is a retroactive progressive present, it denotes what has begun in the past and continues into the present time. This is why it is often called the present tense of duration. The active voice: Timothy is commanded to continue producing the action of the verb. The imperative mood is a command to not only stick with the principle of recovery but to continue to take in Bible doctrine.

            “the form” — the accusative singular direct object from the noun u(potupwsij which does not mean a form. It does mean an example, a standard, an outline, a delineation, a pattern, a formula, or a category. Several of the meanings are pertinent to this particular context. Remember that Timothy has arrived at the high ground of super-grace and must now hold that position. He does so by fulfilling this command of constantly having in his soul an outline of sound doctrine, the standard of sound doctrine, the delineation of sound doctrine. This boils down to keeping on having a categorical outline.

            “of sound words” — present active participle from the verb u(giainw which means to be healthy or to be sound. Arndt and Gingrich, page 840, says that this is used figuratively in the pastoral epistles with reference to Christian teaching. Thus, in accordance with the prevailing usage Christian teaching is designated as “correct doctrine.” We also have a descriptive genitive plural from the noun logoj, and the plural of logoj means doctrines. All together we have this: “Keep on having a categorical outline of correct doctrines.” The participle is used as an adjective and is correctly translated “correct doctrines.”

            “which” is the genitive plural from the relative pronoun o(j, it has as its antecedent “correct doctrines” — “which correct doctrines.”

            “thou hast heard” — a constative aorist active indicative from the verb a)kouw. It means not simply to listen as in a casual manner but to listen under the principle of academic discipline. The aorist tense is a constative and it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. The active voice: Timothy has produced the action of the verb by GAPing it on a daily basis. The indicative mood is declarative representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of reality. The reality is that Timothy has recovered through the daily intake of Bible doctrine. He has recovered from his reversionism and the influence of evil which was noted in the first epistle. The verb therefore connotes a very strict academic discipline which belongs to the function of GAP.

            “of me” — the preposition para plus the ablative singular from the personal pronoun e)gw — “from the immediate source of me.” The ultimate source of all doctrine is God, the immediate source is the one who communicates the doctrine.

 

            The grace provision for learning doctrine

            1. The formation and the preservation of the canon of scripture. This includes the mechanics of inspiration as well as God’s faithfulness in keeping and protecting the written canon. The Bible has always be subject to many attacks and yet the Bible today is the best seller throughout the world. The 20th century has an intact canon of scripture preserved in the original languages so that the meaning of any passage is as perspicuous today as it was in the day of the autograph. This is the principle of grace. We have more information today about the original languages of scripture, more papyri uncovered, more MSS, which tell us exactly what the autographs said. So that today we are in a better position to know exactly what the original said than ever before in history.

            2. The divine authorisation of the local church. The local church is a classroom for learning doctrine, the place of assembly of all believers in a specific geographical location, and it is a classroom which is under very strict discipline.

            3. A right pastor. The spiritual gift of pastor-teacher provides both the ability and the authority to communicate doctrine via monologue.

            4. The royal priesthood of the believer. In this dispensation there exists a universal and royal priesthood among believers. The purpose of this priesthood is for privacy of reception of doctrine. This prevents the intrusion of some legalist with his own ideas telling you how to live your life. To have the privilege of growing up spiritually you must have privacy. The royal priesthood is a grace gift that has many privileges — to ensure privacy, to avoid bullying, to give a chance to learn doctrine when you enter the congregation for instruction. Every royal priest must construct his own altar which is Bible doctrine resident in the soul.

            5. The ministry of God the Holy Spirit. The aristocracy of the believer’s priesthood is related to this ministry. The Holy Spirit at the moment of salvation enters the body of every believer, He enters every believer into union with Christ — “I in you and you in me.” The Holy Spirit not only is indwelling the body of the believer for protection in the angelic conflict but He controls the soul of the believer under conditions of the filling of the Spirit. This is God’s grace provision for learning doctrine and for having the ability for fulfilling the objectives and to enjoy the blessings that God has for us. For the first time in history, and throughout the entire Church Age, the believer’s body is indwelt by the Holy Spirit. The indwelling of the Holy Spirit is the royal escutcheon of the Church Age. The sealing of the Spirit is the security of the royal family. He makes every believer a royal ambassador. In addition, the filling of the Spirit provides the means by which we learn doctrine.

 

            The doctrine of refreshment

            1. Definition. While refreshment in the English language generally connotes food and beverage it has a much greater connotation in the Bible. It means to restore to strength of a soul, to revive the divine viewpoint in the function of a soul, and to do so apart from the pastor’s function of Bible teaching. In other words, to restore the soul of an individual, provide stimulation and blessing for the soul of the individual, without teaching them doctrine. It also means to supply what is necessary for spiritual blessing in time of adversity or disaster. Primarily there is one verb that brings out the subject, the Greek verb a)nayuxw [a)na means again and again; yuxw means the soul]. Put together it means to breathe again and again or to revive the soul. Your life should be a source of revival to individual souls in your periphery.

            2. We see the ministry of refreshment in many areas. The alleviation of Saul’s psychosis. Saul apparently had a temporary psychotic condition which erupted from time to time in his life when there was any kind of pressure. 1 Samuel 16 23 — eventually someone came into his life who was able to be of some help. This, by the way, is permissive control of history allowing the function of demon influence in the life of reversionistic Saul. Saul became refreshed and well because the music that David played reached Saul’s soul and brought his soul back to reality, temporarily alleviating the psychotic condition that he had. Refreshment came to his soul which alleviated the suffering and caused him to calm down. Refreshment, then, is used for soul recovery from an adverse condition whether it is reversionism, psychosis, neurosis, the influence of evil, or some other form of apostasy. Always, refreshment connotes soul recovery and soul blessing.

            3. In Proverbs we have a tristitch of doctrinal refreshment — Proverbs 25:13. Line one from the Hebrew gives us the illustration — “Like the cold of snow in the time of harvest.” The time of harvest is a time when the workers get very hot at their work. Water boys were often sent to some place where there was still snow. By the time it was down it had melted but was then cold water. The snow here is melted snow that is still cool and refreshing. They would bring it down in containers and the workmen would stop their work and take a drink of this refreshing water. Therefore this is to be the illustration for the next two lines.

            The second line is “faithful messenger to those who send for him.” The pastor or any communicator of doctrine is regarded in this analogy as a water boy.

            The final phrase says, “he refreshes the soul of his masters.” The water boy worked for everyone else. The principle is that the refreshment that comes to the believer comes from the one who is faithful in communication. The refreshment in the Bible, of course, is always connected with the soul. Hence, this is an analogy between a water boy during the harvest who brings the cold water down to the workers and the communicator of doctrine providing spiritual refreshment for the souls of the hearers. The teacher of doctrine is the key to the ministry of refreshment. And you ability to take in doctrine has everything to do as to whether you ever reach the point of refreshment. The point of total refreshment is a super-grace believer. This is a part of that paragraph, blessing by association.

            4. The rejection of refreshment means national discipline — Isaiah 28:8-14. “Times of refreshing” are the only thing that can save a nation as far gone as the northern kingdom was in this passage — a revival of doctrine in the soul of believers.

            5. Response to the Word of God is called refreshment — Romans 15:32. Paul wants to come and teach them doctrines they do not have. But he also says he wants to be refreshed by them. Paul is going to teach them but many of them are going to be a refreshment to Paul — because there is a rapport in category #3 love, their is a refreshment, many of his friends are there, people he truly loves, people who stimulate his soul. Cf. 2 Corinthians 7:13, the ministry of Titus to the Corinthians. A Bible conference can be a mutual refreshment if the communicator of doctrine teaches the Word and those who are his friends become a source of blessing while he is there.

            6. The super-grace believer has a ministry of refreshment. This is a part of blessing by association. There are at least three illustrations of this in the New Testaments. a) Certain Corinthians believers — 1 Corinthians 16:17,18; b) The super-grace believer Philemon — Philemon 7, 20; c) 2 Timothy 1:16, the house of Onesiphorous.

 

            “in faith” — the preposition e)n plus the instrumental of pistij, which means “by doctrine.” But we must put in something else. This is previously-learned doctrine. There is no definite article in front of the word “faith.” The word pistij means doctrine more than it means faith in the new Testament, it means what is believed and/or doctrine. The absence of the definite article calls attention to the quality of that doctrine. The quality is tops because it is in your soul where it is useable. It takes doctrine to learn doctrine. Basic doctrine must reside in the soul before advanced doctrine enters the human spirit and the frame of reference.

            “and love” — the connective kai plus the instrumental singular of a)gaph, so it should be “by means of love.” It doesn’t mean to love doctrine and it doesn’t mean to love each other, it is a synonym here for the filling of the Spirit. Romans 5:5 says that this love is shed abroad in our right lobes by means of the filling of the Spirit. Cf. Galatians 5:22; 1 Corinthians 13 are really talking about the filling of the Spirit and the relaxed mental attitude which results.

            “which is” is not found in the original. However the instrumental singular of the definite article is used here as a relative pronoun and it provides the same concept. So we can get the word “which” out of the definite article, and putting in the word “is” is legitimate in translation.

            “in Christ Jesus” — e)n plus the locative of Xristoj and I)hsouj. Royalty related to Israel and royalty related to the Church is all here “in union with Christ Jesus.”

            Translation:  “Keep on having a categorical outline of correct doctrines, which [doctrines] you have heard from me, by previously learned doctrines, and love [filling of the Spirit] which is in Christ Jesus.”

 

            Genesis 3:1-6

 

            The tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil

            A. Man in the innocence of the garden had four categories of trees — Genesis 2:9, category #1, “...every tree that is desirable to the sight.” This is designed for man’s soulish pleasure. Man observed this category and was stimulated in his soul. These trees reminded man of his status of innocence provided by God’s grace. Innocence represents reaping what God sows and the stimulation of the soul by this category of trees was a reminder of the stimulation to man’s soul by the daily provision of doctrine which was taught by Jesus Christ every evening in the garden. Doctrine resident in the soul gave Adam capacity for life and appreciation for the trees of the garden in that capacity. In other words, category #1 took care of the fact that man had a soul and he had a house for the soul, namely the body. Category #2 is food for the body. Categories 3 & 4 for volition, man’s positive and negative poles. The volition of man’s soul is the purpose for which he was created, to resolve the angelic conflict.

            Principles:  Before the fall man had a relationship with God. It was not eternal life, it simply is called relationship based upon creation. He had three categories which he was told to utilise:

            Category #1 for the soul; to eat from trees which provided food for the body; then, right in the middle of the garden there were two trees: one was for positive volition called the tree of lives (pl), and it meant that every day he had to have capacity for life. The only way that he could appreciate God’s plan — which was grace and excluded anything which was not grace — he had to have capacity for lives. He lived day in and day out, therefore it is plural. This is not eternal life, man was not given eternal life in the garden. Man ate of this tree, man was positive toward this tree, and this gave him the capacity to appreciate who and what God was (one of two ways, the other was the Bible class held every day in the garden). Also for negative, the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. This was forbidden. Why? Because when you have a relationship with God there are two things you don’t need: a) You don’t need works; b) You don’t need evil. Evil is what you think and works is how you put your thinking into operation.

            Category #2, good for food. This is designed to satisfy and stimulate the human body. Again, in innocence man reaps what God sows. Adam did not earn or deserve the food provided. The stimulation to the taste buds was a reminder of God’s perfect grace. This category sustained the body as the house for the human soul.

            Category #3, the tree of lives in the middle of the garden.

                        a) This was the tree of positive volition toward the plan of God.

                        b) This tree was only available as long as man remained in innocence or positive toward the grace plan of God.

                        c) The tree was no good to man in status spiritual death. Why? Because in spiritual death man has no capacity to appreciate God. And it is in the plural because this capacity had to be renewed every day. It has to do with capacity for life, not eternal life.

                        d) This tree was provided for man as the ruler of the world. If man is going to rule the world under God he must have capacity to appreciate God, he has to have capacity for life, for love, for happiness, for perfect environment. These capacities are not something you work up by yourself, these are God-given in grace; and the tree of lives was so designed with that in mind.

                        e) This tree was God’s grace provision for man who was created to resolve the angelic conflict.

                        f) Man was created with free will in order to resolve Satan’s appeal of his judgment of the lake of fire — Matthew 25:41.

                        g) The tree of life was provided to be associated with man’s positive volition in innocence to perpetuate grace blessing and man’s rulership of the world.

                        h) The tree of life was associated with perfect environment and life in the garden plus the perpetuation of that life under positive volition toward God’s original grace provision for man — Genesis 2:9; 3:22. The unbeliever never does appreciate these things because he is spiritually dead. What is spiritual death? It is the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. And with good and evil you do not know God, you do not appreciate God, you are dead to God. After the fall man is born a do-gooder, born evil, born with the knowledge of good and evil. And that is Satan’s plan, Satan’s project.

                        i) When man sinned he was driven from the garden and cut off from the tree of life — Genesis 3:24. The next time we see the tree of life is in eternity. Why? It isn’t needed until then. It is instant capacity for life.

                        k) If man in spiritual death had eaten from the tree of life his volition would no longer be the means of resolving the angelic conflict. Under spiritual death he could not even use the tree of life, it has no meaning to him at all. You cannot appreciate God under spiritual death, and spiritual death is eating from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.

                        l) The purpose in creation of man could not be perpetuated after the fall of man.

                        m) But the purpose of creation is perpetuated after the fall by cutting off the tree of life. The tree of life is removed but the tree of knowledge of good and evil goes on into history, and it goes on and on in reversionism and being under the influence of evil.

                        n) The tree of life is now the cross of Christ after the fall. That is the equivalent to appreciating God. What the tree of lives did in the garden doctrine does today for the believer. So it is the cross that provides redemption toward sin, reconciliation toward man, and propitiation toward God. Here is the beginning of appreciation for God.

                        o) And man’s non-meritorious positive volition and/or faith in Christ is still the means of resolving the angelic conflict — Ephesians 2:8,9.

                        p) By remaining in the garden after spiritual death man would be perpetuated under the domination of Satan which would have doomed him to perpetual slavery under spiritual death. In other words, if he had stayed in the garden then he would have stayed under slavery because Satan was now the ruler of the world. To keep man in the garden when Satan rules the world puts man in perpetual slavery. There is no way to get out of you stay in the garden. So man had to be thrown out of the garden to get back on the garden the new way — he must be born again.

                        q) Furthermore, the tree of life in the garden could not provide the solution to man’s fall and/or spiritual death.

                        r) The tree of life does not provide redemption, reconciliation and propitiation.

                        s) Therefore the fall of man provides a new tree of life and perpetuates the solving of the angelic conflict.

                        t) The salvation work of Christ on the cross is the new tree of life which perpetuates the angelic conflict into human history after the fall.

                        u) So the tree of life was put out of man’s reach in the garden so that the cross of Christ can come into focus for man’s eternal salvation.

                        v) By expulsion from the garden after the fall the cross becomes and remains the issue of salvation — John 3:36.

            The tree of the knowledge of good and evil.

                        a) This the tree related to man’s negative volition.

                        b) This tree perfectly portrays man’s relationship to God in the garden as grace, grace, and more grace.

                        c) In the garden man was the ruler of the world. Man’s rulership of the world depended on his relationship to God and God’s sustaining grace.

                        d) This tree represents the entire policy of Satan as the ruler of the world: human good and human evil. The knowledge of good and evil is not the difference between good and evil, there is no difference! Good and evil are the same.

                        e) This tree was forbidden because it represents everything that hinders man’s relationship with God. Human good hinders man’s relationship with God and so does evil.

                        f) In innocence man did not have to know good and evil to have a relationship with God.

                        g) Man’s relationship in the garden was grace. Grace excludes both good and evil.

                        h) Along with the tree of life the tree of the knowledge of good and evil was located in the middle of the garden.

                        i) This dramatises the importance of man’s positive and negative volition toward God’s plan represented by the tree of life and Satan’s plan represented by the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.

            B. Hence the importance of the divine prohibition — Genesis 2:16,17.

                        a) Note that spiritual death is not only no grace relationship with God but includes cognisance of systems of human good and evil.

                        b) Human good and evil is the policy of Satan as the ruler of this world.

                        c) The presence of this tree in the garden is a part of the angelic conflict.

                        d) God has to present Satan’s plan as a choice for man’s free will. So God’s plan is there: tree of lives; Satan’s plan is there: tree of the knowledge of good and evil. As long as man ate from the tree of lives he was choosing God’s plan, but one day he ate from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil and chose Satan’s plan, immediately making Satan the ruler of the world.

                        e) But God also in grace prohibited the eating of that tree. He warned against it.

                        f) For that tree is the sum total of Satan’s genius.

                        g) That tree is the way Satan has been running the world since the fall.

                        h) Therefore the tree of lives is provided for man’s eating under grace.

                        i) But the tree of the knowledge of good and evil is prohibited.

                        j) The two tree represent the issue of man’s volition in history.

                        k) One tree is grace blessing, the other tree is cursing from the evil genius of Satan.

                        l) Disobedience to God regarding the tree of the knowledge of good and evil meant not only spiritual death but coming under the rulership of that creature genius, Satan.

                        m) The summary of Satan’s rulership policy is, therefore, human good and evil.

                        n) When you understand good and evil you understand the genius of Satan’s policy as the ruler of this world and how it differs from the superior genius of God’s policy of grace.

                        o) There are two periods of human history where man rules the world under a grace policy from God: the garden and the Millennium.

                        p) Both are characterised by perfect environment and both periods terminated with man in revolt against that perfect policy.

                        q) The first revolution was the fall of man, the second is the Gog revolution at the end of the Millennium.

                        r) In both cases the revolution occurred because some segment of the human race did not understand Satan’s policy of human good and evil but accepted it instead of grace.

                        s) For the unbeliever Satan’s policy of human good and evil can only produce spiritual death in time and the second death in the eternal lake of fire.

                        t) For the believer Satan’s policy of human good and evil can only produce reversionism with resultant loss of grace blessing in time and loss of surpassing grace blessing and rewards in eternity.

                        u) God has invented a protection against human good and evil: Bible doctrine. The protection in the garden was the tree of lives. The protection since the fall is Bible doctrine.

                        v) Bible doctrine resident in the soul insulates the believer against evil as well as provides the blessings of grace.

            C. In the original temptation of the woman Satan used the tree of the knowledge of good and evil by relating it to pride or arrogance — the pride and arrogance of the woman. Genesis 3:1-6. Satan, in approaching the woman, wanted to keep the issue on evil. Satan understood a principle: It is not the man, it is the message. If Satan had appeared to the woman in all of his beauty she would have followed him anywhere. Satan follows certain rules in the angelic conflict, and one of them is that if you are going to get someone away from God — man had a relationship with God through creation — you must stick with the message. The message is good and evil. That is his policy, his message. He has to win her soul. It is not the communicator, it is the communication.

            Eating is a non-meritorious function but when you hook it up with Satan’s plan non-meritorious function becomes violation of God’s plan, God’s will; and the act of disobedience was the first sin. In innocence mankind needed to know doctrine for orientation to grace but not human good and evil to orient to Satan’s plan.

            D. Therefore three principles must be perceived to understand the policy of Satan: the doctrine of pride, the doctrine of evil, and the doctrine of human good.

            The doctrine of human good

                        a) Human good is dead to the plan of God and the policy of God — Genesis 2:17 where the forbidden tree is called the knowledge of goods and evil. Hebrews 6:1 — “… repentance from dead works.” You must change your mind about dead works because dead works or human good is the plan of Satan, it is dead to the plan of God. Spiritual death, therefore, includes all the evil that the unbeliever thinks and all of the human good that the unbeliever does, and all the evil and human good that the reversionistic believer accomplishes — thinking or doing.

                        b) Human good is linked with arrogance to produce boasting — Ephesians 2:9; Romans 4:2. Human good always stimulates arrogance.

                        c) Human good is never acceptable to God — Isaiah 64:6. This is why the tree of the knowledge of good and evil was forbidden.

                        d) However, distinction should be made between Satanic human good and morality which is called good. There are three types of good: divine good, human good, morality or establishment good. Divine good: production of the filling of the Spirit and Bible doctrine; human good: the whole principle of Satan’s policy; morality or establishment good — Romans 13:1-7.

                        e) Human good will not save mankind — Ephesians 2:8,9; Titus 3:5; 2 Timothy 1:9.

                        f) The judgment of human good. There are three ways in which human good is judged: i) Human good was not judged at the cross; ii) The judgment of the believer’s human good does take place after the Rapture at the judgment seat of Christ — Romans 5:10; 1 Corinthians 3:11-16; 2 Corinthians 5:10; iii. The judgment of the unbeliever’s human good occurs at the last judgment, the great white throne — Revelation 20:12-15.

            Verse 14 — “That good thing which was committed.” Here are six words to translate three in the Greek: thn kalhn paraqhkhn. There is no verb here and it simply means “That beneficial deposit.” Thn is an accusative singular direct object from the definite article used as a demonstrative pronoun to emphasise the importance of doctrine resident in the soul. Remember that the definite article is often used for a pronoun; here for the demonstrative pronoun because the demonstrative pronoun emphasises doctrine resident in the soul. Then we have the accusative singular direct object from the adjective kaloj. Kaloj as an adjective has a number of similar meanings: noble, honourable, beneficial are the primary meanings. Here we have beneficial as the correct meaning in this passage. Plus the accusative singular direct object from the noun paraqhkh which means deposit. This is the Bible doctrine by which Timothy has recovered from reversionism and then moved on to the high ground of super-grace. The benefit resides in the fact that Timothy now has how own paragraph SG2.

            Next comes the verb, the aorist active imperative from fulassw which means to guard. The culminative aorist contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety but emphasises the existing results. The entirety contemplated here is the daily function of GAP that causes both reversion recovery and entrance into the super-grace life. The existing results which are emphasised is the maintenance of the super-grace status. The active voice: Timothy through the daily function of GAP produces the action of the verb — maintenance of super-grace. The imperative mood is the mood of command. It should be translated: “Guard that beneficial deposit.”

            “by the Holy Ghost” — dia plus the genitive of pneuma plus the adjective a(gioj: “through the Holy Spirit.”

            “which dwelleth” — the articular present active participle e)noikew. The definite article used here is for a relative pronoun whose antecedent is the Holy Spirit. It is translated, therefore, “who.” The present tense is a static present representing a condition which perpetually exists, namely the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. The active voice: the Holy Spirit produces the action by indwelling the body of every believer. The participle is circumstantial for the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.

            “in us” — e)n plus the locative plural of e)gw which means all believers.

            Translation: “Guard that beneficial deposit [maximum doctrine in the soul] through the Holy Spirit who dwells in us.”

 

            Principle

            1. The second deposit in this context is Bible doctrine resident in the soul. The first deposit was faith in Christ for salvation.

            2. This is maximum resident doctrine compatible with reaching spiritual maturity — super-grace.

            3. Once there the command to guard actually refers to maintenance of the super-grace status. We are to maintain the status of maturity, we are to hold the high ground. This is the principle of Philippians 3:12-21.

            4. This anticipates the rest of the chapter in which the reversionist is ashamed of that second deposit. The reversionist is always ashamed of Bible doctrine; he rejects doctrine, he is ashamed of doctrine, and any thought which is based on doctrine or any divine viewpoint of life. The super-grace believer is never ashamed of divine viewpoint, never hesitant to bring out divine viewpoint.

            5. Being ashamed of the second deposit of doctrine in the soul results in being ashamed of the first deposit, faith in Christ. People who are negative toward doctrine are ashamed of Christ. If you are ashamed of the written Word you are ashamed of the living Word.

            6. First the believer is ashamed of doctrine, which he rejects, then he becomes ashamed of Christ.

            7. It is fitting that the chapter should end with a super-grace believer who was not ashamed of the second deposit, therefore he became a pleasant memory under the concept of auld langsyne.

 

            Verse 15 — the reversionist who is ashamed and is not a blessing to anyone else by association. This is the one who doesn’t make it.

            “This” is an accusative singular neuter from another demonstrative pronoun, o(utoj which emphasises a designated object in the immediate context. This is what is called the near demonstrative. There is something in the immediate context that needs a lot of emphasis. In one word it is doctrine, in two words it is doctrine inside, in a phrase it is doctrine resident in the soul — through the daily function of GAP. This emphasises the principle that reversionism at that time, as well as in our day, always comes from rejection of that doctrine — getting our priorities confused, losing our scale of values. The word “this” when used in the accusative obviously must have a verb first, and it comes up next.

            “thou knowest” — the perfect o)ida used as a present tense for doctrine in the right lobe. In this case it should be translated, “You know this fact.” Timothy knows this; Paul knows this. So it is something that Timothy has discovered since reversion recovery and something that Paul knew all the time.

            “that” — the conjunction o(ti is used after verbs of cognisance. O)ida is a verb of cognisance.

            “all they which are in Asia” — the content of cognisance. This includes a nominative masculine plural from paj, which means an awful lot of believers. There is also a nominative masculine plural from the definite article, used this time again as a relative pronoun specifying a category of believers, namely reversionists under the influence of evil — “all who.” Then we have a descriptive genitive plural pronoun o(j, referring to believers in the Roman province of Asia. Plus the implied present active indicative of e)imi, plus a prepositional phrase, correctly translated “in Asia.” and referring to the seven churches of Revelation chapters two and three.

            So far we have: “You know this fact that all they who are in the Roman province of Asia.” The capital of the Roman province of Asia is Ephesus where Timothy is the pastor, and this is the key church at this time in church history.

            “be turned away” — the aorist passive indicative of the compound verb a)postrefw [a)po = from; strefw = to turn]. It means to turn away from, to repudiate, to revolt. So we have the fact that they have revolted. Reversionism is always a form of revolution, spiritual revolution. The aorist tense is a constative aorist, it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. The aorist tense here covers the various stages of reversionism which causes these believers to repudiate Paul. The passive voice is the voice for the implied intermediate agent of reversionism. It means through reversionism they have turned away from me. The indicative mood is declarative for historical reality of a maximum number of reversionists now residing in the Roman province of Asia.

            “of whom” — the ablative plural of separation from the relative pronoun o(j, translated “among whom.”

            “are” — present active indicative of e)imi. This is an idiom which is better rendered “especially” or “namely.”

            “Phygellus and Hermogenes” — [“Fugitive” and “Great Public Speaker”]. These names have no significance as far as these two people are concerned. They were given the names at birth. They are actually both reversionists.

            Translation: “You are aware of this, that all they who are in [the Roman province of] Asia have turned away from me [through reversionism]; especially Phygellus and Hermogenes.”

            Verse 16 — we have a reference to God the Father under the title of kurioj, translated “Lord,” and it always refers to deity, more frequently used of Jesus Christ. God the Father is the author of the divine plan and the source of grace and mercy, and therefore kurioj is sometimes used of Him. This is equivalent of the Hebrew “Jehovah,” pronounced by the Jews, “Adonai.” It can be used for any member of the Godhead.

            “give” — the aorist active optative of didomi, the normal verb for giving. The aorist tense is a dramatic aorist, it states a present reality with the certitude of a past event. This is a Greek idiom and it is a device for emphasis used here for a result which is on the point of being accomplished. The active voice: only God, and in this case God the Father, can produce the action of the verb. Paul would not intrude on the sovereignty of God but simply state the application of doctrine which says this: Those who are associated with Paul or are intimately associated with a grace believer share their blessing. This is blessing by association and/or the doctrine of refreshment. The optative mood: this is the mood by which Paul does not dictate to God. In the optative mood you cannot dictate, you merely express a wish or desire. We translate this, “The Lord may give.” But in this case it is that type of optative that expresses total and strong contingency and therefore it is stated, “The Lord give.”

            “mercy” is the accusative singular of the noun e)leoj, and it is grace in action. To differentiate between the principle of grace and the action of grace we have two words: grace and mercy. The absence of the definite article here emphasises the qualitative aspect of the noun, and since mercy is grace in action it is the highest possible quality.

            “unto the house of Onesiphorus” — this is a dative of indirect object and a dative of advantage from the noun o)ikoj. O)ikoj can mean a house or a household, it also means a family. It refers here to the members of the family of Onesiphorus, for Onesiphorus is definitely dead. The dative of the indirect object indicates the one in whose interest the act of mercy is performed. Onesiphorus during his lifetime was a source of blessing to all who knew him. Now that he is dead, what happens to the members of his family? They continue to be blessed after his death. Any time a person dies under dying grace he leaves behind a grace obligation from the Lord to continue to bless the members of his family who are still alive in the devil’s world.

            We also have here a genitive singular of relationship from the proper noun O)nhsiforuj, meaning benefit-bringing or profit-bearing. He is used as one of the great illustrations of the ministry of refreshment. His family is still alive in Ephesus, we know this from 2 Timothy 4:19. “The Lord give mercy to the family of Onesiphorus.”

 

            The principle of blessing

            1. Not only does God provide blessing for the super-grace believer under paragraph SG2 but He also provides an overflow of blessing to those associated with a super-grace believer in time and after his death.

            2. The family of Onesiphorus still lives in Ephesus.

            3. Paul recognises both their bereavement and anticipates their future blessings because they were associated with such a great believer.

            4. Every super-grace believer is great, and spiritual greatness is numbered in any generation by the exact number of super-grace believers in that generation.

            5. Not only does the super-grace believer carry his own generation in history but he both receives blessing from God and through association provides blessing from God for those who are in his intimate periphery.

            6. Therefore a review of the blessings of the super-grace believer. In other words, the categories of paragraph SG2:

            Category #1, spiritual blessings: occupation with the person of Jesus Christ which is the ultimate objective, receiving God’s very own happiness, capacity for love, capacity for life, capacity for blessing, capacity for happiness, and the ability to face every suffering and pressure of life.

            Category #2, temporal blessings: wealth, success in any type of endeavour, promotion, prosperity [social, sexual, technical, and professional], temporal prosperity; establishment prosperity which includes freedom, protection from crime, blessing in battle, prosperity in the midst of depression and economic disaster; leadership dynamics.

            Category #3, blessing by association.

            Category #4, historical blessing. The super-grace believer holds up his generation historically. This is the spiritual heritage type blessing.

            Category #5, dying blessing. The super-grace believer has great blessing in dying. The next step is surpassing grace, blessing and reward forever above and beyond anything that the peons in heaven possess.

 

            “for” — the conjunction o(ti is “because,” used in a causative sense.

            “he oft refreshed me” — this includes an adverb meaning frequently, pollakij, plus the aorist active indicative from the compound verb a)nayuxw [a)na = again and again; yuxw = to breathe, to revive], hence to breathe again and again means to cheer up or to refresh. The aorist tense is a dramatic aorist, it states a present reality (refreshment) with the certitude of a past event — the intake of doctrine, the daily function of GAP. Here it states what has been accomplished and therefore it also could double as a culminative aorist viewing the super-grace Onesiphorus in his entirety but regarding him from the standpoint of existing results: he was a refreshment to Paul, he was a refreshment to Timothy, he was a refreshment to many. The active voice: Onesiphorus in super-grace status produces the action of the verb. The indicative mood is the reality of super-grace overflowing from Onesiphorus to Paul. Plus the accusative singular direct object from the personal pronoun e)gw, referring to Paul during his second Roman imprisonment — “because many times he has refreshed me.”

            “and was not ashamed” — a part of the ministry of refreshment is true love. True love is not ashamed. Here we have the aorist passive indicative of e)paisxunomai [e)pi = toward; a)iskumomai = to be ashamed]. The verb is stated in the form of a negative reality by the use of o)uk. O)uk eliminates ashamedness totally, which indicates that Onesiphorus had great capacity for love. The constative aorist gathers into one entirety the attitude of Onesiphorus and the various acts of refreshment. The passive voice is with the implied direct agent, which means that by means of doctrine resident in his soul and resultant capacity for category #3 love Onesiphorus did not receive shame when he came to Rome with regard to Paul. The indicative mood is declarative representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of reality and certainty.

            “of my chains” — this is the accusative singular direct object from the noun a)lusij, and it is a synonym for being in jail. With it is a possessive pronoun, the possessive genitive of e)gw, and it is correctly translated “and he was not ashamed of my chains.” Not only did Onesiphorus have great capacity for love in all three categories but he expressed that capacity in the direction of the Lord, in the direction of his family and friends, and especially in connection with this greatest of all people who ever lived. While he is dead and gone to heaven the memory of him lingers on with many people.

            Verse 17 — “But” is the adversative conjunction a)lla. Here it is used as a confirmatory or emphatic conjunction and is given the emphatic force of “In fact.”

            “when he was in Rome” — the aorist middle participle of ginomai. The constative aorist contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. In other words, the whole time that Onesiphorus was in Rome he always made it a point to see Paul. The middle voice is the intensive middle or dynamic middle which emphasises the part taken by the subject in the action of the verb. The participle is temporal with the preposition e)n plus the locative, and therefore it is translated “In fact when he happened to be in Rome.” The action of the aorist participle precedes the action of the main verb, which comes up next.

            He sought me out very diligently” — this includes an adverb, spoudaiwj, and it means diligently or eagerly. With it we have the aorist active indicative of the verb zhtew which means to seek. The ingressive aorist contemplates the action of the verb at its beginning. In other words, he did not know where to find Paul but he kept searching until he did. Once he discovered he was in jail he went to see him even though he was endangering his life and eventually lost his life because he did this. The active voice: Onesiphorus produces the action of the verb because he is truly a man.

            “and found me” — this is a culminative aorist in contrast to the ingressive aorist. The indicative mood is for reality. It should be translated, “and he discovered [or located] me.”

            Translation: “In fact when he happened to be in Rome, eagerly he began to search for me, and he finally located me.”

            In the course of this display of category #3 love Onesiphorus was seized and brought before a Roman tribunal where he refused to renounce Jesus Christ and he himself was quickly executed. The obvious conclusion is that Onesiphorus did not return to Ephesus but died in the function of the ministry of refreshment.

 

            The doctrine of refreshment

            1. While refreshment in the English language generally connotes food and beverage it has a much greater connotation in the Word of God. It means to restore the strength of the soul, to revive the divine viewpoint function of the soul through fellowship, through social life, and the interchange of doctrine. It means to supply what is necessary for spiritual blessing in time of adversity or disaster.

            2. The alleviation of Saul’s psychosis is classified as the ministry of refreshment. The refresher was David making his first great spiritual advance. 1 Samuel 16:23. Refreshment is used here for soul recovery from adverse conditions, whether reversionism, neurosis, psychopathic behaviour, or psychosis. Always, refreshment connotes a soul recovery.

            3. A tristitch of doctrinal refreshment. A parabolic tristitch is one in which the first line gives an illustration for the second and third lines. Proverbs 25:13 — “Lie the cold of snow in the time of harvest.” This is ice-cold water brought down from high up in the mountains in order to quench the thirst of the men who were working in the harvest. They are refreshed when they drink the water after drinking and becoming very warm — “he refreshes the souls of his masters.” Note that the refreshment in the Bible, again, is always connected with the soul. Therefore this is a harvest analogy between the water boy during the harvest, bringing the water to the workers, and the communicator of doctrine bringing doctrine to those who are positive. Bible doctrine, then, is like cold water in a hot period; it refreshes. The teaching of doctrine is the key, then, to the ministry of refreshment.

            4. The rejection of refreshment means national discipline — Isaiah 28:8-14. The only way in which the nation can recover is the ministry of refreshment, the communication of doctrine to the soul.

            5. Response to the Word of God is called refreshment — Romans 15:32. This means a Bible conference in Rome. Paul wanted to come and give them doctrine and then be refreshed by social life with them. This means mutual refreshment. The same concept is found in the ministry of Titus to the Corinthians. Their response to his teaching is called refreshment — 2 Corinthians 7:13.

            6. Super-grace believers all have a ministry of refreshment. This is a part of the super-grace package. For example, certain Corinthians believers — 1 Corinthians 16:17,18; Philemon 7.

 

            Verse 18 — we have the desire of the apostle Paul with regard to Onesiphorus, a desire that actually becomes a reality. “The Lord grant unto him” — the subject again is o( kurioj referring to God the Father as the author of the divine plan. With it is the aorist active optative of the verb didomi which means to give. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist it views the super-grace status of Onesiphorus in its entirety but it emphasises it from the viewpoint of existing results. In eternity Onesiphorus not only has left behind a super-grace refreshment that will mean blessing for those of his own loved ones who are still alive but it means that he will be highly decorated in eternity. He has a paragraph SG3. The active voice: only God can produce the action of the verb, only God can reward, only God can bless. Notice that this simply states the application of the doctrine which certifies that anyone who is a super-grace believer and has exercised the ministry of refreshment is obviously going to have both dying grace and surpassing grace forever. The optative mood: this is the mood by which Paul cannot and does not dictate to God. This is a voluntative optative expressing the wish of Paul. This wish of Paul happens to be correct doctrine. We also have a dative singular indirect object from the intensive pronoun a)utoj emphasising the identity the person, Onesiphorus. he is a super-grace believer, he did hold the high ground until he departed from this life. He did have a ministry of refreshment even in his dying moments. He does have great blessings and great decorations in heaven.

            “that he may find” — the aorist active infinitive of e(uriskw meaning here to discover, because no one in this life knows how phenomenal are the rewards for the super-grace believer. The aorist active infinitive here repeats the last verb of the previous verse. In other words, in the previous verse Onesiphorus found Paul in prison. Now he is no longer on the earth, he is in heaven, and there he will e(uriskw his own paragraph SG3. So this is a culminative aorist, it views both the super-grace status and the ministry of refreshment in its entirety but emphasises its existing results. Onesiphorus is going to be highly decorated in heaven. The aorist infinitive denotes what is eventual or particular in contrast to the present infinitive which denotes process. The active voice: Onesiphorus in eternity produces the action. The infinitive is an actual result.

            “mercy of the lord” — e)leoj which is grace in action. Once in heaven grace in action will be an actual reality. Mercy here refers to the paragraph SG3 belonging to him. We also have para plus the ablative of kurioj — the ultimate source is the Lord. It should be “mercy from the Lord.”

            “in that day” is a reference to the judgment seat of Christ.

            “and in how many things” should be “in fact on how many occasions [at Ephesus] he ministered” — the aorist active indicative of diakonew. Every super-grace believer has a ministry. The constative aorist gathers the ministry of refreshment of Onesiphorus into its entirety. The active voice: Onesiphorus produced the action of the verb.

            “unto me at Ephesus, thou knowest very well” — literally, “you know better than I do.”

            Translation: “The Lord give to him to discover mercy from the Lord on that day: in fact, how many occasions at Ephesus he ministered [a service of refreshment] to me, you [Timothy] know it better than I do.”