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Revelation Is Sufficient Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 29, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: You need to see this truth that the greatest problems of the church have always been caused by Christians and not unbelievers. Heresy and false teaching, and controversies of all kinds that have hindered the work of Christ have come about by God's own people,
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An English boy went into a store to get change for a sovereign,
and the clerk asked him if it was good. The boy said, "Certainly it is
good. I saw my father make it just this morning." The clerk, of
course, refused to take it. Money, like truth, has the shadow of
suspicion cast across it when it has been coined only this morning.
Anything that you can really rely on will not be totally new. Even in
the realm of science this is true. New products and new medicine
are not as new as we might think. Nothing just discovered this
morning would on the market. It takes months and even years of
research before things are ready for the market. Even that which is
really recent in discovery is usually based upon older knowledge,
and so it is not totally new, but an extension of what has gone before.
The totally new and novel is seldom of lasting value
A craving for what is strictly new is a sign of degeneration and
superficiality in a culture. This is what was happening to the Greeks
in Paul's day, and has happened time and time again in history.
Acts 17:21 says in the NEB, "The Athenians in general and the
foreigners there had no time for anything but talking or hearing
about the latest novelty." Certainly masses of Americans are
cultural cousins to these Athenians. Novelty is a must in our society.
People feel only a fool believes and acts today the same as people
believed and acted in the past. That which is the in thing must be
something just coined this morning. Someone wrote, "So long as an
artist is on his head, his painting with a flute, or writes with an
etching needle, or conducts an orchestra with a meat axe, all is well,
and plaudits shower along with the roses. But any plain man who
tries to follow the unobtrusive cannons of his art is but a
commonplace figure."
This applies to every realm including the realm of theology. The
men in the limelight today are those who are expounding the novel
and the freshly coined ideas. They capture the minds of millions for
a while, but then they become old hat, and people begin looking for
something new again. This was the problem that Paul wrestled with
in his day, and it is one that he urged Timothy to help him fight. It
was a real battle, and Paul uses military language often. He tells
Timothy to be a good soldier of Jesus Christ. He starts off in this
first letter by stating that he was not an Apostle by his own choice,
but that he was drafted by the Lord. God commanded him to be His
ambassador to the Gentiles. He was inducted into the royal service
of representing the Risen Redeemer. He loved being a soldier of the
cross, and would have agreed whole heartedly with the poet who
wrote,
Life can never be dull again
When once we've thrown our windows open wide,
And seen the mighty world that lies outside,
And whispered to ourselves this wondrous thing,
We're wanted for the business of the King.
Paul felt one of his important tasks for the Lord was in keeping
the churches on a solid foundation. This was no easy task in a world
as filled with novel nonsense as his was. We often talk as if we were
the only people to ever live in the last days, and that we alone must
bear the burden of so much human folly. We would be ashamed of
our complaints if we knew what others have gone through before us.
Paul spent 3 and one half years in Ephesus going from house to
house and teaching the believers sound Christian doctrine. In spite
of all he did he has to urge Timothy to stay there and charge some to
teach no other doctrine. Here were people who had the best
Christian education experience possible, and yet they were in danger
of falling into heresy and being led into fruitless speculation.
I think it can be said with plenty of evidence to support it that no
group of Christians could long remain Christian in their thinking
without the Bible being constantly read and expounded. If
Churches degenerate to the place where they are no more than
humanistic clubs, they have none to blame but themselves, for God
has provided the means by which we are to stay on the right track.
If men do not avail themselves of the means, they will certainly get
off the main road and onto a side road of trivia. This very church of
Ephesus where Paul and Timothy labored for years was still in
trouble when John wrote Revelation. Christ was threatening to