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When Withdrawal Is Wise Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 7, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Paul’s command is in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. There is no question as to the source of Paul’s authority. Paul commands them to withdraw from fellowship those believers who live disorderly, and not in harmony with the Christian values that he taught when he was with them.
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The Thessalonian Christian had been foolish enough to give heed
to false teaching concerning the second coming. As a result some of
them were acting in a way contrary to the will of God. Their basic
problem was a lack of certain authority. They had been pagans all
their lives, and they had probably believed all kinds of superstition,
and so now as Christians they had to learn to accept the authority of
the Apostles, and this was not easy. Paul’s fist letter apparently
failed to solve the problem, and some of them had refused to get back
to work, even after they had heard his advice and commands. In this
second letter he has to use stronger language, and speak with as
great an authority as anywhere in the New Testament.
Paul knows that if Christians are not submissive to the Word of
God they will be at the mercy of every source of advice. These people
were basing their attitudes and actions on mere rumor that was
baseless, and not on the wisdom of God as revealed through the
Apostle Paul. Their concepts of the end were about as well founded
as those of the poet who confessed: “Absolute knowledge I have none,
but my aunt’s washer woman’s sister’s son heard a policeman on his
beat, say to a laborer on the street, that he had a letter just last week,
written in the finest Greek, from a Chinese coolie in Timbuctoo, who
got it straight from a circus clown, that a man in the Klondyke heard
the news, from a gang of South American Jews, about somebody in
Borneo, who heard a man who claimed to know of a swell society
female fake, whose mother-in-law will undertake to prove that her
7th husband’s sister’s niece, had stated in a printed piece, that she
has a son who has a friend, who knows when the world will end.”
It was on the basis of authority as remote as this that some of
them began to be idle and to wait for the Lord without working.
This disturbed Paul greatly, and he was determined that Satan
would not bring shame upon the name of Christ and His church by
this subtle means. His first strategy we have already considered. He
has destroyed the false theological foundation of those who are idle.
He has made it clear that the Day of the Lord is yet future, and that
Christians will know when it is near, and so until then they are to
work and carry on a normal and honorable pattern of life. They are
to live just as if they were sure the Lord would not come in their
lifetime. In other words, Paul has said they were not to use the
second coming as any excuse for laziness or idleness, for until we see
the signs we have no idea when the end will be. Now he goes on to
some specific and practical methods to be used by the faithful in
bringing those who are out of step back into harmony with what is
good Christian living.
It is a sensitive situation, and Paul approaches it diplomatically
and with all the kindness of his Christ-like heart. In the first verses
of this third chapter he strengthens their relationship and makes it
clear that they are one in Christ. They are seeking the same end,
which is the glory of Christ and the extension of His kingdom. In
verse 1 he calls them brethren, and he asks for their prayers. Paul
reveals his confidence in them and covets their prayers. He
acknowledges that they are God’s children, and so their prayers will
be a benefit to his ministry. Paul’s greatness was in his dependence
upon God, and in his recognition that the prayers of the common
Christian were of value and power in getting the Gospel to speed on
its way to success. R. A. Torrey sent out 5 thousand letters in 1901
asking for prayer as he took his world tour of evangelism. When he
reached Australia there were ten thousand praying, and 40 thousand
were praying in England everyday. He said, “Who could not preach
under such conditions, and is it any wonder that the marvelous
results followed that did follow.” I cannot doubt that the success of
Billy Graham is also due to the thousands who pray for him
constantly.
Paul knew this was the source of much of his success, and he
wanted these Christians to share in it. Paul was wise as a serpent
and harmless as a dove. He was going to lay down some rigid
commands, but he made it clear that it was in love. So often
Christians do the right thing in the wrong way. They let evil increase