GOOD
SOLDIER OF JESUS
10/5/58
2 Timothy
2:1-7
2
Timothy, 2nd chapter, 1-7. And the
text, "Thou therefore endure hardness, as a good soldier of Jesus
Christ." And the subject is A
GOOD SOLDIER OF JESUS CHRIST.
We
begin this message answering a question, What is a Christian? Well, a Christian is, according to some, a
spiritual dilettante.
He
cannot worship, except in a place that has been set apart with the sprinkling
of holy water. And the architecture
must be correctly Gothic or else it shocks his sensitive soul.
He
cannot pray without the aid of sundry gentleman who are arrayed in attire
according to the ecclesiastical fashion books for the various seasons of the
year.
He
cannot eat, except what is prescribed for him by functionaries who arrogate to
themselves the ordering of all of life.
And
he cannot even be buried in common ground with ordinary sinners, but must be
fenced off in a place by himself. That,
according to some, is a Christian. There
are others who say a Christian is a theological polemicist. He is a forensic champion. He is a Scriptural hairsplitter. He goes around with a theological chip on
his shoulder, daring anybody to knock it off.
Walking
down the streets -- the street of Austin, in Waco one time, a stranger came up
to me, stopped me and said, "Won't you come to our church tonight? We're going to have a big fight."
I
said, "What you going to have a big fight about?" "Oh," he said, "we're going
to have a big fight over the two-cup innovation."
Well,
I asked him what the big fight was about because I didn't know of the
innovation of the two-cup. Well,
heretofore, they'd been having just one cup at the Lord's Supper and all of the
people shared the same germs of everybody else.
And
somebody came up with the novel idea they were going to have two cups instead
of one. Somebody arise and said,
"That's not orthodox and that's not according to the Bible."
So
they were going to have a fight that night in the church over the new
innovation. To some, that is a
Christian.
There
are others to whom a Christian is a new day sophist. Oh, how he scintillates.
He's a news commentator and a book -- and a book reviewer and a fence
straddler and a glad-hander, all in one.
He's
a magnifier of microscopic points. He
looks through spiritual spyglasses and fancies he sees things. And expounds on things that are known and
expounded by God alone. And he reforms
Sodom and Gomorrah and he's in on all of the of things of the community
life. To some, that is a
Christian.
And
then, to others, a Christian is a positive thinker. Bless his triumphant soul.
This man -- this man is a Christian.
He sleeps through the existence of his life in absolute and perfect
serenity. He drinks great drafts of
peace of mind, soothing syrup, the elixir of how to make friends and influence
people. Ah, good.
He
lives in a state of unperturbation and ecclesiastical hibernation while the
world's on fire and souls are falling into hell.
Now,
I don't want somebody coming to me next week and say, "Preacher, I went
home and looked up in the dictionary and there's no such a word as
unperturbation."
I've
already looked it up. There's no such
word, but I'm using it just the same.
A
Christian, a positive thinker.
"Everyday in every way, I'm getting better and better." A Christian, triumphant, victorious, living
on the sunny side of life, in perfect calm and serenity. He is the Christian.
There
was one of those positive thinkers who's training his butler how to begin the
day.
And
when the butler came in with his little tray of coffee on one side, newspaper
on the other side, why he trained his butler to say, "Good morning,
sir. It is a beautiful morning. It is eight o'clock. The sun is shining bright and fair and the
people are well and happy."
And
the man would reply, "That is right.
I know it. I know
everything. It is eight o'clock in the
morning. The sun is shining bright and
beautiful and the people are well and happy."
That
went on and it went on and it went on.
And the fellow came in and went through that same positive
thinking.
"Good
morning, sir. It is eight o'clock in
the morning. The sun is bright and
beautiful and the people are well and happy."
And
the fellow replied, "That's right.
That's right. I know
everything. I know that. It is eight o'clock in the morning. The sun is shining bright and beautiful and
the people are well and happy."
And
the butler finally said, "But, sir, that's a big lie. It's four o'clock in the afternoon. It's raining cats and dogs outside and
there's an insurrection going on in the streets."
I
don't see it. Man, man, this world is
the most unmitigated, turned around, messed up, fouled up planet that I think
human heart could imagine and human ingenuity could devise.
And
to go around with your head up, saying, "Everything's all right,"
smiling like a Cheshire cat. All of
that stuff. Brother, it's just not that
way. There's a war going on.
And
when you get the idea that a Christian is one of these newfangled
psychiatrists, walking around with a smile and everything is fine. "We're going to overcome all of these
evils and darknesses and powers by positive thinking."
Man,
you got another thinking coming. That's
not what it is to be a Christian. A
Christian is not a spiritual fop, a connoisseur of music and millinery. A Christian is not an ecclesiastic -- an
ecclesiastic gourmand who lives on the fat and marrow of the land.
A
Christian is not a spiritual, scriptural hairsplitter. And he's not a slumberer while the war is
going on. Paul said a Christian is a
soldier in a battle and in a war. He's
in the smoke and he's in the fire and he's in the flood.
He's
in the combat. He's in the war. His garments are rolled in blood. His sword is hacked. His armor is dented. His shield is bruised. He hears the call of the trumpet.
He
hears the cry of the anguished. He sees
the fallen and the dying. He's in a
mortal contention with the enemy of Christ, with the host of hell and the
legions of Satan.
And
the Lord God was pleased to leave the war to us. And the whole thing is at stake and in our hands; the crown of
Jesus, the gospel of the Son of God, the victory of the host of heaven. We are His soldiers and we are fighting in
the war, "Thou, my son, be a good soldier of Jesus Christ."
Now,
he didn't say be just a common, ordinary soldier. He said, "Be a good soldier of Jesus Christ." That would mean, we are to be doubly devoted
and doubly committed to the great Captain and our Savior, the Lord Jesus; He
Whose name is Wonderful, Counselor, the Mighty God.
One
of the men -- several of the men overheard David say, "Oh, for a drink of
the water from the well by the gate of Bethlehem." And those soldiers were so committed to
David, so devoted, loved him so much, that just overhearing that wish, they
went through the enemy lines.
They
risked their lives. They brought back a
draft of water from the well which is by the gate of Bethlehem. Loving, devoted to our great commander, the
Lord Jesus.
Not
ashamed to name Him anywhere. Standing
up for His cause in the office, on the street, in a circle of friends, in a
house, in a home and a business, anywhere.
Faithful and loyal to our great Lord and captain, a good soldier of
Jesus Christ.
A
good soldier of Jesus Christ, an obedient one.
Reading the great commissions of our Lord.
It
is not for us to follow traditions or church teachings or opinions of men or
even these that our parents believed.
We are to follow the great words and the explicit orders of our great
Captain and leader, the Commander, Christ Jesus.
Good
soldiers of Jesus Christ, doing what He says, just as He says it, following the
explicit commandments of the Lord as He gave them, fearlessly, unafraid. When the word came, "Go to the
rescue."
The
men said, "But if we go, we'll not come back alive."
And
the captain replied, "Our orders never said anything about coming back alive. They said, `Go to the rescue.'" Obedient to the great commandments and great
commissions of our Captain.
The
good soldier of Jesus Christ. One that
reaches out for victory for our Lord.
Trophies of grace to lay at His feet. Crowns and laurels to bestow upon Him. Taking His flag and His banner and planting it on the highest
hill.
A
good soldier of Jesus Christ. One who
perseveres. We're not fighting just to
win a skirmish or a battle, but a war.
And that war is as age long as sin and death and as meaningful as the
grace of God that reaches up to eternity.
A battle
to fight
And a
fulmine strong
And the
bugles' haughty cry.
A fight
for the right,
Be it
short or long,
Where a
man must win or die.
In
the American Revised Version of 1901, that word there is translated, "Thou
therefore endure hardship with me, as a good soldier of Jesus
Christ." Endure hardship with me,
as a good soldier of Jesus Christ.
The
man who wrote that appeal was in prison.
He had the sentence of death as he faced an execution. And he writes to the young son, Timothy,
"Endure hardship with me."
How
many times had he been in prison? How
many times had he been beaten with rods?
How many times had he suffered?
But he doesn't write, "Oh, Timothy, I have had a hard time. But I hope that it will be easier for
you." He never refers to it. The thought never enters his mind.
But
he writes instead, "Thou therefore, my son, Timothy, endure hardness [with
me], as a good soldier of Jesus Christ."
Why,
I have been overwhelmed by some of our leaders coming to me and saying,
"Pastor, thus and such they quit.
And thus and such he has resigned.
And thus and such they have turned aside."
Why,
I can't believe it. Man, man, you don't
ever get out of this war. You don't
ever quit. You don't ever resign. You may take another place. You may fill in a -- in a gap over here on
another wing or on another side, but you don't ever get rid of this battle and
this war.
We're
in it until we die. And our children
are in it and our children's children are in it until the end of the way.
"Endure hardness [with me], as a good soldier of Jesus Christ."
If
you were in a port and two ships came in from opposite directions. One from this way, one from the other
way. And this ship came in from this
way. And it had sailed on placid seas,
seas of glass, under fair sky. Not a
ripple on the bosom of the deep. And it
sailed into port.
But
this ship had been battered by massive waves.
Its superstructure had been destroyed and it was battered and beat and
dented by the fury of the sea. Tell me,
if you had a medal to pin on one of the captains, which one would you
choose? "Endure hardness [with
me], as a good soldier of Jesus Christ."
In
the Boston shipyards where I spent a day with a chaplain, who is the chaplain
of a squadron. And the squadron of
destroyers was brought into the Boston shipyards to be overhauled in order to
be sent to the Eastern Mediterranean.
The
chaplain said to me, he said, "Preacher, which one of these battleships do
you want to see and do you want to look at?
And go in and look at all of its insides and outside. Which one do you
want to see?"
I
said, "Do you have a ship that's been in the war and is beat and
patched?" He said, "I surely
do." I said, "That's the one
that I want to see."
And
he took me to it. One of those
destroyers that had been shelled and almost sunk, and four or five times was
reported as having been sunk. And I
went all through it. And everywhere and
all over it were marks of conflict and battle and war. "That's the ship I want to see." A good soldier of Jesus Christ.
When
I was ordained, there was an old gentleman there by the name of Nunn, old Brother
Nunn. He owned the Amarillo News. Had a little goatee, distinguished-looking
man, one of the finest Christian deacons you could ever know.
When
they ordained me and I stood there at the front and the people came by and
shook hands with me, that old gentleman said to me, he said, "Son, I hope
life for you is a primrose path. But if
it is, your life will be worthless."
That's
the God's truth. If all of your life is
taken up in things easy, in things soft, living in the luxury of the land and
no war, no battle, no fight, no sacrifice, no going all out for God, your life
-- may all of your days follow a primrose path, but it will be worthless.
Man,
if we don't have a big program around here to challenge every drop of strength
and every ounce of energy of this church, let's get one. Let's get one. If we're not in the heat of this battle, up to our ears in this
war, let's get in it.
Let's
declare war against hell and against Satan and against all of the powers that
bring and damn and drag our people down to the bottom of the dark pit.
Let's
lift our people up. Let's win them to
the Lord. Let's teach them the Word of
God. Let's get in the fight as a good
soldier of Jesus Christ.
What
is that old song,
Am I a
soldier of the cross,
A follower
of the Lamb?
Must I be
carried to the skies
On flowery
beds of ease,
While
others fought To win the prize
And sailed
through bloody seas?
Surely I
must fight if I would reign,
Increase
my courage, Lord.
I'll bear
the toil, endure the pain,
Supported
by thy Word.
A
good soldier of Jesus Christ.
"Preacher, got a place on the line where somebody needs to stand
faithful? Give it to me. Got a place in that organization where
somebody needs to pay a price? Give it
to me. Got a place in that ministry
down there where somebody needs to fight for the Lord? Assign it to me.
"Let
me take this hill. Let me take this
Union. Let me have this class. Let me have this battalion. Let me have this squad. Put me over there where the shells are
bursting and the shrapnel is falling and where the swords are sharpest and
keen.
"Put
me there where the cannon are roaring and the smoke and the fire and the
thunder of battle are all around me."
Get in it up to your ears. A
good soldier of Jesus Christ.
"But
you don't understand, Preacher. I've
got a favorite TV program on Sunday night.
But you don't understand, Preacher.
I have to stand in line too long at the cafeteria.
"But
you don't understand, Preacher. I've
got entertaining to do. You don't
understand, Preacher. I've got all of
these other little old inconsequentials to take up my time in life."
Oh,
forget them. A good soldier of Jesus
Christ. Volunteer. There's a place for you, for you, for you,
all along the line, with little children, with teenagers, with adults, in the
morning, in the evening, in the afternoon, every day in the week. Do what you can, all that you can. "Endure hardness [with me] as a good
soldier of Jesus Christ."
Now,
may I say a brief word of encouragement to us.
In this church there are examples of apostolic order and devotion that I
read about in books. But I never
thought I'd live to see it.
In
this congregation tonight are God's men and women, who shall shine as the stars
forever and ever. God bless the
faithful soldiers of Jesus Christ, who man the posts and stand in the firing
line in this church.
Ah,
that I could really encourage. No one
of us is standing alone. Sometimes you
may think -- sometimes discouragement falls upon you as though it might be
true. I see weariness in your face and
discouragement in your eyes. And once in
a while, I hear the word, "I think I'll quit. I think I'll quit."
Ah,
fellow, up and down that line there are soldiers standing faithful like a
bridge of stars. Just like Robert E.
Lee, looking out over the field of battle, pointing to T. J. Jackson.
"Look
at him standing there like a stone wall."
"Stone wall," they said.
"Stone wall. That's
Stonewall Jackson." And the name
stayed with him and has and will forever.
Wherefore,
seeing we are compassed about, with so great a crowd of witnesses. Let us stand faithful in the line. Don't you quit. Don't you give up. Don't
you be discouraged.
Up
and down that battle line there are a host of men and women, young people,
children, who are faithful to our Lord, winning the battle for Jesus, our
Savior.
May
I encourage you. You're never forgot,
never, never. The great Lord of the
line, the great Captain of our salvation, the great Father in glory looks up on
us and He never forgets us. The white
prince out there, fighting for his father, the king, said words saying,
"Send me reinforcements."
And
the king, who was intently watching his son and watching the sway of the
battle, sent word back to his white prince, saying, "Tell my son I'm too
wise a king not to send enforcements when he needs them. And I'm too good a father not to send them
out of the love of my heart."
Don't
you think we're forgot. We are in the
eye of our Father God in every moment of this war and this conflict. And He remembers us. He looks upon us. And what help we need, He will send it. What strength we lack, He will give it.
Every
victory that God sees is essential for us.
He'll bestow it upon us if we are good soldiers of Jesus Christ.
And
some of these days -- bless His name -- some of these days, think what it will
be to share in that final and ultimate victory. "Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and be ye lift up, ye
everlasting doors, and the King of glory will come in.
"Who
is this King of glory? The Lord, strong
and mighty. The Lord, mighty in battle,
He is the King of glory.
"Lift
up your heads, O ye gates, and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors, and the
King of glory will come in.
"Who
is this King of glory? The Lord of
hosts, the God of the battle. He is the
king of glory." [Psa 24:7-10]
We're
not going to lose. We can't lose. They're not going to win. They can't win.
The
battle belongs to the children of God.
And the victory ultimately is His Who's Lord and King reigns over us,
the Jesus Jehovah Whom we serve.
I
could not help but think, as I prepared this sermon, and put in that last part,
encouragement, encouragement. I could
not help but think of a symbolism that Paul used in his Corinthian letter.
When
he followed the imagery of the great Roman triumph, winding its way with wagons
and wagons and wagon trains of booty and plunder and prey, coming up finally to
the head of the Capitoline Hill.
And
there, finally, riding up in his chariot, with his enemies chained to his
wheels, standing conqueror. And he
gives to his soldiers their reward for their faithfulness in the campaign.
And
to this one and to this one and to this one and to this one, calling them by
name. Julius Caesar knew the name of
every man in his army. Riding in
triumph up to the top of the Capitoline Hill.
There standing on the steps of the temple of Jupiter, giving to his
faithful soldiers, the rewards of their campaigns.
Paul
uses that imagery. So I can use it as I
try to think of that great and ultimate victory which shall come to God's people
by and by, when He's Lord of the earth and king of all creation, visible,
personally present, and His people are gathered before Him, the bema,
the judgment scene of Jesus Christ.
And
He gives to His soldiers the rewards of their efforts. O Lord, I don't want it be said of me in
that day, "He was a coward and was afraid. And he got tired and he quit.
And he put his sword aside and he hid."
Ah,
Lord, until I drop, until Satan cuts me down, until disease or death wastes
away the force and vigor of my body, I can't see and I can't hear and I can't
walk and I can't preach and I can't work.
Until then, Lord, help me to be a good soldier of Jesus Christ. Working, staying by the stock."
You
know, I would like for a little while not to be the paid preacher of this
church. I'd like to be a layman in this
church. I'd like to do that just to
show myself that I'd be faithful to a task down here, whatever it was, just
because I love God and want to serve in the army of Jesus Christ.
That
class, that Union, that assignment, that task, faithful unto death, at a
sacrifice, at a price, at a cost, I know.
But the great Captain of the Lord's host look up us and find us
faithful. "Endure hardship with me, as a good soldier of Jesus
Christ."
I'd
rather live the next ten or fifteen years all out for God, than to live twenty
or thirty years supinely, pusillanimously, indolently, indifferently, just
seeing the days pass at no cost, no sacrifice, no blood, no sweat, no tears, no
effort, no all-out.
I'd
rather fight. I'd rather be in the
war. I'd rather work. I'd rather try. God help my fellow soldiers to be that way. Give me a place in the line and there I'll
stand faithful unto death. "Endure hardness [with me] as a good soldier of
Jesus Christ."
Lord,
help me to have more strength and more power and more ableness, more acumen,
more wisdom, more understanding, more devotion, more consecration, more
everything, Lord, that would please Thee and advance Thy cause and Thy kingdom
in the earth. "Endure hardship [with me] as a good soldier of Jesus
Christ."
Now,
let's face this new year. God bless
us. Let's face this new year with the
most triumphant, victorious, giving of ourselves to God of any church, of any
people that the Lord ever had in this earth and expect great things from
God. Look for great victories from
God.
And
the Lord won't let us down. He doesn't
forget. He watches the line of
battle. He's our King. He leads us all. He's just looking for good soldiers that He can bless and reward
and commend, you. "Endure hardship [with me] as a good soldier of Jesus
Christ."
Now,
we sing our song of appeal. And while
we sing it, somebody to enroll in the army.
You come and stand by me.
Somebody to put his name on the list, in the roll, you come and stand by
me. A family to put his life with us in
this appeal for the Lord, you come and stand by me.
In
this balcony around, this great throng of people on this lower floor, anywhere,
somebody you. Somebody you, put on the
uniform of Jesus Christ and stand by me.
"Here
I am, Preacher, and here I come.