HE ABIDETH FAITHFUL
10/19/58a
2 Timothy 2:11-13
This
is the pastor bringing the morning message entitled, HE ABIDETH FAITHFUL.
In our preaching through the Word of God, we are in the 2nd chapter of 2
Timothy.
Last
Sunday night we concluded with the 9th verse of that 2nd chapter, "But the
Word of God is not bound." "I am bound and in prison," Paul
writes, "but the Word of God is not bound.
"Therefore,
I endure all things for the elect's sakes, that they may also obtain the
salvation which is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory.
"It
is a faithful saying, `For if we be dead with Him, we shall also live with
Him.
"'If
we suffer, we shall also reign with Him. If we deny Him, He will also deny
us.
`"If
we believe not, yet He abideth faithful, He cannot deny Himself.”
Once
before, I referred to those little pistos ho logos. Translated,
"It is a faithful saying." And I referred to the fact that there
were four of them.
And
I read them here, in these pastoral epistles. And one of the sharp young men
in this congregation who had his Greek testament with him, came to me after the
service.
And
he said, "Pastor, you said there are four. There are five." And he
showed it to me.
The
reason I missed it was I never followed it through in the Greek as I should
have, for in one of the instances pistos ho logos is translated,
"It is a true saying."
And
I was following just the King James Version where it is translated, "This
is a faithful saying." But there are five of them, as the young fella
pointed out to me.
In
1 Timothy 1 and 15, "This is a faithful saying." Pistos ho logos.
`Faithful the Word and worthy of all acceptance that Christ Jesus came into the
world to save sinners of whom I am chief.'"
The
second one, 1 Timothy 3:1, "This is a true saying." But the saying pistos
ho logos, "it is a faithful saying, `If a man desire the office of a
pastor, he desireth a good work.'"
Now,
the next one is in the 4th chapter of 1 Timothy and the 8th verse,
"Godliness is profitable unto all things, having promise of the life that
now is, and of that which is to come.
"This
is a faithful saying."
Now,
the fourth one is my text and the last one is in the last chapter of Titus.
Titus 3 and 8, "This is a faithful saying, and these things I will that
thou affirm constantly, 'That they which have believed in God be careful to
maintain good works.'"
Five
of them here in these brief, short, pastoral letters. They were sayings that
evidently fell from the lips of the inspired early Christian prophets like Agabus.
And the golden words were minted into proverbs that were passed from lip to
lip, and heart to heart, and enriched each soul as it was repeated.
And
five of them I have said, Paul has encased in the amber of divine inspiration.
They kind of have a sequence, "This is a faithful saying, `That Christ
Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am chief.'"
A
man might not have been able, poor and unlettered, to preach a sermon, but he
could repeat the saying. And it's the whole gospel in a sentence.
Then
following, "Godliness is profitable in this world and in that which is to
come." The double blessedness of the salvation so freely bestowed in our
Lord.
And
then that last one, "It is a faithful saying that the one who has embraced
the Christian faith, be careful to maintain goods works." The service of
the child of God to his Lord and to His people. They are unusual sayings.
I
have preached two sermons on two of them and this is the third sermon on
another one.
It
is a faithful saying,
For
if we be dead with Him,
We
shall also live with Him.
If
we suffer with Him,
We
shall also reign with Him.
If
we deny Him,
He
will deny us.
If
we believe not,
Yet
He abideth faithful,
He
cannot deny Himself.
Now,
that is almost certainly an early Christian hymn. The form of it. The meter
of it. The syllables of it are like a miniature Psalm.
I
would think that practically all of your expositors and commentators would
place that in metrical form -- in meter and verse and stanza -- and would
present it as an early Christian song.
One
of those hymns and songs and spiritual songs whereby the congregation edified
one another. This is one of them.
Now,
I have copied it here on this little sheet of paper, out of my Greek Testament,
for you to see how it flows.
Ei
gar -- for, ei gar sunapethanomen. Kai
suzesomen.
Ei hupomenomen.
Kai sumbasileusomen.
Ei
arnesometha kakeinos arnesetai hemas.
Ei
apistoumen ekeinos pistos menei,
arnesasthai
gar heauton ou dunatai.
"If
for we died together with -- and He have to put Him -- also we shall live
together with Him."
Ei,
if, hupomenomen, we endure. Translated here, "Suffer." If we
suffer. If we endure. And the meaning is the task and the toil and the
burden.
If
hupomenomen, we endure.
Kai sumbasileusomen.
A basileus is a king. Soon, with Him, we shall basileusomen --
we shall reign with Him.
We'll
be kings with Him. Ei arnesometha. If we deny. If we deny,
also, He will deny us.
If,
ei apistoumen. apis, a, denial, alpha privative -- theos.
God, a theos. One doesn't believe in a God.
If
we are unfaithful, apistoumen. That one ekeinos, faithful, menei,
abides. Arnesasthai, to deny Himself, ou dunatai, it is
not possible.
A
undoubtedly one of the early, early Christian hymns. And in the record now of
the Holy Bible encased forever in divine inspiration, "For if we be dead
with Him, we shall also live with Him." That is the incomparably
meaningful picture of the sacred ordinance of baptism.
We
are buried with our Lord. Dead with our Lord. We have died with our Lord. We
are buried with Christ, our Lord. And we are raised to walk in newness of life
to live with Him. Death has no more power over one of God's children, for we
live a resurrected life.
We are dead to the world in Christ.
We are alive to heaven in Him.
If we be dead with Him,
If we have died with Him,
Been crucified with Him,
Or buried with Him,
We shall also be resurrected with Him
In His glorious likeness.
Then
the second stanza or verse,
If we suffer with Him,
We shall also reign with Him.
Suffering
is a common lot -- is the common lot of all humankind. It is not peculiar to
the Christian. All men suffer. We are born into this world in suffering.
When
we leave this world, it will be to enter the gates of darkness and death
through suffering. There may be a sea without a wave, but not a man without
sorrow.
The
old ancient patriarch said, "Man that is born of woman, is of few days and
full of trouble. Man is born unto trouble," he repeated, "as the
sparks fly upward." To suffer is the common lot of all humanity.
Suffering
does not necessarily carry with it a recompense of reward. Because one suffers
does not mean that he shall be given for it a reward of God. It depends upon
how we suffer, for what cause we suffer, for whom we suffer.
One
of the most terrible exegesis that I could think of is to take the parable of
the rich man and Lazarus. "And the rich man died and in hell he lift up
his eyes.
"And
Lazarus died -- the poor beggar who begged crumbs from his table at his door --
Lazarus died and was carried by the angels into Abraham's bosom."
It
is a very, very poor commentary that follows that story and says, "The
rich man luxuriated in this life. Therefore, he suffered torment in the life
to come. And the poor man suffered and grieved in this life. Therefore, he is
comforted in the life to come."
No.
The poor man, Lazarus, had his heart in heaven. And he was carried where his
heart was when he died. But the rich man lifted not his eyes up unto God, nor
did he repent, nor did he listen to the testimony of Moses and the prophets.
And when he died, he lost what he had in this life, and he lost his soul in the
life that is to come.
Suffering
in itself is not rewarded of God. Miriam, the sister of Moses. Because she spake
evil of her brother, was stricken with leprosy.
Uzziah,
the good king. Because in haste and in a rash, willful act he entered into the
temple to assume the offices which were alone given of God to the high priest,
was stricken with leprosy.
The
prophets of Baal, praying to their false god on Mount Carmel,
lacerated themselves until they bled and hurt.
Monastic
flagellation, the mortification of the flesh, the flogging of the body, self-denial.
These things in themselves are nothing, nor do they carry a recompense of a
reward.
It
is only if we suffer with Him, for Him. It is only in Christ that we shall
receive a reward. "If we suffer with Him, we shall also reign with
Him."
Our
reward in suffering comes only when it is dedicated and on behalf of Christ our
Lord. To suffer in itself, the common lot of all men, carries no recompense
with it.
Now,
our suffering today is almost apologetic. And the tone by which I approach to
mention it cannot help but be somewhat apologetic. And yet -- and yet, though
in America and in Dallas we are not sawn asunder and stoned, and we don't
wander about in sheepskins and goatskins, and though the days of the furnace of
Nebuchadnezzar are over, yet his fire still abideth in the earth.
I
know families here. A husband of which, or a wife of which, or a child of
which suffers reproach and contempt and opprobrious epithets because of their
faith and their devotion to Christ. And they meet it in the family circle.
They meet it when they go home.
I
know people by these scores who work in offices and in workshops where it is
difficult to be a true and honest and faithful and loyal Christian. Many, many
times that colporteur climbing up a high mountain, or that missionary crossing
the far seas, or that faithful Sunday School teacher, or that devout witness to
Christ does so at a sacrifice.
Many,
many of the people upon whom the very foundations of this glorious church is
built, many, many of those people come down here and labor and toil at a
sacrifice and a cost.
"If
we suffer with Him, we shall also reign with Him." God forbid that all of
our work should be at no cost to ourselves.
David
said, "I will not offer unto the Lord that which doth cost me
nothing." Just to come if it's convenient. Just to give if something is
left over. Just to work if it happens to please us.
Just
to share in the ministry of Christ if it is convenient. Oh, the fiber of that
devotion is spongy and the very texture of it is rotten and poor. How
marvelously does God bless a people who serve Him at a cost.
These
men of whom so many times I read who say that persecution and toil and hardship
never hurt a church. It puts steel in their blood. It puts iron in their
muscles. It puts fiber and strength in their testimony and their witness.
I
suppose no proverb has been coined in the Christian church that is more oft
repeated or more certainly true, "The blood of the martyrs is the seed of
the church." "If we suffer with Him -- if it is at a cost and at a
price -- we shall also reign with Him.
"If
we deny Him, He also will deny us." What a terrible "if."
"If we deny Him, He also will deny us." And yet, and yet, terrible
as that little word is, how characteristically true. If we deny Him.
"Lord,
is it I?" When the Master announced at the Last Supper, "One of you
shall deny Me."
"Lord,
is it I?" said Simon Peter. "Is it I? Lord, though the whole world
deny Thee, yet not I."
And
the others said it, asked it in contempt, when Judas asked with a sneer,
sarcastically, "Lord, You're talking about me."
"If
we deny Him" -- if we deny Him, deny Him openly some, doctrinally some,
apostatize some. And how many there are. When the parade is on and the
banners are flying and the trumpets are sounding and the medals and honors and
recognitions are given away, they're on the bandwagon.
But
if the shots are scattering and falling and the trenches are to be stormed and
the forges to be taken, they hide themselves in the dens and the caves and wait
for the fury to pass and the fair weather to appear.
Oh,
terrible possibility. "If we deny Him, He also will deny us."
"They're
not Mine. They don't belong to Me." He will deny us. "If we
believe not, yet He abideth faithful, He cannot deny Himself." "If
we believe not."
In
the Book of John, out of that chapter out of which we read earlier, the
question was asked, "Do any of the rulers believe on Him?" It was a
forensic question. "Do any of the rulers believe on Him?"
It
was asked in the Sanhedrin. "Do any of the rulers believe on Him?"
it was asked by the leaders of the people.
It
was a declamatory question. "Do any of the rulers believe on Him?"
No. Not one. And the leaders of thought today may not believe on our risen
and living Lord.
Albert
Einstein, when he died, I kind of felt it because he opened this new atomic age
and was so great and wonderful a man.
The
newspaper account that I read said -- and from what I could learn it is
verified -- Albert Einstein said, "I do not believe in God. I am an
atheist, and I want to be buried accordingly." And he was buried
accordingly.
The
leaders of thought. Do they believe on our Lord? They did not back there in
the beginning. The sophists and the Gnostics and the Grecian metaphysicians
scoffed at the gospel of the Son of God.
In
the groves of Epicureus, on the porches of Zeno, in the academies of Plato, in
the lyceums of Aristotle, in the assemblies of the Areopagus, there was none
who believed on Christ.
Only
a few clung to Paul when he preached in Athens,
and they of the poorest sort. The gospel found shelter at first in the
workshop and in the humble cottage. "If we believe not, yet He abideth
faithful."
If
our leaders of thought, of science, of government, of literature -- if they
believe not, He still is the same. He cannot deny Himself.
What
if the leaders of Christendom do not believe on Him? Oh, what a strange thing
to say in a Christian pulpit. What if the leaders of the church do not believe
on Him?
It
is my impression that in the modern pulpit, most of the preachers of the modern
day do not believe on Jesus as Lord.
They
don't believe He was born of a virgin. They believe He was born as any other
man, by natural processes and was just another man. They don't believe in His
miraculous power.
They
think all of these miracles are of the same substance and fiber and texture as
you find in Aesop's Fables or in the story of Jason's Golden Fleece.
They
don't believe in the personal resurrection of our Lord. They think it was a
phantom. It was a psychological aberration. They don't believe in a coming
King and a glorious, final consummation of the aeons.
They
believe this thing came from an evolutionary process. And give it time to
evolve, and we shall someday either be annihilated or grown into archangels or
seraphim. That is the typical modern preacher. And that is the typical modern
pulpit.
What
if the leaders of the Christian world do not believe in the inspiration and the
supernatural revelation of this Book?
What
if they believe that Jesus is just like any other man, except maybe better and
more able and wiser and far reaching and prophetic in His vision? What if they
believe that?
Why?
What? Where? How? Has God changed His purposes? Has God recalled His
elective choices? Are the foundations removed? No. "If we believe not,
yet He abideth the same."
"He
cannot deny Himself." He doesn't change. He's the same Lord, and the
same Christ, and the same God, the same Savior. "He abideth faithful. He
cannot deny Himself."
If
men lose confidence in the Word of God that by the foolishness of preaching men
are to be saved, and they hide the true gospel and -- and they becloud the true
doctrine behind rites and ceremonies and sacraments. What if they do? He abideth
faithful. He cannot deny Himself.
What
if men lose their faith in the advocacy of prayer that can -- that can subvert
kingdoms and overturn empires? What if the church
of Jesus Christ becomes like Laodicea?
Losing
in its wealth and its affluence and its riches that great humility and humble
crying unto God.
What
if when the Son of Man cometh, He doesn't find faith in earth? What if we
believe not? "He abideth faithful. He cannot deny Himself." God
never changes. He is the same forever.
And
may I close this sermon with an avowal of that humble, but deep as soul,
persuasion. If we deny Him, if we believe not, He abideth faithful. He cannot
deny Himself.
Our
Lord is not quench -- our Lord is not quicksand. He is a rock. A foundation.
Our Lord is not a meteor. He is a star in the heavens forever, fixed and
eternal. Our Lord is the Son of God.
"Thou
art my Son. This day have I begotten Thee. I have set My Son upon the throne
in Sinai [sic, Zion]. I give to Him the nations for an
inheritance and in the innermost parts of the earth for His possession."
It
is the decree of Almighty God. He abideth faithful. He cannot deny Himself.
He will never change.
However
we are and however wind of doctrine by which we are blown and however we may
deny or apostasize, He is the same. He cannot change in His nature or in His
character. He is Jesus Christ. The same yesterday and today and forever. He
cannot deny Himself.
He
is the same in His offices. He is the great Prophet and that great Prophet
forever and forever. He is our great High Priest after the order of
Melchizedek. And He is that great High Priest forever and forever.
He
is the great King of heaven, and ultimately of this earth, and He will never
lay down His scepter.
He
is the Shepherd of the flock Who shall keep His sheep forever. He is the
friend that sticketh closer than a brother. He is the groom Who shall love His
bride forever. He cannot deny Himself. He ever abideth faithful.
Our
blessed Lord will not change in His words. He cannot deny Himself. "The
grass withereth, the flower fadeth, but the Word and promise of our God shall
stand forever." Heaven and earth may pass away, but this Word shall never
pass away.
He
cannot change in His offices. He cannot change in His character. He cannot
change in His Word. He cannot change in His salvation. "If we believe
not, yet He abideth faithful. He cannot deny Himself."
I
may spurn it and scorn it and trample it underfoot and do it despite, but the
proverb act and love and mercy of God in the salvation we know in Christ Jesus
is ever the same.
Whether
I scoff or not, whether I believe or not, whether I accept or not, it abideth
forever. He cannot deny Himself.
Our
Lord tasted death for every man. For you, whether I accept Him or not. Our
Lord died for my -- our sins whether I accept Him or not. Our Lord is the
great propitiation of all of the sins in the world, whether I receive His
proffered love and mercy or not. He abideth faithful. He cannot, He could
not, deny Himself.
The
great invitation of the Savior to come to the propitiatory. The mercy seat. The
golden lid. The ark of the covenant. The place of intercession. The meeting
place between a man's soul and God.
The
holy of holies. It abideth in heaven forever. He cannot deny Himself. If we
deny Him, "If we believe not, yet He abideth faithful. He cannot deny
Himself."
He
does not change in His character. He does not change in His offices. He does
not change in His Word. He does not change in His salvation. He does not
change in His ultimate and final purposes for us in this earth.
Our
Lord lives and reigns, the King of heaven, and is waiting for His enemies to be
made His footstool. When ultimately and finally in the decree and purpose of
God, He shall reign as Lord in this earth. If we believe not, if we deny,
"He abideth faithful, He cannot deny Himself."
His purposes will ripen
fast, unfolding every hour. Those great,
mighty decrees of God can never be staved or stopped.
They
shall go on and out and beyond, until finally they achieve that glorious golden
consummation which is written so large in the final triumph of the lamb and of
the people of God on the pages of this sacred, sacred book.
What
if the day of tribulation comes? What if the day of the pouring out of the
vials of the wrath of God comes?
What
if the day of Jacob's sorrow and trouble comes? God shall seal for himself
twelve thousand out of Judah, and twelve thousand out of Reuben, and
twelve thousand out of Joseph, and twelve thousand out of Levi .
And
with a hundred and forty-four thousand shall he still make his gospel known
evangelizing in the earth, and the martyrs, and the saints of God.
Bathed
in the blood of the lamb and bathed in their own blood, the great, ultimate
triumph of the kingdom of God
through fire, through sword, through stake, through dungeon, through
persecution, through martyrdom, through death. If we believe not, if we deny,
he abideth faithful.
He
cannot deny himself. In the going out of the tide, back and back and back,
receiving back, out, going away, and finally the silver wave has given place to
the muck, and the mire, and the dirt, and the filth of the flats. But you
wait. You wait. God is not done.
The
first wave of the wash, followed by another, and another, and another, and
another. Advancing. Coming. Rising. Until finally the fullness of the seed
has commenced.
The
earth filled with the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea. If we
deny, if we believe not, yet he abideth faithful. He cannot deny himself.
The
ultimate and final victory always lies with God. If we believe, if we trust,
if we yield to him, our life, our sou, we share in that resurrection, that
heavenly salvation. That community of God's people. If we refuse, we close
the door. We're shut out. But he's still the Lord . And he's still the
same. And his purposes never falter.
It
is for me -- Ooh, God help us. Blessed be the God who still loves us and keeps
us. It is for me to trust him, to love him, to follow him, to own him, to
stand up for him. And that's the appeal of this morning's hour.
In
this balcony around, in this press of people, this throng on the lower floor,
down one of these stairwells, or into the aisle. Would you come and give me
your hand?
"Pastor,
this morning I have given my heart to Jesus, and I give you my hand in token of
that committal."
A
family of you. One, somebody, you. "Here I am, Pastor, putting my life
with these wonderful people in the church." We had a gracious harvest at
the eight-fifteen hour. By baptism.
By
letter. At this solemn moment when our people ask of heaven and make appeal
for you, would you come? "Today, humbly, trustingly, I give my life to
Christ." Or, "This morning we place our lives in the fellowship of
the church."
Would
you come? On the first note of the first stanza down these aisles and here to
the front. Would you make it now? While all of us stand and prayer fully sing
this appeal.