Summary retelling of 1 Timothy 4:11-13
Paul
tells Timothy to literally “command” and “teach.” Paul encourages Timothy to let nobody despise
him because he is young. Rather, Timothy
is to set an example in speech, conduct, faith, love and purity. Paul encourages Timothy to devote himself to
reading God’s Word in public, to encouraging others in the faith, and to
speaking about our faith so that others can learn from what God has taught us.
Thoughts for Today
First Thought:
Command
and teach. These are really two sides of
the same coin. Leaders must
command. Leaders must say, “This is what
needs to be done.” This is the command
part. The reason that commanding is
different than teaching is because commanding assumes that the audience cannot
not yet see the big picture. A general
commands his troops, sometimes even into situations that don’t make sense on
the small scale but make much sense on the larger scale. Especially in the beginning, new Christians
need someone to command them – that it, to tell them what has to happen and to
tell them to trust them. On the other
hand, teaching is for those who do see the large scale. Teaching is for someone who knows enough and
sees enough to be able to make the right decision with the information on
hand. Teaching is far superior to
commanding because it allows people to make their own decisions; but sometimes
commanding is necessary until maturity is present.
Why
do you think teaching is superior to commanding? Can you think of a time in your spiritual
life where you obeyed simply because someone told you to obey and things worked
out well? Why is it important to realize
that while the goal may always be to understand, sometimes we have to be humble
and allow ourselves to be commanded?
Second Thought:
Paul
makes sure Timothy knows how to get people to look past his youth. The more Timothy acts in a way that models
excellent speaking, good behavior, faithfulness to God, love to one another,
and motivations that are pure and not self-interested the easier time people
will have overlooking his age. This is
not so much a passage to older people telling them that they should respect Timothy. This is a passage to younger people telling
them that if they want to be respected, they have to act a certain way in order
to gain that respect. Young people who
act out of their immaturity and short-sighted perspective should be treated
with caution. Young people that can
transcend their immaturity and see with eyes that understand the greater
picture can be trusted and treated as one with wisdom that exceeds their years.
Do
you think Paul is wise in giving this advice to Timothy? Do you think the world tends to treat young
people with caution? Is this fair? Is it more often right or wrong? How easy is it to always think and act with
wisdom beyond our years?
Third Thought:
Paul
then encourages Timothy into a public faith.
Paul tells Timothy to continue to focus on God’s Word publically (read,
preach, bring it up in conversations, etc).
Paul tells Timothy to be sure to encourage people in their faith – that’s
what exhortation means. Paul tells
Timothy to always teach about the faith.
This is the example of Jesus.
Jesus never missed an opportunity to bring faith into a
conversation. Jesus used anything and
everything as an example of how to think about faith and our relationship with
God. Jesus lived a very public faith
life.
Why
do you think it is important to remember to live a public faith life? Are there parts of your faith life about
which you aren’t quite comfortable talking?
How much do you consider yourself as someone who has something to
teach? How good are you at perceiving
upon opportunities to talk about your faith and then acting on those
opportunities? How good are you at
exhorting others in their faith life?
Passage for
Tomorrow: 1 Timothy 4:14-16
2 comments:
These are one of my favorite set of verses because I find them very inspirational. I think that if Bible girl had a shirt 1 Timothy 4:12 would be one of the verses on it.
LOL. Bible Girl. Forgot about that. Good times!
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