The
Five T's
1
& 2 Thessalonians, 1 & 2 Timothy, Titus
First Timothy was taught by Dr. James Modlish
First
Timothy Six
(ADVICE
TO TIMOTHY & OTHERS)
Introduction:
Chapter
five deals with groups of people, namely the elderly, the
widows and the leaders of the church. Chapter six
continues on the theme of dealing with specific groups
which are slaves, trouble makers, the rich, and the
educated.
I
. To Slaves (6:1-2)
Slavery
was a vital part of ancient life; it is estimated that
perhaps 25% of the population of Rome were slaves. Many
slaves found Christ, but their masters would be
unbelievers; and the Christian slaves might be prone to
disobey or claim freedom in Christ. Paul urges them to be
good testimonies to their lost masters that their masters
might learn to respect the Name of God and the Word of
God. Slaves who had believing masters would be tempted to
take advantage of them, and this Paul prohibits. (See
Eph. 6:5 and Col. 3:22).
II.
To Troublemakers (6:3-5)
"Don't
worry about doctrine," some modern preachers say; "the
important thing is spiritual unity!" Paul refutes that
lie in this section: whenever there is disunity in a
church, it is because somebody does not believe and
Practice the Word of God. Those who were teaching false
doctrine, and who would not agree to Paul's teachings,
were to be noted and dealt with.
The apostle
clearly pictures these people who cause trouble in the
church. They are proud; they want to be "important
people" in the church. Yet they are ignorant, "knowing
nothing"! Instead of feeding on the truths of God's Word,
they feed on empty-questions and the meanings of words;
and all of this leads to envies, strife, constant
turmoil, and not godliness. These people are destitute of
the truth; their only concern is personal profit. If they
can use religion to further their own goals, then that is
all that concerns them.
Note that
(Titus 3:10) commands that a troublemaker ("heretic",
meaning one who causes factions and divisions) is not to
be permitted membership in the church after he has been
warned two times. Troublemakers who move their church
letters, then come back to cause more trouble, time after
time, ought not to be received into the church membership
after the second offense.
III.
To The Rich (6:6-19)
The
thought of "gain" in (vs. 5) leads Paul into a discussion
of the Christian and wealth. Some have made the mistake
of equating "gain" with godliness and the "blessings of
God." This is not necessarily true. God chooses to bless
some materially (Abraham, Job and others are extremely
poor in the things of this world (Jesus, Paul,
Peter).
Money has
been a snare to more than one. A snare is a trap that is
set to make you lose what you considered precious. Think
what Lot lost when he set his eyes on the rich plane of
Sodom. Or all that Haman lost (Book of Esther) when he
set his heart on riches and honor. How about Ananias and
Sapphira in (Acts 5)? What does a man need for
contentment? Very little: food and raiment and a godly
life.
Verse ten is
a verse that is changed in all the new Bibles, and why
not? Why would you want to pervert the Word of God with a
watered down version that denies the deity of Christ if
you weren't interested in making a buck by selling your
new copy? Money itself is neutral; the way it is used,
and the heart and motive behind it determine its
character. Every one of the Ten Commandments can be
broken for money. For money people have denied God,
blasphemed His Name, stolen, lied, murdered, committed
adultery, etc. etc., Why is booze a scourge of this
nation - because the Kennedy family and others like them
love money more than righteousness.
Paul then
injects a warning to Timothy, because Christian leaders
can be led by false values and material gain. Demos
forsook Paul because he loved the world (2 Tim. 4:10);
Judas sold Christ for 30 pieces of silver. Note that he
calls this youthful pastor a "man of God"! What an
encouragement! Note, too, the three exhortations: flee, follow, fight! Flee these
things - pride, covetousness, false teachings. Sometimes
the finest thing the Christian soldier can do is run. In
(2 Tim. 2:22), Paul commands him to "Flee youthful
lusts."
(vs. 17-19)
form a positive instruction to the rich, telling them how
to use their riches for God's glory. First these people
must be humble, accepting their wealth as a stewardship
from God. They should keep their eyes on the giver and
not the gifts. Their primary motive in having money
should be to give it away (vs. 18), because of the future
reward (Matt. 6:19,20).
IV.
To the educated
"Science" always has been an accumulation of knowledge, but
sometimes it is false knowledge. Unfortunately even
Christians sometimes prefer to listen to education above
the Word of God! Stick with the Bible, let science and
education catch up later.
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