Here’s Paul
at the end of his life and he doesn’t have any friends. He’s completely abandoned.
He’s financially broke.
His friends
have forsaken him and he’s standing in front of the Roman government being
persecuted, being tried, says Richard Jordan.
You see, he’s
not finishing with a $5 million home in the hills with big cars and a big bank
account. You say, “What kind of success could he have been?”
Paul says in II
Timothy 4: [17] Notwithstanding the Lord stood with me, and strengthened
me; that by me the preaching might be fully known, and that all the Gentiles
might hear: and I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion.
[18] And the Lord shall deliver me from every evil work, and will
preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom: to whom be glory for ever and ever.
Amen.
He’s got the
perspective right. My point is, as he’s looking at what’s happening in II
Timothy, and he looks back over his ministry, he says, “You know, we went from
nobody knowing this message but me to this thing going all over the known world
and there being preachers out there preaching this, churches out there teaching
this, and making it known.”
There’s a
little book called, “The Apostle Paul and the British Isles,” that explains how
Paul, as tradition says, came in contact with the royal family of Great Britain
and gave the gospel to them.
You remember
in Philippians it talks about the people in Caesar’s household heard the gospel?
The royals were actually living in Rome at the time Paul was in that prison and
they got the gospel and went home with it.
I don’t know
if that’s true or not, but I don’t doubt that it could be true. That’s how the
gospel spreads; you know that.
When he
finished II Timothy he said, “It’s all in apostasy. I’m in jail, I’m broke and
I don’t have any friends.” It went from nobody knowing the message to him
making it known, the whole world knowing it, to him in jail.
What that’s
an illustration of is, “My strength in made perfect in your weakness.” II Corinthians
12:9: [9] And he said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my
strength is made perfect in weakness. Most gladly therefore will I rather glory
in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.
So how would
you expect Paul’s epistles to end? Not like the Book of Revelation where it’s, “Woo-hoo,
new heaven and new earth!” You expect to see it end in weakness and the Body of
Christ has progressed through 2,000 years in the dispensation of grace as “unknown
and yet well known.”
II Corinthians
6: [9] As unknown, and yet well known; as dying, and, behold, we live;
as chastened, and not killed;
[10] As sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich;
as having nothing, and yet possessing all things.
*****
The crucial thing you have to understand is the course of a nation in today's dispensation of grace is determined by the amount of sound doctrine resident in the populace. That’s what determines the strength of the TRUE church; not the institutional, civil religion, but the true church.
We don’t have
to be the majority (we never have been) but our spiritual impact is so
powerful. Paul says, “As unknown and yet well-known,” and that’s the way we
are, but when that’s so diminished we come to the place where there’s no
ability to affect the culture.
A basic
sociological truth says that within any group of people, large or small, 10% of
the people of the organization (institution, movement, religion, cult, body,
etc.) thoroughly committed to one idea, can control the whole organization and
carry it in the direction of that ideal.
In the
business world you hear about the 80-20 rule (80% of your business comes from
20% of the activity), but the rule of social movement is all you have to have
is 10% committed to something to control it.
I say that because if you have 10% of the populace that is committed to the truth, you can influence it. By the way, when 10% of the populace becomes Muslim, are they not thoroughly committed to what they do?
You watch
what’s happening in Europe today and you’re just seeing a foretaste. That
stuff's all coming here; it will just come in a different form because it hops
the pond and all of the Americas have been different.
The things
that hold a culture together have long been dissolved here in the United States
and now you have a generation of people with no understanding of what our
culture is about.
There’s a
revisionist kind of idea and even the simple cultural foundations, and the
understanding that carries our culture along, is gone and generations have come
along who’ve had that educated out of them. Those people are now taking the
control reins of culture.
*****
By II
Timothy, Paul had ministered all across Asia into Europe all the way to Rome,
planning churches in tremendously diverse cultures, but this is where the
reader sees the church move from rule to ruin.
In his
parting message to Timothy, Paul writes in II Timothy 4: “For I am
now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought
a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the
faith.”
Paul tells
you what his course is in Acts 20:24 when he writes, “But none of these things
move me, neither count I my life dear unto myself, so that I might finish my course with
joy, and the ministry, which I have received of the Lord Jesus, to testify the
gospel of the grace of God.”
That last
part of the verse has always kind of tickled my fancy. You know, when you read
Paul’s life, that verse helps you understand it. He lived like he had a suicide
mania.
If you look at Acts 14, he goes into a city and they drag him outside of town, stone him and leave him for dead. But he gets right back up and you know what he does? He goes right back into the city.
You say, “No,
wait a minute, what kind of deal is that?!” You check the record; up until that
point every time a city rejected Paul he shook the dust off his feet and went
on to the next one.
But now
here’s one where he goes in, they drag him out, stone him and leave him for
dead and God resurrects him. I believe he died and God resurrected him. That’s
the experience he talks about in II Corinthians 12.
Paul gets up
and says, “You know, I’ve been up there in paradise and seen some things that I
can’t even tell people about. It was so wonderful I’d like to go back. I’ll go
back into the city and maybe they’ll . . . ”
From then on
he lived like he had a suicide mania. He would just go right into the mouths of
the lions. In fact, here he talks about being delivered out of the mouth of the
lion.
The guy had
this concept of holding on loosely to earth. When he says, “Neither count I my
life dear to myself,” he didn’t say he didn’t love his family, or that he was
trying to die tomorrow. He said, “I’m holding it loose. The most precious
things to me are not what I possess here.”
When you talk
about persecution, or someone coming along and taking what I’ve got, beating me
up, putting me in jail, or being shipwrecked time and time again . . .
Read II
Corinthians about all the stuff he went through. They did all that stuff to
Paul and you think, “Goodnight, I’d have quit about the second verse!”
But he says, “I’m not just going to finish the job, I’m going to do it WITH JOY.” Those two words changed that verse for me. He’s saying, “I’m not just going to endure, I’ve got a joy in this!”