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Philip Conley's Morning Thoughts

Morning Thoughts (I Timothy 4:13 – “Good Addiction to the Things of God”)

“Good Addiction to the Things of God”

I Timothy 4:13, “Till I come, give attendance to reading, to exhortation, to doctrine.”

This morning, we normally attach positive or negative connotations to things based on their most common occurrence. Addiction is a word that generally brings negative situations to mind as we see them most frequently. Culture in our day is plagued with various drug addictions, and the entertainment industry perpetuates itself by addicting its audiences in such a way to feel like they keep needing a “fix.” However, addiction is something that if properly focused can actually provide a good structure for things that the disciple of the Lamb should employ. Obviously, the addiction cannot be fixated on things seen and temporal but rather on things unseen and eternal. (II Corinthians 4:17-18) When we give ourselves over in such a way to the things of God, the circumstances of life will make less of an impression on us.

In our study verse, the apostle is in the midst of some very involved charges to his young son in the ministry. Paul tells Timothy that many things in his life will make him an example of the believers (Verse 12), and that profiting himself in this way will yield lasting fruit that touches on the promises made by Almighty God. (Verse 8) Our verse uses an interesting expression that we would like to consider, and Paul follows that expression with a specific order of operation. The phrase “give attendance” has many connotations, and some of those connotations include “cleave,” “hold fast,” and “be addicted to.” Paul literally told his young charge to be addicted to reading, exhortation, and doctrine.

The power behind the expression’s connotation of addiction means that Timothy would put these things first and foremost in his life. When we see someone addled with drug addiction, they are willing to sacrifice their livelihood, family, or anything else to feed their addiction. Sadly, we see these wrecked souls wavering over the cliff of life’s abyss and can feel powerless to help them. While the Bible does not condone neglecting our families or the honorable causes of life such as employment and livelihood, we are commanded to put Him and His kingdom first and foremost in our lives. (Matthew 6:33) How many times do we actually do this, or do we – as I recently heard preached – give God our leftovers? When God and His heavenly things become the focal point of our lives, the other necessary things will all be added in their proper place and function. Therefore, Paul encouraged the young minister to be addicted to these things.

It bears mentioning here that even though this command is to a minister, it is not confined to him. As the previous verse states, Timothy was to be an example “of” the believers. Though the minister should live in such a way to be an example “to” the believers, that is not Paul’s point. His point is rather more broad. When Timothy fulfilled his charge and command, he would actually be an example of what a believer should look and act like. In other words, “Timothy, when you do these things, you will look like a believer should.” Therefore, what is good for him is good for all who name the name of Christ and attempt to follow after Him in newness of life.

What Timothy was to be addicted to – and us too – follows a specific order. Many times we see lists in the Bible and do not consider that the order of the listing plays prominent significance. As Paul would tell the same minister in another epistle, Scripture is profitable for doctrine, reproof, correction, and instruction in righteousness. (II Timothy 3:16-17) Is that order important? I heard a rather succinct way of describing that list, “Doctrine tells you what is right. Reproof tells you what is not right. Correction tells you how to get back right. Instruction in righteousness tells you how to stay right.” In that light, the order makes perfect sense. In my humble opinion, the order here bears similar importance. Reading should precede exhortation, and exhortation should precede doctrine.

When we consider the doctrine of what we believe about God and His dealings, why do we believe what we believe? Is it because our parents believed it? Is it because “our church” believes it? Is it because my spouse believes it? What should be the reason we believe it? The starting point must always be “thus saith the Lord.” Anything less than that is a shaky foundation that will not stand up to the ravages of our sin-cursed lives. To know what He says, we have to read His Book. One of the truly amazing things to me about this Book is that it is only a subset of all there is. John told us at the end of his gospel account that if everything was written just about Christ’s 33.5 years on earth, the world could not contain the books that should be written. If the world cannot hold the works necessary to describe those 33.5 years, how much more God’s dealings with this world from the beginning as well as declarations of His work before the world began?

Therefore, what we have contained within the pages of those 66 books is highly important. Considering all that God could have told us, what He has told us must of necessity be those things needful and fruitful for us in the right here and now. When viewed in that light, it should be easier to “want” to consume and process the word of God through reading and study than view it as a chore. The drug addict looks forward to nothing more in his life than getting back to his addiction. Our lives should look forward to doing these things that Paul lists rather than feel like it is a duty to be done. As many ministers have remarked in the past, “We are told to read our Bibles and go to church, but we should view it that we ‘get’ to read our Bibles and go to church.”

Just as we should be given and addicted to reading the word of God, we should likewise also give adherence to exhortation. Though this word can be used in a wide variety of applications, the word here most often denotes a consolation through summons. Could anything more clearly sum up the gospel of Jesus Christ? It is a summons that brings encouragement and consolation to the sin-sick soul. Nothing in life better energizes and re-charges the disciple about just how much the Lord loves us to pick us up and get back out in the warfare of life. These seasons of fellowship with the Lord through His Spirit revive and cheer the soul, and they also teach us what is right. The doctrine that we preach is not of our own conjuring. We believe, preach, and adhere to those things most surely believed among us that have been handed down generation after generation all the way from the time and hands of Jesus Himself. This doctrine brings cheer and encouragement, and it is plainly declared in the pages of God’s holy word.

The order of these words is clearly seen through one leading to the other. If I believe what I believe for any other reason than the Lord said it, then I am believing something misguidedly. Though what I believe may still be right, I do not know why it is right. The Bereans of Acts 17 were called “more noble” because they took what they were told and strained it through the Scriptures. Ministers should always be careful to clearly distinguish between their opinion and the gospel truth. There are many things that “I think” that I cannot adamantly prove. However, if the Bible plainly declares it, I should adamantly stand on it. When someone asks what I believe about something, I should say that I believe it because the Bible said it. When someone asks why I preach what I preach, I should say that I preach it because the Bible said it.

To know what to believe or what to preach, we must be addicted to reading and consuming the word of God. Having read and consumed the contents, we should integrate and internalize those things to us to be ready to encourage and console one another with those teachings, and through these exercises of godliness, we will then know what to think and how to live. Beloved, I know from my past that I have not always given the time and attention to the things of God that I need to. Sometimes reading is met like a chore. At times the exhortation of preaching and fellowship with other saints seems painful and pointless rather than consoling and encouraging. Sadly, there are even times when I may struggle to prove what I think about things that I believe are right. Good doctrine comes from good exhortation, which comes from faithful reading and consuming the word of God. Therefore, let us give ourselves over to reading our “source material” at every opportunity, be ready to hear the gospel’s summons whenever available, and proceed to glorifying God in our beliefs and lives. In doing so, we will be an example “of” the believers so that others will see and glorify our Father in heaven for that which they see. (Matthew 5:16)

In Hope,
Bro Philip

Philip Conley's Morning Thoughts

Morning Thoughts (II Corinthians 4:17-18 – “The Highs and Lows of Perspective”)

“The Highs and Lows of Perspective”

II Corinthians 4:17-18, “For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal.”

This morning, emotional upheaval seems to be rampant. Today’s age is marked by heightened duress, medicated depression, violence of various stripes, and many other things that directly link to people’s swinging emotions. While today’s entertainment is supposed to give a “high,” it is always transitory and fleeting. Today’s tensions generate “lows” that either hit the cliff wall or fall into the murky abyss. Solomon declares that life under the sun yields helplessness and hopelessness at times when viewed from the natural perspective. However, though we live with a natural vantage point, we do not have to keep a natural perspective. If all we had was life under this sun, we would be of all men most miserable, but since we have life under a different Son, we can stand with courage and peace rather than helpless and hopeless lives.

Our study verses are what I like to call “perspective texts.” Perspective can be a powerful thing, as we tend to view our perspective as reality. The truth is that reality is reality no matter whether I view it or not. As many ministers have declared, “The truth of Scripture is true whether anyone believes it or not.” If I was blind and could not tell light from dark, my perspective would not have day and night, sun and moon, etc. However, reality is still the same though I would not see it. Perspective governs what and how we think rather than what reality and truth are. Therefore, we should always try to tailor what we perceive to align with the truth rather than suppose that truth aligns with what we see.

Consider the magnitude and power of what Paul declares in these verses. Paul has labored in the context to show that persecutions and problems in this world do not change the truth. Though he and other ministers had suffered for the cause of Christ, nothing changed what God had worked in. The inward man is still renewed day by day no matter how much the outward man perishes. (Verse 16) Right after our study verses, Paul will go on in the next chapter to describe the reality of what awaits after this life. Nothing here changes that. Nothing can hinder it. That is reality. Praise God it is! But, the power of perspective is still clearly shown in these verses. Something is described as light and easy, while something else is described as weighty and powerful. Suffering here is light; eternal glory is weighty. Surely all of us in our right mind would freely confess to this truth. Heaven and immortal glory is go great and majestic that all things here pale in comparison. Paul attested the same in Romans 8:18.

However, though that is the truth, that is not exactly Paul’s point. It may be hard to convey the point to someone in dire suffering here of how light it is. It may be hard to convey the point to someone in the prime of life how weighty and glorious heaven is. Why is this hard to do? To the man dying of cancer whose body is wracked with pain, he sees the affliction as heavy rather than light. To the youth full of vim and vigor, heaven may be a distant thought because so much fun in life is right before him. The perspective determines how meaningful these truths are to the individual. In our present age, I have heard many ministers lament the experience that many of us have that people are not as energized and engaged in the gospel as they should be. However, one of the gospel’s functions is to comfort the child of God. How do you comfort someone who does not feel to need it? As a minister among us is known to say, “You can’t comfort people who are too comfortable to be comforted.”

Paul’s encouragement to this church is to align their perspective to the truth and reality of our suffering and future home. The reality is that suffering is light. The reality is that heaven is weighty. How do we see it? There is a condition. To see it as it should be, we must look at one set of things while ignoring or denying the other. We must set our affection on things above focusing on things that only faith can see. We must look up and above the vain and perishable things of this old world. When we constantly look down at the shifting sands of time, we will fall prey to sorrow, anger, depression, and other emotions that will drive down upon us until our knees buckle under the strain. When we focus our minds unto the hills from which cometh our help, we feel and understand that no matter the bondage here, the release and liberty is better.

When people find out that I am a preacher, I constantly have to field a specific question, “Why do bad things happen to good people?” Over the years, I have tried to formulate responses that are less offensive than others, and I also try to tailor the wording to the circumstance that they are focused on at the time. However, the simple answer is this. If we ask the wrong question, we will get the wrong answer. In computer programming lingo, “Garbage in equals garbage out.” We deserve nothing good as fallen creatures, and therefore, it is more fitting to ask, “Why do good things happen to any of us?” Grace is the only suitable reply to this question, and what a glorious answer it is!

Yet, let us probe a little further about suffering in this life. First and foremost, suffering in this world is a direct result of sin. To deny this truth is to turn a blind eye to plain Scriptural declaration. Creation’s original state was deemed good and very good by her Creator. The problems all came after the fall of man in the garden. So, no sin, no suffering. But, sin is a reality, and therefore, suffering is seen. Does this mean that suffering in this life cannot do anything good for us? Is all suffering needless and pointless? Not according to Paul in these verses. Yes, we do suffer a lot of needless and pointless things due to our own failings, but the general sufferings of life can actually help arm our perspective. Look at Paul’s specific language. The suffering “worketh for us” that which makes heaven appear weightier. Now, this powerful point will only apply when our perspective is focused where it should be. If someone is doggedly looking down at this life, they will either become despondent or embittered when suffering occurs. The pity parties and the “Why me?” statements will ensue. But, if we meet the condition of looking above, these sufferings actually draw our mind to think of heaven better and brighter than we may have before.

Friends, heaven is more glorious than we can imagine. It is more weighty and majestic than we can possibly consider. However, our minds and spirits get closer to that reality when we look above during the sufferings of this life. To the faithful saint upon his/her deathbed, heaven seems close enough to touch sometimes. As I heard a minister relate recently, a mule plows better when pointed towards the barn than away from it. As he is older himself, he said, “I feel like I’m heading towards the barn. I can see it, and I’m plowing away knowing that it’s getting close.” As we age and the body peels away from us, we can see that glorious city dawning closer and closer. Though I am not an old man by any stretch of the imagination, I can feel things inside me that were likely ignored as a youth. It is that powerful yearning to be home and at rest. To feel this and nurture this perspective, we need to spend our thoughts and moments in things that endure rather than with things that quickly pass through this temporal sod.

Several years ago, I viewed a “computer junkpile.” A company had set up to take old computers to get some of the material still inside them. As I looked at the various models stacked together it dawned on me that at one time these were all the happening new thing. They were the toys of the hour. Yet, looking at them now, they were so old and obsolete. Things of life are that way. New cars get dated quickly. Fashion styles leave and disappear. Today’s news lines tomorrow’s trash cans. Yet, there are things that are just as real today as they were yesterday, and if there is a tomorrow, they will be just as real then and through all eternity. Thinking and looking by faith at these things helps us keep things in frame. One of my favorite verses at the close of Isaiah 40 talks about mounting up like an eagle. Consider that perspective. An eagle flying through the heaven does not see “big” things on the ground as large as I do. His vantage point makes them smaller in sight than I see them from the ground. Yet, no matter how high he flies, the heavens above him are still stretched out grand and seemingly without end. If natural creation becomes bigger looking at those heights, how much more the heaven of heavens? If natural things can look so much smaller, how much more from God’s sight at the foot of His throne? Let us mind the things above, for when we do, our afflictions will be lighter and heaven more heavy. Does cancer still hurt? Sure it does. Can heaven still seem far away at times? Sure it can. However, minding things above will align us better and get us closer to thinking of things the way they really are.

In Hope,
Bro Philip