Certainties that Drive an Enduring
Ministry, Part 1
by
John MacArthur
Copyright 2007,
Grace to You.
All rights reserved. Used by permission.
It is a special message that has
been on my heart for a number of
weeks in preparation for the John
Piper Conference which will come up
in a week or so, a couple of weeks
from now, that I want to bring to
you tonight. I’ve been thinking,
because I’ve been asked to think
about it, about what it is that
contributes to an enduring,
persevering, long-term ministry.
This is not something that I have
not thought about. In the past, I
have. I began to think about the end
of my life somewhere near the
beginning of my life, truthfully.
Somewhere in the very early years of
my ministry, I was brought under the
power of the words of the Apostle
Paul. They were dramatically
effective in my thinking very early
in my ministry. They are the words
that Paul wrote to Timothy. He had
instructed Timothy to fulfill his
ministry. And then he said this, “I
am already being poured out as a
drink offering and the time of my
departure has come. I have fought
the good fight. I have finished the
course. I have kept the faith. In
the future there is laid up for me
the crown of righteousness which the
Lord the righteous judge will award
to me on that day and not to me
only, but to all those who love His
appearing.”
Early in my ministry I thought how
wonderful it would be to come to the
end and say, “I have fought the good
fight. I have finished the course. I
have kept the faith.” Through all
the years since then, I have seen
men come and go. I have seen men
rise and fall. I have seen the
faithful and the unfaithful. I’ve
seen the persevering and the
enduring men and women who have
endured to the end, bringing no
reproach upon Christ, no scandal. I
have seen the opposite. I have seen
those who started well and were
discredited and brought reproach
upon Christ in scandal to the church
somewhere along the line. I never
wanted to be one of those. Through
all these years I have been exposed
in my reading to the great heroes of
the faith who ended strong, who
finished well, very often under dire
circumstances, even martyrdom, but
did not betray the Christ they
proclaimed and sought to honor.
I remember Patricia and I one night,
got on an airplane to fly to
Australia. And in the darkness of
that long night of flight, I read
the biography of A.W. Pink written
by Ian Murray. It started out so
wonderfully. A.W. Pink was one of my
spiritual heroes, gifted teacher of
Scripture, gifted theologian, gifted
communicator. And I started that
biography full of hope and
anticipation. And it ended in one of
the most sad and morose and
sorrowful times in my memory as I
watched him fade away, broken,
discouraged, disappointed, angry,
grieving to becoming a recluse in an
obscure village on the coast of
Scotland who wouldn’t walk out the
door. It was a shattering experience
for me because I had gleaned so much
from his teaching. And I thought, I
don’t ever want to end like that.
I was talking to my Dad about that
one time and he reminded me of
another beloved preacher who ended
bitter, angry, hostile and I knew I
didn’t want to end my ministry like
that either.
But how? How does one endure to the
end? Avoiding all the moral mine
fields and all of the
discouragements? All the things that
stand in the way, all the hurdles
and obstacles over which we might
stumble? You can want that. You can
desire that. You can long for that.
You can set your goal on that, but
how do you get there to be able to
say, “I finished the course, I kept
the faith?”
And so, I have from those early
years looked to the Apostle Paul who
is my own personal spiritual hero.
There stood Paul writing his last
chapter, 2 Timothy chapter 4 from
which those words are taken. And
there he stood high in the thin air
of his own ministry Everest, having
gone to the summit of faithful
service to breathe that rarified
oxygen that too few will ever
experience. His climb was harder and
longer and lonelier than any man
would ever imagine he would be
capable of enduring. But there he
stood at the triumphant end, at the
summit of loyalty to Christ. There
were no earthly crowds cheering him.
There were no earthly crowds hailing
his achievement. In fact, even those
in whom he had invested his life had
forsaken him he says it, “All who
are in Asia have forsaken me.” And
Timothy, to whom he writes, is on
the brink of forsaking him and even
the Lord as well.
His speech as he stands at that
pinnacle, that ministry Everest, his
speech does not sound triumphant.
Here it is, the following verses:
“Make every effort to come to me
soon, for Demas, having loved this
present world, has deserted me and
gone to Thessalonica. Crescens has
gone to Galatia, Titus to Dalmatia.
Only Luke is with me. Pick up Mark
and bring him with you, for he’s
useful to me for service, but
Tychicus I have sent to Ephesus.
When you come, bring the cloak which
I left at Troas with Carpus, it’s
cold here. Bring the books,
especially the parchments. Alexander
the coppersmith did me much harm;
the Lord will repay him according to
his deeds. Be on guard against him
yourself, for he vigorously opposed
our teaching. At my first defense no
one supported me, but all deserted
me; may it not be counted against
them. But the Lord stood with me,
strengthened me in order that
through me the proclamation might be
fully accomplished and that all the
Gentiles might hear; and I was
delivered out of the lion’s mouth.
And the Lord will deliver me from
every evil deed and bring me safely
to His heavenly Kingdom; to Him be
the glory forever and ever. Amen.”
In a sense, it’s a solo doxology,
isn’t it? Luke was still there so
maybe it was a duet at best. It
wasn’t a very triumphant moment, his
friends were gone, some for good
reasons, some for bad reason. His
enemies were still after him and
mounting attacks on the churches
where he had invested his life.
Physically he was cold and he missed
his books. And he was fearful
because the assault of false
doctrine was just beginning and he
knew it and he was reminded that
battling enemies can be a lonely,
lonely task and even in his case, as
influential as he was, no one stood
by him at his first defense. And
soon after this, a thankless world
would chop his head off.
How did he do it? How was he
steadfast, immovable, always
abounding in the work of the Lord to
the finish? I could know that speech
of Paul and I’ve known it all my
life. I could know it, I could
memorize it, I could wish for it, I
could by positive speech rehearse it
again and again in some personal
soliloquy, but how to do it? How did
he climb that Everest? How did he
get there still maintaining
faithfulness, battling all the way
without the kudos of the crowd,
without the applause and the cheers
of those who might have assisted him
with their good will and
encouragement? How did he do it? How
did he avoid the internal obstacles,
the external obstacles?
There had to be far more to it than
self-discipline. Far more to it than
determination. He had a measure of
those things and I as well have a
measure of those things. But those
things on a human level are
insufficient to take us through this
course because it is fraught with
supernatural assaults. And so
through the years of my ministry, I
have done everything I could to dig
deeply into the life of the Apostle
Paul, even at this very time as we
speak I am immersed in a biography
of Paul, trying to suck out
everything I can about him because
he is, to me, the model of endurance
in ministry. I find keys to his
endurance all through the Scripture,
but nowhere are they gathered
together so richly as in 2
Corinthians chapter 4, and so I want
you to look at 2 Corinthians chapter
4 with me, for here we find, I
think, the best and most concise
expression of this man’s
motivations.
Second Corinthians chapter 4, and I
want to draw you to two statements
that he makes, one in verse 1 and
one in verse 16. And those two
statements which are really the
repeating of the same statement,
will be the foundation of our look
at this great chapter. In verse 1,
at the end of the verse, we hear him
say, “We do not lose heart.” Again
in verse 16 at the beginning of the
verse, “We do not lose heart.” He’s
talking here about losing heart and
he’s affirming that he doesn’t do
that. And he’s surrounding those two
statements with the reasons he
doesn’t do that, hence the several
therefores that are interspersed
into this chapter.
But let me tell you about that verb
“lose heart,” because I think as
often happens, the English doesn’t
really get us to where we need to go
in order to understand what he’s
saying. This verb ekkakeo, or
enkakeo, either one, offers far more
than this translation gives us. The
old King James translated it “faint
not.” And this “lose heart,” maybe a
little bit more, but it’s still not
the full understanding of this word.
We think of it as perhaps getting
tired, getting weary, getting burned
out, getting discouraged, and that’s
certainly does happen to people. But
there’s a lot more here than that.
Ek, preposition at the beginning,
and then after that, kakeo, that
kakeo verb means to cause evil...to
cause evil. Compounding it
intensifies it. The root, kak, is
found in the world kakos. The word
kakos, the noun, or kakia, means
malice, malignity, wickedness,
depravity, corruption. It means
moral badness. The adverb form of
that same root means wretchedly,
wrongly, criminally.
So this root is not talking about
something as simple and seemingly
benign as getting tired, weary,
discouraged. We’re really talking
about giving in to evil. That’s
really the best way to understand
it...defecting, a cowardly
defection. And the translation that
we have here can easily omit the
inherent sin in this defection.
Again in the massive work in Kittel
which is lexography at its maximum
level, it comes down to the fact
that this word means to act badly,
to act badly. It is the opposite of
doing what is right. It is the
opposite of doing good. It is used
that way, for example, familiar
words, Galatians 6:9, “Let us not
lose heart in doing good for in due
time we shall reap if we do not do
badly.” In other words, this losing
heart, this growing weary is to
defect from doing what is good. It
is used in the same exact way in 2
Thessalonians chapter 3 and verse
13, “Do not grow weary in doing
good.” That is, do not cease doing
good and begin to do badly. It is
the opposite of doing good. Good in
2 Thessalonians 3:13 is kalos, the
opposite of kakos which is bad. So
this losing heart is a sinful
defection. It is to cease doing good
and to begin to do bad. Paul says,
“I will not give in to this whether
it is immorality, whether it is
discouragement, any defection,
whether it is cowardice, whether it
is indifference, whether it is
worldliness, whatever it is that
diverts me from this ministry, I
will not do that.” He says in verse
1, “Therefore since we have this
ministry as we received mercy, we do
not give in. We do not defect. We
are not giving in to evil,
cowardice, or defection to
immorality, to any kind of
impropriety.” That’s what he’s
saying.
What prompts him here to say this?
Well, his experience with the
Corinthians had the greatest
potential to drive him to sinful
defection. If anybody could drive
you out of the ministry, it was the
Corinthians. They brought him deep
discouragement, penetrating
disappointment. Their sin, their
shallowness, their rebellion, their
criticism of him was heart breaking.
Their disaffection toward him was a
sad return for his love and
sacrifice. After nearly two years of
labor there, there were massive
issues of sin to which he wrote in 1
Corinthians, sins that destroyed
purity and unity and worship.
Jealousies, incest, law suits,
desecration of the Lord’s table,
gross immorality, so bad that
Apollos the preacher would not stay
there and would not return to
Corinth though Paul pleaded with him
to do that. He wouldn’t do it.
Corinth was the church that no one
wanted to pastor. He wrote the two
letters, 1 Corinthians and 2
Corinthians to them, he also wrote
two other letters that are referred
to in those letters that are not in
Scripture. They ate up years of his
life and years and years of his
heart. Whatever was remedied by the
first letter fell short of the mark
because false teachers came in and
assaulted the church, tried to
destroy Paul’s name, Paul’s
reputation. There was an all-out
attack on Paul’s character so that
they could discredit Paul, have the
people lose complete confidence in
him, then replace him, draw the
people’s confidence and teach lies.
When Paul knew this was happening,
he made a visit to the church. It
was a horrible visit. It could be
referred to as the painful visit.
They attacked him openly and
publicly and he left with a broken
heart. After that, he wrote a severe
letter to them. He was reluctant to
even return there. He says that in
chapter 2 of this letter, “I don’t
know if I can come again, I don’t
know if I can stand the pain again.”
False teachers are gaining ground
with his beloved church. This is
really painful stuff. He has endured
so much. This is enough to drive you
out of the ministry. They blasted
his character. They said he was in
the ministry for money. They said he
was in the ministry for favors from
women. They said he lied about his
accomplishments. They said he had no
credentials from the Apostles in
Jerusalem. They slandered him in
every way possible. They said he was
an unimpressive speaker and an even
more unimpressive person. They said
horrible things about him.
This was so agonizing to him that in
chapter 12 of 2 Corinthians he calls
it a messenger from Satan, a spear
like steak driven right through his
flesh. And he prayed three times for
the Lord to remove the agony of what
the Corinthians were doing to him.
He was so crushed, look at chapter 2
verse 12, “When I came to Troas for
the gospel of Christ,” by the way,
you need to know he’s on his way to
meet Titus because he has sent Titus
to Corinth with a letter, that
letter I referred to. Titus is
supposed to meet him and tell him
how they responded to the letter.
“He comes to Troas to meet Titus,
comes for the gospel of Christ, a
door is open for me in the Lord.”
There’s no church in Troas. He
arrives, has a wide-open door, verse
13, “I had no rest for my spirit,
not finding Titus, my brother,
taking my leave of them I went to
Macedonia.” Boy, you know you’re in
trouble when you are the great
Apostle, the greatest preacher in
the world, the most significant
servant of Christ there is, you walk
into a city for the sake of the
gospel and the door is wide open for
you to preach, and you turn your
back and walk out because your
spirit is so tortured, tortured by
the disaffection, the decline of
this Corinthian church. They had
ripped his heart out and he had
nothing else to give to anyone else.
In the seventh chapter of 2
Corinthians, in the fifth verse,
“Even when we came in to Macedonia,”
he says, “our flesh had no rest.” He
said I left Troas to come to
Macedonia. I got to Macedonia, there
was no rest, “We were afflicted on
every side, conflicts without fears
within. And it wasn’t until Titus
arrived, verse 6, God who comforts
the depressed comforted us by the
coming of Titus.” Here is Paul in
depression...depression.
How severe was the depression? He
was so crushed, so wounded, so
stabbed by this thorn in the flesh
driven through him, this messenger
of Satan demonically induced false
teachers ripping and shredding his
church, he was so tortured by that
that he lost all heart for ministry.
He is really on the age of when you
quit. He is agonizing. And it’s not
just this. Oh no, it’s not just
this. Go back to the beginning of 2
Corinthians for a moment and let’s
compound the assaults on this man.
Verse 3, in this letter he writes,
“After his depression has been
lifted, some by the coming of Titus.
Titus gave a good report. But the
false teachers were still there and
he knew he had to write another
letter to defend his own credibility
and integrity, or the people would
then again follow the false teachers
away from him, and that’s why he
writes this letter. But in this
letter he mounts up the suffering.
“Blessed,” verse 3 of chapter 1, “be
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Father of mercies, the
God of all comfort who comforts us
in all our afflictions so that we
may be able to comfort those who are
in any affliction with the comfort
with which we ourselves are
comforted by God. For just as the
sufferings of Christ are ours in
abundance, so also our comfort is
abundant through Christ. If we are
afflicted, it is for your comfort
and salvation. If we are comforted,
it is for your comfort which is
effective in the patient enduring of
the same sufferings which we also
suffer.” It’s all about suffering
and trying to survive and draw on
the comfort of God.
Verse 8, “We do not want you to be
unaware, brethren, of our affliction
which came to us in Asia that we
were burdened excessively beyond our
strength so that we spared even of
life. Indeed we had the sentence of
death within ourselves in order that
we should not trust in ourselves but
in God who raises the dead.” It got
to the point that I was in such a
peril of death that my only hope was
in resurrection. God was going to
have to raise me from the dead, were
so many enemies after my life.
God...verse 10...who delivered us
from so great a peril of death will
deliver us. It is He whom we have
set our hope, He will yet deliver us
and you also joining and helping
through your prayers.
He lived every day under assault
from so many directions. In chapter
4 and verse 8, “We are inflicted in
every way but not crushed, perplexed
but not despairing, persecuted but
not forsaken, struck down but not
destroyed, always carrying about in
the body the dying of Jesus that the
life of Jesus also may be manifested
in our body, for we who live are
constantly being delivered over to
death for Jesus’ sake.” So many
people wanted him dead, they were
trailing him wherever he went. “We
do this that the life of Jesus also
may be manifested in our mortal
flesh. So death works in us but life
in you.”
In chapter 6, he says in verse 4,
“As servants of God, we are in much
endurance, afflictions, hardships,
distresses, beatings, imprisonments,
tumults, labors, sleeplessness,
hunger.” Further down, verse 8, “By
glory and dishonor, by evil report
and good report, regarded as
deceivers and yet true, unknown and
yet well-known, dying yet behold we
live, punished yet not put to death,
sorrowful yet always rejoicing, poor
yet making many rich, having nothing
yet possessing all things.” Tough,
hard life.
And then go to chapter 11 where he
says in verse 23, “Are they servants
of Christ, these false teachers? Are
they servants of
Christ?...sarcastically...I far
more.” How can you tell a true
servant of Christ? Not by his
successes but by his suffering.
“I’ve been in far more labors, verse
23, far more imprisonments, beaten
times without number, often in
danger of death, five times I
received from the Jews thirty-nine
lashes, three times I was beaten
with rods, once I was stoned, three
times I was shipwrecked, a night and
a day I spent in the deep. I’ve been
on frequent journeys, in dangers
from rivers, robbers, countrymen,
Gentiles, in the city, in the
wilderness, on the sea, among false
brethren. I’ve been in labor and
hardship, through many sleepless
nights, hunger and thirst often
without food and cold and exposure.”
Unbelievable. This is his life. And
above that, verse 28, “Beyond that,
those external things, and here you
get to the heart of this man, there
is the daily pressure upon me of
concern for all the churches.” This
is what really went after his heart.
Beyond all that...is what the Greek
says...on top of all that, more
importantly, there is this
unrelenting concern for the
churches. And then he defines it.
“Who is weak without my being weak?
Who is led into sin without my
intense concern?” He’s so bound up
with the church that the weakness of
the church debilitates him, that the
sin of the church crushes him.
This is my life. How do you survive
this? How do you survive all the
external assaults and attacks? How
do you survive all the internal
disappointments of churches that
you’ve poured your life into that
turn on you? How do you get to that
triumphant summit and stand there
and say, “I have finished the
course, I’ve kept the faith?” How do
you rise to the point of saying, “We
do not lose heart?,” the editorial
we, part of his humility. He spoke
in plural terms. How do you get
there? How do you survive this. How
do you deal with what he talks about
in chapter 12 as I referred to it
earlier, a thorn in the flesh, a
messenger of Satan sent to buffet
me? How do you deal with that? Verse
10, “How do you become content with
weaknesses, insults, distresses,
persecutions, difficulties?” What do
you hang on to?
Well you’ve got to have something
outside yourself. Let’s go back to 2
Corinthians chapter 4 and find out
what he says. And that’s just a
glimpse, kind of the overview of
what the man went through. I could
give you the same approach
biographically step by step. But you
get the picture. What do you turn
to? What do you hold on to? What
keeps you going so that you don’t
quit, burn out, become discouraged,
fall off into some sin? How can
anybody possibly endure this? You
say, “Well it’s by the grace of
God.” Of course it’s by the grace of
God. “It’s by the mercy of God.” Of
course it’s by the mercy of God.
“It’s by the power of God.” Of
course it’s by the power of God. But
not apart from the servant of God.
What did he cling to?
I find in this passage some
certainties...some certainties. In
the uncertain circumstances, in the
shifting disappointments of life, in
the relentless temptations that flow
at any believer and especially at
one who serves the Lord in this
fashion, you’ve got to have some
fixed points. You have to have some
rock bed foundation. There are some
things that he was absolutely
certain about that gripped him and
held him firm in the midst of these
amazing storms that came against his
life. What I’m going to try to do is
just give you a little bit of an
insight into what these certainties
were. I call them the certainties
that drive an enduring ministry.
Number one, he was certain about the
superiority of the New Covenant...he
was certain about the superiority of
the New Covenant. Now I’m going to
get a little bit like the Puritans
here, and dive in and try to extract
out of just a few words what I think
is in these opening few verses. He
was certain about the superiority of
the New Covenant. Verse 1,
“Therefore, since we have this
ministry,” emphasis on the “this.”
Which ministry? This ministry. And
just which ministry is this
ministry? It’s the ministry that
he’s been talking about, that’s what
the therefore is there fore, to take
us back. The theme of chapter 3 is
the New Covenant...the New Covenant.
And it is this ministry to which he
refers in verse 8, calling it the
ministry of the Spirit, calling it
in verse 9 the ministry of
righteousness. We’ve received this
ministry.
Now understand, he’s talking about
the New Covenant ministry in Jesus
Christ of which he said in chapter
3, for example verse 6, “It gives
life.” He says, “As servants of the
New Covenant, not of the letter but
of the Spirit, for the letter kills
but the Spirit gives life.” The New
Covenant produces life. It also
produces righteousness. That is why
he says in verse 9, “It is the
ministry of righteousness.” The Old
Covenant, the Law could not produce
life, it only killed. It could not
produce righteousness, it was a
ministry of condemnation. He says
the New Covenant unlike the Old is
permanent, it is permanent. The Old
Covenant is represented in verse 7
as that which is on the face of
Moses with a fading glory...with a
fading glory. Verse 10, “For indeed
what had glory, the Old Covenant had
a glory of its own, in this case has
no glory on account of the glory
that surpasses it.” Its glory is
nothing like the glory of the New
Covenant. Verse 11, “For if that
which fades away was with glory,
much more that which remains is in
glory.” So he sees the glory of the
New Covenant. Remember the Old
Covenant was the Law, it exposed men
to sin and condemnation and it could
not save. The New Covenant brings
life, brings righteousness and
brings salvation and it is the
everlasting covenant. Thus the New
Covenant brings hope, verse 12,
“Having therefore such a hope, we
have boldness.” It is clear, he says
in verses 13 and 14, the Old
Covenant was all veiled. The New
Covenant removes the veil. Verse 14,
“The veil is unlifted in the Old
Covenant, but it is removed in
Christ. The New Covenant...he
further says... is Christ centered.
The New Covenant is empowered by the
Spirit.” Verse 17, “Where the Spirit
of the Lord is, there is liberty. It
brings freedom from sin and death
and punishment by the power of the
Spirit.” And finally, “The New
Covenant is transforming, moving us
from one level of the glory to the
next through the work of the Holy
Spirit.”
Now you’ve got to understand, this
is a Jew, this is a fastidious Jew,
this is a Jew who is a Pharisee, who
is loyal to the Law and the Old
Covenant to the max. This is a
fanatic. This is one who lived under
the bondage, under the horrible
bondage of that Old Covenant and
made the most of it, never coming to
embrace New Covenant salvation by
grace alone through faith alone,
never understanding the reality of
the New Covenant. This is a Jew not
having a final sacrifice, not having
one to whom he could turn as the
Lamb that finally and forever makes
the offering that satisfies God so
that no other offering could ever be
made. This is a Jew who is working
under the massive load of law and
guilt that came to those who were
honest about their endeavors. And
this is a Jew who stumbling under
the weight of this law, fell on his
face on the Damascus Road, this
Pharisee, and under the sovereign
power of God met Jesus Christ and
was redeemed and was given the
understanding of the New Covenant
redemption provided in Christ and
was in that moment liberated from
the bondage of the Law under which
he had lived his whole life and
under which he had endeavored to
bring everybody he could influence.
He was converted in a staggering
way.
The record of his conversion is
given in the ninth chapter of Acts
and he rehearses it in a wonderful
testimony. I like the one in Acts
26. But the spiritual work is in
Philippians 3. It’s in Philippians 3
that he describes what he used to
be. He says, “I put my confidence in
the flesh, circumcised the eighth
day of the nation Israel, tribe of
Benjamin, Hebrew of the Hebrews, as
to the law a Pharisee, as to zeal a
persecutor of the church, as to the
righteousness which is in the law
found blameless. And I thought that
was gain but when I saw Christ it
was all loss.” He says it was manure
when I found Christ. “And I have
suffered the loss of all things and
count them rubbish in order that I
may gain Christ and may be found in
Him not having a righteousness of my
own derived from the law but that
which is through faith in Christ,
the righteousness that comes from
God on the basis of faith.” He had
been saved, freed from the law and
its horrible bondage. This is the
something better of Hebrews 11:39
and 40. This is he greater covenant,
the superior covenant of the book of
Hebrews. Here is a man who is
saying, “Why would I be faithful to
the end? Why would I persevere to
the end? Why will I go through all
the obstacles? Because we have this
ministry.”
He comprehends the glorious,
unequaled reality of New Covenant
gospel ministry. This ministry of
the Spirit, this ministry of life,
this ministry of righteousness, this
ministry of hope, this ministry of
redemption and forgiveness, it is
the wonder and the glory of the New
Covenant ministry, a privilege
beyond all privileges. It has come
in his life time and he is an
Apostle of Jesus Christ, the great
bearer of the New Covenant. What
privilege. Privilege beyond all
privileges. This most noble, this
most glorious truth is given to him
to preach. It is the highest calling
on earth. It is the great news from
God concerning salvation. It dwarfs
all other duties, all other acts,
all other ministries, all other
service, all other privileges. It is
a staggering honor. And whatever the
price might be to pay to fulfill it,
the price is not nearly high enough
to buy him out...not nearly enough.
Think of it. Look at chapter 2 for a
moment. Think of it. Verse 14,
listen to what he says. “Thanks be
to God who always leads us to His
triumph in Christ.” This is
triumphant. You may have your
problems but we win in the end and
Christ wins. And in the meantime,
look at this, “He manifests through
us the sweet aroma of the knowledge
of Him in every place.” He is
stunned by that, that a mere mortal,
a mere mortal can be the instrument,
the took through which God manifests
the sweet aroma of the knowledge of
Himself in Christ in every place.
You’re talking about real eternal
influence. We are a fragrance of
Christ to God among those who are
being saved and among those who are
perishing. To the one an aroma from
death to death, to the other an
aroma from life to life. Who’s
adequate for these things? No human
being could have that much power.
If you’re a believer, your life is
an aroma through which God gives the
fragrance of Christ. To those who
believe, it’s an aroma from life to
life. To those who refuse, it’s of
death to death. Meaning that you are
used by God to bring them life and
compounding blessing in that life,
or to those who reject your
testimony, to bring death and
compounded death because of greater
responsibility since they have heard
from you. Who’s adequate for this?
What human being on this planet on
his own has eternal influence on
people? No one. He’s just stunned by
such a life...stunned by it.
I have the joy of this, I hear the
testimony. Somebody hears me preach
on a radio somewhere and God
graciously saves that person. What
would you do in your life that has
that meaning? People say to me,
“When are you going to retire?”
What? What are you talking about?
This isn’t a job, this is a calling
from God. What do I retire from?
What am I going to do? Whatever
Patricia says all the time? That
isn’t going to work. And I can’t fix
anything. I just want to get to the
end, to the top and finish the
course because the course is so
staggeringly glorious.
How could you let go of it if you
get it? If you understand it? If
you’re immersed in it? Bathed in it?
Saturated in it? What do you want
your life to be? Comfortable? You
want to lick your wounds and feel
sorry for yourself and have people
commiserate with you? You want to
wander off with some woman who’s not
your wife for a moment’s pleasure
and forfeit this? Staggering. If you
get it and you understand this, then
you understand what drove Paul
through everything. That’s just one
point, let me give you at least one
more. Probably put some money in the
offering, you deserve it.
Point two, and I know I’m not moving
through this chapter very
fast....point two, he was certain of
a second thing. He was certain of
the superiority of the New Covenant.
Secondly, he was certain that such a
calling is a mercy...such a calling
is a mercy.
How did we get here? How did I get
to this? How did anybody in the
service of the Lord get there? How
did you get to be a Christian? Did
you earn it? Did you achieve it? It
is a mercy. Back to verse 1,
“Therefore since we have this
ministry as we received mercy we
don’t lose heart.” It wasn’t just
the glory of the New Covenant, it is
the staggering reality that it was
given as a ministry to a sinner and
it is a mercy.
Paul writes to Timothy in 1 Timothy
1, “I thank Christ Jesus our Lord
who has strengthened me because He
considered me faithful, putting me
into ministry even though I was
formerly a blasphemer and a
persecutor and a violent aggressor,
yet I was shown mercy.” “I am what I
am,” said Paul, “by the grace of
God.”
It’s a mercy to be in ministry. It’s
a mercy to be sustained in ministry.
Listen to Philippians 2:27, talking
about Epaphroditus, dear companion
of Paul. It says he was sick to the
point of death, but God had mercy on
him. It is a mercy to be in ministry
and it is a mercy to have the
physical health to sustain that
ministry. My life and your life as
you serve the Lord is a mercy. It’s
a mercy to be in ministry. It’s a
mercy to be enabled in ministry.
It’s a mercy to be gifted in
ministry, that is to say something
we don’t deserve. It’s a mercy to be
given strength and health.
Everything in my life is a
mercy...my wife, my children, my
friends, my church...it’s all a
mercy. What do I deserve? Nothing.
You hear pastors sometimes say,
“Well that church doesn’t treat me
the way I should be treated.” I
don’t think you really want to be
treated the way you should be
treated. New Testament, New Covenant
ministry is a mercy. It is a gift of
grace. It is a favor to the utterly
undeserving. It is given...it is
given as a pity to us. God pities us
for our worthlessness and gives us
this ministry in spite of it so that
we in our worthlessness may be
blessed both in time and eternity.
I used to hear a lot about people
having burn out in the ministry. Did
you ever hear about that? People in
the ministry having burn out? You
know, that’s not related to work. I
don’t know ditch diggers that have
burn out. That’s not related to
work. People who have burn out, who
get discouraged and become
despairing and end up like A.W.
Pink, a recluse, not wanting to talk
to a human being because they’re so
angry and despondent, that isn’t a
result of labor, that’s a result of
unrealistic expectations not met. So
if you go into ministry and you
think you’re there because you’ve
earned it. You know, you went to
school and you graduated from
seminary and you do the work and you
have the skill and you’re there
because you have achieved a certain
thing and you expect a certain
response...you’re a candidate for
disappointment. I tell pastors all
the time, the best way to approach
ministry is to start from the fact
that you deserve absolutely nothing.
I don’t. And whatever you get is a
mercy...it’s a mercy. This is why
Paul is so reluctant to defend
himself even though he’s forced to
do it in 2 Corinthians. He hates it
worse than anything, he hates it. He
would rather speak about his
weaknesses. He would rather speak
about his suffering and his failure.
And he says in chapter 10 verse 17,
“He who boasts, let him boast in the
Lord for not he who commends himself
is approved but he whom the Lord
commends.” Ministry is never earned,
it is a mercy of which we will never
ever, ever be worthy. He was driven
by the superiority of the New
Covenant and he was driven by the
mercy of his calling.
Quickly, a third one, just a couple
of minutes on this. A third
certainty, he was certain about the
need for a pure heart. He was
certain about the need for a pure
heart. Verse 2, “But we have
renounced the things hidden because
of shame...” Stop right there. We
don’t lose heart because we have
renounced the secret life. But is
alla, a-l-l-a in English
transliteration, it means on the
other hand. We do not lose heart, we
don’t fall into sin. On the other
hand, we renounce the things that
are hidden because of shame. We
don’t fall into sin...listen...we
don’t fall into moral iniquity, we
don’t behave badly, we don’t defect,
we don’t leave because we don’t
cultivate sin on the inside. James
says in James 1 that lust conceives
on the inside and produces sin.
Now you’ve got to understand. This
is a former Pharisee who is a
well-trained, highly skilled
hypocrite, a master at hidden shame,
a whited sepulcher in the words of
Jesus. White on the outside and dead
men’s bones on the inside. He says
we renounced, timeless aorist, we
renounced. On the other hand, we
don’t defect on the outside, we
don’t abandon ministry, we don’t
give up no matter how difficult it
might be, no matter how great the
temptations because we have
renounced things hidden because of
shame. Meaning, the secret sins that
eat at character. If you’re going to
have an enduring ministry, folks,
I’ll tell you something. You’ve got
to be dealing with sin in your own
heart all the time. Time and truth
go hand in hand, I say that all the
time. Time and truth go hand in
hand, given enough time, the truth
comes out. People who endure
triumphantly, who endure to the end,
who breathe that rare oxygen at the
peak of faithful ministry are those
who have renounced hidden sins,
things that he calls hidden things
because of shame, meaning they’re
too shameful to speak of them. You
would never admit you did them.
You’d never confess to them because
they’re too shameful. Shameful means
ugly, disgraceful, thoughts and
actions that pollute the soul and
lead eventually to the forfeiture of
ministry.
One of my favorite verses in this
whole thing, and I’ll close with
this. Second Corinthians 1, I love
this, and I may develop this a
little more when I talk about this
in a couple of weeks back in
Minneapolis. But in 2 Corinthians 1
verse 12, this is such an
interesting statement to me. Now
remember, Paul’s being attacked by
false teachers. They say he’s
immoral. He’s a liar. He’s a
deceiver. They’ve just...they’re
just giving him an all-out assault
among the Corinthians and the people
are listening to it, some of them
buying into it. How’s he going to
defend himself?
Verse 12, “Our proud confidence is
this,” where am I going to go to
defend myself? “Our proud confidence
is this, the testimony of our
conscience.” Wow! Conscience! What
is he saying? He’s saying, “Say what
you will about me, my conscience
does not convict me...it does not.”
The highest court on earth is your
conscience and it’s put there to
accuse or excuse you by God, Romans
2. He says, “Say what you will, the
testimony of our conscience is that
in holiness and godly sincerity, not
in fleshly wisdom, but in the grace
of God we have conducted ourselves
in the world and especially towards
you.” Wow. Here is a man who won the
battle on the inside and his enemies
could accuse him of anything and
everything and his conscience would
not agree. He could appeal to the
highest court in the world, apart
from the heavenly court, his own
conscience, and say, “I stand before
my own conscience in holiness and
godly sincerity.”
This becomes a testimony that he
gives numbers of times. In Acts
23:1, he says in defending himself,
looking at the council, “Brethren, I
have lived my life with a perfectly
good conscience before God up to
this day.” Let me tell you. The
reason he could say what he said in
2 Timothy 4, “I’ve finished the
course, I kept the faith,” is
because he had lived with a
perfectly good conscience, that is a
conscience that did not accuse him
relentlessly for his hidden secret
sin. In the twenty-fourth chapter
and the sixteenth verse in Acts, in
view of this he said, in view of the
coming resurrection and facing the
Lord, “I also,” he says, “do my best
to maintain always a blameless
conscience before God and before
men.”
Enduring ministries come to people
who win the spiritual battle with
temptation and sin on the inside
over the long haul. And in that
letter, of course, or in that book
of Acts, he is giving that testimony
in worldly tribunals. They would all
understand that. Beloved, if you
want to have an enduring ministry to
the glory of Christ, don’t cultivate
secret sin in your life or your
conscience will torture you. And if
you silence your conscience by
overriding it continually, you will
sear your conscience, turn it into
scar tissue and eventually it will
not function and your sin will
become known.
Charles Wesley wrote a great hymn,
one of the only ones I’ve ever found
about the conscience. This is what
he wrote, “I want a principle within
of watchful, godly fear, a
sensibility of sin, a pain to feel
it near. Help me the first approach
to feel of pride or wrong desire to
catch the wandering of my will and
quench the kindling fire. From Thee
that I no more may stray, no more
Thy goodness grieve. Grant me with
filial awe, I pray, the tender
conscience give.” Wesley pled for a
hypersensitive conscience. It’s no
magic to come to the end of your
life and enduring all that comes in
ministry, it’s all about
understanding the privilege of New
Covenant ministry, it’s all about
understanding that you don’t deserve
anything anyway and all ministry is
a mercy and it’s about cultivating
holiness in your heart.
Now I think I have six more...but I
don’t know if I can get through them
all next week, I will, promise. If
not, when I get back from my trip.
Let’s pray.
Father, we thank You for your
sustaining grace. We know that no
matter how we struggle, You hold on
to us securely forever. You never
leave us or forsake us. You never
allow us to be tempted above that we
are able and always with the
temptation make a way of escape that
we may be able to bear it. Lord,
we’re so grateful for those who have
gone before us and those who
surround us now who are faithful
over the long haul who have enduring
ministry, both those who preach and
teach the Word and those who serve
humbly in the congregations around
this world. We thank You for
faithful believers, men and women,
who to the very end bring no
reproach on Christ, who never lose
their wonder over gospel privilege,
over the mercy of ministry and who
always, always deal with sin on the
inside. Give us confessing hearts,
give us pure hearts, give us the
constant thrill of being privileged
to carry this magnificent gospel in
clay pots as we shall see later in
the passage. Thank You for teaching
us again through the example of Paul
and his words to us, in Christ’s
name. Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "MacArthur's Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
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