In this keynote message from TGC’s 2009 National Conference, John Piper unpacks 2 Timothy 1:1–12 with a powerful call to “fan into flame” the gift of God, urging believers to live with courage, love, and self-control. He highlights the role of grace and the Word in strengthening us to speak and suffer for the gospel without fear or shame.
Drawing from Paul’s example and Timothy’s sincere faith, Piper encourages pastors to feed the flame of God’s calling through deep dependence on God’s power and purpose.
Transcript
The following is an uncorrected transcript generated by a transcription service. Before quoting in print, please check the corresponding audio for accuracy.
John Piper: Would you pray with me, Father in heaven? I believe that in this conference, you do mean to set some young men, mainly men. I think perhaps some women too free. You mean to set them free from some long time bondages. I’m thinking particularly now in this message about bondage to fear so deeply rooted they don’t know where it came from, mother, perhaps, maybe like Timothy or grandmother like Timothy, maybe so deep they don’t know why they act the way they act, why they turn away from opportunity, why they won’t take stands, why they don’t make themselves clear. They don’t know they’re enslaved. They don’t know their slave master. So, God, I believe that now and throughout this conference, you mean to arrive, show up in power through Your word and set people free, amazingly free, they will date from these days liberation. So come do that. May there be a touching of our tongues, like that dumb man, you spit, you touched his tongue and he spoke clearly. So, God come touch tongues, touch hearts. I ask for your help now to be faithful to this paragraph in Second Timothy, in Jesus’ name. Amen, let’s go to Second Timothy, chapter one. My assignment is verses one through 12, so I’m going to read it with you, and then we’ll, we’ll chew on it like a dog.
Where is Second Timothy, by the way, I can’t there it is. Here we go. Paul, an apostle of Christ, Jesus, by the will of God, according to the promise of life that is in Christ. Jesus to Timothy, my beloved child, Grace, mercy and peace from God the Father and Christ, Jesus, our Lord, I thank God whom I serve, as did my ancestors. I would rather they translate that as or from my parents, because I think there’s a link, a link with the mother and grandmother here. I thank God whom I serve as did from my parents with a clear conscience, as I remember you constantly in my prayers, night and day, as I remember your tears, I long to see you that I may be filled with joy. I’m reminded of your sincere faith, a faith that dwelt first in your grandmother, Lois and your mother, Eunice, and now I am sure dwells in you as well. For this reason, I remind you to fan into flame the gift of God, which is in you through the laying on of my hands, for God gave us a spirit, not of fear, but of power and of love and of self control. Therefore, do not be ashamed of the testimony about our Lord nor about me his prisoner, but share in suffering for the gospel by the power of God who saved us and called us to a holy calling, not because of our works, but because of his own purpose and grace which He gave us in Christ, Jesus, before the ages began, and which now has been manifested through the appearing of our Savior, Christ, Jesus, who abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel for which I was appointed a preacher, an apostle and teacher, which is why I suffer as I do, but I am not ashamed, for I know whom I have believed, and I am convinced that he is able to guard until that day what has been entrusted to me. Amen. So what I’m going to do is begin by stating the main point of the paragraph. And when I say main point, I don’t mean most important point. I mean the point. Which everything else supports and explains. If I say I’m hungry because there’s a great famine, it’s much more important to that there’s a great famine than that I’m hungry, but the famine is explaining my hunger. The main point of that sentence is I’m hungry. So know what I mean by main point. I’m looking for that in every text. What is everything arguing for, even if the arguments are massively more important than the point, you’re going to the point. So here’s the point in my words, and then we’ll unpack it. The point of this paragraph is Timothy. So I’m just going to be Paul here. Now I’m going to you’re Timothy, I’m Paul, even if you’re old, you’re you’re Timothy, I’m Paul. Timothy. Keep feeding the flame, the white hot flame of God’s gift in you, namely the gift of unashamed courage in speaking about Christ and suffering for the gospel, that’s the main point of this paragraph. I’ll say it again. Timothy. Keep on feeding the white hot flame of God’s gift in you, namely, unashamed courage to speak openly of Christ and to suffer for the gospel. That’s the point of this paragraph. Everything else is arguing for it or explaining it. So here’s what we’re going to do. I’m going to open four parts, four aspects of this passage, I’m going to lay it out for you in four steps. Number one, where does that point come from? Number two, is it the point only of this paragraph or the whole book? Three, how does Paul intend for us to feed the white hot flame of his gift in us. And fourth, let’s do it. Let’s take how he did it, and do it. Okay, that’s where we’re going. Four, four steps. Number one, seeing the main point in the text, you’ve just heard me say, what I think the main point is, you shouldn’t give a rip. What I think the main point is, and you should preach in such a way so that people don’t give a rip. What you think the main point is, all that matters is if they can see it, okay, preach that way. Preach that way. Your people get bored because they hear you. Generalize, generalize, generalize. You, you, you show me the text like a dog or whatever. So where do I get it? I get it from verses six through eight. I’ll read it. Then show you all the pieces of the of the point in the text. For this reason, verse six, for this reason, I remind you to fan the flame of the gift of God, which is in you through the laying on of my hands, for God has given us a spirit, not of fear but of power and of love and of self control. Therefore, do not be ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me his prisoner, but share in suffering for the gospel by the power of God. Timothy, first part, keep on feeding the white hot flame. That’s verse six. First part of the verse, I remind you to fan the flame. All I do is add a couple of words to draw out what’s here. Namely, I’m adding the words white hot, there’s hot, and then there’s hot. You say I got a fever, I’m hot. I touch your forehead. You’re not hot. Put my hand in a fire. That’s hot. You’re not hot. The fire is hot.
This is the flame here. Jesus spits lukewarm preachers out of his mouth. There’s hot, and then there’s hot. And Jesus hates lukewarm. They gag him. He spits them out. So I add the words. White Hot. Just to get it hot, I’m saying hot, not just hot. It’s white hot. He is. Timothy, stir this thing. Breathe on this use oxygen. Do what you have to do to make this thing burn with White Hot. Hot. Paul said in Romans 11, chapter 12, verse 11, do not be slothful, but boil in the spirit. Zeontes, boil in the spirit. Don’t fizzle. Boil in the spirit. Same idea. So the second thing I do is add the words keep on. Keep on feeding Timothy the white hot flame. Why do I say keep on? Because the problem here, in in this paragraph, is not that Timothy is having a sudden once in a lifetime low, which needs a single Fanning. He’s having a typical repeated low, and you do too. And the present tense of this infinitive means keep on fanning it. Timothy, keep on fanning it. Do whatever you have to do. Get up every morning and do this. Don’t die in the ministry. Don’t go cold in the ministry. So he just had a few words. Why hot? Keep on and you see where I’m getting the point from verse six. So Timothy, keep on feeding the white hot flame of what the gift that is in you. God’s gift is in you. For this reason, I’m still in verse six. For this reason, I remind you to fan the flame of the gift of God. God gave Timothy a gift. It includes fire, the ongoing existence of that fire depends on Timothy’s obedience to verse six. That’s the way the gifts of God are. They’re not automatic. If you obey verse six, my gift in you will burn. If you don’t, it won’t, unless you think that God is held hostage by Timothy’s weakness, such that he can’t make his gift effective or successful in blessing Timothy’s church and reaching the lost, I’ll just remind you, and then we’ll see it in the text in a few minutes, that God makes the flame of his gift dependent on the feeding of the flame that Timothy does, and he makes the feeding of the flame dependent on his grace. He’s not held hostage by Timothy’s weakness. But I haven’t shown you that yet, so you shouldn’t believe it. That’s just Augustine. That’s all that is who cares about him?
Timothy, keep feeding the white hot flame of God’s gift, namely, the Unashamed courage to speak openly and to suffer for the gospel now that comes from verses seven and eight. Let’s start reading in the middle of verse six the gift of God, which is in you through the laying on of my hands, for God has given us a spirit, not of fear, but of power, love, self control, therefore, don’t be ashamed. So God’s given a spirit, and the spirit is not of fear, but what’s the opposite of fear, courage? Yes, it’s powerful courage, loving courage, self controlled or sober minded courage. But the focus here is on the courage because of what follows, namely, therefore, don’t be ashamed. Don’t be ashamed. Have. Of unashamed courage. That’s the gift God gave Timothy, verse eight, therefore, do not be ashamed of the testimony about our Lord or of me his prisoner, but share in the suffering for the gospel. So don’t be ashamed of speaking about Christ, and don’t be ashamed of the circumstances of others who’ve spoken about him and now are in shameful situations like jail, and be ready to suffer because you will. You suffer second half of verse eight, share in suffering for the gospel. Embrace this Timothy to walk away from this. Embrace it. Walk into it. God’s given you a gift for this. He’s given you a gift of unashamed courage to speak openly and suffer well. Notice the last phrase of verse eight, by the power of God. So when all your feeding this flame, this white hot flame of God’s gift, when all your feeding is done, and your flame burns brightly, and you are speaking boldly, and you are suffering, well, know where it came from. Came from God. God did this in you. He didn’t just start it way back there in the ordination service. He’s doing it by God’s power. You are suffering, and thus the feeding that is fanning that suffering, sustaining flame is God’s work. Know that, Timothy, you’re not left to yourself here. When I’m telling you to feed that flame, I’m telling you to depend on power, it’s coming from outside you. How does Timothy get the gift of this power? We’re still unpacking the main point. We’re still on point one in the outline. Let’s read verse six again. Get it through the laying on of my hands. This is where the gift came from through the laying on of my hands. For this reason, I remind you to fan the flame of the gift of God, which is in you through the laying on of my hands. This is almost the same as First Timothy, 414, do not neglect the gift you have which was given you by prophecy when the Council of Elders laid their hands on you. So Paul and the elders are laying their hands on this young man, setting him apart for ministry. And here’s my picture of what happened. And this picture is created not out of my imagination, but out of pieces of the text, which I think you’ll hear. Timothy may be kneeling, they’re gathered around him, and they’ve put their hands on him, and they start praying that God would come. It’s not automatic, it’s not some kind of artificial ceremony. God come. Come, gift this man beyond anything he’s known in his life so far, we all know Timothy’s weaknesses. He needs a fresh, unusual gifting come. So they’re praying, and God speaks to Paul, and Paul speaks over Timothy words something like this. Timothy, in answer to our prayers, God, the Almighty, is going to give you a flaming unashamed courage for Christ beyond anything you have ever known. And at that moment, I think Timothy weeps, wouldn’t you? The reason I think he. Weeps is because of verse four. Paul says to him, as I remember your tears out of the blue. Where’d that come from? You read commentator after commentator after commentator. You know what they all say when they said goodbye to each other. Say what? Give me one clue in the text that that’s why he cried. I got clues. I mean, you’re young. This is the most authoritative human being on the planet with his hands on you, telling you, God just told him, you’re going to be amazingly courageous and you’re going to suffer. How could you not cry? I mean, it would just be so absolutely overwhelm me. So I can’t prove it. I can’t prove that’s what verse four is talking about, but I’m sure not going to jump outside the text to say whoa. I think they said goodbye one time. You
a young man, against all your predilections, against all your weaknesses, against all your timidity, you’re going to speak for me unashamedly and courageously, and you will suffer now this is the point in the message where I prayed God would begin if he hasn’t already do that right now for you,
because I’m Paul and I’m old enough to be the father of Most of you, and I just want this to happen. Real bad for you. I don’t have my hands on you, but God does, and be asking the Lord in the next minutes, do it. I’m enslaved. I’m a chicken. Over and over again, I wimp out in what I should preach and what I should say on the plane or the bus or in the classroom. So there it is. That’s the main point of the text, Timothy, keep feeding the white hot flame of God’s gift in your life, namely the gift of unashamed courage to speak openly for Christ and to suffer well for the gospel. That’s the point of the whole paragraph, unpacked, and that’s the first point of my outline. Number two is that an isolated thought of paragraph number one, or is it the burden of the book? Now my prayer here is that as I give you a litany of 14 restatements of this point in this book, God will come down. I’m just going to read them, bullet them, and they come for me like hammer blows on a nail on a cross. 116, 116, onesiphorus was not ashamed of my chains. Two Three, share in suffering as a good shoulder of Christ. Two nine, I am suffering for the gospel, bound with chains like a criminal. 210 I endure everything for the sake of the elect. 212 if we endure, we will reign with him. 215 do your best to present yourself a worker who does not need to be ashamed. 224 the Lord’s servant must be patiently enduring evil. Three, one, in the last days will come times of difficulty. 310, you have followed my persecutions and sufferings. 312, all who desire to live a godly life in Christ will be persecuted. Four, five, as for you endure suffering. Four, six, I am already on the point of being poured out like a drink offering. Four Seven, I have fought the good fight. 416 At my first defense, nobody stood by me. End of Book except the Lord. It’s the point of the book. You. Here this. This is what Paul is so jealous to see happen in this young man. And what I am so jealous to see happen in you. There’s way more in the book, and you will hear what six messages on this and Oh, May it never, ever let you go. May 2 Timothy never, ever let you go if you are in the Ministry for an easy, secure, esteemed, untroubled, comfortable, safe life, get out of the ministry quick. And if you’re single, don’t marry a woman who wants that. There are a lot of glorious young women who want to partner with you in those risks if you don’t have them at your church, come to my church, there aren’t enough men to go around for these women. I women are more radical, more mature, more everything, almost. It’s a hard road to follow Jesus you would follow me. Must take up his cross, deny Himself. Whoever would save his life will lose it. Whoever loses his life for my sake and the Gospels will find it. The Calvary road is a hard road just happens to be the most joyful road there is Timothy keep feeding the white hot flame of God’s gift of unashamed courage to speak openly of Christ and to suffer for the gospel.
How do you experience let’s go to number three, point number three. The point number three is how Paul intends for Timothy to feed the white hot flame of this gift. How do you do it? We’ve seen the end of verse eight as the first part of the answer. By the power of God. You’re going to suffer by the power of God. You’re going to be unashamed by the power of God. This flame is going to burn hot by the power of God, and therefore your feeding of it is by the power of God. And so the question now simply shifts over. How do you get that power? What would you do right now, if we were done, I just gave you 15 minutes to get it. Go get it. Because this text says, feed it by the power. So go get it. Do it. What would you do? The answer comes in linking chapter one, verse two with two. Verse one, I got to sneak into phil reichen text. I’m gonna sneak out again quick. Don’t worry. I’m don’t worry. Won’t say too much. Got to get into chapter two. Look at look at chapter two. Verse one, you then my child be strengthened. Now, that’s the power of verse eight. All right, you’re going to burn and you’re going to speak and you’re going to suffer by the power of God in verse chapter two, verse one says, Be powerful. Be strengthened. Get that by the grace that is in Christ, Jesus. Now quick, jump out of that text. Okay, that’s Phil’s business, but I’m going back up, back up to verse two of chapter one, because what I want to know now is, okay, you’re telling me that in order to feed the flame of this gift of courage, I have to have the power of God. And you’ve just told me in chapter two verse one, that I’m empowered through the grace that is in Christ, Jesus. How do I get the grace? You just keep you just keep pushing me out or down or up. How do I get it? Because you’re telling me I got to have power, and now you’re telling me the power comes through the grace. So how do I get that? And verse two is the key, seeing it big. Verse two to Timothy, my beloved child, Grace, mercy, peace from God the Father and Christ, Jesus, our Lord. You.
My do we breeze over these introductions? Here’s something I did not see. What book was I working on? Forget, I didn’t see it until about three or four years ago. Every. Every single epistle of the apostle Paul, all 13 of them, without exception, begins with some form of grace to you, all of them, no exceptions. Grace to You, all of them, without exception. All 13 end with some form of grace. Be with you. Why? Why to you at the beginning of the letter and with you, without exception at the end. This is big. Here’s my answer. Very few commentaries comment on this. I don’t know of anybody. I mean, I’ve just missed it if it’s out there. So test all things. Hold fast to what is good. My answer is, Paul is very aware that as he begins to write or he knows they begin to read person or church, as they read his apostolic word, grace is flowing to them, to them. Grace is coming to them as they are absorbing the truths that he is saying, writing they’re hearing, and when they get to the end, and he pictures the epistle finishing, the church is about ready to dismiss or discuss or whatever they did after They read the letter or the individual, he says, As you end my letter, the grace that’s been coming to you through it will go with you. Hold to it by faith. Hold to it by faith. It will go with you. You go back out into the world where you face all the problems. Been so nice here to hear the epistle read, and now you go that grace, that grace will go with you. So my answer to the question, okay, you’re saying that feed the flame, Timothy, feed the white hot flame of the gift of God, which is unashamed courage to speak and suffer. You’re saying feed it by power. Okay, where’s the power? You will be empowered by the grace that is in Christ. Jesus, okay, where’s the grace? My word mediates the grace. I’m speaking the grace into your life, my word is the grace I have not received the spirit of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, that I might understand the things that are from God, and I impart them in words not taught by human wisdom, but taught by the Holy Spirit. That’s the point of verse one. Timothy, I am an apostle of Christ, Jesus. I am an authorized spokesman of the living, reigning all authoritative Christ. And I didn’t choose to be it. I was chosen. It’s by the will of God. And the focus of my apostolic, divine, inspired Word is not just anything under the sun. It is life, and you have that life, and that life is sustained. It’s fanned into flame with courage again and again and again and again. As you listen to me, you come back to this book again and again. You and then my young pastors, this is what your people need from you. There’s no other way to mediate grace to your people that last goes deep when it’s done, will be heard. Grace will be with you as you go out. That’s a throw away phrase if they haven’t heard the word of God. This is such a powerful summons to hear and preach the Word of God. Timothy, do you remember the beach of Miletus? You remember this? You were there. You were in the elders that were there. You remember what I said? Don’t you remember what I said? I said, Acts 2032, I commend you to God and to the word of His grace, which is powerful to build your courage. I added your courage. That’s all I added. I’ll read it without my addition, just so you feel the full. Biblical force of it, I commend you to God, you elders and to the word of His grace, which is powerful to build you and courage is one of the things that has to be built again and again and again. Word grace, power through word so my answer to the question, how do you feed the white hot flame of unashamed courage Timothy is that you feed it by giving heed seriously, deeply meditatively, contemplatively, with faith to my word, which has as its central truth, Grace, which will be the means of your power, which will be the means of your courage, and you will speak and suffer Well, Last point number four, okay, if that’s the way it happens, main point keep on feeding the white hot flame of the gift of unashamed courage to speak openly and suffer Well, if that’s how it happens, then what sorts of things did Paul say, in addition to how it happens, to make it happen, that are here, and there are three, and we’ll, we’ll do them. Number one, he said that Timothy’s faith was authentic. And he’s speaking, he says, as a father loving his son,
your faith is authentic. I’m speaking to you as my beloved child, and I’m your dad. I’ll read that to you. It’s verses three through five. I thank God whom I serve, from my parents with a clear conscience, as I remember you constantly in my prayers, night and day, as I remember your tears, I long to see you that I may be filled up with joy. I’m reminded of your authentic, sincere, unhypocritical faith, a faith that dwelt first in your grandmother, Lois, and in your mother, Eunice, and now I’m sure, I’m sure, dwells in you. What’s all that about? Here’s my paraphrase. You, you prepare a sermon. You, you know what to say. I mean, good night. I don’t ever preach on text this long, ever. I mean, this is just horrendously difficult for me. I want a verse, a phrase to chew on. I mean, I’m feeling like I’m just jumping from piece to piece. This is not easy. So I’m reading these, these, these verses, three through five. How’s that fit in? What’s why is this throwaway affection, or is it really, really part of how a young man becomes bald? So here’s my paraphrase. Timothy, I’m Paul now you’re Timothy. Timothy, I believe with all my heart Your faith is real, even though cool. Maybe that wasn’t on the video now it is. I just spilled the water. Start over. Timothy, I believe with all my heart that your faith is real, even though it came from your grandmother and not your dad, even though it came from your mom and not your dad and. I want you to know my faith too. My ministry is from my parents. It’s okay. Don’t feel bad about this. Glory in it, glory in the lineage. But I know, Timothy, your dad wasn’t there for you in in these matters. He was a he never believed. We know that. I’m not making that up. That’s from the book of Acts. He’s never mentioned there, physically, maybe certainly not there spiritually. So that this man, this young man, is becoming what he is as a future Minister exactly the way I did well, exactly is way overstated. I’m resonating with this because my dad was away from home at least three fourths of my young life. I am a mama’s boy, and if, if Jesus were a psychologist, he could explain probably most of my problems from that, and I’m not kidding, the kinds of fears, the kinds of timidity, the way I relate to my wife and my expectations are all shaped by being a mama’s boy. I Yeah, so maybe I’m reading too much in maybe I’ve been able to see what’s really there. Paul is aware that he’s got a grandmother. He’s got a mother. They shaped this boy. His timidity and his difficulty with boldness may be rooted right there mine, I think probably was, is so he is not simply going to say, my faith is Coming from my parents like yours came from your mother. We don’t have to be second handers because of that. It’s real. It’s authentic. I’m talking about your faith being authentic. Unhypocritus. There’s no hypocrisy. I’m looking at you, Timothy, as a mama’s boy and a grandmamas boy. And I’m saying you’re real. I’m telling you. You’re real, my beloved son. Verse two, my beloved Son, you didn’t have a dad. I’m him. Cannot tell you how many young men come to me standing down there or whatever, and take my hand with earnestness, sometimes tears, you’re my dad. That’s scary. I never met this kid, 22 years old, 2530 my oldest son is 36 years old, so if you’re under 36 such a statement is not stupid, it’s biblical. It’s heavy. Timothy, the grace that I’m delivering to you with my words right now as I write this letter is coming from a Heavenly Father and flowing through the words of your spiritual earthly father. That’s what I am. That’s what you are, and that’s grace. Timothy and I speak like that to you, those words to you that’s grace and power and flame and courage. I think that’s what’s going on in verses three through five. I
second, there are, I’m working on three final things that Paul says to do, the word that produces the grace, that produces the power, that produces the courage, that’s where we are. Number two, Paul gives himself as a pattern of courageous suffering with confidence in God’s sustaining grace. Verses 11 and 12, I was appointed a preacher and apostle and teacher, which is why I suffer as I do. But I am not ashamed, for I know whom I have believed, and I am convinced that he is able to guard until that day what has been entrusted to me So Timothy, i. When you speak as a preacher or a teacher, I’m an apostle, you’re not but two out of three. When you speak as a preacher or a teacher, you’re going to suffer. Consider my life. It has not been easy, but I’m not ashamed, and I don’t want you to be ashamed. He’s putting himself as an example, sitting in prison, shameful to be in prison, shameful, even if you’re there for good reasons. It’s just don’t be ashamed of me as God’s prisoner. I’m not ashamed. I’m sitting here glorying in my king. The reason we don’t have to be ashamed Timothy Is this the one who entrusted us with this gift and gospel, the trust, the deposit, which you’ll hear about in these next messages, this deposit, the reason we don’t have To be ashamed is because the Gospel is powerful. He is. Let’s read it, verse 12. I’m not ashamed, for I know whom I have believed, and I am convinced that he is powerful. It’s the same word showing up again. He’s powerful to guard until that day, what’s being deposited, which means, if it takes fire to fulfill my calling to be courageous in speaking and suffering, he gives it he’s faithful. That’s how I know we don’t have to be ashamed or fearful about our suffering. He’s put this deposit, this gift, in us, and he’s jealous for the gift of the gospel, he’s jealous for the gift of courage, he’s jealous for the gift of power, he’s jealous for the gift of grace. He’s not putting these things in us to take a vacation. He’s going to be there. He is powerful to guard until that day what has been entrusted to us. So Timothy, look at me. Your dad sitting in jail and not ashamed. You don’t have to be either. You never had a dad to model this for you. I’m doing it right now. I’m showing you what it is to be a man Timothy, to be a man in jail, to be a man shamed by everybody and not ashamed. Learn from me. Timothy, you didn’t have him to learn from learn from me. Lastly, number three, you know, when I started by saying, I’m going to tell you the main point, and it may not be the most important sentence. This is the most important sentence. It’s not the main point. I mean, Paul’s always doing this, right? He’s always saying, I’m hungry because there’s a great famine. Well, tell us about the famine. Well, he does lots of times. But the point is, I’m hungry or fear the flame. And now he’s going to, he’s going to go way, way back and down to put put a support under this courage that boggles your theological brain. But I don’t have enough time to unpack the boggling. I’ll just boggle you with it. Let’s read verses nine and 10. So the power, this is the power, the power of God. You’re going to be fanning the flame with this power and courageous with this power and speaking with this power and suffering with this power, the power of God who saved us and called us to a holy calling, not because of our works, but because of his own purpose and grace, which he gave us in Christ, Jesus, before the ages began, and which Now has been manifested through the appearing of our Savior, Christ, Jesus, who abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel. That’s the kind of power with which you feed the flame. That’s the food the Fauci. Beginning that will show the grace which will produce the power which sustains the courage that enables you to speak and suffer with White Hot passion. So what does this mean? What does verse as nine and 10 mean in a few minutes? Listen, Timothy, listen very carefully the grace of God referred to in verse one, which is the means by which you are empowered in chapter two, verse one, the grace of God that’s coming to you through the writing of this letter, the grace that makes you powerful, the grace that saved you, the grace that called you. This Grace was not given to you when you were converted. It was given to you before the world was created.
Takes your breath away, creates so many problems you wouldn’t believe maybe you would. Timothy, your name was written before the foundation of the world in the book of the life of the Lamb who was slain, Revelation 13, eight, God set his face to make you his And to make you courageous before the stars were made.
This will help a mommy’s boy get serious. This will give put some steel in his spine if he starts to wimp out. God Almighty set his favor on me to give me everything I needed to be saved and called and empowered and graced and made courageous in speaking and suffering before anything else was I mean, Paul doesn’t throw sentences like that around for nothing. This is the sort of thing your weak people need. You run away from them. Shake them. Shake them. They’re so bored with everything. Shake them with the with the weight of a sentence like that. Now, why did he say it? I mean, why would he stir up such a hornet’s nest of controversy? Why does Paul talk this way? He tells us why. He says, I want you to know with crystal clarity that your salvation, your calling into a life of courage and speaking and suffering, is Not based on according to anything you do feel, think or act. Now, the reason I say it so radically and rule out everything he thinks, everything he feels, everything he does, is because of the contrast that Paul speaks in this verse. The contrast is not between not your works, but your faith. That’s not what he says. He has to say he saved you and he called you not according to your works but according to your faith. Would be a good Pauline way to talk, and that’s not the way he talks here. He says, It’s not according to your works, it’s according to God’s purpose and grace. Sounds like Romans, nine, one to 13, sounds like Romans, 11, verses, five and six. Sounds like Ephesians, two, eight to 10. The contrast is Timothy. I want to strip you of every possible reliance for salvation, calling power grace, boldness, courage, shamelessness. Speaking, I want to strip you of every. Every expectation that those things are ultimately dependent on you in any sense at all, that’s a good place to stand as a mama’s boy is for me, I you, when Christ died for you, Timothy to become your punishment, to become your perfection, and then rose again and abolished death and brought everlasting life to light. He manifested in that that gospel he manifested in that that his eternal purpose was to be gracious to you from all eternity. What you should see in the Gospel, what you should see in Christ, crucified, covering your sins, providing your righteousness, triumphing over death, opening eternal life. What you should see in that is from this text, from eternity, God planned to do you good forever, if you’ll have it. Keep on feeding the white hot flame of God’s gift, the Unashamed courage to speak the gospel openly and to suffer for the gospel. Don’t be afraid, because I am sure that he will do for you what he’s done for me. Paul says, and I say with him, he will rescue you from every evil deed, and he will bring you safely to his heavenly kingdom. To him, be glory forever and ever. Amen. Let’s pray so Father, perhaps now would be the time when the Liberator comes. Let’s just wait. My clock here says, I have three minutes I would like to be quiet for a little bit of that. Would you let’s just be quiet and ask God to do what in your life needs to be done with this. If Grace has come to you in the ministry of the word brothers, it will go with you. Amen.
John Piper (BA, Wheaton College; BD, Fuller Theological Seminary; ThD, University of Munich) serves as founder and lead teacher at Desiring God and is chancellor of Bethlehem College & Seminary. For 33 years, Piper served as pastor of Bethlehem Baptist Church, and he is a Council member of The Gospel Coalition. He has authored more than 50 books, and more than 30 years of his preaching and writing are available free of charge at Desiring God.




