CHAPTER SEVEN
IN HIS LETTERS TO THE THESSALONIANS
... our gospel came not unTo you in word only, but also in power, and in
the Holy Spirit, and in much assurance (I Thess. 1. 5).
having suffered therefore, and been shamefully entreated, as ye know, at
Philippi, we waxed bold in our God to speak unto you the gospel of God in much
conflict (ii. 2).
"...we have been approved of God to he entrusted with
the gospel... " (ii. 4).
"...being affectionately desirous of you, we were well pleased to impart unto
you, not the gospel of God only, but also our own souls ... For ye remember,
brethren, our labor and travail: working night and day, that we might not
burden any of you, we preached unto you the gospel of God,, (ii. 8, 9).
"...we ... sent Timothy, our brother and God's minister in the gospel of
Christ..." (iii. 1, 2).
"...rendering vengeance to them that know not God,
and to them that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus
(II Thess. i. 8).
...whereunto he called you through our gospel, to the obtaining of the glory of
our Lord Jesus Christ " (ii. 14).
WE SEE THAT THE, GOSPEL has quite a place in these letters. We seek now to
discover the real meaning of the gospel, that is, the essential meaning of the
good tidings, from the standpoint of these letters and the Thessalonian
believers, and we shall be helped to that understanding if we take a look at
the spiritual history, life and state of these believers in Thessalonica.
THE THESSALONIAN CHRISTIANS AN EXAMPLE
You will at a glance see what a special regard Paul had for them. He
repeatedly uses words such as these: " We give thanks to God always for you all
". Both in the first and second letters he speaks like that (I. i. 2 ; II. i.
3, ii. 13). " We give thanks to God for you ". And then he says about them a
very wonderful thing, which gives us a definite lead in this consideration. He
says in the first letter, chapter i, verse 7: " Ye became an ensample to all
that believe in Macedonia and in Achaia ". That is something to say about a
company of the Lord's people, and it leads us at once to ask the question-How
were they an ensample? It was evidently not only to those immediately referred
to, in all Macedonia and Achaia, for these letters remain unto this day, and
they therefore represented that which is an example for all the Lord's people.
If that was true of them, then the gospel must have meant something very much
where they were concerned. It must have had a very special form of expression
in them, and so we seek to answer the question: How were they " an ensample to
all that believe "?
A PURE SPIRIT AND A CLEAN HEART
We find the answer in the first place here in this very first chapter. It
was in their realism in reception of the gospel. " Our gospel came unto you
not in word only, hut also in power, and in the Holy Spirit, and in much assur-
ance ". And again: " when ye received from us the word of the message, even the
word of God, ye accepted it not as the word of men, hut, as it is in truth, the
word of God " (ii, 13). Now that represents a very clean start; and if we are
going to come to the place of these Thessalonian believers, if the gospel is to
have that expression in us that it had in them, if it is going to be true in
our case that we are an example to all them that believe, then it is very im-
portant that we have a clean start.
For us, of course, if we have advanced in the Christian life without
becoming such exemplary believers, that may mean retracing our steps in order
to start again somewhere where we have gone wrong; clearing away a lot of
rubbish and starting at a certain point all over again. But I am thinking also
of young Christians who have recently made the start. You are really at the
beginning, and we are most concerned about you, because you may meet many old
Christians who are not by any means an example to all that believe. I am sorry
to have to say that, but it is quite true, and we do not want you to be like
that. We want you to be exemplary Christians ; those of whom the Apostle Paul,
if he were present, could say, 'I thank God always for you'. It would be a
great thing, would it not, if that could be said of us-? 'Thank God for him!
Thank God for her! Thank God that ever we came into touch with this one, and
that one! I always thank God for them-they are an example of what Christians
ought to be!'
Now, that is the desire of the Lord, that is our desire for you, and it
should be the desire of our hearts for ourselves. Although we may not have
succeeded, let us not give up hope that some may yet give thanks for us, that
we may be an example, that in some things, at any rate, it may be true of us as
it was of these. Paul says here: " Ye became imitators of us " (I Thess. i.
6). The Lord help us to be such an example that we could invite others, in
some respects at least, to imitate us, without any spiritual pride.
Well, if this is to be so, the start must be a clean one. You see, quite
evidently, as these Thessalonians listened to Paul preaching the good tidings,
their minds and hearts were free from prejudice. They would not have come to
the conclusion to which they did come if there had been any prejudice, if they
had already closed down the matter in their minds, or come to a set position.
They were open in heart from the outset, ready for whatever was of God, and
that created a capacity for discerning what was of God. You will never know
whether a thing is of God if you entertain prejudice, if you have already
judged it, if already you have come to a fixed position. If you are settled in
your mind, closed in your heart, harbour suspicions and fears, you have already
sabotaged the work of the Holy Spirit, and you will never know if the thing is
of God. You must be open-hearted, open-minded, free from suspicions and
prejudices, and ready in this attitude-'Now, if there is anything of the Lord,
anything of God, I am ready for that, no matter through whom it comes, how it
comes, where it comes. If it is of God, I am ready for it'. That creates a
disposition to which the Holy Spirit can bear witness, and makes things
possible for the Lord.
Now, as we shall see, that is exactly how these Thessaionians were. They
received the word, yes, in much affliction, but they received it as the
Word of God, not as the word of man. Because of their purity of spirit,
they had the sense-'This thing is right, this is of God!' That was a good
start. As I said earlier, it may be that some of us will have to get back
somewhere to make that start again. To any reading these words, who may
be of advanced years in the Christian life, I would say: Dear friend, if
you have anywhere on the road become in any way affected, infected, by
prejudice and suspicion, you have closed the door to anything further of
God. Let us clearly understand that. It is true that-
'The ]Lord hath yet more light and -truth
To break forth from His Word'.
We have not yet exhausted all that the Lord has to show us in His Word; but He
will only show it to the pure in heart. " The pure in heart ... shall see God
" (Matt. v. 8).
These Thessalonians, then, had a pure spirit from the start.
MUTUALITY AND MATURITY
The next thing that we notice about them, after their realism in
reception, was their mutuality and maturity two things which always go
together. In both these letters, that which the Apostle speaks about perhaps
more than anything else is the wonderful love between these believers. " The
love of each one of you did toward one another aboundeth " (II Thess. i. 3).
He is speaking all the way through about their mutual love. And going
alongside of that was their spiritual growth. You see, love always builds up
(I Cor. viii. 1). This kind of love, mutual love, always means spiritual
increase. We can see how true that is if we view it from the opposite
standpoint. Little, personal, petty, selfish, separated, individual
Christians, or companies or bodies of Christians who are exclusive and closed,
and have not a wide open heart of love to all saints -how. small they are, how
cramped they are. It is true. And it is in this mutual love one for another,
and growing and increasing love one for another, that spiritual growth takes
place. Do not forget that. If you are concerned about the spiritual growth of
your own heart, your own life, and that of others, it will be along the line of
love, mutual love, and you are the one to begin it. Mutuality and maturity
always go together.
SUFFERING AND SERVICE
And then, in the third place, you will find that they were characterized
by suffering and service, and this is a wonderful Divine combination. It is
something that is not natural. The Apostle had much to say about it, as you
will see if you underline the word 'suffering' in these letters, and note his
references to their sufferings and their afflictions. They " received the word
in much affliction (I Thess. i. 6). He speaks about their sufferings, and he
describes those sufferings. They in Thessalonica were suffering along the same
lines and for the same causes as their brethren in Judaea, he said (ii. 14).
Now, in judaea, that is, in the country of the Jews, you know how the
Christians suffered. Christ Himself suffered at the hands of the Jews ;
Stephen was martyred at the hands of the Jews ; the Church met its first
persecutions in Judaea in Jerusalem, and they were scattered abroad by the
persecutions that arose there over Stephen; and Paul says, 'Now you are
suffering in that way'. Evidently there was in Thessalonica much persecution,
much opposition; threats and all sorts of difficulties-the kind of thing, per-
haps, where it was very difficult for them to do business and get jobs, all
because the business was in the hands of those who had no room for this
Christianity and for these Christians.
But with all that severe suffering, and with all their much affliction ", they
did not become introspective. That is the peril of suffering. If you are
suffering frustration, opposition, persecution, or if the best jobs are given
to someone else, and so on, the natural thing is to turn in upon yourself, to
be very sorry for yourself, to begin to nurse your trouble and be wholly
occupied with yourself. But here, suffering led to service.
The Apostle says that the Word went forth from them, not only through all
the region of Macedonia and Achaia, but throughout the whole country (i. 8).
Their suffering -what did it do? It made them turn outwards, and say, 'There
are others everywhere in need, in suffering, as we: let us see what we can do
for them'. That is the way to respond to the gospel, is it not? That speaks of
the glorious gospel! The gospel had become to them such good news that it had
the effect upon them of delivering them entirely from all self-pity in the
deepest affliction. Let us take that to heart.
PATIENCE AND HOPE
Furthermore the Apostle speaks of their " patience of hope " (i. 3), and
that simply means that they did not easily give up. That counts for something,
you know. You are having a difficult time; everything and everybody is against
you. It is so easy to give up-just to give up; to draw out of the race, or
drop your hands in the fight, and say, 'It is no use-better give it all up'.
But no: these Christians had patience and hope. They did not easily give up,
they' stuck to it', and we shall see that they had a hope that kept them
sticking to it.
Such were these who were 'an example to all that believe'. In them we see
the constituents of exemplary Christians, and they are the true features of the
gospel. You see, the gospel is for Christians in difficulty! It is not only
for the unsaved, but for Christians when they are in difficulty or in
suffering. It is still good news. If we lose the 'good news' element in the
gospel, if it loses for us its keen edge as' good tidings', we become stale; we
come to the place where we 'know it all'. If we lose that sense, then when
trouble comes we give up, we let go; but if to have come to a saving knowledge
of the Lord Jesus is still for us the greatest thing in all the world and all
the universe, then we get through.
DIFFICULTIES BECAUSE OF TEMPERAMENT
Now, because difficulties always correspond to our dispositions, that is,
what we are always gives rise to the nature of our trials, so it was with the
Thessalonians. Nothing is a trial to you unless you are made in a certain
way. Something that is a trial to you might never be a trial to me at all. Or
it might be the other way round. What might be a terrible thing to me and
knock me right off my balance, other people could go through quite calmly, and
wonder what I am making such a,fuss about. Our troubles and our trials very
largely take their rise from the way we are made.
Now I want you to follow this. The thoroughness of these Thessalonian
believers led them into peculiar testings. And that is always the case. If
you are not thoroughgoing, you will not have thorough-going difficulties. You
will get through more or less easily. If you are thoroughgoing, you are going
to meet thorough-going testings. They arise quite naturally out of your own
attitude or your own disposition.
Now, you know that human nature and constitution is made in various ways.
You know in general that we are not all alike. That is just as well! But we
can to a very large extent classify human nature into different categories
-what we call temperaments. In the main there are seven different
temperaments, or categories of human constitution. I am not going to deal with
that in detail, but there is a very useful point here on this matter. These
Thessalonians were quite clearly of the ' practical ' temperament, and the
keenness of their particular sufferings was largely found because they were
like that. I do not, of course, mean that other people do not suffer, but they
suffer in other ways.
You see, the standard of life of the practical temperament is quick and
direct returns. We must see something for our money very quickly! It is the
business temperament, the temperament of commercial life. The things which
govern this temperament are quick successes. 'Success' is the great word of
the practical temperament. It is success that succeeds. The successful are
the idols of this particular kind of make-up.
There is not much sentiment here. These people cannot stop for sentiment.
Things that are not what they call practical are regarded by them as just
'sentimental'. They are not so, of course, but that is how Martha reacted to
Mary. Mary was not sentimental but Martha thought she was, because Martha was
so preeminently practical. Again, there is very little imagination in this
make-up. It rides roughshod over all sensibilities. It does not stop to think
how people feel about what is said; it just goes right on.
And then it sometimes makes terrible mistakes-it confuses things. For
instance, it mistakes inquisitiveness for depth, because it has always to be
asking endless questions. The 'practical' people are always asking questions,
questions, questions; they keep you going with questions all the time,
thinking that this is an evidence of spiritual depth. They think that they are
not just taking things at their surface value, they are being very practical,
as well as deep. But there is a good deal of difference between inquisi-
tiveness and depth. It is very possible to confuse things.
Now we want to get to understand these Thessalonians and the effect of the
gospel. Can we not now picture them, in the light of what I have said? They
responded quickly, and in a very practical way, and in a very thorough-going
way. One of the major themes to which they responded was the coming of the
Lord. Right at the beginning Paul says: " Ye turned unto God from idols, to
serve a living and true God, and to wait for his Son from heaven " (i. 9, 10).
It was a big thing with them, this coming of the ]Lord, and they had concluded
that the Lord's coming would take place, at latest, in their own lifetime.
That was their practical reaction to the gospel, and it was good in its way.
But you know that these two letters of Paul are ah=t entirely occupied with
correcting a false element in that reaction.
Now you find them in trouble-trouble springing out of their own make-up-in
this matter. They had been saying to themselves something like this. 'The
Lord is coming-we have been told the Lord is coming, we have accepted that "
the coming of the Lord draweth nigh ", and we have accepted that to happen any
day ; and we were told that, when the Lord came, all His own would be caught up
to meet Him. We concluded that all believers would be caught up, be raptured,
and enter into the glory like that, together. Oh, what a wonderful thing-all
going together into the presence of the Lord! But some of our friends died,
yesterday, last week, and people are still dying. It seems to upset this whole
matter of all being caught up together.' They were thrown into confusion and
consternation because, instead of the Lord coming and gathering them all up to
Himself, there were people amongst them going into the grave. It was a setback
for their practical make-up, you see.
Now, the Apostle writes to them. He writes to them the gospel, the good
news, for people who are in perplexity and in sorrow because of disappointment
in this way, and he says: 'I want you to know, dear brethren, I want you to
understand, that that makes no difference in the final issue. When the Lord
comes, they will not have gone before us; and when He comes, we shall not go
before them. It just does not make any difference. They that are asleep in
Jesus and we who are alive and remain shall all be caught up together. You
need not allow this thing to trouble you any more. You must not sorrow as
those who have no hope, or who have lost their great hope-as those whose great
hope of the coming of the Lord has been struck at by the deaths of these
believers. There is really no place for any element of disappointment over
this. It is good news for those who have lost loved ones-it is good news
concerning the issue of life and death-that we shall all together go up " to
meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord." It is just
wonderful.'
So we see that here Paul was able to bring in the gospel good news, the
good tidings-in order to get over a certain difficulty that had arisen because
of their makeup, their disposition.
A HELP TO KNOW ONE'S OWN DISPOSITION
Let us pause there for a minute. You know, we should get over a great
many of our troubles if we knew what our temperaments were. If only we would
sit down for a minute-and this is not introspection at all-sit down for a
minute and say: 'Now, what is my peculiar disposition and make-up? What is the
thing to which, by reason of my constitution, I am most prone? What are the
factors, the elements, that make up my temperament?' If you can put your finger
on that, you have the key to many of your troubles. Asaph, the psalmist, was
having a very bad time on one occasion. He looked at the wicked and saw them
prospering. He saw the righteous having a difficult time -himself included-and
he got very downhearted about all this. But then he pulled himself together,
he recollected, and he said: " This is my infirmity; but I will remember the
years of the right hand of the Most High " (Ps. lxxvii. 1 0). ' " This is my
infirmity " ! This is not the Lord, this is not the truth-this is just me, this
is my proneness to go down in times of difficulty. It is how I am made; it is
my reaction to trouble.'
Now, perhaps that sounds a very naturalistic way of dealing with things.
But I have not finished yet. If you and I will understand this thing-that a
lot of our trouble comes because we are made in a certain way; it is really in
our own constitution-we shall have a ground upon which to go to the Lord. We
shall be able to go to the Lord and say: 'Lord, You know how I am made; You
know how I naturally react to things. You know how, because I am made that
way, I am always being caught in certain ways ; You know how it is that I
behave under certain strains. You know me, Lord. Now, Lord, You are different
from what I am: where I am weak, You are strong; where I am faulty, You are
perfect.'
Do you not see that the Lord Jesus, the perfect Man, is the perfect
balance of all the good qualities in all the temperaments, that in Him are none
of the bad qualities of any temperament, and that the Holy Spirit can make
Christ to be unto us that which we are not in ourselves? That is the great
wonder, the great mystery, the great glory, of the meaning of Christ as
mediated to us by the Holy Spirit. It is the wonder of His humanity: a perfect
manhood without any of all this that troubles us. Look at Him under duress: He
does not go down. Look at Him from any standpoint of testing and trial: He
goes through. But He is man. He is not going through on the basis of His
Deity. He is going through on the basis of His perfect humanity, and that is
to be mediated to us.
Spiritual growth means this, that we are becoming something other than
what we are naturally. Is it not so? Naturally, we may be inclined to be
rather miserable people-always taking a miserable view, always going down in
the dumps. Now, when the Holy Spirit takes charge of us, the miserably
inclined people become joyful, although it is not natural for them to be
joyful. That is the miracle of the Christian life. We become something that
we are not naturally. Naturally, we would very quickly go down under some
kinds of criticism or persecution, and nurse our troubles, but when the Lord
Jesus is in us, we can take it and go on. We do not go down, we go on. He
makes us other than what we are. That is the work of grace in the life of the
believer.
These Thessalonians suffered very much because of their practical
temperament. They expected that that of which they had been told at the first
would come about immediately. They were saying to themselves: 'The Lord will
come- He may come to-day, any day-and that will be the end of all our troubles.
But time is going on, and people are dying, and things are getting more and
more difficult. It does not look very much as though the Lord is coming . . .'
They may have been almost at the point of breaking and scattering. And at that
point a new presentation of the gospel of the Lord Jesus came in, bringing the
hope of something different from what they were naturally.
What is true in the case of the practical temperament is true in all other
temperaments. We may take this as a principle. If we only understood it, the
Lord is dealing with every one of us like that. He is dealing with us accord-
ing to what we are. It is no use trying to stereotype or standardize the
dealings of God with people. God's dealings with me would perhaps not be very
troublesome to you, but God's dealings with you might very well throw me right
off my feet. He deals with us according to ourselves, in order that there may
be that of Christ in us which is not of ourselves. I say again, that is the
work of grace. That is the mediation of Christ-that is the very meaning of
being conformed,to the image of Christ. It is partaking of His
nature-something utterly different. But it is a terrible process. Now we have
got to get through as these people got through.
Is that good news? I think it is. I think that is the gospel, good
tidings'. It is good tidings for the man who is always too ready to drop out
and give up and be miserable. It is good tidings to those who, because of
their own natural expectations and reactions, are disappointed in what is
actually happening. It is good tidings that Christ is something other than we
are, and that we can be saved from what we are by Christ. It is very
practical, you see. How are we saved from what we are? By Christ! Not by
Christ just coming and putting out His hands and pulling us up. That is what
we are all wanting Him to do. We are appealing to the Lord to come and do
something like that, literally lift us right out of where we are. What He is
doing is displacing us, and putting Himself in our place in an inward way. It
is a process, a deep process, and it is perhaps only over years that you can
see more of Christ. That person used to be such-and-such a one, but there is a
difference now, you can see Christ now; they are no longer what they used to
be, they are getting over that. They are being " changed into the same image
". That is good news: good news for the Thessalonians, and good news for us.
THE TEST AT THE END
But there is one other thing with these Thessalonians. Things in the
world were becoming increasingly difficult; they were going from bad to worse.
These dear people saw things happening, they saw forces at work, and they
thought: 'This does not look as though the Lord is coming, as though His
Kingdom is coming. It looks as though Satan is having it all his own way.
Things are going from bad to worse; and as to things being changed, as to there
being " a new heaven and a new earth " and a new world state, all this that we
have thought would come with the coming of Christ and His Kingdom, we do not
see any sign of it at all. Rather is it going the other way: the world is
getting worse, evil men are waxing worse and worse. There seems to be more and
more of the Devil than ever there was.'
Now, the Apostle wrote his letters on that, and he said: 'Look here, that
does not mean things going wrong; that does not mean disappointment for your
expectations. The Lord will not come until those things have happened and come
to fullness. " The mystery of lawlessness does already work ". Before He
comes, two things must happen.
'First of all, there must take place a great,falling away.' A great
falling away? Christians falling away? Professing Christians falling away,
going away from the Lord, turning back? That is not very practical for these
people! Yes, that is exactly what will happen toward the end. The nearer the
coming of the Lord is, the more the test will be finding people out. The sieve
will be at work. There will be a falling away; there will be many
people-professors -who say,' We are not going with this, we cannot go on with
this any longer'. They will go back from following the Lord. It always was
so. It was so in the days of our Lord's flesh. At the end it will be like
that. 'Oh, how disappointing!' Ah, yes, but understand that that is how it
will be, and that it does not mean that everything has gone wrong. It is just
going to be like that. When the Lord does take away a people, it will be a
people who have gone on with Him to the end; and He is testing, testing. 'Now,
you Thessalonians, understand that what He is doing is testing you as to
whether you will go right on to the end. It has to be made manifest whether the
root of the matter is in believers, or if it is only profession. So do not
misunderstand the signs of the times.
And then the second thing. Antichrist, that man of sin, the Devil, seems
to be getting more and more of his own way, they thought. And it was so.
'But', said the Apostle, the Lord's day will not come until that man of sin,
the Antichrist, has been revealed." Oh, we thought Christ was coming, not
Antichrist!' Ah, but Christ will not come until Antichrist has come. Do not
misunderstand things. If there is a mighty movement in this world by Satan,
the Devil seemingly incarnate, a great incarnation of him it may be in man form
or system form, whatever it is that is dead set upon obliterating everything
that belongs to Christ, that is not a bad sign. That is a good sign-the Lord
is about to come! That is the good news in the day when the Devil seems to be
carrying everything away. That is portentous. The Lord is at hand.
" But when these things begin to come to pass, look ap, and lift up your
heads; because your redemption draweth nigh ", said Jesus (Luke xxi. '1)8).
So if suffering increases, if patience is tested ; if Satan seems to be having
it his way, and getting the power into his hands, do not be deceived-do not
allow that to say to you, 'Well, our hope is not being realized.' Turn it round
the other way, and say, ' These are the very things that say that our hope is
about to be realized.' This is good news for the day of adversity, good news
for Christians in suffering, good news when Satan is doing his worst. The Lord
is at hand!
THE SUMMING UP OF THE WHOLE MATTER
But where shall we sum it all up? We have always sought to find a little
fragment in which it can be all concluded, and I think we have it here:
"Faithful is he that calleth you, who will also do it" (I Thess. v. 24).
Here is the conclusion and summing up of the whole matter. Yes, beloved
ones are dying, going to the Lord. Time is dragging on. The Devil is
apparently gaining power and doing his worst. We, the Lord's people, are in
suffering: nevertheless, God is able to see us through. "Who will also do
it." What more do we want? Over against everything else-' He will also do it.'
That is good news! After all, and in the final summing up, the good news is
that it is not left with us. It is the Lord's matter. What is left to us is
to believe God, to seek to understand His ways, to be steadfast, to hope unto
the end, and then the Lord takes over. " Faithful is he that calleth you, who
will also do it." Good news!