CHAPTER EIGHT

IN HIS LETTERS TO TIMOTHY

 

the gospel of the glory of the blessed God, which was committed to my

trust " (I Tim. i. I 1).

" Be not ashamed therefore of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me his

prisoner: but suffer hardship with the gospel according to the power of God. .

. " (II Tim. i. 8).

" , . . our Saviour Jesus Christ ... abolished death, and brought life and

incorruption to light through the gospel, where un,to I was appointed a herald,

and an apostle, and a teacher " (II Tim, i. 10, R.V. mg.).

" Remember Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, of the seed of David, according

to my gospel . . . " (II Tim. ii. 8).

We COME NOW to our closing thoughts on what Paul called " the gospel which I

preach ". " The gospel of the glory of the blessed God ". We need, in the first

place, just to note the correct translation of these words, because the

different versions render them in different ways. The Authorized Version has:

" the glorious gospel of the blessed God ". You will note how different this is

from the Revised Version from which I have quoted above. The latter-the

Revised-is the correct rendering of the statement, and the point in getting it

right is this. Paul is not speaking of what the gospel is about-the content of

the gospel. He is speaking of the gospel which has to do with the

manifestation of the glory of God. That may sound a little technical, but it

is very important. Let me repeat: what Paul has in mind here is the gospel, or

the good tidings, which is concerned with the manifestation of the glory of

God. The glory of God in manifestation that is the gospel.

Note another thing: " the gospel of the glory of the blessed God ". There

is a translation which changes that word, and uses the word ' happy ' in the

place of ' blessed ': " the gospel of the glory of the happy God ". But that

does not sound quite right, does it, in our ears? And yet, if we understood the

real meaning, we should realize that that is not an altogether inappropriate

word.

There are two Greek words translated 'blessed' in the New Testament. One,

which is much the more common, literally just means 'well spoken of'. That is

its literal meaning, but in the New Testament it is almost exclusively used in

the sense of 'blessed', and is so translated. That, however, is not the word

that is used here. The word used here-the second of the two words to which I

have referred-is one that occurs far less frequently. It is a word which

expresses that which properly speaking is true of C,od alone: that is, the

uniqueness of God as to what He is in Himself, altogether apart from what men

think of Him or say about Him. It is just what He is in Himself. You may

think what you like, and say what you like, but God is this. This is the word

here translated 'blessed'. The word really means that solemn, calm, restful,

perpetual gladness that fills the heart of God. If you can get the feeling of

that definition, you have got somewhere near understanding the meaning of the

word here translated 'blessed'. It is the gospel of the glory of the calm,

restful, confident gladness of the heart of God; the good news, the good

tidings, of that.

THE GLAD TIDINGS OF THE GLORY OF GOD

What is this glory of God which becomes that gospel, that good news? It is

the glory of God in the revelation of Himself in His Son Jesus Christ. The

revelation of Himself. In the Old Testament the glory of God has symbolic

form, as we know. For instance, in the Most Holy Place of the tabernacle,

between the cherubim on the mercy seat, the glory was found. The glory

covered the mercy scat. It was a light streaming down upon the mercy seat,

uPon the ark of the covenant; streaming down and focusing there. It was

heavenly radiance. It was but a symbol. That which it symbolized is here-the

light of God streaming down upon, and through, His Son Jesus Christ. That is

the glory of God. Paul in writing to the Corinthians puts it in this way: "

the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ "

(II Cor. iv. 6). It is that which is in the Lord Jesus of God's perfectly

restful, calm, tranquil, abiding satisfaction.

THE GLORY OF GOD IN A MAN

Now, here is a very remarkable thing. You hear about the glory of God.

Much is said about it, and you are told that that is what you will find in the

Bible ; that, if you go to the Bible, there you will find much about the glory

of God. When you take up the Bible looking for the glory of God, what do you

find? A Man! You find that you are confronted with a Man. You cannot get away

from that Man: the Old Testament is always pointing, by numerous methods and

ways, to a Man; the New Testament, from beginning to end, has one Man in view,

a Man always in view. So that you have to say: 'This is the answer to my

quest. I am in quest of the knowledge of the glory of God, and God's answer to

the quest is a Man.' That is but an exposition of this little phrase, " the

gospel of the glory of the blessed God ", which is the revelation of God in His

Son, Jesus Christ.

God is here represented as being in a state of perfect tranquillity,

restfulness, calm, abiding assurance and satisfaction and joy, and everything

that can be summed up in the word 'blessedness'. God is represented as being,

God is stated to be, in that condition. What is the basis of that state of

God? It is just that God has found a perfect, a complete, expression of

Himself in a Man. Yes, we know who that Man was. I am not overlooking or

setting aside His Deity, His own Godhead, but I am not thinking about that just

now. You see, God created man with very, very high purposes. Indeed, man was

created in order to answer to and satisfy the heart of God: and when we say

that, we are saying tremendous things. To satisfy the heart of God! There are

some people who take a lot of satisfying. Indeed, they never do seem

satisfied. Things are always falling short of their standard and their ideal.

But you can go a long way, you can go as far as it is possible to go with any

human conception of satisfaction, and you still fall far, far short, infinitely

short, of God's idea. God is so much greater, so much more wonderful.

We have in the fallen creation but a faint reflection of how wonderful and

great God is. Yet even when we view this very creation as it is, with all its

faults and weaknesses and variations and so on, we have to stand in awe and

worship. We can see just a faint indication of what a wonderful God He is, and

of how much it must take to satisfy Him. Yet here He is in a state of absolute

satisfaction, calm, tranquil, restful, happy, because all those thoughts of

His, all those desires of His, all those intentions of His, and all those

first undertakings of His, have now been consummated and perfected-not in the

creation generally, but in a Man. That Man answers to God to the very last

requirement of that infinite Mind. How great Christ is! God finds, therefore,

His happiness, His blessedness, His satisfaction, His tranquillity, in that.

A REPRESENTATIVE MAN

Perhaps you may think, 'That is a beautiful thing to say, those are very

wonderful thoughts to express, but where is the practical value of it?' Ah,

that is just the gospel, you see. Do you think that the Lord Jesus, God's Son,

came through and took the position of man, and was made perfect to God's utter

and final satisfaction, just in order that God should have that in one Man?

No, the gospel is this, that the Lord Jesus is representative of all the men

that God is going to have. He is representative and He is inclusive. The old

and beautiful beginning of the gospel, which you and 1, after long familiarity

with it, still often need, for our own tranquillity, to grasp more perfectly,

is just this: that Jesus Christ, God's Son, is a sphere into which we are

called, bidden, invited to enter by faith, so that we are hidden in Him as to

what we are ourselves; God sees only Him and not us. A wonderful thing! You

have got to put aside all your arguments and all your questions, and accept

God's fact. That this phrase, " in Christ ", occurs two hundred times and more

in the New Testament must surely meaN SOMETHING.

GOD SEES US IN CHRIST

The first, and perhaps the all-inclusive, thing that it means, is that, if

you are in Christ, God sees Christ instead of seeing you. I have a little

piece of paper here. Let that represent you or me in ourselves, what we are.

I put it into a book, and that book represents Christ. You do not see the

paper any more you only see the book. That is our position " in Christ That is

what Christ means. All His satisfaction to God is put to our account. That is

the gospel: when you and I are in Christ, God is satisfied with us-tranquil,

happy, blessed. Oh, wonderful gospel! You cannot grasp it, or explain it, but

there is the fact stated. This is the gospel of the glory of the satisfied

God.

Putting again the test that we were applying in other connections in an

earlier chapter, it is just this: that, when you and I really come into Christ

and find our place in Christ, one of the first things of which we are conscious

is that all the strain has gone out ; we have come to rest. A marvelous

tranquillity, that is not natural, has come into us. We feel the battle is all

over between us and God. It is wonderful; a blessed, happy condition. Now,

that is our experience, but what is the significance of it? It is the Spirit of

the happy God bearing witness to God's happiness in our hearts. "The gospel of

the glory of the blessed God ". The first stage of.that is a position. We are

in Christ.

CHRIST IN US

The second stage or the second aspect of that is that Christ is in us.

But we must not pursue that to the same conclusion as in the last point. That

does not mean that we are seen and Christ is hidden. No, Christ is in us and

we are in Christ: an impossible thing to explain, unless perhaps we can put it

like this. Dr. Campbell Morgan was asked on one occasion whether baptism was

sprinkling or immersion. He said: 'My dear friend, come with me to the Niagara

Falls, and stand underneath. Are you sprinkled or are you immersed?' Well, I

leave you to answer. But it is like that. Christ is in us. Why is He in us?

He is in us as that very satisfaction to the heart of God, in order that the

Spirit of God may work in us to conform us to Christ.

And that introduces another aspect of the Christian life: that, if you and

I go on continually on the basis of Christ within, our joy increases. That can

be put to the test. Stop going on with the Lord, and see what happens to our

joy. Get away from the Lord, and see what happens to our blessedness. We

shall begin to lament then-

'Where is the blessedness I knew

When first I saw the Lord?

Where is the soul-refreshing view

Of Jesus and His Word?'

Ah, but God forbid that it should be necessary for any of us to sing that hymn.

It is not necessary. Go on with the Lord Jesus on the basis of God's

satisfaction with Him,. and the blessedness increases. God's happiness

enlarges in our heart. Christ is installed within as the pattern, standard,

and basis upon which God works.

Now, here is something fundamental. Oh, how long we take to learn this!

It is simple, I know, but it is fundamental, and it is a thing on which we are

always tripping up. If we begin to try to go on the ground of what we are,

God stops. If we get on to our own ground, what we are in ourselves-our

miserable, wretched self, that God regards as a corpse and a stinking

corpse-forgive me for saying that-because it has been dead for two thousand

years (that may sound amusing, but really it is exceedingly serious): if you

get off the ground of "Christ in you" on to what you are in yourself, God says,

' I am going no further'. All Divine operations cease. We can only continue

as we began. We began in faith that Jesus Christ was our substitute, took our

place with God and answered to God for us. That was our faith that brought us

into Christ. We have to go right on to the end with the same faith in the Lord

Jesus, and no faith in ourselves, and God will go on if we go ON on His ground.

The good news is that God is ready to go right on with increasing blessedness

if we will only keep on His ground. His glory is in His Son, and He has no

glory in man apart from His Son.

So Christ is our sphere, Christ is our center, and Christ is our model,

and we are being conformed, says the Apostle, until Christ is fully formed in

us. Simple, basic: God's glory in Christ being manifested in believers, in the

Church, because believers are resting upon God's satisfaction with His Son.

That and that only is the way of the glory of God and the expression of God's

blessedness, God's happiness. That is the gospel.

You see., it all comes at last to focus upon this. What is the gospel?

When you have said all that you can about it, it is included in, and compassed

by, this-God's perfect satisfaction, rest, tranquillity, concerning His Son,

made available to us. Oh, that you and I might live without conflict with God,

because we abide in Christ! Brother, sister, when you begin to feel miserable

about yourself, repudiate it. 'Yes, I know all about that. If I do not know

all about that now, it is time that I did. I know all about what I am; I know

where that will lead me if I begin to take that into account. I set that

aside. It is a fact-God has done it-that, so long ago, in Christ I was

crucified, in Christ I died, in Christ I was buried, in Christ I have been

raised. It is all in Christ. That is where I stand.' Maintain that position ;

abide in Christ. Get out of that on to any other ground, and the glory

departs, the blessedness, the happiness, is arrested.

GOOD NEWS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

Paul was speaking to Timothy about the gospel, and Timothy needed good

news, good tidings. To begin with, Timothy was a young man. A young man who

is a Christian has his own personal problems-he has many difficulties and

problems in himself. A young man represents the sum of a life at its

beginnings: all the problems of life are resident there. Timothy was a young

man. To such a young man, the Apostle says: 'It is all right, Timothy: you may

be beset by all these problems and these difficulties, you may be having all

this trouble spiritually in these different ways, but Jesus Christ is equal to

the whole situation!' Do remember, young man, young woman, that the Lord Jesus

is God's answer to all the problems of youth. That is good tidings, is it

not?

Timothy was not only a young man, but he was a young man in difficulties

of a specific kind by reason of his position in Christian work. Difficulties

were coming at him from three directions. Firstly, there was the pagan world.

What a challenge that must have meant for a young man in those days! It was a

world that had no place for God, no place for the Lord, no place for the

things of God, and all the opposing force of that world must have seemed

concentrated upon this young man. Secondly, there were all the difficulties of

the Jewish world. Paul hints at them here. These judaizers were pursuing Paul

over the whole world, with the determination: 'This man shall be brought to an

end-this man's work shall be utterly wiped out!' By every means these judaizers

were set upon destroying Paul and his work and his converts, and Timothy was

associated with Paul. Paul says: " Be not ashamed . . . of me ". Association

created a good many difficulties for Timothy. The answer is: 'All right, Tim-

othy ; there is good news for you! The Lord Jesus is equal to that-He will see

you through it all'.

And then Timothy was a young man in great responsibility in the work of

God-in the Church of God. If you know anything about that, you know that you

need a fairly sure ground of confidence. He came up against some very

difficult Christians. But Paul said: " Let no man despise thy youth." There

were certain wiseacres-people who thought themselves to be something-who were

inclined to say, 'Oh, Timothy is only a young fellow, you know you must not

take too much notice of him.' They were despising his youth. That is rather a

difficult thing to endure. It takes the heart out of you if you happen to be in

that position. I remember so well, when I commenced ministry and became

responsible for a church, where most of the church officers were old men, one

of them was heard to say, one day, 'He is so young, you know!' But I had a

champion among them, and he said, 'Don't worry about that-he is getting over

that every day!' Well, that is very kind and nice: but that sort of attitude

among fellow workers may well take the heart out of you, when you have to carry

the responsibility. Timothy was in that position, but this is the gospel for

Timothy: 'It is all right: the Lord Jesus is equal to that situation-He can see

you through that too'.

After all, it is really just this. It is what the Lord Jesus is " made

unto us ... from God ": God's satisfaction. Oh, thank God that the Lord Jesus

covers our faults and weaknesses and defectiveness. I once read a story-I

think it was true-of a certain hotel on the Continent, where people used to go

and stay for rest and quiet and detachment. One day a mother arrived with her

little girl, and that little girl was just beginning to learn the piano. Every

morning, first thing, she went to the piano and strummed and strummed, and all

day long she strummed. Morning, noon and night she strummed, until those

people became almost distracted, and they were counselling together as to what

they should do, when a famous pianist arrived to stay at the hotel. He at once

sensed the atmosphere, took in the situation, and when the little girl went to

the piano, he went up alongside and sat down, and put his hands over hers and

guided them, and there began to come forth the most beautiful music. The

people came down from their rooms into the room where the piano was, and sat

down and listened. When the recital was over, the pianist said to the little

girl, 'Thank you so much, dear; we have enjoyed it so much to-day'-and all the

trouble was over.

Yes, the Lord Jesus just puts His hands over ours. We might make a mess

of things; we do, if we are left to ourselves. We upset a lot, do a lot of

harm; we are so imperfect, so faulty: and then the Lord Jesus comes, in this

blessed way, and corrects our defectiveness, answers to the Father for us,

makes good our deficiencies-how? -with Himself, just Himself.

That is the answer; that is the good news - " the gospel of the glory of

the blessed God.

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