Sketches From The Life of Paul
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 31: Paul's Last Letter.
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From the judgment-hall of Caesar, Paul
returned to his prison-house, knowing that he had
gained for himself only a brief respite; his [p. 319] enemies would not rest until they had secured his
death. Yet he knew that truth had triumphed
for the time, and that to have proclaimed a
crucified and risen Saviour before the vast throng
who had listened
to his words, was in itself a
victory. A work had that day begun which
would increase and prosper, and which the
emperor of Rome, with all his pomp and power,
would seek in vain to destroy or hinder.
The apostle's speech had gained him many
friends, and he was visited by some persons of
rank, who accounted his blessing of greater value
than the favor of the emperor of the world.
But there was one friend for whose sympathy
and companionship he longed in those last trying
days. That friend was Timothy, to whom he
had committed the care of the church at Ephesus,
and who had therefore been left behind when
he made his last voyage to Rome. The affection
between this youthful laborer and the apostle
began with Timothy's conversion through the
labors of Paul; and the tie had strengthened as
they had shared together the hopes and perils
and toils of missionary life, until they seemed
to be as one. The disparity in their age and the
difference in their character made their interest
and love for each other more earnest and sacred.
The ardent, zealous, indomitable spirit of Paul
found repose and comfort in the mild, yielding,
retiring character of Timothy. The faithful
ministration and tender love of this tried
companion had brightened many a dark hour of
the apostle's life. All that Melancthon was to
Luther, all that a son could be to a loved and
honored father, that was the youthful Timothy
to the tried and lonely Paul. [p. 320]
And now, sitting day after day in his gloomy
cell, knowing that at a word or nod from the
tyrant Nero his life may be sacrificed, Paul
thinks of Timothy, and determines to send for
him. Under the most favorable circumstances,
several months must elapse before Timothy can
reach Rome from Asia Minor. Paul knows that
his own life, for even a single day, is uncertain,
and he fears that Timothy may arrive too late,
or may hesitate through fear of the dangers to
be encountered. He has important counsel and
instruction for the young man to whom so great
responsibility is intrusted, and while urging him
to come without delay, he dictates the dying
testimony which he may not be spared to utter.
His soul is filled with loving solicitude for his
son in the gospel, and for the church under his
care, and he earnestly seeks to impress upon him
the importance of fidelity to his sacred trust.
The words of Paul to Timothy apply with
equal force to all the ministers of Christ, to the
close of time: "I charge thee therefore before
God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge
the quick and the dead at his appearing and his
kingdom: Preach the word; be instant in season,
out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all
long-suffering and doctrine."
This solemn charge to one so zealous and faithful
as was Timothy, is an emphatic testimony to
the great importance and responsibility of the
gospel ministry. The apostle summons Timothy,
as it were, before the bar of infinite justice, and
in the most impressive manner charges him to
preach the word; not the customs or sayings of
men, but the word of God; to preach it as one
in earnest,—"instant in season, out of season,"— [p. 321] whenever an opportunity was presented; at stated
times and occasionally; to large congregations,
to private circles; by the way, at the fireside;
before friends and enemies; to one as well as to
many; whether he could speak with safety or
would be exposed to hardship and peril, reproach
and loss.
Timothy suffered from physical infirmities, and
the apostle, tender and compassionate as he was,
felt it necessary to warn him to neglect no duty
on this account. And fearing that his mild,
yielding disposition might lead him to shun an
essential part of his work, Paul exhorts him to
be faithful in reproving sin, and even to rebuke
with sharpness those who were guilty of gross
evils. Yet he is to do this "with all long-suffering
and doctrine;" he must manifest the patience
and love of Christ, and must explain and enforce
his reproofs and exhortations by the word of
God.
To hate and reprove sin, and at the same time
to manifest pity and tenderness for the sinner,
is a difficult attainment. The more earnest our
own efforts to attain to holiness of heart and
life, the more acute will be our perception of sin,
and the more decided our disapproval of any
deviation from right. We must guard against
undue severity toward the wrong-doer. But
while we should seek to encourage him in every
effort to correct his errors, we must be careful
not to lose sight of the exceeding sinfulness of
sin. While there is need of Christlike patience
and love toward the erring, there is constant
danger of manifesting so great toleration for his
error that he will consider himself undeserving
of reproof, and will reject it as uncalled-for and
unjust. [p. 322]
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