
JULY 19
PROVEN WORTH
So Paul treads softly and plans his next move. Timothy is the second of four godly examples profiled in Philippians. He was with Paul and Silas when they planted the church in Philippi. They know his character. And so should we.
Timothy learned the Word of God from infancy. You have known the Holy Scriptures from the womb, wrote Paul (2 TIM 3:15). Taken literally, this would suggest that Timothy’s Jewish mother read the Bible to him during pregnancy. Not a bad idea for expectant mothers. Timothy kept the faith of his mother and grandmother, even though his father was a Gentile (2 TIM 1:5; Acts 16:1). Timothy was also a faithful disciple and well-spoken of in his home church. No wonder Paul recruited him as a missionary (ACTS 16:1-5). Timothy served Paul in the Gospel as a son with a father. His name appears 26 times in 12 books of the New Testament. And he is a co-sender with Paul of six New Testament letters, including Philippians.
Timothy is young. But he’s no upstart or lone ranger. He’s a man of proven worth, which means tried and true, tested as gold, and approved by God. Paul literally says of him: I have no one of like-soul. Timothy is a sterling example of the Christlike character and behaviour that Paul urges throughout this letter. He is the exact opposite of those who seek their own interests and not those of Christ. Paul had previously sent him on several apostolic assignments. Now he can trust him to handle the touchy situation in Philippi—without putting on airs or seeking honours. There is hope for the Philippians. And us? Where have all the Timothys gone?
PROVEN WORTH
JULY 19
So Paul treads softly and plans his next move. Timothy is the second of four godly examples profiled in Philippians. He was with Paul and Silas when they planted the church in Philippi. They know his character. And so should we.
Timothy learned the Word of God from infancy. You have known the Holy Scriptures from the womb, wrote Paul (2 TIM 3:15). Taken literally, this would suggest that Timothy’s Jewish mother read the Bible to him during pregnancy. Not a bad idea for expectant mothers. Timothy kept the faith of his mother and grandmother, even though his father was a Gentile (2 TIM 1:5; Acts 16:1). Timothy was also a faithful disciple and well-spoken of in his home church. No wonder Paul
Timothy is young. But he’s no upstart or lone ranger. He’s a man of proven worth, which means tried and true, tested as gold, and approved by God. Paul literally says of him: I have no one of like-soul. Timothy is a sterling example of the Christlike character and behaviour that Paul urges throughout this letter. He is the exact opposite of those who seek their own interests and not those of Christ. Paul had previously sent him on several apostolic assignments. Now he can trust him to handle the touchy situation in Philippi—without putting on airs or seeking honours. There is hope for the Philippians. And us? Where have all the Timothys gone?
PrayNow
• Think Family and Home. Confess: Effective discipleship is relational and intentional. It begins with faith at home. The hearing of the Word (ROM 10:17). The moulding and grounding in the Word (DEUT 6:4-9). Pray that parents will take ownership of this biblical call and steward it well. That our young, like Timothy, will grow up from infancy with the Word as their plumbline, their compass, their wisdom, their reference point, and their blueprint for right living.
• Think Generations. Unless each generation experiences the faith in a personal way as Timothy did, it will degenerate into a familiar thing they inherit, a convenient thing they live with for pragmatic reasons like marrying and burying, and a meaningless thing they can ignore or abandon. On our watch, may we do our best to avert the perennial woe of Western Christianity: The devolution from first generation fervency, to second generation complacency, to third generation apathy, to fourth generation apostasy. Pray!
• Think local church. Be diligent to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth (2 TIM 2:15). There’s no way to accurately handle the Word without making our best efforts to study and master the Word as Timothy did. Pray for a revival of hunger for the Word and a restoration of life-on-life discipleship and nurture in the Word. Pray especially for young pastors and emerging leaders.
• My Timothy more than represents me. His being there is as good as my being there.
• My Timothy knows me. My ways, my words, my walk, my works. He perceives my heart. He intuitively knows what I want done in every ministry situation.
• My Timothy shares my heartbeat, my passion. My cause is his cause. My burden is his burden. He and I are of one heart and one mind. Like Father, like son. I have no one of like-soul (:20).
PrayNow
• Think Family and Home. Confess: Effective discipleship is relational and intentional. It begins with faith at home. The hearing of the Word (ROM 10:17). The moulding and grounding in the Word (DEUT 6:4-9). Pray that parents will take ownership of this biblical call and steward it well. That our young, like Timothy, will grow up from infancy with the Word as their plumbline, their compass, their wisdom, their reference point, and their blueprint for right living.
• Think Generations. Unless each generation experiences the faith in a personal way as Timothy did, it will degenerate into a familiar thing they inherit, a convenient thing they live with for pragmatic reasons like marrying and burying, and a meaningless thing they can ignore or abandon. On our watch, may we do our best to avert the perennial woe of
• Think local church. Be diligent to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth (2 TIM 2:15). There’s no way to accurately handle the Word without making our best efforts to study and master the Word as Timothy did. Pray for a revival of hunger for the Word and a restoration of life-on-life discipleship and nurture in the Word. Pray especially for young pastors and emerging leaders.
Senior Pastors with Timothys. Leaders of proven worth and kindred spirit of whom they can confidently say:
• My Timothy more than represents me. His being there is as good as my being there.
• My Timothy knows me. My ways, my words, my walk, my works. He perceives my heart. He intuitively knows what I want done in every ministry situation.
• My Timothy shares my heartbeat, my passion. My cause is his cause. My burden is his burden. He and I are of one heart and one mind. Like Father, like son. I have no one of like-soul (:20).