02

Jump Start # 849

 

Jump Start # 849

1 Timothy 4:15 “Take pains with these things; be absorbed in them, so that your progress will be evident to all.”

We are looking at this great passage from Paul to young Timothy. This is more than good advice that works, these things are essential to growth. Paul knew.

There are three expressions in this verse. Yesterday we looked at the last expression, “so that your progress will be evident to all.”  Today, we consider the middle expression, “be absorbed in them.”

Be absorbed in them. First, we must know what the “in them” is about. Earlier, Paul told Timothy, to “point out these things” to the brethren. That included warning them about some dangerous times that would come with false teaching.

He also said, “command and teach these things” (11). The “in them” is God’s word. That’s what Timothy was to stand upon and that is what Timothy was to teach. That is what was to occupy Timothy’s attention, mind and time. God’s word is what Timothy was to be absorbed in.

Absorbed. The NIV says, “give yourself wholly to them.” I like “be absorbed.” Soak it up. Be a sponge. Take in all that you can. We can understand that concept. When there is a spill at dinner, we want a paper towel that will absorbed the mess. Absorbing in this context involves learning, thinking, sharing, asking questions. This is not an easy concept for many of us. In school, we’ve learned how to study just enough to pass tests. We haven’t mastered the subject, only finishing the class. A day after the final, or in some cases, an hour after the final, far too many couldn’t tell you what the class was about. They didn’t learn. They certainly didn’t absorb. They attended with the intention of passing, and nothing more. We thrive on short cuts, condensed versions, simplified answers. We read just enough of the directions to complete the job. When we are confronted with something we don’t know, we ask just enough questions to get us through.

 

Absorbing carries the idea of being interested. Bored people do not get absorbed in things they are not interested in. Put on an old black and white movie and most kids today would run from the room screaming. No interest there.

We absorb what we are interested in. Some can tell you everything about their favorite team, their favorite singer, their favorite movie and their favorite hobby. Why? They are interested in those things. They have put time, money and effort into those things. They follow them. Absorption begins with interest.

Now our interest can change. Mine has. I was never a fan of classical music growing up. We had music appreciation in grade school, but it all sounded the same to me. Beethoven, Bach, Brahms were not my taste. I liked another “B” group—The  Beatles. Then I met miss Debbie. She was a piano major in college. She loved the Classical. She understood them and was interested in them.  I started going to concerts with her, not rock ’n roll, but classical concerts. I did a lot of whispering because I didn’t understand a thing. The more we dated, the more I liked classical music. We have been to many concerts, even one in Vienna, Austria. She was playing a song for the kids one day and asked them who the composer was. I nailed it! She was shocked. What happened was that my interests changed. The same can happen to us spiritually. It may be a person that introduces us to the Bible. It may be our own study. Once we start getting interested, the absorption follows.

 

Paul wanted Timothy to be a spiritual sponge. Take it all in. Soak it up. Be filled. Let the word of Christ richly dwell within you. Make this your passion, your interest, your ambition, your goal. Make this you. This is how Christ lives in us. This is how Christ becomes our life. This is how we walk by faith.

These thoughts are a lot different than being spoon fed every Sunday and hanging around on the outskirts of God’s word. Dive in. Get immersed into God’s word. Be absorbed in them.

Let me share with you some absorbing stories:

1. I know a man, he’s a senior citizen, who prints every one of these Jump Starts and keeps them in a notebook. He’s a quiet, humble man but he has the heart as big as a mountain. He’s still absorbing.

2. I know a family that recently traveled over two hours one way to hear the Gospel preached in a meeting. That’s a long way. It’s not far, however, when you have a hunger and an interest.

3. I know a man who reads through the Bible every year. He’s been doing this for years.

4. I know a guy who is a hoarder of religious material. He collects old class books, bulletins, religious magazines and anything he can get his hands on. He reads everything he collects. Folks turn to him when they need information, because he has it.

5. I’ve seen many people taking detailed notes during sermons. They underline in their Bibles, and write things in the margins. They are absorbing.

6. There are some people overseas who traded their dinner to get a Bible.

7. I’ve heard stories from long ago of families selling war bonds so they could have enough gas to drive to a gospel meeting.

8. I heard of an old preacher that was teaching a class. He was reading an entire chapter of Ephesians. Someone commented that his Bible was upside down. He smiled. He quoted the entire chapter by memory.

 

We start early by teaching the little ones the books of the Bible. We build upon that, adding layer upon layer of more thoughts, insights and observations.

 

Do you know what happens when you squeeze a sponge that has been sitting at the bottom of a bucket full of soapy water? Soapy water comes out. What happens when a Christian is squeezed by the world? The word of God will come out. It just happens because he has absorbed the word.

 

Interest…passion…absorbing…becoming!

Roger

 

 

 

01

Jump Start # 848

 

Jump Start # 848

1 Timothy 4:15 “Take pains with these things; be absorbed in them, so that your progress will be evident to all.”

Our passage today comes from Paul’s words to young Timothy, the preacher. Young preachers need help. They need to learn. They must grow. Congregations must be patient with them.  These words do not just fit a young preacher. They fit old preachers. They actually are for all of us. I can’t think of any Christian that could be excluded from these wonderful words.

Three statements make up this verse. Let’s look at them in reverse order:

1. So that your progress will be evident to all. Progress. Growth. Movement. Future. There is a ride at Disney that takes you on a journey from early days of household technology to the wave of the future. The characters remain the same, even the dog is the same, but the appliances, TV’s, phones become more advanced with each scene. It’s progress we are told.  Spiritually we ought to be progressing. We ought to be moving. We ought to be getting closer to God, more Christ-like in our thinking, and deeper in our understanding. Why does it matter that our progress is evident to all? Two reasons.

First, if it is not evident, then I may not be progressing. I remember the first time, as a kid, our family drove to the Rockies. At first, the mountains seemed small, way off in the distance. As we drove closer and closer, it seemed that the mountains were growing. When we finally got there, they filled the sky. Evident.  As a person is growing in character, knowledge, faith, their progress will grow and others will see it. If no one can see any progress, it is possible that no progress is taking place.

Second, evident progress becomes useful. Who do you want standing in the pulpit on Sunday? Someone whose progress is evident. Who do you want to go to if you have a question? Someone whose progress is evident. When progress is evident, you will use those spiritual tools and knowledge to help others. The opposite of progress is stagnate. Stale. Stuck. Find those gems of truth and insights and observations that are in Scriptures. Dig them out. Share them. A growing Christian is exciting to watch. They are eager, busy and interested. They are busting with questions. They are full of energy. They have ideas. They are thinking, using and benefiting spiritually. Their progress is evident.

 

Now, we must ask, can that be said of you? Is your progress evident? Do others see it? Do they see it in your home? Do they see it at work? Do they see it at the church building? Same ole’ same ole’ are not the words of Paul to Timothy. Progress spiritually.

 

Christians who stumble, fail and have trouble are those who stopped progressing. They turned their engine off. They came to a stand still. Others things took over. Sports, wealth building, grandkids, TV, Facebook have filled their time and hearts. They have flat-lined with God. Have you ever eaten anything stale? Not too tasty is it? God is interested in your progress. Peter ended his epistle with, “Grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Grow. Movement. Progress.

 

  • Progress in attitude. Less thinking of self and more thinking of Christ. Less “woe is me,” and more, “Here am I, send me.” More forgiving and less demanding. More hope and less gloom. More peace and less war. More positive and less negative. More joy and less pouting.

 

  • Progress in knowledge. Moving off the milk of the word and onto the meat of the word. Deep thinking. Lowering the nets spiritually. Looking at words. Looking at the settings. Looking at the how comes and the whys? Asking. Probing. Researching. Digging. Learning. Figuring things out. Taking that knowledge and using it. Become a person of the word.

 

  • Progress in behavior. More like Christ and less like the world. More sensitive to things that are wrong. More compassion for others. Becoming more generous. Old man, old ways, old thinking,  old habits gone and buried. No more. The expression, “you can’t teach an old dog new tricks,” doesn’t fit in the thinking of a person who is progressing. Holy, righteous and godly become who you are. Prayer is as natural as breathing. You find yourself praying all the time and about everything and everyone. You pray for strangers. You pray for friends. Kindness smoothes those hard and rough edges of your character.

 

  • Progress in hope. You think about Heaven more. You long for Heaven. You live as if one foot is already there. Your ambition, drive and aim are Heaven. Years ago, someone was trying to get me to be a salesman. He had me write down five things that I wanted. I wrote the word “Heaven” five times on a piece of paper. He looked at that and said, “No, you wrote the wrong things. I meant a boat, a vacation house, travels overseas…” His hope and my hope were not in the same galaxy. What is it that you want? The man who is progressing spiritually wants Heaven.

 

Next time, we will look at the next expression from this verse.

Progress…evident to all…You don’t have to tell anyone, they can see it! That’s what Paul wanted. That’s what God wanted. Is it what you want?

Roger