Let us keep this at the top of each of these pages: Right doctrine is a good friend and faithful companion to the Christian. Confirming and convicting; enlightening and edifying; reminding and renewing, doctrine is essential for establishing and elevating a Believer in the things of God. Therefore, we thought we would provide an opportunity for you to get better acquainted with this good friend.
"But we ought always to give thanks to God for you, brothers beloved by the Lord, because God chose you from the beginning to be saved, through sanctification by the Spirit and belief in the truth. 14 To this He called you through our gospel, so that you may obtain the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ. 15 So then, brothers, stand firm and hold to the traditions that you were taught by us, either by our spoken word or by our letter. 16 Now may our Lord Jesus Christ Himself, and God our Father, who loved us and gave us eternal comfort and good hope through grace, 17 comfort your hearts and establish them in every good work and word" (2Th 2:13-17)
As is so often the case with the Apostle Paul, so much is packed into this short passage! While this paragraph stands as a cohesive whole that can be quickly read and appreciated as an edifying note to believers, let’s take a moment to consider the depth of what is declared here.
"We ought always to give thanks to God” stands as sound advice to every Christian in every age. Most likely, we all have our own reasons we would give for why we are thankful, but the reasons Paul lists here are true for each of us: 1) We are loved by the Lord. God loves us! The most famous verse in the bible, John 3:16, declares that is why He sent His Son among us. 2) God has chosen us. We didn’t stumble onto Him and He didn’t pick us at random. Choice involves consideration. Next time you feel unworthy or unlovable, remember the God who knows all and sees all chose you.
And what did He choose us for? 3) To be saved. I told you He knows all about us. He knew what a mess we were in - and what a mess we are – yet He chose us anyway. Now, He is holy and undefiled (another way of saying “clean”), so His first work was to clean us up. Every loving parent, when their little children have been out playing in the mud, will still let them back into the comfort and safety of their home. But aren’t those same parents very likely to have the little ones take off their muddy clothes at the door and then plop them into a hot bath? Only after that, will there be a warm meal and warmer family time.
Of course, the cleaning we need isn’t just a washing off of the results of innocent fun. In my parent-and-child metaphor, the children have been very naughty. In fact, they have demonstrated a bent toward naughtiness. This is why Paul’s passage above mentions “sanctification”, with its implied ongoing discipline and training; its efforts at changing the disposition of the heart – away from "the pleasures of sin for a season" toward "I always do that which pleases my Father".
And we are not silly children lacking in self-awareness. We know, don’t we, that we need such discipline and ongoing training. Salvation encompasses more from being delivered from my sins, but also from my sinfulness. It involves cleansing the outside, but salvation is really an inside job. That’s why we’re promised a new heart and a renewed mind. Have we awakened yet to the enormity of those two priceless gifts?
And why the thorough cleansing, inside and out? Paul says that we might “obtain the glory of Lord Jesus Christ”! If anyone else wrote that passage down anywhere else than in the bible, it would be heresy. But it is Apostolic teaching nestled inside scripture.
Nor does this thought stand alone. Jesus Christ Himself promised those that overcome as He overcame can sit with Him on His throne at the right hand of God Almighty! Suddenly the daunting task of ongoing discipline becomes "light and momentary" when compared to the reward awaiting those who submit to it with a willing heart.
The soaring truth declared here, that God will take unclean, unworthy people and lift them all the way to Christ’s throne fulfills Old Testament prophecy, even as it supersedes it and adds more depth: "He raises the poor from the dust; He exalts the needy from the ash heap - to make them sit with nobles and inherit a seat of glory" (1 Sam 2:8).
My response to this amazing grace of God is the same as Paul’s in our passage above. First, he and I both exhort us all to "stand firm" in what we’ve been taught. God is worth it! What He has in mind for us is worth it! Whenever the flesh whines to us, “I can’t afford to pay such a price!” we must reply, “We can’t afford to NOT pay such a price!”
But what an ending Paul provided to our passage! He is declaring the gospel, after all – the good news of God: May Jesus Christ Himself and God the Father do two wonderful things for us: First, comfort us in our trials and tribulations, stirring up a godly hope in our hearts to press on. And second, work in us and through us to accomplish the very things required of us.
"Behold, I am with you and will keep you wherever you go. And I will bring you back to this land; for I will not forsake you until I have done what I have promised you" (Gen 28:15)
"Do not fear, for I am with you; Do not anxiously look about you, for I am your God. I will make you mighty. Surely, I will help you. Surely, I will uphold you with My righteous right hand" (Isa 41:10)
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