(72)

Paul as a 'father' to Timothy

We can learn a lot about spiritual leadership from Paul’s ‘father-son’ relationship with Timothy, especially because this relationship covers a sixteen-year period and because it is frequently referred to in Paul’s letters and in the book of ‘Acts’ written by Luke. For example, being a spiritual father has little to do with leading someone to faith in Christ; for Timothy was already a well respected disciple of Jesus when Luke introduces him into Paul’s story. Instead, Paul is a father to Timothy because of the way he helps him develop as an adult son to his heavenly Father: by making Timothy a partner in his own ministry, and by sending him back to churches where they had ministered together—with specific responsibilities and authority to represent Paul among those believers. Finally, as we look at several other characteristics of spiritual ‘fatherhood’ in Paul’s two letters to Timothy, we learn something important about the character of our Father God as well. - JKM

SCRIPTURE PASSAGE

LUKE   (Acts 15:40;   16:1-3, 11-12 PH)  [50 AD][i]

Paul… ·came to...Lystra; and a disciple was there, named Timothy—the son of a believing Jewish woman, but of a Greek father. ·The brothers and sisters at Lystra and Iconium gave a good report about him. ·Paul wanted to have Timothy travel with him; so he circumcised him because of the Jews in that area, for they all knew his father was a Greek... ·From Troas we sailed... ·...to Philippi.

PAUL    (Philippians  1:1; 2:19b-22 PH) [59 AD]

From Paul and Timothy, servants of Christ Jesus, to all the holy ones…at Philippi… ·I trust …to send Timothy to YOU shortly… ·I have no one likeminded who will genuinely care for YOUR situation, ·since all seek their own (group) interests, not those of Jesus Christ. ·But YOU know his trustworthiness, how as a son to a father he has served together with me in the Gospel.

(1 Corinthians 1:2; 4:16-17; 5:1,4-5; 16:10,11a,12a PH) [55 AD]

From Paul… ·to the church of God at Corinth… ·I encourage YOU to become imitators of me. ·For this reason I have sent Timothy to YOU, who is my dearly loved son. He is faithful in the Lord and will remind YOU of my ways of living in Christ Jesus… ·(Concerning) sexual promiscuity…, that one possessing his father's wife:... ·when YOU are gathered together in the name of our Lord Jesus—with the power of our Lord Jesus and my spirit (present)—·turn over such a one to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, so that his spirit may be saved... ·When Timothy comes, see to it that he be put at ease towards YOU, for like me, he engages in the work of the Lord. ·Let no one despise him… ·Concerning brother Apollos, I desired that he come to YOU with these brothers, but his will was not at all to come at this time.

(2 Corinthians 1:2,19,1b PH) [56 AD]

Grace to YOU and peace from God our Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ…, ·the Son of God…proclaimed among YOU…by me and by Silas and Timothy, ·our brother

(1 Timothy  1:2,12-13,16,3-4, 18-19a;  3:14-15;  4:12,14, 16a;  6:20  PH)  [62 AD]

To Timothy, a genuine son in the faith: Grace, mercy, and peace from Father God and Christ Jesus our Lord… ·...he deemed me trustworthy—placing into ministry ·this former reviler, persecutor and abuser… ·I obtained mercy…that in me Jesus Christ might display (his) all-enduring patience... ·As I left for Macedonia, I encouraged you to stay on in Ephesus to charge some not to teach other things ·…, which bring about disputes rather than God's household administration that is through faith. …·I place with you, Son, this charge, …that… you might serve as a good soldier, ·having faith and a good conscience. Some, through putting these away, have made a shipwreck of the faith... ·I write…, hoping to come to you shortly, ·but—if I am delayed—so that you know what manner of life is required in God's household… ·Let no one despise your youth. Instead, become an example for the believers: in word, in manner of life, in love, in spirit, in faith, in purity… ·Do not neglect the gift…in you, which through prophecy was given to you with the laying on of hands by the eldership... ·Keep a hold of yourself and the teaching… ·Guard that which was deposited with you, turning away from polluted babblings and the so-called ‘alternative ways of knowing’.

(2 Timothy  1:2-5, 13-14; 2:1-3,15; 4:2,9,11,21 PH) [64 AD]

To Timothy, dearly loved son: Grace, mercy, and peace from Father God and Christ Jesus our Lord… ·...I am constantly reminded about you in my nighttime and daytime prayers, ·…greatly desiring to see you·while I call to mind the un-hypocritical faith that is in you, which first made its home in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice... ·Hold on to the pattern of the healthy words which you heard alongside me, in the faith and the love which are in Christ Jesus. ·Guard the good thing deposited with you by the Holy Spirit who makes his home among us... ·...My son, be empowered in the grace that is in Christ Jesus. ·And the things you have heard alongside me… commit these to faithful people, those who will be competent in teaching others. ·...Endure hardships…! ·Do all you can to stand with God as an approved worker: unashamed, handling honestly the Word of truth… ·Proclaim the Word! Opportune season or not, stand by it! Convince, rebuke, encourage—in all patience, and in teaching…·…Come quickly to my side…, ·only Luke is with me… ·Do all you can to come before winter.

MEDITATION

In four different letters, Paul speaks of himself as a ‘father’ to Timothy, his ‘genuine’ and ‘dearly loved son’. Yet he encases this relationship within the accountability that they both have: as adult sons to their ‘Father God’, and as ‘brothers’ to Jesus as an Eldest Brother (‘the Son of God’) and ‘Lord’. The first thing their relationship teaches us is that being a spiritual father within the Father's 'household' is not primarily about leading someone to Jesus. For Paul speaks of his father-son relationship with Timothy mainly in terms of how they ‘served together...in the Gospel’. So being a spiritual father is more about relating to a ‘son’ or ‘daughter’ as an adult, and as a partner in ministry. We get our first glimpse of Paul doing this in Philippi, where they—along with Silas—planted a new church shortly after Timothy began traveling with him. A decade later, in a letter to this church, Paul reminds them of how he had treated Timothy as a fellow servant, and how Timothy had acted like a trustworthy ‘son’ by imitating his ‘father’ in the way he put the interests of Jesus first, ahead of any personal or group interests. After leaving Philipi, Paul treats Timothy as both a ‘co-worker’ and ‘brother’ while evangelizing Corinth—just as he had done right before that in Thessalonica (1 Thes.3:2a; Act.17:1ff, Med.#71).

Secondly, Paul gives Timothy responsibility with authority to minister when Paul isn't with him. He not only did this years later in Corinth and Philippi, but already did so in their first year together. Shortly after being forced to leave Thessalonica, Paul sends Timothy back to that city to encourage and establish these new believers in their faith (Med.#71). From my own experience, and observations, this is the hardest lesson for spiritual fathers to learn. Many spiritual sons and daughters are hindered in their growth because they are left with ministry responsibilities when their leaders travel, but not with the authority to act on their own.

Thirdly, Paul sends Timothy into situations where he is already known, and he doesn't send him alone into difficult situations. Only after ministering together for almost two years in Corinth (Act.18:5-18a), does he ask for Timothy’s help in dealing with serious problems in the church there by going to that city.[ii] Paul has already sent one letter (1 Cor.5:9-11), urging these believers to take action against the sexual promiscuity, pride and divisions polluting their church life (Med.#69). Now he writes another letter (1 Corinthians); and in it he tells them why he is sending Timothy—as a ‘son’ who has demonstrated faithfulness to Jesus as Lord and who is able to remind them of Paul's way of life in Christ. This is risky, though, since the Corinthian believers prefer to have a more influential person come solve their problems—like Apollos, or Paul himself. So Paul sends several ‘brothers’ with Timothy, saying that he and Apollos will come later. Sadly, Timothy's visit is unsuccessful, as is Paul's planned visit. Only after a very stern third letter and a visit by Titus do the Corinthians finally follow Paul's instructions (Med.#73)—like for dealing with the man living in a sexual relationship with his father's wife. Yet Paul continues to invest in Timothy, for we get several more brief glimpses in the Bible of them ministering together, or of Paul sending Timothy somewhere on his behalf.

In the first of two letters to Timothy, we again see Paul entrusting Timothy with responsibility and authority in Ephesus. But in these letters we also see, fourthly, how Paul treats his spiritual ‘son’ as a person, and not just a work-partner in ministry. He expresses his desire to just be with Timothy, and to see him finish well. For he challenges his ‘son’: to keep a secure hold on both sound teaching and on himself, with ‘faith and a good conscience’; and to keep the main thing (God's purposes) the main thing. He also emphasizes the importance of the Scriptures and of being empowered by the ‘grace’ of Jesus ‘in all patience’. Paul has seen too many others ‘shipwreck’ their faith by useless disputes and spiritual fads. Or by allowing the needs of others to cause them to neglect the specific gifts God entrusted to them by his Spirit—such that purity of speech and lifestyle cease to be a priority, and love stops being the governing factor in their relationships.

Finally, in his second letter, we see a spiritual father who prays often for his ‘son’, and is not exclusive—affirming the spiritual input of others. We also see Paul being vulnerable about his own weakness and needs, and about his past. For he has learned that we can always count on receiving ‘mercy’[iii] from our Father God as well as ‘grace and peace’. Perhaps Timothy is facing a drawn out battle in the church in Ephesus, and Paul knows he tends to dwell on his lack of success in Corinth. So Paul recalls his own past failings and need for God's mercy, and urges Timothy to not be intimidated by older church leaders. Do you also have a tendency: to be intimidated by others, or to dwell on past failings and to forget that you have a Father who is merciful?

PRAYING THE WORD

Father, I receive your mercy today in Christ Jesus my Lord, as well as your grace and peace. Help me guard and not neglect what you've deposited in me by your Spirit, and honestly handle your Word while keeping a hold of myself in all purity, love and sound teaching—so that I may model these things even as I teach them to my own spiritual sons and daughters. (2 Tim.1:2,13-14; 2:1-3,15; 1 Tim.1:18; 4:12,14,16; 16:20)

NOTES

[i] Through links in the detailed version of this meditation, members can check out these dates in several ‘chronologies’ of  the events in Paul’s life and ministry.

[ii] Through links in the detailed version, members can also access a two-part teaching I gave in 2011 on ‘the Corinthian Mess’ and what we can learn from how Paul dealt with it.

[iii] Only in these two letters does Paul add ‘mercy’ to his standard opening blessing: ‘Grace and peace’ from God our Father (2 Cor.1:2).