This section of Chapter 1 has
seven verses:
2 Timothy 1:1-7
1 Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of
God, according to the promise of life which is in
Christ Jesus,
2 To Timothy, my dearly beloved son: Grace, mercy,
and peace, from God the Father and Christ Jesus our
Lord.
3 I thank God, whom I serve from my forefathers
with pure conscience, that without ceasing I have
remembrance of thee in my prayers night and day;
4 Greatly desiring to see thee, being mindful of
thy tears, that I may be filled with joy;
5 When I call to remembrance the unfeigned faith
that is in thee, which dwelt first in thy
grandmother Lois, and thy mother Eunice; and I am
persuaded that in thee also.
6 Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that thou
stir up the gift of God, which is in thee by the
putting on of my hands.
7 For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but
of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.
Let us begin with the Barclay commentary
AN APOSTLE’S GLORY AND AN APOSTLE’S PRIVILEGE
First, the paraphrase of the
verses:
2 Timothy 1:1–7
This is a letter from Paul, who was made an apostle
of Christ Jesus by the will of God, and whose
apostleship was designed to make known to all men
God’s promise of real life in Christ Jesus, to
Timothy his own beloved child. Grace, mercy and
peace be to you from God, the Father, and from
Christ Jesus, our Lord.
I thank God, whom I serve with a clear conscience,
as my forefathers did before me, for all that you
are to me, just as in my prayers I never cease to
remember you, for, remembering your tears when we
parted, I never cease to yearn to see you, that I
may be filled with joy. And I thank God that I have
received a fresh reminder of that sincere faith
which is in you, a faith of the same kind as first
dwelt in your grandmother Lois and in your mother
Eunice, and which, I am convinced, dwells in you
too. That is why I send you this reminder to keep at
white heat the gift that is in you and which came to
you through the laying of my hands upon you; for God
did not give us the spirit of craven fear, but of
power and love and self-discipline.
WHEN Paul speaks of his own apostleship, there are
always certain unmistakable notes in his voice. To
Paul, his apostleship always meant certain things.
(1) His apostleship was an
honour. He was chosen for it by the will of God. All
Christians must regard themselves as God-chosen men
and women.
(2) His apostleship was a
responsibility. God chose him because he wanted to
do something with him. He wanted to make him the
instrument by which the tidings of new life went out
to all people. Christians are never chosen entirely
for their own sake, but for what they can do for
others. Christians are people who are lost in
wonder, love and praise at what God has done for
them and aflame with eagerness to tell others what
God can do for them too.
(3) His apostleship was a
privilege. It is most significant to see what Paul
believed it his duty to bring to others – God’s
promise, not his threat. To Paul, Christianity was
not the threat of damnation; it was the good news of
salvation. It is worth remembering that the
greatest evangelist and missionary the world has
ever seen was out not to terrify people by shaking
them over the flames of hellfire but to move them to
astonished submission at the sight of the love of
God. The driving force of his gospel was love, not
fear.
As always when he speaks to Timothy, there is a
warmth of loving affection in Paul’s voice. ‘My
beloved child’, he calls him. Timothy was his child
in the faith. Timothy’s parents had given him
physical life, but it was Paul who gave him [instruction
to] eternal life. Many people who never
knew physical parenthood have had the joy and
privilege of being a father or a mother in the
faith.
PAUL’S object in writing is to inspire and
strengthen Timothy for his task in Ephesus. Timothy
was young, and he had a hard task in battling
against the heresies and the infections that were
bound to threaten the Church. So, in order to keep
his courage high and his effort strenuous, Paul
reminds Timothy of certain things.
(1) He reminds him of his own confidence in him.
There is no greater inspiration than to feel that
someone believes in us. An appeal to the best in
someone is always more effective than a threat of
punishment. The fear of letting down those who love
us is a sobering thing.
(2) He reminds him of his family
tradition. Timothy was walking in a fine heritage;
and, if he failed, not only would he damage his own
reputation but he would lessen the honour of his
family name as well. A fine parentage is one of the
greatest gifts anyone can have. It is something to
thank God for and should never be dishonored. [See
Deuteronomy 27:16]
Quoted verse:
Deuteronomy 27:16
Cursed be he that setteth light by his father
or his mother. And all the people shall say, Amen.
(3) He reminds him of his setting
apart for office and of the gift which was conferred
upon him. Once we enter upon the service of any
association with a tradition, anything that we do
affects not only us. We do not do it in our own
strength. There is the strength of a tradition to
draw upon and the honour of a tradition to preserve.
That is especially true of the Church. Those who
serve it have its honour in their hands; those who
serve it are strengthened by the consciousness of
the [spiritual
fellowship] of all the saints.
(4) He reminds him of the
qualities which should characterize the Christian
teacher. These, as Paul at that moment saw them,
were four.
(a) There was courage. It was not cowardly
fear but courage that Christian service should
bring. It always takes courage to be a Christian,
and that courage comes from the continual
consciousness of the presence of Christ.
(b) There was power. In
true Christians, there is the power to cope, the
power to shoulder the backbreaking task, the power
to stand firm when faced with the shattering
situation, the power to retain faith when confronted
by the soul-destroying sorrow and the wounding
disappointment. Christians are characteristically
people who could pass the breaking point and not
break.
(c) There was love. In
Timothy’s case, this was love for the brothers and
sisters, for the congregation of the people of
Christ over whom he was set. It is precisely that
love which gives Christian pastors other qualities.
They must love their people so much that they will
never find any toil too great to undertake for them
or any situation threatening enough to daunt them.
No one should ever enter the ministry of the Church
without a deep love for Christ’s people.
(d) There was self-discipline.
The word is so¯phronismos, one of these great
untranslatable Greek words. It has been defined as
‘the sanity of saintliness’. In his book on The
Pastorals, Sir Robert Falconer defines it as
‘control of oneself in face of panic or of passion’.
It is Christ alone who can give us that command of
self which will keep us both from being swept away
and from running away. No one can ever rule others
without having complete self-control. So¯phronismos
is that divinely given control of self which makes
people great rulers of others because they are first
of all the servants of Christ and in complete
control of themselves [by
the power of the Holy Spirit].
~Barclay Commentary
Now to the other commentaries.
We will begin with the general commentaries and move
to the more specific. Here is part of the commentary
on verses 6-14 from the Matthew Henry Concise:
God has not given us the spirit of fear, but the
spirit of power, of courage and resolution, to meet
difficulties and dangers; the spirit of love to him,
which will carry us through opposition. And the
spirit of a sound mind, quietness of mind. The Holy
Spirit is not the author of a timid or cowardly
disposition, or of slavish fears. We are likely to
bear afflictions well, when we have strength and
power from God to enable us to bear them. As is
usual with Paul, when he mentions Christ and his
redemption, he enlarges upon them; so full was he of
that which is all our salvation, and ought to be all
our desire. The call of the gospel is a holy call,
making holy. Salvation is of free grace. This is
said to be given us before the world began, that is,
in the purpose of God from all eternity; in Christ
Jesus, for all the gifts that come from God to
sinful man, come in and through Christ Jesus alone.
And as there is so clear a prospect of eternal
happiness by faith in Him, who is the Resurrection
and the Life, let us give more diligence in making
his salvation sure to our souls. Those who cleave to
the gospel, need not be ashamed, the cause will bear
them out; but those who oppose it, shall be ashamed.
~Matthew Henry Concise
Now part of the commentary on verses 6-14 from the
main Matthew Henry:
Here is an exhortation and excitation of Timothy to
his duty (2 Timothy 1:6): I put thee in remembrance.
The best men need remembrancers; what we know we
should be reminded of. 2 Peter 3:1, I write this, to
stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance.
I. He exhorts him to stir up the gift of God that
was in him. Stir it up as fire under the embers. It
is meant of all the gifts and graces the God had
given him, to qualify him for the work of an
evangelist, the gifts of the Holy Ghost, the
extraordinary gifts that were conferred by the
imposition of the apostle's hands. These he must
stir up; he must exercise them and so increase them:
use gifts and have gifts. To him that hath shall be
given, Matthew 25:29. He must take all opportunities
to use these gifts, and so stir them up, for that is
the best way of increasing them. Whether the gift of
God in Timothy was ordinary or extraordinary (though
I incline to the latter), he must stir it
up, otherwise it would decay.
~Matthew Henry main
Now notice the Biblical Illustrator which takes on
the scripture by subject heading as opposed to word
or phrase;
Stir up the gift of God which
is in thee by the putting on of my hands.
The graces of God’s Spirit
are of a fiery quality
And here we must all learn a double lesson. First,
to get this fire; and next, to keep it from
quenching. This is that one thing necessary; and how
should we rejoice if it be already kindled! For
without it we are blind, corrupt, cold, yea, stark
dead. We must make our hearts the hearth to uphold
it, and our hands the tongs to build it; it must
lodge with us daily, send out flame from us, and our
lamps must be continually burning; then shall we
glorify our God, give light to others, walk safely,
as walled about with a defence of fire, in this
pilgrimage; and the Lord, at length, shall send us
fiery chariots to carry us to [the Kingdom], where our
lamps shall burn day and night, and shine as the sun
in the clear firmament for ever and ever.
The gifts of God are to be
stirred up within us
For if they be not, will they not perish? Have you
not heard that they are of a fiery quality, and
therefore subject, without stirring, blowing, to
decay and be extinguished? The things that put out
the fire of the spirit in us, are—first, evil
cogitations; as smoke weakeneth the eye, cold frosts
nip the tender bud, and stinking smells damp and
dull the purest spirits, so do bad thoughts disturb,
impoverish, and enfeeble the gifts of God that be in
us. [Secondly, corrupt speech; that troubleth the
fountain, and stoppeth the spirit’s spring; it
shakes the young plants of grace, as the boisterous
winds do the late grafted scions: this will cause
the new man to die before his time, and the best
fruits he beareth to become blasted. Thirdly, wicked
works; they raze the foundation, and, like the boar
of the wood, root up all; when these break forth
into action, then falls grace suddenly into a
consumption; for they do not only wither the
branches and change the complexion, but also kill
the body, devour the juice of life, and destroy the
constitution. Fourthly, loud company; this doth
press down and keep under the gifts of God, that
they cannot shoot up and spring; as water to fire,
green wood to dry, this quencheth all; one grain of
this leaven leaveneth the whole lump. Let the
Israelites live among the Egyptians, though they
hate the men, yet they will learn their manners; and
Peter will grow cold if he warm his fingers at
Caiaphas’ fire. Fifthly, the prosperity of the
wicked; that will buffet the soul, wound the very
spirit, and make grace to look pale and wan. How
have the faithful fainted to see this, and the
strongest foot of faith reeled, staggered! This mud
hath made the men of God almost to turn out of the
way. Sixthly, and finally, the pampering of the
flesh. It will impoverish the spirit, and make it
look lank and lean. If the one be cherished, the
other will be starved. When one of these buckets is
ascending the other is descending. Paul knew it
well, therefore would beat down his body, and keep
it in subjection. These be the greatest impediments
that hinder the gifts of grace from stirring,
growing.
Private helps to stir up
grace
First, reading either the Scriptures or other holy
writings. This being done in a corner will refresh
the spirit. It is like food to the fainting
passenger. Secondly, meditation. He that sits long
by the fire shall have his body to grow hot, and his
cold spirits to become active, nimble. Let this be
done thoroughly, and it will make grace to stretch
itself beyond its ordinary wont, and the Christian
to be rapt out of himself. Thirdly, prayer. Who ever
in his secret chamber went to God by earnest prayer
but he was ravished in mind, and in the strength of
that action spent all that day without weariness?
God giveth the greatest gifts in secret; and, like
man, revealeth Himself apart. Yea, private prayer
doth both stir up and increase grace mightily; and
as secret meals make a fat body, so doth that a
well-liking mind. Fourthly, observation, and that of
the daily acts of God’s providence. Fifthly,
examples: not the worst, but the most excellent. Set
before thine eyes the cloud of witnesses, that have
far outstripped thee. Think what a shame it is for
thee to come so far behind them. Will not a comely
suite make some leap into the fashion? Sixthly,
resolution; which must consist in propounding to
ourselves a higher pitch of perfection. He that
would shoot or leap further than before will cast
his eye and aim beyond the mark. But if all these
will not stir up this fire, then consider what a
loss it is to be a dwarf and bankrupt in this grace.
How God may forsake us, an evil spirit possess us,
and Satan seek about to apprehend us, as the
Philistines did Samson; so shall we pluck up our
spirits, stir up our strength, rise out of this
lethargy, and fly for our lives.
The ordinances of God are
not without profit, if rightly practiced
It is not a trade, but the well using of it; not a
farm, but the well husbandry of it, that will enrich
the one and the other. Wherefore, be steadfast,
immoveable, and abundant in the work of the Lord,
knowing that your labour is not in vain in the Lord.
Grounds of Paul’s appeal to
Timothy
In encouraging Timothy to stir up the gift that is
in him, and not suffer himself to be ashamed of the
ignominy, or afraid of the hardships, which the
service of Christ entails, the apostle puts before
him five considerations. There are the beautiful
traditions of his family, which are now in his
keeping. There is the sublime character of the
gospel which has been entrusted to him. There is the
teaching of Paul himself, who has so often given
him a “pattern of sound words” and a pattern of
steadfast endurance. There is the example of Onesiphorus with his courageous devotion. And there
is the sure hope of “the salvation which is in
Christ Jesus with eternal glory.” Any one of these
might suffice to influence him.
Watching the heart flame
The Greek word rendered “stir up” literally means to
kindle up, to fan into flame. We know that Paul
frequently uses for his illustrations of Christian
life scenes well known among the Greek heathen
nations of the Old World, such as the Greek athletic
games. Is it not possible that the apostle while
here charring Timothy to take care that the sacred
fire of the Holy Spirit did not languish in his
heart, while urging him to watch the flame, to keep
it burning brightly, to fan the flame if burning
dimly.
Individual gifts
What if God should command the flowers to appear
before Him, and the sunflower should come bending
low with shame because it was not a violet, and the
violet should come striving to lift itself up to be
like a sunflower, and the lily should seek to gain
the bloom of the rose, and the rose the whiteness of
the lily; and so, each one disdaining itself, should
seek to grow into the likeness of the other? God
would say, “Stop foolish flowers! I gave you your
own forms and hues, and odours, and I wish you to
bring what you have received. O sunflower, come as a
sunflower; and you sweet violet, come as a violet;
let the rose bring the rose’s bloom, and the lily
the lily’s whiteness.”
Self-education
Every man has two educations—that which is given to
him, and that which he gives himself. Of the two
kinds, the latter is by far the most valuable.
Indeed, till that is most worthy in a man, he must
work out and conquer for himself. It is this that
constitutes our real and best nourishment. What we
are merely taught seldom nourishes the mind like
that which we teach ourselves.
~Biblical Illustrator
Now to the specific commentaries, which take the
scripture phrase by phrase and sometimes word by
word.
Generally we have three phrases here:
1] Wherefore I put thee in remembrance.
2] That thou stir up the gift of God.
3] Which is in thee by the putting on of my hands.
1] Wherefore I put thee in
remembrance.
Wherefore I put thee in
remembrance - From the earnestness with which
he stirs up Timothy in both Epistles, it seems
likely that he did not possess the rugged, restless
energy of Paul. ~People's
New Testament
Wherefore I put thee in
remembrance - He urges us to set the
invincible power of the Spirit which God has given
us, against those storms which may, and do come upon
us. ~Geneva Notes
Wherefore I put thee in
remembrance - Because of the great affection
the apostle had for Timothy, and because of that
confidence he had of him, that unfeigned faith dwelt
in him, as well as because this had had a place in
his relations before him; he therefore acts the part
of a kind monitor to him, and, upon these
considerations, doubts not of succeeding in his
following admonition: ~John
Gill
Wherefore I put thee in
remembrance - Wherefore — Greek, “For which
cause,” namely, because thou hast inherited, didst
once possess, and I trust (“am
persuaded”) still dost possess, such
unfeigned faith ~Jamieson,
Fausset, Brown
2] That thou stir up the gift of
God.
Stir up the gift of God.
- The supernatural gift which he received by the
imposition of the apostolic hands. The gift of
office was conferred by ordination at the hands of
the presbytery; the gift of miraculous powers, by
the imposition of the hands of an apostle.
~People's New Testament
That thou stir up the gift of
God - Greek, That thou “kindle up” as a fire.
The original word used here denotes the kindling of
a fire, as by bellows, etc. It is not uncommon to
compare piety to a flame or a fire, and the image is
one that is obvious when we speak of causing that to
burn more brightly. The idea is, that Timothy was to
use all proper means to keep the flame of pure
religion in the soul burning, and more particularly
his zeal in the great cause to which he had been set
apart. The agency of man himself is needful to keep
the religion of the heart warm and glowing. However
rich the gifts which God has bestowed upon us, they
do not grow of their own accord, but need to be
cultivated by our own personal care.
~Barnes Notes
Stir up the gift of God, which
is in thee - The gift which Timothy had
received was the Holy Spirit; and through him, a
particular power to preach and defend the truth.
This gift is represented here, under the notion of a
fire, which, if it be not frequently stirred up, and
fresh fuel added to it, will go out. This is the
precise idea which the apostle had in his mind;
hence the term αναζωπυρειν, which signifies to stir
up the fire; to add fresh fuel to it. From this it
plainly appears, that if Timothy had not continued
to be a daily worker with God, he would have
received the grace of God in vain. The Latins have a
similar metaphor, excitare igniculos ingenii, to
stir up the sparks of genius.
~Adam Clarke
Stir up the gift of God, which
is in thee - The gift of God is as it were a
certain living flame kindled in our hearts, which
the flesh and the devil go about to put out: and
therefore we as their opponents must labour as much
as we can to foster and keep it burning.
~Geneva Notes
That thou stir up the gift of
God which is in thee - by "the gift" is meant
his ministerial gift; for what qualifies men for the
ministry, is not anything natural in them, nor
acquired by them, but what is given unto them, and
that of God: and this was "in" him; it continued
with him; it was not lost by him, nor taken from
him, as gifts may be, when they are not used; and
yet it seems as if there was some decline, some
backwardness and indifference as to the exercise of
it: he might be too remiss, negligent, and forgetful
of it; wherefore the apostle puts him in mind to
"stir" it up: there is in the word used a metaphor
taken from coals of fire covered with ashes, as if
almost extinct, and need to be blown up into a
flame, and a very apt one it is; since the gifts of
the Spirit, especially his extraordinary ones, such
as ministers in those times had, are compared to
fire: see Matthew 3:11 and these may be reinflamed
or increased, when they seem on the decline, by
reading, meditation, prayer, and the frequent
exercise of them. Agreeably to this the Arabic
version renders it, "that thou kindle the fire of
the gift of God which is in thee"; and the rather
the apostle took this freedom with Timothy, not only
because of his superior age and office, but because
this gift was through his means.
~John Gill
Quoted verse:
Matthew 3:11
I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance: but
he that cometh after me is mightier than I, whose
shoes I am not worthy to bear: he shall baptize you
with the Holy Ghost, and with fire:
Stir up — literally,
“rekindle,” “revive the spark of”; the opposite of
“quench” or “extinguish” (1 Thessalonians 5:19).
Paul does not doubt the existence of real faith in
Timothy, but he desires it to be put into active
exercise. Timothy seems to have become somewhat
remiss from being so long without Paul (2 Timothy
2:22). ~Jamieson, Fausset,
Brown
Quoted verses:
1 Thessalonians 5:19
Quench not the Spirit.
2 Timothy 2:22 [see
lesson]
Flee also youthful lusts: but follow righteousness,
faith, charity, peace, with them that call on the
Lord out of a pure heart.
Gift of God — the
spiritual grace received for his ministerial office,
either at his original ordination, or at his
consecration to the particular office of
superintending the Ephesian Church (see on 1 Timothy
4:14), imparting fearlessness, power, love, and a
sound mind (2 Timothy 1:7).
~Jamieson, Fausset, Brown
Quoted verses:
1 Timothy 4:14 [see
lesson]
Neglect not the gift that is in thee, which was
given thee by prophecy, with the laying on of the
hands of the presbytery.
2 Timothy 1:7 [see
lesson]
For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of
power, and of love, and of a sound mind.
3] Which is in thee by the putting
on of my hands.
Most all the commentaries speaking to this phrase
discuss Paul laying hands on Timothy, while
considering 1 Timothy 4:14 [which
we just read] and the act being carried
out by others with Paul. Rather than spending time
with this, we have remained focused on Salvation
Process elements. |