Faith and Love: The Foundation of Church Stewardship

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The aim of the charge is love that issues from a pure heart and a good conscience and sincere Faith. Father, we want very much to realize the aim here of the charge. We want to be people who love from a pure heart and a good conscience and sincere Faith. [00:02:09]

The charge that he is leaving Timothy with here is first mainly negative: not to teach different Doctrine, not to devote themselves to myths, not to devote themselves to endless genealogies. This word endless I think is very important here because it contrasts with aim or tellos, goal, end. [00:03:00]

These other doctrines, these myths, these endless genealogies, and the resultant speculations that never land on anything solid, anything sure, they don't promote God's stewardship. That word promote there is important because it implies Paul wants the effect of ministry and Doctrine and thinking to go somewhere and promote something. [00:04:08]

Paul has an aim. He has something he wants to promote, and what he wants to promote is first expressed in terms of stewardship, God's household plan for the church. That word oikonomia is used, for example, in Ephesians 3:8-10. [00:04:53]

The aim of the charge is Love. Now, where does love come from? Three things, he says: it issues from a pure heart, a good conscience, and sincere Faith. So relate that sincere Faith as the source of love to Faith as the source or the essence of the stewardship. [00:07:59]

He wants to promote God's household plan, and you do that by faith. That is, he wants to promote love in the church, and the heart of how you do it is Faith. It comes from, and then he mentions three things: Pure Heart, good conscience, sincere faith. [00:08:20]

First comes faith, that is obedience to the truth, that yields a pure heart, and that yields love. Love one another from a pure heart. So you see the sequence here. I'm arguing that faith comes first, then the heart is pure, then love abounds. [00:09:54]

The aim of everything that he has said here—not different Doctrine, not myths, not endless genealogies, not speculations—the aim of all of that charge is love, or to say it another way, it is the advancement of God's household plan, and both of them, the love and the household plan, come from faith. [00:10:16]

The relationship between faith and a good conscience, which is, I think, how you maintain the felt experience of the pure heart and love. Love and faith are paired up at least five times in this letter. [00:11:22]

The entire household plan of God, and he's of course treating the church as the household, and he's going to call Elders stewards, household Keepers. In Titus 1:7, for an overseer, an elder, a pastor, as God's household manager must be above reproach, and so on. [00:11:42]

The church is viewed as God's house, the pastors are viewed as the managers of the house, the stewardship of the house is going to be built by faith, and the essence of that stewardship is going to be love, all of it rooted in a faith yielding a pure heart and a good conscience. [00:12:23]

The aim of the charge is love that issues from a pure heart and a good conscience and sincere Faith. Father, we want very much to realize the aim here of the charge. We want to be people who love from a pure heart and a good conscience and sincere Faith. [00:02:09]

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