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Sermons from Trinity Evangel Church in Marysville, WA. We are reformed (and still reforming!) disciples of Christ.

Trinity Evangel Church Trinity Evangel Church

    • Religion & Spirituality

Sermons from Trinity Evangel Church in Marysville, WA. We are reformed (and still reforming!) disciples of Christ.

    12: Jealousable Households

    12: Jealousable Households

    • 1 hr 1 min
    2: First Steps (Pt 1)

    2: First Steps (Pt 1)

    • 59 min
    1. After Godliness

    1. After Godliness

    I love the Pastoral Epistles; come along and love them with me! Titus is another short book (only 46 verses long) after Habakkuk (56 verses), and we'll consider it together over these next few months. It's a book about the influence of the truth on character/conduct/lifestyle, and then how that behavior influences others, both inside and outside the church.

    One of the phrases that has most affected my perspective on truth and worldview is in Titus 2:10: “that in everything they may _adorn the doctrine of God our Savior_." There is a way to live that shows the beauty of the teaching. This is the burden of the letter to Titus. Starting in the greeting, the knowledge of truth "accords with godliness" (1:1). The "sound doctrine" that Titus is to teach (2:1) could be taken as a mini-encomium of godly character. And the phrase "good works" peppers the letter six times (1:16, 2:7, 14, 3:1, 8, 14).

    Our habits of life _matter_. Our households need examples, the household of faith needs examples, the world needs examples.

    Robert Capon wrote that we have lots of principles but “nobody has been showing me pictures. At least not ones I can identify with.” Edmund Burke wrote, “Example is the school of mankind and they will learn at no other.” Peter wrote that elders were to be templates to the flock (1 Peter 5:3), and the first group Paul addresses are elders in Titus 1:5-9. Men of godliness are to lead the way by showing what truth looks like in the flesh. We adorn the doctrine, we wear it in a way that makes it look _good_.

    This book is a personal letter from the apostle Paul to one of Paul's disciples named Titus, his **true child in a common faith** (1:4). As usual in first century correspondence, the author identifies himself and greets his reader. This is, certainly, to Titus, but it's got to be _for_ more than Titus; it’s a “church” book.

    Paul left Titus as a young man (2:6-8) on the island of Crete to appoint elders for the churches that Paul had just planted with Titus' help (1:5). Titus had been traveling and working with Paul, and was especially successful in some back-and-forths with the Corinthians (2 Corinthians 2:12-13, 7:5-7; 8:6-7).

    It'd be a good question just how much of the letter bearing his name would have been new information to Titus. Along with reminders, these instructions were public, like speaking loud enough to one kid so that the whole table hears. The Cretan Christians were apparently unorganized (1:5), upset by false teachers (1:11), living in a culture of liars (1:12) and ungodliness, worldly passions, and lawlessness (2:11, 14). The pre-Christian Cretans themselves had been:

    > foolish, disobedient, led astray, slaves to various passions and pleasures, passing our days in malice and envy, hated by others and hating one another. (Titus 3:3 ESV)

    To start, here is one of the longest opens in any of Paul's letters.

    > Paul, a servant of God and an apostle of Jesus Christ, for the sake of the faith of God’s elect and their knowledge of the truth, which accords with godliness, in hope of eternal life, which God, who never lies, promised before the ages began and at the proper time manifested in his word through the preaching with which I have been entrusted by the command of God our Savior;
    > To Titus, my true child in a common faith: Grace and peace from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Savior. (Titus 1:1–4 ESV)

    There's the author, the addressee, and the greeting, but I'm going to drill in on two themes.

    # The Threefold Aim

    Paul was a **slave**, doing the will of another. He was an **apostle**, taking the message of another. So he was a preacher according to the command of God.

    There are great statements of Paul's purpose throughout his letters (for example Colossians 1:28 to present every man complete in Christ; Philippians 1:25 for progress and joy in faith). This greeting to Titus has three parts, two **for the sake of** aims, two objects “to further” (NIV), and then

    • 1 hr 1 min
    11: Education and the Household

    11: Education and the Household

    • 1 hr 1 min
    7: Dissident Joy

    7: Dissident Joy

    This final paragraph is what living by faith looks like. This is what living by faith *sings* like. This is how trust in tension responds when it's about to get worse before the glory of the Lord covers the earth. This is living with *dissident joy* (dissident comes from *dis*=apart and *sedere*=to sit, so to sit apart), when we oppose the world’s official narrative in the peace of God which surprises their understanding.

    These final verses of Habakkuk are often referenced at weddings; they have a "in sickness…in want…in sorrow” vibe. That said, the original context belongs to the economic devastation due to war. Some marriages are a battleground, but this has a bigger application.

    The covenant people of Judah were corrupt, Habakkuk asked why the LORD seemed to be allowing it. The LORD said He was raising up a foreign nation to judge Judah, Habakkuk asked how it was right for the LORD to use such a wicked people. The LORD said He would judge them too, He purposed judgment for everyone who was puffed up. Habakkuk wrote a psalm as his reply.

    The song started with Prophetic Requests in verse 2; Lord, *work*! Remember mercy! Verses 3-15 were Prophetic Remembrances, celebrating times when God showed up, through natural means and among the nations to do His work. Now the Prophetic Resolution comes in verses 16-19. It is the end of the song, and a fitting final paragraph to the book.

    Habakkuk's resolution is a declaration of faith to rejoice amidst ruin.


    # Reaction (verse 16)

    The revelation of ruin *on Babylon* caused visceral reaction.

    > I hear, and my body trembles;
    > my lips quiver at the sound;
    > rottenness enters into my bones;
    > my legs tremble beneath me.
    > Yet I will quietly wait for the day of trouble
    > to come upon people who invade us.
    > (Habakkuk 3:16 ESV)

    This is full-body feedback, from head to feet, into the guts and skeleton. The **body** is more like the “belly” (KJV) or one’s insides; his “stomach churned” (NET), and **trembles** could be like "pounded." The **lips quiver** like a mouth-seizure making it hard to speak intelligibly. The **bones** are supposed to be the structure and support system, but they are being eaten away. **Legs** could be translated "feet" and they are wobbly, unsteady; he’s gone limp.

    **I hear** follows up with “I have heard” in verse 2; Habakkuk got the message. And so he will **quietly wait for the day of trouble to come upon the people who invade us**. This isn't the catastrophe and captivity of Judah, this is the calamity on the Chaldeans. *That* trouble won't be the end of Judah's troubles, at least not immediately, it will be worse for everyone.

    The body keeps the prophecy, so to speak, and who knows how long it will be while God’s judgment runs the course. When we see and fear and laugh (as in Psalm 52:8)—taunts included, we can’t skip the fear (where Habakkuk’s song started too in verse 2).


    # Resolution (verses 17-18)

    It's a resolution with concession: “Even though, still.” It’s all a piece, one sentence.

    > Though the fig tree should not blossom,
    > nor fruit be on the vines,
    > the produce of the olive fail
    > and the fields yield no food,
    > the flock be cut off from the fold
    > and there be no herd in the stalls,
    > yet I will rejoice in the LORD;
    > I will take joy in the God of my salvation.
    > (Habakkuk 3:17–18 ESV)

    Six lines of progressive collapse, disruption, and scarcity provide the context. There’s loss of options, luxuries, and essentials. Figs/dates were more sweet and like treats, fruit on the vine was grapes for wine. No olive oil and no wheat, then no baking and no bread. Now we're talking food basics not on the table. Without a flock there'd be no milk and little for sake of clothes, and no herd in the stalls meant no help for the work, and together no meat.

    The land has been gutted, the supply chain broken. They didn't even have the Fed print worthless mon

    • 1 hr 5 min
    6: A Framework of Faith

    6: A Framework of Faith

    Habakkuk himself didn’t know it, but we're told that those who are filled with the Spirit and richly indwelt by God's Word speak to one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs (Ephesians 5:18-19; Colossians 3:16). We're told that anyone who is cheerful should sing psalms (James 5:13, the command is *psalleto*). And we're also given a prophetic example that when there is corruption in the land, and when God sends ruin not revival, the right response is to (write and) sing a psalm.

    Habakkuk 3 is described as a prophet’s “prayer" (3:1), just as chapters 1-2 were introduced as a prophet’s “oracle” or burden. But the final note in chapter 3 is that it was for the "choirmaster," so a *corporate* not just personal prayer-song (which follows the taunt-song in 2:6-20). We also see three uses of the word "Selah," which is some sort of musical notation, and the only books of the Bible that have "Selah" are Psalms and this chapter in Habakkuk. So Habakkuk 3 is a prophet’s prayer-psalm.

    Of the commentators I read, only one argued that verse 2 is a refrain/chorus which he thought would be sung between three sections as titled before each Selah. Others weren't as certain of that breakdown. But you can see the changes of person. Verse 2, and again in verses 7 and 16-19, have the first person "I." Verses 3-6 talk about God's works in the third person, and verses 8-15 address God directly in the second person, "You." The ESV adds a break with a heading between verses 16-17, and that's...odd.

    I think we can see the Prophetic Request (verse 2), Prophetic Remembrance in two parts (verses 3-15), and Prophetic Resolution (next time, in verses 16-19).

    That’s the framework of the song, but the song itself belongs with the *framework of faith* (a phrase used by O. Palmer Robertson in his commentary). The just shall live by faith, requesting help and remembering God’s previous help in history. Go to God with questions and complaints, get perspective from God on what He’s doing, and then worship God with the saints.


    # Prophetic Requests (verse 2)

    The only Asks in the entire prayer come in verse 2.

    > O LORD, I have heard the report of You,
    > and Your work, O LORD, I do fear.
    > In the midst of the years, revive it,
    > in the midst of the years, make it known,
    > in wrath remember mercy.

    The initial framework of faith: *hear and fear*. This pairing is found four times in Deuteronomy (13:11, 17:13, 19:20, 21:21). The prophet heard when the LORD said, “I am doing a work in your days that you would not believe if told” (Habakkuk 1:5), and he was awed by it. “I hear You!”

    The repeated phrase **in the midst of the years** seems to refer to the time between Habakkuk's questions and the fulfillment of the LORD's answers. This would at least be after Josiah’s death in 609 BC, then during Judah’s anticipation of then captivity to the Chaldeans, up until the Chaldeans got what they deserved. Since Cyrus took control of Babylon in 539 BC, the "midst" could have been the 70 or so years. That said, we are still waiting for all Babylon's daughters to shut their mouths in silence, as well as for the knowledge of the glory of the Lord to cover the earth. We are at least in a related "midst" of waiting.

    The three requests are: 1) **revive it**, meaning revive the work of the LORD. “Bring it!” 2) **make it known**, again the work of the LORD. And 3) **remember mercy** in the midst of the **wrath**, which is a word for wrath that relates to angered agitation. Knowing that the judgment is *deserved*, and knowing that the judgment will be brutal, does not mean we cannot pray that there would be mercy.

    The just shall live by faith—with trust in tension, and here is faith longing for the Lord to work and depending on the Lord for His mercy.


    # Prophetic Remembrances (verses 3-15)

    There are two approaches to the prophet’s remembrances, descriptive (third person) and then direct address (second perso

    • 57 min

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