A few weeks ago I reflected on the ways that Titus 2 showed
gospel change in four different life stages.
As I compiled that series, though, something began to jump out at me. Paul
might have been giving different specifics to young women than he did to old
men, but they were clearly all on the same team, all headed in the same general
direction.
A common theme began to emerge: Paul was encouraging each
of them to extraordinary obedience, even though the applications were often
seemingly ordinary.
Here are three truths about extraordinary obedience in
ordinary situations:
1. Our
everyday obedience is our best witness.
Look at some of the values in Titus 2:1–6, and you’ll
quickly find a few that our culture finds antiquated and foolish. The most
striking are the virtues of self-control and submission. You may find some
Americans who cherish the idea of self-control, but few who live it out. And
you’ll find even fewer who will voluntarily say, “Yes, submission, that’s my
favorite!” Instead, our culture praises those individuals who follow their
hearts and defy convention.
What this means is that when people live the way Paul
describes, the world will notice. Not only that, but they’ll often be pleased
by the countercultural life that they see. As Tim Chester says,
“People may not like it when we talk about self-control and
submission. But they find it attractive when we live it. Unbelievers who are
repelled by the Christian teaching on headship within marriage are attracted by
the Christian marriages they see. Unbelievers who find Christian morality
restrictive are attracted by the good lives of the Christians they know.”[1]
The Apostle Peter would say it like this: “In your hearts,
honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to
anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you” (1 Peter 3:15).
When is the last time the way you treated your spouse, or ran your business, or
spent your money, made someone ask you to tell you about your hope?
Walking in obedience to Christ isn’t always flashy. But
it’s that everyday obedience—in our marriage, in our jobs, in our schools—that
acts as a theater for bringing glory to God and demonstrating his grace to the
world.
2. The
best testimony to the gospel happens in the “mundane.”
Paul was a missionary, and his life was chock full of
dramatic sacrifices. So when he takes up the pen to instruct Titus, you might
expect him to say things like, “Give all your money away! Leave your home to
preach the gospel to the nations! Be prepared to die for Jesus!” But instead,
he addresses the seemingly mundane reality of the home. What gives?
We often think of great Christianity as revealing itself in
grand sacrifices and heroic missionary stories. And it does. But heroic
Christianity isn’t born on the mission field. It’s born in the “small” areas of
life, in the home. Your Christianity is best measured by the relationships most
people don’t see.
That’s a chilling thought for a lot of people. If God
judged your faith only by your relationships in your home, how would you
measure up? As Robert Murray M’Cheyne said, “It is the mark of a hypocrite to
be a Christian everywhere but home.”
But for many of you, this doesn’t need to be a rebuke; it
can be an empowerment. For those men who feel like failures because they
haven’t achieved all of their life’s ambitions, know that your integrity in
your career matters. For those women who sacrificed more than we can quantify
to stay home and raise children, that faithfulness matters. Books probably
won’t be written about the way we treat our spouse and kids, but that doesn’t
make the home any less a theater for the extraordinary. Because if what Paul
says is true, miraculous power comes through mundane faithfulness.
3.
Extraordinary obedience flows directly out of the gospel.
There is always a danger to read a list of commands in
Scripture and to create a new “to do” list. “Be self-controlled?” Check! “Be
reverent?” Check! But that’s never what Scripture is after. And it’s not Paul’s
idea here either. After laying out the various examples of everyday obedience,
Paul reminds us, “The grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all
people, training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live
self-controlled, upright and godly lives in the present age” (Titus 2:11–12).
What gives us the power to live in a truly Christian way?
Not more religious tasks. They may work for a while, but they’re exhausting if
we’re using them to change ourselves. No, as Paul says, the grace of God gives
us the power to walk away from sin and choose holiness. It’s not as we try
harder that we become more like Christ. It’s as we learn to steep ourselves in
the story of what God has done for us, looking upward to the glory of the God
who saved us, backward to the price he paid for us, and forward to what he’s
making us.
Focus on that and the fruit will begin to grow naturally in your
heart.
by: J.D. Greear
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