The opening verses of the second chapter of the Second Epistle to Timothy are in essence a to faithfulness.
The apostle Paul was lying imprisoned at Rome, with expectation of no other issue but death. The infant church had fallen upon perilous times. False teachers were assailing the very essence of the gospel. Defection had invaded the innermost circle of the apostle’s companions. Treachery had attacked his own person. Over against all these dreadful manifestations of impending destruction, he strenuously exhorts his own son in faith, Timothy, to steadfast faithfulness. Faithfulness to himself, faithfulness to the cause he had at heart, faithfulness to the truth as he preached it, faithfulness to Jesus Christ, their common Redeemer and Lord.
The temptations to unfaithfulness by which Timothy was assailed were very numerous and very specious. Many good men had fallen and were falling victims to them. The perverted teachings of the errorists of the day were urged with a great show of learning and with eminent plausibility. And they were announced with a fine scorn which openly declared that only dull wits could rest in the crude ideas with which Paul had faced to world – and lost.
The sword of persecution had been ruthlessly unsheathed, and sufferings and a cruel death watched in the way of those who would fain walk in the path that Paul had marked out. It seemed as though the whole fabric which the apostle had built up at such cost of labour and pain was about to fall about his ears.
Paul does not for a moment, however, lose courage, either for himself or for his faithful followers. But neither does he seek to involve Timothy unwittingly in the difficulties and dangers in which he found himself. He rather bids him first of all to count the whole cost. And then he points him to a source of strength which will supply all his needs.
We called the passage an exhortation. We might better call it, more specifically, an encouragement. And the encouragement culminates in a very remarkable sentence.
This sentence is pregnant enough to reveal at once the central thought of Paul’s gospel, and the citadel of his own strength. Amid all the surrounding temptations, all the encompassing dangers, Paul bids Timothy to bear in mind, as the sufficing source of abounding strength, the great central doctrine – or let us say, the great central fact – of his preaching, of his faith, of his life. And he enunciates this great fact, in these words: - Jesus Christ raised from the dead, of the seed of David.
It is, of course, to the glorified Christ Jesus that Paul directs his own and Timothy’s gaze. Or to be more specific, it is to the Regal Lordship of the resurrected Jesus that he points as the Christian’s strength and support. Paul bids Timothy in the midst of all the besetting perplexities and dangers which encompassed him, to strengthen his heart by bearing constantly in remembrance, not just Jesus Christ (simply as Jesus Christ,) but Jesus Christ conceived of specifically as the Lord of the Universe, who has been dead, but now lives again, and abides for ever in the power of an endless life; as the royal seed of David ascended in triumph to His eternal throne.
No doubt a part of the apostle’s purpose in his allusion to the past humiliation of the exalted Lord is to constitute a connection between Jesus Christ and his faithful followers, that they may become imitators of Him. (He who suffered is now exalted; so it will be with them.) But the “nerve-centre” of the exhortation, obviously, does not lie in this. How could Timothy imitate our Lord in being of the seed of David? How could he imitate Him by ascending the throne of the Universe? Fundamentally the apostle is pointing to Christ not as our example, but as our almighty Saviour. He means to adduce the great things about Him. And the central one of the great things he adduces about Him is that He has been raised from the dead. To Paul, it is clear, the resurrection of Christ was the hinge on which turned all his hopes and all his confidence, in life, and also in death. “Remember Jesus Christ, risen from the dead.”