2
Timothy 1:7-8 (NASB) For God has not given us a
spirit of timidity, but of power and love and discipline.
Therefore do not be ashamed of the testimony
of our Lord, or of me His prisoner; but join with me in suffering for
the gospel according to the power of God,
Fear
doesn’t come from God. Rather, God offers in place of fear, power,
love, and “a sound mind.” Why does Paul say “a sound mind”
(KJV), or “self-discipline” (NIV), or “discipline” (NASB)?
Paul uses these terms because fear militates against sound,
disciplined thinking: fear expands itself irrationally when we
give place to it.
This
is an important point and one that recurs as you read the Bible’s
passages on fear. Fear feeds
itself, even to the point where we perversely begin to
fear fear itself. But what God provides is a spirit of love (the
most important key to conquering fear outright) and power
(in His power we are not helpless but can chose to exercise faith in
His goodness and sovereign control), and discipline.
Discipline enables us to control the wild flights of fancy in our
minds (2 Corinthians 10:5), so that we are not carried away with
gusts of fear (as the spies were in Numbers 13-14). To yield to these
imaginations is to give way to panic.
Paul
has a real bell-ringer in 2 Timothy 1:8 in our battle against fear
and panic. Notice that Paul did not advise Timothy to combat his
fears by backing off his ministry. Paul didn’t give his young
coworker a pass because Timothy was afraid. Rather, in verse 8 Paul
says, “join with me in suffering for the gospel according to
the power of God.” Paul did not
protect Timothy from suffering; he invited Timothy to
embrace suffering with him for
the sake of the gospel.
We are not accustomed to think of
fear in terms of moral responsibility. But there is a significant
moral component to our fears when we allow them to interrupt the
responsibilities and ministries to which God has called us.
God
desires that we confront our fears by
not allowing them to turn us aside from our obligations.
Rather than giving in to fear and retreating, we are invited by God
to step out onto the edge and labor together with Him. It is
uncomfortable—to be sure—but “God hath not given us a spirit of
fear, but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.”
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