October 5, 2024

Accountable Friendship

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Timothy – Letters to a Young Man: Accountable Friendship
Sycamore Creek Church
September 29 & 30
Tom Arthur
2 Timothy 4:3-4

Peace friends!

The other day I was working out in the yard edging the driveway.  If you know me at all, you’ll know that I really don’t like doing yard work.  I live on a corner lot so there is at least twice the amount of sidewalk to edge than the average house in my neighborhood.  I’m not really having a very good time.  Tabitha, who lives with us, walks out to her car at just about the time that I’m fed up with the whole process.  If you know Tabitha, you know that she’s super bubbly.  She is an encourager at heart.  She looks at what I’ve done and says, “Looks great!”  I respond, “Another hour of my life wasted.”  She catches the attitude and says back to me, “You could always use that hour to pray.  That’s what I do in my cleaning job when I’m cleaning toilets and don’t like it.”  Ouch.  At first my defenses went up.  I thought, “Who are you to tell me when to pray?”  Slowly but surely God’s Holy Spirit worked conviction on my defensiveness, and I realized that the pastor had just been held accountable.  I also realized I had an opening illustration for this message!

The Problem
Here’s the problem I want to deal with today: We don’t give or receive correction well.  I’m no better than anyone else when it comes to this.  I get defensive even if there is truth in it.

When was the last time you received correction or guidance from someone and actually accepted it well?  When was the last time you gave correction or guidance to someone (especially in a touchy situation) and they received it well?

The Point
Today we’re wrapping up a series on Paul’s letters to Timothy.  Paul is the first Christian missionary and Timothy is a young church leader that Paul is mentoring.  They are spiritual friends.  With an eye toward eternity and the things of God, Paul is helping Timothy to live and lead well right now.  Today we’re going to see how Paul holds Timothy accountable and guides him and how he instructs Timothy to do the same with others.  What we’ll find is this: True spiritual friends do more than just listen, they also guide.

The “books” of 1 & 2 Timothy are actually not books.  They’re letters that Paul wrote Timothy.  Here’s one section where Paul guides Timothy about his own leadership of guiding others:

2 Timothy 4:3-4
For the time is coming when people will not put up with sound doctrine, but having itching ears, they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own desires, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander away to myths.

Paul is essentially saying: It’s hard to receive guidance and correction.  When push comes to shove, we tend to seek out people who agree with us rather than seeking out people who will challenge us.  This comes in every facet of life.  Throughout the two letters, Paul speaks to Timothy about the content of the teaching he is teaching others:  “Pay close attention to yourself and to your teaching” (1 Timothy 4:16).  He talks to Timothy about money: “Love of money is the root of all kinds of evil” (1 Timothy 6:10).  He guides Timothy about sin: “People will be lovers of themselves” (2 Timothy 3:2).  In each case, Timothy is to teach and guide in the way that Paul has instructed him, in the way that Paul has received guidance and correction from Jesus.

Guiding and Correcting
Or course, saying you should guide and correct is much easier than the real thing.  I asked some friends for examples of when they had received or given guidance or correction.  I ended up getting two stories about eating disorders.

Alice McKinstry was at one time an Aversion Therapy therapist.  She helped people get over bad habits like smoking or overeating.  She actually met Mark, her husband, when he came in seeking help to quit smoking.  Her job was to give him an electric shock as he picked up a cigarette!  I guess it worked.  And she got a husband in the process!  One day she had a Jewish woman come to see her who had been in a concentration camp.  This woman had an eating disorder.  When Alice found out her background, she told her something that she wasn’t supposed to say in her job: she didn’t need Aversion Therapy; she needed to focus on the trauma of being in a concentration camp.  I was intrigued to find out that the woman ended up agreeing and sought out another kind of therapy.  It was a risk that Alice took on several levels to guide this woman to find healing.

I also heard back from Krissy Brokenshire about people holding her accountable through guidance and correction.  Krissy is a young mom of two kids in our church.  She wrote to me:

I have a long history of eating disorders that started when I was eleven years old. For the most part I have not had a major relapse for at least the past ten years, but a lot of that had to do with the people I love watching out for me. It was the worst in high school and between my parents and several close friends, they kept me honest about what I was eating and that I was making good life choices. Without nearly 24-7 accountability on the body-problems I would not have had the strong foundation needed to develop new habits and work on the head-problems.

I’m struck by the courage of both Krissy and Alice to receive and give guidance in a culture that is more interested in keeping everybody’s business private.

Give Correction or Guidance
Of course all of us have stories of giving correction or guidance and it not working out quite so well.  And it never will work out well all the time because no matter how well you do it, the person has to receive it well too.  So how do you do you give guidance in a way that will create the fewest obstacles possible?

Giving guidance is an art more than a science, but let me offer a bit of science to help you.  It comes from the science of marriage.  Julie Gottman and her husband John have been studying couples over several decades.  They video tape them arguing about something and then follow up every couple of years to see how their relationship is progressing or digressing.  Here’s a brief video of Julie Gottman talking about what the healthy couples do when they give one another guidance or correction:

Even though this is about marriage, I think it can be instructive to any situation where you’re attempting to hold a spiritual friend accountable.  I’d sum it up in these ways:

  1. Complain, don’t criticize.
  2. Start your sentences with “I” instead of “you.”
  3. Talk clearly about what you need.
  4. Be polite.
  5. Express appreciation.

Don’t forget to spend some time in prayer before you bring it up.  This might be a brief “breath prayer” in the moment or it might be a more extended time of prayer before the moment.

Receive Correction or Guidance
So what about being on the receiving end of correction or guidance?  What should you do if someone attempts to hold you accountable?

One thing the Gottmans focus on in their research is helping couples accept influence from one another.  I think this is a helpful emphasis for everyone.  Most of us have a gut reaction against accepting another person’s influence.  Most of us get defensive the moment someone attempts to correct us.  If that’s your default, then seek God’s power to change your default so that your default becomes: maybe there’s something I can learn from this person’s guidance or correction.  Maybe God can teach me something here.  Maybe there’s not and their guidance or correction is completely frivolous, but if you don’t begin with the default that there might be something of worth here, you’ll never really know.  You’ll only get defensive.

I’d suggest that your next step should be to be curious and ask questions about what the person is seeing or noticing.  Instead of defending yourself, get to see yourself from that person’s perspective.  This past week I had a meeting with a colleague who didn’t like something I did.  This person sent me an email about it, and I suggested we meet to talk about it face to face.  When I got the email, I was at first defensive.  But I held back the defensiveness when we met, and I spent the first twenty minutes just asking questions.  Then I summarized what this colleague felt.  I learned something new about myself in this process.  I also won over this colleague.  At the end of the twenty minutes of me just listening and asking questions and summarizing how they felt, this person apologized to me for sending the email!  I didn’t see that coming.  I think the door opened for reconciliation in part because I was willing to accept influence and ask questions.

A third step I’d suggest you go through is seek other input.  Does more than one person notice this about you?  Someone recently told me that the messages each Sunday were getting too long.  Then someone else told me the same thing.  Then I went to a conference where they essentially said the same thing.  Then I went to another church where the pastor’s message was just as long as mine.  It was too long.  Ouch.  So I’ve been working on getting them tighter.  Hearing the same thing from many people suggested to me that there was some real truth I had to grapple with here.

Lastly, make sure you pray about it.  Give God’s Holy Spirit an invitation to seek your heart and mind and show you your own brokenness.  Allow God to convict you and hold you accountable too.  Psalm 139 says:

Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my thoughts.
See if there is any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.

A Community of Spiritual Friends Guiding and Correcting
What might a whole community of spiritual friends look like who were open to holding one another accountable through giving and receiving guidance and correction?  How would it not devolve into just being a big group of very judgmental and defensive people?  Well, I received a glimpse of what it might look like in an unlikely place: a karate black belt test.  Recently I went to see Justin Kring, a newly baptized member of our church, test for his second degree black belt.  His sensei is Mark McCloud, who is also a member of our church and owns the Karate Dojo in Holt.  I was deeply moved watching the panel of senseis preside over the tests.  The spirit in the room was not a spirit of being judgmental, but it was a spirit of accountability.  You had either mastered the kata techniques or you had not.  Mark doesn’t actually let anyone test who he knows won’t pass.  There are clear standards that one is held accountable to, but the community is one of support and encouragement and love.

That’s what I’d like to see happen here at SCC.  I’d like to see us be a community where spiritual friendships thrive and part of that thriving is that spiritual friends are holding one another accountable to truly following Jesus by giving and receiving guidance and correction.  If a karate dojo can pull it off, I think we can too.

Prayer
God, help us to be a community that creates environments where spiritual friendships can thrive.  Give those spiritual friends the courage to give and receive guidance and correction so that we more faithfully follow Jesus.  May we have these things by the power your Holy Spirit working in us.  Amen.

Remember Who You Are

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Timothy – Letters to a Young Man: Remember Who You Are
Sycamore Creek Church
September 15/16, 2013
Tom Arthur
1 Timothy 4:14 & 2 Timothy 1:5-7

Peace friends!

Do you ever forget who you are?  You get so caught up in the problems surrounding you that pretty soon you feel like the problems are your whole identity?  Sometimes all the small problems in my life begin to add up and overwhelm my sense of who I am and who I’m called to become.  Sometimes my body distracts me with pain or anxiety.  Sometimes conflict with those around me crowds out who I am.  Or stress on time crowds out time with God where I remember who I am.  Sometimes I forget who I am, and then I realize that I’ve been playing to all my weaknesses rather than my strengths.  Other times sin bogs me down, and when I’m no longer living at the center of God’s will, I forget who I am.

When people talk to me about who they are and what they’re called to I often hear some pretty regular themes pop up.  Someone gets bogged down in a job that sucks the soul out of their life.  Or they begin to set their hearts on the accumulation of money, security & stability, respectability, and fame and pretty soon forget who they are.  Or others dig themselves so deep in a hole with bad choices and it is going to take so long to get out of that deep hole that they begin to forget who they are, even if they’re taking positive steps to get out of the hole.  I see people who are stressed on more than one front.  They’re fighting battles at home and at work at the same time.  Or home and school.  It’s exhausting, and pretty soon they forget who they are.  Sin gets in the way too.  Someone once told me, “I know it’s a sin and I’m going to do it anyway.”  The lure of the sin was blinding them to who they are.

Today we’re continuing in a series called Timothy – Letters to a Young Man.  It’s a Bible series where we’re exploring the two letters we have that Paul, the first missionary of the church, wrote to Timothy, a young church leader.  If you read between the lines there’s an impressive list of things that Timothy was struggling with and all of them threatened to make Timothy forget who he was.  Timothy was facing:

  1. Competing truth claims & “false teachers”
  2. People jumping ship
  3. Questions about how to organize the church
  4. Fanatics
  5. Theological and Biblical nitpickers (“Stupid and senseless controversies”)
  6. Hypocrites (“Holding to the outward form of godliness but denying its power”)
  7. Challenges to his young age
  8. Needy widows (Some who were freeloaders!)
  9. Questions about money and getting paid
  10. Physical ailments (Drink wine!)
  11. Social upheaval (converted slaves and slave holders)
  12. Expectation of persecution.

It’s enough to make one quit.  Timothy isn’t sure he’s up to the task.  He’s kind of like Steve Rogers before he become Captain America.

Dr. Abraham Erskine reminds Rogers of who he is.  What we’ll find as we read through the letters that Paul wrote to Timothy is that Paul is a spiritual friend and mentor who reminds Timothy who he is.  That’s the whole point of the message today: Spiritual friends remind us who we are.

Remember Your Calling
In the face of all these obstacles that Timothy is facing, Paul regularly reminds Timothy of who he is and his calling in life.  Here are two key places where Paul does that: 

1 Timothy 4:14 – Do not neglect the gift that is in you [talents], which was given to you through prophecy with the laying on of hands [confirmation] by the council of elders. 

2 Timothy 1:5-7 – I am reminded of your sincere faith, a faith that lived first in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice [history] and now, I am sure, lives in you [passion].  For this reason I remind you to rekindle the gift of God [talents] that is within you through the laying on of my hands [confirmation]; for God did not give us a spirit of cowardice, but rather a spirit of power and of love and of self-discipline.

Notice that Paul points to several things that point to who Timothy is: his talents or the God-given gifts that are in him, the confirmation of the church through the laying on of hands (twice Paul reminds him of this!), his history or circumstances, and his passion or you might say the fire in his belly.

Who Are You or What’s Your Calling?
What’s your calling?  Who you are is wrapped up a lot in the sense you have about your calling, your vocation.  “Vocation” is Latin for “to call.”  If you want some clues to what you’re called to do find a spiritual friend who will help you sort through your history, passion, talent, and confirmation.  What if it’s not clear after that?  It rarely is crystal clear, and in some ways I think our calling is a moving target.  But sometimes I get people talking to me who are looking for big stupendous things to be called to when our calling may be much more simple than that: to be a loving member of our family, church, community, and world.  Here’s one calling that all of you have.  If you ever wonder what God wants of you, here’s the answer: to be holy, to be set apart to love more perfectly.  If you seek holiness, a more perfect love, then you can say with Paul: “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. From now on there is reserved for me the crown of righteousness…” (2 Timothy 4:7-8).

Who Reminds You Who You Are?
I have several people in my life who are spiritual friends who remind me who I am both past and present.  In there are two key groups of people who reminded me who I am.  First was a thirty-four week Bible study group called Disciple Bible Study.  Week thirty-three is a day-long retreat.  During that retreat you spend time going around sharing with one another what you see in each other in terms of your gifts and calling.  I did not yet have a sense that I was called to be a pastor, but all twelve people in that group told me that day that they thought I was.  Whoa!  Here is the confirmation of the church, the “laying on of hands.”

Eventually I went to seminary, and I was appointed to an internship at a church in Richmond, VA called Reveille.  While I was in seminary studying to be a pastor, I had never really had a whole community treat me like a pastor until that summer.  As far as they were concerned, I wasn’t just a student studying to be a pastor, I was their pastor!  That summer I became a pastor because the church treated me like one.  They reminded me who I am.

Most of you know Barb Flory, the founding pastor of this church.  I remember our first meeting together.  I cried.  That’s not really what you’re supposed to do when you’re exploring being a leader of a community.  Leaders don’t cry.  But Barb saw something in me that told her that I was the right person for this church.  She regularly reminds me of that.  It always seems to come when I’m feeling overwhelmed with the responsibilities of leading the church.

Then there’s my friend, Jon Van Dop, another pastor.  Jon and I meet regularly to discuss what we’re celebrating and what obstacles we’re facing as a pastor.  As I think back on these meetings, it’s somewhat humorous.  First he goes and dumps on me.  I tell him how awesome he is and what a good job he’s doing.  Then I dump on him, and he tells me how awesome I am and what a good job I’m doing.  We remind each other of who we are and what God has called us to.

Who is reminding you of who you are?  What spiritual friends do you have in your life who are being a Paul to you?

Who Do You Remind Who They Are?
So if each of us needs a Paul in our lives, we also each need a Timothy in our lives, someone we’re reminding regularly who they are.  For all of this is first our family.  Every night when Micah goes to bed, I tell him, “You are a gift from God to me and your mom.”  I remind him who he is.  I hope that when he’s sixteen I’m still reminding him that he is a gift from God, even if it doesn’t feel like it.

Of course, don’t just stick with your family.  Who outside your family are you reminding who they are?  When I lived in Petoskey I gathered together a group of high school guys for a weekly small group.  We began by reading the book, How To Find the Love of Your Life by Neill Clark Warren.  This was before Warren had founded e-harmony.  Then we moved on to the book of Romans in the Bible.  This wasn’t a huge group.  Three or four, sometimes five, guys.  Their assignment each week was to read a chapter and bring something to the group that they found interesting.  We were planning to end the year with a backpacking trip where we finished out the book of Romans.

Most of the guys in this group were seniors and were graduating at the end of the year.  One morning I woke up and went out to get the paper.  I read the paper and was surprised to read a headline: “Petoskey senior trip canceled after stampede.”  Whoa!  Apparently the seniors went on a wild rampage the last day of school running around the halls tipping over trash cans and pushing a teacher over.  Their annual trip to Cedar Point was canceled by the school board.  As I read the article, I saw the names of three of the guys in my small group as the three “ring leaders.”  The most interesting thing about it was that all three of the guys listed were quoted as taking responsibility and apologizing for what had happened.  It may sound strange, but I was particularly proud of those three guys.  I was proud to say that they were in a small group with me.  We all forget who we are and do stupid stuff, but I believe that it was at least in part because of that small group that they had not forgotten long.  They were the only ones named as having publicly apologized.  The next small group meeting was quite a time of discussion.  I didn’t cancel the backpacking trip to finish out the book of Romans.

One of the guys in that group was Charlie Matz.  I asked Charlie to make a video introducing himself and telling you a bit about what effect that backpacking trip and studying the book of Romans had on him.  Meet Charlie:

 

 

Charlie began a video production company called The Veracity Project.  Veracity means “truth.” They have made dozens of videos that seek to remind others who they are and have sold over 30,000 downloads and reached millions all over the world.  One of those videos stars his co-founded Bub.  It’s called “Big But.”

 

Big But – The Veracity Project from Do Something Church on Vimeo.

So who do you remind them of who they are?  Who is your Timothy?

Where To Find Your Spiritual Friend
So you’re convinced you need a spiritual friend to remind you of your big buts, and you need to be a spiritual friend to someone to remind them who they are.  But where do you find that spiritual friend?  We can’t make spiritual friendship just happen at SCC, but we can create environments where spiritual friendships can be made.  The place where that happens most is in small groups.  Throughout the month of September we’re publishing a list of all the small groups that are happening during the fall semester.  Small groups aren’t a magic wand to spiritual friendships, but they are the best thing we’ve got.  Because you’re not going to build these kind of spiritual friendships in a worship service.  It’s just too big of an environment.   You need something smaller.  Insert: small groups.  There’s a lot of buts about why you can’t get into a small group.  One of them has been: But when does it end?  You mean I’m supposed to sign up to meet with a bunch of people I don’t know for the rest of my life?  Well, no.  We’re switching this fall to a semester based small group system.  You sign up for a semester.  That’s it.  If you like the small group, great.  If you don’t like, well, it’s only three months.  At the end of the semester, the sign-ups begin again.

Spiritual Friends Change the World
What would it look like if we all had a spiritual friend who was reminding us who were and if we were regularly being that kind of spiritual friend to someone else?  I think we’d change the world.  Consider this fact for one moment: Jesus reminded twelve disciples of who they were – now there’s over two billion!  Who is your Paul?  Who is your Timothy?  Who is your spiritual friend that is reminding you who you are?  Who is your spiritual friend who you are reminding them of who they are?

God, help us find the spiritual friends we need.  Amen.

Timothy Reading Plan

Throughout this series I’m recommending that you read a chapter of 1 & 2 Timothy each day.  Someone who is doing this found this suggestion organizing your reading.  I thought it might be helpful so I pass it on to you.  It is from the great Bible App, You Version (download it and check it out):

First Reading: Enter
As you read this passage of scripture for the first time, you are simply “entering in” or familiarizing yourself with what God is saying here.  Notice the circumstances, people, places, etc.

Second Reading:  Impress
As you read the same passage of scripture for the second time, notice what word, phrase, sentence or verse makes an “impression” on you.

Third Reading:  Pray
As you read this passage of scripture for the third time, begin by spending a few moments in prayer thanking and praising God for his Holy Word.  As you read, be prayerfully interacting with God about the text.

Fourth Reading:  Live
In this final reading of the passage, ask God to show you how He wants you to live based on this scripture.  Is there something He would have you start doing, stop doing or continue doing?