Moments in the life of a Pastor

Walking with God


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3. Trusting in Truth – Part 3

Titus 1:1-4

“This letter is from Paul, a slave of God and an apostle of Jesus Christ. I have been sent to proclaim faith to those God has chosen and to teach them to know the truth that shows them how to live godly lives. This truth gives them confidence that they have eternal life, which God—who does not lie—promised them before the world began. And now at just the right time he has revealed this message, which we announce to everyone. It is by the command of God our Savior that I have been entrusted with this work for him. I am writing to Titus, my true son in the faith that we share. May God the Father and Christ Jesus our Savior give you grace and peace.”

 Second Paul points to our:

2.         Purpose in the Kingdom –Vs 2-4 – Serving the Savior

Your position is a slave of the Savior, so your purpose then is to serve the Savior. It’s here that we discover that purpose flows out of position. If you don’t know whose you are you will never know who you are and therefore you will never know why you are here. Our identity crisis doesn’t just cripple us it compromises the church. Many of us are making our purpose attaining a position. But when you understanding that as a royal priest you already have a position it frees you to put your energy into living out our purpose. Paul now tells us how we are to serve the Savior:

  1. Furthering the Faith of others 1a

Stop making service about self. How do we further the faith of others, Pray for them. I remember going to visit an older man who was physically limited and on oxygen and instead of talking about his problems he reminded me of the power of prayer. He pulled out his prayer list, which consisted of a long list of people that he regularly lifts up before the Lord. Who are you pursuing in prayer? We can encourage and edify one another with our words. So let me ask you are your words blessing or bruising, are you helping and healing or are you hurting. Is your mouth a ministry or a menace? We are often quick to criticize but slow to commend. One of the greatest ways to further other people’s faith is to set a good example, by being faithful in our faith, going to church, having daily devotions, witnessing. So what are you doing to further the faith of others? Or are you making the focus of your faith you? Second

  1. Growing in Godliness – 1b

Are you making the goal godliness or are you making the goal getting. Most of us are motivate more by worldly goals than by God’s Word. How do you know if you are growing in Godliness? Does your character reflect Christ or the culture? Truth should transform the way we live. Proper belief must lead to practical behavior because doctrine is deadly when it is divorced from godly living. Third

  1. Teach the truth 1b

Not only do we need to trust in the truth but we need to be teaching the truth. More things are caught than taught, which means that we must model the truth not just mouth it. Parents don’t just preach biblical principles to your kids practice them. Fourth

  1. Give Priority to proclaiming 3b

As we minister in our Crete, we must never forget the importance of sharing the good news of God. Proclaiming truth is the primary catalyst for transformation. Scripture is what changes sinners into saints.

E. Commit to what we have in common in Christ – 4

I am writing to Titus, my true son in the faith that we share. Because of Christ we have more in common than we do apart. Focusing on our differences leads to division, focusing on our faith leads to unity.


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2. Trusting in Truth – Part 2

Titus 1:1-4

“This letter is from Paul, a slave of God and an apostle of Jesus Christ. I have been sent to proclaim faith to those God has chosen and to teach them to know the truth that shows them how to live godly lives. This truth gives them confidence that they have eternal life, which God—who does not lie—promised them before the world began. And now at just the right time he has revealed this message, which we announce to everyone. It is by the command of God our Savior that I have been entrusted with this work for him. I am writing to Titus, my true son in the faith that we share. May God the Father and Christ Jesus our Savior give you grace and peace.”

It’s here that Paul reminds us of three critical points, first he points to our:

  1. Position in Christ – Vs 1

Paul reminds us that we are not just slaves, rather we are slaves of the Savior. This is significant because if he had just referred to himself as a slave he would have been pointing out his place but a slave of the Savior speaks to a position. Many of us are trying to find our identity in our place instead of our position. We are letting society instead of scripture define us, and when that happens we start making it about our place, and we start put all of our energy into promoting self. Life becomes about self-promotion and building our kingdom instead of serving the King of Kings. Instead of participating in God’s eternal work life is reduced to worldly work where we submit to a pecking order instead of submitting to the Savior. We spend our lives stacking our resumes for recognition, where all the effort we put in to being noticed leads to one thing, narcissism. Is it any wonder that our society has shifted from one driven by service to one that’s driven by selfishness. A society that used to say “don’t ask what your country can do for you but ask what you can do for your country” to one that votes based on what’s in it for me. When we allow ourselves to be defined by the culture instead of Christ we start finding our security and significance in who we are instead of in whose we are. This leads to running instead of relying, trying instead of trusting. Is it any wonder that we are worn out? So we think, I just need to priorities and become more efficient, I just need to work harder. But you don’t need to work harder you need to start working for Him. You want to change your priorities you need to change your position. I am a servant of the Savior, a child of the creator, an ambassador of the Almighty, a royal priest of the prince. Who are you? If you let yourself become defined by society instead of the Savior you will squander your life on a system that is constantly shifting and moving the bar. A system that perpetuates a performance based life of effort and exhaustion instead of a position based one of exhilaration. We start basing our happiness on how things are going instead of basing our happiness on holiness in Him. The focus will become self instead of serving, and because we make it about our place in society instead of our position in the Savior we end up putting people down in an effort to elevate self instead of building people up in an effort to give glory to God. Why are so many people not living out their position as slaves of the Savior, because they have let themselves become slaves to sin, slaves to self, or slaves to society. Are you living to serve and satisfy the flesh, or are you living to please the Father? Truth protects us from getting trapped and frees us from trying to measure up to the worlds standards instead of standing on the Word. Notice that Paul begins with his name which means little or in Latin humble. He went from having a mighty Hebrew name (Saul) before his converted to a name that knocked him down a notch. Amazing how changing one letter can change our whole outlook. If we want to stand for truth then first we need to understand our identity. Paul describes himself as “a servant of God.” He could have pulled out his resume and referred to his religious heritage, his authorship of so many books of the Bible, or His experiences of being brought up to the third heaven, but he didn’t. Paul chose the word slave, “one whose will is swallowed up in the will of another.” This word “slave speaks of a “bondservant” and echoes back to the Old Testament, where a person who got into debt and was unable to pay back what they owed became the property of his creditor for seven years. At the seventh year, these slaves were liberated but some decided to voluntarily remain as slaves because of the kindness of their Masters. Those who wanted to be slaves for life would be taken to the priest who would pierce the earlobe, thus indicating that he was marked for life to serve his master permanently (see Exodus 21:1-6). A bondservant freely serves because He loves the Savior. So let me ask you are you serving out of obligation or out of obedience? If your service to the Savior becomes based on the law instead of on love it won’t be long before service becomes a job instead of a joy and we become miserable ministers. Paul was a servant of God and “an apostle of Jesus Christ.” He is first a slave and second a “sent one,” which is what the word apostle literally means. The order here is significant, Paul was sent because he was a servant. As an apostle he had authority, but it was only because his will was swallowed up in the will of God. Your obedience as a called one in Christ flows from your submission as a bondservant. You will never say yes to being sent until you learn to submit. It is imperative that we keep these words in the right order. We’re slaves first, and second, we’re sent out. Do you know who you are? You are a servant and you’ve been sent to Crete.