But refuse profane and old wives’ fables, and exercise thyself rather unto godliness. For
bodily exercise profiteth little: but godliness is profitable unto all things, having promise
of the life that now is, and of that which is to come (I Timothy 4:7-8).
Callings in Scripture appear in a number of unique and specific contexts covering the
lifetime of a Christian. There is the calling to God-consciousness that comes to a child
early in life, gently echoing through a variety of circumstances appointed of the Lord. A
definite call to “Come unto Me” is that calling which brings the soul to the threshold of the
New Birth. As the Christian continues in his or her walk with God, there will be the
commanding call, “For God hath not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness” (I
Thessalonians 4:7). The Scriptures also declare callings to specific ministries for one’s
life; these may include callings to be a pastor, preacher, teacher, missionary, or
evangelist.
Strongly interwoven through the Word of God are also commands couched in a call from grace
specifically about one’s life in Christ. It is a command-calling concerning how the life
should be lived before the Lord. One such command-calling is found in First Timothy 4:7 and
summons the whole life to a spiritual pattern of living.
But refuse profane and old wives’ fables, and exercise thyself rather unto godliness.
Exercise Thyself
In the context of First Timothy 4:7, the Apostle Paul calls Timothy away from the trivia that
tends to surround religion and draws him to this crucial command, “exercise thyself rather
unto godliness.” The word exercise is a very delicate Greek word meaning “to strip or
to make naked.” It is a metaphor for runners, for wrestlers, for those in athletics in whose
heart and mind there must be a resolve to put off all those things that would diminish or
hamper strength and power in the match or race. It is a laying aside of any constrictions
that would hinder one’s purpose. In this passage Paul declares to Timothy, “You must let
godliness be the object of all your care; it must, at all costs, be the object of your life.
You must lay aside anything that hinders you. This must become the prominent principle in
your life. To come to this I exhort you to strip away anything that will keep you from this
one thing; you will have to focus your mind and your attention on this aspect of godliness
for your life.”
The second word found in this phrase is thyself. My first spiritual concern as a
Christian is for myself. I may have been called to preach and teach God’s Word as a minister
of the Gospel. I may have been called to pour out my life in the preparation of young men and
women to face the onslaught of this wicked, corrupt, apostate age. But rising above the
multitude of hours in a day–physically and mentally pouring out my life in such a
calling–there is something higher and of a greater imperative nature: the urgent care of my
soul. Evangelism does not approximate the value of this necessity; regular visitation will
never be a valid substitute; the consumption of time in study can never replace the daily
care of the soul’s relationship with God.
My priority in life is the spirituality of my personal life before God. I have a burden for
my wife and for my children, but one thing that must consume my life almost every waking
moment of the day is the consciousness that I must personally and privately be ever preparing
to meet my God. I cannot invest my life to inspire others in Christ if I do not have that
inspiration within myself. This inspiration of God and for God must be controlling my life as
I plead for it to do so in others. Heaven’s calling and command is for me to intensely pursue
the exaltation of God and His holiness in my own heart.
The greatest accountability I have is my own life. I may give untold hours in a week to the
ministry of the Lord. But there is something that rises above every person I love, every
student I teach, and every soul to which I minister. This something is the priority of my
concern and burden for myself and my walk with God. Is that selfishness? Or is that for the
Christ within me? The Apostle Paul declared “For to me to live is Christ.” Such a declaration
refers to the fact of Christ being the unfolding of his living every moment of the day. This
spiritual realm is a reality when every moment of the day is in communion with God. This
is the greatest way one exalts Christ in the life.
The Biblical New Birth and Its Life
Unto what is the Christian to exercise himself? It is unto “godliness.” This command-calling
demands that I strip away from my soul’s living before God everything that would compete or
hinder this godliness from controlling my life. Such a life is in another kingdom, a
spiritual kingdom. No flesh can reign or attend this kingdom, for no flesh can glory in the
Lord’s presence. Jesus Christ has come to reign within and He is eternal life for me. The
contemporary philosophy controlling the modern church today has destroyed the full
understanding of this matter of eternal life. It seems the only thing many are concerned
about is that once they die, they will enter into the realm of eternity or a life in
eternity. This is basically the message of modern evangelism. The famous question is, “If you
died right now, where would you spend eternity?” Thus the hereafter becomes the greater
burden in modern evangelism rather than the truth of a Christ-life presently to be lived on
earth.
The phrase “eternal life” in the Bible is not simply referring to the duration of life or the
fact that we will live for eternity. Eternal life is a quality of life to be known now in
this life. It is not simply I will have eternal life in the future, implying that to possess
that life I must first physically die. I am to have eternal life right now. It is not only a
future life beyond the grave but also a present life that is of a quality not of this earthly
kingdom. Life now for the Christian should transcend in its thought and living into the realm
where God resides. Life is viewed from His perspective now, not Adam’s. This is the dilemma
of a true backslider—he has turned from the quality of life in Christ and resorted back to
the old life of the temporal, the mundane, the earthly, the fleshly, and the worldly. He has
left the sphere of eternal living.
Who Is a Christian?
A proper understanding of the term Christian has fallen on hard times. The
contemporary Church has its own definition of what a Christian is; however, it is a false
definition that has allowed almost everyone who attends some kind of church to use the title.
There is only one infallible, definitive revelation of who is a Christian, and it is found in
the Bible.
The passages which give God’s definition of a Christian, or of being “born of God,” are found
in the First Epistle of John. Each of the passages found there is in the perfect passive. The
perfect tense is a combination of the aorist (the crisis tense) and the present (the
continuation tense). Thus, there was a crisis in the past of a New Birth (John 3:3), but the
work of that crisis continues to the present. Modern evangelism is only content with the
crisis and not with the continuation of this divine work in the life.
The first of six markings of a truly born again Christian is found in First John 2:29:
If ye know that he [Christ] is righteous, ye know that every one that doeth [in the present
tense] righteousness is born of him [God].
Oh, this is of great importance. It is not what I have professed or done for God for many
years. The power of God’s birthing must be evident in the life. Such a birth power will give
the evidence of the righteousness of God continually in the life.
The second marking of a true Christian is found in 3:8-9:
He that committeth sin [in the present tense; this is his living/practice] is of the devil;
for the devil sinneth from the beginning. For this purpose the Son of God was manifested,
that he might destroy the works of the devil. Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin;
for his seed remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because he is born of God.
If this birth power is truly within the individual, he will not be given to premeditated sin
in his life. Why? “For his seed remaineth in him.” This phrase is either declaring that the
Christian, God’s seed, remaineth in Him, God; or, God’s seed, the Word of God, remaineth in
him, the Christian. Both would be true. Premeditated sin is the exception to the rule of the
Christian (see I John 2:1).
The third mark of being born again is presented in 4:7:
Beloved, let us love one another: for love is of God; and every one that loveth [and I have
to keep that in the context of God’s true saints] is born of God, and knoweth God.
Again, all of this is present tense.
The fourth mark of being born again John declares in 5:1:
Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ [the Messiah, the Anointed One] is born of God.
A person born of God gives the evidence that he believes that Christ Jesus is Who He is.
The fifth mark of being truly born again is found in 5:4:
For whatsoever [or whosoever] is born of God [in the perfect tense; the power of the election
in that man] overcometh the world: and this is the victory that overcometh the world, even
our faith.
Such a person will be overcoming the world rather than being drawn into that from which he
was to be delivered.
The sixth marking is found in 5:18:
We know that whosoever is born of God sinneth not [it is not his practice to premeditatively
sin; we read that in 3:9]; but he that is begotten of God keepeth himself, and that wicked
one toucheth him not.
This final mark acknowledges that we are responsible, at least in this context, for keeping
ourselves. We are exhorted in Proverbs 4:23 to “keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of
it are the issues of life.” Jude 20-21 exhorts, “But ye, beloved, building up yourselves on
your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost, keep yourselves in the love of God.” There
is a keeping that I cannot keep, and only God can keep. But there is a keeping that God will
not keep, which is my responsibility. May these marks of a true Christian ever be evident in
our living.
Unto Godliness
The Apostle Paul exhorts one to exercise himself unto godliness. This term godliness
must be accompanied by a biblical presupposition, for some writers have replaced the term
with the word religion. Typically, the broader base of Western civilization would
readily respond to the Christian inquiry, “Oh, I’m a religious person; I believe in
religion.”
There are two etymologies for the word religion. The first carries the meaning “to
choose again.” Biblical history reveals that the first choice man made in the Garden of Eden
was the choice of the flesh, the choice away from God. Thus, when man embraces religion, he
is now making a second choice, not for the flesh or not away from God, but a choice to God,
unto God, or for God. A second etymology for the word religion emphasizes “a binding
or a knitting back again.” Isaiah 59:1-2 announces that what broke man’s relationship with
God was man’s sin: “But your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and your
sins have hid his face from you, that he will not hear.” Sin was the only thing on the planet
that separated our Beloved Lord from His Father. Christ called Him “Father” at the beginning
of the Cross ordeal and at the end. But when He was made sin at high noon, Christ could not
use that title; it was the cry “My God, My God” because our sins separated Him from His
Father. Sin intrinsically is the power to separate from God. Apart from Christ, we have no
hope; Christ becomes the propitiation for our sin only if we turn to Him in
repentance. True religion is the returning to God. “Let us draw near with a true heart in
full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies
washed with pure water” (Hebrews 10:22).
The Greek word godliness in First Timothy 4:7 is eusebea, meaning “to devote
one’s life well to God.” Godliness is a God-consciousness in everything we do and say. How
can an individual be conscious of God in every decision he makes during the day? All tend to
make decisions simply through self, and such decisions at times are costly and far-reaching.
Therefore, one must cultivate in his life that in every decision made—if it is a hundred or a
hundred and fifty a day—there must be a consciousness of God (Proverbs 3:5-6). Because the
average professing Christian is not conscious of God in such things, godliness is not the
consistent marking of his life’s character. It does not mean that he curses or blasphemes
God; it simply means he does not bring God into the consciousness of his present-tense
living. The past is gone; the future has not been lived. We only have the present moment in
which to live; in that present moment we must live for Christ. We must make our decisions for
Christ; we must pray for Him to be in that moment.
If this truth is not part of our moment by moment living, then we must cultivate it
throughout the day. How can one cultivate this? One classic revelation is made after the
occasion of the man who had gathered sticks on the Sabbath day (Numbers 15). His judgment was
to be stoned to death in accordance to the word of God. The Lord then immediately revealed to
the children of Israel (15:37-41) the need of sewing a “ribband of blue” into the hem of
their garments. Why a “ribband of blue” in the hem of the garment? This young man’s sin
involved the bending down and picking up of sticks on the Sabbath, which resulted in
blaspheming God’s Law. So the next time one was tempted to bend down and pick up sticks he
would see the blue, thus reminding him of the call to godliness. Three things were to come to
mind: “that ye may look upon it, and (1) remember all the commandments of the LORD, (2) and
do them, and (3) be holy unto your God” (15:39-40). What could be a “ribband of blue” to
cultivate godliness today? It could include verses of Scripture on a refrigerator, on
notebooks, appropriately on mirrors, or even the dashboard of a car. These little reminders
placed strategically in life’s path call us and remind us, “Have you included God in your
decisions today?” There will come a day when these “ribbands of blue” will have helped to
establish a mind stayed upon the Lord. Eusebea is a consciousness of God in all that
we do, “well-devoted” at any moment.
Conclusion
The Christian who hungers for this godliness must pray to God to be stripped away of anything
and everything that will affect this godliness. Is the heart pursuing money, honor, a certain
job, etc.? Or, even pursuing just self? What is my pursuit in life? A variety of things could
encumber a Christian life from exercising itself unto godliness: pride, self-centeredness,
preaching/teaching, exhorting for the wrong reasons, or studying for the wrong reason. There
must come a day when God begins to strip away everything that hinders this godliness. We may
respond that there will be nothing left if God lays my soul naked. Well, this is where God
wants to bring us: that in His sight, we “are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom
we have to do” (Hebrews 4:13).
Godliness or well-devotedness is also specifically tied up in the word worship.
Worship must become the moment by moment attitude of the heart. Worship comprehends all that
respect which a man owes to God and that he gives to God. Worship to God is both external and
internal. Men in the Old Testament who fell on their faces before God were revealing the
heart attitude of eusebea. However, there must also be internal worship of loving God
and trusting God at every moment, delighting in Him, and even knowing deep sorrow at times
for offending Him. That is eusebea too. Those that worship God give Him their most
intense love, their highest joy, their deepest sorrow, their strongest faith, their greatest
fear. When Abraham took the greatest object of his love, his beloved son, to Mount Moriah, he
told his servants, “I and the lad will go yonder and worship, and come again to you” (Genesis
22:5).
This “godliness” also may be likened to a sentinel guarding a gate or entrance, examining
everyone that seeks to pass through. Why such intensity of protection? Because there is a
king within! Some years ago while visiting Windsor Castle on a weekend when Queen Elizabeth
II was in residence there, I was drawn to the presence of a guard dressed in his full
soldierly regalia standing as a sentinel at a door. He stood impressively with a machine gun
in his hand. Some yards away was a white line drawn on the pavement accompanied by an obvious
sign warning that no one was to cross that white line. At that moment some visiting teenagers
began to toy with the soldier as they threatened to cross the line. He just stood there until
finally one young man did cross the line. Immediately, the machine gun came down from his
shoulder as his strong voice demanded the youth get back behind the line.
One may wonder why he was so serious about this matter. Well, there was a queen behind the
door, and he was ready to protect her at all cost. Oh, that we as God’s people would have
such a tenacity of heart to never allow petty things, grieving things, and sorrowful things
to come to our soul. How much more victorious our lives would be if such a vigilant sentinel
attitude, standing at the door of our heart, controlled us. Such a life would cry out, “I
refuse to allow anything to disturb my king.” That is biblical eusebea. It is the
worshiping of my God in inward motions of the heart and the outward actions of my life. It is
where all the springs of my affections and conversation run clear; this is true godliness. It
is my moment by moment living in His presence—to please Him.
A warning arises from Ezekiel 43:7-8 to us who live in the End Time of the Last Days:
And he said unto me, Son of man, the place of my throne, and the place of the soles of my
feet, where I will dwell in the midst of the children of Israel for ever, and my holy name,
shall the house of Israel no more defile, neither they, nor their kings, by their whoredom,
nor by the carcases of their kings in their high places. In their setting of their threshold
by my thresholds, and their post by my posts, and the wall between me and them, they have
even defiled my holy name by their abominations that they have committed: wherefore I have
consumed them in mine anger.
This is the delusion of the hour! The Institutional Church believes it can build another
threshold of entrance into God’s Kingdom, another post of the Cross erected, or another wall
to keep us from the full holiness of God for our lives. We need walls of biblical separation
established in Christianity today, but many tend to make up their own wall and place it
beside God.
“Exercise thyself unto godliness” is the call. May godliness be a precedent in all of our
actions. Even down to old age, when the body is declining, may we ever be pursuing godliness
right down to the last moment of life on this earth, when even at that late hour God will be
stripping away the final shreds of hindrance to bring us to the full reality of Christ in the
life.