Friday, October 22, 2010

Fight the Good Fight of Faith (1 Timothy 6:12)

October 3, 2010

Dear friends in Christ.

It was a fight that some of you may have seen, or at least read about in the newspapers, or even seen in specials on ABC’s Wide World of Sports. It was a fight that was announced, advertized, promoted, hyped, and talked about for months before and for years after. It was a fight between speed and strength, agility and endurance. It was a fight that boxing promoters named, “The Fight of the Century”—the first boxing match between champion Joe Frazier and challenger Muhammad Ali, held on March 8, 1971 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. By the evening of the match, Madison Square Garden had a circus-like atmosphere, with scores of policemen to control the crowd. Yet, spectators were not disappointed as the fight itself exceeded even its promotional hype by lasting the full 15 rounds. Ali dominated the first three rounds, peppering the shorter Fraizer with rapier-like jabs that raised welts on the champion's face. Frazier began to dominate in the fourth round, catching Ali with several of his famed left hooks and pinning him against the ropes to deliver tremendous body blows. Ali's speed and combinations kept him on even terms with Frazier and the fight was about even until late in round 11. During that round Frazier caught Ali with a crushing left hook that almost floored Ali, sending him falling into the ropes. Ali managed to survive the round, but from then on Frazier seemed to come back in the next three rounds. At the end of round 14 Frazier held a lead on the three scorecards. Early in round 15, Frazier landed a spectacular left hook that put Ali on his back (for only the third time in his career). Ali, his right jaw swollen grotesquely, got up from the blow quickly, and managed to stay on his feet for the rest of the round despite several terrific blows from Frazier. A few minutes later the judges made it official: Frazier had retained the title with a unanimous decision, dealing Ali his first professional loss.

Since that March night nearly 40 years ago, sports commentators still say that there hasn’t really been anything like that Fight of the Century. For no matter how you look at it, both fighters can be seen as examples of strength, endurance, and a willingness to keep on fighting no matter how greatly the odds are stacked against them. In fact, even as Christians, these men can be examples to us, especially when we consider the impact of what Paul is telling us in our lesson today! For as Paul speaks to us from more than 40 years ago, he is telling each and every one of us to Fight the Good Fight of Faith! Turn with me to 1 Timothy 6:12. Now, as you are turning to 1 Timothy 6:12, let me give you a little bit of background to this verse. Timothy was in Ephesus. Paul had left him there when he traveled on to Macedonia on his way to Jerusalem. Paul had left Timothy there for the stability of the congregation and so that Timothy might command certain men not to teach false doctrine. Paul, on the other hand had traveled to Jerusalem, where he had been arrested and imprisoned. He had been transferred to Caesarea where he was tried again, appealed to Caesar, and transferred to Rom. Now, as Paul writes to Timothy he is in prison in Rome, waiting for his appeal to be heard by the Emperor. As he writes he tells Timothy in verse 12, “Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called when you made your good confession in the presence of many witnesses.” (1 Timothy 6:12, NIV)

What better words could Paul have given Timothy as he served the congregation in Ephesus leading them in God’s Word, and what better words could the Lord speak to us through Paul than these! Fight the Good “Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called when you made your good confession in the presence of many witnesses.” (1 Timothy 6:12, NIV) What better words could there be for us to hear than these, especially when we consider the fight we have been in, since the day we were called to faith. Though we don’t have TV crews covering our every move or boxing promoters delivering the play by play action, each and every one of us is involved, not merely in the fight of the century, but in the fight of faith. For the truth is, on the day that we were called to faith, Jesus Christ, who was at one time our enemy, marched boldly into satan’s camp and rescued us from our enslavement there. He brought us into the hospital of his salvation. He laid us on the gurney of his love. He took a bowl of his own blood and began to wash the filth of our sins from our hearts, from our minds, and even from our bodies. He applied the salve of his grace to our small cuts and our deep wounds so that they would heal. He discarded the filthy stinking rags of our sinful lives and dressed us in robes of his righteousness, marking us as his redeemed children and people. Then, he began training us with his word so that we might be ready to fight the good fight of faith.

For you see, ever since the day our Savior rescued us from satan and brought us into his kingdom by faith, we became satan’s opponents. On that very day that our Savior called us to faith, we stepped into the boxing ring of life and began our toe to toe battle with the devil. But unlike the fight of the century that lasted only 15 rounds, the good fight of our faith is a fight that lasts until the final bell rings and our Savior takes us home to heaven. Each morning as we wake, we hear the sound of the bell marking the next round in the fight of our faith. We see our opponent, satan, coming out of his corner ready to deliver blow after blow, hoping that each blow might weaken us or knock us down. Each day we feel our adversary landing blow after blow weakening our resolve to fight back, confusing us into accepting his temptations, knocking us to the mat in hopes that this time he has finally knocked the faith out of us so that he might be declared victorious in this fight of faith.

Yet, even though satan may land some stinging blows and even knock us to the mat on more occasions than we care to admit, we are not alone in this fight of faith. Jesus is in our corner and he is backing us the whole way. Not only is he our coach who has taught us how to fight with his Word. He is the one who buckled the championship belt of his truth around our waists and taped our hands with his righteousness. He is the one who fitted our feet with the readiness that comes from the gospel and gloved us with the word of God. He is the one who equips our faith to defend against the vicious blows of our enemy, and to attack, peppering our enemy with all the power and force of his Word. It is the Lord Jesus who strengthens our arms with his powerful word so that our blows leave welts on satan’s face. When we grow weary in the fight, it is Jesus who refreshes us with the refreshing waters of his grace and salvation. When we can barely keep our gloves up to defend ourselves, it is Jesus who rings the bell and gives us a respite so that we might regain our strength in his Word. When we are so tired that all we want to do is lay on the mat and be counted out, it is Jesus who steps in and fights for us, comforting us with the assurance of his salvation, soothing our wounds with the salve of his gospel, and washing us clean, once again, with the blood of the covenant, the blood that he poured out for you and me when he went to the cross in our place. This is our Savior who calls on each and every one of us to “Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called when you made your good confession in the presence of many witnesses.” (1 Timothy 6:12, NIV)

Though he calls us to fight, we do not fight alone. Though we may not always feel ready to fight, he gives us so many opportunities to prepare ourselves with his Word. He invites us to join together week in and week out in this house of worship where he provides his word without cost and without price. He invites us to gather as children to learn the precious truths of salvation from our teachers in Sunday School. He invites us to gather as young adults and delve into the deeper truths of his Word in Confirmation Class. He invites us to gather as adults and examine the precious truths of salvation in Bible Study. He invites us to gather as families to confess our sins, receive forgiveness, to pray to him, to praise him, to hear his Word proclaimed to him and to worship him with all our hearts. He invites us to use the time with which has blessed us to grow in our faith and our knowledge of him so that we are better prepared to continue fighting the good fight of faith against our enemy, the devil.

This is our Fight of Faith. Though we don’t have any sportscasters writing about it or giving play by play commentary as Joe Frazier and Muhammad Ali did, we still fight on. Though our fight is much longer than the grueling 15 rounds that they went, we can learn a great deal from their endurance. Though each one had been guaranteed $2.5 million just for fighting, this fight wasn’t about the money; it was about taking hold of the title, Heavy Weight Champion of the World. For us, the same thing is true. We don’t fight the good fight of faith because we are being paid for it. We don’t fight the good fight of faith because we derive recognition from it. We don’t fight the good fight of faith because the world is cheering us on. We fight the good fight of faith because we want to take hold of the eternal life that is ours by faith. We fight because we long for the day when the final bell will ring and we will be declared victorious through faith in Jesus Christ. We long for the day when our Savior will bring us to the halls of heaven and bestow upon us the crowns of victory that he promised when he called us to faith. We long for the day when the faith that God our Savior instilled in our hearts will be fully confirmed as we live by his side forever in heaven.

So as you go from here today, heed the words that Paul wrote to Timothy and us nearly 2000 years ago. “Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called when you made your good confession in the presence of many witnesses.” (1 Timothy 6:12, NIV)

Amen.

Pastor David M. Shilling
Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church --Le Sueur, MN