The Living Dead
“But she that liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth.”
I Timothy 5:6
Introduction:
- If God sent His dear Son to fully secure everlasting life for us, surely we can live all-out for Him.
- We live in the perilous times of the last days when most Christians think pleasure first, God second.
- The Christian norm should not be set by carnal and compromising Christians but by God’s word.
THE CONTEXT (I Timothy 5:3-16)
- Let us take a very superficial review of these verses to gather our context for a lesson.
- 5:3 Widows indeed, those meeting Paul’s qualifications, are supported by the church.
- 5:4 Widows with saved family are supported by them no matter her qualifications.
- 5:5 A widow indeed has no family, trusts God, and serves like Anna (Luke 2:36-37).
- 5:6 A widow that uses her single state for ease and pleasure is dead while she lives.
- 5:7 Paul told Timothy to charge churches and widows to keep them from any blame.
- 5:8 If a family refuses her support, they deny Christianity and are worse than pagans.
- 5:9 The qualifications begin with age, for younger widows can marry or work jobs.
- 5:10 The qualifications are various good works that prove her exceptional character.
- 5:11 Widows under 60 should not be supported by the church for marriage will call.
- 5:12 The damnation here is judgment for starting service to Christ and then quitting.
- 5:13 Such young widows lacking the maturity of age will use church support for sins.
- 5:14 The solution for young widows is to remarry and get busy with another family.
- 5:15 Some young widows supported by the church had so left service for pleasures.
- 5:16 A restatement of 5:4 to protect the church from supporting those with families.
- A few additional thoughts about widows will help the understanding of sober saints.
- In the early, Spirit-filled church widows were supported by the church (Act 6:1-7).
- The widows in this number were expected to serve a church by continual prayer.
- Widows without family have a Judge and Keeper far better (Ps 68:5; Jer 49:11).
- A godly widow without cares of a husband or family can pray more (I Cor 7:34).
- Charity misapplied can be a great hindrance to true charity by consuming it evilly.
- God expects families to take care of their own, with widows being the objects here.
- God’s welfare rules are strict, because not everyone that wants charity deserves it.
- God’s welfare rules are wise to reward the exceptional and to protect the gospel.
- If Paul thought it better to be like him at 20, how much more at 60 (I Cor 7:6-9)!
- The church of Rome’s abominable doctrine does the very opposite of this passage.
- Idleness is a great curse and leads to other sins allowing reproach by adversaries.
- The severe language in these verses is the Spirit’s indictment of carnal Christians.
- Though there is much value in each verse, widows are not the topic for this sermon.
THE TEXT (I Timothy 5:6)
- The Holy Spirit by the sober apostle compares widows indeed with wanton widows.
- A wanton widow is opposite her that dedicates herself to supplications and prayers.
- This is a widow whose desires are ease and pleasure, making her worthless to all.
- She uses her single status to be indolent and pursuing her comfort and enjoyment.
- This is not a criminal or sinful widow engaged in unlawful activities for her sex.
- This widow made a commitment of service and then reneged on it (5:6,11-13,15).
- God said: “liveth in pleasure,” “dead while she liveth,” “wax wanton,” “against Christ,” “having damnation,” “cast off first faith,” “turn aside after Satan.”
- Character is measureable by works. It does not matter what you think of yourself.
- A widow indeed’s character is humble service, faith, constant wrestling with God.
- Paul’s fear was about widows starting out to serve Christ and then seek the flesh.
- Waxing wanton and casting off first faith is reneging on a full-time commitment.
- You may see turning aside after Satan as visiting the witch of Endor, but it is less.
- You may think this language far too extreme and condemning, but it fits scripture.
- The language of “dead while she liveth” is what we must understand and measure by.
- The prodigal’s father described his living son as having been dead (Luk 15:24,32).
- A brother that wanders into error is the death of a soul (James 5:19-20; Pro 21:16).
- Jesus rebuked the church in Sardis for presuming life while being dead (Rev 3:1).
- If baptized, you are risen with Christ, so your life should be heavenly (Col 3:1-4).
- Belly worshippers are living dead and enemies of the cross of Christ, and they are defined as those who mind earthly things (Phil 3:17-21). This is equally severe!
- Being carnally or spiritually minded shows condition, now and future (Rom 8:5-9).
- Was Paul dead or alive in the sense of fully committed to Christ (II Cor 5:13-15)?
- Was there any apostle that could approach this zealot in his service (I Cor 15:10)?
- Our religion, two duties, allows little else and brings great reward (Mark 8:34-37).
- A sold-out life for Christ is the only goal (Rom 12:1-2; I Cor 6:19-20; Tit 2:11-14).
THE APPLICATION
- Perilous times are when Christians are lovers of pleasures more than God (II Tim 3:4).
- Perilous times are Christians with a form of godliness without power (II Timothy 3:5).
- What should you do (Eph 5:14)? Awake thou that sleepest! Arise from the dead!
- We easily default to lethargy, slothfulness, forgetfulness, distraction, routine, and ruts.
- Marriage shows this by the great passion of dating and less passionate thereafter.
- Business shows this by constant slipping of focus, organization, repair, zeal, etc.
- You cannot be content with spiritual condition or you are unlike Paul (Phil 3:8-15).
- What do you talk about? Job? Health? Politics? Weather? Why not Jesus Christ?
- How is your attendance? In actual count? In spirit? In preparation and prayer?
- How is your participation? How often do you volunteer for ways you can serve?
- How is your zeal? Not zeal for health, exercise, school, or work? For Jesus Christ?
- How much do you love God by love for others (John 13:34-35; I John 4:12,20)?
- How are your vital signs of life? Love? Joy? Peace? Longsuffering? Gentleness?
- What are you using life for? If living for pleasure, you are the living dead to God.
- Will you make light of God’s invitation to the marriage of His Son (Matt 22:5)?
- God has saved us; we must live different than the world (I The 5:4-11; I Pet 4:1-5).
- Jesus taught plainly to Ephesus … remember … repent … do the first works (Re 2:5).
- Recall haunting words to the wanton widow – damnation for casting off first faith!
- What is remembering (II Pet 1:9; Psalm 42:4; II Corinthians 13:5; Ps 139:23-24)?
- What is repentance (II Co 7:10-11)? It includes confessing (Job 34:31-32; I Jn 1:9).
- What are first works? (I Thes 1:9-10; Mat 6:33,24; 22:37-38; Jas 4:4; I Jn 2:15-17).
- Humble yourself to God, cast your care on Him, resist Satan (I Pet 5:6-9; Jas 4:6-10).
- Seek the Lord like Asa, with fervent purpose and zeal to find Him (II Chr 15:2,8-17).
- Beg God to turn you (Psalm 80:18-19; 119:25,37; 143:10-11; Jer 31:18; Lam 5:21).
- Make no provision for the flesh for sin (Rom 13:14; Matthew 5:29-30; I Cor 15:33).
For Further Study:
- Sermon Outline: Belly Worshippers.
- Sermon Outline: Spiritually Minded.
- Sermon Outline: He Deserves Better.
- Sermon Outline: Playing with Sin,.
- Sermon Outline: Awake Thou Sleeper.
- Sermon Outline: To Live Is Christ.
- Sermon Outline: Sin Will Find You Out.