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This Week on the Blog 2025

Week 49, November 30–December 6: 2 Timothy 1–4; Titus 1–3; Philemon

  • Sun      Nov 30             2 Tim. 1–4
  • Mon     Dec 1               Titus 1–3, Philem.
  • Tue      Dec 2               2 Chron. 1–3
  • Wed     Dec 3               2 Chron. 4–6
  • Thu      Dec 4               2 Chron. 7–9
  • Fri        Dec 5               2 Chron. 10–12
  • Sat       Dec 6               2 Chron. 13–15

We start this week by reading 2 Timothy, Paul’s second epistle to his friend Timothy, his spiritual son and partner in ministry. We preached through this short letter in a sermon series last year.

Second Timothy includes the short passage that may be the most important text in the Bible about the Bible. In 2 Tim. 3:16–17 we find a summary of what Scripture is, and we mentioned these verses in the first post of this series as we began the read thru. Paul is encouraging and exhorting Timothy to continue in his ministry of the gospel, unashamed of the gospel and guarding it as a good deposit that has been entrusted to him (1:8–14). There will be challenges and suffering along the way, but the charge to Timothy, and to all who follow Christ, is to carry on, resting in the faithfulness of God. We are to conduct ourselves as faithful followers of Christ, empowered by his strength while we remember him and live as workers who are approved by God through Christ, unashamed and “rightly handling the word of truth.” (2:15)

Paul warns Timothy that difficult days are coming. The last days, before Christ returns, will be characterized by all sorts of sin. (The list at the beginning of chapter 3 sounds quite familiar to our time too.) In contrast to the sin of those around him, Paul reminds Timothy that he is different. Paul assures Timothy, and us, that “all who desire to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted,” even while the evil get more evil and the deceivers become more fully deceived themselves (3:12–13).

But you, on the other hand, Paul exhorts, “continue in what you have learned and fully believed.” Stay the course, press on in what you know is true, confident in the one from whom you learned it, and most importantly, continuing as directed by the sacred writings, “which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.” This is where Paul inserts the summary definition of these sacred writings—the Scriptures, God’s word of truth that produces wisdom and keeps us steadfast, approved by God, faithful guardians of the gospel in godless days.

All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work. (2 Tim. 3:16–17)

“All Scripture” A profound insight from the Greek here is that the word for “all” means… all. Whatever he is going to assert in the rest of the passage applies to the whole Bible, every bit of it. In Paul and Timothy’s time, Scripture meant the books that we call the Old Testament. It could be that Paul knew of some writings that would become part of the New Testament and considered them scriptural too, but he is primarily talking about the Hebrew Bible, the OT. Of course, the message of this verse expands to include the NT now too, but it is important to keep in mind that he is referring to all Scripture—Genesis and Galatians, Job and Jude, 1-2 Chronicles and 1–2 Corinthians, and even Leviticus!

“is breathed out by God” It appears Paul made up a word here, melding together the word for “God” with a word for “breathe,” which also conveys the idea of “spirit” or “spiration.” The nature of the Bible is that it comes from God himself, his very breath. It is from God’s own Spirit. This is why we talk about the Bible being the inspired word of God.

“and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness.” The Bible, all of it, is given by God for our benefit. It has multiple uses, but each of them, whether instructing us in the path we should walk, correcting our course when we stray, or developing the skills and discipline to travel well in a way that is pleasing to him—all of it is not only glorifying to God, but it is also good for us, useful to our benefit… so long as we read it.

“that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.” Reading the Bible is profitable for these things, and the way it ultimately profits us is to carry us, men and women of God, increasingly towards maturity as followers of Christ. It is not to say that if we read the Bible we will all be perfect at once, but this verse is claiming that the aim and result of prioritizing the role of the Bible in our lives is to move us towards what God wants for us; that is, the completion of the good work he has begun in us (Phil. 1:6). This good work is fundamentally a work of God, and it produces good works in us too. This is saying that the Bible doesn’t just teach us truth, though it does do that and that is fundamentally important; but the effect of reading the Bible goes beyond instruction too. It also includes equipping for behavior. God’s inspired word is incalculably valuable for our intellectual, spiritual, and ethical lives. It shapes our thinking, our affections, and our actions. This is why we read it.