MAINTAINING TRUTH

September 27

Bible Reading: 1 Timothy 3

1 Timothy 3:15, “…the church of the living God, a pillar and buttress of truth.”

We live in a day in which “truth” is being increasingly dismissed or even viciously attacked.  A day in which the relevance of Romans 1:18 is clearly evident: “For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth.”  This effort to suppress the truth is clear across all aspects of our society—politics, news, education, media, etc.  Sadly, it is as John MacArthur recently noted: “No generation of people has been exposed to more lies and more liars than this one.  The internet has created an explosion of lies that is beyond human comprehension.”

Enter the church of the living God, which is “a pillar and buttress of truth.”  It stands in this lofty and privileged position before the world.  God has positioned her there by grace according to His sovereign decree.  He has firmly established her in truth and bids her to live it out and proclaim it. 

Two terms are used to describe the church in its relationship to truth.  Both terms relate to a structure which is fitting since the church is elsewhere identified to be a “holy temple in the Lord…a dwelling place for God by the Spirit” (Ephesians 2:21-22).  The church, as a building, has been “built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone” (Ephesians 2:20).  It has been well founded on the truth.  Webster’s dictionary offers this definition for truth: “A transcendent, fundamental or spiritual reality.”  The truth, in this context, has to do with the manifestation of unseen spiritual and eternal realities.  We live in a “there-is-no-such-thing-as-truth” kind of day (John 18:38; Romans 1:18), but the truth stands unassailable, irrespective of what people think of it.  Jesus is the embodiment of truth and came to bear witness to it (Ephesians 4:21; John 18:37).  God’s Word is truth (John 17:17).  The gospel is “the word of truth” (Ephesians 1:13).  The truth is beautiful both in its transforming influence and the glorious reality to which we are destined.

The two terms used regarding the church—in its relationship to the truth—are both structural.  The first, “pillar,” refers to “a column supporting the weight of a building” and is used metaphorically “of a local church as to its responsibility, in a collective capacity, to maintain the doctrines of the faith by teaching and practice, 1 Tim. 3:15” (Vine’s Expository Dictionary).  The second term, “buttress,” means “a support, bulwark, stay.”  Metaphorically, the buttress speaks of that which lies at the foundation (The KJV translates the term “ground”).  Both the “pillar” and “buttress” serve a building in a supportive role, but there is a difference in their particular functions.  The buttress is the foundation, which generally lies unseen beneath the structure.  The pillar extends the supporting strength of the foundation to the superstructure of the building.  It differs from the foundation inasmuch as it is visible.  In fact, in NT times pillars served not just to support, but to adorn a building.  They were sometimes intricately carved and thus worked to beautify the structure.

The church has such a role in the world.  It does not embody truth, but adorns it.  It does that as it proclaims the truth and is changed by the truth.  It is important to note that the church of the living God is the pillar and support of this particular virtue.  Other virtues are elsewhere esteemed in Scripture, but none can be possessed apart from truth.  Truth therefore stands in a preeminent role, and all else is lost if truth is forsaken.  God has given the church this truth maintaining and truth manifesting role.  The local church serves in this role.  Lives changed by truth adorn the truth (Titus 2:10).

It ought to be that if a person visits an evangelical church, he or she would find truth being proclaimed and practiced.  But that is not always the case. 

Charles Spurgeon

“It is every believer’s solemn duty to resist every attack on truth, to abhor the very thought of falsehood.” – John MacArthur

Once to every man and nation
Comes the moment to decide,
In the strife of truth with falsehood,
For the good or evil side;
Some great cause, God’s new Messiah,
Offering each the bloom or blight,
And the choice goes by forever
Twixt that darkness and that light.

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Author: looking2jesus13

Jerry Conklin, born and raised in Hillsboro, Oregon, served six years in the US Navy Submarine service. After earning a degree in Nuclear Technology, he worked at Trojan Nuclear Plant as a reactor operator. In 1990, after earning a Masters Degree in Theology, he became the senior pastor of Lewis and Clark Bible Church in Astoria for 27 years, also serving as a fire department chaplain and making nine trips to Uganda for ministry work. After his wife’s cancer diagnosis, they moved to Heppner. Since 2021, he has served as the part-time hospice chaplain for Pioneer Hospice. In 2023 he helped establish South Morrow County Seniors Matter (SMCSM) and now serves at the board chairman. In February 2025 Jerry was honored as Heppner’s Man of the Year. In March 2025 Jerry was honored by US Senator Jeff Merkley for his work with SMCSM. Jerry and Laura have four children and three grandchildren.

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