Let us pray… Heavenly Father, You have blessed us so richly by making sure we would have the letters to read even today that were written by our Lord's Apostles. Their insights and instructions enrich our lives. Thank You, Father, for inspiring them. And thank You for ensuring their words would be accessable to us in our age. Sadly, though, Father, we don’t always spend as much time in Your word, reading these letters, as we should. We get too wrapped up in the day-to-day workings of our lives. Please help us see the wealth of good information contained in the Apostolic letters. And please help us heed their warnings and instructions.
Speak to us now, Father, that we might hear Your voice through Your Spirit within us and better understand the message You have for us this day. Please protect us from those who serve Satan and carry out his evil deeds. And Father, please keep us strong in our faith, of one mind and one purpose in our love, worship, and service, and healthy and safe in the days ahead. This we pray in the precious name of Your Son, Christ Jesus our Lord. Amen.
John Wesley, the father of the Methodist Church, once challenged us Christians to, “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all people you can, as long as ever you can.” That ought to be enough to keep us busy and out of trouble for a while.
Back in the 1970's, the Association of Life Underwriters of Washington, D.C, conducted a little survey where it was shown that for every dollar reaching the needy, the sick, the underprivileged child, and the aged adult, the cost of channeling it through the church is just eight cents, while the cost of channeling it through voluntary charitable organizations or the federal government is 27 cents and $3, respectively.
Let me repeat that... For every dollar intended for the needy, the church can deliver that dollar for the cost of only 8 cents, whereas it costs 27 cents to go through a voluntary charitable organization and $3 for the government to handle the task. Every one dollar that our government spends helping the poor, the sick, the underprivileged, the elderly, costs the American taxpayer three dollars!
Now granted, those figures are 50 years old now, but I bet the ratios are pretty close to the same today. It looks to me like the church is the most efficient provider of services by far. So let's follow John Wesley's encouragement and do all the good we can as a church family, working for Jesus.
One might ask how can the church do so much better at helping those in need, providing so much at so little a cost? I think we can look at the time when Jesus fed over 5,000 people with nothing more than two small fishes and five small loaves of bread. He did this miracle by putting it in God’s hands. When we trust in God, when we put a seemingly impossible task in His hands, He can make a little go a long way. When the church imitates Jesus in this manner, we can do a lot with a little.
After an opening introduction similar to what we read in the 2nd letter, John gets right to the point. He is concerned about the treatment that some “traveling teachers” received in Gaius’ church. Some versions of our Bible call these folks “brothers” or “brethren”. In effect, they were disciples who went from church to church throughout the known world, sharing the Gospel message and teaching those church families more about Jesus. These were people much like Paul, who not only planted churches but also visited some that other missionaries had started, like the church in Rome.
Well, some of these traveling teachers brought back a report of how that church was staying faithful and living according to the truth of the Gospel. And apparently they made sure to note that Gaius himself had been especially welcoming and supportive of them while there.
Let me point out something here that comes up very briefly toward the end of the letter, where John mentions a man named Demetrius. Demetrius was very likely one of these traveling teachers, perhaps the one who brought the report back to John. John speaks highly of Demetrius, to let Gaius know how much his support was appreciated.
In this letter, John encourages Gaius and his church to continue being hospitable to these teachers, even though they might be complete strangers, for they are traveling and teaching for the Lord Jesus. And for their efforts they receive only support from the churches that sent them and the churches that receive them, as Gaius did.
But there was one man there in Gaius’ church who rejected the teachers and refused to have anything to do with them. Not only that, but he also told other believers not to help the teachers. And if they decided not to listen to him and helped the travelers anyway, he kicked them out of the church!
Now John describes this Diotrephes as one who loves to be a leader. We might call him a self-styled leader, someone who wants to be in charge of things. John makes it clear that when he comes to visit, he will make everyone aware of what this man has been doing, including the evil accusations he has made against John and the brethren, all of which is in sharp contrast to the teachings and commands of Jesus. In this letter, John is exercising his apostolic authority and rebuking Diotrephes, and he has every intention of doing so in public when he comes to visit.
Then John offers his friend, and us, some very good advice. Don’t let this man’s bad behavior have any impact on how we live and act. Don’t let his bad example influence us. Follow only what is good. Imitate what is good, not what is evil.
Now we today are in a great position to see what is good, for we have all the works and deeds of righteous men and women throughout the ages saved for us in our Bible. And in all of that, we can easily see that Jesus is the best example to follow, the best to imitate.
Hear the words the Apostle Peter spoke to the household of the Roman centurion Cornelius as recorded by the Apostle Luke in chapter 10 verses 38 and 39 of his Book of the Acts of the Apostles…