An attached fuel hose

No one engaged in warfare entangles himself with the affairs of this life. — 2 Timothy 2:4                                  

Felipe Massa of Brazil should have won the Formula One Grand Prix in Singapore in September 2008. But as he drove off from a refueling stop while in the lead, the fuel hose was still attached. By the time his team removed the hose, he had lost so much time that he finished 13th.

The apostle Paul warned Timothy of another kind of attachment that would cause him defeat — “the affairs of this life” (2 Tim. 2:4). He urged Timothy not to let anything slow him down or distract him from the cause of his Lord and Master.

There are many attractive things in our world that are so easy to get entangled with — hobbies, sports, TV, computer games. These may start off as “refueling” activities, but later they can take up so much of our time and thought that they interfere with the purpose for which God created us: to share the good news of Christ, serve Him with our gifts, and bring glory to Him.

Paul told Timothy why he ought not be entangled with this world’s affairs: So that he could “please Him” (v.4). If your desire is to please the Lord Jesus, you will want to stay untangled from the world. As John reminds us, “The world is passing away, and the lust of it; but he who does the will of God abides forever” (1 John 2:17). — C. P. Hia                    

 

In this world but never of it,

Help me, Lord, to live this day,

Free from all that would entangle

Of the dazzle and array. — Graves

 

READ: 2 Timothy 2:1-7

 

Although we live in this world, we must declare our allegiance to heaven.

The Bible in one year:Ruth 1-4; Luke 8:1-25

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