Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, according to the promise of life which is in Christ Jesus. (2 Timothy 1:1)
Paul’s Tombstone
As Paul penned his letter to Timothy, he knew he had a short time to live. His ministry in the kingdom of Heaven had taken him to countless cities over many years, preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ. The souls he led to Christ were without number. His travels had covered untold miles of long and arduous journeys. He had suffered a lot but enjoyed many blessings. At the end of his third missionary journey, he was arrested and, through an appeal to Caesar, brought to Rome for trial. He was released for a time and then arrested again. This time, the sentence of death would be carried out when the executioner removed his head with a sword.
Timothy was very dear to Paul. His letter to Timothy was filled with courage and faith, encouraging him to continue preaching the gospel. The church would suffer much under the heavy hand of persecution. Paul was not afraid of dying. He had fought the long fight of righteousness for his Lord, Jesus Christ. His faith was stronger than ever, but his race was ending. How a man faces death says a lot about his character. Paul’s view of death defined who he was, what he was, and what he lived for. If Paul were given a tombstone and asked what to inscribe on the marble face, it would be that he served the Lord as an apostle of Jesus Christ and lived for the promise of life, which is in Christ Jesus.
Two things defined his life: who he was and to whom he lived. Paul considered himself the worst sinner, but he knew that was impossible. All men sin and fall short of the glory of God. Paul’s view of his life was the damage he did to the early church as he sought to destroy every visage of the kingdom of God. He was a blasphemer and insolent man. His life was directed to destroy those who followed the Way. And he was good at what he was doing. But Paul could not resist the grace of God. Of all the people chosen to be a mouthpiece for the gospel of Jesus Christ, Saul of Tarsus was not on the list. God saw him and showed him grace.
Paul knew the grace of God saved him and put him to work as an apostle. He cherished the many years he worked tirelessly in the kingdom. He was beaten five times by his fellow countrymen. On one occasion, he was stoned and left for dead. He suffered three shipwrecks in his life, spending more than 24 hours in the sea adrift. His life was a perilous journey of toil, travail, danger, and false accusations against his character. He suffered these things because he was an apostle of Jesus Christ. Those times of peril were trying, but Paul exalted in the glory of the Father to suffer for Christ. Paul never gave a quarter to fighting and defending the gospel as an apostle.
Why would anyone live with such depravities? Paul came from a wealthy and influential family of Tarsus. When he became a Christian, he gave all that up for the life of a servant. The heart of Paul endured all the trials of life because of one thing: the promise of life in Christ Jesus. His goal was to live for the promise God made to him. Eternal salvation defined the life of Paul. He lived it every day, longing for the reality. There was nothing in this life that appealed to him. He wanted eternal life. When he writes to Timothy, he tells him a crown is waiting for him with his name on it. A crown was inscribed with the name “Paul.”
What a person puts on their tombstone says a lot about their life. Paul exalted in two things that mattered to him. He served the Lord as an apostle and was faithful to death. The promise of eternal life measured his life. Nothing else mattered to Paul. Just those two things. What do you want on your tombstone? So many people waste their lives for glory on a piece of marble. Paul lived to have his tombstone show Christ.
- Kent Heaton