NOTICE: Store prices and specials on the Banner of Truth UK site are not available for orders shipped to North America. Please use the Banner of Truth USA site .

Section navigation

Going It Alone

Category Articles
Date December 5, 2003

Psalter Reading: Psalm 27
Epistle Reading: 2 Timothy 4: 9-18
Text: 2 Timothy 4: 16-18

Sometimes you have to go it alone. The old spiritual teaches us to sing, “You gotta walk that lonesome valley, you gotta walk it by yourself, oh, nobody else can walk it for you, you gotta walk it by yourself”.

There are such times:

When you are in the MRI or CAT scan machines
When you are the only Christian at the family gathering
When you are the only believer in the office
Your first nights alone in the house after the death of a spouse
When you walk the last steps through the valley of the shadow of death

Paul tells us his own experience of having to go it alone. From his account we can find help for our times of going it alone.

I. The Reality

At my first defense no one came to stand by me, but all deserted me.

Many make the mistake of thinking Paul did not love people or need them in his life.
-Because he was an scholar and intellectual
-Because he was a strong willed leader
But that is too simple and superficial reading of the apostle – he shows here that he keenly felt it when he did not have human support and encouragement.

Paul is describing his “first defense” – this was something like a “preliminary hearing” before the full trial – a defendant was allowed to have supporters present and even to have people speak on his behalf.

He was in Rome and in Rome there was a significant church that had received perhaps the greatest of all Paul’s letters and with which he had established a relationship during his first imprisonment

Where were the Christians who were members of the church in Rome when Paul needed them? Not there. Why? We don’t know. Perhaps it was nothing worse than fear. These were “Nero times” and the Neronian persecutions had commenced. But they did not come to Paul’s defense.

It is hard and painful to have to face trial alone. It is even harder when people could be there for you but are not. It is even worse when the people who could be there for you, but aren’t, are Christians. When I once faced a difficult time and found a Christian friend not there for me, he later said, “If you thought I was going to the wall for you, you were wrong.

But notice how Paul is not vindictive about their failure from fear – he asks that the Lord may not hold it against them – in this he shows the spirit of the Lord Jesus who prayed for forgiveness for his persecutors

When we have to go it alone we are not alone in that experience, for we know that Paul has been there. Moreover, Paul was not the first to go through it. Joseph in the pit. Elijah confronting the prophets of Baal on Mt. Carmel. Daniel in the lions’ den. But supremely the Lord Jesus in Gethsemane. “Jesus walked that lonesome valley, He had to walk it by Himself, nobody else could walk it for Him, he had to walk it by Himself.”

II. The Resources

The Lord stood with me…

That is a remarkable statement. No one was standing by Paul as the charges were read, and he made his defense. But Paul was not alone, for, though unseen, the Lord Himself was standing there.

The promise of the Lord to be with us is the fundamental promise and blessing of the Bible. He was with Adam and Eve in the Garden. But they forfeited His presence by their sin. Yet he was determined to redeem them and to grant them His presence again. The distinguishing feature of Israel’s life was the God was with them. Ultimately God comes to be with us in Christ. He is Immanuel. When Paul speaks of the Lord being with him he means the Lord Jesus Christ.

The LORD is always with His people. Sometimes they feel it and are comforted by the sense of it. Sometimes they do not feel it, but even then the Lord is with them. Our fickle feelings are not gauge of the Lord’s presence. He says. “I will never leave you nor forsake you.” Jesus last promise: “I am with you always even to the end of the age.”

The Lord strengthened me.

The Lord helped Paul. “The Lord is my helper. What can man do to me?” The Lord’s strength is made perfect in our weakness. When my Dad was diagnosed with cancer, I was considering a call to another church. Turmoil without and within. Talked to him on Sunday morning before going to church. Asked, “Do you feel the Lord is helping you?” He replied, “There’s never been any doubt about that.”

The Lord was with Paul and strengthened him “so that through me the message might fully be proclaimed and all the Gentiles hear.” The “defense” was an occasion of preaching the gospel for Paul. Your hard times and alone times can be for you an occasion of proclaiming the gospel by life and word.

III. The Rescue

So I was rescued from the lion’s mouth.

This was temporal deliverance. Paul felt as though at the hearing he had his head stuck in a lion’s mouth and his head was about to be bit off. But the Lord delivered him. No fellow Christian helped, but that did not hinder the Lord. The Lord acted to grant Paul deliverance, extension of life, and further opportunities for ministry. Shadrach, Meschach, and Abenego. The Lord was with them in the fiery furnace and he saved them from it. When you are facing hard times and you are alone the Lord can yet deliver you. “How oft in grief hath not he brought thee relief, spreading his wings to o’ershade thee?”

The Lord will rescue me form the every evil deed and bring me safely into his heavenly kingdom.

Health and wealth gospel can offer only temporal blessing. Only the “full gospel” can offer something when all, even life itself, fails. We will go through the valley of the shadow safely and arrive safely in the heavenly kingdom. I pray at deathbeds sometimes, “Lord grant a safe journey through the dark valley and a happy arrival in the heavenly kingdom.” At death we will enter the kingdom of God that, though hid from our eyes, is real and in heaven. And there we shall await the final revelation of the kingdom when even our bodies will be saved.

To him be the glory forever and ever. Amen.

Now let us come to the Table and taste the fruits of the heavenly kingdom.

WILLIAM H SMITH
WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA

Latest Articles

William Cunningham: Humble Controversialist 21 October 2024

The following short article appeared in Issue 690 of the Banner of Truth Magazine (March 2021). The first volume of William Cunningham’s works to be prepared for the press by his literary executors, James Buchanan and James Bannerman, was The Reformers and the Theology of the Reformation. It was published in 1862, a few months […]

Corporate Worship: 10 Benefits for Our Children 9 August 2024

Having your children with you in worship can be hard. It can be hard for the parents, for the children, and for the rest of the congregation. The squirming, the shuffling of papers, the loud whispers, and the louder cries, all can make it challenging to have our children with us in corporate worship. But […]