THE FIRST EPISTLE OF PAUL TO TIMOTHY - Chapter 3 - Verse 5
Verse 5. For if a man know not how to rule. This is a beautiful and
striking argument. A church resembles a family. It is, indeed,
larger, and there is a greater variety of dispositions in it than there
is in a family. The authority of a minister of the gospel in a
church is also less absolute than that of a father. But still there
is a striking resemblance. The church is made up of an assemblage of
brothers and sisters. They are banded together for the same purposes, and
have a common object to aim at. They have common feelings and common
wants. They have sympathy, like a family, with each other in their
distresses and afflictions. The government of the church also is designed
to be paternal. It should be felt that he who presides over it, has
the feelings of a father; that he loves all the members of the great
family; that he has no prejudices, no partialities, no selfish aims to
gratify. Now, if a man cannot govern his own family well; if he is
severe, partial, neglectful, or tyrannical at home, how can he be
expected to take charge of the more numerous "household of faith" with
proper views and feelings? If, with all the natural and strong ties of
affection, which bind a father to his own children; if, when they
are few comparatively in number, and where his eye is constantly
upon them, he is unable to govern them aright, how can he be
expected to preside in a proper manner over the larger household,
where he will be bound with comparatively feebler ties, and where
he will be exposed more to the influence of passion, and where he
will have a much less constant opportunity of supervision? Confucius, as
quoted by Doddridge, has a sentiment strikingly resembling that before
us: "It is impossible, that he who knows not how to govern and reform his
own family, should rightly govern and reform a people." We may remark,
also, in this verse, a delicate and beautiful use of words by the
apostle, to prevent the possibility of misapprehension. While he
institutes a comparison between the government of a family and that of
the church, he guards against the possibility of its being supposed that
he would countenance arbitrary authority in the church, even such
authority as a father must of necessity employ in his own family. Hence
he uses different words, he speaks of the father as 'ruling' over his
own family, or presiding over it —prosthnai; he describes the
minister of religion as having a tender care for the church
—epimelhsetai.
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