"The fire doesn’t remove the fight; it purifies us through the fight."
1 Timothy 6:11-12
"But as for you, O man of God, flee these things. Pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness, gentleness. Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called and about which you made the good confession in the presence of many witnesses."
Paul has just warned Timothy about the dangers of false teaching, quarrelsomeness, and especially the love of money (the root of all kinds of evils). Then he pivots sharply with "But as for you…" It’s a call to be different in a corrupt culture that celebrates all sorts of excesses and excuses. Don’t negotiate with sin or greed. Instead, run.
Run toward a life that honors and reflects God. Love a genuine, sacrificial care for people. Love right living before God and others. Lust after a deep trust in God’s promises. Stay the course when it’s hard. These aren’t optional add-ons. They’re the positive replacement for what we flee.
Q: What are we fleeing?
A: Love
That love is subtle. It promises security, significance, freedom, and power.
"If I just had a little more… then I’d be safe, respected, happy, in control."
That lie has driven empires, broken families, corrupted churches, and shipwrecked countless faiths. It’s not usually an outright rejection of God; it’s a quiet shift of trust and what is at the center of your life. It's a shift from the unseen eternal Provider to the visible, temporary provision.
Jesus said it this way:
"Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also." (Matthew 6:21)
What's precious to your heart?
What do you think about all day, more than any other thing?
Whatever is it the center of your thoughts, pivoting on the axis of your heart? What is pulling you vertically and horizontally? Where does it balance?
Wherever that axis is, that is the center of your being. That "treasure" is the real center of our being. It’s what we instinctively run toward when we’re anxious, what we daydream about when we’re idle, what we protect when we feel threatened, what truly guides our lives even when we are lying to ourselves.
Jesus sees through every layer of self-deception. And he's given us the ultimate diagnostic test for the human heart.
Is He at the axis of our heart, or is it money, comfort, success, reputation, or control?
What was at the heart of (the axis) Judas Iscariot's story? Was it the Lord’s earthly ministry?
No.
If we examine his appearances in the gospels we can see what drove his thinking. A consistent pattern emerges, and proximity to Jesus was secondary or a means to that end.
Even early on this is revealed about him.
Jesus said:
"Did I not choose you, the Twelve? And yet one of you is a devil." (John 6:70)
Jesus said this right after many disciples turned back and stopped following Him because His teaching had become too hard. Jesus had already seen the true axis of Judas’s heart. Even while Judas was outwardly part of the inner circle.
Judas heard the sermons. He witnessed every miracle. And he was chosen to serve as the treasurer. Judas preached, cast out demons, and healed the sick alongside the others, and his god was money. While Judas castigated Jesus for allowing the woman to waste her valuable possessions on him, Jesus knew Judas completely. He saw his daydreams, and hidden thoughts.
Jesus knew it all.
Every hidden daydream.
Every secret calculation.
Every moment Judas smiled outwardly while inwardly tallying silver.
Even when Jesus washed Judas’s feet and gave him the dipped bread at the Last Supper, He knew.
Proximity to Jesus does not automatically transform the heart. You can be in the inner circle, active in ministry, and still have an entirely different treasure at the core center of your being.
The love of money can coexist with outward Christian activity for a long time. But it cannot coexist with Christ at the true axis of the heart. Eventually, the real center will be revealed. And scripture tells us that all of those things will be consumed in the cleansing refining fire.
Do you think that the cleansing happens because life will become perfected? That your true desires will be "fixed" on God because the world will change? The "need" will no longer exist? You'll finally be able to walk true and holy because the temptation will no longer possess you?
No, scripture paints a different, more sobering and more hopeful picture.
The love of money, self-deception, and misplaced treasure get exposed and burned away in the heat of real life; not because temptation disappears, but because the fire reveals what is truly at the axis of our heart. The final refining perfection is the result of God’s work, not the reason the fire purifies us now. Yes, sin and temptation will be gone forever, but the refining happens in the midst of those pulls. Now is the time given. In this age. During this one life. God wants our desires fixed on Him now, by grace, while the battle still rages. The fire doesn’t remove the fight; it purifies us through the fight.
Pray now.
Not my words.
Pray your own words from your true center.
Amen and amen.