Breathe In the Word, Walk Out the Commission
2 Timothy 3:16-17
"All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work."
Man of God, do you believe this?
How profitable is the word of God today for you?
Is it profitable for your doctrines, or does it require supplements?
How does it inform you about God and His plan?
What does it tell you about mankind, angels, sin, and the future, about your life, death, and life after death?
Are the scriptures informing your beliefs, or are your beliefs influencing your interpretations of the scriptures?
This scripture passage speaks to a high view of biblical authority held by many Christian traditions. The texts stand on its own as a coherent library of prophetic and historical information. Yet, good interpretation often benefits from context; historical settings, genre awareness, the original languages, and cross-references. That isn’t supplementation so much as responsible handling, which the Bible itself models.
For any reader, the ideal is Scripture norming our understanding, not the reverse. In practice, everyone brings presuppositions to any serious study of the Bible. It's unavoidable. Culture, our experiences, prior teachings; all these things influence our understanding. The safeguard is letting the text speak on its own terms.
Many traditions emphasize sola Scriptura (Scripture alone as the final authority), while others see Scripture + Tradition + Magisterium as the most sacred form of Biblical instruction. 2 Timothy 3:16-17 itself pushes toward self-sufficiency. That doesn’t mean ignoring helpful tools, but it does warn against letting political systems, philosophies, socioeconomic pressures, or feelings sit in judgment over the text. The same text that equips also confronts laziness, fear, or compromise.
Evangelists, let the Word do its work daily. Teach and preach what is true, reproving what is false. Correct the paths people walk, train them to walk worthy. Honor your call to evangelize the people. And if you're called to Pastoral care, or teaching the Word, then do what God has done in you. Nothing will be more frustrating to the man of God then to be called to a particular Spiritual gift and to not follow that path. Having once learned God's plan for your, it is not for you to leave it left undone.
The goal is clear; the man of God becomes complete, fully equipped, capable for every good work. This is not a marginal claim; it stands as a cornerstone for how believers should approach the Bible. Once a person has clearly seen God’s revealed will, through His Word, it becomes a matter of obedience, not option.
James 4:17 "So whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him it is sin."
The "plan" is not always dramatic or public. For most of us it is the daily, faithful discharge of the gifts, opportunities, relationships, and assignments God has already placed in our hands.
Man of God, what has the Lord made clear to you lately that you must not leave unfinished?
God has prepared the works.
Spoke to those things in His Word.
You have been created for them.
The only remaining question is whether you will walk in them.
Pray, study Scripture, seek counsel, and look at the needs around you and the gifts inside you. Man of God, the same grace that saved you now compels you forward. You are not working for salvation; you are working from it.
Now go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that Jesus has commanded you (Matthew 28:18-20).