Wisdom for the Heart
Stephen Davey will help you learn to know what the Bible says, understand what it means, and apply it to your life as he teaches verse-by-verse through books of the Bible. Stephen is the president of Wisdom International, which provides radio broadcasts, digital content, and print resources designed to make disciples of all nations and edify followers of Jesus Christ.
Wisdom for the Heart
A Pattern for Young Men Part 2 (Titus 2:6-8)
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What if credibility became your greatest currency—more valuable than wins, likes, or titles? We walk through a clear path for young men to build a life that speaks loudly and cleanly: serve others in concrete ways, think with Scripture-shaped conviction, and speak words that protect the reputation of Christ and the church. This isn’t about performing to earn redemption; it’s about living from it, so neighbors, coworkers, and classmates glimpse grace that actually changes people.
We start with action—rescue missions, food drives, crisis response teams, and global trips—where good works carry good news. Then we press into the mind: why purity in doctrine isn’t academic trivia but the steering wheel of a Christian life. In a culture that prizes novelty and speed, we make the case for slow, steady formation: reading the Bible deeply, building a library that strengthens the soul, and using biography and theology to create a durable, biblical filter for daily choices. The goal is not to impress but to become wise enough to love well.
Dignity and speech tie it together. Real dignity isn’t dour; it’s the gravity that wins a hearing. Sound words—healthy, clean, beyond reproach—turn free speech into a sacred trust. Paul’s striking “us” reminds us that your personal reputation becomes our church’s reputation; how you talk online or in the office drafts the headline people write about the gospel. An unforgettable story from an NFL player draws the arc: from the thrill of a career-defining play to the deeper joy of watching young men encounter Christ. That shift—from highlight to holiness—maps the journey we’re inviting you to take.
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Another Way To Live
SPEAKER_00Let's show the world another way to live. And it isn't about yourself, it's about doing something good for somebody else. Now don't misunderstand the emphasis. Paul is not defining how you become a Christian. He's describing how you live like a Christian. See, Paul is not telling Titus to urge unbelieving young men to live this way so they can be redeemed. He's telling young men who are redeemed to show the world how they have been. And that thing. Just surfed around looking for good deeds. Found a lot of opportunities. Whether it's working with a rescue mission, whether it is this bumper crop and filling bags up for food for those who are needy, and along with that will come the gospel, serving with converting hearts ministries, working with college students, taking crafts and games to a local mobile home park, serving on a crisis response team, where when a natural disaster strikes, this team's ready to go, and volunteers working with them, and you won't believe the agony they went through to be able to do that with all the licensing and all of the governmental codes and regulations, they're finished, they're ready to go. Then internationally, two teams touched down. I was just told a little bit ago that our team to China just touched down safely. A team heading to Africa, they're still in the air, dedicating their own time and energy and help to do good things for people who need help. And with that comes the gospel, which demonstrates the grace of God who reached us when we could not help ourselves. This happens to be the pattern for how young men are to act. Now, don't misunderstand the emphasis. Paul is not defining how you become a Christian, he's describing how you live like a Christian. See, Paul is not telling Titus to urge unbelieving young men to live this way so they can be redeemed. He's telling young men who are redeemed to show the world how they have been and that they have been. Let's show the world another way to live. And it isn't about yourself, it's about doing something good for somebody else. Secondly, he's going to talk now about a pattern for how young men are to think. Notice the end of verse 7. Titus, now you as an example, and all the young men likewise, are to have purity in doctrine. Pure doctrine literally means uncorrupted, untainted doctrine. See, young men, young people at large, are more likely to be carried away by doctrinal novelties than the older set who've arrived at their conclusions after years of study and a dedication in and to the Word of God. What Paul is effectively telling all young men to do then is to get a head start. Don't assume that one day you'll understand sound doctrine. It's just going to happen. Get started on it today. Understanding truth, the truth of God's word. And this is not, by the way, knowing some answers to fill out on a doctrinal examination. This is a reference to literally developing a Christian mindset. A Christian mind. To have minds that are reformed. Paul knew it would be impossible to live like a Christian unless you think like a Christian. And Christian thinking, a Christian mind is governed by and determined by, directed by sound doctrinal truths that are discovered not in ourselves, not in our world, but in this book. And our generation, of all generations, while our culture digresses, the church is digressing. Because in modern church history, now more than ever, we are in the process of abandoning doctrinal instruction. Mention the word doctrine and the eyes just glaze over. I want church to be fun, you know, relevant. You know, we we we want an event. We don't want doctrinal preaching and teaching. Everything has to be either funny or relevant or quick or whatever. And so our generation, one author said, is suffering from spiritual anorexia. That is, they've lost their appetite for doctrinal substance. I had a guy, and I think I mentioned this to you before, came from a seminary, just finished the semester visiting back home. He came up to me after I preached the sermon and he said, You did exactly what our professor said not to do in homiladic. So, what did I do? He said, You preached verse by verse and you mentioned theological terminology. We're told not to do that. That's an evangelical seminary, by the way. Listen to the thinking process of the psalmist who wrote, Oh, how I love your law. Your commands make me wiser than my enemies. They're ever with me. I have more insight than all my teachers. I meditate on your statutes. I have more understanding than those older than me, for I obey your precepts. My soul weeps because of grief. Strengthen me according to your word. Remove the false way from me. Graciously grant me your law. I cling to your testimonies. O Lord, do not put me to shame. I shall run after your commandments. You will enlarge my heart. Teach me, O Lord, the way of your statutes, and I will observe them to the end. Give me understanding that I may observe your law and keep it with all my heart. Make me walk in the path of your commandments, for I delight in it. I shall not forget your word. How's that for passion? You cannot act like this. You can't think like this. You will never think like this unless our minds are saturated with that which reforms our minds. Titus urged the young men to become devoted to the word of God. Tell them they cannot have the wisdom of God apart from the word of God. You cannot be profoundly influenced by that which you do not know. And let me add, while I'm on the subject, men, just read the word, obviously. Meditate on the word, memorize the word. But then read read widely on subjects related to the word, that illustrate the word, that dramatize the truth of the word, that illuminate the word. Good devotional works. Books that inspire Christian leadership, Christian thinking and living. You only have so much time. Why read junk? Did you know that in the Christian community, three out of every four books are purchased by women? The truth is, our generation of men has stopped reading. The average man buys a book and never gets past the third chapter I've read. So if you're an author, put it all into the first three chapters because that's all they're gonna get. I mean, think about it. You decided to read through the Bible, you probably decided that a few times, and so the book of Genesis you've read more often than any other book in the Bible. You gotta get to the Leviticus, slug through numbers. It might be better advice to young men. Rather than try to read the Bible through in a year, pick one book of the Bible and study it for a year, which is what we happen to do together as a congregation. We study a book every year. Sometimes we take a wee bit longer. We're never going to become knowledgeable in sound doctrine unless we study it and read it and become acquainted with it and become saturated with it. So I'd recommend go buy the devotional, My Utmost for His Highest, by Oswald Chambers. It's a devotional with some teeth to it. Then when you finish that, go buy his biography and be inspired by what he encountered and accomplished before he died in his early 40s. Read a book that many leaders in our Christian community have said influenced them, one of the top three books, Hudson Taylor's Spiritual Secret. Read A. W. Tozer's The Knowledge of the Holy and the Pursuit of God. Pick up a copy of Charles Ryrie's Basic Theology. If you want more than that, you can buy one volume theology is about that thick. You can buy ten volumes of systematic theology that just sort of puts it all there for you to follow. Read a biography of some Christian from the past. I'm making my way slowly, among other things, through Warren Wearsby's classic compendium, simply called 50 people every Christian Ought to Know. Just a chapter on different men and women that have impacted their world for Jesus Christ. Purchase John MacArthur's book, Right Thinking in a World Gone Wrong. That'll keep you up at night. Biographies, doctrinal reading, in addition to the study of the Word of God, all of them have a way of creating a biblical filter through which you rinse your thoughts and your decisions and your perspective. If we don't have that filter, we're gonna believe whatever our decision, whatever our thoughts, whatever our perspective sounds good to me. We're not developing a filter because our minds are reformed, and you gotta stay at it. One author said the mind is like a garden. If it is not carefully looked after and cultivated, it quickly becomes a wilderness. Sounds like my front lawn. So it is with the Christian mind. You leave it alone, it will swiftly become worldly in its thinking. Why do you think the Apostle Paul is telling Titus to tell older men and older women and younger women and younger men to live like this? Because the implication is what? They're not. Or they may not. The mind, apart from the guidelines of untainted truth, can justify anything. I mean, how can something be wrong that's bringing me so much happiness? God's will is for me to be happy, so what I'm doing is I know the will of God. We need to accept everybody in the church, no matter what they're doing. You know, the problem with Christians I'm coming to believe is that they're just way too judgmental. I'm no bigger sinner than anybody else in that church. See, that's those are thinkings and perspectives that are unfiltered. They haven't been purified. The problem with the church is not that we're teaching too little. We're not teaching enough. If you want young men to think correctly and to grow in Christ, they gotta learn of Christ and become acquainted with the doctrines of Christ and the commands of Christ, which come from the Word. Now notice Paul adds at the end of verse 7, another aspect of how they are to think, which of course is reflected in how they act. Young men are to be dignified. Now we've already encountered this word as well. I find it interesting that older men were told to be dignified, and now younger men are told to be dignified too. And that had, if you remember, the aspects of living with a sense of gravity, sanctity, respect, ability. The word speaks of a willingness, and we challenged older men to grow up and act like their age. You remember that? And it was harsh. I don't know. I got a three-page email from somebody who said, Man, you are just way out of line. You let the old men have it like that. Way too hard on old men. I preached on older women the next Sunday and he wrote me an apology. He said, Oh, we were so hard on the older women. I apologize for what I said about the older men thing. Dead serious. Now talking about young men. Describe someone who is worthy of respect. This doesn't mean the Christian young man is a, you know, a cold wash rag, whatever you do, don't invite that guy to anything. Just comes in and just sucks the energy out of the room. It doesn't mean he can't have fun and laugh. What it does determine is what he considers fun. And that at which he laughs. So the dignity that Titus is to model for young men and for young men to model to their world has this aspect of seriousness that earns you the right to be heard. The world is not going to take your Christianity seriously if you don't. If it's trivial to you, it'll never be significant to them. Which is exactly what Paul has in mind as he talks about what your world is hearing from you in this next dimension of patterning godliness. He not only delivers a pattern for the way young men act and the way young men think, but thirdly, now Paul talks about the way young men speak. Verse 8. We're to be sound in speech, the young men are, which is beyond reproach. Sound comes from that word again, hygiene, healthy, clean. And Lagos, the word. You are known for your clean words. Now, for the Greeks, the term Lagos could have a number of connotations. Jesus Christ is called the Lagos, the explanation of God. In Ephesians 4, however, Paul uses it in a very daily kind of context. And here also in Titus, this is the context of normal day-to-day speech. This is just how you talk. It's a reference to your vocabulary. I mean, we've been scaling the heights of true doctrine, and now he's going to get down to how we talk. See, a pattern for godly living is not just how a young man acts or thinks, but even down to the nitty-gritty of how he talks. And I can't help but wonder what kind of example we as older men are in modeling for the younger men. Do we pray, now understanding at our age, with a psalmist, Lord, you're going to need to set a watch, a guard before my mouth. You're going to need to keep the door of my lips. Psalm 14, 3. Because our world out there says, as unbelievers are quoted in Psalm 12, verse 4, our lips are our own. Who will be the Lord over us? That's the unbelievers thought. You're not going to tell me how to talk. In fact, I know immature believers who would say, you can't tell me how to talk. I got liberty. Don't you know the First Amendment? Freedom of speech? Yeah, I do. But the maturing Christian understands that our freedom of speech is not a license to speak anything. We are not free to say things that discredit the gospel or hurt the reputation of Christ. Which is, by the way, the direct motive of clean speech. Paul gives us here at the last phrase of verse 8. Look there. So that your opponent will be put to shame having nothing bad to say about us. You know why you ought to be talking with clean language? So that your opponent can't have anything dirty to say about you. So don't say dirty things. And if you don't say dirty things, they can't say dirty things about you and the church. Now, I think it's surprising. In fact, I want you to notice at the end of verse 8, a rather surprising pronoun there. You'd think Paul would have written, so that, now you young men, speak with clean language, so that the opponent will be put to shame having nothing bad to say about you. It's not what he says, is it? Having nothing bad to say about us. You see, you develop a godly reputation, and guess what? The church ends up with a godly reputation. And it works the other way around. Whatever you are like in your world, your world thinks that we're all the same way. How you think, talk, and act on that campus or in that boardroom or in that corporation or that neighborhood, they just assume if you're part of this church, then that's the way we all are. We all think that way. We all talk that way. We all act that way. Our reputation as a body of believers, a local assembly, is directly tied to each of our individual reputations out there. So if you're not acting like a Christian, not thinking like a Christian, not talking like a Christian, you have my permission to never tell anybody where you go to church. Keep it a secret. God's method, Howard Hendricks used to love to say this and never forget it. God's method has always been to take a clean person and drop him in the middle of a corrupt culture. It's true, isn't it? He takes a clean person, drops him into the middle of a corrupt culture, where they reveal through their everyday conversation, which is clean, through their thinking process, which is governed by biblical truth, through the way they act, which is self-controlled and dignified, through all of that, this clean person who's been dropped into a corrupt culture is able to demonstrate what it means to follow the true and living God. And you live, young men, you live with a growing sense of awareness. And Paul wants you, young men, to grab it by the collar. Now it isn't just about you. It is about us. And ultimately it's about the character and honor of the one who leads us. Jesus Christ. I love the way the Apostle Peter put it in his first letter, where he wrote, keep your behavior excellent among the Gentiles, those unbelievers. Keep your behavior excellent, so that in the thing which they slander you as sinners, they may, because of your good deeds, end up glorifying God. We ultimately show our world by talking and living and thinking differently than our world, and in so doing, showing them something far better. A few months ago, and I close with this, I met a former professional football player. He used to play for the Chicago Bears. Hope that's not offensive to you. Big guy. Six, seven, six, eight. I just knew I talked to him like this. After some initial conversation, I steered the discussion to spiritual things. He didn't know I was a pastor. And I invited him to church. And he immediately began to smile. He said, Well, I don't have time. I thought, man, this is great. I said, What do you mean you don't have time? He said, Well, you know, I I um I'm a businessman, but on Sunday I have a circuit and I travel around the state of North Carolina giving my testimony and and delivering the gospel to juvenile detention centers and jails and prisons. So I said, Wow, that is fantastic. Would you share your testimony with me? He said, I'd be glad to. So he he told me, kind of fast forwarded the tape to his professional career. He said, I was living the dream. I signed, I was signed. Early in the NFL draft, had several years winning seasons. He said the pinnacle of my career was beating the Dallas Cowboys. I said, Praise God. I'm so glad that happened. He said, We won that game because on one play I rushed Troy Aikman and caused him to fumble, and I picked up the fumble and ran for a touchdown. He said, I can remember this was the ultimate. He said, I can remember spiking the ball in the end zone right on top of the star in the carpet, the Dallas Cowboy logo. I said, man, I'd love to live that dream for just a moment. He said, but in the hotel room that night, the euphoria of all of it had gone. And he said, I was sitting there alone, and he said, I was overwhelmed with a sense of emptiness. He said, This had been my dream. And in my position, this is the ultimate play. And he said, I realized then there had to be something bigger and better. He said, it wasn't long until I picked up a Bible and began to read it. God connected me with some believers, and I eventually understood the gospel and accepted Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior, and he told me they grin. He said, you know, that moment in the Dallas Stadium cannot compare to seeing some young man give his heart to Jesus Christ. That's what Paul is saying to young men. You know, as you as you live your life and you chase your dreams, and it might be playing football. But just remember there's nothing more important than the credibility of your testimony. There's nothing more vital than the delivery of the gospel. There's nothing more critical than the reputation of the church, your brothers and sisters, whose reputation hangs upon yours. And there's nothing more ultimately glorious than bringing honor and attention and praise to our great Redeemer and Savior, Jesus Christ.
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