Eternal Encouragement - 1&2 Thessalonians
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
June 22, 2025 :: 1 Thessalonians 5:12-15
Are you ready for the return of Jesus Christ?
We have been talking a lot about the end times this year at Lanse Free Church. First, the prophecies of the King of Kingdoms in the Book of Daniel and now in these two letters to the Thessalonians.
In these two letters, the Apostle Paul has a lot to say about living in light of the return of Christ. He mentions it in every single chapter, and he’s been focusing on it in depth at the end of chapter 4 and the first part of chapter 5 which we’ve studied the last two Sundays.
Do you remember what we learned last week about how to be ready for the return of Jesus Christ? Was it knowing in advance the time and date of His return? Is that how we get ready? No.
When is Jesus coming back? We don’t know and that’s okay. In fact, it’s better than okay. It’s better that we don’t know. It’s important that we don’t know.
What do we need to know to be ready for the return of Jesus Christ? We need to know who we are and where we are headed.
We learned last week that we are children of the day. We belong to the day, not the night. We belong to the day of the Lord. It’s our Day. So we eagerly anticipate the return of Jesus Christ because that day is our day. We have nothing to fear because we belong to Jesus are not headed into eternal wrath but eternal salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ who died for us and came back to life to give us life forevermore.
And because we know who we are and where we are headed, we stay alert and self-controlled (this was verse 6, “Keep calm and carry on,” don’t get freaked out by the end times), and we put on the triangle of virtues that Paul loves to emphasize in his teaching: faith, love, and hope.
Remember this? Faith, love, and hope. We get ready for the return of Christ by, every day, putting on faith, love, and hope. That was in verse 8.
Paul likens these three things to the body armor of a soldier. Faith in God’s promises. Trusting in everything God has said that He will do. That’s your body armor. That’s your breastplate, your bulletproof vest that you wake up every day and put on. Faith. And the second piece of body armor protecting your vital organs is love. Love for God’s people and for those who are not yet God’s people. And on top of all of that is the helmet of hope in God’s salvation. Hope in everything that God has said is certainly coming for those who belong to Jesus.
His return. Our resurrection. Our being caught up to be with Him in the air. And our being together with the Lord forever. Nobody missing out. All of us–those who have already died and those who are still alive–all together with Jesus forever and ever and ever. “To a land where joys will never end.” Faith, Love, and Hope. That’s how we get ready for the return of Christ.
Paul said in verse 11, “Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing.” Which is what we’re trying to do by studying these words together in 1 Thessalonians.
And that leads us to verse 12. Paul is coming down to the end of his letter, and he gets really practical with the Thessalonians. He starts firing off these short little staccato instructions. Do this, do this, don’t do this, don’t do this, do this, do this and this. We’re going to take two Sundays to get through them all. This week, we’re just going to do verses 12, 13, 14, and 15.
But don’t miss this. Paul hasn’t really changed the subject. Paul is still talking about how we live ready for the Lord’s return. This is how to live in the meantime. This is how we live while we wait for Jesus to come back. Remember, our waiting is not passive. It is active. Active in love.
In verse 12, Paul is “double-clicking” on this idea of encouraging one another and building each other up. It’s all about relationships. The title of this message comes from the last seven words in verse 15, “To each other and to everyone else.” It’s all about how we relate to each other and to everyone else while we wait for Jesus to come back.
Paul is focusing in on the “love part” from verse 8. And I’d like to summarize his teaching here in three points of application. Here’s the first one:
#1. LOVE YOUR CHURCH LEADERS.
As you are waiting for the return of Christ, love the people who lead your church.
Now, this could be a bit awkward this morning. Because verses 12 and 13 tell me to tell you to respect me and to hold me in the highest regard.
Awkward.
It could be really awkward if you folks weren’t so good at this already. Last Sunday was the 27th anniversary of the first time I preached in this pulpit as your pastor. And George Leathers pointed it out and praised God for it. And you gave me round of applause of appreciation. Thank you!
And thank you for taking a risk on me as a rookie pastor 27 years ago. It struck me really for the first time that the Thessalonian church leaders were all rookies themselves. They hadn’t even been to Bible school and seminary like I had. Look at verse 12.
“Now we ask you, brothers [and sisters], to respect those who work hard among you, who are over you in the Lord and who admonish you. Hold them in the highest regard in love because of their work.”
He’s talking about their church leaders.
And remember, this is a baby church. Paul had planted this church not very long ago and then had to leave them in a hurry (see Acts 17). And he had to leave some baby Christians in charge of leading this baby church.
And he knows that church leadership is hard work. Jeremy, is church leadership hard work? Yes, it is. The church that the Childs serve just recently swapped buildings with another church family in town. Both churches had buildings that were not great for them but would be great for the other, and so they swapped locations. Was that hard work to lead through? I’ll bet it was. Imagine if we swapped locations with any other church in West Branch!
But just the day-in and day-out work of church leadership is difficult.
And Jeremy and I are paid to do it. We are generously supported by our church families. The real heroes of church leadership are those who are unpaid volunteers.
For example, our church’s elders. Keith and Keith and Cody and Abe and Curtis are all serving as elders this year. And that’s a lot of work. I’ve seen a lot of Curtis recently. He helped lead the Membership Seminar on Tuesday and then was the Elders’ meeting on Thursday and then lead the Kentucky Team meeting on Saturday. And he’s got a job, a wife, and three rambunctious girls. Thank you, Curtis, for working hard among us and helping to lead this church in love. We hold you in the highest regard IN LOVE because of your work.
None of these guys do this work for the recognition. In fact, they probably hate that I’m talking about them. But the Bible says here that we need to do that recognition. We need to acknowledge their service, to show our esteem and appreciation. And not because they are better than anyone else, but because they are working hard. Sometimes just one step ahead of everyone else.
I think about these Thessalonian church leaders thrust forward with almost no training (and probably no pay) and being asked to lead and care for this fledgling church which was experiencing persecution. Paul says, “Respect those who work hard among you...hold them in the highest regard in love.” Love your church leaders.
Again, church, you are great at this. As one of your church leaders, I feel very loved and appreciated. You regularly encourage me. You take good care of my family. You pray for me. I know it. Two years ago when I was fraying at the edges, you granted me a three month sabbatical rest from which I still glow inside.
One of the things you do that encourages me the most is study your Bible with me. You know two of my favorite sounds in the whole world are babies crying in church and the sound of pages rustling when I say, “Turn with me if you would to 1 Thessalonians.”
I love the sound of babies crying in church because it says that we are reaching the next generation. And I love the sound of pages turning because you are not just listening to me but actually reading your Bible and seeing what it says. And then you go out and do what it says! You send that encouragement card! You put on faith, love, and hope. You love your church leaders!
Now, of course, if your church leaders are in the wrong, you don’t follow them, and you don’t just honor them if they are not working hard. If we are out of whack, then we need to have our feet held to the fire.
These verses don’t just tell the church to love the church leaders, but tell those of us who are church leaders how to lead the church!
Church leaders are to work hard among the flock. Some pastors are lazy. There is joke out there that pastors only work once a week and that for only half day, and I’m sure that’s true for some of us. It could be a cushy job. Jeremy and I need to work hard.
And we need to admonish. Did you see that verse in 12?
“...[W]e ask you, brothers [and sisters], to respect those who work hard among you, who are over you in the Lord and who admonish you.”
We who are church leaders have a responsibility to correct those who are going astray. To warn those who are getting out of line. To teach the hard parts of the Bible and not just the easy parts.
On Tuesday at the membership seminar, a number of the people who came said that they appreciated that here at Lanse Free Church we teach the parts of the Bible that are not as popular as the others. That’s hard to do, but it’s our calling.
At our elder meeting on Thursday, we have been talking about discipling, and Abraham asked us what part of making disciples gives us the most joy and what is the hardest to do. And I joked that I really love correcting people. I just love telling people where they are going wrong. Which is totally not true. I really struggle with the admonishing part of my job. I can do it up here at the pulpit. It’s easier to broadcast it, but it’s harder when talking with you one on one to bring the hard parts of Scripture to bear on your lives. But we have to do it.
You know who is good at this? Pastor Kerry, our district superintendent. Right, Jeremy? Kerry is such a good shepherd at telling us what we need to hear, not just what we want to hear. He is good at admonishing. He is good at encouraging in both ways–consolation and exhortation. And we respect and hold Kerry in the highest regard in love because of his work among us.
I love going to EFCA One like Keith Hurley and I are this week. It’s a great reunion of our extended church family. And I see a lot of hard working church leaders learning together how to lead better. I often see pastors have to slip out of sessions to get on the phone because someone back home is in a crisis and needs their shepherd.
Love your church leaders. You do that so well with me. And we need to do it with all of our hard-working church leaders. Not the just the elders but everyone who has a leadership role and who rolls up their sleeves and does the hard work, especially in teaching the Word of God.
I think of Jordyn Skacel as our Director of Family Ministry and all of her teachers getting ready to teach at Family Bible Week. We respect and honor you. While we wait for the return of Christ, we love our church leaders.
Secondly, while we wait for Jesus to come back, we love our church family.
#2. LOVE YOUR CHURCH FAMILY.
Here’s where we really get into the “each others.” Look at verse 13.
“Live in peace with each other. And we urge you, brothers, warn those who are idle, encourage the timid, help the weak, be patient with everyone.”
Once again, Paul uses the word “brothers,” and he means both brothers and sisters. He’s talking about our spiritual siblings, our whole church family. He tells them all to “live in peace with each other” while they wait for the return of Christ.
And that’s not always easy to do! It’s not always easy to get along with other Christians, is it? We have conflicts with each other. We have tensions. We don’t always agree. We don’t always see things the same way. We are all sinners, broken and difficult, in our own ways.
And, yet, we are called to peace. It’s not optional.
“Live in peace with each other.”
And that takes work.
Years ago, I learned to differentiate between peace-faking and peace-making (cf. Ken Sande).
There’s peace-breaking, too. That’s when we cross a line and sin against one another. And we need to repent of peace-breaking and forgive each other. But we also need to repent of peace-faking which is pretending there is peace when there is not. Running away from our conflicts and from each other.
When Paul says, “Live in peace with each other,” he isn’t telling them to put on a smile and pretend that there is nothing wrong. He’s calling them and us to work at peace-making among Christians so that we live in the shalom that God offers.
Who might you need to confront or forgive today so that you aren’t peace-breaking or peace-faking in your church family?
Because we need each other! This is what a healthy church family looks like. Listen to verse 14 again.
“And we urge you [that’s the word for “encourage” there again, the harder edge to encouragement], brothers [and sisters], warn those who are idle, encourage the timid, help the weak, be patient with everyone.”
What a great verse! That’s one of my favorite sentences in the New Testament.
Notice how Paul recognizes that there are different kinds of people in our church families and they need different kinds of ministry to them. You see that?
There’s the idle, the timid, and the weak. And they are not same. And they don’t need the same things!
You don’t warn the weak.
You don’t help the idle.
You warn the idle, encourage the timid, and help the weak.
So, it’s important for us to get to know one another and identify what each person needs and then give them that. We have to get into each other’s lives so that we can really love our church family.
And that’s not always easy to do. People are not always easy to love. It’s easy to love your church family in the abstract, but it’s hard to do it in the nitty gritty.
Remember that old Peanuts cartoon where Linus says that he wants to grow up to be a doctor and his sister Lucy laughs at him because he doesn’t love mankind? And Linus says, “I love mankind...it’s people I can’t stand.”
I love the church, it’s church people that I have a hard time with.
The idle, the timid, the weak. You know who that is? That’s all of us at one time or another. And we all need each other.
Verse 14 says, “[W]arn those who are idle.”
That word for “warn” is the same word as in verse 12, “admonish.” It means to point out where someone is going wrong and help them to go right.
The word translated “idle” in the 1984 NIV is more difficult to translate. The 2011 NIV update has “idle and disruptive.” The King James and the New American Standard have “unruly.” And the CSB says, “irresponsible.” The idea is someone who is “out of line” and not doing what they are supposed to be doing. Like working, for example.
These are difficult people to love. When someone is not doing the thing that they are supposed to be doing, it can be really frustrating to live with them. Have you ever had to deal with a lazy person? Somebody who doesn’t do their job? The Bible calls them “the sluggard.” Some of these people might have quit their jobs because they were expecting Jesus to return any minute and were just loafing around playing video games waiting for the kingdom to come. And so hard to move.
Paul says, “warn those who are idle.” Get in their face. Point them to Scripture. Tell them where they are going wrong.
The church leaders have to do that (v.12) but this says that we all do it for each other as we love our church family.
Warning someone like this is not breaking the peace but pursuing peace. This is not getting frustrated with someone because they are driving you nuts with their irresponsibility. This is loving your brother or sister in Christ with a loving warning that they are out of line and they are going to hurt themselves and others.
Do you do this? This is how we stay ready for the return of Christ. We warn the idle. And we “encourage the timid.”
That second group in verse 14 are those who are “fainthearted.” It’s those who are disheartened and discouraged and depressed. The troubled.
And the last thing they need is to be admonished. We don’t say, “Cheer up, Buckaroo” to these folks. We don’t say, “Quit your whining, you dopes. What are you afraid of?”
The Thessalonians were dealing with persecution from the Jews and the Romans. Some of them were getting pounded, and it was wearing them down. Paul says, “Love your church family. Encourage the timid.”
Some people are afraid to stick their heads out because they might get chopped off. By now, we should not be surprised to hear Paul say, “Encourage your brothers and sisters. Comfort them. Send them a card. Send them a text. Give them a call. Be in their DMs and PMs.”
Remind them what is true. Remind them what we’ve learned the last two weeks:
Jesus died and rose again, and so will all of us!
Jesus is coming back for all of us!
All of us will be with Jesus forever!
We belong to the Day.
We are not appointed for wrath but for salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ.
And that makes all of the difference. Remind each other of what is true. The timid can be difficult to love. Some of you would rather warn an idle person than encourage a timid person. And some of you, it’s the opposite. We’re called to do both. We have to love the brothers and sisters in front us. Whoever God gave us and whatever they are struggling with. And we need to tailor our love to their particular needs.
Like the weak. We need to (v.14), “help the weak.”
It’s not an hundred percent clear what kind of “weakness” Paul is talking about. Some of the commentators I read this week emphasized spiritual weakness. These people might be anxious, struggling to believe the promises, weak in faith.
Others think that it was physical weakness, bodily weakness. Those struggling with an illness, a disability, a limitation. As I get older, I struggle more and more with my limitations. I need reading glasses. I don’t sleep as good. I can’t concentrate for as long. I can’t go as long without a break. And I need more people to help me.
The weak can be difficult to love. You have to slow down. You have to come alongside. That’s what the word “help” here means. It means to stand with someone, to be devoted to them. To hang with them. The Bible is saying that we need to hang on with the weak.
Is there someone in our church family that you need “hang on with?” Don’t leave their side. Don’t leave them hanging. We need each other! Yes, church people can be difficult to love. I am difficult to love.
But this is how we live in the meantime while we wait for the return of Christ.
Every day we put on the body armor of love.
Every day we put on the body armor of love.
Every day we put on the body armor of love.
Paul says (v.14), “Be patient with everyone.” And by that, he means “everyone.”
We are need to be patient with the idle, the timid, and the weak. Even the idle! Even the disruptive, unruly, irresponsible, “crazy-lazy” (c.f Alistair Begg) folks in the church. Even those that need warned.
“Be patient with everyone.” Do you need to hear that? I know that I do. We have to adapt our ways of loving to the particular needs of our spiritual siblings, but we also have to be patient with all of them. And we hope that they are all patient with us. Because we are all three of these at some time and sometimes all three at once. Love each other. Love your church family.
Our theme verse last year as a church was John 13:34-35, “A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another” (NIV84).
One thing I worry about as our church grows in size is that we not lose our family feel. We need to know each other and be in each other’s lives and love one another in a 5:14 way.
“And we urge you, brothers [and sisters], warn those who are idle, encourage the timid, help the weak, be patient with everyone.”
Love your church family. And number three and last:
#3. LOVE YOUR ENEMIES.
Look at verse 15.
“Make sure that nobody pays back wrong for wrong, but always try to be kind to each other and to everyone else.”
This is probably the hardest thing that the Lord ever asks us to do. To love our enemies. To love those who do us wrong.
Paul knows that we will be sinned against. We will! But the Lord Jesus taught us in His Sermon on the Mount that citizens of His upside-down, inside-out kingdom that is here already yet still to come are not allowed to hate those who hate us but must love them back (see Matthew 5:38-42)!
Personal retaliation is not an option for followers of Jesus Christ (see also Romans 12:17, 1 Peter 3:9). The Thessalonians were not allowed to get to revenge on those who harmed them, and neither are we.
In fact, it’s more than just non-retaliation. We are called to be kind to our enemies and to seek their good. “Make sure that nobody pays back wrong for wrong, but always try to be kind to each other and to everyone else.”
That phrase “be kind,” isn’t quite strong enough. The 2011 updated version of the NIV has, “...always strive to do what is good for each other and for everyone else” (1 Thess. 5:15 NIV). Not just kindness (though that’s in there) but goodness. We are called to seek the best for our neighbors and even for our enemies.
You see how this stretches from “each other” to “everyone else?” We don’t just love our enemies within the church–those with whom we have a church disagreement. We are called to be children of the Day loving even those people outside of the church who hate and oppose us.
Is that what we’re doing?
Is that what we do when we get cut off in traffic?
Is that what we do when somebody undercuts us at work?
Is that what we do when somebody gossips about us in our family?
Is that what we do when we hear a news report about our political enemies?
Is that how we act on social media? Are we paying back wrong for wrong or always trying to be kind to each other and to everyone else?
Seeking their good, seeking what is best for them?
Every day we put on the body armor of love.
Every day we put on the body armor of love.
Every day we put on the body armor of love.
That’s how we get ready for the return of Christ.
It’s hard to do! So hard to do. But our Lord Jesus showed us how to do it. The Bible says that Jesus loved us when we were His enemies. Jesus died for His enemies. He took the punishment for the sins of His enemies into Himself on the Cross, and when He rose from the dead, He gave His own righteousness to cover His enemies with grace. Jesus showed us how it’s done. So that, now, we can show His love to each other and to everyone else.
To love our church leaders who work so hard among us.
To love our church family, the idle, the timid, the weak.
And to love even our enemies.
Until Jesus returns and takes us home to be with Him forever.
***
Messages in this Series:
01. "To the Church of the Thessalonians" - 1 Thessalonians 1:1-10
02. "We Loved You So Much" - 1 Thessalonians 2:1-16
03. "You Are Our Glory and Joy" - 1 Thessalonians 2:17-3:13
04. "Do This More and More" - 1 Thessalonians 4:1-12
05. "Encourage Each Other With These Words" - 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18
06. “We Belong to the Day” - 1 Thessalonians 5:1-11