14-7-9 Following Elders
It should be evident from the above that Paul consciously modelled
his life upon Moses and John: among others. David was another of
Paul's heroes; to the point that David's words are quoted
by him with the preface: " I say..." (Rom. 10:18).
But above all, he modelled himself upon the Lord Jesus. There are
others who exhibited this characteristic of modelling their lives
around faithful Biblical characters. Saul and Jonathan modelled
themselves on Gideon (1), Jeremiah upon Job (Jer. 20:14-18), Jeremiah
upon Micah (Mic. 7:8 = Lam. 3:2 etc.), Jeremiah upon David (Jer.
20:10 = Ps. 31:13; 38:17; 41:9; 56:6; Jer. 20:12 = Ps. 54:7) . Jeremiah
also has far more allusions than average to Isaiah and Deuteronomy;
as if these books were his favourites. And David's final psalm of
thanksgiving (2 Sam. 22) is shot through with allusion to so many
faithful men who were obviously his heroes (just follow up the marginal
references). At the end of his life, he felt so close to those who
had gone before. This idea of consciously modelling, of having some
characters as your heroes, your inspiration towards a closer following
of God, was very much in Paul's thinking. Not only does he do it
himself, but he encourages others to do it. He doesn't use the word
'modelling'; he uses the word 'mimicking', Greek 'mimicos', normally
translated " follow" in the AV. This Greek word is used
almost exclusively by Paul:
" Ye became followers of us and of the Lord....ye
know how ye ought to follow us...an ensample unto you
to follow us" (1 Thess. 1:6; 2 Thess. 3:7,9; the
implication is that in the gap between 1 and 2 Thessalonians,
they stopped following Paul as they initially did straight after
his conversion of them).
" Be ye followers of me" (1 Cor. 4:16; 11:1)
" Whose faith follow (i.e. that of your ecclesial
elders)" (Heb. 13:7)
Be " followers of them who through faith and patience
inherit the promises" , e.g. Abraham (Heb. 6:12)
" Ye, brethren, became followers of the churches...in
Judea" (1 Thess. 2:14).
So Paul encourages them to mimic him, to mimic Abraham, to mimic
the persecuted ecclesias in Judea, to mimic the faithful elders
in the Jerusalem ecclesia (e.g. Peter), so that they would
be better mimickers of the Father and Son. But the idea of mimicking
involves a child-likeness, an intellectual humility, a truly open
mind. Why Paul used that word rather than a word which simply meant
'to copy' or 'to follow' was perhaps because he wanted to stress
that this kind of conscious modelling of your life on someone else
involved a real need for openness of mind to the word, resulting
in an unfeigned, uncontrived, child-like mimicking. Paul is really
encouraging his readers to get involved in this 'mimicking' of faithful
examples, of absorbing their spirit into our own by careful, sustained
meditation. Will we rise up to it? Or are we still on the level
of whizzing through our Bible reading in 10 minutes / day, giving
little thought to what we've read throughout the next 24 hours? |