Overview:
The Spirit creates godliness in the believer’s life, but that doesn’t eliminate our own effort!
In Paul’s first letter to Timothy, he instructs his mentee to train himself to be godly. Pastor Chuck Swindoll examines how Christians should train, and what it looks like to grow in Christlikeness.
This practical message illuminates the obstacles to spiritual discipline and shines the light on practices that promote growth. It’s often your quiet moments before God, your private choices, and the inner person you cultivate daily that determines who you become!
Message Summary:
In this profound and timely message, Chuck Swindoll explores the often-neglected spiritual discipline of solitude. Using the Apostle Paul’s early years as a primary case study, Chuck argues that the deepest spiritual growth rarely occurs in the middle of a crowd or a busy schedule. Instead, it is in the “Arabia” seasons of life—those periods of forced or chosen isolation—where God does His most transformative work in the soul. Drawing from Galatians 1, Chuck highlights a detail of Paul’s life often overlooked in the book of Acts: the three years he spent in the desert of Arabia receiving direct revelation from Jesus Christ. This study serves as a divine invitation to view our own seasons of solitude not as empty gaps in our productivity, but as fertile ground for a renewed walk with God.
The message focuses on the “reframing” of our schedules during unusual or disruptive times. Chuck observes that many Christians are tempted to merely “wait out” a crisis until things return to normal, but he insists that God’s primary agenda in our solitude is to drive us deeper into His presence. By examining the transition of Paul from a violent persecutor to a broken, humble servant, Chuck reveals that the “hunger for godliness” must be nurtured in the quiet. The goal of this teaching is to help believers cultivate a “fresh walk” that gives priority to prayer and introspection, moving away from mystical mumbling toward a genuine, disciplined pursuit of Christ that can sustain us through any Earthly storm.
Message Key Facts:
- The Mystery of Paul’s Arabia: Chuck points out a striking discrepancy between the “fast-paced” narrative of Acts 9 and Paul’s own account in Galatians 1. While Acts seems to move quickly from Paul’s conversion to his ministry in Jerusalem, Paul reveals that he intentionally avoided human sources of knowledge. He did not seek out the senior Apostles for training; instead, he disappeared into the desert for three years. Chuck calls this Paul’s “Personal Seminary,” where the “resident dynamic” of the Spirit taught him the very Gospel he would eventually preach.
- Solitude as a Refiner’s Fire: Chuck reflects on how Paul’s previous life was defined by “Zeal for tradition” and violent activity. The three years in Arabia were necessary to strip away the “old skin” of Pharisaic pride and replace it with the “Mind of Christ.” Chuck suggests that solitude is God’s tool for removing our crutches—our reliance on people, popularity, and busywork—so that we find our total sufficiency in Him.
- The “Topsy-Turvy” Schedule: A major highlight is Chuck’s application to the modern believer’s “rearranged” life. Whether due to global events, personal illness, or professional shifts, a stopped schedule is often God’s way of saying, “Be still and know that I am God.” Chuck encourages the church to stop resenting the “Arabia” of their lives and start making the most of it by practicing the discipline of silence and meditation.
- Discipline for the Purpose of Godliness: Chuck emphasizes that spiritual maturity is never an accident; it is the result of intentional discipline. He warns that we should not confuse being “mystical” with being “godly.” True godliness involves a rugged, honest interaction with the Word of God in private, which then allows us to “model” a fresh walk in public. He posits that our hunger for godliness will never be greater than our willingness to be alone with our Maker.
- The “Direct Revelation” Principle: Chuck discusses how Paul received his message “by direct revelation from Jesus Christ.” While we now have the completed Canon of Scripture, Chuck argues that the Spirit still brings “direct revelation” in the sense of illuminating the Word to our specific circumstances. This illumination rarely happens in a rush; it requires the “quiet resting place” of the soul.
- Searching the Heart: The sermon concludes with a call to “invite God to search us.” Chuck uses the metaphor of a ship’s pilot once again—reminding us that in the silence, the Pilot can point out the “mines” in our character that we are too busy to notice during the noise of the day.
Message References:
- Galatians 1:11–24: The primary text for the message. Chuck breaks down Paul’s testimony: his receipt of the Gospel “by direct revelation,” his history as a persecutor, and his strategic withdrawal into Arabia and Damascus for three years before meeting the Apostles in Jerusalem.
- Psalm 139:23–24: The prayer for search and discovery. Chuck uses this to show that the purpose of solitude is to allow God to “search me, O God, and know my heart” and to “see if there be any wicked way in me.”
- 1 Timothy 4:7–8: The command to “discipline yourself for the purpose of godliness.” Chuck links this to the solitude of Arabia, showing that godliness is a “profitable” pursuit that requires the training of the inner person.
- Psalm 46:10: “Be still, and know that I am God.” This serves as the overarching theme for the value of solitude—that knowing God’s character requires the cessation of our own frantic activity.
- Acts 9:1–22: The historical backdrop of Paul’s conversion. Chuck contrasts the external events of the Damascus road with the internal work that took place during the subsequent years mentioned in Galatians.
- Matthew 6:6: Jesus’ instruction on “secret prayer.” Chuck notes that the most powerful movements of God in history often began in a “closet” or a “quiet place” where the world could not see.
- Isaiah 40:31: The promise that those who “wait for the Lord” will gain new strength. Chuck interprets “waiting” not as idle sitting, but as the active, quiet cultivation of one’s relationship with the Spirit during seasons of solitude.