Most of us have a moment we can point to.
The moment when quitting stopped being unthinkable and started feeling like the reasonable thing to do.
Maybe it was a marriage that had gotten so hard you started doing the math on whether staying was even worth it. Maybe it was a calling you said yes to when you were younger and more optimistic, and you woke up one day and couldn't remember why. Maybe it was your faith, not a dramatic crisis, just a slow, quiet erosion that nobody around you could see because you were still showing up, still going through the motions, but inside something was giving way.
You know the moment.
Paul wrote 2 Timothy from a Roman prison cell. Chained. Classified -- his own word -- as a criminal, the same word used for the men crucified on either side of Jesus. He was not under house arrest the way he had been before. This was chains on his wrists. And he knew he was not getting out.
And yet he picked up a pen.
He wrote to a young pastor named Timothy in Ephesus; a man he loved like a son, a man who was struggling with fear and shame, watching people who used to stand with Paul walk away. Wondering whether the cost of this calling was worth it.
From his chains, Paul said to Timothy: don't quit.
He didn't say it exactly like that. He said it with soldiers and athletes and farmers. He said it with his own testimony and a hymn the church was already singing. But underneath it all, the message is the same.
In 2 Timothy 2:1-13, Paul gives Timothy and us three anchors that hold when resolve runs out.
A Strength to Receive
The first word Paul gives is not a command to try harder. It's almost the opposite.
"Be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus" (2 Timothy 2:1).
Notice what Paul doesn’t say. He doesn’t say try harder. He doesn’t say dig deeper. He says be strong in grace, which means the strength he’s pointing to isn’t something you produce. It’s something you draw from. It's something he receives, and it is located in one place: in Christ.
Paul follows this immediately with a vision of discipleship: the things Timothy has received, he is to entrust to reliable people who will pass them on to others. Four generations. Four links in a chain. Receiving so you can give. Being strengthened so you can strengthen others.
And then Paul gives three pictures of what faithful entrusting looks like when it costs something.
The soldier doesn't get tangled up in civilian concerns -- he stays loyal to one commanding officer. The athlete doesn't just work hard -- he competes within the rules, because effort without integrity is wasted effort. And the farmer introduces something the other two don't: hope. He plants in one season and waits for a harvest he can't guarantee, knowing that faithful labor will eventually produce something.
Consider one ordinary, faithful Christian. No platform. No crusades. Just someone who prays for the people around them and shares their faith. Over the course of a year, two people come to Christ. That's it. Two.
Those two do the same thing. Each of them leads two people to Christ. Now you have four. Those four lead two each. Now you have eight.
How many years before that faithful multiplication reaches every person on earth? About 33.
Paul isn't looking for the next great evangelist. He's looking for faithful people who will pass it on. Just two. That's the strategy.
Receive strength. Stay connected to the source. Don't quit on the deposit that's been entrusted to you.
A Savior to Remember
After all the metaphors, Paul lands in a surprising place. Not a principle. Not a strategy. A person.
"Remember Jesus Christ, raised from the dead, descended from David. This is my gospel" (2 Timothy 2:8).
Two things to remember. Raised from the dead -- the resurrection, not as doctrine but as present reality. Jesus is alive. The commanding officer the soldier serves is not dead. The one who sets the rules for the athlete is still in charge. The God who guarantees the harvest has power over death itself.
Descended from David -- the incarnation. He came. He lived. He died. He rose. It is not mystical or theoretical. It happened.
And then Paul says something that crashes his own reality into view: "I am suffering even to the point of being chained like a criminal. But God's word is not chained."
You can lock up the messenger. You cannot lock up the message. Paul's imprisonment doesn't mean the gospel is losing. It means the gospel is so powerful that the authorities feel threatened by it.
And what sustains Paul in those chains? People who haven’t yet heard the gospel. People who haven’t yet had the chance to respond. People whose moment of faith hasn’t come yet, because no one has reached them. Reaching them with the gospel requires messengers who don’t quit.
That's why Paul endures. Not for his own vindication. For them.
For people he will probably never meet, whose response to the gospel depends on faithful people staying in the fight.
A Faithfulness That Starts with God
Paul closes this section by reaching for something the church was already singing -- a hymn, a confession, words that had been tested and passed down by believers who had already faced what Timothy was facing.
"Here is a trustworthy saying: If we died with him, we will also live with him; if we endure, we will also reign with him. If we disown him, he will also disown us; if we are faithless, he remains faithful, for he cannot disown himself" (2 Timothy 2:11-13).
The hymn opens with grace -- with what Christ has already done. You died with him. That's completed. That's a done deal. And because you died with him, you will live with him. Not a possibility. A promise.
It turns to cost -- endurance matters, the choices we make matter, the temptation to walk away is real and the warning against it is serious.
But the hymn doesn't end there.
Notice the shift in the final line. The first three lines are all about our performance -- we die, we endure, we disown. But the fourth line isn't about us anymore.
If we are faithless, he remains faithful -- because he cannot disown himself.
His faithfulness is not conditional on ours. It doesn't rise and fall with our performance. Faithfulness is not something God does -- it's something God is. He cannot act contrary to his own nature. To disown his people would be to disown himself. And that is impossible.
Your faithfulness matters. Endurance matters. The choice to keep following Jesus matters. But the ultimate ground beneath it all is not your consistency or your strength.
It's his nature.
Don't Quit
So here's where we land.
Paul gave Timothy three anchors from a prison cell. Receive strength -- not something you manufacture, but something you draw from, located in grace, located in Christ. Remember Jesus -- raised from the dead, whose word is unchained even when his messengers are in chains, and worth the cost. Remain faithful -- not because you're strong enough, not because you'll never waver, but because the one you're following cannot disown himself.
If you're at that moment right now -- when quitting has stopped being unthinkable and started feeling reasonable -- this is what Paul would say to you.
Don't quit.
Not because you're tough enough to handle it alone. Not because the cost won't be real. But because the one who called you is faithful. Because his word is still moving. Because your labor is not in vain. Because there is a harvest coming.
Don't quit.







