Work Out
Summary
In this sermon, Mark Oshman explores the themes of humility, obedience, and the multifaceted nature of salvation as presented in Philippians chapter two. He emphasizes the importance of working out one's salvation with fear and trembling, while also highlighting the role of God's grace in the process of sanctification. The discussion encourages listeners to reflect on their personal faith journeys and the communal aspect of living out their beliefs in a world that often challenges Christian values.
Transcript
If you have a Bible, I hope you do. You can work your way to the Book of Philippians. We're in Philippians chapter two. It's our summer series as we're working through Philippians in a series called Enjoy Jesus. I mentioned last week that when we moved back nine years ago, our kids were not born in America. They weren't growing up to that point in America. And so one of the things that we wanted to do is kind of teach them about their home country.
Jen and I are both natives of Colorado. We're one of the few, the rare born here. And so we want to teach them some things about Colorado, Colorado history, Colorado culture. And so we did a lot of things that summer, but one of things we did, we found that, you know, there's nothing more quintessential historical Colorado than going in a gold mine. And so we found a gold mine called the Molly Kathleen gold mine outside of Cripple Creek. And I told just side note real quick.
Told Jennifer like on Friday. Hey, my opening illustration is gonna be about the Molly Kathleen goldmine and she looked horrified. I was like what what's the problem? She's like, you know, a lot of people died in that mine like four months ago I was like no, but I'm still going with it We did look it up someone did die and the tourists were stranded for six hours down in the mine But that's not anywhere in my illustration. So
When you go to the gold mine, well, you you've heard of the San Francisco 49ers, the gold rush of 1849 to California. That was mostly like panning for gold. That was the easy way apparently. Well, in the 1850s, they began to find gold near Boulder and Golden and Denver and Colorado Springs in the hills and in the mountains. And so 100,000 people.
left the East Coast, left their lives, their families, their careers in search of gold, in search of instant riches, 100,000 people. And so in Colorado, it's called the 59ers. 1859 is when they arrived, 100,000 people. Now, of course, most of them did not strike it rich. Many of them were left broken, destitute, and in terrible conditions, but a few did. There were
golden them their hills. so the cry was, Pike's Peak or bust. That was on advertisements on the East Coast. And so people began to make their way there. Well, in 1890, a woman by the name of Molly Kathleen, she becomes one of the first and only women who starts her own mine. And it becomes a booming mine. And when you go into the
the tourist attraction now, you go into the mineshaft elevator after putting on your helmet and getting a little bit of briefing. You go down with the guide and it drops a thousand feet. It's very fast. It feels like you're falling for a thousand feet in pitch black, which is, mean, Disney's got nothing on that. So then you, and they warn you like it's going to be black and you're going to feel like you're falling and it's all true. And so eventually you get to the bottom and you come out and it's cool.
Literally, it's cool, but you go around and I'm tall, so I'm always smacking my head on the caves. But what you start to get a sense of as they're explaining how they did it is just how incredibly difficult it was. At that time, they just had hand drills and dynamite to make their way and make the holes and...
And it was very, very dangerous. It difficult. Twelve hour days back breaking work, blowing up the rock, taking it out, all in search of gold or these veins of gold that would run at all sorts of angles and depths and go in all these different directions. And when they find a vein of gold, that they would just work that vein until the last ounce of gold would come out of the hills there.
At its peak, produced in its day, $500 million worth of gold. That's the equivalent of $17 billion today. In fact, as I was looking at it, I wanted to make sure that I was thinking of the same one that we had went to. And so I looked it up on Google Maps and you see the gold mine is still active, but now just very near it, you see it from the satellite view, it's all strip mining.
where they've stripped mine down a thousand feet and they still are just taking gold out of that place. Now, what does that have to do with our passage today? Well, actually, I think it's a lot. If you can understand the difficulty, the struggle, the danger of that, but also the worth and the treasure of doing that hard work, then you can start to understand what I think the apostle Paul is getting at here.
the apostle Paul, the spirit of God wants for all of us. We're going to come to this passage in Philippians chapter two that I think is one of the greatest, if not the greatest, on what it means for those of us that are currently followers of Christ. What does it mean in this time and this place to live? How now shall we live? But it is one of those passages that has a lot of landmines in it. When I used to travel around Cambodia,
We were living in Asia. There were these signs all over that are still there today. Danger mines everywhere from 1970s Civil War. And you would see the evidence of it all over Cambodia. People missing legs and this like that. There's still just mines all over the place. I feel like our passage today should have this sign in front of it. This is the one of the greatest passages on what it means to be a Christian. But if we're not careful.
There's some landmines. So I just want to give you that warning. Philippians chapter two in this book of Philippians. Paul is writing to a church that he loves and helped establish 10 years prior. He loves these people. He's currently in prison in terrible circumstances, wondering if this is going to be his last day, wondering where his next meal is going to come from. And the Philippian church has sent a gift, have sent him some
money so that he could eat while he was in prison because they don't feed you there. And so he's writing back to them and he's writing with this incredible, incredible sense of joy. In fact, it is the theme of the book that in spite of our circumstances, there can be joy in your life because joy is found in Jesus. And so that's what we talk about often here. Our website you'll see we exist to enjoy Jesus.
and make disciples or put it a few other ways. think John Piper is the one that coined the phrase God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in him or happy in him or in older catechism the Westminster catechism question number one what is the chief in demand the chief in demand is to enjoy God and glorify him forever or enjoy God by glorifying him forever we were made for joy we were made to find
our joy in spite of our circumstances in the person the work of Jesus. And so that's where we've Now in chapter one verse 27 Paul had said this only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ. And we saw that it's this term for citizenship. Let you let you represent your heavenly kingdom well because you are citizens of the heavenly kingdom.
And the rest of Philippians is going to answer the question. Well, what does that actually look like? How do we let our manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ? And last week, Paul points to Jesus in that great hymn, that great theological rich hymn of Jesus who humbled himself and did not consider equality with God something to be clung onto, but emptied himself, taking on the form of a servant, becoming like a man and even
being obedient to death, even death on a cross. This was what Paul wanted us to look at. And it's right after that hymn of Christ's humility and then exaltation after his death, burial and resurrection that we come to our passage. And so this has not pulled out a context. The context is important. Paul says, therefore, therefore, and what in light of what you just heard about what Jesus has done, who left his throne in glory,
came and died in your place and now is reigning as King of Kings and Lord of Lords. Therefore the word is host a it could be translated as a result as a result of looking at Christ his humility and his glory as a result. He gives them three things a commendation a command and a comfort. Here's the commendation he says my beloved therefore my beloved.
Agapetoi from the word Agape. Agapetoi, my beloved. Paul doesn't say this to everyone. The only other church he says this to is Thessalonians. He loves these people. He's like, I have such affection for this church, my beloved. He says, as you have always obeyed, because he's pointing back to Jesus' obedience, even obedience to the death, as you have always obeyed, so now, not only as in my presence,
But much more in my absence. Continue to bathe is basically what he's saying. He says I remember when I came to to Philippi and you all became followers of Christ and there was just this strong desire to submit yourself to the lordship of Christ with each other and individually. And so he's just saying now I'm a thousand miles away. I'm in prison. But but as every father to sons or daughters because Paul is their spiritual father.
He wants to see when you grow up and mature, you still are obedient. You are still pressing on. And so he commends them. calls them his beloved. And you can see out of this his tender care for him. So what he says next is where the warning sign should be. Says, so as you have always obeyed, so now not only in my presence, but much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with
fear and trembling. Work out your own salvation. Now, the reason we get uncomfortable with this is because there's just in the Greek, there's just one word between the word work and salvation. So, Therial, work and salvation. So, we get nervous like, what I thought, I thought salvation was, was all grace, all grace. Well, what is this? Why is work so closely tied to our salvation? This is where we
where we're careful. We tend to have a flat and linear view of salvation. We tend to think, well, I got saved and therefore when I get to heaven, I've got the Willy Wonka magic ticket that they got to let me in when I get to the Dick gate. And this is kind of a real simplified version, but this is what a lot of us think. Well, I did nothing. I got the ticket. I'm going to get into heaven. And on some rudimentary level, that's true.
You will go there. for Paul and for the New Testament writers salvation, this word has much more depth and breadth and width that we sit in often. for example, Paul will often talk about this word soteri in the past tense. So let me give you an example of that. So Ephesians 2, 8, 9, the great one. So in the past tense, for by grace you have been saved, past tense, you have been saved.
through faith. And this is not your own doing. It is the gift of God, not a result of work so that no one may boast. So is Paul just contradicting himself in the letter to Philippians? No, he's talking about this in the past tense. more than the past tense, in fact, most often this word is in the future tense. the next slide. So in the future, here's one example, Romans 5, 9. Since therefore we have been
justified, that's past tense, salvation, by His blood, much more shall we will be saved. One day is coming, we're going to be saved by Him from the wrath of God. And I love this one as well because we shall be saved by who? God. From what or who? God. You're going to be saved by God, from God, for God. So this is actually the most common
Tense of the word salvation you're going to be said you you have been saved. That's justification You will be saved that's called glorification But here Paul talks about the present tense That there's a present tense to it. For example 2nd Corinthians 2 15 for we are the aroma of Christ to to God among those who are being saved we are in process being saved and we
call this sanctification. There's height, depth and breadth to this word. And in the present tense, it's sanctification. are being saved. So when we are justified, we get the righteousness of Christ. We get the absolute righteousness of Christ. That's our position. But practically, we're not there yet. None of us are there yet. And sanctification is the process, we'll see, empowered by the Spirit, of becoming
practically what we are positionally in Christ. Becoming practically holy, practically righteous, even though we have the holiness and righteousness of Christ. And one day we will fully have the holiness and righteousness of Christ. But we live in the present. We live in the sanctification period. And so Paul says, work out your salvation. Work it out. Now, that makes me think of...
the Molly Kathleen mine. In the first century, there was a philosopher and historian named Strabo. Strabo wrote a 17 volume encyclopedia of the world at that time. And in volume three, Strabo is writing about the mines in Spain and about the workers going into the hills and bringing out gold and silver. And you know what he says? They worked out
gold and silver. He uses the same word that Paul uses. Now you can start to think about it. The gold and silver in the Mollie Kathleen mine, it was put there by God. It's there. But it takes work, a lot of work to get it out. Notice Paul doesn't say work for your salvation or work up your salvation. He says work out
what God has worked in to your life in Christ. You have the righteousness of Christ, in Christ. you have the presence of Christ and we are called to work out. But maybe you're still uncomfortable with even that language. But the New Testament is not uncomfortable with it. New Testament will often talk about this effort that is involved. So Hebrews 12 14 strive for holiness.
without which no one will see the Lord. There should be a striving in our Christian lives. First Timothy 4 7. Train yourself for godliness. And he uses these parallels between athletes and soldiers who go into this training mode so that they can win the prize that there is work to be done. We train ourselves. Second Peter 1 5. Make every effort. Which effort should you make? Every one.
every effort to supplement your faith with virtue. There is this working out what God has worked into us and he says and do this with fear and trembling. Again there's landmines here. Often maybe you've heard well when the Bible says fear the Lord it doesn't really mean fear it means just be in awe of the majesty and glory
God. But the problem with that is there's other words for awe in Greek and Hebrew. Paul knows these words. 35 times in the Old Testament we are commanded to fear the Lord.
when because he's the Lord. He is the sovereign one. He is the holy one. And every now and again every every now and again the veil between heaven and earth gets pulled back in the Bible and people get just the slightest glimpse of who God actually is. And you know what they experience fear and trembling Isaiah in the year King Uzziah died in Isaiah chapter six. He goes into the temple just to
a normal day to church like you might go to and all of sudden God decides this is the day I'm going to pull back the veil and God's glory fills the temple. And you know what Isaiah does? He isn't like, that's awesome. I'm in awe of you, Lord. No, no. He gets on his face. He sucks dirt. He says, woe is me. I'm undone.
I'm a man of unclean lips and I live among a people of unclean lips. I have seen the Lord and I'm dead. I don't know how I'm still breathing in this moment. He thinks he's done. There is some fear in trembling when he sees the majesty, glory and holiness, just the glimpse of God. This is the right response. I mean, even in the New Testament, John, John who writes the gospel of John, John who refers to himself as
the disciple whom Jesus loved. I love that humble brag. I don't want to put myself in the gospel. I'll just say the guy that just really loved. But this guy, John, man, he and Jesus did love him. He was one of the inner three. Like we have scenes in the gospel of John where John's like leaning, lounging with Jesus as they're eating, like next to him, shoulder to shoulder, head on his shoulder, like all that stuff like.
He's close with Jesus. But you know what? When John's an old man and he's on the island of Patmos, God says, OK, now I'm going to pull back the veil a little bit. I'm going to give you a glimpse. He pulls back the veil, gives him a vision in the Book of Revelation. Revelation chapter one, John sees the glorified, resurrected King of Kings, Lord of Lords, Jesus. And what does John do? He doesn't say, Jesus, my homeboy, I'm the one you love.
No. In that moment, he gets on his face and he's like, he says, I fell as though dead until Jesus lifts him up. There is a kind of of fear that is good fear, and it is not exclusive of of love. Right. But like there is just like a recognition that this is a dangerous thing. Like a great example of this is
Chronicles of Narnia, Aslan. He's not a tame lion. He's not a safe lion. He's a lion. But he's good. He's good. When my kids were little, our church was also connected to our house in Okinawa. And so my office was upstairs in the church. every now and again, with four little girls, my wife would be exhausted trying to discipline these kids. And so she would say, go tell your father what you did.
And I always knew, because I'd be in my office and I had a window and I could see the stairs come up. I'd see this little head come up very slowly. Very, very slowly. And then it turned and it faced me and there'd be tears in their eyes. I'd be like, I know what's going on here. But I play dumb. And they open the door and it's like, hey, Zoe, Abby, Hannah, whatever, what you doing? Mom sent me up here. Yeah?
Yeah. Why'd she send you up here?
bit my sister.
Hmm. So she sent you up here to be disciplined. Yeah. What do you think we should do? I don't know.
And I would explain, well, you know, I love you, right? Yeah. And because I love you, I can't let you live in rebellion to your mom because we're training you to live in obedience to your heavenly father. So I have to discipline you, right? Yeah. So there can be fear and love in the room at the same time. Or even take creation. Like a few years ago, again, we were trying to teach our kids about America, so we drove to...
The Grand Canyon. mean, this is majestic. It's awesome. It's beautiful. But there are places where it's not just at the tourist center where it's just a cliff and it just drops off and there's a ton of fear like because one slip and you're dead. But there's no other place you'd want to be in that moment. It gets glorious, but you don't play around with it. So Paul says, work out your salvation.
take work out what God has worked into your life. Do this with fear and trembling. Now if this was the only verse that we had on sanctification we would be a sad lot. We would leave here and be like man I got to I got to really try harder and be afraid apparently and tremble.
But this isn't the only verse. In fact, the very next verse is meant for our comfort. The very next verse, verse 13 says, so after you work out your salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you, both the will and to work for his good pleasure. It is God who works in you. This is
Good news, this is gospel. We are saved by grace. We will be saved by grace, but even our sanctification is grace. The word work, there is inner gone. We get the word energy from. It is God who pours energy into us. So if I had a miter saw up here and some two by fours and I started to try to cut it, if I don't plug it in, it does nothing.
But the moment I plug it in, it's got energy. I put on my goggles and I chop it in a half a second. It goes through. This is the kind of work that God wants to put in you. He doesn't leave us on our own. He doesn't save us and say, okay, work it out on your own. And when you die, then I'll meet you there. No, His spirit lives in us to energize us to will and to work. This is a comprehensive working of the spirit in our lives. I love
What Charles Spurgeon says about this verse, he says, assistance of divine grace is not given to us to put aside our own efforts, but to excite them. God comes to us to work in us. What? To work in us to be indifferent? no. To work in us with will, with resolution and firmness. Does he work in us having willed to sit still?
no, he works in us to do. The direct effect of the influence of grace upon the heart is to make a man active. And the more divine grace he has, the more energetic he becomes. A man will never overcome sin except by energy. We have the source of all energy. We have the power to conquer all that keeps us down. We have the Spirit of God.
The new covenant is God has removed a heart of stone and put in a heart of flesh. He has put in his spirit so that to to will and to act so not just to give us energy but also to give us the desire. Did you see that this is to will and to work so to have a desire and to actually get to work for his good pleasure. God's good pleasure and our good pleasure are not opposite of each other. They are one in the same. When he
wills and he works in us. do what theologians say is this confluent operation with the spirit. So for example, if I ask you who wrote the book of Philippians, Paul or God? You'd say yes.
So when I say by the spirit in your sanctification as you work for holiness as you make war with your sin as you as you as you strive to to reflect in your life what God has done in you and justification as you do that who's doing that work God or you. The answer is yes. Yes. And if we have any desire for holiness this verse just said well God put it there. Well praise God give me more desire God.
If we have any success in breaking down the hard granite hearts and bringing out the gold, it's God who did that. This is all good news to Will and to work. Well, then Paul goes to an application for the Philippians church. if Jesus is the one who humbled himself, who was obedient to death and is now
reigning as king of kings and lord of lords and we are to work out our salvation with fear and trembling but we do it with the Spirit's energy power and desire how now shall we live verse 14 he says do all things if if Christ really is sovereign over all it means he's sovereign over all every thought every action every desire every conversation every relationship every dollar like he is sovereign over
all. We bring it all under His rule and His reign. We do all things. Now when Paul's writing, we tend to view this only through an individualistic lens, and there's a place for that, but he's writing to a church that as a church needed to work out their salvation, bring out what God has worked into them. And for them, he says this, do all things without grumbling or disputing.
that you may be blameless and innocent children of God without blemish in the midst of a crooked and twisted generation. Paul has gotten word of this church that he loves with the immense pressure that they're facing. They're starting to be some fracturing. There's some disunity. There's some grumbling. There's some gossip. They're losing the narrative. Now, we might not think of grumbling and disunity and gossip as that big a deal, but God takes it very, very seriously.
Because Jesus with his blood bought his bride and has sent his bride on mission and nothing derails mission more than these things. And he says so because Jesus is Lord do all things without grumbling or disputing that you may be blameless and innocent children of God without blemish in the midst of a crooked and twisted generation. He says among whom you shine as lights in the world. I like what.
The Dutch theologian Abraham Kuyper said about this, said, there is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is sovereign over all, does not cry, mine. Mine. It's all his. And when we live in light of that truth, did you see what happens? In a world that is crooked and twisted, that has lost.
their way in a world of brokenness and darkness. When we work out our salvation when we put forth the good that God has put in us we are a light to the world. This is our distinct contribution to the world. But if we if we're not working out our salvation if we are living like all of our neighbors and friends and that don't know the Lord then then there's no distinction there. Jesus put it this way if salt loses its saltiness what is it good for. Nothing.
No one lights a lamp and puts it under a bowl, right? He says, no, you are a city on the hill. But when we work out our salvation, our light shines forth and the world can look on. You know, when you go down into the Molly Kathleen mine and you go through the different tunnels, there's a moment where they say, all right, everybody, turn off your lights. We're going to turn off all the lights. And it's unsettling. I don't know if you've ever been a place where it's absolute darkness and you can sense no movement.
whatsoever. And it doesn't take long to let you just sit in that darkness for a moment where you're like, okay, can we turn on our lights now? And then the guy lights a single match. He's walked down the tunnel a long way and you see this single match and you're just kind of like walking towards it because you're this is, you're just drawn to the light. Like this is our role. This is our distinct calling by God.
in Parker, Colorado in 2025 to work out our salvation, to work out what God has worked in so that we might be a light to the world. So what does that look like for you and for me? I don't know. I don't know all the answers. Maybe you're aware of an area where the Spirit is saying, this is where we're going to do the hard work in your heart, in your mind, in your life, in a relationship. Maybe you're already aware of that. And that's good. So ask God to
to work into will in you. Maybe you don't know and so you just begin to pray. Listen none of us have arrived. All of us are in process but with fear and trembling we want to work out our salvation. So we ask the Lord Lord what area do you want to work on in my life in my church in me.
Maybe it's you do foster care. Maybe you are reaching out to neighbors. Maybe the Lord is saying, I want you to be more bold in your witness and in opening your mouth. I want you to be a better father. I want you to shine the light as a mother to your children. Like there are 10 million applications to this passage and the spirit will work with you in showing those things. So for the glory of God.
and the joy of all people, let's work out what God has worked in, amen? Amen, let me pray for us to that end.
Gospel Shaped Minds, Hearts, and Lives
Summary
In this conversation, Mark Oshman discusses the concept of Third Culture Kids (TCKs) and their unique experiences of belonging and identity. He draws parallels between TCKs and Christians, emphasizing that believers are citizens of heaven and must live in a manner worthy of their citizenship. The conversation explores the importance of orthodoxy (right belief), orthopathy (right feelings), and orthopraxy (right actions) in achieving spiritual maturity and unity within the church. Oshman highlights that knowledge alone is insufficient for spiritual growth and that true maturity involves a holistic approach that includes love, unity, and practical application of faith.
Transcript
Many of you know that my my daughters weren't born here. They were born in Japan and we were serving as missionaries in Okinawa, Japan. And so they are known as TC case. Anyone ever hear that term? TCK. OK, we got it. Yeah, we have some TC case. We had some in the last TC came in third culture kid. And what it means is that they have a third culture, meaning they don't share the host culture of their.
their parents because they weren't born or raised in that culture in our case here in Denver Colorado and they don't really share the culture of the place they were born Japanese culture because they're not really from there and so that they exist in this third space and that that develops them in certain ways and it gives them opportunities and challenges and so my daughters are all very ⁓ culturally aware that they're aware.
They're observant, they're able to fit in in different places. They're very, they're hyper aware of Americans and their bad behavior overseas and how they're acting. Cause they're like, you don't do that. ⁓ And so that's a third culture kid, but that it's also challenging because they never really feel home anywhere. this America doesn't really feel like home for them. They lived in check. That doesn't really feel like home. They lived in Japan. That doesn't really feel like home.
There is something in TCKs that longs for something of home, but they don't know where to point to that. And so it reveals itself in different ways. It's just ⁓ kind of some funny ways. ⁓ My daughter, Hannah, she loves American commercials. Like no joke, like we have YouTube TV, we're watching a show and a commercial come on and she'll just.
And I'll start fast forward and she's like, dad, no, no, no, stop. The commercials are on. Like, yeah, that's why I'm fast forwarding. Everyone, no one likes the commercials. Like they're entertainment for her. I'm like, where did this come from? Like, wow, who watches commercials? Well, I thought about it when growing up in Japan, we had one channel, one English channel by AFN, Armed Forces Networks. And AFN has all these shows from all the different networks.
in the states that they'll show and they'll have sporting events, but they don't show commercials that they just have this, but they still have this gap in space that they got to fill where a commercial would be. And so they fill it basically with, ⁓ it feels like homemade public service announcements. They're so bad. So we learned all about ⁓ cholesterol levels and ⁓ we learned about how you need to drink a lot of water because you're in Okinawa, it's hot, you got to be hydrated. We learned about
All the different ways that the ocean is going to kill you. And so consequently, none of my daughters love the ocean, even though we grew up there. Like it's trying to get you at all times. ⁓ Learned about, ⁓ what other things we learned? ⁓ yeah, this term OPSEC. Anyone know OPSEC? It means operational security. So there's ⁓ all these commercials with the bad acting where ⁓ this, you know, ⁓ airman is walking home and.
and someone in the shadows is following him and ⁓ you need to watch your operational security, what's going on. And never take the same way home from work as you do. Like who does that, right? Like take a different way home every day, like you can't do it. But we still use that term in our family. Like if we're traveling and it's kind of a dangerous place, say like Marseille, France, and we're like, hey, watch your opsec. And we all know, like don't be on your phone, don't have the earbuds in, like watch what's going on.
There's that, but there's one other commercial that would come up in different ways time and time and time again. And it was basically this, you Americans who are living in this host countries would be Japan, Germany, Italy, Korea, you Americans understand who you are. Understand that you represent America. You represent your citizenship. And as such, you either give a good name to America or you give a bad name and we see this.
all the time. And so the commercial was, hey, represent America well. Paul is getting out here at this point in his letter. Last week, he said something. He basically said, we're all TCKs now. We're all third culture kids. If you are in Christ, have Colossians 1.16, you have been delivered from the dominion of darkness and transferred into the kingdom of the sun.
God loves you have a new citizenship in Philippians three you'll say we are our citizenship is in heaven therefore we never are fully comfortable where we're at. This isn't really our home. Don't get settled in so much. And then Philippians chapter one last week Ryan preached on this but in verse twenty seven it said this only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ. And as Ryan said
Paul's not contradicting the gospel. He's not saying earn your salvation. There's one word, manner of life, and we get the word politics from. ⁓ It's a word you might have a footnote, citizenship. He's basically saying, listen, Christians in Philippi, you understand Philippi. Philippi is this Roman colony on the outskirts of the Roman Empire, but they are thoroughly Roman, and they have as such obligations and responsibilities as Romans.
to represent Rome well. And Paul is saying to these people in Philippi, you understand how they do it, but you are citizens of heaven. Therefore, live in a manner worthy of your citizenship in heaven. You represent a different king and a different kingdom. He says, well, what does that look? It looks like ⁓ spiritual maturity manifests itself in spiritual unity. So he says, so that whether I come to you and see you or in absent, I may hear of you.
that you are standing firm in one spirit with one mind striving side by side for the faith of the one gospel. So we are citizens. Chapter two, where we're at today, answers the question, well, how do we actually do that? How do we pursue a spiritual maturity that leads to spiritual unity that reflects the kingdom values in the world? And Paul's going to show us there's actually three things that are necessary. The three things that...
have to be in our lives if we're going to be those kind of people that live in a manner worthy of the gospel of Jesus. And so if you have your Bible ⁓ Philippians chapter two ⁓ we'll pick it up. Actually I'm to pick it up in verse five. I'll read this passage. It's known by some as the Christ hymn. Some some theologians think this is not unique to Paul but rather one of the oldest Christian hymns to teach Christians about Jesus.
that is in existence and Paul is quoting it. You'll see some rhythm to it, but we'll jump off from there. Paul writes this. Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours and Christ's, who though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men and being found in human form. He humbled himself.
by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Therefore, God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name so that at the name of Jesus, every knee should bow in heaven and on earth and under the earth. And every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father. Amen. Well, this passage, what you just heard,
is one of the most important ⁓ passages in all the Bible in this area of theology called Christology. What is the truth about Christ? And libraries have been written about this. so Paul pointing to this is showing this first essential that we must have as Christians to reach some level of spiritual maturity. And that's orthodoxy. It's right belief. But like we are ⁓
We are unified on a truth, on the truth. And so it is incumbent on citizens of the kingdom to know the truth, to believe the truth, to tell the truth. And this passage ⁓ tells the truth about who Jesus is. Again, it'd be very hard to overstate every single word and line of this Christ hymn. I'm going to just show you quickly what I mean by this. So I don't normally do this.
But ⁓ I want you to lock in for like three minutes because I want to give you a grammar lesson. You're like great grammar. That's going to be an awesome sermon Mark. ⁓ I know I know but just stick with me for three minutes. I've got my mother-in-law here who's a lifelong English teacher. So this was for her. ⁓ I'm just kidding. But this is important. I just want to show you like how important every word in this Christ him is for our understanding.
and our orthodoxy, our right belief. And so in verse six, it says, though he was in the form of God, those words, though he was, in the Greek it's just one word. it normally gets translated being. It's a participle, know, a verbal adjective, a verb that describes a noun. You're like, yeah, okay, we got that. I was like third grade or something.
Well, here's the deal. In the Greek language, ⁓ that word ⁓ gets translated differently based on circumstances. So it's what's called a circumstantial participle. So depending on the context and the circumstance, you use different words in the English to describe. Does that make sense so far? So let me give you some examples. So the first example I have up here, can we get to ⁓ the example? Okay, so if we have a blank here and it says the baby was crying.
the mother fed the baby. What do you think you would put in that blank? Because, there. So this is what's called a causal participle. Because the baby was crying, the mother fed the baby. Next example. Now don't give it away too quickly here. We'll see if they get here. So this one is blank, the baby was crying, the mother went to bed. What would you put there?
What? Okay, could be in spite. In spite of the fact that the baby was crying, the mother was exhausted. So this is called a concessive. So you might put although, although the baby was crying, like mom's like, I'm done. And so the context would be although. Same exact word in the Greek, but in English, it's context. And there's like five or six more based on circumstances. I just wanted to show you two, causal and concessive. Now, you're like, okay, great.
What does that have to do with this passage? It blows my mind. I hope it'll blow your mind. So in the ESVs, what I'm saying, it says this, who though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped. what is that? Is that concessive or causal? Concessive. It'd be although he was God. And this makes sense. And this could be right. Many scholars land there. And obviously the
ESV scholars land there. It's concessive. Although he was God, he did not consider equality with God something to be clung onto or grasped onto. Totally makes sense. If I'm God, I don't have to serve anybody. Everyone could serve me that that would make sense. And if I choose to, I'm not that that could be true. However, ⁓ one scholar I was reading, Dr. Hawthorne, he spent his life as a Greek professor at Wheaton College.
He says this, listen to this, says if you understand the context, if you understand the flow of Paul's argument and what he's saying about God, it's exactly the opposite. In other words, this ought to be translated. Your attitude should be the same as Christ Jesus, who precisely because he was in very nature God, precisely because he did not consider equality with God to be grounds for grasping. So do you see what it's saying?
He's saying, listen, if Jesus, when he came and took on flesh as God in the flesh, he didn't come to conceal who God is, but to reveal who God is. And because precisely because he is God, he is a God who serves. He's a God who gets low. This is an amazing, mind blowing truth about who our God is. Like we read stories of CEOs and up and comers and Forbes and Wall Street Journal and
And the whole aim of this world is to climb the ladder, climb the ladder, climb the ladder, climb the ladder, get to the top. But what we see here in Christ is that that he is coming down the ladder, coming down the ladder, coming down the ladder, even to the point of death, even death on the cross. And when you hit death on the cross, you hit rock bottom. So some quick application for us in our striving and our striving to get to the top.
and are striving to get ahead of others as we climb, climb, climb, climb, climb. The biggest problem with that is that as we're climbing to the top, we'll miss Jesus because he's on his way to get low. I mean, this is this is cool theology, right? Like this is what we we start to see. That's just one example that I wanted to show. But but ⁓ I want I want to say that there should be a warning attached to this.
There should be a warning because orthodoxy alone isn't sufficient for your maturity. In fact, it's actually kind of dangerous. We're all children of the Enlightenment. That means we value ⁓ rational thinking and thought. And we've in some circles boiled down Christianity to ⁓ what do you know about God? And if you know a lot about God and you know a lot about the Bible and you know a lot of scriptures that are memorized, then you must be spiritually
Mature and if you have a platform and if you have books then then we want to be like you we boil down Maturity to knowing things about God now. It is not less than knowing But it is certainly more than knowing We know this right there are plenty of things that you know that have no impact on your life. You know, you should eat better You know, should sleep more, you know, you should
Exercise, you know, you know you should spend more time with your family. Like we could go on and on. My daughters, my teenage daughters, always know the UV levels outside. Yeah. They also know that it's not great for their long-term health. But it does not change their behavior whatsoever. It's actually the opposite. They are always tanning.
I'm sending them reels from doctors thinking if I get more knowledge into them they will change but knowledge doesn't necessarily change us it should like we should read this passage about Christ and be like wow that's going to change me but knowledge alone is actually kind of dangerous ⁓ it's not sufficient it's actually the easiest easiest one of the three that Paul is going to say we need to get ⁓ so for example
We were living in the Czech Republic and in Czech culture it's pretty hostile to the gospel. And so a ministry we were partnering with was like hey we need to we need to bring someone American over here that's going to just be very clear on the gospel. And so they found had this relationship with this guy very large ministry ⁓ strong ministry. ⁓ He's a professor ⁓ in California at a ministry at a seminary. He is a pastor in.
Texas, he's written many books, has his own ministry, like just known for like truth, truth, truth, truth, truth, this guy. So they bring him over there and they say, hey, we need someone to speak to the wives. And so they asked my wife to talk to the wives there. And he does it. He stands up and he proclaims the truth. And everyone's like, yeah, this guy, I want to be like this guy when I'm older. He's 72. And that's what I want my life to be because he is bold for the truth.
Well, nine months ago, it was discovered that this man that's 72 has been in a five-year relationship with one of his seminary students for five years.
that there's some sort of disconnect. I don't know many people that know orthodoxy better than this man and have such a massive disconnect to his life. Listen, every week I can stand up and open up God's Word and say, this is what God says and you should test me in light of scripture to see if I'm orthodox. you can't know my heart. You can't know what's going on in my thought life, how I steward my affections.
I could be a fraud for all you know.
Again orthodoxy without anything else is actually dangerous because we think I must be spiritually mature because I know things about God. That's not true and we have to push back against that. So Paul gives us the second thing that we must have in order to be mature that leads to unity that leads to mission that leads to joy. Verse one says so if there's any encouragement in Christ have any comfort from his love any participation in the spirit any affection.
and sympathy complete my joy. Paul is appealing. Notice the words encouragement, comfort, love, affection, sympathy, joy. These are words of the heart and the soul. So we need orthodoxy but we also need orthopathy. We need right feeling. We need to feel things right. We are to love God with our heart, soul, mind, and strength. Our whole body. We live in a culture that ⁓
that we think we're victims to our hearts. We're victims to whatever we feel. Like, well, I, you know, the heart wants what the heart wants. Follow your heart. Like that's paganism. That's not Christianity. Christianity is, hey, you can control your heart. Your heart doesn't have to control you. You can shepherd and steward what you love, what you set your affections on. This is what we're called to. This is good news because you don't have to be a victim of your feelings.
You can recognize that your feelings are not in line with the truth and that there are patterns and pathways to change them. The Puritans got this. They got orthodoxy, but they never disconnected it from orthopathy. Right feeling. Thomas Watson, I'll put it on the screen, this. Knowledge without love inflames pride. The devil has knowledge but no love, and so is a devil still. Knowledge is for the eyes, but love...
is for the heart. So we must cultivate our hearts carefully. Well, how do do that? I just I feel what I want. I want what I want. I love what I want. No, you can you can lead your heart. We see this all over the place in the Psalms. The psalmist are having conversations with their hearts and their soul. Why are you downcast on my soul? Trust in God. The psalmist is reminding. I will remind myself of the
deeds of the Lord. Every song that we sing is not just for our mind, it's for our hearts. Sometimes you come in a room like this and the words, you're not feeling anything, but you are singing to your heart saying, this is what's true. This is what we feel. This is what we love. We've got to understand, as the Puritan said, what stirs our affections for the Lord and what robs our affections from the Lord.
What stirs your affection? Prayer, worship, reminding each other, fellowship, like these things will stir your affection. What robs your affection? Certainly sin robs your affections, but a thousand other things do as well. Like I can give myself to, I can give my emotion and passions to what a 20 year old does with a football more than who Jesus is. I need to give an account for that. I need orthopathy. need right.
feeling but but even that is not sufficient because some of some of us here are more emotional than other more in tune with that but but if you have orthopathy without orthodoxy then you're just going to affirm everything that the world affirms you're say love who you love love what you want follow your heart and and the Bible is gonna say that no that's a terrible path in fact if you have orthodoxy and orthopathy it's still not sufficient there's one more thing that we must have
here we see it beginning in verse two. says complete my joy being of the same mind have the same love being in full of cord and one of mine. He's calling them to unity or or we could say ortho proxy right action. We are called to love God with our minds our hearts and our hands like we shouldn't be satisfied just like well I love God and my mind and my heart and it's personal and private.
No, Christianity is not a personal and private religion. It's a personal religion. Yes, it's not private. We are meant to love God with our actions, with unity in this case. Unity is a huge deal in the Bible. It's not a huge deal in most of our circles, but Jesus, on the night that he was betrayed in the upper room, gathered his disciples and he says, the world will know that you're my followers as you love one another in unity.
Jesus said that. And then in John chapter 17, he begins to pray for his disciples. He says, but I don't only pray for them, I pray for all that will believe after them. So he prayed for you. You know what he prayed for you? Father, make them one as you and I are one. And then he went to the cross and with his blood purchased the unity of his bride, the church. It's a huge deal in the mind of Christ. Christ died for the unity of his church.
And so we should fight for unity, but unity is not easy. Like unity is easy when we all agree and everyone's happy and we sing kumbaya, but when there are legitimate differences of opinion and ideas, then what do we do? Well, usually we just go to a different church. I don't like that. That's not what Jesus is saying. that there is a fighting for unity and orthoproxy that's here.
And so Paul shows us, here's the path. Here's how you get unity. He says, nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility, count others more significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others. Paul appeals to humility. Again, that's why he gives this whole Christology.
not to give you theology, to show Christ has humility. Like until the time of Christ, humility was not seen in the ancient world as a virtue. It was seen as weakness. Rome valued power and dominance and control and pride. And then Jesus came along full of humility. And Jesus followers saw Jesus' humility and they memorized this Christ hymn and they're like, this is the way, the way up is down, the way to glory is...
down. And so humility, but humility is hard, right? It's hard to just generate in yourself, right? I love what Chuck Swindoll says about humility. says, we appreciate humility in others, but rarely want it for ourselves. The price is too high. Humility is not what gets us ahead. And let's be completely honest, we like humble people around us because they don't threaten our position.
They're safe people with that quaint little virtue that keeps them on the sideline during the scramble to the top of the hill. We can afford to be humble after we're king. Church, live in a manner worthy of the gospel. That means humility. We are a humble people. How do we do this? Well, the best book that I know,
that I regularly reread. It's this tiny little book by Tim Keller called The Freedom of Self Forgetfulness. You can read it in 45 minutes. The Freedom of Self Forgetfulness. He actually takes a passage from 1 Corinthians, but it's an echo of Philippians 2. And he shows the path to joy is simply taking your eyes off yourself. Here's what he, I'll put a quote on the screen here. says, humility.
is not thinking more of myself or thinking less of myself. It's thinking of myself less. humility is not like, I'm so bad. I'm so, no, it's just like, take your eyes off yourself. True gospel humility means I stopped connecting every experience, every conversation with myself. In fact, I stopped thinking about myself altogether.
C.S. Lewis would say, you ever met a truly humble person, you probably wouldn't think that's a humble person. You'd just think, that person was a happy chap, I think he said. That person ⁓ really was interested in me. Like there's just this freedom of lifting our eyes and this is what Paul is calling us to, consider others above yourself. So there it is, orthodoxy, orthopathy, orthoproxy.
How will we pursue spiritual maturity that leads to unity, that leads to joy as a church? Again, if we only value the first one, we'll think, okay, I took notes, it's good sermon, don't really need to do anything. But if we value all three, then we'll consider all three. Orthodoxy, do you know the truth about the gospel? Do you love the truth? Do you proclaim the truth to one another and to others?
Without the truth, we have no common basis for our belief and our mission as a church. We pursue orthodoxy, but not alone. We go to orthopathy. What captures your heart, your imagination, your feelings when you're alone, when your head hits the pillow at night, where's your heart at? So how are you going to lead your heart rather than be led by your heart this week?
What truths of the gospel are you going to rehearse to your heart this week? Maybe in prayer, maybe in scripture reading, maybe in song. What stirs your affections for God and what robs your affections for God? Without right affections, we may be puffed up with pride and not love God or love people. And then finally, orthopraxy. Have you become comfortable with a faith that is merely personal and private? In what ways will you...
Let your knowledge and your passion work itself out in your life this week. How will you use your life to build up, encourage the unity of this church this week? Without orthopraxy, there's no evidence that we are citizens of the kingdom of God. And the whole point of Paul's letter is for our joy. Our mission and our joy are tied together to unity.
Paul knows that enjoying Jesus is tied to one another. Like every organization knows this. Like every sports team knows we must have unity if we're going to win the championship. Like go to a musical performance in the orchestra. There's no unity there. That's a terrible performance, right? Every business knows this. Why wouldn't we know this as the church? Why wouldn't we value what Christ values? Unity for our mission and our joy. There's just too much at stake here to ignore.
these truths. So let's love the gospel in our minds, our hearts, our hands in unity together for the glory of God, the joy of all people. Amen. Let me pray for us to that end.
The Gospel Unchained
Transcript
If you have a Bible, Philippians chapter one is where we're at. in week three of our series, our summer series through the book of Philippians. We're calling it Enjoy Jesus. And that's from the themes of Philippians. 16 times you're going to come across the word joy or enjoy. And 31 times you're going to come across Jesus in these four short chapters. So that certainly is the theme. But this is the book of joy. But paradoxically, as Ryan mentioned in his prayer, it's also known as the book of suffering.
And I say paradoxically, not because the Bible says it's paradoxical, but because we and our culture says joy and suffering. Those are like if you had a spectrum over here is suffering and you don't want to spend any time there. You really want to go all the way to the other end of the spectrum where joy and get as far away from suffering as possible. In our mind, that's how it works. Avoid suffering so that we could go to joy.
But Paul is going to show us that that's not actually the case. That the purpose of life isn't to avoid suffering, but that actually, that there is a path to joy even in and through our suffering. In 2003, I graduated from Denver Seminary and had a six month old baby at the time. And we headed off to Okinawa, Japan to do ⁓ military ministry. had a contract with the chapel on base to run.
They're young adult ministry, so 18 to 25 year olds. So you could think college ministry and it was awesome. Privilege of my life. Love working with the military. ⁓ Got to have a lot of fun. A lot of scuba diving, snorkeling, spearfishing, jet ski, all the things. Sports, every Thanksgiving we'd have this massive ⁓ turkey bowl thing. And I was in my late 20s at the time. And so ⁓ it was awesome. But something happened over the years. I noticed that every year
I'd be a year older and they'd be the same age because they were just like switching out and every year I was getting a little slower and a little bit more broken down and and I was like what was this was frustrating to me because they were just keep going there still 18 it seemed like every year and and I realized early on that one of my responsibilities as their pastor was to help develop a theology of suffering.
And that was a particular challenge in that community ⁓ because they are some of the healthiest people on the planet. To be in the military, you had to be healthy. You had to stay healthy. You had to ⁓ continue to get the scores. In fact, to be in Okinawa and bring your family, everyone in your family had to be healthy because they wouldn't send your family over there if they couldn't deal with them there. So they all had to be healthy. And so I would remind these guys and girls, I'd be like, hey,
Life is actually shorter than you think. I know you're living like this is how you're going to live forever. I know you don't believe me when I say your body will break down. You will suffer. You will eventually die. I know you don't believe all that, but that is coming. And it was hard because even when someone did get sick, ⁓ there was occasions where someone would get cancer. Within a matter of days, they would move them out of Japan and back to the States. And so just take that out of their realm.
When my daughter was two years old and in ⁓ the commissary, the grocery store on base, one time my wife was pushing her down the aisle and ⁓ she screams out, she says, mommy, mommy, why does that man have white hair? It was such an oddity to see on base anyone over 40 years old. And so this was the environment. So it was real hard practically to be like, hey, actually ⁓ it's coming.
And the better you prepare for it now, the better you'll be then, but it was hard. But what's true then and there, I think is still true here and now. Yeah, we might have a diversity of age that we didn't have there, but we still, most of us live our lives as if we will live forever. As if things are just going to keep going in spite of the evidence, right? Like last Sunday, I woke up.
I had injured my knee while sleeping.
I still can barely, I'm like, why can't I walk? Well, you're 49 now. You can go to sleep in injury. So some of you, most of you are younger than that. You don't realize that's a possibility, but it's coming. But also this life, like on this side of eternity, there is suffering. You'll lose jobs. If you're married, one of you will bury the other one. Like this is genuine. And I know just pastorally, when we do,
our worship and prayer nights, and we have you fill out the prayer cards. The level of suffering that is in this room every Sunday is just, it's unbelievable. In so many realms, brokenness from the past, brokenness in relationships, brokenness in finances and career and unmet expectations and life plans that have gone astray, like that's all in the room. But we spend most of our time thinking, I...
That's not where God's at work. I just need to focus on God. just need. But but here's the big truth that Paul is going to show us. And it's actually really good news that that whatever area your life in right now you point to as a struggle, a point of pain, an uninterrupted plan like that, that it's that's probably the area in your life where God is at work the most. That God has plans for your joy.
through that. And the sooner we can understand that and begin to wrap our minds around that, the sooner our joy will rise. So we've got to have a broader definition, a theology of suffering, a broader definition of what God's blessings are. make no mistake, we have a lot of blessings here at this time in this place. Most of us are healthy. Most of us do have finances. We have
education, like all those things are good things and evidences of God's grace, but they're not the ultimate thing. And all those things can be taken away tomorrow. And if that's the case, does that mean all your joy goes away as well? Well, Paul wants to give you something better, a firmer foundation for your joy and mine. And that's why I'm so excited for this passage. There's good news. There's a path not
around suffering but through suffering for our joy here now and forever. So if you have your Bible we're in Philippians chapter one and I'll pick it up in verse 12. Paul's writing to the church at Philippi.
in about the year 60 A.D. and he writes, I want you to know brothers and sisters that what has happened to me has really served to advance the gospel. Okay, so if you've been here you know some of the context but I'll just remind us Paul had traveled about 10 years prior to this to the city of Philippi. He brought the gospel. God did a miraculous work. A church was planted. They loved.
their pastor and they were just so encouraged by him. They've now gotten word 10 years later that he is in prison in chains, literal chains in Rome with an uncertain future, maybe death before him. And so they've got two concerns or two major worries that Paul wants to as he sends back a letter to them, he wants to calm them down a little bit. He wants to encourage them. And the first one is
What's happening to our friend and pastor? He's suffering. Is he OK? And so Paul wants to address that a little bit. But the other one is they know the apostle Paul is the in the first century, the preeminent architect of of Christianity and church planting and evangelism. Where Paul goes, churches are being planted. But now he's in prison. So the question in this young church is mine and this young movement is will.
the mission of God continue when God's best man is out of the game. And so Paul wants to put them at rest. He wants to encourage them with that. And so he starts and he says, I want you to know what has happened to me has actually served to advance the gospel. And when Paul says what has happened to me, it's such an understated way of saying what has happened to him. He could have listed out many things. We have them recorded in the book of Acts.
Since he planted Philippi, things have not gone well physically in Paul's life. He's gone into cities to preach the gospel. People got mad. They dragged him out, stoned him, left him for dead, thinking he was dead. When he comes to again, he gets up and he heads back into the city to preach the gospel. Like, probably that's not happened to any of us. Praise the Lord, I guess. But he continues and...
And we read in Acts chapter 20, says, Holy Spirit has testified to me that in every city I go, persecution awaits me. To which I'm like, Paul, stop going into the city. Like that seems like a bad path. He's like, no, but I need to go into the cities to finish the course that God has set for my life. And so he continues. Well, in Acts chapter 21, he's headed on his way back to Jerusalem and this prophet named Agabus comes up to him and
takes his belt and binds his hands and he says, the Lord says, whoever has this belt, this is what's going to happen to him. You're going to go to Jerusalem. You're going to be arrested and you're going to be handed over to the Gentiles and treated, misabused. ⁓ Things are not going to go well for whoever owns this belt. And everyone's like, okay. And Paul's like, yeah, I know. That's what the Holy Spirit told me too. And so the other Christians are like, so Paul, you're too important for the mission.
Don't go to Jerusalem. He's like, no, I swear the Lord told me I need to go. And so he goes to Jerusalem and sure enough, he gets arrested. He gets beaten. He gets handed over to the Gentiles. He appeals to Caesar. So they put him on a ship while he's sailing from Jerusalem or from Palestine to Italy. He ⁓ that there's a storm, there's a ⁓ shipwreck. The ship breaks up. He spends a day and a night in the open sea. Like, that's not fun.
When they wash up on shore, they're freezing, and so they try to start a fire. He reaches into the woodpile, gets bit by a venomous viper. Lord, you're sovereign. Why the viper? Like, that's... I would have some prayer of lament. Like, why, Lord? Where are you, right? But he survives, and because he survives, they think he's demon possessed. Like, all this stuff. Eventually, he gets to Rome.
and chained. And the book of Acts ends kind of unceremoniously. It just says, and then Paul was in prison in Rome for two years. So for at least two years, he's in Rome chained daily to a guard. Hour by hour. But he says something crazy. What has happened to me? All of that has actually served to advance the gospel. So your fears about the gospel going forward, you don't need to worry. And he offers up
two compelling and surprising evidences of God's grace. In verse 13, he says, it's advanced the gospel so that it has become known throughout the whole imperial guard and to all the rest that my imprisonment is for Christ. This is really significant and interesting. The imperial guards, the Praetorium, it's the elite special forces of the Roman Empire. And as such, in many ways,
They're the most powerful force in Rome, more so than even Caesar because they have been known to take out Caesars that they don't like. So Caesar wants to be kind to them. Well, for 24 hours a day, in four to six hour shifts, Paul is literally in chain, chained to one of these guards. And Paul says, and because of my chains, the gospel hasn't been changed. The gospel has actually been unchained. It's been.
released 24 hours a day, four to six guys a day are literally a captive audience for me.
This is kind of crazy when you think about it, right? The apostle Paul, you're going to be chained to him for six hours? you're going to get some gospel there. So every like over two years, that's like 2000 guys chained to him. And then, you know, maybe some of them don't say anything. Maybe some of them mistreat him, but others are like, so what are you in chains for? Well, I'm glad you asked. It's because I believe that Jesus,
This Jewish guy is the Messiah. Okay, what's big deal with that? Why believe he is King of Kings and Lord of Lords? And the guards are like, whoa, whoa, whoa, okay. Now I know why you're here. That's a dangerous thing to say. That could ⁓ end in your death. We say here in Rome, Caesar is King of Kings and Lord of Lords. You can't just be saying that. Well, tell me more about this Jesus. Okay, well, yeah, Jesus.
is the Son of God. is God incarnate. He left his throne in glory. He took on flesh to live among us a life of perfect obedience to the Father that you and I could never live. And then after 33 years, he was betrayed and crucified on a Roman cross. And the Roman soldier says, ⁓ crucified. This guy must be a bad dude. he's a bad dude, just not in the way that you think.
because he died on the cross. took his body down. They put him in a tomb and by the power of God on the third day, he rose again from the dead, conquering sin, death and the grave. And after 40 days, he ascended to the right hand of the father so that at the name of Jesus, every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. And every soldier is just like, okay, dude, maybe some are offended.
Maybe some are indifferent, some, some are like, wow. God opens their heart and opens their mind and they're becoming followers of Jesus one by one by one. Their shift is over. They go back to their family. They're like, I got to tell you something happened to me today. I'm a follower of Jesus and their families are like, well, tell us about that. And they tell the story and they become followers Jesus and they're all in, in the.
heart of the Roman Empire, heart of the power of the Roman Empire, the heart of Caesar's household so that some of Caesar's aunts and uncles and brothers and sisters and cousins, they're becoming followers of Jesus. So that at the end of the book of Philippians, third to last verse, it's crazy what Paul writes. says, greet every saint in Christ Jesus, the brothers and sisters who are with me, greet you. All the saints greet you, especially those of Caesar's household.
This is wild. Paul wants the gospel to go as far as possible. He's now in chains. Everyone's thinking the gospel is not going to go forward and Paul's like, contraire. The gospel is going further and faster than it has ever gone before. And it's just a reminder that God doesn't need any of us to advance his mission. And yet he invites all of us to be a part of it. And so this surprising evidence of grace is the first thing he offers up to
allay their fears and their worries. And he says the second thing, which is also surprising. It says, and most of the brothers and sisters having become confident in the Lord by my imprisonment are much more bold to speak the word without fear. This is interesting because you would think if the leader of Christianity is seen as suffering and about to die,
that all the followers might scatter, but the opposite is true. It's actually true throughout church history. It's simply this, that Christian courage is contagious. Christian courage is contagious. You can see it in every century where persecution rises up and the church is put to death, burned at the stake, crucified. It doesn't actually... ⁓
The doesn't suppress Christianity, it actually fuels Christianity. Let me give you just a couple of examples. One from 470 years ago, year 1555, during which would start what's called the English Reformation. Prior to this, there was a king, King Henry VI. He brought Protestantism to England for the first time and it began to grow. But then his sister took over the throne. Her name was Queen Mary. She's known as Bloody Mary.
I don't know what you think about Bloody Mary. I thought you just say her name three times in a mirror and she shows up or something like that. Or it's a drink, whatever. But Bloody Mary was named Bloody Mary because of her hatred of Protestants. She wanted to bring back Roman Catholicism into England. And so she gathered up all the Protestant leaders and she would burn them at the stake. And in 1555, she gathered up Hugh Latimer and what's his name? Ridley is his last name, Nicholas Ridley.
and they're leaders of the church and she condemns them to be burned at the stake and so they set up the two poles, they set up the wood, ⁓ their friends had come by and put ⁓ gunpowder on their chests so that it would catch fire quickly and they would die more quickly. It was a mercy to them. Well, they start Ridley's fire first but the problem with Ridley's fire was they used fresh wood. It was green wood. It wasn't burning very fast or hot.
So it was just burning his legs and he's just praying Lord into your hands I commit my spirit into your hands I commit my spirit into your hands I commit my spirit and he's in agony and he's praying Lord let the fire come to me let the fire come to me let the fire come to me just he just wants it to be over and then Latimer next to him he's got a wood pile but his wood is dry wood and it starts to go up very quickly and Ridley suffering and then Latimer says this famous phrase to his friend.
says this, of good comfort, Mr. Ridley, and play the man. I love that, play the man. We shall this day light such a candle by God's grace in England as I trust shall never be put out. Play the man. Now two observations about that. In a few moments, so Latimer dies first because his wood was hot and fast. Someone had mercy on Ridley. They took a log that was on fire, put it to his chest, caught that, caught that ⁓
gun power on fire and he died after that. cross over from this side of eternity to the next. I imagine they enter into glory together and Latimer just looks or Ridley looks over to Latimer and he's like dude hey Mr. Quickburn ⁓ what was all that about play the man. I was trying. All right. But God used that to absolutely spark a flame of revival throughout all of England going north into Scotland where it reached a guy named
John Knox and John Knox from there just lit that the whole island nation on fire and into Europe as well. Courage is contagious. What Paul wants the Philippians to see, what Paul wants you and I to see, wherever you're at in life, whatever you're facing is simply this. When our passion is Jesus, when that's the all-consuming passion, then our joy will rise above our circumstance.
When your passion is Jesus, your joy rises above the circumstances because circumstances are good and bad, good and bad. And if your joy is tied only to your circumstances, you're going to go up and down. if Jesus is above it all, your joy is secured. Now, Paul knows this. He knows this theologically. He knows this personally. Like he knows the word. He knows the stories.
He knows the stories like Joseph in the book of Genesis, where his brothers leave him for dead. gets sold into slavery in Egypt, but rises up through the ranks so that in the sovereignty and goodness of God through Joseph, the nation of Israel is preserved. His brothers are preserved. And when his brothers realize who it is that is saving them, they're afraid and they think he's going to take vengeance on them. But Joseph knows this truth as well. He says this in Genesis 50-20.
As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good. What you intended for evil, God is sovereign over even that. He meant it for good. Paul knows this. He knows this theologically throughout the word. He knows this personally. Before he goes to Rome, he sends a letter on ahead and in it he writes that famous verse, Romans 8 28. And we know that for those who love God,
all things work together for good for those who are called according to his purposes. That's not a throwaway verse. That this is a ⁓ trust and no matter what I face I can have joy because my passion is Jesus and he's above my circumstances. Well he gives one more just evidence of grace showing that when your passion is Jesus
Your joy will rise above your circumstances in verses 15 through 18. When you first read them you ask the question like what is going on there. What's wrong with these people. Look what he says. Some indeed preach Christ from envy and rivalry. That's interesting. But others from goodwill. The latter do it out of love knowing that I am put here for the defense of the gospel.
This former proclaim Christ out of selfish ambition, not sincerely, but thinking to afflict me in my imprisonment. What then? Only that in every way, whether in pretense or in truth, Christ is proclaimed, and in that I rejoice. Now don't know about you, but I do know my own heart. I do not have yet developed in my soul the gospel flinch.
that the apostle Paul has here. You see what I'm saying? Like when someone is critical of you, or ⁓ as my daughters would say, if someone's one of your ops, ⁓ there's not exactly warm feelings to that, right? Like your ops are trying to pull you down, they're going after you, they're backstabbing you, like all these things.
Like my pride rises up and my my defense rises up and I said, you know, I get personally offended. But that wasn't the case for the apostle Paul. Again, when your passion is Jesus, your joy rises above your circumstances. I love how ⁓ Eugene Peterson put this in his paraphrase in his book, The Message. Listen to how he reworked these verses. I think he gets it right. He says this.
It is true that some here preach Christ because with me out of the way, they think they'll step right into the spotlight. But the others do it with the best heart in the world. One group is motivated by pure love, knowing that I'm here defending the message, wanting to help. The others, now that I'm out of the picture, are merely greedy, hoping to get something out of it for themselves. Their motives are bad. They see me as their competition.
And so the worse it goes for me, the better they think for them. So how am I to respond? I've decided that I really don't care about their motives, whether mixed, bad, or indifferent. Every time one of them opens his mouth, Christ is proclaimed. So I just cheer them on.
And that is a joy in Christ, a passion for Christ that has a joy that is above our circumstances. So then the question becomes in all of this for you and for me is this, is Jesus your passion?
Think about that. How do you answer that? Is Jesus your passion? And I don't mean by that, is Jesus one of your passions? Because you're here on a Sunday morning. That's true to some degree of all of us. But I mean, is Jesus just a part of the pie? Like, hey, give me a little bit of Jesus, but I'll really be happy if I have ⁓ this going on in my life and this relationship and this financial state and this vacation and this retirement plan. If I have the whole package,
then I'll be happy. Or or or do you get to a point where the apostle Paul get got to or the Psalmist Psalm 73 in Psalm 73 the Psalmist starts his Psalm and he says as I looked out into the world I saw the wicked prospering. He essentially says and I was mad at God. It seemed everyone else was doing great in their life. Here I am trying to follow and worship God.
And my life isn't like their life. And he's grumbling and he's he's discontent. And it says eventually as he goes through life he comes to this place where he goes into the presence of God and and in the end all he has is God and in the end he finds God is enough. Here's how the psalmist in Psalm 73 concludes his psalm he says whom have I in heaven but you and there is nothing on earth that I desire besides you.
My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever. Can you actually say if tomorrow God stripped everything from your life, your health, your relationships, your finances, would Jesus still be enough?
I think this question is Jesus your passion. If we're honest with ourselves, maybe what we have to say is no, but I want him to be. And if that's your prayer this morning, that's actually a prayer I think Jesus understands and answers and respects. Look, we all have competing things for our joy. But Jesus loves us too much to let...
The good things become God things because then they become idols and they crush us. Is Jesus your passion? Well, we should also, maybe you're here today and you're like, I don't know about that. I still feel like you've got suffering on one end of the spectrum and joy on the other and never shall the two meet. Or maybe it's something you're going through or have been through or are about to go through and you're like, there's no way my joy can be
⁓ had because of this suffering in my life. I get that. But there is a place you can look outside of your life to know that actually joy and suffering do overlap. It is God's plan. The author of Hebrews tells us about this in Hebrews chapter 12. Listen to what he says. He says, Let us run with endurance the race set before us. So run your race. Let us look to Jesus.
the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross. You see the connection? The joy and the cross, the joy and the cross, the greatest suffering the world has ever seen. The cross of Christ where the wrath of God for the sin of man is being poured out on him is a pathway for Jesus's joy, it says, and it's the pathway for our joy. Joy and suffering are.
hide at the cross. So even if you can't make sense of your suffering, you can look to Jesus and see that your joy is eternally secured in Him. Amen. Let me pray for us to that end.
Christ, Our All in All
Transcript
Good morning. Happy Mother's Day. Good to see you all. If you have a Bible, you can begin to make your way to the book of Philippians. It's one of Paul's short letters to the church at Philippi in the first century. We started this series last week. We call it Philippians Enjoy Jesus. This is the theme. We picked that on purpose because there are 31 references to Jesus in this small book and 14 references to joy. These are
tied together. That's why on our website you'll see we exist to enjoy Jesus and make disciples. Well, as I was thinking about that this week, I was thinking, well, who are the happiest people on the planet? Who has the greatest joy? And so I did what we all should do. I asked Chachipiti. Chachipiti pointed me to the World Happiness Report that comes out every year.
And it said, well, the people in these countries are the happiest people in the world. And for seven years in a row, Finland has been number one. The next is Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, and Norway. Maybe you're starting to pick up a theme here. These are the Nordic countries. And by the World Happiness Report, they report consistently as the happiest people on the planet. But as I thought about it some more, I thought,
how do you measure that? On what criteria are you determining these people to be more happy than say anyone else in the world? And then you start to learn some more. And so I probed Chapti Pti and I asked, well, what's the criteria? And what emerges is a very modern secularist, secularist, atheistic, even ⁓ materialistic view of what should define our happiness. And so a closer look says these have the
highest GDP, the most government programs, the highest level of personal freedoms, the highest trust in your government. These measurable things are then showing up as these are the happiest people on the planet. But I thought, is that true? Are they really the happiest people on the planet? This seems entirely dependent on circumstances or ⁓ material wealth or life.
Circumstances are they really the happiness and so I probed some more And then there's a different story that starts to emerge from that Finland who's the happiest country in the world also? Ranked second only to the United States in antidepressant use ⁓ Same thing with Sweden these countries often lead that not that you wouldn't take those or or But but it but you would think if you are the happiness you would do that.
a high level leading the world of suicide. There's a loneliness epidemic in these countries. It's a very stoic culture. so as a stoic culture, there is a cultural expectation that you wouldn't say you're unhappy. And so you start to see, wow, maybe they're not quite as happy as the World Happiness Report says. Maybe this is just a modern secularist materialistic view of how we could possibly measure happiness. And so after
Probing these questions and getting articles and reading some more, Chat GPT finally concluded this. Said this, while the top ranked nations in the happiness report enjoy stability, safety, and economic well-being, a deeper narrative emerges when we look at metrics like suicide, divorce, out of wedlock childhood, substance use.
and loneliness. These suggest that happiness defined by material comfort and individual freedom doesn't always equate to lasting contentment. This is happiness based entirely off of circumstances. ⁓ But as we've talked about before, circumstances alone come and go. One of the great frustrations I had even this week is why does my joy seem to rise and fall on my own circumstances or
my perception of my circumstances. And I want a happiness that outlasts that. One of the books that Pastor Rick on his sabbatical said, here's the first book I read. I love the title. It's a book on the book of Ecclesiastes, which deals with this issue. But I love the title of the book. The title of the book is Everything is Never Enough. Everything is never enough. It's not enough for you to be happy. So then I begin to think, what will...
who are the happiest people that I've encountered? Again, it's hard to measure. It's hard to really tell what's going on in people's hearts and lives. But what immediately came to mind was this village of people that I went to visit in the middle of nowhere in Cambodia. There was an exuding joy from these people. There was a smile in our conversation with them. There was just a contentment. This, in spite of the fact...
that they all lived in shanty homes that were probably smaller than your children's bedroom with 10 roofs. ⁓ This whole community had been uprooted in a massive systemic injustice by their government from being a fisherman community for generations, 20 miles inland, no river, no fishing, because they needed to make room for a new mall on the river. And so they were plotted down here, nothing.
And yet they had this exuding joy. They had a happiness that clearly had risen above their circumstances. And I asked the question, well, how do we get that? How do we get that kind of soul satisfaction? And this is the reason we're going through this book. We said last week as we did an overview of the book that the big idea of the book is when we abide in Christ, we will abound in joy.
When we abide in Christ, we will abound in joy. Again, 31 times Christ has mentioned, 14 times joy. But then, as I said last week, someone came up to me after the first service and said, well, what does that look like? What does it mean to abide in Christ? So that's a very good question. And this book serves as kind of a field guide for that. It's easy to say, it's more difficult to do.
But hopefully through our journey through this book, we will learn what it means to, as Paul says, the secret of being content. Because if it was just on our circumstances, 2025 Parker, Colorado, given all those things, GDP and health and wealth and circumstances, you would think Parker would be one of the most explosively joyful places on the planet. And I'm not sure that that's true. In fact, I've been to the self-proclaimed happiest place on Earth.
Disney World. And I've seen full on meltdowns, tears and snot and all of it. And that's just the parents. I've been the parent where I've looked my kid in the face and be like, what is wrong with you? We're in Disney World. Why are you breaking down here? And if you can't be happy in Disney World, then maybe happiness isn't so tied to our circumstances. Well, Philippians wants to give us a
deeper foundation, a stronger foundation for our joy. And it's again, something that I need desperately in my life because I am too much moved up and down by my circumstances. And so my hope for me and for you is that this would take us to deeper waters. I'm to go and read our passage and then pray for us as we dive into this first passage in the book of Philippians. But as I do so, I'd ask you to lift.
Listen carefully, this is God's word.
I thank my God in all my remembrances of you, always in every prayer of mine for you all, making my prayer with joy because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now. And I am sure of this, that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ. It is right for me to feel this way about all of you.
because I hold you in my heart. For you are all partakers with me of grace, both in my imprisonment and in the defense and confirmation of the gospel. For God is my witness how I yearn for you all with the affection of Christ Jesus. And this is my prayer, that your love may abound more and more with knowledge and all discernment, so that you may approve what is excellent and so be pure and blameless for the day.
of Christ, filled with the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ to the glory and praise of God. This is the word of the Lord. Thanks be to God. Let's pray.
Lord, we do come before you now in the name of your son, in the power of your spirit, turning our attention to your word to us. So, Holy Spirit, would you would you show us what what we need both as individuals and as a church to find our joy in Christ today? Form and shape Christ in us as only you can do. We pray in Jesus name. Amen. Amen. Well, even in this initial
introduction to the church. Paul on one level is writing a thank you letter. A thank you letter for a church that has been with Paul for about 10 years now in support and prayer and encouragement. So he's thanking them but even in his thinking of them he gives us clues to a happiness that transcends our circumstances and that's what I want to look at. He gives us three. In fact he starts off in verse 3 says I thank my God in all my remembrances of
You. Now it's one thing to say I'm thankful for you but to say I'm thankful for God because of you. That there's something bigger going on here. He says, in every prayer of mine for you all making my prayer with joy. Why? Because of your partnership in the gospel. We'll come back to that at the end. It's a very important word that partnership word. But he says because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now.
So Paul is thinking about the Philippian Church and we talked about this last week in Acts chapter 16 you can read about how that church came about and what was clear then as is now in Paul's life is that ⁓ That that the church should rejoice in Christ because Christ was the initiator of their salvation And then this is why we can rejoice as well. We rejoice in Christ because he's the initiator the starter the the founder of our salvation so when
Paul came to Philippi. He's thinking about that day when he came and there weren't there weren't enough men for a synagogue but he went down to the river and he saw Lydia in Acts 16 13 says and the Lord the Lord opened her heart and she received Christ. It was clear to Paul from the very first person that came to know Jesus. Jesus was on the move. Jesus was at work and then it went on and there's the slave girl who was
possessed and she's delivered and she comes to know and be part of this church and then it goes on to the jailer who's as Paul and Silas are in prison and God sends an earthquake and the chains fall off and the jailer falls on his face and he becomes and his whole household becomes followers of Jesus and what Paul is reminding them is what is clear and what you can rejoice in and this is incredibly good news your salvation
entirely of God. Listen, this is good news to us. There is a as many ways as God saved people in Philippi is probably represented in this room. So for some it is through the mind and through the intellect like Lydia. She's thinking about, she's reasoning, but God reaches down and opens her heart and she finally comes to know Jesus. Some it's a demonstration of
Holy Spirit power, a deliverance from a stronghold like the slave girl. Others, it's like the jailer who you just all of a sudden see your need for Christ and you fall down before him and say, what must I do to be saved? And God comes in. This is how God works. This is incredibly good news. This is good news even if you're not a follower of Jesus yet, because if you become a follower, you can know that it wasn't you, but God wooing you.
Drawing you in God doing the work This is good news because you you can know that your salvation is secure because it it wasn't that you you were smart enough It wasn't that you were moral enough. It wasn't that you tried hard enough It wasn't that you prayed the right prayers and and did the right things like whatever it is It wasn't on you. We get to rejoice in Christ because Christ is the initiator of our salvation it's all on him he
did this work. It reminds me of what Paul said to the Ephesian church. In the Ephesian church in chapter two he says, you were dead in your sins and transgressions. You were by nature children of wrath. This is the story of humanity apart from God. They are dead. Dead men don't do anything but be dead. They stood condemned under the righteous holy wrath of God and
And that's where we all were. But but listen to what Paul says in Ephesians 2 4. says, but God, you were dead, but God being rich in mercy because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ. By grace, you have been saved. This is good news. We were dead. Our salvation.
was not on us. didn't make ourselves alive, but God did it. And then he says, I thank God because of your partnership in the gospel. We'll come back to that from the first day until now. He who began a good work in us. This is what he says next. So the first first thing we rejoice in is he's the initiator of our salvation. But in verse six, it says this. And I'm sure of this. He who began a good work in you. So this was God who started this.
in you. That word in is very important. We'll see. He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ. So we rejoice in Christ that he's the initiator of our salvation, but we also rejoice in Christ and rest in Christ that he is the sustainer of our salvation. This is again incredibly good news. I talk to so many Christians that
understand that they were saved by grace alone in Christ alone and faith alone but then live their lives as if now it's on them to stay straight to really show God that they're serious. We're saved by grace but now I'm gonna sustain myself by my work and my own righteousness? No! That's not good news. The good news is I am sure that that he who began a good work in you
carry it on until completion until the day of Christ. This is good news. This is what the hymn, He Will Hold Me Fast says. Listen to the hymn from 1903. When I fear my faith will fail, Christ will hold me fast. When the tempter would prevail, he will hold me fast. I could never hold, keep my hold through life's fearful path for my love is often cold. He must hold me fast.
He will hold me fast. He will hold me fast for my savior loves me. So he will hold me fast. Those he says are his delight. Christ will hold me fast. Precious in his holy sight, he will hold me fast. He'll not let my soul be lost. His promises shall last bought by him at such a cost. He will hold me fast. This is good news. In verse seven, it says this. It is right for me to feel this way about
you all because I hold you in my heart for you are all partakers with me of grace." That word partakers is actually the same root word of verse five, partners in the gospel. What Paul is saying is he knows that the grace that Paul has received, the grace that Paul knows he still has, he knows is also true of the Philippians. He's seen the evidence and the fruit of it in their lives. So we are
saved by God once and for all. That's called justification. But the Bible also talks about a present tense. We are being saved. We were saved by grace and we are still saved by grace. It's grace and more grace. But in this second kind of ⁓ mention of salvation, it's ongoing, active, and present. So it's less like, or John Piper says, it's less like an inoculation, right? Where you get a shot
You don't think about it and you're good for the rest of your life. So like I prayed a prayer when I was six and I got the inoculation. No, he says it's less like an inoculation and much more like dialysis. The Christian life is much more like dialysis. I am saved by grace, but I keep coming to Christ, the fount of grace, and I keep getting that drip of his grace and power and mercy in my life day after day after day after day.
One of the evidences that God's grace is present in your life is that you want more of God. You want to grow. You desire Him. This is not born of yourself. You don't muster this up in yourself. This is God's grace in you. It's the dialysis. ⁓ Charles Spurgeon told the story that he had an elderly lady come up to him after a sermon one time and she said, Pastor,
I don't know if God loves me. Well, why do you think that? I just don't. I don't know if God loves me. he said, well, what do you love, Jesus? She saw with all my heart. Spurgeon's smile is like, well, you can be assured that if you have any love for Jesus, Jesus put it there first. Therefore, he does love you. This is the evidence. Your desire is an evidence of grace, but it is this constant coming.
to the fount of grace in our salvation. He who began a good work in you, he who started it will sustain it, which brings us to the last point, verse nine. it is my prayer. And here's what Paul is praying for the Philippians. By the way, it's good to tell people you're praying for them. It's better to say, here's what I'm praying for you. I mean, that's that's really encouraging. And you're like, well, I don't even know what I would say.
This is free today. You can literally just memorize these verses or copy and paste them and then actually pray these things. But but there's nothing there's no prayer that you're going to give to anyone that's more encouraging than this. Paul writes it down. This is my prayer for you that your love may abound more and more with knowledge and all discernment so that you may approve what is excellent and so be.
and blameless for the day of Christ. Paul prays this that your heart, your affections would grow, that you would love the people on your left and right, the people that God has in your life more this year than you did last year and more next year than this year, that your love would grow. But notice he ties it also to our mind. There's not this disconnect. He says your love for one another, your love for Jesus,
should grow and have this desire in you to know Jesus more. And as you know Jesus more and the gospel more, your love grows. And as that grows, you want to love Jesus more. It's this cycle that overflows toward one another. so the last thing, but he says is that until the be blameless until the day of Christ. This is speaking of the last day. So Christ is the initiator. He's the sustainer, but
Christ is the finisher of our salvation as well. What Christ begins, Christ sustains. What Christ sustains, Christ finishes. This is our hope. This is our confidence. He says this is what will happen when that happens. We will be filled with the fruit of righteousness. Not our own righteousness, the righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ. Our lives are headed somewhere.
And it's headed to a destination. We see this at the very end of his prayer to the glory and praise of God. This is the point of life to glorify God and to praise him and enjoy him forever. This is the aim of every Christian and every church. But there is actually more here than just these three things, initiator, sustainer and finisher of our faith for our joy here. Let's go back up to those words that I pointed out before.
says because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now and then in verse seven you are all partakers with me of grace. So the word there and the root word there is coinonia. So if you have Christian subculture you have any background there you're like coinonia I get that that's that's like what my small group was called or that's I think of a potluck dinner you know coinonia we're gonna have
Fellowship that that is a very small part of this word, but it actually totally misses the word see Paul throughout this passage has been saying another word that we don't have in English It's well, I guess if you're from the south you might have it but it's the plural for you So what would it be in the south? Y'all maybe if you're from New Jersey in New York, you have it as well. It's the plural for you. What is it?
Use guys, right? I've yet to see that in a translation. But it's an important thing, especially in our very individualistic culture. Your joy hits a ceiling if you make your life only about yourself. You and Jesus, what you're doing, that's actually a path for kind of a miserable life. Deep down, you were created for something that is...
far greater and bigger than even your own life and even your own contribution. We were made for koinonia. So well, potlucks, fellowship, no, no, Koinonia is this, I'll give you definition. ⁓ koinonia is ⁓ a fellowship of people with a shared purpose, a shared mission, and a shared vision. A shared purpose and a shared mission and a shared vision. So.
This happens in a lot of different ways. Your family hopefully is a koinonia. We have a shared purpose, a shared mission, a shared vision. ⁓ When we think about koinonia in this kind of transcendent, purposeful way, you can start to see, you get to be a part of something that is bigger than yourself and you can see how that makes your joy expound on a multiplication, exponentially. So a good way to think of koinonia or fellowship
is the fellowship of the rings. Here they have a koinonia. They've got men and dwarves and elves and hobbits and they have come together where they shared purpose, mission, mission and vision and every person in that fellowship of the ring had to fulfill their role. So now you start to see, ⁓ this word is actually very important. Paul is thanking the church for their
Partnership their shared vision purpose and mission another coin ania. I thought of this week is a Navy SEALs happy Mother's Day by the way Navy SEALs shared purpose vision mission Everybody train do your part do it well for the sake of your brothers and the mission This is a coin ania now you start to see this is more than a well the potluck that you're ⁓ Every sports team is a coin ania
Every sports team when they gather for training camp that they don't just say hey ⁓ Glad it's another year. Let's let's just go have fun guys Unless maybe you're the Rockies. Maybe that's what they say
They're terrible. But every other team, every other team is like, hey, we'll have some fun, but we're here to win. And if you're good enough, we're here to win the championship. Everybody has to play their part well. Here we have an F1 race team. There's 21 people in this. 21 people, all of them, for the sake of the mission, the shared purpose, vision, and mission, that they've got to do their job to exact.
as fast as possible in perfect concert together to achieve the goal to win the race. 21 of them. You can just start to imagine what each person's job is here. I was told after the second service they don't do they don't even change out the gas anymore. That's too dangerous so they have enough gas for the whole race so they're just changing tires. So they come in they they lift it they put on the tire and they're off. On average an F1 team is just under three seconds.
in the pit. Team Red Bull has the record 1.8 seconds. Shane Zataris on your way. It's a koinonia.
Sometimes koinonia is big, it's national. I think of the 1960s. In 1960s, America was falling behind in the space race with the Soviet Union. And John F. Kennedy thought this was a problem. And so in a very famous speech to Congress on May 25th, 1991, he started to cast a vision for a koinonia, a shared vision, mission and purpose for the nation to come alongside to play your role.
to accomplish the goal. 1961, before Congress, he spoke to him in his thick New England accent and said this, this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal before the decade is out of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth. And I think that's a pretty important part at the end there. I think we can land a man on the moon, but to return them safely, that seems like a
part of the whole thing, right? That's not Elon's thing right now. We're just going to land a man on Mars and he's going to die. That's the plan. But that wasn't JFK's thing. We're going to land a man on the moon and bring him back safely. There's the vision. There's the mission. This has caused the nation to move and everyone play their part. So the following year in 1962, he goes down to Huntsville, Alabama and visits NASA for the first time.
There's a story, we don't know if it's true, it's probably apocryphal, but it does capture this idea of Koinonia. As he's touring the facilities, he comes across a janitor. And he asks that janitor, what do you do? And the janitor replies, Mr. President, I'm helping to put a man on the moon.
If you can understand that, you understand I have a role to play. The goal is far bigger than what I'm doing, far bigger than what I know or can accomplish on my own, but I'm part of something. I'm part of something that is great. I'm helping put a man on the moon. The following year, or actually the next day, Kennedy goes to ⁓ Rice University in Houston and he gives this famous speech there.
I love what he says. says, choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do other things. I love that part. That's like public speaker. I don't know what to say. I'm just going to throw in some filler words. We're to go to the moon and do some other things. What other things? Other things.
It's not because they are easy, but because they are hard. Because the goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one we intend to win. It was a coin in the air. Of JFK would be killed the next year, but before the decade was out as he...
cast that vision, the mission was accomplished. It was costly. Oh man, it cost the nation a lot. It was dangerous. Nine men would give their lives in different accidents in that decade. And the mission was accomplished. July 20th, 1969, NASA's Apollo 11 mission, they accomplished it.
And as amazing as that was and all the energies and engineering and the nation and the funding and all that coming together to accomplish this mission, amazing as that was, Redemption Parker, Jesus has called us to a coin in the air that is far more amazing than that. More costly than that, more dangerous than that, more important than that. It's of eternal importance. And so we don't.
We don't gather as a church just for ourselves.
We don't gather because we like the style and we like this and we're kind of consumers. We gather because we are a koinonia. We have a shared mission, vision and purpose to see Christ glorified, to see God praised in our lives among our neighbors and the nations. This is what God has called us to do. And if we're not doing that, why are we even here?
I say this all the time, if we're not about the mission, why do we gather here? Colorado has much better things to do on Sunday morning than this. But if we are about the mission and we've been invited to the greatest coin coin in Nia, the world has ever seen. Our hope and our confidence is this, that the mission will be accomplished. It will be accomplished. Christ will do it.
So let us rejoice that Christ is the initiator of our salvation. Let us rejoice that Christ is the sustainer of our salvation. Let us rejoice that Christ is the finisher. Let us rejoice that Christ is our all in all. Let us rejoice God is and will be glorified in us and through us among our neighbors and the nations. Amen. Amen. Let me pray for us toward that end.
Philippians: Enjoy Jesus
AI Transcript
Well, if you have your Bibles, you can make your way to the Book of Philippians. think I got that right for you, Trisha. The Book of Philippians. So if you've been with us for the last couple of years, we worked our way through the Gospel of Luke. I was blessed by that. And it was an amazing time for me. Hopefully you were as well. But now what we're going to transition a little bit and on the back of your bulletin, if you got a bulletin, you can kind of see the the summer preaching schedule and see where.
we're going to be if you want to kind of dig in and prepare yourself for our time together each Sunday and then you'll see also ⁓ our fall planned ⁓ series is the book of revelations so buckle up for that as well. This morning we are starting the book of lippians we're calling it enjoy Jesus. For 49 years I've had this problem I've been going after things ⁓
There there's been desires in my heart and I chased down certain things. That's actually not the problem. That's actually how God hardwired me and you we whatever we do we do in pursuit of our own joy. The problem is in a fallen world with a fallen heart and a fallen mind oftentimes the pursuit of my joy has not led to joy but disillusionment or dissatisfaction or sin or
destruction. has been my problem for 49 years because I'm 49 years old. We live in a culture that offers all sorts of promises for your joy, right? There is this consumerism culture, certainly in Parker, Colorado in 2025, that says, buy this and you'll be happy. Get kind of a retail therapy to fill that void that we feel, that angst, that kind of existential angst that we all have that I believe God
put in there for a reason, we fill it with stuff. And we live in such a time and a place and have such resources that oftentimes ⁓ we get one thing to the next, to the next, to the next. This is why when my girls were little, I would always take them with me to the city dumps and I would show them broken dolls and bikes. I said, this is where it's all ending up. Like the stuff that you...
⁓ so much this is where it's it's gonna end up and it was really for myself just a reminder as well but there's consumerism there's there's hustle culture do the grind work this achieve that then you'll be satisfied and don't get me wrong that there are good things in in getting good stuff and and and and achieving things that that's not my point my point is it's not it's not the essential joy that you were created for you can enjoy a lot of things in this life and
Hopefully you do, but there is one essential thing that you and I were created for. There's self-optimization culture. Eat this, don't eat that, exercise this, get this degree, do that, then you'll be satisfied. There's a whole section in the bookstore on that. There's, of course, just endless opportunities for escapism with this existential angst. You don't want to talk about it. You don't want to feel it. So you go into... ⁓
Netflix binges or video games or drugs or alcohol or or hobbies like it's an endless list of seeking and searching longing to find satisfaction. And of course we live in a day and an age where we're told if you're not happy with yourself though the path to happy is just to change yourself change your identity become a new person and then you'll be happy and everyone will celebrate you. Again the list is endless. We all have this in common.
The French philosopher Blaise Pascal has that famous quote 300 years ago where he writes all men seek happiness This is without exception for some it's the cause of going to war and for others to avoid it But whatever the purpose whatever the aim in every single action People are seeking happiness even those that take their own lives It's a it's a seeking a longing for happiness now ⁓
We would do well as we go through this series to pause and just ask ourselves the question, maybe journal a little bit. Where am I looking? What am I seeking? What am I believing about what I'm pursuing that will bring me happiness? What do you daydream about? What is the promise behind that pursuit? Right? But happiness is elusive. I mean, that soul satisfaction is elusive. It's like grasping smoke in the moment you think you have it.
you don't have it. And every every now and again some some people in our culture and in history go further down the roads that we think will bring us happiness than we could ever think or imagine. And then they come back and they say it's actually not down there. And we say well the problem must be with you because I think it is down there. Right. A classic a great example of this is after he won his third Super Bowl.
Tom Brady is being interviewed by 60 minutes and he says, you know, I was sitting on my hotel bedroom after I won the Super Bowl. Super Bowl MVP has a supermodel wife. And he says, is this it? Is this all there is? I thought I'd be happy by now. And the interviewer is like stunned. What can you do? And Tom says, I don't know. I wish I knew. I wish I knew.
He again has gone further than all of us in this room combined. Maybe it was the seventh Super Bowl. Maybe he found happiness in that. But probably not. The three thousand years before that, ⁓ Solomon, Solomon had more of everything than we could imagine. And then he reports back in his book as an older man in Ecclesiastes and he says, it's not what you think. Ecclesiastes, two.
Verse 10 says this, denied myself nothing my eyes desired, nothing, whatever I desired I had. I refused my heart, no pleasure. My heart took delight in all my labor and this was the reward for all my toil. yet when I surveyed all that my hands had done and what I had toiled to achieve, everything was meaningless. A chasing after the wind. Nothing was gained.
under the sun. Again, some of these people have so much that we believe would bring us happiness. When they report back, it doesn't bring you happiness. We just think the problem is in you, Solomon. The problem is in you, Tom. If I had that, I'd be happy. But we would do well to take heed to learn from their wisdom. there's there's this you've seen this meme where there's two options and you got to choose and you don't know what to choose. Let me see. You might not be able to see it.
But on the left hand, you get to choose option A, a comfortable life that goes according to all your plans. Like, ⁓ that sounds like a pretty good option. I'm going to choose that. But before you do, have option B, a deep sense of contentment and joy in life. And then the sweating face, right? Like, which one do I choose? Because in our mind, well, if I choose the first one, I get the second one. A.
leads to B. If I have a comfortable life that goes according to all my plans, I'll have a deep sense of contentment and joy in life. And Paul is here to tell us in the book of Philippians, A is independent of B. There is not the connection you think there is. In fact, this is the secret he's going to say. If you understand that it's not about a comfortable life that goes according to your plans, you can still have a deep sense of contentment and joy.
in this life. This is a profound little four-chapter book that we're going to be in together this morning. So let me ⁓ do a little bit of context here for you this morning. ⁓ We're going to do what the church at Philippi did. ⁓ It's four short chapters. What would have happened is, as Epaphroditus brought this letter from Paul to the church of Philippi, he would have gathered the whole church
And he would have said, listen, I've got a letter for you. And he would have read it in its entirety out loud. So we're to get there. But before I do that, let me just set up the context a little bit for you. Philippi, Philippi was established by ⁓ Caesar, Caesar Augustus eventually ⁓ is a Roman city. It's where the Roman army officers would go and retire because Rome didn't like to have ex military officers in Rome. That that kind of would be.
conflict there but they would send them to Philippi and it was modeled in its government and culture and architecture ⁓ after Rome and they had the worship of all the Roman gods but primarily in Philippi they worshiped the state they worshiped the Emperor and so the the claim in Philippi Caesar is Lord was not just a political claim it was a religious claim and so now you can kind of start to get the
the picture. It's in ⁓ Macedonia north of modern day Greece and in Acts chapter 16 we learn that the apostle Paul is traveling with Silas and Luke and he's doing what he's doing. He's going around telling people the gospel planting churches and in Acts chapter 16 he's in modern day Turkey and he thinks I'm going to go to this city and preach the gospel and the Lord says no.
And he's like, OK, well, I'm going to walk to this city and preach the gospel. And the Lord says no. And so he's confused. Like, I just want to go preach the gospel or what's going on. So he goes to sleep and in the night he gets a vision. There's a man in Macedonia saying, come here, come here. And so he wakes up and and he says, OK, the Lord is calling us there. So that means they've got to get on a boat, cross the Aegean Sea. And for the first time ever.
bring the gospel to Europe. And so they land on the shores, go about 12 miles in shore to this town, Philippi. Now it's the Sabbath and so what Paul would normally do on the Sabbath is he'd go to the synagogue, the local synagogue, and find the Jews there and start there. But you needed 10 men, Jewish men, to establish a synagogue. Apparently there's not 10 Jewish men. In fact we see in the context that
This city is maybe kind of racist against Jews. don't have any and they don't like foreigners. but then Paul goes to the second option which is down by the river and he finds some women praying there and as he joins them in prayer he begins to tell them the gospel and in Luke in in Acts 16 it says that the Lord opened the heart of this woman named Lydia from Thyatira.
Lydia is this girl boss. She's got a house in Thyatira, a house in Philippi, a house in Rome. She's a dealer in Purple Goods. She is a business. She's got it all. But she comes to believe in the Lord. She goes back to her household. That's her whole family. She tells them the gospel. They believe. She tells all her servants.
Wow.
To do that, I'll need to be on the online. What in the world? OK.
I'm trying to figure out how it, I don't have anything connected to the speaker. So, oh, maybe I do. Maybe it's my computer. Siri or Siri. Yeah, just shut that down. I don't even know where my sound guy is. All right. So Lydia, she's a girl boss. Okay, you get it. Then Paul goes with Silas into the city. They're preaching the gospel. Well, there's this girl who's demon possessed and she's owned by, she's a slave girl.
And she would tell people's futures. that's how she would make money for her owners. And she'd follow Paul and Silas wherever they go. And before they could open their mouths about the gospel, she would cry out, these men are servants of the Most High God. They're telling you the way of salvation, which is true, but not the way they wanted to start their sermon. so it says after two days, Paul was greatly annoyed. I love that Paul got greatly annoyed. And he turns and he rebukes the demon and ⁓
casts out the demon and ⁓ then she gets set free. Beautiful picture. Next member of the church at Philippi. Well the owners of the girl are not happy at all. That's their way of making money. And so they drag Paul and Silas before the magistrates. They beat them for their faith, throw them in jail. And in jail they're bloodied and wounded but Paul and Silas in chains are praising God.
singing hymns, praying in the night, and God sends an earthquake, it's an earthquake like no other. You could read this all in Acts 16. It's a wild start to a church. And the chains come off, the doors open, and the jailer, who's probably a retired army officer, he's like, oh no, if any of these people escape, I'm going to be put to death, but I'm going to be tortured first. So in pursuit of his joy, he gets ready to take his own life.
And the apostle Paul says, don't do it. We're all here. We're all here. And he's blown away and he goes and he falls before them and he says, what must I do to be saved? And Paul says, believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. And he believes and he rejoices and his household believes and they get baptized. So this is the the core team. This is the launch team of Philippi. Think about it. You have upper class Lydia. Businesswoman, you've got this ⁓ broken
bottom of the rung slave girl just now set free from her oppression. You've got blue collar ⁓ jailer who just wants to drink a beer and watch the game on Sundays. And this is the family of God in Philippi.
It's a beautiful picture of the church. love what D.A. Carson says about the church in general, but this certainly applies to Philippi in here. He says this, church itself is not made up of natural friends. It is made up of natural enemies. What binds us together is not common education, common race, common income levels, common politics, common nationality, common accents, common jobs or anything of the sort.
Christians come together not because they form a natural collocation but because they have been saved by Jesus Christ and owe him a common allegiance in the light of this common allegiance in the light of the fact that they have all been loved by Jesus himself they commit themselves to doing what he says and he commands them to love one another in this light they are a band of natural enemies who love one another for Jesus's sake.
This church now becomes this beautiful picture of the gospel. It is marked by its radical generosity. Even though Lydia is doing well, the rest of the church is pretty poor. But they always give generously, whether it's to the church in Rome who needed money or to support the apostle Paul on his missionary journeys. Now they hear that their beloved founding pastor is in prison and in need in Rome. Paul's been arrested.
He's in Rome. He's in totally in the need of others, but he's being abandoned by other Christians at this point. And so they gather what limited resources they have and they send it with a path of dryness to Rome to care for their pastor. So Paul loves this church on one level. It's a thank you letter for their their support of the mission. But but he also loves this church and he knows there's certain things both within and externally to the church that are threatening the joy of the church.
perseverance of the church. Wherever Paul planted churches, it wouldn't take long for others to come behind them and say to these Gentiles, it's great that you found the Jewish Messiah, but you also need to find and obey the Jewish law. It's grace plus law. And Paul will say repeatedly, that's not the gospel. And so he's going to address that. There is some poverty and there's some struggle financially as they're being ostracized by
the others. And so they're wondering, can God still provide? Is this religion going to provide for me? And so Paul wants to address that. And all this pressure is creating this unity and division in the church. And so Paul, because he loves them, is going to address that as well. So this is the letter he writes. Probably he doesn't write it. He probably dictates it to someone, maybe Epaphroditus, who will then take it on a scroll to Philippi.
Now imagine yourself this is this is a real letter from a real person to a real church in real time and real space and yet it is also indwelt with the spirit of God. So it's meant for the Church of God throughout all time. So imagine yourself in Philippi in the first century receiving this letter. I'll go ahead and read it. It'll take about 15 minutes to read through the whole thing. If you're new here and you leave the church because there's too much scripture.
That's better than you go to a church and there's no scriptures. So that's just I'm just saying. But I'd ask you to listen carefully. This is God's word. Paul and Timothy, servants of Christ Jesus, to all the saints in Christ Jesus, who are at Philippi with the overseers and deacons, grace to you and peace from God our father and the Lord Jesus Christ. I thank my God and all my remembrances of you always in every prayer of mine for you all making my prayer with joy.
because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now. And I am sure of this, that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ. It is right for me to feel this way about you all, because I hold you in my heart. For you are all partakers with me of grace, both in my imprisonment and in the defense and confirmation of the gospel. For God is my witness how I yearn for you all with the affection of Christ Jesus.
And it is my prayer that your love may abound more and more with knowledge and discernment so that you may approve what is excellent and so be pure and blameless for the day of Christ, filled with the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ to the glory and praise of God. I want you to know, brothers, that what has happened to me has really served to advance the gospel so that it has become.
known throughout the whole imperial guard and to all the rest that my imprisonment is for Christ. And most of the brothers, having become confident and lured by my imprisonment, are much more bold to speak the word without fear. Some indeed preach Christ from envy and rivalry, but others from good will. The latter do it out of love, knowing that I am put here for the defense of the gospel. The former proclaim Christ out of selfish ambition.
not sincerely, but thinking to afflict me in my imprisonment. What then? Only that in every way, whether in pretense or in truth, Christ is proclaimed, and in that I rejoice. Yes, I and I will rejoice. For I know that through your prayers and the help of the Spirit of Jesus Christ, this will turn out for my deliverance, as it is my eager expectation and hope that I will not be at all ashamed, but with full
Courage now as always Christ will be honored in my body whether by life or by death for to me to live is Christ and to die is gain. If I am to live in the flesh that that means fruitful labor for me yet which I shall choose I cannot tell. I am hard pressed between the two my desire is to depart and be with Christ for that is far better but to remain in the flesh is more necessary on your account.
Convinced of this I know that I will remain and continue with you all for your progress and joy in the faith so that in me you may have ample cause to glory in Christ Jesus because of my coming to you again. Only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ so that whether I come to see you or am absent I may hear of you that you are standing firm in one spirit with one mind striving side by side for the faith of the gospel.
and not frightened in anything in your opponents. This is a clear sign to them of their destruction, but of your salvation and that from God. For it has been granted to you that for the sake of Christ, you should not only believe in him, but also suffer for his sake engaged in the same conflict that you saw I had and now here that I still have. So if there is any encouragement in Christ, any comfort from love, any participation in the spirit,
any affection and sympathy, complete my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to his own interest, but also to the interest of others. Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus.
who though he was in the form of God did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men and being found in human form. He humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Therefore, God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus, every knee should bow.
heaven and on earth and under the earth and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father. Therefore my beloved as you have always obeyed so now not only in my presence but much more in my absence work out your own salvation with fear and trembling for it is God who works in you both to will and to work for his good pleasure.
Do all things without grumbling or disputing, that you may be blameless and innocent children of God without blemish in the midst of a crooked and twisted generation, among whom you shine as lights in the world. Holding fast to the word of life so that in the day of Christ I may be proud that I did not run in vain or labor in vain. Even if I am to be poured out as a drink offering, the sacrificial offering of your faith, I am glad and rejoice with you all. Likewise.
You should be glad and rejoice with me. hope in the Lord Jesus to send Timothy to you soon so that I too may be cheered by news of you. For I have no one like him who will be genuinely concerned for your welfare. For they all seek their own interest, not those of Jesus Christ. But you know Timothy's proven worth, how as a son with a father, he has served me in the gospel.
I hope therefore to send him just as soon as I see how it will go with me. And I trust in the Lord that shortly I myself will come also. I have thought it necessary to send to you Epaphroditus, my brother and fellow worker and fellow soldier, and your messenger and minister to my need. For he has been longing for you all and has been distressed because you heard that he was ill. Indeed, he was ill near to death, but God had mercy on him.
not only on him but also on on me also lest I should have sorrow upon sorrow I am the more eager to send him therefore that you may rejoice in at seeing him again and that I may be less anxious so receive him in the Lord with all joy and honor such men for he nearly died for the work of Christ risking his life to complete what was lacking in your service to me finally my brothers
Rejoice in the Lord to write the same thing to you is no trouble to me and is safe for you Look out for the dogs Look out for the evildoers look out for those who mutilate the flesh for we are the circumcision Who worship by the Spirit of God and glory in Christ Jesus and put no confidence in the flesh? Though I myself have reason for confidence in the flesh also if anyone else thinks he has reason for confidence in the flesh I have more
circumcised on the eighth day of the people of Israel of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews, as to the law of Pharisee, as to zeal a persecutor of the church, as to righteousness under the law blameless, but whatever gain I had, I counted as loss for the sake of Christ. Indeed, I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake, I have suffered the loss of all things and count them as rubbish.
in order that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God that depends on faith, that I may know him and the power of his resurrection and may share in his suffering, becoming like him in his death, that by any means possible I may attain the resurrection from the dead. Not that I have already obtained this or have already perfect.
But I press on to make it my own because Christ Jesus has made me his own. Brothers, I do not consider that I have made it my own. But one thing I do, forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus. Let those of us who are mature think this way. And if anything you think otherwise, God will reveal that to you also to you. Only let us hold true to what we have attained.
Brothers, join in imitating me and keep your eye on those who walk according to the example you have in us. For many of whom I have often told you and now tell you even with tears walk as enemies of the cross of Christ. Their end is destruction. Their God is their belly and their glory in their shame with minds set on earthly things. But our citizenship is in heaven and from it we await a savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.
who will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body by the power that enables him even to subject all things to himself. Therefore, my brothers, whom I love and long for, my joy and crown, stand firm thus in the Lord, my beloved. I entreat Iodia and I entreat Syntyche to agree in the Lord. Yes, I ask you to also, true companion, help these women who have labored side by side with me in the gospel together.
with Clement and the rest of my fellow workers whose names are in the book of life. Rejoice in the Lord always. Again, will say rejoice. Let your reasonableness be known to everyone. The Lord is at hand. Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, let your requests be known to God and the peace of God.
which surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Finally brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things. What you have learned and received and heard and seen in me, practice these things and the God of peace will be with you.
I rejoiced in the Lord greatly that now at length you have revived your concern for me. You were indeed concerned for me, but you had no opportunity. Not that I am speaking of being in need, for I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content. I know how to be brought low and I know how to abound. In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need. I can do all things through him.
who strengthens me. Yet it was kind of you to share in my trouble. And you Philippians yourselves know that in the beginning of the gospel when I left Macedonia, no church entered into partnership with me in giving and receiving except you only. Even in Thessalonica, you sent me help for my needs once and again. Not that I seek the gift, but I seek the fruit that increases to your credit. I have received full payment and more. I am well supplied.
Having received from Epaphroditus the gifts you sent, a fragrant offering, a sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God. And my God will supply every need of yours according to his riches and glory in Christ Jesus. To our God and Father be glory forever. Amen. Greet every saint in Christ Jesus. The brothers who are with me greet you. All the saints greet you, especially those of Caesar's household.
The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit. This is the word of the Lord. Thanks be to God. Amen. There was one big idea for the book of Philippians. I would say it's this and this is why we've titled it Enjoy Jesus. The big idea is that when we abide in Christ we will abound in joy. When we abide in Christ we will abound in joy. There are many things we will pursue.
happiness but there is only one thing that is meant to satisfy our souls. It's Jesus. When we abide in Christ we are bound in joy. So I want to encourage us to pursue joy this summer. Pursue the deepest joy. Now the gravitational pull of this world is such that 30 minutes on a Sunday morning once a week is not going to be sufficient for you to persevere in your joy. So I want to challenge you. ⁓
I have I think I call it the joy challenge. OK. The joy challenge. There's three things that I want to challenge you to consider doing for the duration of the summer. The first one is to meditate on this book. Spend some time just reading rereading the book. If you if you read a chapter a day every day during this series you would read through this book 22 times. ⁓ We've got some scripture journals if that's your thing.
out by the offering boxes on your way out. All this is is the book of Philippians. And on the side, it's got a blank space for you to take notes. I encourage you to live in the text, highlight, underline, put question marks, put crosses where you see Jesus, see that the theme of joy and Jesus go hand in hand throughout the book. So that's the first one. Meditate on the book. Whatever that looks like for you, commit yourself to live in the book a little.
Number two, would say, ⁓ talk about your joy with others. Discuss it with others. In Deuteronomy six, the Shema says, take the law of the Lord and meditate on it and talk about it when you sit down and when you walk and when you're with your friends. So at your dinner tables and with your friends and coworkers talk, you know what question people love to answer? Hey, what what brings you joy in this life? People love to answer. Strangers love to answer that. You can ask these questions. And then the big one.
The last one is memorize this book. Memorize the book of flipping. You're like, no, I can't memorize stuff. Like, dude, you told me the stats of a 20 year old on a football field for like the last 20 years. I know you can memorize things. Like we can remember things. You have all the lyrics to Taylor Swift. You're OK memorizing things. So you can't. So I don't have time.
Well, first I would say, well, make time. And second, I said, just give me your phone. I'll find some time. Let me see your screen time. I bet I could find the 20 minutes a day that you would need for that. I bet I could find it. You're like, well, I don't know how. I'll say this. The more you do it, the better you get. So it'll it'll start off hard. As Jennifer said yesterday, every every start of every morning or whenever you do this, it starts a little bit hard, but then you get into a rhythm. Here's what I do. I usually just print out.
print out the text. I just read from the ESV and these journals are in ESV, but it's not the easiest translation to memorize. So I'm probably going to memorize in the NIV just because it flows a little bit smoother. But I'll print out a chapter, front and back, and then I'll just practice, I'll highlight, and then I'll take my voice recorder on my phone and I'll test myself and I'll play it back. And then you'll see, I keep making a mistake here or there. You can do this. You're like, well,
What other suggestions you have? ⁓ Ask Chat GPT. I'm serious. It'll give you a whole plan, strategy, schedule, reminder. That's the strength of Chat GPT. ⁓ So memorize it. And then if you do that, if you take this joy challenge and you memorize the book at the end of the series, whoever does that, lunch is on me. I'm going to take you out. I'm serious. Like the Saturday before the end or the week after, whatever. We'll figure it out.
Whoever does it. If a bunch of you do it, we'll go to Chick-fil-A. And like two or three of you, we're doing steaks, but... ⁓
That's my challenge for you. What you saw in this book is Paul's love for the Philippians. Man, he loved this church. Not only because of God's grace to them, but God's grace through them. And so he wanted them to abide in Christ and abound in joy. And I feel the same way. I love this church, not only because of I get to be a part of what God is doing in the city and God's grace to you, but you guys are such a blessing to me. And so...
For your joy, for my joy, may we abide in Christ and abound in joy. amen? Amen, let me pray for us to that end.