How
to Gain Unity’s Advantage
“Only
conduct yourselves [as citizens] worthily of the gospel of Christ
so that,
whether I come and see you or whether I am absent,
I
may hear the things concerning you:
that
you stand firm in one Spirit,
with
one mind contending together for the faith of the gospel
and not being frightened at anything
by
the ones who are opposing—
which
is a sign of destruction to them
but
of salvation for you,
and
this from God.
For
it has been given to you on behalf of Christ
not
only to believe in Him, but also to suffer on behalf of Him,
having
the same struggle
which
you saw with me and now hear to be with me.”
--Philippians 1:27-30
Without using the
word Paul presents “unity” as the means to a great advantage. The only thing he longs to next discover
about the church in Philippi is that they face their opposition with a united
front. This will serve as a sign or
indicator from God in two ways. For the
opponents, it portends their inevitable destruction. But for the Christians who have joined arms
and share the Spirit, this surely indicates their salvation. In the context of conflict and opposition, a
sign from God is an amazing advantage!
Social
Advantage
To begin to
comprehend the sociological advantage, imagine if one of us were arrested—say for
refusing to bake a cake—and were therefore incarcerated. Jail is a means of making one feel isolated,
demeaned, and excluded—terrible experiences for a social creature. You would understand this treatment against
you to be representative of the whole society. But imagine how you would feel if you received
visits to your cell from every member of your church! Every Christian in the county! This is probably the sense of Heb. 13:3; we
visit jailed Christians. Now, the guards
and wardens might reconsider their evaluation of you, the prisoner. The press might take notice. Society’s perception might well change, since
you are obviously esteemed and valued by such a large number of people. Their regard and relational investment in you
would raise your value before the watching world. Contrariwise, imagine your sensations if no
one came. Unity brings advantage.
This example is
meaningful in the context of Philippians.
Paul was incarcerated on his initial evangelistic visit (Acts 16), and
is back in jail as he writes (Phil. 1:30).
He gained advantage from Silas in the first stint, and from Epaphroditus
(4:18) in the latter sentence.
Or again, consider
the advantage felt especially early in the American Restoration. Those who early braved estrangement from
their denominational social groups suffered scorn and ostracism. All they had was the Lord and one another,
they being but small in number. The
denominations had established structure and swelling membership from which to
offer acceptance and status. And those
leaving these groups found what? A place
among Barton Stone’s vilified ex-Presbyterians?
Dubious status in James O’Kelly’s “secession” from the Methodists? Recognition as a Campbellite? Such moves were from status to stigma, but
what an advantage came when such outcasts banded together in Christian
unity! These stragglers became a
movement and observers eventually joined in great numbers. Advantage unity!
Or again, look at the
phenomenal growth of the NT church across the social boundaries of many diverse
cultures in the Greco-Roman world.
Success appeared highly unlikely for any calculating odds. But Jew bonded to Gentile in Christ Jesus,
and the resulting unity redrew the social map as Christianity became a
conquering force.
Spiritual
Advantage
Paul appreciates the
social advantage of unity, but much more the theological gains. He so appreciated the comfort brought by
loving brothers and sisters while he wore the chains, but admits he didn’t even
need these comforts (Phil. 4:10-14). The
spiritual advantage of unity was enough to fill his heart. The nature of this advantage becomes apparent
when we grasp the message of Philippians.
To
begin, unity is the fruit of “walking worthily”
(1:27). I have added to the translation
above the sense of “walking worthily [as
citizens]” because the word chosen by Paul (the root of which forms our
word “politics”) would have special connotations in a Roman colony like
Philippi and among people privileged with Roman citizenship, as were the
Philippians. But he urges these
Christians to walk worthily “of the
gospel.” I suspect many of us make
the mistake (as I once did) of understanding this to mean conduct befitting careful
morals, solid ethics, fervent religiosity (church attendance), and lovingly
responsible relationships. Not so, if we
let context be our guide and follow the function of Paul’s words. Of course, the sort of “worthy walking” that
I am thus setting aside is plainly required of Christians. None of these responsibilities are
optional. However, they are not what
Paul is communicating here, and we miss the boat if we settle for an
alternative meaning.
Think
about it. What does it mean to walk
worthily of the “gospel”? The gospel is the Cross-death of Jesus that
led to glorious resurrection and exaltation—how, pray tell, does one walk
worthily of that? Well, again, everything suggested in the
previous paragraph would not seem enough, would it? The Scriptures as my witness, nothing
suffices as a walk worthy of Jesus’ death that is short of a death of our
own. We answer His dying with a death of
our own, or we fall far short of acting worthily!
Response
to “gospel”
Let it be suggested
that one obeys the gospel in exactly the same fashion as one walks worthily of
it: through his own responsive
death! When Jesus called disciples, He
warned-off any who would not “take up
their own crosses and follow [presumably to the place of death]” (cf. Mark
8:34 and parallels in other Gospels). As
He was to embrace crucifixion for them; so must each of us for Him! Dietrich Bonhoeffer was right: “When
Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die.”
This spiritual death involving total sacrifice of self is not
presented as a goal that a Christian attains after long, steady and incremental
progress. Jesus presents this in radical
demand as prerequisite: the walk of
discipleship begins only after one accepts it.
As J. Paul Sampley (Walking
Between the Times, p. 19) writes: “Participation in Christ’s death is the
beginning of the believer’s faith journey.” The New Covenant, in bare
essence, is the agreement between Christ and the believer to share this
death. The resulting relationship brings
salvation.
Now while the death
of Jesus was physical and mortal, our responsive deaths are not necessarily
so. They may be so in all actuality, as when
we obey the command to faithfulness in such a way that it brings martyrdom
(Rev. 2:10). That is one way to take up
your cross and follow; one way to obey the gospel; one way to walk worthily of
Christ Jesus! But we find indicators
that the “death” may actually leave us, in some sense, alive—strange as that
may sound. On one occasion, Jesus in
Luke’s Gospel was heard to bid prospective disciples to take up their crosses “daily” (9:23). That is impossible to do daily for mortals
who have but one mortal life to give!
But daily dying is possible if we embrace the type set forth in 2 Cor.
5:14-15, NASB—“For the love of Christ
controls us, having concluded this, that one died for all, therefore all died;
and He died for all, so that they who live might no longer live for themselves,
but for Him who died and rose again on their behalf.” We allow our “self”—in autonomy,
independence, and self-determination—to die the death. Then, when Christ enters us and takes over
that area of control, we can declare as Paul did that it is no longer us who
live. We have been crucified! It is now
Christ living in us (Gal. 2:20-21).
Although we still breathe and feel our hearts beating, we can say with
Paul: “I die daily” (1 Cor. 15:31).
Sounds
like baptism!
It will be lost on
none of my fellow heirs of Restorationist heritage that the ground we have thus
staked out is overlapped by baptism in its full dimension. Baptism is the immersion in water where death
with Christ is deliberately taken. Baptism
is death; baptism is crucifixion. It
need be done just once, but dying comes daily thereafter. We are conceptually on the same ground staked
out by Paul in Romans 6! We have been
baptized into the death of Jesus, offering to God in that moment our own death
to self and to sin. We become “living sacrifices” (Rom. 12:1)—what a
concept! We are raised—with the water
dripping off us—to newness of life. And
newness of life is meant in such a way as to answer the question that sets off
the discussion of that incredible chapter:
“Are we to continue in sin so that
grace may increase?” Our lives
change so as to answer that question with the sharpest negative! Having died with Christ in such a way that we
are directed (in the power of the Holy Spirit) no longer by our “self” but by
our new Lord, our lives take on sanctification and righteousness. We are transformed daily.
Four
models for unity in Philippians
Paul expressed
everything written in the previous five paragraphs simply as “walking worthily of the Gospel.” The meaning he intends has everything to
do with the Cross and our response. This
may easily be shown to fit the flow of the Philippian letter as demonstrated by
four models worthy of imitation.
Consider the people
set forth as examples to the Christians who are called, in unity, to stand
faithfully together against their opponents.
First example: Paul presents
himself as he struggled through his own personal dilemma—to die (and be with
Jesus) or to remain alive (and stay with the brothers and sisters)? He settled that deliberately by giving advantage
to Philippi’s Christians! Had he sought
his own advantage, he would have died mortally and entered himself without
delay into the presence of Christ Jesus (1:21ff.). However, his actions are those of a man who
has experienced a death of self in response to Jesus, enabling him to bring
advantage to others in unity. Second
example: Paul hopes to send Timothy,
because while others think of their own interests and advantages, Timothy is
genuinely concerned about others (2:19-22).
Again, a man walking worthily of Jesus’ dying brings advantage to
others. Third example: there is their own congregational minister,
Epaphroditus (2:25ff.; 4:18ff.). He came
close to mortality for the work of Christ, doubtless because having already
died it was of no further concern!
Paul, Timothy,
Epaphroditus—all of them advantaged the unity in the church because they each died
responsively to Jesus. To the point,
they actually were each imitating the supreme example of Jesus himself! Jesus was a worthy model—to them and to
us—because of His own dying. When Jesus
died, it meant setting aside His essential equality with God (a personal advantage),
without which as a forfeit, He could not have advantaged others. Reader,
you ought break from this page and read Philippians 2:1-18 before resuming.
A
“sign” with two opposite meanings
This brings us in to
the sign, both of Christian salvation and of their opponents’ destruction—in
each case a sign from God (1:28). The
Christians’ salvation is thus marked as with a sign or definite indicator
because their walks correspond worthily to the Cross-death of Jesus. This is the supreme fulfillment of the work
of God. But the opponents are just the
opposite; they stand in contradistinction to those who carry their own crosses
to follow Jesus. In 3:18-19, after
exhorting: “Brethren, join in following my example, and observe those who walk
according to the pattern you have in us”, Paul describes the opponents as “enemies of the Cross.” Their orientation to Jesus and His Cross
is adversarial rather than responsive—and this marks them with a clear
indicator, a sign from God. Their god is
their “appetite”—devotion to selfish
concerns that brings no advantage to others.
Their glory—rooted in self rather than in Christ Jesus—is really
shame. Their end is destruction—a death
apart from Christ—in lieu of one that they could have shared with Him had they
been responsive. As I read it, these
opponents were other members of the church at Philippi whom Paul described as “preaching Christ out of selfish ambition”
(1:17) and “from envy and strife”
(1:15). So, the sign reveals the
acceptance of death-with-Jesus (thus an indicator of salvation) or reveals the non-acceptance
(an indicator of destruction).
Unity brings
advantage! But this is an advantage that
may only be produced by Christians who die responsively with and for
Jesus. These dying-yet-alive Christians
are walking worthily of the gospel.
Some
Practical Applications
So, how can we gain
the advantage of unity? Let’s consider
three ways to live this out.
First, a personal
application. Phil. 2:1-5 is a supremely
beautiful exhortation which gains its power in the glorious model set forth by
Jesus in the “Christ hymn” (2:6-11).
This is holy ground we are walking on.
Jesus set aside all the personal advantage that came with being God and
with not being associated with sinful humanity.
Yet…He took His place among us, left all of that behind, took a slave’s
status that left Him dead—nailed to a Cross.
Those who manage to take this in are exhorted: “Make
your own attitude that of Christ Jesus” (v.5).
Let’s be plain about
this: if we do not respond to His
Cross-work with a death of our own, we are outside of Christ and will have no
advantage to bring to the unity of His people.
You determine whether your heart does or does not make this response. This should have been the central feature of
your conversion/baptism, which leads to the second application.
Second, an
evangelistic application. When I made my
first attempts at evangelism, I did shoddy work. I understood the requirements that we often
memorize on five fingers—hear, believe, confess, repent, and be baptized. I understood these to bring the ultimate
prize—salvation! All that is true, but I
found out that it is possible to go through all of this with a new believer
with hardly a mention of Jesus. Without
mention of what He did on the Cross, and why.
Without making it explicit that His death necessitates a death of our
own (the gospel that saves actually contains two crosses!).
Now when I present
the gospel for obedience, I declare that the only acceptable response is dying
with Jesus. I give the convert space and
time to fully consider and decide by urging them to “count the cost” as Jesus did (see Luke 14:25-33). No one should be baptized short of this
determination. I do not press for
baptism until this happens.
By the way, this
presents a huge demand upon a convert, but in my experience it brings a great
advantage to the evangelist and aids success.
A convert who is willing thus to die is not apt to quibble over things
that easily become disagreements and break the deal:
·
Is baptism really necessary?
·
Do I really have to break off an
immoral relationship?
·
Are you telling me I can no longer
drink alcohol or take drugs?
Find a convert
willing to die, and this all becomes much easier. The reason is that the real engagement now is
not between you and the convert, but between her and Jesus. You (the evangelist) need no longer do any
“arm twisting” because Jesus is now doing the heavy lifting—and isn’t that how
things should be?
Third, an application
for preaching. A major element of
preaching is moral exhortation, getting Christians to “shun the wrong and do
the right.” You may have noticed that to
get Christians to say “no” to sin and “yes” to holiness requires more motivation
than “because the Bible says so.” People
will not quit simply because you prove convincingly that it is sin. It’s not until Jesus is lifted up before them
on the Cross that hearts will bend and defer, and those in the audience who
have already yielded to the gospel will make easy work for the preacher. Now, all that’s required is a reminder that
they have already died to such things!
The preacher simply queries how anyone beholding the Crucifixion could
fall into temptation, could engage in sin, or could refuse the sacrifice called
for in the pursuit of holiness? As in
evangelism, the minister is no longer the one responsible for undertaking the
heavy work of motivation; Jesus has already done that! If the Cross won’t work, nothing will.
In closing, we gain
unity’s advantage by responding, one and all, to the Cross.
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