Philippians 1:1-11 · Thanksgiving and Prayer
Divide and Destroy
Philippians 1:1-11
Sermon
by Harold Warlick
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One day at a city gate two women were arguing over a baby. King Solomon said, “Well, first take a sword, cut the baby into two equal pieces, and give each mother a half.” Of course, you could only divide the baby by destroying it.

The most vital items in our faith are like that. You can only divide them by destroying them. They are entities, not quantities. The Holy Spirit is an entity. Each part belongs to every other part. The Bible itself is an entity; it is an organic whole. In our modern mindset, hinging often on the primacy of specialization, we are tempted to affirm the expression, “Divide and Conquer.” Faith wants to underscore a unity that transcends diversity, division, and specialization.

The biggest and best aspects of the Christian faith cannot be halved or divided. The good news of Jesus Christ overcomes the diversity of who we are, how we worship, our present circumstances, and what we believe in our own little groups. F. W. Boreham1 has reminded us that our universe consists of two sets of things; there are Quantities, and there are Entities. Life in the long run revolves around its entities.

A pound of butter is a quantity; you can divide it without doing it injury. A quart of milk is a quantity; you can pour it into several glasses without in any way destroying it as good milk.

You hear a person proclaiming, “I believe in the ethical portions of the Bible. Give me those passages that make for justice and love of neighbor and integrity. Give me the Ten Commandments; give me the Sermon on the Mount; give me the prophets; give me the Golden Rule.”

And another person proclaims just as loudly: “Give me the Evangelical. Give me John 3:16. Give me the story of the cross! Give me the precious promises of the New Testament.” It cannot be done. To divide the Bible is to destroy it. How does the person so insistent on the ethical aspect of Scripture remove the stain from his or her own soul without that Savior given out of God’s love to the whole world? How? You can describe yourself as a feminist who contends that God is a male construct used to oppress women. Fine. But how do you understand the mystery of life and walk through the difficulties of life without a God who loved the world enough to send the Christ to guide you?

And let those who are so insistent on the evangelical ask themselves a question. Ignore the prophets, the Sermon on the Mount, the Golden Rule, and truthful perspectives like those of the feminists. To what extent will people respect your message? They will turn from your arrogance and naiveté with contempt.

This oneness, this living in partnership with the whole gospel, calls forth the ultimate in knowledge and depth of insight if one is to discern what is best. Paul’s words to the Philippians emphasize that growth in Christ is relational not mechanical and that there is but one single gospel in whose service we are all partners.

In our day, Paul’s letters do not often serve as the basis for the Sunday sermon. In the season of Advent it is especially rare to hear a sermon centered on a Pauline letter. One reason why this is the case is that many people, including preachers, possess a rather narrow perception of “the gospel.” They view the gospel as divided into four quantities and share a story from one of the four canonical Gospels. Consequently the appointed passage is taken from one of these four Gospels and becomes the subject of the Sunday sermon. Certainly the good news or “joy” in Christ transcends any one of the four stories about Jesus that have been preserved from earliest times.2

Tradition has it that there is only a single gospel, not four. We possess four versions of an indivisible gospel. Paul shares this traditional view that there is but one single gospel. Consequently he can forcefully remind his hearer that they are in partnership with the gospel.

In our contemporary world of specialization, division, and quantification, no greater need looms before us in the Advent season than this sense of connectedness. Advent and Easter, darkness and light, bondage and exodus, exile and homecoming, Jew and Gentile, Shepherd and King, stable and star, baby and Messiah and, yes, prison and joy — all are one. In Paul’s statement of gratitude for his relationship with the church (Philippians1:3-11), he states in parallel phrases a twofold gratitude: his remembrance of them and their partnership in the gospel.

Commentators refer to Philippians as the “epistle of joy” and wonder why the word occurs so often, especially in a letter to close friends who are heavy with the news of Paul’s being in prison and facing death.3 Yet one must remember Paul’s insistence on the gospel and life’s experiences as an entity. A Thanksgiving is part of all his letters except Galatians. He is thanking God for the Phillipians’ intimate partnership in the proclamation of the gospel.

Today’s lesson seems especially appropriate for the Advent and Christmas season. Paul is grateful for the Philippians’ generous sharing in the gospel ministry ever since he first presented them with his message. The Philippians have repeatedly shared in the spread of the gospel by financially aiding Paul (1 Thessalonians 4:16, 2 Corinthians 11:9). In many respects they are his favorite congregation. He longs for them with a view that they are in the very heart of Christ. The letter expresses great mutual affection.

Perhaps this is a message all of us need to hear at this particular time of year. Those of us who are in practical partnership with the Advent and Christmas programs of the church often work our way through the season with a love-hate mentality. While some may have a holiday card image in their minds, with chestnuts roasting on an open fire, the season often becomes a problem-solving one:

• It’s the last month to raise the church budget.

• When the last Christmas Eve Communion Service candle is extinguished the minister often will sigh, “Thank God!”

• The choral director, weary from cantatas and choir parties, will slump in the recliner from exhaustion.

• The hurried, frantic shopper will sit on the floor surrounded by reams of wrapping paper and yards of ribbon.

• The calendar will be loaded with Sunday school parties and frantic visits to relatives.

To be certain, Advent and Christmas often become problems to be solved instead of a partnership to be affirmed. Chuck Hutchens, a United Methodist minister in Taylorsville, North Carolina, had a particular problem one Advent season. A Christmas season dinner party was scheduled for 6 p.m. one evening. Chuck arrived home at 5 p.m. to begin helping his wife with the housecleaning. The house looked great! The tree was beautifully decorated, the dining room table was gorgeous, the pleasant smell of scented candles filled the rooms, and the sounds of Christmas music echoed throughout the home. But at 5:10 p.m. the doorbell rang. There stood two guests who thought the Christmas dinner was at 5 p.m. And there stood the hosts in their sweat suits. The house was ready but the hosts were not! The external problems were solved but the progress of the hosts in getting themselves ready was abruptly cut off. One of the essential aspects for the church is the necessity of not separating the programs of Advent from preparation of the people themselves for the season.

How appropriate, then, to utilize this Scripture of thanks and joy. Ben Witherington4 has pointed out that the letter of Philippians is more of a progress-oriented than a problem-solving letter. Though there were still things that had to be overcome in Philippi, Paul exuded confidence and expressed hope about how things would turn out for his converts and himself.

Paul’s methodology of establishing positive feelings between himself and his audience speaks to us as we move through this season. It is through our love for one another that our partnership with Christ is sealed. Indeed, it is this love that enables us to discern what is best.

Have you ever wondered how people are trained to detect counterfeit money? I mean some fake money looks just like the real thing. The American Banking Association sponsors a two-week training program. The program is unique in how it helps tellers detect counterfeit bills. Not once during the two-week training does a teller ever see a single counterfeit bill. Not once do they listen to a lecture describing the characteristics of counterfeit money. All they do for two weeks is handle authentic currency. Hour after hour, and day after day they just handle the real stuff. At the end of the training they have become so familiar with the authentic that they are never fooled by the false. The people themselves are prepared.

Paul’s words challenge us to see creation as basically good and God constantly acting in and through history. While we do not live in first century Philippi and we have never heard Saint Paul preach, we have to live out our faith in the world of our time as they did in theirs.

We move forward, handling the best, confident that the one who began the good work in us will see it through to its completion. After all, we are partners in an entity, the gospel of Christ, not competitors in a contest. We are not hawkers of a quantity like those who begin playing Christmas music in malls the week of Halloween so they can effectively compete with other shopping centers who are doing the same thing. Advent is not a chance for our church to get its slice of the season. It is a chance for us to affirm our partnership in the gospel.

For the next two weeks we will sing the carols of joy. We will light the candles on the Advent wreath. We will remember those who have labored with us on life’s journey. All will not be perfect. The suffering and loneliness of this world will be very much with us. But, we hope, our partnership in that which began before our birth and continues beyond our death will remind us that Christmas is, indeed, a joy to be embraced instead of a problem to be solved. So be it.


1. F. W. Boreham, The Blue Flame (New York: Abingdon Press, 1930), pp. 27-31.

2. Raymond F. Collins, Preaching the Epistles (Mahwah, New Jersey: Paulist Press, 1996), pp. 9-11.

3. See the treatment by Fred Craddock, Phillipians: Interpretation, A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching (Atlanta: John Knox Press, 1985), pp. 15-17.

4. Ben Witherington III, Friendship and Finances in Philippi (Valley Forge: Trinity Press International, 1994), p. 41.

CSS Publishing Company, You Have Mail From God!, by Harold Warlick