Philippians 2:1-11 · Imitating Christ’s Humility
Our Common Life in Christ
Philippians 2:1-11
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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It glows with light and power today as we turn to verses 1 through 4 of the second chapter of this Philippian letter.

“If then our common life in Christ yields any thing to stir the heart, any loving consolation, any sharing of the Spirit, any warmth of affection or compassion, fill up my cup of happiness by thinking and feeling alike with the same love for one another, the same turn of mind, and a common care must be no room for rivalry and personal vanity among you, but you must humbly reckon others better than yourselves. Look to each other’s interests and not merely to your own.” (Phil. 2:1—4 NEB).

Paul is always concerned about the church. It is one of the central themes of all his epistles. In the first chapter of his letter to the Philippians with which we have already dealt in this sermon series, he concentrated on his own situation. He knew what was uppermost in the minds of his friends at Philippi. He needed to assure them that he was confident of the faith and high in spirit, even though suffering in prison. So, he was not just a missionary evangelist, he was a pastor_.

In chapter 1, verse 27, he express for the Philippians and the witness they must make. Whether he ever returned to them or not, they were to live as citizens worthy of the kingdom of Christ. They were to stand fast in the Gospel and not be intimidated by adversaries. They were to count it a privilege to suffer because they believed; they were to entrust their lives to Christ.

Now in the first four verses of chapter 2, Paul takes up the theme of the church and gives a succinct, radiantly clear description of our common life in Christ, that is our life together in the church. Thus he underscores the challenging fact that the Christian life is always a shared life; with one mind striving together for the faith of the gospel.” (1:27).

Listen again to those four verses as I share them form the New England Bible. Note that Paul begins the passage with an if. The if is not used the way we normally use it – as the condition upon which what follows depends; such as, if there is good weather, adequate rain, and sunshine, and if the frost doesn’t come too early, the trees will bear an abundance of fruit. He turns that around, first naming the harvest and then the conditions that will produce the harvest. So, let’s do that today putting our emphasis on the harvest of our common life in Christ.

I. LOVING CONSOLATION

The first harvest yield is loving consolation.

When we are a part of the body of Christ, the ministry of loving consolation should be dynamically alive, as we are the recipients of it, but also as we share it with others.

The Revised Standard Version uses the word “encouragement” for the Greek word paraklesis, and is translated in other New Testament passages as “comfort,” “exhortation,” and “incentive.” What is to be sensed here is the up that is ours within the Christian community. It must always be so.

Mary Lou Redding is the Managing Editor of The Upper Room, and a friend. She is an ardently committed Christian, who has had a great deal of tragedy in her life. Let her tell a part of the story. “At a time of profound upheaval in my life, God brought me into relationship with four other people. After a time we became a family to one another. I could call any one of these people, even in the middle of the night (and I did), knowing that what ever help I needed they would give. And they were just as free to call on me for help and support (and they did).

Once, while praying for one another, one person thanked God for the “coming-home feeling,” we had whenever we were together. That phrase became for me a symbol of the freedom we felt to express our affection for one another, our weak nesses, our fears, our strengths. These people made God’s love for me visible and tang Home is not a place.” (Alive Now). And that’s the church – not a place, but love you know you can depend on - our common life in Christ where the harvest of “loving consolation” is bountiful!

II. FELLOWSHIP OF THE SPIRIT

The second harvest yield of our common life in Christ is fellowship of the spirit. Koinoia is the Greek word for this experience, and fellowship is a little weak in expressing the full meaning.

Koinoia may be translated “participation,” “communion,” or “sharing.” Paul used the same word when he wrote to the Corinthians to suggest what happens in Holy Communion. Do you remember that marvelous verse, I Corinthians 10:16, which we often use in the liturgy of Holy Communion? “The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not a participation, that is Koinoia, in the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not a participation (koinoia) on he body of Christ?” (I Cor. 10:16 R.S.V.) Paul captures the essence of our common life in Christ in his threefold benediction in II Corinthians 14:1, “the grace which Christ supplies, the love which God bestows, and the fellowship which the Holy Spirit creates” (II Cor. 13:14).

You see, the Holy Spirit gives us the gift of koinoia, the gift of fellowship. We do not create it. As Christ supplies the grace and God bestows love, so the Spirit creates a deep sharing among us which makes us one. In that fellowship, which the Spirit gives, we experience the joy of knowing that along with Christ, there are other human beings who know us the way we are and still love us. Mark that down. The fellowship of the Spirit is marked by unconditional love.

In his novel, Sweet Thursday, John Steinbeck tells of a young prostitute named Susie who finally finds an opportunity to get out of her life of degradation and begin a new life. Steinbeck is accurate in depicting Susie as a girl of no self-worth, no self-dignity as a human being, because prostitution is a metaphor for self-hatred, and humiliation.

But she has the opportunity to leave that old destructive life and begin a new one. As she leaves, her friend says, “Repeat after me: I am Susie and nobody else.” Somewhat perplexed, Susie repeats, “I am Susie and nobody else.” Then the other woman says, “I am a good thing.” And more confidently now, Susie says, “I am a good thing.” Then the other woman says, “And there ain’t nothing like me in the whole world.” And Susie repeats, “And there ain’t nothing …” she stops, breaks down, and cries tears of joy because there is somebody in this world who knows her the way she is and loves her.

Isn’t that what ought to be happening in the church?

Within the fellowship of the spirit, Koinoia, people experience that - the joy of knowing that along with Christ there are other human beings who know us the way we are and still love us.

Yet, there is another side of this coin of love and acceptance in Koinoia. It is the whole matter of mutual responsibility, that is, we are to hold each other responsible and accountable. The clearest scriptural reference to this is Chapter 6 – Paul’s letter to the Galatians. Listen to the first three verses.

“We must not be conceited, challenging on another to rivalry, jealous of one another. If a man should do something wrong, my brothers, on a sudden impulse, you who are endowed with the Spirit must set him right again very gently. Look to yourself, each one of you: you may be tempted too. Help one another to carry these heavy loads, and in this way you will fulfill law of Christ. For if a man imagines himself to be somebody, when he is nothing, he is deluding himself.” (Gal. 6:1-3 NEB)

At the heart of our common life in Christ is the ministry of spiritual support, correction, guidance, and restoration. I would say this is the ministry most glaringly missing in the whole church. There is absolutely no way for pastors to provide this – We are too few in numbers. Christians must link themselves with a small group – or two or three other trusted spiritual friends with whom you will share your life in the fellowship of which you will mutually support, love, and hold each other responsible. “Husbands and wives can do this if they mutually agree to grow together spiritually for at the heart.”

Now here is a very pointed and helpful teaching to which we Christians need to pay attention. The Greek word for “trespass” is means literally “false step.” It could mean a slip that comes in walking on an icy or otherwise dangerous path. Paul is giving us some clear signals.

First, we need to remember that we are vulnerable. Any of us may slip. The church should never take the stance of being a “pure” people, a people without sin. I mean by this that we should not strive for holiness of life, and seek to live righteously. I mean we should be careful about spiritual over-confidence. Just when we think we are solidly in the saddle, with firm clutch on the reins, the wild horse of the flesh may take a sudden turn or make a dramatic buck, sending us sprawling to the ground. Or, like Peter, we may be betrayed by over-confidence and end up denying Christ.

Confusion plagues us is not always easy to decide what is right. So Paul says, “Be careful how you think of others’ sins; consider yourself, lest you also be tempted.”

But there is this second dynamic of Koinoia to which we give too little attention. within the shared life of the people of God, we are to judge each other, but this judgment is assessment in love, not condemnation. Now get that clear – we are to judge each other, but this judgment is assessment in love, not condemnation. When we are involved with each other, knowing the love we share and our mutual commitment to each other’s spiritual growth, we can speak the truth in love, we can assist each other in recognizing and acknowledging faults and weaknesses. We can confront and challenge each other. Without this kind of involvement with and mutual concern for each other, we remain licked in our own worlds and there is little chance for change and growth.

Now here is the key. Paul defines the kind of mutual support and correction we should provide for each other:

“Restore him in the spirit of gentleness,” he said. “Gentleness is a fruit of the spirit. Our supporting, correcting, guiding and restoring activity is in the spirit of Christ, who is gentle and calls us to gentleness. We handle each person with a kind of gentle care with which we would handle a piece of precious, fragile crystal. We seek to be sensitive to the brittleness of persons, to their high emotional pain threshold. We are firm, seeking never to fall in the ditch ourselves in order to help the sinner; but we are gentle, recognizing that the stakes are high - in fact, eternal. We don’t burst down doors to make our case. We respect privacy and dignity and self-esteem. We know that what is worthwhile is not accomplished by mere denunciation and rebuke. Our duty is not to condemn but to restore. And that can happen in Koinoia – where we are loved by others unconditionally, and where there is a ministry of spiritual support, correction, guidance and restoration.

That leads to the third harvest yield of our common life in Christ: affection and compassion, or mercy as some translations have it.

This is to some degree a re-statement of the first harvest yield of loving consolation, but with added meaning. In this verse and in Philippians 1:8, the King James version says “bowel” instead of “affection”. While it is somewhat inexact and certainly inelegant, the word “bowel” gets our attention enough to cause us to want to explore the deep meaning of it. The Greek word splagchnon literally means “inward parts.” As Paul used it, it meant the viscera, but not the lower viscera, not the intestines; rather, it meant the heart and the lungs. Now that becomes a powerful metaphor. It has to do with breathing and the pumping of blood – all that keeps us alive.

“Affection” takes on far more power than we usually credit to it. This is no light, soft word that is far less than love. It is active love, expressive love, and, for the Christian nothing less than loving with the love of Christ.

Did you see that article in the Christmas issue of Time magazine which ended with the story of Sister Emmanuelle. Sister Emmanuelle is 74 years old. She is a person who loves with the love of Christ. Every day she rises at 4:30 a.m. to begin her work as a missionary among 10,000 garbage pickers in Cairo, Egypt. These people are the “untouchables,” who live in what amounts to perpetual serfdom. They bequest their trade and squalor to succeeding generations. The garbage pickers stay alive by sorting through the refuse that is hauled out from the city in creaking donkey carts. These ragged men and women save the bottles and tin cans to sell for the only money they ever see. They use most of the waste food to slop the pigs that live with them. Infant mortality in the community is 40%. 40% - Two out of five babies die as infants. At 9:00 a.m. each day Sister Emmanuelle welcomes 40 youngsters who attend school in her hut. She teaches both Christians and Muslims to read and write and introduces them to a wider world than the garbage heap. Waving aside the flies that fill the air in enormous clouds, Sister Emmanuelle also spends the hours each day visiting her flock, carrying a ledger in which she meticulously records the names and needs of 3,000 families. She is gentle, but that gentleness turns to steel when she confronts bureaucrats and government officials and bankers, challenging them to help the garbage pickers. Speaking of her life in the garbage dumps of Cairo, this woman says, “My job is to prove that God is love, to bring courage to these people. I don’t want to be anywhere else because here I feel I am giving the life of Jesus Christ to these children.” She is! She is expressing the third harvest yield of our common life in Christ: Affection and compassion.

IV

I must close now.

“If then common life in Christ yields anything to stir the heart” Paul said. Then he named the things we have been discussing: loving consolation, fel1ov the Spirit, Affection and Compassion.

It sounds far-fetched, you say. You haven’t experienced that in the church. Yet, you long for it. That’s what we are all looking for. How can it be so? Paul answers that in vss. 2, 3, and 4. Listen:

“Fill up my cup of happiness by thinking and feeling alike, with the same love for one another, the same turn of mind, and a common care for unity. There must be no room for rivalry and personal vanity among you, but you must humbly reckon others better than yourselves. Look to each other’s interests and not merely to your own.” (Phil. 2:2-4 NEB)

That’s tough, isn’t it – but that is what is required if our common life in Christ is going to yield anything to stir the heart. It is interesting that Paul is not asking for uniformity of belief, not is he talking about doctrinal orthodoxy. You see these can be diversity of doctrinal belief and emphasis. He is calling for harmony of relationship, mutual concern and love for one another, a caring for the quality of fellowship in order that Christ may perform his ministry through his body, a willing to lay down our own interests for the sake of others. When we allow the Spirit to build us into a fellowship like that the harvest yield of our common life in Christ will be guaranteed. And that will not only stir our hearts; it will capture the attention and imagination of this city and even the whole world. The Holy Spirit will be so vitally alive among us that people will seek that power. Christ will be lifted up – and He will do the rest, because his promise stands- “And I – if I be lifted up – will draw all men unto me.”

So much is riding on it – our destiny and the eternal destiny of others is dependent upon the quality of our fellowship - the harvest yield of our common life in Christ.

“If then our common life in Christ yields anything to stir the heart” Does it? What are you doing, how are you doing, how are you living to make our common life a true reflection of Christ, a vital Konia fellowship?

Will you join me in praying that each one of us will be so yielded to Christ, and so committed to one another that our common life, this church will produce the kind of spiritual harvest that will stir the heart of this city – and reach out to the world.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam