Philippians 1:1-11 · Thanksgiving and Prayer
Partners In The Gospel
Philippians 1:1-11
Sermon
by Brett Blair
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LEADERSHIP magazine printed a delightful story sometime back. It was about Mark Wellman, a paraplegic, who gained national recognition by climbing the sheer granite face of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park. On the seventh and final day of his climb, the headlines of a local newspaper read like this: SHOWING A WILL OF GRANITE. Accompanying the headline was a photo of Wellman being carried on the shoulders of his climbing companion Mike Corbett. A subtitle said, "Paraplegic and Partner Prove No Wall is Too High to Scale." What many people did not know is that Mike Corbett scaled the face of El Capitan three times in order to help Mark Wellman pull himself up once. (1)

Today we celebrate World Communion Sunday. This day millions of people all around the globe will receive the sacrament of the Lord's Supper. They will come from various traditions and different cultures. Some will walk to church while others will ride a bus or train and still others will drive in cars. Some will attend large churches, others very small churches, but all have one thing in common. We are followers of Jesus Christ.

Father Henri Nouwen began a daily Eucharist, or service of the Lord's Supper, at the university where he taught a few years ago. At first only one or two students attended, but gradually the number increased. Father Nouwen watched students who did not know each other, and often had very different viewpoints, come together as a worshiping community. "Most of these people would never have chosen each other as friends or companions," Father Nouwen wrote. "But they all, often for quite different reasons, felt attracted to a daily Eucharistic celebration, in which the Word of God was proclaimed and the Body and Blood of Christ shared."

Over the months these quite different people found themselves drawn by a deep sense of community. These people who had different interests discovered a special bond based not on physical or emotional attractiveness, social compatibility or common interests, but on the presence of the living Christ.

As students participated in the daily communion they were strengthened by each other's presence. "All of them started to experience support from each other in their daily struggles," Nouwen wrote. "Many became good friends, and some even found their partners for life. Such were the remarkable fruits of spiritual community." (2)

St. Paul begins his letter to the church at Philippi by calling them "partners in the Gospel." That phrase aptly describes our relationship to those around the world with whom we share this celebration of bread and cup this day. That relationship cuts across national, racial, and ethnic differences. It is based on an elemental spiritual truth: WE ARE ALL ONE FAMILY.

A reporter asked a white teenaged girl in Philadelphia why she participated in a riot to run a black couple out of her neighborhood.

"I wouldn't want my kids to get to know the blacks," she said.

"Why?" the reporter asked.

"Because they might get to like them!" she answered.

That's the danger, isn't it? There is so much fear, unfounded fear, in our world even today. We see it in the Middle East, in Bosnia, and we see it in our own neighborhoods. How sad! Why can we not believe the Bible? We all descended from one mother and father. We are all one family.

Benjamin H. Alexander, Research Chemistry Professor at The American University in Washington, D.C., notes that through molecular biology research and DNA tracings scientists at the University of California at Berkeley and at Harvard University have agreed that there was once a woman whom they call Eve who lived approximately 200,000 years ago and who is the mother of us all. Research shows that her genes are found in every human being living on earth today. Therefore, all five billion people on the planet are blood relatives. This mutual Eve is the 10,000th great grandmother of all of us. We are one family. We need to affirm our oneness around the table of Christ this day.

WE ARE FAMILY EVEN WITH THOSE WHO DO NOT DECLARE JESUS AS LORD. As followers of Jesus we long for the day when every person on this earth knows him to be Savior and Lord. We ought never be apologetic for our evangelical imperative. Nevertheless, it would be the most grievous of blasphemies if as followers of this man whose very nature was love we should in any way cause those who do not share our faith to suffer.

Some of us have long been avid followers of Marx ” Groucho Marx, that is. Groucho, a Jewish gentlemen, was married to a Gentile. He once asked a friend, "How do I go about joining that posh beach club in Santa Monica?"

"Don't try to get into that club," said the friend, uneasily, "They're ” well, anti-Semitic."

Groucho thought for a moment and then said, "My son is only half-Jewish. Do you think they'd let him go into the water up to his knees?" Groucho was exposing the absurdity of discrimination.

Maxie Dunnam recalls the time thirty years ago when he and his wife along with their two small children were driving from Gulfport, Mississippi, to his parents' home in Richton, about one hundred miles away. It was sleeting and the road was becoming icy on that unusually cold night. It was close to midnight out on a dark, lonely highway. Then it happened. Their car stalled. There wasn't much hope of anyone stopping to help them at that hour of the night. The children were getting colder, and Dunnam and his wife were getting anxious. After what seemed an eternity a car came to a screeching halt beside them.

Maxie told the driver that their car had stalled, and without asking any further questions, the stranger told them to get in his car. The stranger even helped them with their luggage, and went out of his way to take them to a friend's home in the nearest town where they could spend the night.

Dunnam noticed the man's accent was different from his own. He obviously was not from Mississippi. The man who helped the Dunnam family that night was David Ben-Ami, Rabbi of Temple B'Nai Israel in Hattiesburg.

A few months later Dr. Dunnam read an article in the newspaper about the trials and tribulations of Rabbi Ben-Ami. His troubles began when he befriended ministers of other faiths. The Rabbi visited pastors who had been thrown in jail for demonstrating against racial injustice. He befriended a white Presbyterian minister who had been involved in this struggle for equality, and he had assisted in distributing turkeys to needy Mississippi families of all races. Rabbi Ben-Ami's congregation was upset and had asked him to leave. (3)

Discrimination from any quarter is a tragedy. We are a family ” even with those who do not name the name of Jesus. We do him a great disservice if we cannot love all people ” even those who worship differently than we worship. Here is the important thing. CHRIST ASKS US TO DO NO MORE THAN HE HIMSELF HAS DONE.

The next time you judge another to be unworthy, think how unworthy you and I are of the sacrifice Christ made for us. If loving people who are not like us is difficult, imagine a holy God giving up His Son for unholy humanity. We began this meditation telling about a young man helping a paraplegic friend scale the face of a great mountain. I hope it causes you to think of what Christ did for us on Calvary. He came into this world of sin and death, sorrow and suffering, for one purpose ” to lift us up. And now he calls us into a partnership. We are partners with him and with believers all over this world seeking to lift others to the throne of grace as well.

There is a story about a woman who lived in a Philadelphia neighborhood that was going downhill very fast. The area was becoming increasingly over-crowded, noisy and dirty. It was a bad situation. The woman decided something would have to be done about it. She knew that money would be required to change the situation. Consequently, she started a fund-raising drive. She called people. She sent letters. She got some financial support from private foundations. She finally raised $85,000 ” then promptly used the money to move to another neighborhood. (Source unknown)

That's how some people respond to the world in which we live. They flee the scene of the grime. That's not an option for you and me, though. We have been bought with a price. Someone has lifted our undeserving souls all the way to the throne of God. As we take the bread and the cup this day, we remember what Christ has done for us, and in partnership with him and his people all over this world, we seek to lift others to that throne as well.


Greg Asimakoupoulos, Concord, California

Henri J. M. Nouwen, LIFESIGNS (New York: Doubleday & Company, 1986), pp. 104-105.

Maxie Dunnam, PACK UP YOUR TROUBLES (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1993), pp. 62-63.

by Brett Blair