Philippians 1:1-11 · Thanksgiving and Prayer
Partners In the Gospel
Philippians 1:1-11
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Connections are important.

Nobody understands the word connection as do United Methodists. When we talk about the larger church we refer to it as “the connection.”

Connections are important. I remember visiting with a young man in Nashville 25 years ago -- I was the editor of the Upper Room and this young man was a student at Vanderbilt University. His parents were friends of mine but I had known him only in passing. This was one of those encounters that we have now and then that we sense are charged with deep meaning. I remember it as though it were yesterday, praying as that young man left, “Oh God, we need that young man in the ministry of your church.”

Connections are important. That young man was David Thomas.

Three years ago I came to be the president of Asbury Theological Seminary. A young woman came to see me in my office soon after I arrived, introduced herself as the president of the Student Body, and told me she wanted to pray for me. I needed that. I had come to Asbury following God’s will, not my own. I had come somewhat “kicking and screaming” -- having left a dynamic congregation that was providing rich fulfillment in ministry, as well as leaving two children who were at the stage in life that our relationship had grown into a deep friendship that was providing joy and deep meaning in Memphis. I had preached -- and I still do -- that God’s will does not take us where God’s grace will not sustain us. I needed Karen Musselman’s prayer that day. And I thought -- if this is what Asbury is like, maybe I can make it.

Connections are important. When it came time for my formal inauguration as president of Asbury, Karen inspired a special chapel service in which the students anointed me as their president and Karen prayed the prayer of consecration.

Connections are important.

In ____1995, David asked me if I would be available on a particular night to meet him and Karen in the chapel at Asbury. He was going to ask Karen to marry him; if she said “yes,” he was going to give her a ring, and he wanted me to meet them that evening at 9:00, to share that significant decision and seal it with prayer and the sacrament of Holy Communion. You don’t forget experiences like that.

Connections are important.

And now, here we are, celebrating the covenant of ministry between you -- this congregation and David and Karen -- celebrating a new connection. This connection transcends all of us -- yet, it involves all of us. And it involves not only this pastoral couple and this congregation and staff, and this bishop and the Methodist connection -- it involves the whole church, the whole gospel, the whole world.

I believe that -- I am not just speaking lofty words -- I believe that because that is the way I understand the church. Centenary is a dynamic outpost of Kentucky Methodism, but more than that, you’re an outpost of the Kingdom. You’re connected with the whole Church, not just the whole Church Militant today around the world, but the Church Triumphant, alive in Christian history, connected also with the whole of God’s history.

There is a sense, my friends, that the covenant we celebrate tonight is connected and goes all the way back to the covenant God made with Abraham. Isn’t that tremendous? Can I get an amen to that? So, to make that glorious universal reality concrete, I want us to look at the church at Philippi, and let Paul speak to us in this particular phase at this particular time as he spoke to that church, 2000 years ago.

Get the setting in mind. In verse one of chapter four of this letter, Paul tells us what he thinks of the church at Philippi: “My brethren whom I love and long for, my joy and my crown, stand firm in the Lord.”

The church at Philippi was Paul’s “joy and crown.” Of all his churches it gave him the least trouble and the most satisfaction. So, Phillipians is a letter of joy, brimming over with expressions of gratitude and affection and love.

The vivid story of Paul’s visit to Philippi is told not in that letter, but in the sixteenth chapter of Acts. In a few lines there in the book of Acts, the work of the Holy Spirit guiding the missionary endeavor of Paul and his companions is boldly stated. The Holy Spirit had prevented them from going to Bethesda so they went to Troas where Paul had a vision. Do you remember? In a kind of dream-sleep, Paul heard a man from Macedonia pleading, “Come over and help us.” As the pattern of Paul’s life had been established by his obedience to the heavenly vision he had had on the Damascus Road, he remained obedient, responded to this vision and, along with Silas and Timothy, and probably Luke, he set out for Macedonia, concluding that “God had called us to preach the gospel to them.” (verse 10)

They made their way to Philippi, a Roman colony, the leading city of the district of Macedonia. There a Christian church was born. Do you remember how it happened? Lydia, a seller of purple silks was converted. Then her entire household responded to the gospel and were baptized with her. A church began in her house. Dramatic events followed. Paul, in the name of Jesus, freed a slave-girl from a spirit which made her a source of gain for owners. And as a result of that, Paul and Silas were arrested, flogged, and thrown in jail. But again the Spirit did His work. The jail became the setting for another display of the Holy Spirit’s presence and power. The jailer and his household were converted and baptized.

Isn’t that a remarkable beginning for a church -- the conversion first of a woman and her entire family, then a jailer and his entire family? Think about that -- probably the most unlikely candidates for church membership that could have been imagined in Philippi. Let me urge you, parenthetically, not to forget that. Those you think the most unlikely prospects for hearing the gospel may be waiting for you to share it with them. When was the last time this congregation looked seriously at the Lexington community and asked, “What audience are we missing? Who is out there that no church is paying attention to?” This is not the sermon -- I just throw it in as an extra -- let it lodge solidly in your mind. Those you think the most unlikely prospects for hearing the gospel may be waiting for you to share it.

Back to the main stream of the story. When the city fathers discovered that they had flogged and thrown a Roman citizen into jail, they were not only embarrassed, they were afraid of what Paul might do to them legally. So they begged them to leave Philippi and they did. On two other occasions Paul returned. So three times he was in Philippi and he came to love the Philippians. Every time Paul thinks of his friends there, he is filled with joy and he expresses it in those gracious words of verses 3, 4 and 5: “I thank my God every time I remember you, constantly praying with joy in every one of my prayers for all of you, because of your sharing in the gospel from the first day until now.”

The New King James translation of verse 5 puts it this way, “I am thankful for your partnership in the gospel.” Other translations use the word “participants” -- participants in the gospel. So, let’s think about that because that’s what covenant in ministry means: -- partners in the gospel.

Paul and Timothy, Epaphras and other companions in that Roman jail are bound to those Christians far away in Phillipi. They are all partners in the gospel. Though we may never grasp the full meaning of this, three words begin to plumb the depths of what it means for us to be partners in the gospel. Those words are privilege, partakers and promise. Let’s look at those.

I

First, privilege.

Our privilege is spelled out in the first two verses of this letter. Three times in these verses Paul speaks the name of our Lord Jesus.

-- in Christ

-- from Christ

-- of Christ

We are in Christ. Our blessings come from Christ . We are servants of Christ.

It all boils down to this as Christians, we belong to Jesus Christ. That is the privilege that is ours.

Emerson Colaw, a now-retired bishop of the church, tells a story that comes out of his long-time ministry at Hyde Park Church in Cincinnati. The Taft family of political fame were members of that congregation. The six-year-old daughter of the family was named Mary. During her first week at school the teacher asked each of the students to introduce themselves and to tell something about their family. When it came “little Mary’s” turn she stood up and said, “ I am Mary Taft. My great-grandfather was the president of the United States. My grandfather was a senator, my father is a congressman, and I am a Girl Scout Brownie.”

Isn’t that beautiful? We need to celebrate who we are -- the privilege that is ours: we belong to Christ.

What a powerful reality. What would happen to this congregation if that reality permeated your corporate awareness? Because you belong to Christ you belong to each other. You belong to David and Karen; David and Karen belong to this new family of Christ. Every member, every person in Christ, belongs to every other person in Christ. What would happen if this reality permeated the corporate awareness of the congregation? I tell you what would happen. This congregation would become a place of redemption, the lack of which we have seldom known. And it would become a place of powerful grace that would be impossible to resist.

So, I call you to celebrate it, claim it, live it out -- the privilege of belonging to Christ and because you belong to Him, belonging to each other.

II

Then there is the second word that helps us probe the depths of what it means to be partners in the gospel: partakers. Verse 7 says, “For all of you share in God’s grace with me, both in my imprisonment and in the defense and in the confirmation of the gospel.” The New King James version says, “You are all partakers with me of grace.”

I asked a moment ago what it would mean if the privilege of belonging to Jesus Christ broke through as a powerful reality in the corporate consciousness of this congregation? That question has to do with your life together here. The question I ask now has to do with your expansive identity and your solidarity with the Christian movement around the world. What would it mean for Centenary Church to grasp the reality of what Paul is talking about: “Partakers with me of grace -- both in my imprisonment and in the defense and confirmation of the gospel?”

Paul felt that the Philippians were in solidarity with him in prison. What would it mean for this congregation to be partakers of grace -- people who share grace, and receive from those Jesus called the least of these: the hungry, the stranger, the naked, the sick, the prisoner? Those who are imprisoned in addiction that make them slaves.

Mother Theresa who has, perhaps, more than any other person today, demonstrated this dynamic of solidarity -- partakers of grace -- has put her mental finger on the deepest need not to just people who are dying in the slums of Calcutta, but of all human beings. She said:

In these twenty years of work amongst the people, I have come more and more to realize that being unwanted is the worst disease that any human being can experience. Nowadays we have found medeicine for loprosy and lepers can be cured. There is medicine for TB and consumptives can be cured. For all kinds of diseases there are medicine and cures. But for being unwanted, except there are willing hands to serve and there is a loving heart, I don’t think this terrible disease can be cured.”

(Malcolm Mugurag, Something Beautiful for God, New York, Harper and Row, 1971, pp. 98-99.)

Willing hands to serve and loving hearts to love -- that’s what it means to be partakers of grace -- to enter into solidarity with suffering humanity. But not many of us want to be servants like that do we? We have the notion that Christianity centers in service but I submit to you there is a vast difference between the way most of us serve the willful decision to become a servant after the style of Jesus. Most of us serve by choosing when and where and whom and how we will serve. We stay in charge.

Jesus calls for something else. He calls us to be servants, and when we make this choice, we give up the right to be in charge. Then, amazingly we experience great freedom. We become available and vulnerable. We lose our fear of being stepped on or manipulated, or taken advantage of -- and aren’t those our fears? People were always saying to me in Memphis and other churches where I have served -- “Preacher, I don’t want to be taken advantage of....I don’t want to be stepped on.” But what joy comes , what energizing of life, what power for ministry comes when we act out of the desire to be a servant, rather than the pride-producing choice to serve now and then, when and where, and how and whom we please.

Paul says, “You are partakers with me of grace even in prison.”

But he also says, “You are partakers with me in defense and confirmation of the gospel.” I could preach an entire sermon on this, -- but just a word. Methodism is being torn asunder today. Everywhere I turn people are asking, “Is the church going to split? How long can we survive the tension and strife?” A minority force of the church, which unfortunately includes some of our leaders, are becoming more aggressive every day in their advocacy for personal freedom of abortion, physician-assisted suicide, the ordination of practicing homosexuals, the affirmation of same sex-marriages, and on and on the issues go.

These are the fiery issues that make the news. But my friends, if all these specific issues were to disappear tonight, tomorrow we would still be in trouble as a church. We would be in trouble because we have forsaken the authority of scripture, we have diminished the uniqueness of Christ as God’s revelation, as God’s gift of Himself for our salvation; we have made our personal experience the measure of judgment, rather than the faith once and for all delivered to the saints. And so -- everything is relative. When you don’t have a center, there is no way to define a circumference. If Centenary Church is to be partakers with Paul in God’s grace, then you must do so in the defense and confirmation of the gospel.

III

And now this final word in probing the meaning of being partners in the gospel: promise. Listen to this breathtaking word of Paul in verse 6: “I am confident of this, that the one who has begun a good work among you will bring it to completion by the day of Jesus Christ.”

It is a great day in the life of a pastor and a congregation when they realize the ministry and mission of the church is not dependent upon their human resources. The church is not our idea anyway. It is God’s idea. It is God’s Kingdom enterprise and God is in charge.

We all know this congregation is a lighthouse church in this annual conference. It could be a beacon church for the entire denomination. You have done great things. You have had remarkable growth. There is a sense in which as the hymn says, “You have done wondrous things.” And again, in the words of the hymn, “Glorious things of thee are spoken.”

God has begun a great work in you -- but you have only just begun. What a great day this is. A turn to a new chapter in the life of faithfulness and service. How that chapter is written will not be dependent upon the gifts and graces of your new pastoral couple -- though I am very excited about their being here and I know you are. They are two of the most gifted and committed persons I know. But the future of Centenary will be dependent upon them only in part -- The future will be dependent upon how clearly they and you hear God’s call, how deeply you feel the heartbeat of a hurting world, how willingly you will deny self and follow Christ, how sacrifically you give your talents and financial resources as servants of the servant who is Lord, how quickly you respond to the Holy Spirit’s guidance, how authentically you will live together as though it were a privilege to be the recipients of grace, how disciplined you are as a praying people -- coming boldly to the throne of grace and holding tenaciously to the horns of the altar until God has blessed you with His presence, and you have yielded your will to His command. That’s where the secret is. That’s the reason you can rejoice in the promise: He who has begun a good work in you will bring it to completion.

We have seen it happen, and we know it will continue.

It was dramatically confirmed for me back in January 1990. Jerry and I visited churches in what was then Czechoslovakia. There were not many Methodist Christians there but what committed Christians they were. One pastor who came to spend the day with us in a seminar spent more than one-half his monthly salary to buy the gasoline to come to the meeting. As I looked at the pastors and lay persons, I saw in them a people who were filled with great hope. But no wonder! Until November, 1989 every church in Czechoslovakia was severely restricted by the Communist government. Christians could not evangelize. They had to be careful about how they spoke in public. They could post no public notices on their church buildings. No signs of advertisement could be erected outside their churches. They could make no public declarations. They could not even ring their church bells.

Then in November 1989, you remember the story; it was on TV and on the front pages of newspapers around the world a group of students confronted a group of soldiers, and in the magnificent square of Prague -- gave the soldier flowers. That as the catalyst that brought the revolution against the government out in the open and to full blossom. Everybody took to the streets, and the old communist regime knew that it was over.

Christians there told us the story. It was decided that on November 27, at noon, everybody would walk out of homes, businesses, offices, factories, fields. Everybody would simply walk out into the streets at noon. Every church bell in Czechoslovakia would be rung at noon. And when that day and time came bells that had been silent for forty-five years began to ring. It was electric. Everybody knew that something new had come.

Dr. Vilem Schneeberger, one of the pastors, whom I had known back during my years as World Editor of The Upper Room, said that for the first time he was able to put signs out in front of his church in Prague. Do you know what he put on that sign? Just four words: “THE LAMB HAS WON!

What a victory! What a sign of the Kingdom! The Lamb had won! Not the bear, but the Lamb! Not the tiger, but the Lamb! Not the lion, but the Lamb! He who had begun a good work in them -- because of their long years of faithfulness and the faithfulness of the body of Christ around the world -- the Lamb had won. You can count on the promise: He who has begun a good work in you will bring it to completion.

So, as you begin this new chapter of your life together, pastor and people, I call upon you to be partners in the gospel. Remember your privilege -- you belong to Christ. Know that you are partakers of grace with those in prison -- you’re to enter into solidarity with suffering people around the world -- and you’re to defend and confirm the gospel. Claim the promise: He who begun a good work in you will bring it to completion.
MaxieDunnam.com, MaxieDunnam.com, by Maxie Dunnam