Philippians 2:1-11 · Imitating Christ’s Humility
Pray, Baby, Pray
Philippians 2:1-11
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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I see we’re all here this morning, in spite of a lot of warnings that we wouldn’t be. Or are we only here in some parallel universe? Pinch or touch your neighbor to see if they’re really here.

Okay. We’re all here.

On 08 September 2008 the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) was finally turned on, and we weren’t turned off. What is the Large Hadron Collider? It’s the largest machine ever built, a seventeen mile long circular tunnel designed to smash together protons in a re-enactment of the Big Bang.

How’d it do? You guessed it. It broke down only after being “on-line” for a few hours. But the cooling unit that failed was soon replaced and within a week the LHC was back in service, warming up, or more accurately cooling down (since the protons must be kept at a crisp -459 degrees Fahrenheit, or absolute zero Kelvin), for its potential first smash ups.

The LHC is located outside Berne, Switzerland, the crossing between the French and Swiss border. Originally it was to have been built outside Houston, Texas. But a combination of naysayers, money woes, and bureaucratic bungling brought work to a halt in the mid-90s. When the US defaulted on the LHC, the Europeans picked it up and formed the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN). The real miracle of this project was not the bringing together of two protons, but the bringing together of eight thousand physicists from eighty-five different countries to build this enormous machine.

There is one tiny little glitch in all this good news and impressive scientific advancement. That is the nagging concern held by some researchers that this machine will cause the end of the world — maybe even the end of our galaxy.

That could be a real “down-side.”

Those who predict this doomsday scenario suggest that if physicists succeed in re-creating the “Big Bang,” we will also create a black hole and possibly “dark matter.” This black hole, this sucking void of anti-matter, will simply slurp us in, cannibalizing our planet and taking the entire Milky Way galaxy with it.

Well, at least it won’t start in Houston. US residents who predict this dire ending to “life, the universe, and everything” might at least have a nanosecond to say, “Told you so!”

The unfortunate truth is that black holes happen in our lives all the time. There are frequent collisions between opposing forces that can slam us down and suck out our soul if we let them. These vortices of extremely destructive energy are part of the downward bent of incarnation, that broken state of creation theologians call “sin.”

It is one thing to experience this brokenness in the form of global forces that ambush us — like “war,” or “greed”, or “pollution,” or “hate,” like 9/11, 9/15 (the Economic Crisis Wall Street experienced last week), like the “Ike Spike.”

But it is much worse when we are singled out for sabotage by those we think we know, by those we think we can trust. There are a lot of different “super-colliders.” What happens when our communities, our work place, our worship place, our home place, become super-colliders? What can we do to make sure we don’t get sucked into all that destructive energy?

If you think you’ve been stabbed in the back at work, you are not alone. In a national survey by The Creative Group, nearly half of advertising and marketing executives responded that current or former colleagues had tried to make them look bad on the job in the past year. In addition, professionals of all types told Yahoo! HotJobs they had suffered from sabotage on the job. In a recent online poll asking, “Are you aware of a coworker trying to make you look bad or sabotage your work in the last year?” nearly three-quarters said “yes.”

These numbers are amazingly high, but these numbers are not surprising to Dr. Gary Namie, director of the Workplace Bullying Institute. He says that employee sabotage is one of the most prevalent forms of on-the-job bullying, a phenomenon that itself is far too common.

“Sabotage can happen in any organization, but some forms are special to the industry,” Dr. Namie says. “In creative fields, it may take a passive form, such as not contributing to the group effort. In health care, a seasoned professional may withhold vital information, which not only hurts the new employee but also affects patient care.”

Namie identifies a variety of saboteurs. Any of these sound familiar to your own lurking black holes?

1) Belittlers, who hurl put-downs, demeaning remarks and disparaging comments.

2) Credit thieves, who steal your ideas and grab the glory when something is successful.

3) Finger pointers, who pin the blame on others when the anything goes wrong.

4) Rumor-mongers, stirring up drama by spreading lies and half-truths that destroy reputations.

5) Slackers, who shirk responsibility and foist duties onto others.

6) Scorched-earth managers, who will undermine or even fire a smart, capable worker when they feel threatened by brains and talent.

The worst thing about saboteurs is that they do not confine themselves to the workplace.

Those whom we love and trust as friends and family and brothers and sister in Christ can also betray us. Every person here can tell a story of some time when they were shown the “left foot of fellowship” (in Christian love, of course). In fact, the percentages for Jesus were 1 in 12. Do you think we deserve better?

Think of the 12 closest people to you? There is always a black hole, a Judas, in the midst.

In today’s epistle text Paul offers some “survival guides” for dealing with black holes. Paul knows from personal experience that even living in a faith community will be a struggle against the forces of the world. Here in today’s epistle lesson Paul tells us what “makes” and “breaks” a community. Paul introduces what “makes,” and itemizes what “breaks,” a Jesus community.

What makes a faith community? Harmony and unity. The basis of both is found in the virtues of “comfort” and “consolation,” of “agape” love and “koinonia” fellowship, and an over-arching devotion to putting on and living out of the “mind” of Christ. These are the forces that “make” a community of harmony and unity.

What can break a faith community? The seeds of dissension and declension are planted by the vices of “selfish ambition” and “vain glory” (“empty glory”). Those are two forces that can break a community.

Most especially, however, Paul identifies one feature that can both make and break a Jesus community. That’s humility. Humility is the key characteristic found in those who would live “in Christ,” who would follow Christ’s example (Philippians 2:5-11) for “sabotage survival.”

Jesus experienced the sting of sabotage as cruelly as anyone ever has in this life.

Jesus came “first to the children of Israel.”

But his message was sabotaged by the Pharisees.

Jesus preached in his hometown, before his own family.

But his mission was sabotaged by sarcasm and familiarity (Matthew 13:54-58).

Jesus committed no crime, only goodness.

But he was sabotaged by the Sadducees, by Pontius Pilate, and by the people who voted for “Barabas.”

Jesus chose twelve disciples, twelve who became his friends and family, twelve whom he taught and trusted and loved.

But Jesus was sabotaged by Judas, and if truth be told, by every one of The Twelve. It was not just Judas who betrayed Jesus.

Jesus teaches us how to deal with our successes — with humility and faithfulness to our larger mission. But Jesus also shows us how to deal with our saboteurs.

If you have twelve friends, twelve co-workers, twelve family members, you will have at least one saboteur. And how did he treat that saboteur? It was without precedence. Jesus invited him to join in his “Last Supper.” If you knew you were going to die, would you want to share your last meal with the person who betrayed you and caused your death? Jesus did. Jesus prayed, broke bread, and shared time with Judas. Jesus accepted Judas’ kiss, without hesitation and without rancor. Jesus “humbled” himself, even to the point of loving to the end the ultimate saboteur.

The human response to a revealed betrayal is rage. We deal with our exposed Judas’ by treating them like waste products, crushing them and tossing them out. But Jesus showed a different way. He had a final meal with Judas. He continued to show HIS love for Judas. Judas’ betrayal was not a surprise to Jesus (don’t most of us know who is “out to get us”?) but Jesus’ continued love, continued acceptance of Judas, despite his impending betrayal is the ultimate act of humility.

Jesus also taught us to be humble and merciful in the face of “sabotage” because each of us, in one way or another, has sabotaged someone else. And in our own way, just like Peter and the other eleven, each of us has betrayed our Lord.

You say: not me? Really?

No one here betrayed their parents by their words and actions?

No one here betrayed their heritage?

No one here betrayed their friends with a shared confidence?

No one here betrayed themselves by various embezzlements? Many of you here this morning are masters of self-sabotage, sabotaging by various means God’s design for your life mission and ministry.

The Philippians were threatened by outside forces, to be sure. But the real danger to this Jesus community came from within. The greatest threats were from internal saboteurs. This is why Paul implores them to take on for themselves the humility, the identity of Christ.

When your mission is love, there is no power on Earth that can “one-up” you. The only way to be “one-upped” when your mission is love, is to have someone else “love more.” And how can that be bad? When selfish ambition, when “vain glory,” are not a part of our agenda, we can never truly be undermined. A black hole cannot be created by the collision of more love, more compassion, more humility.

There is a mantra that is making the political rounds. It started out in a commercial by T. Boone Pickens. Then it picked up steam as a rallying cry at political rallies. What am I talking about? Anyone? . . . “Drill, Baby, Drill.”

I want to end the sermon the sermon this morning with another rallying cry. It’s the cry that we need to survive the sabotage that we all will experience in life. It has three parts.

First, Love, Baby, Love.

Can you all say that? LOVE, BABY, LOVE.

Second, Forgive, Baby, Forgive.

Can you all say that? FORGIVE, BABY, FORGIVE.

Finally, Pray, Baby, Pray.

Will you say that with me? PRAY, BABY, PRAY.

Now let’s put them all together:

Love, Baby, Love.
Forgive, Baby, Forgive.
Pray, Baby, Pray.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet