Philippians 1:1-11 · Thanksgiving and Prayer
The Christian Life Defined By Prayer
Philippians 1:1-11
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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My grandmother Dunham came to live with us when I was four or five years old.  She was a quiet, gentle woman who spoke very little.  But her presence was like a benediction to our entire household.  I remember Grandma as she sat on the swing on the front porch.  Now you don’t know anything about the South, unless you know that swings on front porches are very important.  She would sit in the swing on the front porch, reading the Bible.  During our play, we often found her with her hands folded over the open Bible, her eyes closed, and we thought she was dozing.  There came a time though, when we realized that she was not sleeping, but praying.  I would often see her lips moving, and on occasion, those moving lips would give audible expression to prayer.  And I knew that Grandma was praying for me and my family and for those about whom she was concerned.  When we became old enough to be aware that she was praying, and to understand the significance of prayer, we would soften our voices when we would come around in the yard and find her there doing that, or we would simply slip around to the backyard in order not to interrupt what we were awed by, in Grandma. 

Here and there in the New Testament, we come upon Jesus and he’s praying.  We find him on his knees.  Think about that.  Do you feel the power of it?   We read one of his prayers in our first scripture lesson this morning.  Are you awed by it as I am to hear him praying that prayer in the upper room?  Listen to him.  I pray not only for these, Peter, James and John, but for those who will believe through them, Maxie and Jeri and Kevin.  Do you get the impact of that?  Christ is praying for you.  I pray not only for these, but for those who will believe in me because of them.  Christ is praying for you in the Upper Room – and he never ceases to pray for us.  The writer of the epistle to the Hebrew says that Jesus ever lives to make intercession to the Father for you and me.  Likewise in the New Testament, as you read Paul’s epistles, you will find this dauntless Christian, breaking into prayer for those to whom he writes.  In this Philippian letter, in the 4th and 5th verses, which we considered last week, Paul says that every time he remembers the Philippians, he thanks God for them.  Isn’t that a great compliment?  What if all the friends that we know would pray for us when they remembered us?  Wouldn’t that be marvelous?  And then in that 10th and 11th verses, rather the 9th and the 10th verse if you want to look at it there – he shares his prayer for them.  Listen to that.  It is my prayer that your love may abound more and more with knowledge and all discernment, so that you may approve what is excellent and may be pure and blameless for the day of Christ, filled with all the fruits of righteousness which comes through Jesus Christ to the glory of God the Father.  It struck me as I began to study this letter in preparation for this sermon series, that in his petitions for the Philippians, Paul is really defining the Christian life. He loves his friends, he is longing for them, so he prayers for them.  And in his prayer, he defines the Christian life.  With that perspective in mind, let’s look at this prayer of Paul.

The prayer contains three petitions.  There is the prayer for love, for light, and for life.  Note first the prayer for love.  Verse 9 has it – it is my prayer that you may abound more and more in your love.  In the English language, love is an appalling overworked word, diminished in its power.  Perhaps you’ve heard of that country fellow who wanted to express his deep love for his sweetheart, he wrote her a letter and closed it by saying, I love you so much, that I would climb the highest mountain just to be at your side.  I would swim the widest ocean just to gaze into your eyes.  I’ll be over Saturday night if it doesn’t rain.  We have trivialized the word love abominably.  We love everything from cashew nuts to Jesus Christ.  The problem has been with us a long time.  We use the word love to translate the Greek words for immoral passion, sexual feeling, and fraternal and family affection.  But there’s a fourth Greek word which the New Testament has really lifted up to immortality – the word Agape.  Peter and John and Paul especially, selected that word for love in order to express to us what God chose to do in Jesus Christ, for us persons and our salvation as the creed has it.  The spontaneous, unmerited love and favor God has shown to us, rebellious and pride-filled sinners, is agape.  The Son of God loved us and gave himself for us. 

I. Prayer for Love.

In the gallery of word pictures signifying love, none come close to the breadth and height and width of agape.  The love of Christ which passes all knowledge.  In language, we’re poverty stricken to convey the richness of the meaning of agape, and so pictures are necessary.  A father welcoming home a prodigal son.  A sinful woman forgiven by Christ and pouring a bottle of precious perfume on Jesus’ feet.  A shepherd concerned about one lost sheep, so he risks the wilds of the wilderness to find it.  Dare we hang in that same studio?  The portrait par excellance of love.  The love of God, dying on a cross, spilling every ounce of blood and love for us sinners, acting out everything he said.  Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.  Paul felt poverty-stricken in language too, as we do.  So he pictured agape in Jesus, urging us to read into the meaning of the word all the mighty acts of God, culminating in God’s choosing to do in Jesus Christ something that had never been done before and would never be done again.  To be born, to live, to teach, to suffer, to die, to rise again, and all for us persons and our salvation.  And the way that agape looks in our lives is etched immortally in Paul’s hymn of love. 

Love is patient and kind, not jealous or boastful or arrogant or rude, does not insist on its own way, is not irritable or resentful, bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.  That’s what it means to be a Christian.  To be persons whose love is abounding more and more.  Is it so with us modern Christians?  Answer these questions to answer that one.  How could pockets of starvation exist in Memphis and in America if 100,000,000 Christians in America really heard Jesus say what he did?  I was hungry and you fed me.  How could racism continue if 100,000,000 Christians in America live the faith of Jesus who took as his model and hero, of his moving parable a member of the most despised ethnic group of that day – the Samaritans.  How could people suffer with disease and die without hope and die without Jesus Christ – if 100,000,000 Christians in America burned with the words of Jesus.  I was sick and you visited me.  How could opportunities for liberation and reconciliation and forgiveness go by wasted if every morning 100,000,000 Christians in America responded to Jesus’ words, love one another as I love you.  Forgive one another as I have forgiven you.  Is that prayer being answered in your live? - that your love may abound more and more. 

II. Prayer for Light.

The second petition is for light.  That your love may abound still more and more in knowledge and all discernment, in knowledge and all discernment.  The New International version of the New Testament says, in knowledge and depth of insight.  In this petition, Paul connects light with love.  He’s talking about the kind of love that should characterize our lives - a love that calls for and seeks after knowledge, a love that is not blind, that does not look over the faults of others or the weaknesses of others, but sees them clearly, looking beyond them to the heart of things, and continuing to love.  Though connected with the light for which Paul prays is not the same as love.  Spiritual knowledge and discernment are gifts of the spirit desperately needed in our day, but I don’t know any of the mainline churches that are talking about discernment as something that ought to be present in the life of a Christian.  The only people I hear talking about that are the Pentecostals and some people such as that.  Yet there is an astounding and disturbing proliferation of spiritual movements and religious cults in our day.  I believe that this is an out__ for the deep spiritual hunger that is prevalent in our time.  What happened at Jonestown a few years ago, with Jim Jones?  And what continues to happen today in the growth of the Moonies and the Children of God and other cults are obvious signs of the times.   Interestingly, the Greek word translated discernment in our text is used only in this one verse in the New Testament, cognates of it are used in Luke 9:45 and Hebrews 5:14.  The Hebrew passage especially is enlightening.  In that passage, Paul is talking about teaching the word of God, and he uses the metaphor of milk and solid food.  The solid food he says is for the mature, for those who have their faculties trained by practice to distinguish, that is to discern good from evil.  This gives meaning and power to Paul’s petition that we may grow in the gift of discernment and spiritual knowledge.  At least two dimensions must be noted – one is the quality of judgment.  A sharpness of perception very much like the art critic who is able to distinguish between the real and the phony, the authentic and the superficial. 

A second dimension of spiritual knowledge and discernment is a kind of sixth sense, a penetrating intuition that has been practiced and cultivated and disciplined.  Both these dimensions are at the same time gift and growth.  They’re gifts of the spirit that we all should seek, but they grow and mature in effectiveness as we intentionally and consistently wait on the Lord, open to him in prayer, and as we immerse ourselves in his word, through which his revelation comes.  Is this prayer being answered in your life?  The prayer for light, that is for discernment.  Do you live enough with the scriptures to allow his word to be alive and active within you?  Do spend time in prayer cultivating an awareness of the indwelling Christ in order that you can be sensitive to his guidance?  Do you share with others in spiritual conversation- listen to this.  Do you share with others in spiritual conversation in order to have your discerning spirit enhanced by those who are seeking similar growth?  It’s a prayer for light, for knowledge, for discernment and it should be characteristic of the Christian.  Is the petition being answered in your life? - Prayer for love, for light, and for life. 

III. Prayer for Life.

That’s the third petition - for life.  Everything that Christ does in us must reflect itself through us.  Got that?  Everything that Christ does in us must reflect itself through us.  So the prayer is for life.  Life lived in a special, because the love of Christ is abounding within us, spiritual knowledge is increasing, and the capacity for discernment is being sharpened.  How does this life express itself practically?  What does it look like?  Paul gives us some guidance in the scripture.  Verse 10 says that you may approve the things that are excellent.  Now that’s the kind of life which should characterize the Christian.  The word to describe it is – discriminating.  To be able to discriminate, to differentiate, not only between the good and evil, but between good and better, between better and best.  Excellence is the quality we must seek.  The categories of experience within which our choices are being made these days are multiple, and seem to be growing in geometric proportions each decade.  That’s the reason Peter Drucker wrote his book a few years ago on Future Shock.  Look at what we’re flirting with these days, with the rapid advancement of technology.  Artificial hearts – who gets them, and who pays for them.  The ending of life – you’ve been reading about the execution with a lethal drug of a criminal, and the controversy that’s going on as a result of the fact that a doctor participated one step away from the administering of that lethal drug.  How do we debate that issue?  When the primary concern of the Christian is not how we do it, but whether we do it all.  Not how we end a life, but whether we end the life at all.  And how do you deal with whole issue of abortion, when we’re putting so much emphasis upon life?  I’m saying to you, by asking these questions, that our culture is so far gone down the path of sexual promiscuity, selfish indulgence, moral indifference, flabby thinking, that only those who consistently chose the superlatively good can make any difference in the world.  And I pray God that the church will model that sort of thing. 

Paul knew and he lined it out for us, that you may approve the things that are excellent, but Paul adds another characteristic in verse 10 – that you may be sincere and without offense.  Waymoth translates this, that you may be men of transparent character.  I like that.  Persons of transparent character.  Now neither the adjective nor the noun form of the Greek word translated sincere or transparent is common in classical Greek.  Therefore, the derivation of the word is not clear.  Once suggestion of etymology has a challenging meaning when applied to our lives.  The word may have come from a combination of two Greek words.  One which means the sunlight, and another which means to judge.  So the word would literally mean sun tested, s u n, sun tested and sun judged.  To ancient practices provide insight for relating the meaning of that word to our lives.  One came about because there were slipshod sculptors in that day who would produce statues from blemished defective stones.  They would fill in the cracks of the stones with wax, and they would cover over the defects with paint, and it would be a beautiful thing.  But in time, the sun would melt the wax, peel the paint, and reveal the glaring imperfections.  Thus, sun tested, to be free from pretense and sham.  Now, if you’ve been in the shops of the old city of Jerusalem, you know the necessity of a second ancient practice that gives meaning to this word – the bazaars and shops are small and dark.  In that setting, you cannot properly judge an article of pottery or glassware or weaving or cloth.  You have to move out shadowed recesses of the shop to the nearest available sunlight to appraise the value, to detect whatever faults or flaws may be in the article you’re interested in. Sun judged.  To be able to stand in the clear sun of God’s judgment and the judgment of our brothers and sisters with no need to hide or conceal our thoughts and desires.  Paul said to the Ephesians, live like persons who are at home in the daylight.  Isn’t that beautiful?  Live like persons who are at home in the daylight.  That’s what it means to be transparent.  Sincere, and without blame, sun tested and sun judged.  Is that prayer being answered in your life? 

So there it is.  The Christian life defined by prayer – a prayer for love, for light, and for life.  I close the way I began, with a story about prayer.  John Barteck was among a small group of survivors in a shipwreck at sea.  He had a New Testament with him and that New Testament became the center of this traumatized group, as they huddled together and began to pray, as they floated on a small raft on a perilous ocean, day after day.  When a seagull landed on their raft, providing food for their starving bodies, they knew it was an answer to prayer.  Some time later, after they had been rescued, John Barteck was asked what the New Testament did for them, and he responded, “It kept us steady.  We did not lose our heads or panic.  It kept us sane.”  And then he was asked what might have happened had the seagull not come in answer to their prayer.  Barteck replied, “Well then, we would have asked God to help us die like men, rather than like cowards.”  How we live and how we die tells our Christian story.  We can die right if we have lived right.  And we can live right if Paul’s prayer is being answered in our life.  So with Paul, I pray for you, that your love may abound more and more with knowledge and all discernment, so that you may approve what is excellent and may be pure and blameless for the day of Christ, filled with the fruits of righteousness, which comes through Jesus Christ to the glory and praise of God.  That’s my prayer for you.  And my further prayer is, that you’ll let it be answered in your life. 

Maxie Dunnam, by Maxie Dunnam