Philippians 2:1-11 · Imitating Christ’s Humility
The Power of Encouragement (Part VIII)
Philippians 2:1-11
Sermon
by Eric Ritz
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Clarence Thomas who, as many of you know, is now a Supreme Court Justice, acknowledged that one of the persons who had a great influence on his life was a nun by the name of Sister Mary Virgilius Ready. Judge Thomas says it was the encouragement that he received from her that helped him to overcome poverty and racism and become someone.

Newsweek magazine wrote about her and others who served in the school that Clarence Thomas attended. The article said:

"The nuns who lived in the black areas of town were not popular. Whites occasionally referred to them as the `nigger sisters.'' The Ku Klux Klan once sent a hearse to the rectory to intimidate church officials.

"Much like Myers Anderson, the nuns taught discipline. `They said you could do it,'' recalls Orien Douglas, a classmate of Clarence''s. `Mostly they said, `You will do it.''"

The article went on to say that it was the sisters'' encouragement that stood like a wall against the hopelessness that gripped many people in that community. It was the sisters'' constant words of encouragement: "You will succeed...We believe in you...We insist that you believe in yourself."

As we continue our sermon series on Paul''s letter to the Philippians, we find Paul exhorting the Philippians to never allow our eyes to focus on anything except Jesus Christ. To do so is to invite disaster and distraction into our lives; to focus on the administrative machinery rather than the Lord Jesus Christ will result in a church that winds up fighting itself and demonstrating a poor testimony to the world. The Lord Jesus Christ must never become a sideshow but always be the main event in the life of the church. A church can never reflect the joy of the Lord unless it is focused on the Lord Jesus Christ. Today, as I look over the congregation, it is very obvious that we are different people. We are young and old, male and female, rich and poor, democrats and republicans, liberal and conservative--yet, in spite of all these differences, we are one people through the blood of Jesus Christ. We are on the same level at the foot of the Cross.

Paul knew from first-hand experience what can happen to a church when it starts to fuss and fight amongst itself rather than join hands and work together for the common good. Paul urges the Philippian congregation to spend all their time building each other up rather than tearing each other down. Paul wanted them to focus on encouragement rather than envy or enmity.

A distinguished Scottish preacher tells of passing a young lad on a street in Glasgow during the winter. He speaks warmly to the poverty stricken lad and inquires: "Are you cold, my lad?" The lad replies: "I was sir, until you spoke to me."

A tourist wandered along the ocean shore and came upon a crowd of people standing near the water''s edge. An adventurous, lone boat-builder and sailor was about to launch a small, homemade boat for a risky trip across the sea. The small crowd which had gathered was trying to discourage the man from his adventure. "You''ll never make it," some shouted. "You''ll die of thirst. You will run out of food. That little boat will come apart in the first storm."

After listening to the negativism for a brief time, this singular tourist walked up to the group and elbowed his way to the front of the gathered crowd. He called out to the intrepid sailor as the boat was pushing off from land: "You are incredible. You can make it. It will be the adventure of your life. Go in safety and great care. And God go with you." (1)

Since I believe that the danger which the Philippian Church faced is the same challenge every church and Christian faces, it will do us all good to think for a few moments about the awesome power of encouragement. Paul is telling us that we can do it. We are incredible people when Jesus Christ reigns in every heart and mind.

I offer three insights for your consideration and action today.

WE MUST FIRST FOCUS ON WHAT A PERSON CAN BE IN CHRIST RATHER THAN WHAT THEY PRESENTLY ARE. LOOK FOR POSSIBILITIES--NOT PROBLEMS.

I want to share with you some of the world''s opinions about a few folks known to us:

Albert Einstein: Did you know that Albert Einstein was four years old before he could even speak? And seven years old before he could read and understand his first word? Did you know he had to be tutored in math? But today he is known as one of the most intelligent men who has ever walked our earth. So much for S.A.T scores and other measuring devices of intelligence.

Thomas Edison: Thomas Edison was told by one of his grade school teachers that he was so dumb and dull that he should clean chimneys for a living. Today he is considered one of the greatest inventors our world has ever known. We could be worshipping by candlelight rather than our electric lighting in this sanctuary today. So much for dumb and dull people.

Ludwig Von Beethoven: Beethoven''s professor of music told his parents that a career as a musical composer was out of the question for Ludwig. He was hopeless. Imagine all of the beautiful music we would have been denied if Ludwig had listened to his critics.

Pablo Picasso: Picasso was born prematurely and was left to die by his mother on a table in the house. He was considered too sickly to make any contribution to our world.

Then I think of all of the strange characters that our Lord Jesus Christ gathered around him to be his disciples, and I think of all the men and women who through the corridors of history had been chosen to be part of our Lord''s work. Not many of them were highly regarded in the social circles of their time.

Many of these people went on to do great things because there was someone who brought encouragement and inspiration to their lives. Someone believed in them when no one else did. Paul believed in the gathering of God''s people in the Philippian congregation and encouraged them to be all they could be in Jesus Christ our Lord. Their model for encouragement was to be the Lord and to reflect His life through them.

Gert Behanna was fifty-three years old when she became aware of God. The shock and wonder of that discovery haven''t worn off after twenty years. Gert had another shock the very next Sunday when she went to church. She says, "I''d never been to church in my life and I remember how eagerly I awaited that first Sunday. I''d just had a glimpse of God Almighty--me, an alcoholic, a drug addict, rich, lonely, and miserable--already I was beginning to know what joy really was." Gert had just accepted Christ. She was eager to attend church to meet and talk with persons who had known the love of God for many years. "What ecstatic people these long-time Christians will be!" she thought. Even though becoming a Christian was probably the happiest day of her life, she was somewhat hesitant about going to church that first Sunday. "I was afraid they would embarrass me with their love and enthusiasm," she said.

Gert did not find the church people as loving and enthusiastic as she imagined. What she discovered was, "Bowed heads, long faces and funereal whispers." She expected people to shower her with love and affection for making the right choice and wanting to be part of the church. But no one welcomed her. No one even spoke to her the first Sunday she went to church.

"As time went on and I attended other churches," Gert writes, "in various parts of the country, I made a bewildering discovery. These long-faced, listless people were present in every congregation." Then she asked a very good question: "How could they come into God''s presence Sunday after Sunday without breathing in the joy that danced in the very air?"

Let us remember that the theme of Paul''s letter to the Philippians is joy. Joy being the echo of the presence of God inside of us as believers. One of the great benefits of the joy of God is sharing with others the ENCOURAGEMENT we received when we first accepted Jesus Christ as our Lord and Saviour.

ENCOURAGEMENT AND UNITY ARE POSSIBLE IN THE CHURCH WHEN WE LOOK FOR THE COMMON GROUND OF COMPASSION RATHER THAN THE BATTLEFIELD OF COMPETITION.

I recently was reviewing a tape on marriage and the need for the husband and wife to support and encourage each other rather than exchange verbal warfare. A certain wife said to her husband, "You make me wish I had a lower IQ so I could enjoy your company better." He responded, "Before we were married your chin was your best feature. Now it''s a double feature." She said, "Your parent''s biggest mistake was not to seek information on birth control." He said, "I am still using the piece of my birthday cake as the new walkway in the back yard." I think you can assume from the following exchanges in conversation that this marriage would not exactly be one built on encouragement and compassion for each other. Instead of seeking a common ground, they sought the battleground. It is easy to do in any relationship, whether personal or corporate.

I recently read of a Christian church in Oregon that provides encouragement cards in the pew rack. The members take the time before and after the worship services to write notes of encouragement to fellow members. These cards are then mailed on Monday. Can you imagine why this church is growing? In this congregation today are people who are looking and longing for a word of encouragement. Encouragement usually happens when hands are clasped with other hands rather than rolled up in a knotted fist at each other.

Dr. John Killinger of Samford University shares the story of a woman from the Shenandoah Valley who was painting at her easel in the woods one day when she was struck by rifle shots. When she came to she was in a hospital room, her body suspended above the bed in a sling.

She had lost so much blood and was in such a state of shock that the doctors were afraid to operate immediately to remove the bullets; they waited nearly a week to see if her condition would stabilize. Most of the time she lay hovering between life and death, in a state of semi-consciousness.

There was one important thing she remembered. People from the church she belonged to--though she did not attend regularly--cared for her. They came in shifts and sat in the room with her, praying for her.

She could not speak, and they did not know she was aware of their presence. Later she said, "I lay there in my sling blissfully aware of their coming and going. I felt as if I were gathered up in a cocoon of love. It did not matter if I lived or died. I was part of the beloved community."

Encouragement is like peanut butter on a sandwich. The more you spread it, the better things stick together. Robert Fulghum, in one of his heartwarming books about what he learned in kindergarten, shares what one of the teachers always shouted out when they went to the playground, "It is always better to stick together and hold hands." There is great power in holding hands.

ENCOURAGEMENT AND UNITY ARE POSSIBLE WHEN WE RID THE CHURCH OF THAT SICKENING VIRUS CALLED SELFISHNESS.

In a certain there was a woman named Mrs. Pat McGruffy. Mrs. McGruffy was the number-one critic of a certain pastor. If the sermon was too short, it was because he had been lazy that week. If the sermon was too long, it was because he was trying to impress the people. No matter what this poor pastor tried to do, Mrs. McGruffy was always criticizing him at the church''s administrative meetings. Finally, the pastor had had enough and went to see Mrs. McGruffy at her home. He rang the doorbell, and no one responded. He knew she was at home. He rang the doorbell again. Giving Mrs. McGruffy the benefit of the doubt, he got down on his knees to look through the keyhole to see if perhaps she had fallen on her way to answer the door. Low and behold, as he placed his eye to the hole he came face to face with this white eye peering back through the keyhole at him. The pastor shouted out, "Mrs. McGruffy, you better get up real fast, because this is the first time we have ever seen eye-to-eye." Sure enough, Mrs. McGruffy got up and walked out the back door of her house and drove away! If you are looking for disunity and for reasons to disagree in a church, you will always find enough to do so. It is only when we take our eyes off ourselves and place them on Christ that we will ever make the Church a healthy body.

One of my favorite stories concerns a bishop who was traveling by ship to visit a church across the ocean. While en route, the ship stopped at an island for a day. The bishop went for a walk on a beach. He came upon three fishermen mending their nets. Curious about their trade, he asked them some questions. Curious about his ecclesiastical robes, they asked him some questions. When they found out he was a Christian leader, they got excited. "We Christians!" they said, proudly pointing to one another.

The bishop was impressed, but cautious. Did they know the Lord''s Prayer? They had never heard of it.

"What do you say, then, when you pray?"

"We pray, `We are three, you are three, have mercy on us.''"

The bishop was appalled at the primitive nature of the prayer. "That will not do." So he spent the day teaching them the Lord''s Prayer. The fishermen were poor but willing learners. And before the bishop sailed away the next day, they could recite the prayer with no mistakes.

The bishop was proud.

On the return trip the bishop''s ship drew near the island again. When the island came into view, the bishop came to the deck and recalled with pleasure the men he had taught and resolved to go see them again. As he was thinking, a light appeared on the horizon near the island. It seemed to be getting nearer. As the bishop gazed in wonder he realized the three fishermen were walking toward him on the water. Soon all the passengers and crew were on the deck to see the sight.

When they were within speaking distance, the fishermen cried out, "Bishop, we come hurry to meet you."

"What is it you want?" asked the stunned bishop.

"We are so sorry. We forget lovely prayer. We say, `Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be your name...'' and then we forget. Please tell us prayer again."

The bishop was humbled. "Go back to your homes, my friends, and when you pray say, `We are three, you are three, have mercy on us.''" (2)

Those three brothers lived out in their personal lives everything that I have tried to share about the power of encouragement in the life of a believer and as that believer lives out the faith in a CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY. Those three brothers focused on what they could be in Christ rather than what they were not. They looked for possibilities rather than problems. When these three brothers were in the presence of God, JOY DANCED IN THE AIR. The brothers had unity because they looked for the common ground rather than the battlefield. The brothers knew that when the three thought as one they had rid themselves of that deadly virus called "selfishness." May we join our hearts in prayer today and always and raise each other into the presence of Christ. There always is encouragement for the sacred journey when we do so.

Dynamic Preaching, The Ritz Collection, by Eric Ritz