Philippians 3:1-11 · No Confidence in the Flesh
When We Don't Know God
Philippians 3:1-11
Sermon
by King Duncan
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In one of his books, writer Bruce Wilkinson reminds us of the story of the late Howard Hughes. Wilkinson says that, if there was one word that would describe Hughes’ ambition, it was the word more. “He wanted more money, so he invested his enormous inheritance and increased it in just a few years to a billion dollars. He wanted more fame, so he went to Hollywood and became a filmmaker and a star. He wanted more sensual pleasure, so he used his fabulous wealth to buy women and any form of sensual pleasure he desired. He wanted to experience more excitement, so he designed, built, and piloted the fastest aircraft of his time.

“Hughes could dream of anything money could buy and get it. He firmly believed that more would make him happy.” But, of course, it did not. In Wilkinson’s words, Hughes confused the pleasure of having more for oneself for the greater joy of giving oneself to something bigger than oneself. “His Dream,” says Bruce Wilkinson, “was not significant enough to bring meaning to his life.”

And so, in his old age, Hughes became withdrawn. News reports portray him at the end of his life as drug addicted, emaciated and unkempt with decaying teeth and long, twisted fingernails. “But until his death he held onto his destructive dream that more possessions would bring more fulfillment.” (1) His misguided quest for more made him one of the most pitiable men on earth.

Let me tell you about another man in search of more. His name was Saul of Tarsus. Does anybody remember him? Of course you do. Saul of Tarsus became St. Paul the Apostle, but before his conversion on the road to Damascus, he also was in quest of more. In his case, his quest was more religion.

Listen to his words in our lesson for today: “If anyone else thinks he has reasons to put confidence in the flesh, I have more: circumcised on the eighth day, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews; in regard to the law, a Pharisee; as for zeal, persecuting the church; as for legalistic righteousness, faultless . . .”

Before his conversion, Saul was the epitome of religiosity. “If anyone else thinks he has reasons to put confidence in the flesh,” he writes, “I have more . . .” Then he goes on to list his superlative religious qualifications: Circumcised on the eighth day as a part of the people of Israel, the most religious people on earth, God’s own people. And of the Israelites Paul was the most religious of the religious. In his own words, “a Hebrew of Hebrews; in regard to the law, a Pharisee; as for zeal, persecuting the church; as for legalistic righteousness, faultless.” Saul was super-religious even to the point of persecuting early Christians. Do super-religious people ever persecute people who don’t think as they think? Boy, do they! Saul was super-religious. But it is clear, something important, indeed something critical, was missing from his life.

Saul sounds somewhat like John Wesley, the founder of the Methodists, in his early years. Following his studies at Oxford, Wesley, the son of an Anglican pastor, became a pastor himself. He was a rigorous student, careful in his orthodoxy. He lived a devout life, a life of good works. He and his friends visited prisons, provided slum children with food, clothes, even an education. They observed Saturday as the Sabbath as well as Sunday. They gave alms, studied diligently and fasted regularly. At Oxford they were known as the Holy Club. Then, as if that were not enough, Wesley became a missionary to save the heathen in Georgia. [This was 200 years ago.]

But John Wesley wondered inwardly if anyone would ever save him. At this point in his life he was super religious and smugly self-righteous, but deep in his heart he knew something was missing from his life too. At a place called Aldersgate, however, Wesley felt his heart “strangely warmed” and he began to trust not his diligent good works but Christ alone for his salvation.

As for Saul of Tarsus, he met Christ on the road to Damascus, but he also suddenly realized that all of his religiosity meant nothing. Later he would write in our lesson for today, “I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ the righteousness that comes from God and is by faith. I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of sharing in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead.”

Saul’s experience leads us to two critical questions: first, what is the difference between being religious and knowing God. And secondly, how can we know God today? Obviously, these are huge questions to address in one brief message, but let’s go with them as far as we are able.

First of all, what is the difference between being religious and knowing God? We ask this only because of the experience of devout believers like St. Paul and John Wesley and many, many other devoted saints down through the ages who came to a point in their lives when they realized that, in the words of Isaiah, their religion and their righteousness were like filthy garments (Isaiah 64:6).

When Dr. Jack McKinney was pastor of First Baptist Church of Bethesda, Maryland, he preached a sermon on our lesson for the day in which he paraphrased Paul’s words. He saw a parallel in his own life and used contemporary terminology. He interpreted Paul’s word like this:

“If anyone thinks they have a birthright in the church, let him come talk to me. I was born in the church. Cradle roll from day one. I wasn’t a week old when I attended my first church potluck . . . I memorized the Ten Commandments when I was six. I memorized the Beatitudes when I was seven. I memorized the Sermon on the Mount when I was ten. I not only knew the rules at an early age, I kept them. No drinking, no chewing, no dancing. I had perfect Sunday school attendance for seventeen straight years, and it would have been longer if the doctor hadn’t insisted that the flu was not something I needed to share with my sisters and brothers in Christ.

“(But) I woke up one day and realized that . . . my strict adherence to the rules meant little to me. I was always striving to be good, to be the best, to be righteous, but I was constantly frustrated with my failures . . . Everything that I have tried to do in my life to make God like me now seems so worthless. I was striving to will myself into being a person worthy of God’s love and all the while God was trying to tell me that I was already loved.

“I’ve thrown away the rulebook and stopped keeping count of my wins and losses as a Christian. I’m trying to live in a free, loving relationship with Christ my Lord, who calls me to follow him, not just a set of commandments . . .” (2)

Dr. McKinney’s discovery was an honest one. When you seek to be religious, you have a tendency to focus on rituals, rules and regulations, not upon the more pressing business of your relationship with your neighbor and your relationship with God. Rituals, rules and regulations can be helpful in living out your faith, but they can also become an idol in themselves, so that they actually cause you to despise your neighbor and to ignore the prompting of God toward a deeper sense of God’s presence.

Let me give you a concrete example of this, though this may burn just a little.

In his book The Call, Os Guinness tells a story about Dr. Arthur Burns, the former chair of the Federal Reserve Board. Although he was Jewish, Dr. Burns agreed to join a White House Bible Study. Since he was Jewish, the other members of the study were afraid to ask him to pray at the end of their time together.

One day they had a guest leader who didn’t know about this unwritten rule. He asked Dr. Burns to pray. To everyone’s surprise, Arthur Burns stood up and began to pray, “O God, may the day come when all Muslims will come to know Jesus and when all Jews will come to know Jesus, and when all Christians will come to know Jesus.” (3) Oooo, that hurts, doesn’t it? But it is true. There are many Christians who do not know Jesus.

Would it surprise you if I said that there have been many super-religious people who have done terrible damage in our world? Think Inquisition. Think Salem witch trials. Think 9-11. How do you know if you know God? Just being religious is not enough. The very best place to hide from God is religion, especially religious fanaticism. So, how do you know? Here is the best answer I can give you: Are you trying your best to live like Jesus? The formula is much maligned WWJD? What would Jesus do? but we have no other reliable guide.

What is the best guard against doing horrible things in the name of Jesus? Focus on his character. Can you imagine Jesus condemning someone else because they look different, or talk different, or act different, or even believe different from how you believe? The only times I can think of that he outwardly condemned anyone were his reaction to the moneychangers in the temple who were taking advantage of people in the name of God and his reaction to many of the super-religious Pharisees who professed love for God, but looked down on others.

We sing around the campfire, “They will know we are Christians by our love.” Are you Christ-like in how you live your life?

Of course, there were other components to Christ’s character besides compassion for the least and the lost. There was Christ’s dependence on prayer and his attendance in the synagogue as well as his knowledge of the scriptures. And, of course, his willingness to lay down his life as a sacrifice for all. WWJD covers a lot of territory. However, if there is anything in your life that you cannot imagine being part of Christ’s life, then no matter how much scripture you have memorized, how faithful your attendance in church, how sincere your prayer life, probably you do not know God. Particularly, if your heart is filled with hatred and resentment, there is probably not much room there for Christ.

This brings us to our second question: how can you and I come to know God today? And the answer is simple just say “yes” to God. That’s it. There is nothing else you need do. Indeed, that is nothing else you CAN do! Just say yes.

If you want to read your Bible, that’s well and good. If you want to get involved in acts of social justice, that’s wonderful. If you want to spend hours on your knees, terrific. If you want to make a gift of $100,000 to the church, praise the Lord! [I thought I would just throw that in.] All these are time-honored ways of showing that you love God. But they are not prerequisite to knowing God. Knowing God is simply a matter of saying yes.

Faith is a gift. To know God is simply to say yes to God. God is already running down the driveway, moving through the briars and the brambles of the wilderness, knocking at the door. Just say yes. Pray, “Lord Jesus, come into my life and make me like you.” Isn’t that what St. Paul is seeking? He writes, “What is more, I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ the righteousness that comes from God and is by faith. I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of sharing in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead.”

Paul wants to be like Jesus, even to the point of suffering like Jesus. And he did suffer for his faith. Most of us will not have that privilege. It amuses me to hear affluent, middle-class American church-goers saying with great piety, “Oh, yes, if you follow Jesus, you will be persecuted.” How we cheapen the sufferings of the saints when we say that. Oh, you mean you might not get invited to a neighbor’s party because they’re worried you will embarrass them with your opinions? That’s persecution? Your neighbors might speak critically of you? The truth of the matter is that modern day Christians are more apt to persecute than to be persecuted. That’s because we do not know Jesus.

How can you and I come to know God today? Just say yes to Him. Then seek to live as Jesus lived.

Some of you are familiar with a delightful song from the 1970s, the chorus of which goes like this, “To see thee more clearly, love thee more dearly, follow thee more nearly day by day.”

The song is from the musical, Godspell. In the musical, which is based upon the Gospel of Matthew, the cast acts out the parable of the unforgiving servant. To refresh your memory, a servant owes an enormous debt to his master. The master forgives the debt. However, a much smaller debt is owed to this servant by a fellow servant. The servant who has been forgiven this enormous debt by his master refuses, however, to forgive the much smaller debt owed him by his fellow servant (Matthew 18:23-35).

After Jesus explains that his followers must forgive each other from their hearts, the cast sings a beautiful prayer that asks God for three things: “To see thee more clearly, love thee more dearly, follow thee more nearly day by day.” (4)

Is that your prayer?

Do you know God or are you just religious? What’s the difference? Is your faith about following rules and regulations or is it about relationships relationships with your family, friends and all God’s children, as well as God Himself? Do you want to know God better? Do you want to see God more clearly, love God more dearly, follow God more nearly day by day? Simply say “yes” to God. Invite Christ to take up residence in your life and to fill you with his love. Soon you will know that you know God . . . for the grace of God will be evident in your life.


1. Bruce and Darlene Marie Wilkinson, The Dream Giver For Parents (Sisters, OR: Multonomah, 2004), pp. 45-46.

2. Sermon posted on PRCL, 10/3/1999. Cited by Dr. Mickey Anders, http://www.mickeyanders.com/Sermons/Sermon20010325.html.

3. The Rev. Dr. M. Craig Barnes, http://day1.org/669-could_you_be_wrong_about_god.

4. Godspell, Stephen Schwartz, 1973. Cited in Robert Schnase, Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations (Kindle Edition).

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching First Quarter 2013, by King Duncan