Philippians 2:1-11 · Imitating Christ’s Humility
Working Out Our Salvation
Philippians 2:1-11
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
Loading...

William Muil describes a time he visited one of those old colonial houses up in New England.  The house still retained the furniture and the atmosphere of the 18th Century.  The guide was the last descendent of the original owner of the house.  As Muil was walking through the house, he noticed a beautiful old rifle over the fireplace, and reached up to examine it.  The old lady pulled his arm down and said, “Please don’t touch it, it’s loaded and it may go off.”  Then she explained, “My great, great grandfather loaded that gun and placed it there against the day when he might strike a blow for the freedom of the colonies.”  William Muil asked, “Do you mean he died before the revolution?”  “No,” she said, “he lived to a ripe old age and died in 1817, but he was never able to generate much enthusiasm for General Washington’s rebellion.”  That’s so like us, I think, we’re ready for great things to happen in our lives, but when life doesn’t arrange those things according to our specifications and our expectations, they pass us right by.  That old freedom fighter didn’t like George Washington’s rag tag army, just a bunch of farmers.  What chance had they against the disciplined, beautifully uniformed army of the British Empire?  So he waited for the real army to be organized.  And when he discovered that the real army had already come, the only one he was going to get, it was too late.  The war was already over.  He missed his chance, because life didn’t arrange itself according to his specification.  Now that’s the way it is with most of us, most of the time, I’m afraid. 

We miss so much of life, especially so much of what the Lord would give us, or we fail in the ministry to which he calls us, because the offer and the call does not come to us according to our specification.  More to the point, as it relates to our Christian life, we do not make being Christian, daily, a priority.  Being and doing as Christ would have us be and do is peripheral, not primary.  Work at your salvation with fear and trembling, Paul said in our scripture lesson.  Would this have been a shocking for the Philippians?  It is to us.  Those to whom Paul was writing were already Christian.  What does this mean?  Work out your salvation with fear and trembling?  The word salvation comes from the same Latin root as the word salve, an ointment for healing.  To be saved is to be made whole.  In the Greek, the word means not only salvation, but preservation.  And while there is a beginning point of our salvation experience, the point of our repentance and justification, the time of our faith commitment to Jesus Christ, this is only the beginning.  If it ends there, it ends.  And unfortunately, that’s the case with altogether too many of us.  We are to work out our salvation - to grow in maturity, to grow up into the full measure of the statue of Christ.  Now Paul does not mean for this section of scripture which I have read to be his only dissertation of how we are to work out our salvation.  In truth, almost everything Paul wrote was to that end.  In this passage, however, there are some signal clues from us.  At least some things around which we can build and order our life, as we seek to work out our salvation in fear and trembling.  The clues are in two words – obedience and abandonment.

The first is a call to obedience.  Work out your salvation.  Salvation involves faith.  Listen to Paul – for by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your own doing, it is the work of God.  Ephesians 2:8.  Listen to Peter – as the outcome of your faith, you obtain the salvation of your soul.  I Peter 1:9.  The central message of the New Testament is that we are saved only by the grace of God – not by anything we do.  Not by anything that we are – we are saved only by the grade of God - that grace is unmerited, undeserved, unlimited.  And it’s the unmerited, undeserved, unlimited love of God freely given.  And the ultimate expression of it is in the death of his son Jesus Christ, as the expiation of, the satisfaction for, our sins.  One of the most ancient of all creeds says, for us men and our salvation, Jesus died.  What God in and through Jesus Christ has done for all of us, can be appropriated by any one of us, only by faith.  How crucial it is then, that we understand what faith is all about.  Faith is not a head trip.  It is not believing with the mind.  It has to do with our wills and with our emotions. 

Two words will help us get the meaning of faith.  The first word is trust.  This is the primary meaning of faith.  Trust.  For faith is not just a passive, grateful reception of God’s mercy, rather it is an active entrustment of ourselves to that mercy, and into the hands of God.  Faith is a personal decision and commitment.  Trust is the best understanding of it, because trust is both a verb and a noun.  We have trust, we also can trust someone.  Faith as a word does not have a verb form.  You can’t say, I faith you.  we are justified, by trust, in Jesus Christ.  That is, not just by believing, but by entrusting ourselves to him. 

And that brings us to the second word which helps us understand the meaning of faith – obedience.  In Romans 1:8, Paul says, “Your faith is proclaimed throughout the whole world.”  And in that same letter, Romans 16:19, he said, “Your obedience is known throughout the world.”  And he’s clearly talking about the same thing.  In Romans 1:5, he puts the two things together – the obedience of faith.  So to trust Christ, to entrust our lives to him, is to be obedient.  And this is the first signal clue for our working out our salvation with fear and trembling – obedience.  Let’s make it clear with a contemporary story.

You remember, Doag Homershoals, the first UN Secretary General, he was a rare example of a modern Christian mystic who was also a man of the world.  While living his busy, productive life, he bore an eloquent witness and a challenging word to the meaning of obedience.  “I don’t know who or what put the question,” he said on one occasion, “I don’t even know when it was put, I don’t even remember answering, but at some moment I did answer, yes, to someone.  And from that hour, I was certain that life was meaningful for me, and that therefore my life, in self-surrender, has a goal.”  That statement not only witnesses to obedience but to servanthood.  And the who, the who whom always puts the question, is God. 

And that brings us to the most radical of our two words – abandonment.  Obedience is essential for working out our salvation with fear and trembling.  But for Paul there was a degree of obedience that deserves special note, and that’s abandonment.  The extravagance of Paul’s obedience is almost shocking.  Look at verse 17 in that chapter – I am being poured out as a drink offering on the sacrifice and service of your faith.  My biggest problem, and this is confession time –my biggest problem, not only as it relates to how I express my obedience to Christ, but in my basic approach to life, is an unwillingness to give up control.  Can you identify with that?  Most of us keep a tight grip on the controls of our lives.  In fact, most of our knuckles are white, because we grip those controls so tightly.  To abandon myself in faith to Christ, is hard even to talk about, much less to do.  When I press myself, I have to confess, that I can’t believe my life is going to be good unless I control it – unless I make the plans and dream the dreams, and then work for the fulfillment of those dreams.  And I don’t believe I’m alone in that.  And I believe that’s the great source of our human misery.  Everybody not only tries to control their own life, but they want to have three or four more people around them that they can control as well.  Only in trusting Christ can we come to a point of abandonment, a willingness to pour out our lives, believing that we don’t need to, nor can we control the future.  The future belongs to God. 

Now it’s easy to miss another point Paul is making as he talks about abandonment.  We pour out our lives as a drink offering, as a sacrifice for the sake of others.  Jewish, as well as pagan, sacrifices were normally accompanied by a libation of wine.  Priests not only often times poured a libation of wine, but also a libation of blood on the altar, and you can read about that in Kings and Jude and Hosea.  Though such literal priesthood and sacrifice were replaced by a once-and-for-all offering of Jesus Christ, Paul found the metaphor meaningful.  As an apostle of the gentiles, Paul saw himself as the priest presenting to God these gentiles as an acceptable offering.  He also saw himself as an offering, a sacrifice on behalf of others.  And we need to recover that dimension of the priesthood of all believers.  The willingness to offer ourselves, to abandon ourselves in sacrificial ministry to others, and that’s a big part of what Holy Communion is all about.  Broken bread and poured our wine – life and energy spent for the sake of others. 

Let me close now, not on a somber note, but one of hope and joy, and rejoicing.  “Even though I am in prison,” Paul says there in verses 17 and 18, “even though I’m imprisoned, being poured out as a sacrifice, I am glad and rejoice with you all, and you also are to be glad and rejoice with me.”  Now this was a recurring theme of Paul, rejoicing.  And it’s an essential for our working out our salvation.  Therefore, the phrase “in fear and trembling” does not mean nervous apprehension with which some would say we are to await the last judgment.  The word translated “fear” does not here denote fright or dismay or alarm in the face of danger or lose.  As often is true in the New Testament, it denotes the awe that persons experience in the presence of God.  With trembling wonder, with awe – we are to recognize God’s presence, in all circumstances, even in pain, in suffering, in loss, in death, in prison, in uncertainty, in perplexity.  The salvation process is going on for those who love and trust the Lord.  So rejoicing is the order of the day.  Words like obedience and discipline and abandonment fall heavy on our ears, unless we keep the ears of our hearts tuned to Christ’s words.  Listen to him as he uses the beautiful experience of a mother giving birth to a baby – the suffering of that, but the joy that comes.  Listen to him as he writes in John’s Gospel – when a woman is in travail, she has sorrow because her hour has come, but when she is delivered of the child, she no longer remembers the anguish, for the joy that a child is born into the world.  So you have sorrow now, but I will see you again and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take that joy from you. 

I close with this.  A few years ago, I did a filmed conversation which was across the church and continues to be used in study groups and that sort of thing, a filmed conversation with Archbishop Anthony Blume, the Russian orthodox, who has written so helpfully about a life of prayer.  When I questioned Anthony Blume about ordinary persons, like you and me, living the contemplative life of prayer in the every day world, he used an image he said he had gotten from EvelynUnderhill.  And this is a marvelous picture of joyful obedience and abandonment.  He said a Christian should be like a sheepdog.  When the shepherd wants the dog to do something, the dog lies down at the shepherd’s feet, looks intently into the shepherd’s eyes and listens without budging until he has understood clearly the mind of his master.  Then he jumps to his feet, runs out to do it, and the third characteristic, which is no less important, at no moment does the dog cease wagging its tail.  Isn’t that beautiful?  What we have here on this communion table is the ultimate symbol of obedience and abandonment.  The essentials for working out our salvation.  We have heard the shepherd’s words.  Come unto me.  Go into all the world.  So we come to his table with joy.     
Maxie Dunnam, by Maxie Dunnam