Philippians
chapter 3
Mature Christians seek righteousness by faith and not
righteousness through a series of works.
Verse one begins with a warning. Paul says, finally, my
brethren, rejoice in the Lord. To write the same things
again is no trouble to me, and it is a safeguard for you.
Paul imparts a warning but he prefaces this with an
exhortation to rejoice in the Lord. Rejoicing should be the
default reaction of the Christian, no matter what the
condition or situation he or she finds themself in.
His warning will not be about something new.
It addresses an ongoing concern in that congregation that he
has probably warned them about in the past.
Now, he assures them that he is not troubled by repeating
this warning, and assures them that in doing so, he's
guarding their souls from the error that is being taught or
trying to be taught by false teachers that were creeping
into the church in order to cause trouble. By telling them
this over and over, he is emphasizing the urgency of it.
The false teachers were referred to as Judaizers.
They promoted the idea that you had to become a Jew and be
circumcised before you could become a Christian.
They were adding something to the Gospel.
Verse two, he says,
beware of the dogs. Beware of the
evil workers, beware of the false circumcision.
Paul goes directly to the core of the matter.
To refer to someone as a dog was a serious insult.
Dogs in those days were not kept as pets.
They wandered about aimlessly, usually in packs, and they
acted mainly as scavengers.
It was a term that the Jews used to denigrate Gentiles.
These Judaizers were workers, but their efforts and their
activities were evil. Their efforts had a destructive
result to Christians. And the destructive result was that
faithful Christians were falling away from Christ.
Galatians 5:4-6 “You have been severed from Christ, you
who are seeking to be justified by law; you have fallen from
grace. 5 For we through the Spirit, by faith, are waiting
for the hope of righteousness. 6 For in Christ Jesus neither
circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything, but faith
working through love.”
The focus of the Judaizer’s teaching was circumcision, which
they insisted was necessary for salvation.
They taught Christianity was part of Judaism.
And if a Gentile wanted to become a Christian, he had to
first submit to Jewish regulations, which included food laws
and other requirements.
The main demand was circumcision.
Their thinking was if one wants to become a Christian he
should become a Jew first and then he can be a Christian.
Circumcision was an ancient practice among the Jews
beginning with Abraham. It signified that the individual
was included in the covenant relationship
between God and the Jewish people.
The physical circumcision performed on the body was a sign
of one's willingness to obey God and be one of His chosen
people.
Now God's people are regenerated by God's Holy Spirit from
within. Physical circumcision is no longer needed for
religious purposes. Of course, it continues to this day for
health purposes, but not for religious purposes.
In the Old Testament, the prophets spoke of what God really
wanted.
Deuteronomy 10:16
16
Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and
be no more stiffnecked.
Deuteronomy 30:6-7
6 "Moreover the Lord your God will circumcise your heart and
the heart of your descendants, to love the Lord your God
with all your heart and with all your soul, so that you may
live.
Jeremiah 4:4
4 "Circumcise yourselves to the Lord
And remove the foreskins of your heart,
It’s the circumcision of the heart that is important today.
Paul told the Romans that physical circumcision no longer
had any spiritual benefits.
Rom 2:29 “But he is a Jew who is one inwardly; and
circumcision is that which is of the heart, by the Spirit,
not by the letter; and his praise is not from men, but from
God.”
1 Corinthians 7:18-20
Has anyone been called in uncircumcision? He is not to be
circumcised. 19 Circumcision is nothing, and uncircumcision
is nothing, but what matters is the keeping of the
commandments of God.
Paul spoke about circumcision in different epistles because
different churches were having problems with this.
In the book of Colossians, Paul explains the relationship
between Christian baptism and Jewish circumcision.
Colossians 2:8-14 “See to it that no one takes you
captive through philosophy and empty deception, according to
the tradition of men, according to the elementary principles
of the world, rather than according to Christ. 9 For in Him
all the fullness of Deity dwells in bodily form, 10 and in
Him you have been made complete, and He is the head over all
rule and authority; 11 and in Him you were also circumcised
with a circumcision made without hands, in the removal of
the body of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ; 12
having been buried with Him in baptism, in which you were
also raised up with Him through faith in the working of God,
who raised Him from the dead. 13 When you were dead in your
transgressions and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He made
you alive together with Him, having forgiven us all our
transgressions, “
The Colossians also were having problems with Judaizers
teaching The necessity of circumcision for Gentile converts.
Note in verse 11 and 12, Paul explains the two features of
Christian baptism and its relationship with circumcision.
Number one, that through baptism, Christ Himself performs a
spiritual circumcision on the believer.
And number two, what is removed in baptism is not only a
small symbolic piece of flesh, as in physical circumcision,
but He removes the entire body of sin.
So, our sins are all completely forgiven at the moment of
our baptism. See Acts 2:38
This is why physical circumcision is not required.
Physical circumcision is inferior. It is only a preview.
It doesn't serve to remove sin, never did.
It doesn't regenerate the sinner.
Physical circumcision is only relevant now for health
reasons, period.
Philippians 3:3, “for we are the true circumcision, who
worship in the Spirit of God and glory in Christ Jesus and
put no confidence in the flesh”
Paul uses this verse to summarize and compare the Judaizers
and what they're doing with their false teaching and the
status Christians have in Christ.
He lists these attributes of himself and the church that he
planted in Philippi.
He tells them, first of all, they are the true circumcision.
There is a circumcision out there being taught that is a
false circumcision.
Christians are the true circumcision. He says, we are the
substance, not the shadow or the preview.
Physical circumcision was just the preview of what was to
come. Christians are the fulfillment of what
the physical circumcision of the Old Testament pointed to.
From a religious and theological perspective, we are the
legitimate children of God. Not in any way inferior to Jews
or Jewish Christians.
This is what the Judaizers were suggesting with their
requirement to be circumcised in order to become a
Christian.
The Judaizers were trying to set up a caste system where the
original Jewish Christians were better because they were
original. They believed the Gentile newcomers had to be
circumcised in order to be legitimate Christians.
Paul is teaching them they are the true circumcision without
any observance whatsoever of Jewish law.
The third attribute that Paul and the Christians at Philippi
share is they are truly saved by faith and not works of the
Old Law or the flesh. Paul here does not only refer to the
initial Gospel message that the lost sinners is initially
saved through his faith in Christ as the divine Son of God
and this faith expressed in repentance and baptism.
His readers are quite familiar with this, having all
experienced this at their point of conversion. Paul's
point here is how one remains saved between the initial
conversion and the time of one's death.
The Judaizers were not only promoting circumcision to those
Gentiles who had not yet confessed Christ or had been
baptized. They were also insisting that Gentiles who were
already Christians had to submit to circumcision in order to
guarantee their salvation.
That was the hook. Are you really saved? Really, are
you sure of Heaven? Have you been circumcised?
Because let's be sure. This was the pitch.
Paul claims that we are not only saved by faith when we
first become Christians, but we preserve that salvation
throughout our lives by continuing to believe and obey
Jesus. Through faith and obedience, we manifest our trust
in Jesus to keep us saved and preserve our hope of eternal
life.
Between the time of baptism and the time Jesus comes or you
die often times there is a lot of living that goes on. And
there's a lot of mistakes that happen. There's a lot of sin
that happens. There's a lot of failure that takes place.
T he
Judaizer comes along building up doubt in the mind of the
Christian. A Christian who realizes he or she is not
perfect might really want to hear a message of guaranteed
salvation. Something physical they can do to make
absolutely sure they have covered all the bases.
The idea of circumcision in the Old Testament was that when
a Jewish man bathed or whatever, he would always be aware of
his relationship with God because it had been carved into
his body. And that was a little bit appealing to these
Gentile Christians because they might have felt a little bit
inferior to the Jewish Christians. The Judaizers used this
to sell their ideas on Circumcision. It would serve as a
physical visual reminder of their relationship with God.
Such a thing could be quite enticing if you were a little
shaky in your faith. If you weren't sure. Or if you weren't
very mature in your Christian growth. Paul says our
confidence does not rest in what the flesh does.
Whether that be circumcision or other works of the Law. The
confidence of the mature Christian rests with Christ and
what He has done for us. He died to pay the just debt
to God for all our sins.
Philippians 3:4
although I myself might have confidence even in the flesh.
If anyone else has a mind to put confidence in the flesh, I
far more: 5 circumcised the eighth day, of the nation of
Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews; as to
the Law, a Pharisee; 6 as to zeal, a persecutor of the
church; as to the righteousness which is in the Law, found
blameless.
The objective of the Judaizers was to bring the Gentiles
under the Law,
Paul uses himself as an example of one who was formerly
under the Law. He under the Law to a degree that neither
the false teachers or their followers could ever match.
Paul lists six areas where he excelled. If one were to be
measured by the Law.
First, circumcision. Unlike some of the Judaizers or their
followers who were circumcised as converts or as adults,
which was the case for the Gentile Christians who were being
seduced by the false teachers, Paul says he was circumcised
on the eighth day after his birth according to the Law.
The second thing he mentions was his Jewish birthright. He
wasn't a convert to Judaism. He was a Jew.
Third thing he mentioned was the tribe he was born from.
He traced his lineage to one of the two tribes that made up
the southern kingdom of Judah.
The 10 northern tribes, which was the kingdom of Israel were
destroyed They were scattered. They were done in 722 BC.
The southern kingdom remained intact. And even though it was
attacked and exiled in Babylon in 589 BC, a remnant
eventually returned to rebuild the city of Jerusalem and
repopulate the land. Being from the southern kingdom
was a mark of pride. Paul was as a true Jew with an
unbroken historical lineage. He wasn't just any Jew. Paul’s
people came from the southern kingdom through which the
Messiah arrived. He was from one of the two remnant tribes.
He says he was a Hebrew of Hebrews. This refers to the fact
that Paul was a pure blooded Jew. There were no marriages
with non-Jews on either side of his family, all the way back
to his ancestor, Benjamin.
He says he was a Pharisee. The word Pharisee means to
separate. A separate one. There was a time where the
Pharisees were actually the heroes. We always see them as
the bad guys when we read the New Testament. During the
Maccabean Revolt and the intertestamental period,
between Malachi and Matthew, the Pharisees became the heroes
of the people because they were so zealous for God's Word.
They protected the Word from the influence of outsiders that
came in.
The Greek influence that spread throughout the land and
threatened to pollute the Word with its ideas was resisted.
The Pharisees were the protectors of the Word. They started
out well and were highly respected among the Jews. But over
time they were adding things to the word.
Paul says he was a Pharisee. According to the Law, it was
the highest position in society, except for priests. But
priests were decided by family lineage. Pharisees were
lawyers who taught and interpreted the Law. They were the
strictest and most conservative religious group within
Judaism.
Paul was a persecutor of the church. If you were to measure
zeal for the Law, then the most enthusiastic and extreme of
the already extreme Pharisee was Saul. Saul of Tarsus who
actually hunted down and imprisoned other Jews he believed
were violating the Law by following Jesus Christ.
Paul is comparing his credentials as one who is zealous for
the Law and its application to the Judaizers who are
preaching circumcision. Paul is comparing his
credentials to their credentials. The implication is that in
such a comparison, he is by far more pure as a Jew and more
zealous for the Law than they are or could ever be.
This is an important point to establish. before he speaks
of his transformation as a Christian in following sections,
he is laying down the fact that nobody within the Jewish
Christian community is more knowledgeable and more qualified
to speak on this matter than himself.
In effect he is saying if anyone knows what they are talking
about it’s him. There are none among the Judaizers more
qualified to speak on this subject than him. There are none
who know more about than him.
This is a prelude to the next section of his letter where
he’s going to explain what happened to him to transform him
from this zealous Pharisee into the apostle that he is
today.
In order to expose the false teaching and legitimacy of
these Judaizers, Paul compares their credentials according
to the Law to his own. Now he will demonstrate how, in his
life, he discarded these so-called privileges given to him
by the Law for the superior gifts that he has received by
faith in Jesus Christ. Paul is trying to make them
understand they have something better than what the
Judaizers are offering.
Satan is always promoting a better way. He claims to have a
better way to make you happy. Eat this, drink that, smoke
this, pop this pill, Be involved in this sex act. He
offers a more attractive way to make you happy.
It's nothing new. It's as old as the Garden of Eden.
For Eve, what was the better way? Well, she'd have a
better life. She'd have knowledge, she'd have improved
spiritual life if she ate the fruit. Satan convinced
her there was no need for obedience.
What was the better way that Satan offered Jesus? All
the kingdoms of the earth are Yours if You worship me.
No need for the cross.
Satan offered an easier
way.
And in Philippians, what was his better way? The Law
and circumcision. You'll have a physical reminder of your
salvation. It's a much better way than simply depending by
faith. You can't see Jesus. You can't see the
benefits. We'll give you something that you can see, that
you can be sure of. No need to walk by faith. We'll
give you something that enables you to walk by sight. Much
better to walk by sight than by faith. Satan will
always be offering us what appears to be a better, easier
way, even to be saved.
Philippians teaches us to know and understand and maintain
our salvation by faith, even when Satan offers us a more
attractive way.
Phil 3:7-11
"But whatever things were gain to me, those things I have
counted as loss for the sake of Christ. 8 More than that, I
count all things to be loss in view of the surpassing value
of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered
the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish so that I
may gain Christ, 9 and may be found in Him, not having a
righteousness of my own derived from the Law, but that which
is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which comes
from God on the basis of faith, 10 that I may know Him and
the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His
sufferings, being conformed to His death; 11 in order that I
may attain to the resurrection from the dead.
In the next section Paul's going to do three things. One,
he's going to proclaim the superiority of God's method of
saving people through Christ. He uses himself as an example
of one who had a reason to boast in the flesh. If anyone
out there could boast about being a Jew, it was certainly
Paul and yet he discarded of all of these seeming advantages
in order to follow Christ.
Secondly he's going to explain what his and by implication
every Christian's goal in life should be.
Thirdly he's going to use himself a second time as an
example of righteous living and warn those who are not
following this particular example that he's going to give
them.
Paul uses this section to make the argument that
righteousness comes by faith. He's going to make the
argument that righteousness comes by faith and it produces
righteous living which is the true mark of Christian or
spiritual maturity.
What was at stake here was of supreme importance and that
is in the manner in which a soul is saved and preserved for
eternal life with God in heaven. The Judaizers were
introducing a system of salvation that would not work. 1500
years of Jewish history had demonstrated that the attempt to
use the law as a tool to create righteousness in a man or
woman did not work.
Rule keeping, obedience to the Law, this was not the way to
become acceptable before God. Not because God didn't want
that but because human beings couldn't keep the law
perfectly. And when they failed, the law offered no
permanent remedy. Using a system where adherence to
rule of law to make someone acceptable to God never
succeeded for two reasons.
First of all, human beings were incapable of keeping the Law
perfectly and consistently. Paul summarizes this
reality in Romans 3:23 when he says, for all have sinned and
fall short of the glory of God. In Galatians, He says as it
is written, there is none righteous Not even one. There is
none who understands, there is none who seeks for God.
Human beings couldn't keep the law. If they could, that
would be an acceptable way to become righteous. But they
could not and the law also contained no permanent remedy or
forgiveness for sin. The Law was given to reveal sin and
its consequences. It could not make people perfect.
It wasn't given to create righteousness in man, it was given
to reveal sin and the punishment for sin.
Going back to Romans, Paul says now we know that whatever
the Law says, it speaks to those who are under the Law, so
that every mouth may be closed and all the world may become
accountable to God because by the works of the Law (of
Moses), no flesh will be justified in His sight. No human
being will become acceptable, righteous in His sight for
through the Law comes the knowledge of sin. The purpose for
the Law was to show you that you're a sinner,
In
answering the Judaizers, Paul with his own experience of one
who attempted to achieve righteousness using this system,
he's saying, I know what I'm talking about concerning
becoming acceptable to God using this system. Paul is
saying, “I know what I'm talking about. I tried doing it my
whole life.”
So his checklist of religious qualifications as a zealous
Pharisee, going all out to destroy the church was a badge
that he wore proudly. He believed sincerely that he was
acceptable and righteous before God because of killing and
putting in prison those following another religion.
Paul now describes the transformation that took place in his
life brought about by faith in Jesus Christ. In verse 7 Paul
says, “But whatever things were gain to me, what things?
Well , I was a Jew, I was a Hebrew of Hebrews, I was a
Pharisee, whatever things were gain to me, those things I
have counted as loss for the sake of Christ. The
former status he described which the Judaizers would
consider as advantages in the pursuit of salvation, Paul now
completely rejects and considers them as lost or damaged.
What Paul once thought were advantages in obtaining
righteousness were in truth disadvantages when considering
salvation through a system that Christ has established.
They didn't really help him as he once thought. They in
fact, hindered him from obtaining the righteousness he
desired. The harder Paul tried with the Law, the
further he got away from his goal.
Verse 8, “more than that I count all things to be loss in
view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord
for whom I have suffered the loss of all things and count
them but rubbish so that I may gain Christ"
Paul amplifies his statement by declaring that when weighed
against the knowledge of Jesus Christ, not just the
knowledge of his ministry and his teaching, but the
knowledge of Jesus Christ himself. Paul had been called
directly by Jesus. In Acts chapter nine we learn where and
he was encouraged and comforted directly by Jesus Himself.
Acts 18:9-10, “And the Lord said to Paul in the night by
a vision, "Do not be afraid any longer, but go on speaking
and do not be silent; 10 for I am with you, and no man will
attack you in order to harm you, for I have many people in
this city."
Paul's knowledge of both the teachings and the person of
Christ surpass the worth of what he considered valuable
before. His advantages as a prominent Jewish Pharisee and
the sum of what he thought he knew about God and salvation
and righteousness was not worth a thing. His knowledge
of Christ has reduced the value of these former things to
the point of rubbish, nothing, worthless. He adds that even
the things he has lost since becoming a Christian and then
an Apostle, such as health, His freedom, His safety, his
financial security, The respect of the Jewish community, are
also worthless when compared to the value of having Jesus
Christ.
Paul says what I have now is worth more than all of these
things that I had before. He then says, and may be
found in Him, not having a righteousness of my own derived
from the Law. The law was the old way of doing things.
But that which is through faith in Christ is the new and
better way of doing things. That's the effective way of
doing things which is righteousness which comes from God on
the basis of faith.
Paul summarizes the reason for his transformation and
rejection of what he valued in his former life. How do we
get to being acceptable before God? Not through a system of
lawkeeping but through a system of faith and specifically
faith in Jesus Christ, the son of God. Paul believed in the
true God and he wanted the right thing. He wanted to be
acceptable to God. He wanted to be righteous and thus be
saved. He wanted all the right things and he was asking the
right person for it. Formerly Paul had the wrong system for
obtaining these things. God revealed the correct way to
receive these things which is faith and believing that Jesus
Christ is the son of God.
Verse 10, "that I may know Him and the power of His
resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being
conformed to His death."
Paul follows through by explaining what the faith in Christ
system promised and delivered to him. First of all, he
witnessed the resurrected Christ on the road to Damascus. He
was told when called and has since suffered as Christ
suffered in the carrying out of His ministry. Paul
also expected to die as a martyr since he had been assaulted
and threatened with death many times.
This epistle was written from a Roman prison while awaiting
trial and if he lost this case he would likely be put to
death by the Roman government. All of this however did
not diminish the other promise made to him and of course to
all believers and a glorious resurrection from the dead. The
Judaizers were surely using his imprisonment as a way of
undermining his authority as a teacher and probably
discounting his message of the Gospel.
They were claining that If he's an Apostle with God and he's
got the true Gospel, what's he doing in jail? If he's
so holy and good, what's he doing in jail? Paul brushes
aside any comparisons of his ministry or message by glorying
in his sufferings because they are the results of having
received the truth. Salvation is obtained through faith in
Christ, not through any type of lawkeeping system. That
includes being circumcised.
He doesn't specifically offer this as proof for his claim
but the fact that he considers his own attempt at gaining
righteousness through lawkeeping as rubbish and has
willingly given up every advantage and every comfort in his
service to Christ and that he is even ready to die for the
faith provides a powerful witness for his message.
This begs the question; have the false teachers experienced
the same knowledge of Christ and would they be prepared to
lose as much in the service of their message? Just how
much is their message costing them? Paul's
encouragement here, now that he's addressed the issue of
false teaching regarding salvation, is to pursue spiritual
maturity which is the main theme of this letter.
V erse
12, "not that I have already obtained it or have already
become perfect, but I press on so that I may lay hold of
that for which also I laid hold of by Christ Jesus."
Paul states his case. His premise which he will develop in
the next few verses. The question that arises here is,
what is the thing or what is the perfection that Paul
pursues? He says he is going towards a goal. What is
it?
The
answer is in verse 11 and in verse 20.
In the previous section he explained that everything he has
and everything that he had lost, because of Christ, is worth
nothing in comparison to what he now possesses as a
Christian. That being the hope of resurrection.
Verse 11 he says, "in order that I may attain to the
resurrection from the dead."
That's the jackpot. That's what he's chasing.
In
verse 12 he expands the thought by explaining that he has
not yet experienced resurrection. We're not going to be
perfected in this life. We're going to be perfected in the
resurrected life. Paul wants to lay hold of the
resurrection and the eternal life promised to all faithful
Christians. The perfection he speaks of is the full
maturity of both knowledge and conduct in Christ that one
will have when this mortal body is shed and the glorious
eternal body is put on at resurrection.
In 1 Corinthians 15:50 Paul says, "now I say this
brethren that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of
God, nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable.
Behold, I tell you a mystery. We will not all sleep,
(remember sleep now in Christian terms means to be dead). We will not all sleep but we will all be changed, in a
moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet for
the trumpet will sound and the dead will be raised
imperishable and we will be changed. For this
perishable must put on the imperishable and this mortal must
put on the immortal."
Keeping
that in mind, let's go back to Philippians. Paul says, "brethren
I do not regard myself as having laid hold of it yet but one
thing I do, forgetting what lies behind and reaching forward
to what lies ahead. I press on toward the goal for the prize
of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus."
Paul has talked about his own past and the transformation he
has undergone along with references to the suffering that he
has and continues to endure but he says he doesn't dwell on
these things. Paul's mind is focused on a specific event in
the future and that is his own resurrection. It's a
goal in the sense that it guides his decisions and actions.
It's a prize, not a payment because it is a gift and not
something that he could earn. There's nothing he or anyone
else could do to earn the resurrection. God gives that by
grace through faith.
Paul's an Apostle but like every other Christian he too
pursues the upward call of God which is the call to
resurrection and eternal life through faith in Jesus Christ.
The upward call is the resurrection. That’s where we're
raised up from the dead and receive everything that
accompanies that event.
Philippians 3:15-16, "Let us therefore, as many as are
perfect, have this attitude; and if in anything you have a
different attitude, God will reveal that also to you; 16
however, let us keep living by that same standard to which
we have attained."
The perfect in this verse refers to those in the church that
haven't been carried away by these teachings of these false
teachers about circumcision and obeying the Law for
salvation. The mature Christians are the ones that
have held on to the Gospel and hadn't been swayed away from
that teaching. Paul encourages these people who have
influence in the church because of their spiritual maturity
to maintain the same attitude or standard. The standard is
we're saved by faith in Jesus Christ. He's saying
don't be moved away from that standard. Don't be moved away
from the very thing that saved you. Don't be led astray by
these false teachers.
There may be disagreements about various matters but if they
maintain the basic and the critical teaching concerning the
Gospel and faithful Christian living he says God himself
will help them with understanding. Those who are
mature need to maintain their belief and practice according
to Paul's teaching and example and if there are differences,
these will be taken care of with God's help if they continue
in the way that Paul has shown them. If however they veer
off and go with the Judaizers there is no help for them
there.
Paul gives a warning in the last couple of verses.
Philippians 3:17-20, "Brethren,
join in following my example, and observe those who walk
according to the pattern you have in us. 18 For many walk,
of whom I often told you, and now tell you even weeping,
that they are enemies of the cross of Christ, 19 whose end
is destruction, whose god is their appetite, and whose glory
is in their shame, who set their minds on earthly things."
He concludes the section by turning his attention once again
to the Judaizers. He warns the Philippians about their
conduct and eventual ruin. The condemnation is
directed at the Judaizers themselves but the implicit
warning is that if they copy their behavior they will suffer
the same consequences. Paul repeats his previous
exhortation to follow his example as one whose eyes are
fixed on heaven. And he tells them to live in the way the
mature Christians among them live.
Paul describes the very opposite lifestyle of those who are
teaching the circumcision method of salvation and he
mentions a few of their actions. First of all, he says
they're enemies of the cross. They negate the power and
purpose of Jesus' sacrifice by substituting a law works
system.
He says, they served their own desires or their own
appetite. What they do is guided by what they desire.
Thirdly, what they see as success or glory is in reality
shameful before God. The Judaizers boasted in their
followers who had exchanged their freedom in Christ for the
futile effort to become righteous through the Law of Moses.
This was seen as a victory by these false teachers but in
reality was a terrible loss to the individuals in
dishonoring God who sacrificed his son. Paul says,
there's no glory in this. There's no victory here. This is
shameful and then he says they're devoid of the spirit.
Their teaching their motivation, their thinking, is not
guiding by the spirit of God. Paul mentions in verse 19 the
end result of their lives and that is destruction. He
uses the word perdition which refers not only to their lives
here but to their everlasting ruin.
In the last two verses in this chapter Paul immediately
compares the goal and the fate of the Judaizers to what
awaits those who are faithful.
Philippians 3:20-21
"For our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we
eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ; 21 who
will transform the body of our humble state into conformity
with the body of His glory, by the exertion of the power
that He has even to subject all things to Himself."
They are waiting for the return of Jesus who will transform
the body of our humble state into conformity with the body
of His glory. Our body is going to be like Jesus’ body.
By the exertion of the power that He has we will be
resurrected to a body that is like His. Jesus has
power over everything including death. He removes death from
us. We're able to rise.
Paul provides more detail to the prize he mentioned verse
14. Christians are citizens of heaven. We're only
pilgrims here. Our true home is in heaven. Jesus Christ is
the one we eagerly await to bring us there.
He removes the physical body through death and equips us
with a new glorious body that will enable us to exist with
God in the spiritual dimension called heaven. Our new
glorious body will be like his body. Consider the
transfiguration as an example of what this body will be
like.
Matthew 17:1-2, "Six days later Jesus took with Him Peter
and James and John his brother, and led them up on a high
mountain by themselves. 2 And He was transfigured before
them; and His face shone like the sun, and His garments
became as white as light."
This is the result of those who attain to the resurrection
of the dead.
This student of God's word gratefully acknowledges the work
and scholarship of
James Burton Coffman and
Mike Mazzalongo's lessons on
Paul's letter to the Philippians.
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