Philippians Chapter 4
Paul is at the point in his letter where he's going to
offer his final encouragements and greetings to this
church. He's offered a prayer of thanksgiving and
promise and a blessing on the church. He's also
briefed them on his condition and his prospects of being
freed from prison. Paul has shared his dilemma of
wanting to be with Christ or staying on and continuing
his work with them. From these personal remarks he
moves on to the core issue of his letter Which is an
exhortation to continue believing that salvation comes
by a system of faith and not a system of lawkeeping,
rule keeping.
Now his goal is to point the way to a more mature
experience and expression of the Christian faith.
These people are already good Christians. He has
nothing negative to say about them. But he wants
to push them to go further. There's more to do.
There are other heights to reach.
Maturing
in Christ has certain features that can be seen in a
Christian whose faith is growing and Paul gives them
five examples of Christian maturity.
The five are:
-
The mature Christian stands firm in the faith, not
moved away from belief by false teaching or
adversity. Christian maturity not moving away
from what we’ve been taught. In the Churches
of Christ there is this AD 70 movement promoting the
idea that Jesus has already come. A lot of
people were talking about this and debating it and
so on. There are always fads and ideas that
work their way into the church. It's a cyclical
thing. It's happened since the beginning and it
continues even in our day today. Paul is saying a
mature Christian isn't moved away from the faith,
from the Gospel, by every fad and idea that happens
to run through the church.
-
The mature Christian imitates Christ in his denial
of self in order to be molded in the image of the
Lord.
-
he mature Christian rejoices in trial, knowing that
trials are a way of growing and measuring faith.
Some people confuse this with masochism. I'm not
happy that there's a trial. I'm not happy that the
roof just caved in. But the trials don't
destroy our hope. The trials don't destroy the joy
we have knowing the promise that we have in Christ.
-
The mature Christian seeks the righteousness that
comes as a result of faith in Jesus and not
righteousness through law keeping.
-
In this final section Paul is going to describe the
mature Christian in terms of lifestyle. The idea
being the mature Christian demonstrates his growth
in Christ, with his lifestyle, by living
righteously. So after making this point, he's
going to close this letter with some kind greetings
and a blessing on the church.
Paul’s final point about the mature Christian. The
mature lives righteously.
In verses one to nine, three ways Paul mentions that
individuals or the church as a group demonstrate their
righteous lives and thus their maturity in Christ.
Philippians 4:1-9
"Therefore, my beloved brethren whom I long to see,
my joy and crown, in this way stand firm in the Lord, my
beloved.
2 I urge Euodia and I urge Syntyche to live in harmony
in the Lord. 3 Indeed, true companion, I ask you also to
help these women who have shared my struggle in the
cause of the gospel, together with Clement also and the
rest of my fellow workers, whose names are in the book
of life.
4 Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, rejoice!
5 Let your gentle spirit be known to all men. The Lord
is near. 6 Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by
prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your
requests be made known to God. 7 And the peace of God,
which surpasses all comprehension, will guard your
hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.
8 Finally, brethren, whatever is true, whatever is
honorable, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever
is lovely, whatever is of good repute, if there is any
excellence and if anything worthy of praise, dwell on
these things. 9 The things you have learned and received
and heard and seen in me, practice these things, and the
God of peace will be with you."
First by living in harmony. Living righteously
requires living in harmony. He says therefore my beloved
brethren whom I long to see, my joy and crown, in this
way stand firm in the Lord my beloved. Note Paul's
great affection for the brethren. He says the word
beloved twice and he yearns for them. He longs to
see them.
He mentions the word joy. Their existence and their
growth brought Paul joy. If you have children and you
see them mature, you're proud of them.
We
love to see our children grow and mature. They
marry, they begin having their own families. We
love seeing them growing up to be good Christians.
Paul is the same way for this particular congregation.
He sees them crossing different milestones of maturity
and he loves them and it encourages him. He talks about
them being his joy and crown. They were a credit
to him in God's eyes. He took a righteous pride in
them.
He exhorts them a second time concerning the matters
that he mentioned in the previous passage. In
other words, stand firm in the faith and don't be moved
by the false teachers.
In Verse two and three, he says "I urge Euodia and I
urge Syntyche to live in harmony in the Lord. Indeed
true companion, I ask you also to help these women who
have shared my struggle in the cause of the Gospel.
Together with Clement also and the rest of my fellow
workers whose names are in the book of life."
There is a discord here
but it
is not at the church level but between two female
disciples. Paul considers both at fault because he
gently admonishes both women to live in harmony before
the Lord. Paul cannot simply say, "well it's just
two members" ignore it. Two members becomes more
members because when people are in a dispute with one
another and they're not resolving it, usually they
gather supporters to their cause and it can cause a lot
of problem. They're written in the book of life
which is just another way of saying, they're going to
heaven.
Paul does not want their dispute to grow and provide a
poor witness for the church and lead to eternal
consequences for those women should the situation
continue. He recalls a time when these women,
along with another one of their number Clement worked in
harmony with themselves and other workers. Paul is
saying, "hey remember back in the day? We all worked
together, we were all in harmony."
There may be a gentle reminder here to get busy in the
Lord's work as a way of remedying the dispute that
they're having.
Mature Christians have disagreements and disputes from
time to time but they don't let these destroy the bond
of fellowship that they have nor do they allow their
dispute to cause division in the church.
In
Ephesians chapter four Paul writes, "therefore I the
prisoner of the Lord implore you to walk in a manner
worthy of the calling with which you have been called.
With all humility and gentleness, with patience, showing
tolerance for one another in love. Being diligent to
preserve the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace."
Our calling is that we've been summoned to go to
heaven. As people who have been called to go to heaven,
we ought not to be fighting with each other down here.
Paul
says, walk in a manner worthy of the calling with which
you have been called. Paul in this passage elaborates on
the importance of maintaining unity in the church.
He begins by reminding them of who they are and what is
expected of disciples of Jesus. Again, we've been
called to live as He lived. We've been called to
be mature in Christ. We're going to heaven.
Note also, the attitudes and virtues necessary to
maintain peace and unity among those who have been
forgiven for sin and set for eternal live but still
inhabit a sinful body here on earth. These
situations are not resolved by force or argument, by
scheming or creating factions and divisions in the
church. The
goal in a dispute is not to win the argument, rather,
it's to maintain the unity while we work out the
differences.
We always want closure. If you've lived any amount of
time, you've learned the hard way that there's a lot of
stuff that happens in life that never gets closure.
It stays and just nags at you for for years sometimes.
So among ourselves as Christians the goal again is not
to win the argument. We want to discuss the things and
kind of work things out and maintain the unity.
Achieving that requires the mature Christian to possess
virtues of humility. Humility is having a true measure
of oneself.
Someone who doesn't have a true measure of themselves
might think that they're always right and never need to
be corrected. Humility is having gentleness,
seeing both sides of a situation. Not self-willed. It's
not a my way or the highway thing.
Patience is the willingness to bear under difficulty and
trials and misunderstandings without losing one's
composure or bearing.
Tolerance for one another. Recognizing the failings and
weaknesses of others and not being provoked by these to
unkindness or unchristian-like behavior. Tolerance does
not mean anything goes. We cannot tolerate sinful
behavior such as immorality and unchastity.
Christian tolerance is recognizing that other people
have weaknesses And understanding that we also have
weaknesses.
All of these virtues are being motivated by Christian
love. Wanting what is best for the other person because
of your faith and not because they deserve it.
That's
the difference between regular love and Christian love.
Regular love offers itself to a deserving individual who
usually sends us some love back. Christian love
loves those that don't even deserve our love. Jesus
epitomizes Christian love. He hung dying on the
cross and He asked God to forgive the ones that just
murdered Him. He saves a convicted thief that was
earlier insulting and reviling Him. That's Christian
love.
Paul says in verse three that mature Christians are
diligent to preserve unity. Why are they diligent to
preserve unity? Because it's hard, that's why. We're
all sinners, we all have pride. We get crossways with
each other. We say things we regret after saying them
or we say things not even realizing how hurtful they may
be. That's why we have to be diligent to preserve unity
among believers because exercising the virtues noted in
verse two in a dispute situation isn't easy and it
requires emotional and spiritual strength.
It's easy to
be patient when nothing goes wrong. It's much more
difficult to be patient under duress.
When Christian character comes out, under duress it is a
very public demonstration of Christian maturity.
It's visible as believers openly interact with one
another. This is the ability to maintain harmony and
peace despite differences and disputes that arise from
time to time. The
mature Christian demonstrates righteous living in
another way by living in harmony.
Another way to demonstrate Christian maturity is living
in confidence. How does a mature Christian build
and demonstrate confidence and assurance as a child of
God? Certainly not by bragging or showing off one's
skills or wealth or position. These are worldly ways of
promoting assurance and confidence in one's skill and
success.
Paul describes the person who has confidence not in
himself or his abilities but rather confidence in the
one who provides all that is needed here on Earth and
promises heaven as well. That's confidence in God and
not in self. We're
confident in the one who saves us, who provides for us.
That's where true confidence is.
He
says in verse four, "rejoice in the Lord always.
Again I will say, rejoice. Let your gentle spirit be
known to all men. The Lord is near. Be anxious for
nothing but in everything by prayer and supplication
with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God
and the peace of God which surpasses all comprehension,
will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus."
This
section reveals the way that a Christian builds and
maintains spiritual confidence
So we start with verse six, “Be anxious for nothing
but in everything by prayer and supplication with
thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.”
Building confidence begins with prayer. Confidence
building requires first and foremost the understanding
that God is the one who provides all that we need, not
self. We are stewards, we're developers, we're consumers
of these things but God is the provider of all we have.
Knowing and trusting in this reality removes the anxiety
that naturally exists in us when we think we are
ultimately responsible for providing for ourselves and
others.
We get up and go to work, but God provides the work. He
provides the strength. He provides the health. He
sustains our strength. He provides the country with the
economy that provides the opportunity for work and
earning a living. God doesn’t do the work for us, but
He provides the ways and means for us to provide for
ourselves.
Mature Christians do not worry about how they will
obtain what they need. They invest that emotional
and spiritual energy in prayer, gratitude and the work
of the church. God doesn’t want us worrying about the
things He is in control of. God wants us to invest our
spiritual energy into things that matter. He wants us
to have a dynamic and active prayer life where we look
to Him for our emotional and spiritual strength. God
wants to be the source of our confidence.
Verses 4-5, "rejoice in the Lord always. Again I will
say, rejoice. Let your gentle spirit be known to all
men. The Lord is near."
The true mark of confidence is joy, not bravado or
bragging. A Mature Christians recognizes that the
God is present and active in their lives. The
gentleness, humility and confidence are to be seen. God
wants us to demonstrate these qualities. Gods desires
himself to be seen in us through the lives we live.
When someone looks at a Christian, God wants to be seen
in him or her. It's our confidence in Christ replacing
our confidence in ourselves and is a powerful witness to
other people.
Verse
7, "and the peace of God which surpasses all
comprehension will guard your hearts and your minds in
Christ Jesus."
So what does this confidence produce? This
confidence produces peace of mind. A kind of peace
that surpasses reasoning.
Some
people who are wealthy and/or powerful have peace to a
certain degree because they can see and count the
resources they have that protect them from harm or
poverty/ They may have money in the bank. They
may have a big house with a big fence in front. They
have things that protect them and it gives them a degree
of peace or self security.
Mature Christians on the other hand have peace beyond
understanding because with God as their provider and
savior, their peace of mind is guaranteed because no
matter what happens in this life, their resurrection and
eternal life are guaranteed through Jesus Christ.
That is peace beyond understanding.
Non Christians
worry about keeping what they have. They check their
bank accounts. They worry about the economy and check
the stock markets. They worry about their stuff. Do
they really have peace? What are they really thinking
about? They are worried about their possessions,
their riches.
Our Confidence and peace are based on our faith in God
and not possessions. Our confidence and peace are based
on Jesus Christ and not earthly things. The mature
Christian demonstrates righteous living, but he does it
by living in harmony, living in confidence, knowing that
the Lord provides.
The mature Christian lives in confidence, in harmony
with others and in purity.
Verse 8-9, he says, "finally brethren, whatever is
true, whatever is honorable, whatever is right, whatever
is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is of good repute,
if there is any excellence and if anything worthy of
praise, dwell on these things. The things that
you have learned and received and heard and seen in me,
practice these things and the God of peace will be with
you."
In
his effort to equip the Philippians for mature spiritual
living, Paul provides them with a kind of list that will
help them determine if what they think and say and do
are spiritually acceptable and worthy of mature
Christians who are living a pure life.
"whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is
right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is
of good repute"
Paul wants them to NOT have confidence in themselves and
the world and to lay that burden on God and now he gives
them what he does want them to concentrate on.
Let’s draw a comparison here between God and His
children and earthly parents and their children. As
parents, we don’t want our children to worry about the
things we provide for them. We provide the roofs over
their heads, the protection from the world and the food
on their plates. We worry about transportation and
school and we work to provide them with a safe and
secure atmosphere to grow up in so they can be what? We
want our children to grow up to be honest, upright, true
and pure and with good reputations. We want our
children to work on these qualities and grow up to be
goods humans. We don’t want our kids to worry about
providing the basic necessities required for day to day
living. We want to handle that. We want our children
to grow up good and right.
Similarly, God wants us to depend upon Him for the
things He is in control of. Government, economy, work
opportunities. For farmers he wants them to depend on
Him for the rain. For carpenters He wants them to
Depend on Him for the houses to build. And just like us
with our children, God wants His children to grow up to
be righteous, humble, true and pure. He wants us to
grow up and be a walking, breathing, living testament to
Himself. He wants to be glorified through us.
We want to be proud of our children. We want them to be
a reflection of us. We want the world to see our
children and be able to see we were good parents. God
wants His children to do the same. He wants us to set
out there in front of the world and for the world to see
what an awesome father He is. He wants to be proud of
us and He wants to be seen through us.
When a Christian is in the world, the world can see God
in Him.
Paul now goes to his closing remarks
Philippians 4:10-14, "But
I rejoiced in the Lord greatly, that now at last you
have revived your concern for me; indeed, you were
concerned before, but you lacked opportunity. 11 Not
that I speak from want, for I have learned to be content
in whatever circumstances I am. 12 I know how to get
along with humble means, and I also know how to live in
prosperity; in any and every circumstance I have learned
the secret of being filled and going hungry, both of
having abundance and suffering need. 13 I can do all
things through Him who strengthens me. 14 Nevertheless,
you have done well to share with me in my affliction.
He begins with praise for the Philippians. We know that
this congregation had helped Paul in the past and had
sent a gift to him with the request to know his
circumstances which prompted the writing of this letter.
Paul acknowledges their gift as well as the fact that
they had helped him in the past. He also
recognizes the fact that they have always been willing
to help but they lacked the opportunity.
Their opportunity to help
was limited by his
constant traveling. The difficulty of communications of
the day. Paul had been in prison both in Judea and now
in Rome. Before prison, Paul was traveling a lot on His
missionary journeys. The fact that they knew where he
was in jail there enabled them to organize something and
send him a letter and send him a gift.
In verse 11, he says "not that I speak from want for
I have learned to be content in whatever circumstances I
am. I know how to get along with humble means
and I also know how to live in prosperity. In any and
every circumstance, I have learned the secret of being
filled and going hungry. Both of having abundance and
suffering need. I can do all things through Him who
strengthens me. Nevertheless, you have done well to
share with me in my affliction."
He tempers any worries they may have by providing them
with insight into his emotional condition. He doesn't
want them to think that he is discouraged by his
situation. He had just finished telling them to be
confident in the Lord, now he is putting his own words
into action. And their gift is helpful and needed
but it isn't what is going to keep his spirits up. What
keeps him going as a mature Christian is that he has
learned to be content.
The Greek word here means enough, or sufficient.
Paul learned to be content in whatever circumstances he
finds himself in whether he has a lot or not a lot.
In verse 12 he answers the question his readers would
naturally ask at this point. How are you able to
be content with little or much? And his answer is brief
but all-encompassing.
His contentment is derived from the fact that Christ
strengthens. The Greek word there means to enable or
empower. In other words, Jesus enables him to live
with much without falling into worldliness and lust and
Jesus also empowers him to survive with little without
becoming discouraged and questioning God's will.cHe says
the same Lord who enables me to enjoy the good times
without losing my head also helps me bear under the hard
times without being completely defeated
Isn't that what life is like? We all go through the good
times, not so good times. We learn to live with what we
have. Paul’s contentment is not based on what he
has but rather who he believes.
Paul is using his own situation, a Godly man wrongfully
imprisoned and suffering from incarceration for four
years as an example of what mature Christianity looks
like. Paul has stood firm in the faith. He has
imitated Christ in his conduct. You don't hear him
whining and complaining. He has rejoiced despite
his difficult circumstances and he has taught, sought
and modeled righteousness by faith to them from the very
beginning.
Paul's own development as a mature Christian has
ultimately brought him to the point in life where he can
truly be content in any circumstance or situation.
Now what's understood is that this level of contentment
is not reserved for only Apostles. It's available for
all Christians who increasingly depend on Jesus Christ
and seek him out.
There's nothing that can destroy us. There's
nothing in this world that can defeat us.
Paul adds an additional line thanking them in order to
underscore his appreciation. He's commending them for
doing a good deed. He raises their act beyond simple
charity by saying that with their giving they have
shared in his suffering by sacrificing to help relieve
his suffering they've in effect, shared in his
suffering.
Philippians 4:15-20, "You yourselves also know,
Philippians, that at the first preaching of the gospel,
after I left Macedonia, no church shared with me in the
matter of giving and receiving but you alone; 16 for
even in Thessalonica you sent a gift more than once for
my needs. 17 Not that I seek the gift itself, but I seek
for the profit which increases to your account. 18 But I
have received everything in full and have an abundance;
I am amply supplied, having received from Epaphroditus
what you have sent, a fragrant aroma, an acceptable
sacrifice, well-pleasing to God. 19 And my God will
supply all your needs according to His riches in glory
in Christ Jesus. 20 Now to our God and Father be the
glory forever and ever. Amen.
Paul continues his comments concerning their gift by
reviewing past instances where they helped him
financially. Especially at times when it was crucial
because no one else was helping him. He not only
appreciates their history of giving but also the
blessings that the Philippians receive on account of
their generosity. Paul is happy because God is going to
bless them for having blessed him and he confirms that
their recent gift, delivered by Epaphroditus, one of his
helpers from the church at Colossae, has more than
fulfilled all of his material needs
Verse 19 he says “and my God will supply all your
needs according to His riches in glory in Christ Jesus.
Now to our God and Father be the glory forever and ever,
amen.”
The
result of their kind action of caring for Paul's needs
is that he prays that God will provide for all their
needs in the future. This reaches back to the previous
thing Paul said is that God will always provide what
they need and that God can and does do this for them and
by extension for us as well.
Philippians 4:21-23,
"Greet every saint in Christ Jesus. The brethren who are
with me greet you. 22 All the saints greet you,
especially those of Caesar's household. 23 The
grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit."
He sends personal greetings to the church in Philippi.
Those with Paul, Luke, Epaphroditus, Timothy and others
also send their greetings through his letter. Paul had
converted other prisoners, Onesimus for example,
Philemon's runaway slave.
Many of Caesar's elite bodyguards, the Praetorian
Guard. Many had heard the Gospel through Paul and were
telling Paul to say hello for them as well. They're
guarding Paul and they want to be included in his letter
to the brethren. Now THAT’s Christian behavior. How
encouraging that must have been.
Verse 23 The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with
your spirit.
God is happy when we are blessed. Striving for Christian
maturity leads to contentment and peace. Maturing in
Christ is the learning process that brings us to that
point of spiritual development where we are able to
fully depend on Jesus to empower us for every situation.
The great reward for arriving at this level of maturity
is that it creates in us the marvelous state of
contentment that Paul speaks about here. This
contentment is what he describes in verse seven. The
peace that surpasses understanding. There is no
earthly reason to be this content because you're
depending on somebody that no one sees. And
yet, God is there.
And finally, we learn that God wants to bless us and He
is happy when He does.
We are happy when our earthly children do right and it
just thrills us to give them blessings because of that.
Similarly God wants us to do well, to grow up and be
beacons of His greatness. And when we do that, He is
just as happy to bless us as we are to bless our
children when they do the same.
The primary lesson for us through this letter is that as
Mature Christians, we are to look to God for our
material needs and to realize that He is in control of
our lives and that we need to reach the point in our
lives that we understand that if we will make it all
about God, he will make it all about us.
It a family thing. God our Father and We his faithful
children.
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.