©2002 Larry Huntsperger Peninsula Bible Fellowship
|
1/27/02 |
Survival Truths For January |
Philippians 1:1-6 |
1/27/02
Survival Truths For January
We are not returning to Romans this week.
Instead I am going to take us back
to a passage of
Scripture we studied together almost exactly 6 years ago.
I’m going to do this
because it’s
January,
and because
it’s cold,
and
because the days are still very short,
and because Christmas is over,
and because the December credit card bills
have arrived,
and because we made the mistake of
stepping on the scales this past week,
and because there
are a whole bunch of lies
that we are
especially vulnerable to in January.
And so, to help defeat those lies,
I’m going to take
us back
to the
first 6 verses of Paul’s letter to the Philippians.
Those of you who were with us
during the
several years it took us
to study
our way through Philippians
know how deeply this little letter
affected me personally.
We are only going to dip back into the book
for one week,
and then
only into the first 6 verses,
but
even with these verses
so much of the power of what we will see
comes from
understanding
what was
going on in Paul’s life
at
the time he wrote this letter.
It is a very different type of book from
Romans.
Romans was written by Paul
to give us the
content, the doctrine we need
to
effectively function as Christians.
Philippians, on the other hand,
was not written
to offer us doctrine,
nearly so
much as it was written
to help us with our attitudes.
It was written by Paul from Rome
where he had been
in prison
for nearly
two years
waiting for a trial
that would determine whether or not
the Roman
Government
would let
him live
or execute him has a meddlesome trouble-maker
who seemed to
cause riots
and civil
disturbances
just
about everywhere he went.
Paul, too, was in January,
only his January
had stretched on
for two years,
with the
very real possibility
that
he would live in January
for rest of his life.
It is a letter that allows us to see
the attitudes
that enabled Paul
not only to
survive
but
to thrive in the month of January.
There are all sorts of Januarys in life,
and the worst
ones
have
nothing to do with the weather.
Sometimes January is brought on
by a son or a
daughter
who is
going through some deep struggles in their life.
You can’t change it for them -
all you can do is
pray
and hope
and
wait.
Sometimes January comes from
having someone we
love very much
suddenly yanked out of our life
leaving a huge,
cold,
empty hole
into which we fall
every morning when we step out of bed.
Sometimes January comes in the form of
loneliness
or fear
or
stress that blankets our life
like a heavy fog,
making it
impossible for us
to see more
than a few hours
or a
few minutes ahead.
Sometimes January comes in the form
of losing a job
we love,
or finding a job we hate.
January is brought on by anything
that makes us
feel trapped,
or
isolated,
or
imprisoned,
or empty
or hurt.
Paul wrote the book of Philippians
in his own
personal January,
sitting in
prison
very possibly waiting
for his own execution.
And in it he shares with us
the attitudes
that equipped him
not only to
survive
but
actually to thrive
in the month of January.
It is a remarkable letter
not only for what
it says,
but all the more for what it says
given Paul’s situation when he wrote it.
At least 16 times in these 4 chapters
Paul uses the
words ‟joy” and ‟rejoice”.
And even more important,
he gives a basis
for it.
We are only going to touch the first few verses together,
but if you’re
looking for some additional January encouragement in your own life,
I think you
would enjoy reading the rest of the letter on your own.
OK, with that background,
let me read you
the first 6 verses of this letter
and we’ll see
what Paul has to offer us.
PHI 1:1-6 Paul and Timothy, bond-servants of Christ
Jesus, to all the saints in Christ Jesus who are in Philippi, including the
overseers and deacons: Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord
Jesus Christ. I thank my God in all my
remembrance of you, always offering prayer with joy in my every prayer for you
all, in view of your participation in the gospel from the first day until now.
For I am confident of this very thing, that He who began a good work in you will
perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus.
Paul begins his letter by introducing himself,
telling his
readers that Timothy is with him,
and makes
it clear that this is an open letter
to
everyone in the Church.
And then from the very first verse
Paul begins to
reveal to us
the keys to
surviving January.
It is the nature of all January experiences
for our attention
to be focused
on what’s
happening around us.
I understand that perfectly.
It’s one of the
things I do best.
It’s the
way I start every day I live.
Each morning
I groan my way
out of bed,
feel my way
to the stairs,
stumble on down,
flip on the porch light so I can look at the temperature,
and then light
the fire in the wood stove.
Now why do I look at the temperature?
I do it
so that I can
begin the morning
with a
little self-pity
when I see how cold it is.
I begin each day by focusing
on what’s
happening around me.
But I want you to see what Paul does
when he begins
his comments to us.
Rather than beginning by talking about
what’s going on
around him,
he begins by reminding us
of who we are,
and where
we are.
...to all the
saints in Christ Jesus
who are
in Philippi...
First he reminds us who we are.
....to all the saints...
...to all the HOLY ONES...
It’s God’s favorite word for addressing the Christian - His
Holy ones.
Paul understands
the absolute
necessity
of our
reminding ourselves over and over again
who we are -
who we have
become in heart and spirit
because of the
transforming work
of Christ
in our life,
just as Satan loves to remind us
of who we once
were,
and tries
to convince us that nothing has changed.
We may not feel holy,
we may not always
act holy,
but these
are simply temporary difficulties
that cannot, will not change the eternal
reality -
we are now and forever
His Holy Ones,
purified through the blood of Christ.
And with those opening words
Paul begins to
reveal his battle strategy
for
thriving in January.
He is telling us that our success,
our mental and
emotion success
depends upon our not allowing
our
circumstances to shape
our concept of ourselves as Christians.
When we begin with the circumstances
do you know what
question
immediately comes to mind?
Q. Why is this happening to me?
What have I done to cause this?
Or what can I do
to change it?
And underlying all of those thoughts
we allow the
circumstances
to subtly
but
powerfully mold
both our concept of ourselves
and our concept
of our God.
If only I had done better
or been
better this wouldn’t have happened.
What Paul does in these opening verses
is truly
remarkable.
Rather than beginning
by talking about
his prison
or his pain
or
his concern for his future,
he begins by reminding us
of 4 crucial
elements
of our life
with Christ.
He talks about WHO we are,
he talks about
WHERE we are,
he talks
about WHAT to expect,
and
he talks about WHO is in control.
We’ve just looked at the WHO -
we are God’s
saints, God’s holy ones.
And underlying that truth is the reminder
that we can never
allow ourselves
to begin
believing that January has come
or the prison
doors have slammed shut
as the
result of God’s judgement for our sin.
Sin does demand judgement,
Sin does demand
payment,
sin does
demand suffering,
and Christ really did suffer
and He really was
judged,
and He
really did make full and complete payment for our sins forever.
And we now stand
freed from the wrath of God,
His HOLY
ONES FOREVERMORE.
Then the WHERE -
...to all the
saints IN CHRIST who are in Philippi...
We are IN CHRIST.
We are not just
with Him,
or beside
Him,
or
for Him,
we are IN HIM.
Here again, when God wanted to create
a phrase that
communicated
the kind or
relationship we share
with our
Lord Jesus Christ
He came up with the phrase “In Him”
In Christ.
And in that phrase He wanted to create in our minds
a mental image of
our being
absolutely and totally surrounded
with the Person
and presence of our God.
We do not have to go to Him,
or look for Him,
because where He is we are -
in Him.
Part of any January experience
is that feeling
of abandonment,
that
feeling of being all by ourselves,
alone.
And to that Paul says, NO!
Not only is your Lord with you in this,
you are immersed
in HIM.
#3. And then in verse 2 he gives us the 3rd crucial truth -
he tells us what to expect.
Grace to you and peace from God our Father.
16 of the 21 N.T. Epistles
open with the
assurance of Grace and peace from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
WHY?
First of all let me assure you that it was NOT because this
was
the early
Christian’s form of ‟Have a nice day!”
It was not simply a pleasant greeting
passed around
between believers.
The N.T. Epistles were written for a crucial and specific
purpose:
they were written
EXCLUSIVELY to believers-
to those
who had already joined themselves to God
through faith in Christ for their sins,
and they were written in order to reveal to us
the principles
that govern a grace-based walk with God,
and to show
us how to think
like
the new Creations we have already become.
This is a little bit of what Paul was telling us
in that passage
we were looking at last week:
...do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed
by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what the will of God is, that
which is good and acceptable and perfect.
The N.T. Epistles
make that mental
renewal process possible.
And whenever we find repetition in the Epistles
it is there for
one or both of two reasons:
1. Either the concept is so crucial to our survival
that it demands
repetition.
2. Or it is a concept that is so foreign to our thinking
that we are in
danger of missing it
or
forgetting it without constant repetition.
This grace and peace thing
is repeated for
both reasons.
Maybe I could help us understand
what I see going
on with this phrase
found at
the beginning of nearly every N.T. letter
by putting it in
a little different context
for just a minute.
Do you see this door over here to my right?
Well, I’d like
you to imagine for just a minute
that God is
waiting for you
just on the
other side of that door.
(Yes, I know this illustration has major
theological and
doctrinal problems with it,
but just set all
that aside for a minute.)
God is on the other side of that door,
He has asked you
to come through the door and talk with Him.
Q. Now, how would you approach that door?
Would you try to peak through some crack along the edge
or underneath
before opening it wide open?
Would you open it
up just a tiny crack
and peak
through?
Would fling it open?
Would you take
your Bible along?
Would you
change your clothes first?
When you and I reached out to God through faith in Christ’s
payment
for our sins
we were accepting His invitation
to stop running
from Him
and start
building a friendship with Him.
But, having never met Him Personally before
none of us have
any accurate idea
what He is
really like.
We are standing on this side of the door,
hearing His
invitation
to come in
and know Him better,
but we bring to that door
all of our
preconceived ideas
of who He
is,
and
how He acts,
and what He expects,
along with our own pockets full of
personal shame
and
feelings of failure
and
inadequacy
and unworthiness.
To be honest, I think most of us
would probably
open the door
just a
crack
and
peek through.
The entire Bible was written
to share with us
God’s dealings with man throughout human history,
but the New
Testament Epistles,
those books beginning with Romans
and continuing
through Jude,
were given
by God
to a unique group of individuals
for a highly
specialized purpose.
If we were to take the time
to read the
opening lines
of each of
the 21 New Testament letters
we would see that every one of them
was addressed
exclusively to true Christians -
God’s holy ones,
made holy
through their faith in Christ.
These letters are the equivalent to that doorway,
that entrance
into the presence of God.
And God knows that we bring to this doorway
all of our
God-baggage,
all of our concerns about what we can really expect from
Him,
what He thinks of
us,
how He
relates to us in Christ.
How about all of those unresolved issues
that still shred
our lives?
How about all of those fears
or tender places
that we keep telling ourselves should have been resolved
years ago?
How about those times when already
we, like Peter,
have denied Him,
or refused
to trust Him,
or
grumbled about
the way He has handled our life?
What kind of expression
will we see on
His face
when we open that door?
I believe the New Testament writers
begin their
writings with the words,
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord
Jesus Christ...”
in order to
answer that question.
It is a sentence carefully designed by God
to serve as the
Christian’s introduction
to every
conversation
we
have with our Lord.
When we peak through the crack in the door
it is His way of
assuring us
that we
need have no fear of flinging the door wide open.
He is not standing there, arms folded,
with a scowl on
His face,
and a list
in His hands of all the
errors and omissions in our life
since the day we
entered the kingdom.
In this single sentence Paul and Peter and John single out
the two most crucial ingredients in our union with God through Christ,
the two things we
need most desperately
and find it
the most difficult
to accept
or believe
or remember
- grace and peace.
Paul said it best in Rom. 5:1-2
ROM 5:1 Therefore having been justified by faith, we have
peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, [2] through whom also we have
obtained our introduction by faith into this grace in which we stand;
Peace with God - the battle is over forever.
No longer
enemies.
No more
hiding, or running, or playing games.
The Creator of the universe has personally chosen us
to be on His
team,
and nothing
can ever alter that fact.
And we have also received our introduction by faith into
this GRACE in which we stand.
The rules really have changed -
we do not stand
before our God
on the
basis of our ability to do it all right,
we stand on the
basis of His grace,
His
commitment to show us kindness,
His kindness for eternity
not because we
have earned it,
but simply
because He loves us
and
the barriers to His expressing that love
have been removed
forever in Christ.
Now it’s true that when our Lord sits down with us in these
Epistles
there are at
times some hard issues
He talks
over with us,
but that is all the more reason why
He has chosen to
begin with that assurance of His grace and our peace with Him -
just so there will never again
be any
misunderstanding
about our
position with Him.
#4. and then finally, in verse 6
Paul reminds us
of who’s in control -
For I am confident of this very thing, that He who began
a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus.
Paul begins his survival manual
for the Januarys
in our lives
by telling
us right up front
that no January ever has
or ever will in
any way
at any time
short-circuit
God’s commitment
or God’s ability
to complete and perfect
the good
work He has begun in our lives.
And I want to be sure we hear Paul’s words accurately.
This is Paul the Apostle speaking,
the one
individual in all the world
who is more
vital,
more
critical to the birth of the Body of Christ
than any other
human being in history
ever has
been
or
ever will be again,
sitting in prison for two years.
He has a better grasp of what needs to be done and how to do
it
than anyone else
alive.
And there he sits, day
after day
after day.
And it is in this context that he affirms
this remarkable
truth that:
... He who began a good work in you will perfect it until
the day of Christ Jesus.
Once our Lord Jesus Christ picks us up
and holds us in
His hands
He does not
set us down again
until He has carried us into
the eternal presence of God the Father.
From our perspective what’s going on right now
may not look
anything like
the skilled
handiwork of God,
but things are often not at all as they appear.
Some of God’s finest work is done in January,
or in prison.
Paul certainly doesn’t deny the reality of his
circumstances.
Before this
letter finishes
he talks
about his prison,
and
the sickness of his friend.,
and about the other real life issues he
faces.
But when Paul begins his survival manual,
sharing with us
how to thrive in prison
he begins
by telling us the truth.
No matter how things may look,
or how cold it
may feel,
or how deep
the frost has penetrated,
still 4 things have not changed:
we are still His
Holy ones,
we live
forever secure in Christ,
our
God is actively working to bring His grace and peace into our lives,
and no circumstance we will ever encounter
can prevent our God from perfecting and completing the good work He has begun
in us
right up until the day we stand face to
face
before our Lord Jesus Christ.