Philippians - Letter to Old Friends |
Work Out Your SalvationPhilippians 2:12-18 One
of the great divisions of Christendom is that between Protestant and Roman
Catholic. It is so long past now
that it seems to be insuperable; perhaps
to mankind it is. But it is well
that we realize that the division was not made lightly. It was made over two principles:
Of
the second we shall say nothing this morning, but we shall presume it.
The first, however, merits some little discussion when we see this
morning’s passage: (Phil 2:12-18 NIV) Therefore, my dear friends, as you have always obeyed--not only in my presence, but now much more in my absence--continue to work out your salvation with fear and trembling, {13} for it is God who works in you to will and to act according to his good purpose. {14} Do everything without complaining or arguing, {15} so that you may become blameless and pure, children of God without fault in a crooked and depraved generation, in which you shine like stars in the universe {16} as you hold out the word of life--in order that I may boast on the day of Christ that I did not run or labor for nothing. {17} But even if I am being poured out like a drink offering on the sacrifice and service coming from your faith, I am glad and rejoice with all of you. {18} So you too should be glad and rejoice with me. Faith and WorksIf
you place a Roman Catholic and an ardent Fundamentalist in the same room and let
things fly, you will eventually notice that both will set up a straw man of
their opponents position – and demolish.
Interestingly, those who are not theologically inclined might have the
better of the argument here. For
while the theoretical difficulties between the two positions are indeed grave,
the practical aspects are perhaps less in doubt:
This
is what Paul is talking about here. Fitting out the faithThe
phrase for “work out” in this passage – there is a surprising uniformity
in translation here, given the many ways this word is translated elsewhere –
carries with it the sense of accomplishing a goal, finishing a task or producing
a result. The key concept is this:
this verse is not telling you to work your way into heaven.
That’s grace; that’s
God’s part. It is telling you
that you have work to do, and you need to finish God’s work in you – by
works. The
word carries with it the meaning of diligence and hard work.
It is as if Paul is telling the Philippians – and remember he is
talking to mature Christians – that they must finish the job.
Since God started the job, it would seem to be a formidable task –
indeed, impossible for us. How
could we finish what God starts? But
Paul tells us that too! He tells us
that “God works” –
If
we are to do the works of God, we must have both the will and the power of God
– and God liberally supplies them both. Fear and tremblingThis
is serious stuff. Paul puts it with
the words, “fear and trembling.” The
double phrasing is intended to emphasize the point.
Why fear?
But
– and what an important exception – it is God working within us!
This is the great relief of fear, for if He works, then we work beside
him, then we have nothing to fear indeed. A do-it-yourself guideHow,
then, are we to do this? Paul
provides us with a “style guide:” Without complaining or arguingThe
older word for complaining is murmuring – it’s the one sided form of
argument. The other person never
gets a chance to speak back. Is
that really all that serious?
Arguing,
on the other hand, is two sided. It
also produces two sides where there used to be one. How does God feel about that?
Internal workingsWe
are to be “blameless and pure.” This
is a tangible thing; it’s our
track record in front of the world. But
it comes from purity – knowing right from wrong and deliberately choosing the
right. Being
the children of God might seem more direct – and more difficult.
For to be a child of God is to be an imitator of God.
When our Lord uses this phrase, he connects it to the idea that God
treats the evil and the just equally – his sun rises on both.
We are to be perfect as God is perfect, loving even our enemies.
If purity is abstaining from evil, being a child of God is overcoming
evil with good. This
cannot help but stand in stark relief to the world around.
There world was much like ours in its corruptness.
I suspect, therefore, they got their share of ridicule.
I trust they bore it well, and that we will also. External workingsWe
are to be “lights.” What does
that mean?
I
once sailed at night along the Ohio river.
In the areas away from civilization, you could not tell exactly where the
banks were, and when the river turned. But
one simple light bulb, shining across the water, made the outline of the river
clear, and navigation sure. In
the same way we are to be beacons for this generation.
We are to hold out the word (not ram it down their throats).
Drink OfferingThe
last part of this passage can seem puzzling to modern readers – for we are
unfamiliar with the “drink offering.” But
there are three key points we need to know about this part of the old Jewish
law:
We
can take these three points and construct the parallel in Paul’s life.
Rejoice!Finally,
this is a statement of joy. Paul is
rejoicing in their faith; in the
growth of the kingdom, and in their mutual joy.
It is a great example of rejoicing in suffering.
For suffering, like works, produces the mature Christian.
As James tells us: (James 1:2-4 NIV) Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds, {3} because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance. {4} Perseverance must finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything. Let
us take the same attitude about our good works. They too are designed to produce a faith that is mature and
complete. It’s time for us to
grow up in the faith, leave behind the childish arguments – and work out our
salvation with fear and trembling, for it is indeed God who is working in us,
both to strengthen our will and give us strength. |