The letter of Paul to the Philippian church has been
accurately called the epistle of joy. While Paul was in a Roman prison cell,
the delivered messages from his friends at Philippi were sources of great joy
as he remembered their faith and dedication to God. He wrote this letter of
Philippians to those same folks, to let them know the happiness and joy he
experienced when he learned of their work and the testimony of their lives.
In the third chapter of Philippians, Paul gives a discourse
on what it means to really belong to Jesus, even citing some of his own
personal history, which he thought at the time to be truthful and an accurate
assessment of the things God was expecting of him. He called himself a Hebrew
of Hebrews; in regard to the law, a Pharisee; as for zeal, Paul was always
zealous for persecuting Christians and the church; and as for knowing and
living the absolute truth, he claimed to be faultless.
Now Paul is saying that all of those accomplishments are
nothing but rubbish, because the real substance of attaining righteousness is
not of himself, but only through Jesus. Many changes had been made in Paul's
life since his encounter with the resurrected Jesus on the road to Damascus. He
now knows that the sense of righteousness based on his own accomplishments
isn't righteousness at all. Only that which comes from God through faith in
Christ is the righteousness that saves.
That is what led Paul to proclaim in Philippians 3: 10-11, "I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the
fellowship of sharing in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death,
and so, somehow, to
attain to the resurrection from the dead."
Paul readily admitted that he had not yet
achieved those things, nor did he consider himself perfect. He confesses that
he is striving to press on and take hold of that for which Christ Jesus had
taken hold of him. Then notice verses 13 and 14, "Brothers, I do not consider
myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is
behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the
goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus."
There is some good advice for the
Philippians in Paul's statement following those words, "But one thing I
do:" Read them yourself because
it's pretty good advice for you and me, too.
Forgetting
what is behind..... That means if you have accomplished great things,
forget them. Your accomplishments cannot save you. If you have been successful
in business, or education, or parenting, or generosity, or even ministry, those
things are in the past! Forget what is behind you. Remember, we are pressing
on.
Straining
toward what is ahead.... What is ahead for us? It's really a dedication to making the right
decision to press on toward the goal; to win the prize in which God calls us
toward heaven. Paul was saying this, not only for his benefit, but also for all
Christians of all generations. Our main objective is to love and honor and
praise God, because he is calling us heavenward. All else is futile, all else
is rubbish.
<ronbwriting@yahoo.com>
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