Sunday
Morning Bible Study
October 1, 2000
Introduction
Thirty years before the writing of this letter to the Philippian church, a
man named Saul had been on his way from Jerusalem to Damascus on a mission from
the high priest. He was going to hunt
down more of those “Christians” and have them arrested, maybe even put to
death.
Up to that time, Saul had lived an incredible life. He had it all. He was a Jew among Jews.
He was at the head of his class as a Pharisee. As far as people could see, Saul was perfect.
But Saul met someone on the road to Damascus. Saul met Jesus. He would
be changed forever. We know him by his
other name, Paul, the one who wrote this letter.
:7 But what things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ.
gain – kerdos
– gain, advantage
loss – zemia
– damage, loss
counted – hegeomai – to lead; to consider, deem, account, think; a
belief resting not on one’s inner feeling or sentiment, but on the due
consideration of external grounds, and the weighing and comparing of facts; a deliberate and careful judgment
When Paul met Jesus on the road to Damascus, nothing else seemed to matter
anymore. All the things that he was so
proud of in his life were worthless.
Everything that he thought might impress God seemed empty.
:8 Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the
knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord:
excellency – huperecho –
to have or hold over one; to stand out, rise above, overtop; be superior in rank,
authority, power; to excel, to be superior, better than, to surpass
Lesson
Still excellent?
When Paul first came to the Lord, he counted those things he was proud in
as “loss”. But now, thirty years later,
he counts and is still counting ALL THINGS as loss compared to knowing Jesus.
Remember that movie (Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure) where the two
teenagers keep saying to each other through the whole movie, “Excellent!”?
Can you say that about knowing Jesus, that it has been the most “excellent”
thing you’ve ever known?
:8 for whom I have suffered the
loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ,
I have suffered loss – zemioo
– to affect with damage, do damage to; to sustain damage, to receive
injury, suffer loss
dung – skubalon – any
refuse, as the excrement of animals, offscourings, rubbish, dregs; of things
worthless and detestable; manure
Back in Philippinas 3:3, Paul writes,
(Phil 3:3 NLT) For we who worship God in the Spirit are the
only ones who are truly circumcised. We put no confidence in human effort.
Instead, we boast about what Christ Jesus has done for us.
This is what’s behind the phrase “have no confidence in the flesh” in verse
3. Paul had been trusting in what a
great Jewish guy he was, but now he counts it all as manure.
I may win – kerdaino
– to gain, acquire, to get gain; of gain arising from shunning or escaping
from evil (where we say “to spare one’s self”, “be spared”)
Lesson
Trusting only in Jesus.
God doesn’t want us trusting in anything but in Jesus.
Illustration
Elvis was apparently fond of
wearing lots of gold jewelry from various religions. When someone asked him why he wore things from so many different
beliefs, he said something like, “Just coverin’ all my bases. Uh-huh”
Wrong attitude.
Illustration
A ship on her way to Australia met with a very terrible storm and sprang a
leak. As evils seldom come alone, a little while after another tempest assailed
her. There happened to be a gentleman of the most nervous temperament aboard,
whose garrulous tongue and important air began to alarm all the passengers.
When the storm came on, the captain, who knew what mischief might be done by a
suspicious and talkative individual, managed to get near him, intending to
quiet him. The gentleman, addressing the captain, said in a tone of alarm,
“What an awful storm! I am afraid we shall go to the bottom, for I hear the
leak is very bad.”
“Well,” said the captain, “as you seem to know it and perhaps the others do
not, you had better not mention it to anyone, lest you should frighten the
passengers or dispirit my men. Perhaps as it is a very bad case, you would lend
us your valuable help, and then we may possibly get through it. Would you have
the goodness to stand here and hold hard on this rope? Do not leave it, but
pull as hard as ever you can till I tell you to let it go.”
So our friend clenched his teeth, and put his feet firmly down, and kept on
holding this rope with all his might, till he earnestly wished for a
substitute. The storm abated, the ship was safe, and our friend was released
from his rope-holding. He expected a deputation would bring him the thanks of
all the passengers, but they were evidently unconscious of his merits, and even
the captain did not seem very grateful.
So our hero, in a roundabout style, hinted that such valuable services as
his, having saved the vessel, ought to be rewarded at least with some few words
of acknowledgment. He was shocked to hear the captain say, “What? You think you
saved the vessel? Why, I gave you that rope to hold to keep you busy, that you
might not be in such a feverish state of alarm.”
This becomes a picture of how much self-righteous men contribute to their
own salvation apart from Christ. They think they can certainly save themselves,
and there they stand holding the rope with their clenched teeth and their feet
tightly fixed, while they are really doing no more than our friend, who was
similarly fooled. If ever you get to heaven, you will find that everything you
did toward your own salvation, apart from the Lord Jesus, was about as useful
as holding the rope; that, in fact, the safety of the soul lies somewhere else
and not in you; and that what is wanted with you is just to get out of the way
and let Christ come in and magnify his grace.
• Charles
Haddon Spurgeon, The Quotable Spurgeon, (Wheaton: Harold Shaw Publishers, Inc,
1990)
:9 And be found in him,
Illustration
Abraham Lincoln was walking into
town one day when he was overtaken by a man in a wagon going in the same
direction. Lincoln hailed him and
asked, “Will you have the goodness to take my overcoat to town for me?”
“With pleasure,” responded the
stranger, “but how will you get it again?” “Oh, very easily; I intend to remain
in it!”
Mr. Lincoln’s humor aside, his idea
for a ride roughly parallels what happens when we trust Christ as Savior. When we trust Jesus to give us His
righteousness, we are “clothed” with Him.
Never see yourself outside of Jesus Christ.
All that God has for you or will ever do for you is in Him, by Him, through
Him, and for Him.
Illustration
William Booth (founder of the Salvation Army) once said: “When I got the poor of London on my heart
and caught a vision of what Jesus Christ, the reigning Lord, could do with
those people, though I knew there were many with greater training, greater
wisdom, greater intelligence, greater power than William Booth, I was
determined that the living Christ would have all of William Booth that there
was.”
I desire more and more of Jesus.
Someone says, “I need more love.”
no, you need more of Jesus.
Someone says, “I need more joy.”
no, you need more of Jesus.
:9 not having mine own
righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of
Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith:
When we accept Christ, we are trusting that He will make us right with God
through His death on the cross.
When Jesus died on the cross, God put on Jesus the punishment that was
meant for me. Jesus paid the entire
price for my sins. But God also took
the righteousness of Jesus and gave it to me.
And exchange of my sin for His righteousness.
But if I am trusting in my own good deeds, in my own “righteousness”, then
the picture is that when I get to stand before God, that’s what I’ll be clothed
in, my own deeds. Isaiah says that our
own “righteousness” is as filthy rags:
(Isa 64:6 KJV) But we are all as an unclean thing, and all
our righteousnesses are as filthy rags; and we all do fade as a leaf; and our
iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away.
Illustration
The Beggar’s Rags
A beggar lived near the king’s palace. One day he saw a proclamation posted
outside the palace gate. The king was giving a great dinner. Anyone dressed in
royal garments was invited to the party.
The beggar went on his way. He looked at the rags he was wearing and
sighed. Surely only kings and their families wore royal robes, he thought. Slowly an idea crept into his mind. The
audacity of it made him tremble. Would he dare? He made his way back to the palace. He approached the guard at
the gate. “Please,sire, I would like to speak to the king.” “Wait here,” the guard replied. In a few minutes, he was back. “His majesty
will see you,” he said, and led the beggar in. “You wish to see me?” asked the king. “Yes, your majesty. I want so much to attend the banquet, but I
have no royal robes to wear. Please, sir, if I may be so bold, may I have one
of your old garments so that I, too, may come to the banquet?” The beggar shook so hard that he could not
see the faint smile that was on the king’s face. “You have been wise in coming to me,” the king said. He called to
his son, the young prince. “Take this man to your room and array him in some of
your clothes.” The prince did as he was
told and soon the beggar was standing before a mirror, clothed in garments that
he had never dared hope for. “You are
now eligible to attend the king’s banquet tomorrow night,” said the prince.
“But even more important, you will never need any other clothes. These garments
will last forever.” The beggar dropped
to his knees. “Oh, thank you,” he cried. But as he started to leave, he looked
back at his pile of dirty rags on the floor. He hesitated. What if the prince
was wrong? What if he would need his old clothes again. Quickly he gathered
them up. The banquet was far greater
than he had ever imagined, but he could not enjoy himself as he should. He had
made a small bundle of his old rags and it kept falling off his lap. The food
was passed quickly and the beggar missed some of the greatest delicacies. Time proved that the prince was aright. The
clothes lasted forever. Still the poor beggar grew fonder and fonder of his old
rags. As time passed people seemed to
forget the royal robes he was wearing. They saw only the little bundle of filthy
rags that he clung to wherever he went. They even spoke of him as the old man
with the rags. One day as he lay dying,
the king visited him. The beggar saw the sad look on the king’s face when he
looked at the small bundle of rags by the bed. Suddenly the beggar remembered
the prince’s words and he realized that his bundle of rags had cost him a
lifetime of true royalty. He wept bitterly at his folly. And the king wept with him.
We have been invited into a royal family—the family of God. To feast at
God’s dinner table, all we have to do is shed our old rags and put on the “new
clothes” of faith which is provided by God’s Son, Jesus Christ. But we cannot hold onto our old rags. When
we put our faith in Christ, we must let go of the sin in our life, and our old
ways of living. Those things must be discarded if we are to experience true
royalty and abundant life in Christ. “Behold, the old is passed away; the new
has come!” (2 Corinthians 5:17).
Edited from More Hot Illustrations for Youth Talks by Wayne Rice. Copyright 1995 by Youth Specialties, Inc.
:10 That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the
fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death;
We like the sound of the “power of his resurrection”, but it all goes hand
in hand with the “fellowship of his sufferings” and being conformed “unto his
death”.
The resurrected life always follows the crucified life.
being made conformable – summorphoo
– to be conformed to, receive the same form as
:11 If by any means I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead.
attain – katantao
– to come to, arrive; to come to a place over against, opposite another;
metaph. to attain to a thing
(Phil 3:11 NASB) in order that I may attain to the
resurrection from the dead.
:12 Not as though I had already attained, either were already perfect:
attained – lambano
– to take; to take with the hand, lay hold of, any person or thing in order
to use it; to take to one’s self, lay hold upon, take possession of, i.e. to
appropriate to one’s self; to receive (what is given), to gain, get, obtain, to
get back
perfect – teleioo
– to make perfect, complete; to carry through completely, to accomplish,
finish, bring to an end; to complete (perfect)
Paul is simply saying that he hasn’t “arrived”. He’s not perfect. Not
yet.
:12 but I follow after, if that I
may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus.
follow after – dioko – to
make to run or flee, put to flight,
drive away; to run swiftly in order to catch a person or thing, to run after; to press on: figuratively
of one who in a race runs swiftly to reach the goal; to persecute; without the idea of hostility, to run after,
follow after: someone; metaph., to pursue; to seek after eagerly, earnestly
endeavour to acquire
(NAS) I press on
Lesson
Keep moving
“Even if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit
there.”
• Will Rogers
Columnist Herb Caen wrote in the San Francisco Chronicle: “Every morning in
Africa, a gazelle wakes up. It knows it
must run faster than the fastest lion or it will be killed. Every morning a lion wakes up. It knows it must outrun the slowest gazelle
or it will starve to death. It doesn’t
matter whether you are a lion or a gazelle; when the sun comes up, you’d better
be running.”
Don’t just run to live, run to win.
Paul wrote,
(1 Cor 9:24-25 NLT) Remember that in a race everyone runs, but
only one person gets the prize. You also must run in such a way that you will
win. {25} All athletes practice strict self-control. They do it to win a prize
that will fade away, but we do it for an eternal prize.
Peter had let the Lord down. He was
supposed to be the “Rock”, yet when the soldiers arrested Jesus, Peter ran like
the rest of the disciples. And to make
it worse, he went on to deny the Lord three times that night. Jesus had called Peter to follow Him, and
Jesus had promised to make Peter a fisher of men. But Peter had failed, so Peter went back to fishing for
fish. He and his pals had fished all
night without catching any fish. Then
Jesus showed up. After they all ate
breakfast together, Jesus pulled Peter aside …
(John 21:15-17 KJV) So when they had dined, Jesus saith to Simon
Peter, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more than these? He saith unto him,
Yea, Lord; thou knowest that I love thee. He saith unto him, Feed my lambs.
{16} He saith to him again the second time, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou
me? He saith unto him, Yea, Lord; thou knowest that I love thee. He saith unto
him, Feed my sheep. {17} He saith unto him the third time, Simon, son of Jonas,
lovest thou me? Peter was grieved because he said unto him the third time,
Lovest thou me? And he said unto him, Lord, thou knowest all things; thou
knowest that I love thee. Jesus saith unto him, Feed my sheep.
What was Jesus doing with Peter? He was reminding Peter that He still loved him. He was reminding Peter that he needed to go
back and fish for men. He was reminding
Peter to get back to the race that He had called him for.
apprehend … apprehended – katalambano
– to lay hold of; to lay
hold of so as to make one’s own, to obtain, attain to, to make one’s own, to take into one’s self,
appropriate; to seize upon, take possession of; in a good sense, of
Christ by his holy power and influence laying hold of the human mind and will,
in order to prompt and govern it
When the Lord saved me, He had a purpose and a plan for my life. Paul says
he’s pressing on to take hold of what Jesus has for him.
He has works for me to do while I’m here on this earth.
(Eph 2:10 KJV) For we are his workmanship, created in Christ
Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in
them.
He has a future for me in heaven forever.
:13 Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I
do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those
things which are before,
to have apprehended – katalambano
– to lay hold of; to lay hold of so as to make one’s own, to obtain, attain
to, to make one’s own, to take into one’s self, appropriate; to seize upon,
take possession of; in a good sense, of Christ by his holy power and influence
laying hold of the human mind and will, in order to prompt and govern it
forgetting – epilanthanomai –
to forget; neglecting, no longer caring for; forgotten, given over to oblivion,
i.e. uncared for
reaching forth – epekteinomai
– to stretch out to or towards; to stretch (one’s self) forward to
Lesson
Don’t look back
I think that sometimes we are just too caught up in the past.
For some, the past is the “good old days”.
We can talk for hours about how God used to work in our lives.
For others, the past is filled with terror. We are so hurt by what has happened to us that we can’t move on
in life.
I don’t think it’s bad that we deal with our past, but if we’re not
careful, we’ll get swallowed up in the past and never take the time to live in
the present.
Illustration
When Cortez landed at Vera Cruz in 1519 to begin his
conquest of Mexico with small force of 700 men, he purposely set fire to his
fleet of 11 ships. His men on the shore
watched their only means of retreat sinking to the bottom of the Gulf of
Mexico. With no means of retreat, there
was only one direction to move, forward into the Mexican interior to meet
whatever might come their way. In
paying the price for being Christ’s disciple, you too must purposefully destroy
all avenues of retreat. Resolve that
whatever the price for being His follower, you will have to pay it.
• Walter
Henricksen, Disciples Are Made—Not Born
:14 I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in
Christ Jesus.
mark – skopos – an
observer, a watchman; the distant mark looked at, the goal or end one has in
view. It’s the tape at the end of the
race.
the prize – brabeion – the
award to the victor in the games, a prize; metaph. of the heavenly reward for
Christian character
Lesson
Move forward
Set your sights on Jesus and move forward.
Illustration
One morning a couple of cowpunchers went out on the range to bring in a
wild steer from the mountains. They
took along with them one of those shaggy little gray donkeys—a burro. Now a big three-year old steer that’s been
running loose in the timber is a tough customer to handle. Nevertheless, these cowboys had a technique
for handling this steer. They got a
rope on the steer and then they tied him neck and neck, right up close, to the
burro and let them go.
At first, the burro had a bad time.
The steer threw him all over the place. He banged him against trees,
rocks, into bushes. Time after time they both went down. But there was one great difference between
the burro and the steer. The burro had an idea. He wanted to go home. And no matter how often the steer threw him
every time the burro got to his feet he took a step nearer the corral. This went on and on. After about a week, the burro showed up at
the corral. He had with him the tamest
and sorriest-looking steer you ever saw.
Sometimes we feel like that poor burro, being tied to such difficult
times. But we need to be like that
burro and keep getting back up and taking another step home.
Press on. Keep moving. Keep moving forward.