Philippians 3:2-9; 12-14. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on Sunday, May 7, 2023.
This will be our last message on the love of God through Jesus. We talked about the Incarnation, and how God loved us enough to become one of us. We then talked about how he laid that life down in order to Redeem us. Third, we saw the gift of sending the Holy Spirit in order to live within us. Fourth, we looked at the gift of a sure, confirmed, faithful record of His dealings with humanity in the Word. Last week, we looked at the gift of prayer that allows us to communicate with God. And, today, we will look at the gift of the righteousness of Jesus that God shares with us.
Of course, these do not exhaust the ways in which God has lavished His love upon us. However, they go to the heart of what God desires for you and for me. None of us deserve to have our sins covered by another, and yet God loves us enough to make it possible for our sins to be covered by Jesus. More than that, He also makes it possible for us to become the righteousness of Christ and to live it out.
It is sad that there are people in the Church who are still confused over just what God desires of those who come to Christ. The apostles of the first century dealt with these issues, and yet they are still with us today. It is the tension between legalism and hedonism /antinomianism.
The legalist focuses on an outward conformity to certain rules and glories in their accomplishment of them. They generally shame others who do not conform to their list of rules, and very often, they shame themselves internally because they know they fall short.
The word antinomian basically means a person who is against law, or rules. In this context, it refers to a person who believes that they do not need to restrain themselves with sin because the death of Jesus "covers it all."
Both the legalist and the antinomian miss the heart of God in salvation. The answer is not in finding the right balance between the two. We should not advocate having some rules, but not getting to carried away with them. The answer given by the apostles lies not in satisfying a list or rules, and not in having no restraint (i.e., self-discipline). Rather, it lies in a transformation of the inner and outer man that is led and empowered by the Holy Spirit.
Let's look at our first passage.
Paul continually had to deal with false teachers coming in behind him and bringing confusion into the churches that he had started. A common false teaching was in this area of teaching Gentiles that it wasn't enough for them only to believe in Jesus. They also needed to take on the works of the Law. In this case, Paul deals with the pressure for Gentile Christians to be circumcised.
In verse 2, Paul refers to such teachers in three different ways. He first uses an Old Testament metaphor for a person who does evil things, i.e., a dog. Thus, the second way of referring to them, "evil doer," essentially defines the imagery of a dog. The third reference is "the mutilation." This is a play on the way that Jews would refer to themselves as "the circumcision." This was a title of honoring the fact that they had the Law and were obedient to God, as opposed to the Gentiles who were ignorant of the Law and were not part of the circumcision. However, Paul clearly picks a word that turns this on its head. They are not the circumcision, they are the mutilation. Obviously, Paul does not see them in a good light.
Paul tells them to beware, or to watch out for such teachers. They are not going to help them to please God.
For us today, I don't think there are many groups that are promoting circumcision, but we should recognize that the heart of the issue is not so much circumcision as it is requiring something else to be added to our belief in Jesus. Why do people tend to think that faith in Jesus cannot be enough to save us?
I think it generally has to do with a confusion about the work of God within believers, both its goal and its power. Thus, Paul ends verse 2 with the recognition that a believer in Jesus will put no confidence in the flesh.
On what do I place my confidence when it comes to salvation? What makes me know that I am acceptable, or right, with God? I'm not perfect, but if I were to die today, would I be allowed into the presence of the Lord? When it comes to salvation, my confidence should always rest upon Jesus, and him alone.
Thus, Paul emphasizes that Christians are to worship God "in the Spirit." We are not relying on things of the flesh to draw near to God, but instead, we rely upon the Spirit of God to help us worship the Father.
The false teachers would take aspects of the Old Covenant worship, that were legitimate, and teach that they are necessary for believers under the new covenant. Again, it is to say that faith in Jesus is not enough.
The heart of worshiping God is to declare that He is worthy of our faith and obedience, of our trust. Instead of being led by the Spirit of God who was establishing the faith through these apostles, they are being led by men to resist the Spirit and to establish a different wisdom as their guide moving forward. It is interesting that Israel resisted the leading of the Holy Spirit in the wilderness when the Old Covenant (which was new then) was being established. They resisted and retreated into the calf worship that they had picked up in Egypt. Similarly, there is a resistance again as the Spirit leads them out from under the tutorship of the Law into the life of the Spirit of God.
Paul sees this in an enabling to worship. We are enabled to worship God and please Him, be acceptable, by the help of the Holy Spirit, not by human wisdom, or skill.
Paul is telling Gentiles that "we are the circumcision" who worship God by the help of the Spirit, rather than by the help of the flesh. They are the circumcision because they have had their hearts circumcised by God Himself. By the way, this was spoken of even in the giving of the Law. In Deuteronomy 30:6, Moses describes God's grace in helping them repent through a spiritual circumcision of the heart. Thus, even under the Law of Moses, it is made clear that the physical circumcision, which they were commanded to do, was symbolic of an inner work that had to be done by God. No man, or child, circumcises themselves. They need another human to do it for them. Who can help me circumcise my heart? Only God can through faith in Jesus.
Now that Jesus had paid the price and the Holy Spirit was leading the remnant to believe in Him, the symbols of the Old Covenant were no longer needed.
Again, a true believer in Christ should have no confidence in the flesh. I wish that this was true of most Christians today. We are dazzled by the flesh today more than we even understand. It is wonderful to hear someone sing or play music who is extremely good and proficient. It is wonderful to see beautiful buildings. However, it is a different thing if this is what dazzles me and gives me confidence in God.
The word confidence in English emphasizes faith. However, the Greek word has a sense of persuasion. They are similar, but there is a subtle difference. Those who are persuaded by what they see and do in the flesh will miss the work that the Holy Spirit is doing. Paul mentions this in 1 Corinthians 2:1. Paul did not come to them with great speech, as the Greeks loved to hear. He was among them in weakness, in fear, and in much trembling. However, the Spirit of God showed up in powerful ways. Salvation had come to them through the work of the Spirit, not the flesh of Paul. Why would they now retreat back to following the flesh?
It was those who put their confidence in the flesh that had rejected Jesus and put him to death, both Jews and Romans (the Jews in a religious way, the Romans in a secular way). Even the disciples followed Jesus partially because of the Spirit and partially because of the flesh. Jesus did great miracles and they were convinced he could save Israel. Their flesh was already to sit beside Jesus when he took control of Israel. But then, Jesus went to the cross and nailed the flesh, that they had pinned so many hopes upon, to a cross. I picture God being so fed up with our hunger for a superman, who is head and shoulders above the rest, to save us. He sends us our superman and then nails him to a cross so that we can finally get the message. Quit looking to the flesh to save you!
At the cross, we are shown that confidence in the flesh, be it me, another, or even the mortal Jesus, whether religious or secular, will always sacrifice the work of God's Spirit. When Jesus was crucified on the cross, the hopes they had put on him in the flesh, on a work of the flesh, were crucified as well.
It is easy to see this as somehow the message of someone who struggled with obeying God, a loser at obeying God's law. However, Paul cuts this argument off in verses 3 through 6. He had been one of the "Olympians" of fleshly religion in Israel so he lists his fleshly accomplishments. It was outside of Damascus that Saul of Tarsus discovered just how much his confidence in his fleshly accomplishments impressed God. God struck him blind and rebuked him. "Why are you persecuting me?"
That is what God thought about the "best" that 1st century Judaism could produce. I wonder what He thinks about the "best" that 21st century Christianity has produced.
Paul had to choose that day when Jesus confronted him. To follow Jesus and the Holy Spirit, he would have to let go of everything that he had accomplished, and was trying to accomplish. Those "gains" were keeping him from following God. He could not have Messiah and hold on to his confidence in a system that focused on the outward.
In a way, the dynamics in Israel did him a favor. Those in charge in Jerusalem would not be happy if he chose to follow Jesus. Persecution would come to him. He knew up front that to choose Jesus was to leave that system behind. However, the gentiles in Philippi and other places could probably try to keep the Law of Moses and call themselves believers in Jesus. Yet, Paul is showing them here why that can never be. To follow Jesus, to follow the Spirit of God, is to let go of anything else being the source of my confidence.
We might ask at this point why a person would want to hold onto a system of fleshly confidence. At the heart of the answer, we should see the desires of our own flesh. The Law of Moses did not set up a system that was focused on the flesh. It was the leaders of Israel who had taken the Law and turned it into a flesh-based confidence system. They did this over the top of the witness of that same Law telling them that they fell short and needed the help of God, the circumcision of the heart that only God could do.
Saul let go of those gains in order to have Jesus, to have "the excellence of the knowledge of Christ Jesus" for whom he went on to suffer (v. 8). He wanted to know this amazing Jesus even if it cost him everything.
Am I a person of the Spirit who is persuaded by the Spirit of God and who places their confidence on The One in whom the Spirit was without measure?
As Paul makes his argument, it was easy for people to portray him as advocating the life of the antinomian we mentioned earlier. Even today, people will speak about a tension between Pauline theology and that of the apostle James. However, if you read Paul's letters, you will find that he emphasizes doing righteous things, as much as he emphasizes resting in the righteousness of Christ alone for salvation.
Paul is emphasizing that through Jesus, and the Spirit of Christ, we are given a righteousness that is far better than anything we could accomplish under any flesh-oriented confidence system (be it Jewish or Christian). Jesus himself stated in Matthew 5:20 that unless their righteousness exceeded that of the Pharisees none of them would enter the Kingdom of Heaven. He knew that this would shock his hearers because they thought of the Pharisees as the "Olympians" of righteousness. However, in God's eyes, their external, flesh-based righteousness was as filthy rags. It fell woefully short. In truth, Jesus is not setting a high bar here. He is merely speaking the truth.
So, we must start there as Paul points out at the end of verse 8. My righteous works in and of themselves are rubbish, garbage. Let me reiterate that point. It doesn't just say that they fall short. It is worse than that. If I invited you over for dinner and overcooked the meal a little bit, it would fall short of being a good meal. However, if I put garbage on your plate and attempted to serve it to you, it would be gross and insulting. It isn't just falling short. It is on the negative of the scale.
This is not to say that it was wrong to obey the Law of Moses. It is to say that the human heart tends to turn religion into an external performance without internal change. Saul's problem was not in trying to obey the Law. It was in refusing to hear what the Spirit of God was trying to say to him through it. There were plenty of Jews in his day who heard this message from the Spirit and were waiting for the Messiah to come and clean up the mess that the religious leaders of Israel had created.
In the book of Romans, Paul saw that the Law of Moses served to slow down their fall away from God while at the same time showing them their true spiritual need.
It wasn't rubbish to try and obey God, but it was rubbish to think that his righteousness was enough to please God. Our righteousness always falls short of true inner transformation that is led by the Spirit of God when its source is about demonstrating that we are good.
Paul contrasts a righteousness that is from the Law (my performance) versus the righteousness that is from God through faith in Jesus. He is not against the Law. It had served its purpose. However, he is against developing a righteousness that merely adds Jesus to what the Pharisees were doing. Our performance of the Law cannot be the source of our righteousness.
I picture this as an income tax form religion. We can focus on the letter of God's word, and come up with our list of do's and don'ts. In a sense, instead of letting the Spirit of God audit our hearts, we make ourselves legalists who audit ourselves. We create a system of understanding that creates people who are really good at doing their "spiritual taxes," but also others who are terrible at it. O, well, they should be more like Saul of Tarsus.
We should be hearing what the Word says to our heart about dead works, but our tendency (in the flesh) is to build a religion that pats certain fleshly people on the back. They are promoted as "those who can get it done." Then, the people look up to them as amazingly unsurpassable, religious icons.
Paul found a different righteousness that day outside of Damascus. When he quit resisting the Spirit of God and embraced Jesus, he was suddenly right with God, pleasing to Him. Imagine all of the people that Saul had injured, and in a moment his sins are covered! "That's not fair!" No, it isn't because none of us will be saved if God gives us what is fair. The grace of God was available to a man who had been leading saints off to their death. Simultaneously, the grace of God was given to countless uncircumcised Gentiles who hadn't been keeping the Law of Moses, and now Paul is telling them that they shouldn't keep the Law of Moses. They were saved when they obeyed the Spirit and put their faith in Jesus alone. Paul emphasizes this in verse 9: "through faith in Christ..."
Yes, I am still doing something, righteousness, but the motivation is different. I went from trying to show God how good I am so that He will save me, to believing in the salvation of Jesus and following Him by the Spirit. One has a confidence in us, and the other has a confidence in Jesus.
There continues to be a great confusion in the minds of many between salvation and discipleship. This can only be because our pulpits are confused on this issue. We can muddy the lines between being saved and being discipled. Yet, ultimately, Paul sees the problem's source as evil workers (v. 2) who infiltrate and promote the confusion.
If you are saved, have salvation, you know that you would be with Jesus in heaven if you were to die today. Discipleship on the other hand has to do with how much you look like Jesus. We can too easily make a certain nebulous level of discipleship necessary for salvation, and this is a mistake. In fact, it is not the Gospel.
How many times did the disciples fail, and were rebuked by Jesus? I didn't count them, but it was many. Peter himself was rebuked by the Lord with the harsh words, "Get behind me, satan!" Yet, were they "kicked off the team?" Did they lose their place in community of believers? No. They didn't work their way into the family of God and they couldn't fail their way out. There is a caveat to that last sentence, but more on that later. Salvation is based upon my faith in the righteousness of Jesus alone. I am saved as long as I am trusting in the righteousness of Jesus to be my salvation. Discipleship also takes faith in Jesus. Our weakness in being made more like Jesus does not cancel our place in the body of Christ.
It is clear that Paul in verses 8-9 is talking about salvation. The righteousness of Christ alone can save me. However, once we are saved, we are to move on to discipleship. Verses 12-14 are not speaking of salvation. Paul is not saying that he hasn't "attained" salvation yet. It is not the "perfected" who "attain" salvation. He is talking about discipleship. He doesn't fully look like Jesus yet! He is still on the path of discipleship, which ends when we enter the presence of Jesus and are resurrected (see v. 10-11). Paul sees himself in this process of discipleship, being perfected. Of course, discipleship is a component of salvation, but the point is that salvation is being a child of God, and discipleship is taking on the family likeness. We do not lose our salvation because our discipleship isn't going so well at the moment. God is faithful to treat us as sons and "discipline" us (Hebrews 12:5-6).
The Spirit of God is given to us to enable us to become like Christ. We need to cooperate with the Holy Spirit by turning away from things in our past and turning towards Jesus. Union with Jesus is what lies ahead. The Spirit is leading us "upward" out of sin, and into full communion with Jesus as glorified sons of God.
The ultimate prize is Jesus Himself. Yet, the righteousness of Jesus is not only about a legal exchange of his righteousness to cover my sins. Just as resurrection will change our mortal bodies so the believer is in a spiritual transformation process in which we are made to be the righteousness of Jesus. He is teaching us to live out the righteousness of Jesus. This is discipleship. The disciples did not disciple themselves. They were taught by Jesus and the Spirit of God. So too, we must be led by the Spirit to become more like Jesus.
If you go back to Philippians 2:12-13, Paul emphasizes that we should "work out your own salvation with fear and trembling." Many people don't know what to do with that verse because it sounds like the legalists are right. However, Paul is not promoting a new legalism under a different law.
The key is in the phrase "work out." This corresponds to the phrase in verse 13 "works in you." Because you are saved, the Spirit of God has taken up residence within you. He proceeds to work into you the things of God, and you should work that out into your life. This is the New Testament picture of a believer in Christ. We are daily working out what the Spirit of God is working in us. Why should we fear and tremble? It is not because God is capricious and may jerk the rug of salvation out from under us. Rather, it is because I don't trust my flesh and its ability to resist and neutralize the work of the Spirit within us. I take seriously that God is working in me and seek first to understand it, and then to cooperate with it. Saul was not taking it seriously. He was fortunate that the Lord in His mercy rebuked him so severely.
God is not in heaven saying, "Why can't you do it!" Rather, He is inside of us saying, "Take my hand, and I will help you do it!" How can I say no to such love?
Quickly, let me just remind us of similar verses from Paul in the book of Galatians.
In Galatians 6:7-8, Paul warns believers that even we who have been saved should be careful because God cannot be mocked. This is what an antinomian does. They not only believe that the righteousness of Jesus covers their sin, but that it also covers them continuing to sin without even trying to live differently. This is to make a mockery of why Christ died. He did not die to leave us stuck in our sins throughout the rest of our lives. No true Christian will pretend that they can continue to give themselves to sin, and yet, be covered by their "Jesus insurance." Jude calls this a "license for immorality" in Jude 1:4. He then says that such an idea is a "denial" of Jesus. You cannot put your faith in Jesus and deny him at the same time. To embrace Jesus is to embrace his righteousness, both for salvation and as the work that the Spirit is doing in you.
In Galatians 6, Paul warns that our life is a sowing. Your choices and actions are sowing seeds to the flesh or to the Spirit of God. The seeds to the flesh will only reap corruption and destruction.
So, is it possible for our discipleship to become so bad that we "lose" our salvation? Paul doesn't use that terminology here, but he does warn that if we continually give ourselves over to the flesh, then we will reap destruction. He had warned them of this back in Galatians 5:16-21. He counsels them to follow the Spirit and not the flesh. He then states that the works of the flesh are obvious while listing some. Notice that it ends with the warning that those who practice such things will not inherit the Kingdom of God. Whether they were actually saved before or not, we should recognize that there is a whole class of people in Scripture who knew the truth, were part of the being saved community, and yet perished due to lack of faith. The children of Israel in the desert, Lot's wife, Judas, and many others, perished and reaped destruction because of unbelief. Thus, salvation is based upon faith in Jesus, but so is our discipleship. They did not fall short because their discipleship wasn't perfect. Rather, they fell short because their sowing to their flesh overwhelmed any faith they may have had in God.
Let me close with reminding us of Galatians 2:20. Paul died on the day that he met Jesus. From then on, he quit trying to do what he wanted and lived his life to do what Jesus wanted. He wasn't perfect in performing that, but it was how he lived. We are to daily crucify our flesh and its desires. We are not to live out our desires and purposes, but to live out the desires and purposes of God in our life.
So, how is it that our works that are done by faith in Jesus and listening to the Spirit can be clean and acceptable to God? They are purified by faith in Jesus and washed by the presence of the Holy Spirit as we cooperate with Him.
This is a daily battle, but do not lose hope. The Spirit of God will help you in this battle against your own flesh. Keep your faith in Jesus, that he has redeemed you (saved you), and work on following the leading of the Holy Spirit to become like Jesus (discipling). Ultimately, we all lay our heads down in death short of perfectly looking like Jesus, but through death and resurrection, He will finish the work in each one of us! Amen!