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Perspective: Summary: We Must Learn To See Things As God Sees Them
Perspective: Summary: We Must Learn To See Things As God Sees Them
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Scripture: Philippians 1:12-18
Denomination: Baptist
How we see things in our lives and in our worlds is a lot more
powerful and has a lot more impact on us than we might imagine.
For example, if we see the world as existing to bring us pleasure
and happiness, then when it doesn’t we get angry or frustrated or
confused: “why is this happening to me? I’m a good person, I don’t
deserve this, why???” On the opposite side, if we see ourselves as
completely worthless, and someone does a kindness to us, we
reject that because we don’t deserve it. Less extreme, if we see our
city as a place that exists to serve us then we get impatient sitting
on the Quesnell Bridge during construction rush hour. If we see God
as a gentle grandpa handing out nice presents we’ll look at difficult
times as indicators of a problem, like maybe God left us alone. If we
see church as a place full of hypocrites because we knew some we
won’t want to join. If we see a Muslim woman wearing a burka, or a
native man on the street walking towards us, and we feel some
twinge of fear, that reveals to us something of how we see the
world.
“12 And I want you to know, my dear brothers and sisters, that
everything that has happened to me here has helped to spread the
Good News. 13 For everyone here, including the whole palace
guard, knows that I am in chains because of Christ. 14 And because
of my imprisonment, most of the believers here have gained
confidence and boldly speak God’s message without fear.
15 It’s true that some are preaching out of jealousy and rivalry. But
others preach about Christ with pure motives. 16 They preach
because they love me, for they know I have been appointed to
defend the Good News. 17 Those others do not have pure motives
as they preach about Christ. They preach with selfish ambition, not
sincerely, intending to make my chains more painful to me. 18 But
that doesn’t matter. Whether their motives are false or genuine, the
message about Christ is being preached either way, so I rejoice.”
And so Paul does not despair. Well, now that is quite nice for Paul
and everything, he is one of those “super-Christians”, but what does
that have to say to us today? None of us are in chains because we
were telling people about Jesus. But we do have “bad things”
happen to us. Here comes the hard part: how does God see those
“bad things” in our lives? I know how we tend to see them – unfair,
painful, hampering us, to be ended as quickly as possible. But how
does God see them, and is there a perspective there that might be
different than ours? That might in fact be healthier?? I’m not going
to answer those questions in a sermon because they are too
specific and have too wide a range, anywhere from “God hates
those bad things because they are a direct result of our sin and He
doesn’t want us to live like that a moment longer”, to “God sees
these as opportunities for “pure joy” like in James 1 where we read
that as “your faith is tested, your endurance has a chance to grow. 4
So let it grow, for when your endurance is fully developed, you will
be perfect and complete, needing nothing.”
The point is not that I answer that question, but that you ask it.
“God, how do you see what is going on in my life?” Paul saw the
events of his life through the purpose of his life, which was to
spread the good news about Jesus, and that perspective profoundly
shaped how he responded to the hardships of life.
And before moving on, there is a major theme introduced here that
permeates the entire letter – Jesus first. The commentators call this
“the primacy of the Gospel”, but I prefer the simpler “Jesus first”.
This, I suggest to you, is the best lens through which to see all of
our lives.
What is going on here, in its original context, and what does that
mean for us today? I can answer the first one but then I’m going to
ask for your help in understanding the second. In Paul’s day, I
believe the “most Christians” saw it like this: if Paul is willing to
suffer that much for Jesus, surely I can take the risk of talking about
Jesus with the people around me. Paul’s willingness to suffer if
necessary EN-couraged them, and they responded. Now I need
some help, because while I can talk about fear and how I think it
impacts how we live (particularly in relation to how we speak or
don’t speak about Jesus), it isn’t something I can really relate to. I
have other struggles, but that isn’t one, so maybe some of you can
help me. What does vs. 14 have to say to us in 2010 about a
perspective on fear that will help us? Why are we afraid, how does
that feel, how does it impact our lives and our witness for Jesus?
Can anyone help me out?
I think fear feeds on lies. Now of course there are legitimate fears
based in truth – one feels fear about jumping of the top of a bridge
towards the Nile river even if a bungee-cord is securely wrapped
around one’s ankles. But most of them, I think, are based on lies –
we’ll be rejected, we’ll be mocked, we’ll be left out… and (here is
the hidden part of the lie), that will really matter and be bad. For
example, the lie: “I am afraid to share about Jesus because I don’t
like feeling rejected because it makes me feel worthless”; the truth:
“I can tell people about Jesus even if they reject me because God
will never reject me because he loves me whether I succeed or fail.”
See how “Jesus first” changes perspective and chases out the lies?
The last thing I want to take out of this passage and apply to us
today is the idea in vss. 15-18 about “preaching”. It is the main
theme, our translation uses the word 6 times (it is there 3 times in
the original language because Paul likes writing really long
complicated sentences). In Paul’s day, it meant “1) to announce,
declare, promulgate, make known; 2) to proclaim publicly, publish”
(http://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/lexicon/lexicon.cfm?
Strongs=G2605&t=KJV), and “the sense is that of the proclamation
or declaration of a completed happening” (Kittel, TDNT 1:70). So it
was probably mostly verbal proclamation, but not the way we
associate “preaching” today with some professional like me
standing before a group of people who believe much the same thing
in a formal setting like a church congregation. There would have
been some of that, but that is obviously not what Paul is talking
about when he says “most of the believers here have gained
confidence and boldly speak God’s message without fear”.
Instead, what it means is that Paul saw the Christians around him
talking about what Jesus had done for them: announcing, declaring,
proclaiming publicly what they had come to know (head, heart, and
spirit) about Jesus.
This, I submit, is still our task and our goal. Now in our culture the
word “preach” is full of negative connotations. Madonna sang “papa
don’t preach” in the 80s, the adjective “preachy” means “Having or
revealing a tendency to give moral advice in a tedious or self-
righteous way” (dictionary.com). So we need to re-think what it
means for us to live out the clear message of Phil. 1:12-18, we need
to boldly proclaim publicly what Jesus has done for us, in a way that
will get the message heard. In Canada in 2010, let me make a few
guiding suggestions:
Conclusion:
Two examples will wrap us up this morning. For the next two
Wednesday nights we are going to demonstrate what it means to be
the people of God by collecting food for the Edmonton Food Bank.
In the example of the sheep and the goats, Jesus says “I was
hungry and you fed me”, concluding that “whatever you did for the
least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did to me”. That
demonstration is natural in our culture, festivals collect food, football
games collect food, corporations collect food, distribution is
organized and administered by our city, so for Christians like us to
join in something like that is easy and natural and a demonstration
of our commitment to Jesus. And it creates opportunities for us to
be authentic – if people ask why we are collecting food we can tell
them, and when you talk to people on Thursday at work or school or
in social situations and they say “what did you do last night” you can
tell them. Or maybe you want to be proactive and invite them ahead
of time to come and help.
Second story. Last week I had coffee with someone I knew when
they were a junior high kid in my youth group 17 years ago. This is
one of the big advantages of staying in one place as long as I have.
He needed someone to talk with because his life is messy, and
because of a history where I’ve demonstrated my faith in the past,
we had a natural opportunity for an authentic conversation. As I
listened, offered some counsel, I also was able to say at one point
in a very natural way, “for me, I have something in my life that keeps
me going when things are hard – I know I am never alone, I am
always God’s child and thus always loved and accepted, and I have
that foundation, I’m forgiven, and that is something you could have
to.”