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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 20:13:41 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 20:13:41 -0700
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Expositor's Bible: The Epistle to the Philippians, by W. Robertson Nicoll (series editor).
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Expositor's Bible: The Epistle to the
+Philippians, by Robert Rainy
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+
+Title: The Expositor's Bible: The Epistle to the Philippians
+
+Author: Robert Rainy
+
+Release Date: May 25, 2012 [EBook #39788]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE EXPOSITOR'S BIBLE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Colin Bell, Julia Neufeld and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>
+THE EPISTLE</h1>
+<p class="center">TO THE</p>
+<h1>PHILIPPIANS</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h2>ROBERT RAINY, D.D.</h2>
+<p class="center">PRINCIPAL OF NEW COLLEGE, EDINBURGH</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><br /><br />NEW YORK:<br />
+FUNK &amp; WAGNALLS COMPANY,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Lafayette Place</span>.<br />
+1900.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PREFATORY_NOTE" id="PREFATORY_NOTE"></a>PREFATORY NOTE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Not much need be said by way of preface, in
+addition to what is suggested in the introductory
+chapter.</p>
+
+<p>It may be observed, however, that the Apostle's
+teaching repeatedly touches on the question, How
+the problem of practical human life on this earth is to
+be conceived and dealt with under the light and the
+influences of Christianity? The thought occurred
+that some expository passages might be superseded
+by an appendix summing up in one view the principles
+conceived to underlie the Apostle's way of dealing
+with such topics, which could be referred to on each
+separate occasion: and such a statement was prepared.
+It was, however, finally judged more suitable to the
+nature of an exposition to keep as close as possible
+to the Apostle's turn of thought in each of the cases
+in which he approaches the subject, rather than to
+try to secure brevity by a more summary treatment.</p>
+
+<p>A few sentences have been transferred from a
+lecture on the Apostle Paul, published some years
+ago.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER I.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">INTRODUCTORY: THE SALUTATION</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER II.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">THE APOSTLE'S MIND ABOUT THE PHILIPPIANS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER III.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">HOW THE PHILIPPIANS SHOULD THINK OF PAUL AT</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">ROME</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_45">45</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER IV.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">THE CHOICE BETWEEN LIVING AND DYING</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER V.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">UNDAUNTED AND UNITED STEADFASTNESS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER VI.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">THE MIND OF CHRIST</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER VII.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">THE MIND OF CHRIST (<i>continued</i>)</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER VIII.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">WORKING AND SHINING</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER IX.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">TIMOTHY AND EPAPHRODITUS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER X.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">NO CONFIDENCE IN THE FLESH</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER XI.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">THE KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER XII.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF FAITH</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER XIII.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">RESURRECTION LIFE AND DAILY DYING</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_237">237</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER XIV.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">CHRISTIAN LIFE A RACE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER XV.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">ENEMIES OF THE CROSS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_281">281</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER XVI.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">OUR CITY AND OUR COMING KING</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_299">299</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER XVII.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">PEACE AND JOY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER XVIII.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">THE THINGS TO FIX UPON</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_337">337</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">CHAPTER XIX.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">GIFTS AND SACRIFICES</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_353">353</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><i>INTRODUCTORY. THE SALUTATION.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>"Paul and Timothy, servants of Jesus Christ, to all the saints in
+Christ Jesus which are at Philippi, with the bishops and deacons:
+Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus
+Christ."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> i. 1, 2 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER 1.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><i>INTRODUCTORY. THE SALUTATION.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>The sixteenth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles
+contains the account of the Apostle Paul's first
+intercourse with the Philippians, and of the "beginning
+of the gospel" there. The date may be fixed as
+<span class="smcap"><small>A.D.</small></span> 51. After the council at Jerusalem (Acts xv.),
+and after the dissension between Paul and Barnabas
+(ver. 39), the Apostle of the Gentiles, accompanied by
+Silas, took his journey through Syria and Cilicia.
+"Confirming the Churches," he went over a good
+deal of ground which he had traversed before. At
+Lystra he assumed Timothy as an additional companion
+and assistant; and he passed on, guided in a
+very special manner by the Holy Spirit, until he arrived
+at Troas. Here a Divine warning, in a dream, determined
+him to break ground in a new field. The little
+company, to which Luke was now added, passed on to
+Macedonia, and, having landed at Neapolis, where they
+do not seem to have made any stay or found any
+opportunity of preaching, they came to Philippi. This
+therefore was the first city in Europe in which, so far<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+as we have any distinct intimation, the gospel of the
+grace of God was declared.</p>
+
+<p>Philippi was a city of some importance, and had the
+position and privileges of a Roman colony. It was
+situated in a fruitful district, was near to gold mines,
+and was also near enough to the sea to serve as a depôt
+for a good deal of Asiatic commerce.</p>
+
+<p>It is hardly necessary to remind readers of the Scripture
+how Lydia and others received the word; how
+the preachers were followed by the damsel with the
+spirit of divination; how, when that damsel had been
+silenced by Paul, her masters raised a tumult against
+Paul and Silas, and got them scourged and cast into
+prison; how the earthquake, which followed during
+the night, resulted in the conversion of the jailor, and
+in Paul and Silas being sent forth from the city with
+honour. Perhaps Luke and Timothy remained behind
+at Philippi, and continued to edify the believers. At
+any rate, Paul himself had by this time continued there
+"many days." Two short visits of the Apostle to
+Philippi at a subsequent time are known to us (Acts
+xx. 2, 6).</p>
+
+<p>The Church thus founded proved to be an interesting
+one, for it possessed much of the simplicity and earnestness
+of true Christianity. Both in the Epistles to the
+Corinthians and in this Epistle, the Philippians are
+singled out, above all Churches, for their cordiality of
+feeling towards the Apostle who had brought to them
+the knowledge of the truth. They made liberal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+contributions for the furtherance of his work in other
+regions, beginning shortly after he left Philippi, and
+repeating them from time to time afterwards. They
+seem to have been remarkably free from some of the
+defects incidental to those early Churches, and to the
+Churches at all periods. The Apostle's commendations
+of them are peculiarly warm and glowing; and
+scarcely anything had to be noticed in the way of
+special warning, except a tendency to disagreement
+among some of their members. It does not appear
+that there was any great number of Jews at Philippi,
+and we find no trace of a synagogue. This may
+account in some measure for their freedom from the
+Judaising tendency: for we find the Philippians exhorted,
+indeed, to beware of that evil, but not reprehended
+as if it had taken any strong hold among them.
+On the other hand, they seem to have remained in a
+good measure free from evils to which Gentile Churches
+were most exposed, and which, at Corinth for example,
+produced much that was disheartening and perplexing.</p>
+
+<p>Eleven years, probably, had now passed since Paul
+had brought to Philippi the knowledge of Christ Jesus.
+During that time he had undergone many vicissitudes,
+and now he had been for some time a prisoner at Rome.
+Probably he had already written the Epistles to the
+Ephesians, the Colossians, and to Philemon. Comparing
+these with our Epistle, we may conclude that
+his prospects as a prisoner had not improved, but rather
+darkened, since the date of those letters. At this time,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+then, Epaphroditus arrived, apparently after a dangerous
+journey, bearing with him a supply for the Apostle's
+wants, bringing tidings of the state of the Philippian
+Church, and assuring him of their sympathy and their
+prayers on his behalf. It is no wonder that, in these
+circumstances, the Epistle bears marks of having been
+written by the Apostle with a special flow of tenderness
+and of affection.</p>
+
+<p>The scope of the letter may be briefly stated.
+After the usual inscription and salutation, the Apostle
+expresses (as he does so often in his Epistles) his
+thankfulness for what the Philippians had attained, and
+his desire that they might grow to yet higher things.
+He goes on to tell them how matters stood with himself,
+and opens up, as to those whom he reckons trusted
+friends, the manner in which his mind was exercised
+under these providences. Returning to the Philippians,
+and aiming at this, that they and he might have
+growing fellowship in all Christian grace, he goes on
+to set before them Christ, specially in His lowliness
+and self-sacrifice. This is the grand end; attainment
+to His likeness is work for all their lives. Paul sets
+forth how earnestly his heart is set on this object,
+and what means he is taking to advance it. After a
+brief digression relating to his circumstances and
+theirs, he returns again to the same point. In order
+that defects may be removed, dangers avoided, progress
+made, Christ must be their joy, their trust, their
+aim, their very life. They, like the Apostle himself,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+must press on, never content till the consummate salvation
+is attained (iii. 21). If this should be so, his
+desires for them would be fulfilled. So he closes (iv. 2)
+with directions rising out of this central view, and with
+renewed expression of the comfort he had derived from
+their affectionate remembrance. Their goodwill to the
+cause in which his life was spent, and to himself, had
+cheered his heart. And he took it as God's blessing to
+him and to them.</p>
+
+<p>Such is a brief outline of the course of thought. But
+the Epistle, while perfect in the unity of its feeling
+and of its point of view, is remarkable for the way
+in which it alternates between matters proper to the
+Philippians, including the instruction Paul saw fit to
+impress upon them, and matters personal to himself.
+The Apostle seems to feel sure of affectionate sympathy
+in both regions, and in both equally; therefore in both
+his heart utters itself without difficulty and without
+restraint. Ch. i. 3-11, i. 27&mdash;ii. 16, iii. 1&mdash;iv. 9, are
+occupied with the one theme, and i. 12-26, ii. 17-30,
+iv. 10-21, with the other. In short, more than any
+other Epistle, if we except, perhaps, that to Philemon,
+the Epistle to the Philippians has the character of
+an outpouring. The official aims and obligations of
+the Christian instructor are fused, as it were, in the
+glowing affection of the personal friend. He is sure of
+his place in the hearts of his correspondents, and he
+knows how glad they will be to be assured of the place
+they hold in his.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>Let us now attend to the inscription and salutation.
+Those who send the Epistle are Paul and Timothy.
+Yet plainly we are not to regard it as a joint Epistle
+proceeding from both equally; for it is Paul who speaks
+throughout, in his own name and by his own authority.
+Timothy only joins, as Sosthenes and Silas do in other
+cases, in heartily commending to the Church at Philippi
+whatever the Epistle contains. As there was harmony
+between the two labourers when they laid the foundation
+at Philippi, so there is also in the building up.
+Timothy is joined in the love and care; but the authority
+is Paul's. Both alike are called "servants of Jesus
+Christ"; for to this Church no further commendation
+and no rehearsal of a special right to speak and teach
+are needed. And yet, to understanding hearts, what
+commendation could be more weighty? If these two
+men are called and allowed by Christ to be His servants,
+if they are loyal and faithful servants, if they come on
+an errand on which Christ has sent them, if they deliver
+His message and do His work, what more need be said?
+This is honour and authority enough&mdash;to be, in our
+degree, Christ's servants. But the word is stronger:
+it means bondservants, or slaves,&mdash;such as are the
+master's property, or are at his absolute disposal. So
+Paul felt; for we are not to reckon this to be, on his
+part, a mere phrase. Already, in this word, we recognise
+the sense of entire consecration to his Master and
+Lord; in which, as we shall see, he felt he could count
+upon the hearty sympathy of his Philippian friends.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>Those who are addressed are, in the first place, "all
+the saints in Christ Jesus who are at Philippi." The
+saints, or holy ones, is a common expression in the
+Scriptures. The word "sanctify" is applied both to
+persons and to things. Bible-readers will have noticed
+that the term seems to vibrate or vacillate between two
+meanings,&mdash;signifying on the one hand the production
+of personal intrinsic holiness, and on the other merely
+consecration, or setting apart of anything to God's service.
+Now the connection of both meanings will appear, if we
+mark how both meet in the word as it is applied to the
+children of God. For such are separated, set apart for
+God from sin and from the world; not, however, by a
+mere outward destination, devoting them to a certain
+use and service, but by an internal hallowing, which
+makes the man really in his inward nature holy, fit
+for God's service and God's fellowship. This is done
+by the regeneration of the Spirit, and by His indwelling
+thereafter. Hence, to distinguish this consecration
+from the mere outward ceremonial sanctification, which
+was so temporary and shadowy, we find the Apostle
+Peter (i. 2) saying that God's children are chosen "by
+sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling
+of the blood of Jesus." For the ancient Israel
+was sanctified to obedience in another manner (Exod.
+xxiv. 6).</p>
+
+<p>Now because this real consecration takes place when
+we are grafted into Christ by faith, because the Spirit
+comes to us and abides in us as the Spirit of Christ,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+because whatever the Spirit does, as our Sanctifier, has
+its rise from Christ's redeeming work, because He unites
+us to Christ and enables us to cleave to Christ and
+hold fellowship with Him, therefore those who are thus
+sanctified are called saints <i>in</i> Jesus Christ. It is the
+Spirit who sanctifies; but He does so inasmuch as He
+roots us <i>in</i> Christ and builds us up in Christ. Therefore
+saints are sanctified <i>by</i>, or <i>of</i>, the Spirit; but they
+are sanctified (or holy) <i>in</i> Christ Jesus.</p>
+
+<p>This expression, "saints," or some phrase that is
+equivalent, occurs commonly in the Epistles as the
+designation of the parties addressed. And two things
+are to be observed in connection with it. <i>First</i>, when
+the Apostle addresses "all the saints," in any Epistle,
+he is not shutting out any professed members of the
+Church, any professed believers in the Lord. He never
+speaks at the outset of an Epistle as if he meant to
+make deliberate distinction between two several classes
+of members of the Church: as who should say, "I write
+now to some part of the Church, viz., the saints; as
+for the rest, I do not now address them." Hence we
+find the term used as equivalent to the Church&mdash;"to
+the Church of God which is at Corinth, with all the
+saints which are in all Achaia," and again "to them ...
+that are called to be saints." We shall see presently the
+lesson which this is fitted to teach. But, <i>secondly</i>, on
+the other hand, the Apostle's use of the word makes it
+clear that he uses it in the full sense which we have
+explained, of a real saintship. He does not restrain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+the sense to some merely external saintship, as if his
+meaning were "professing Christians whether they
+are real or not." The word stands, in the inscriptions,
+as equivalent to "sanctified in Christ Jesus," "faithful
+in Christ Jesus," "beloved of God"; or as in 2 Peter i.,
+"them that have obtained like precious faith with us,"
+and in 1 Peter, "Elect according to the foreknowledge
+of God unto obedience." Thus then we are to take
+it:&mdash;The Apostle wrote to the visible, or the professed
+and accepted followers of the Lord, on the understanding
+that they were what they professed to be. He was
+not to question it: he assumed that they were saints of
+God, for to profess the faith of Christ is to claim that
+character. He rejoiced to hope that it would prove to
+be so, and gladly took note of everything which tended
+to assure him that their holiness was real. He proclaims
+to them, in the character of saints, the privileges and
+the obligations that pertain to saints. It was the
+business of every man to look well to the reality of his
+faith, and to try the grounds on which he took his
+place with those addressed as beloved of God and
+called to be saints. There might be some who had
+but a name to live (2 Cor. xiii. 5). If so, it was not
+the Apostle's part, writing to the Church, to allow that
+possibility to confuse or lower the style of his address
+to Christ's Church. He wrote to all the saints in
+Christ Jesus who were at Philippi.</p>
+
+<p>This is evident from the strain of all the Pauline
+Epistles, and it is important to observe it and apply it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+Otherwise we shall readily fall into this way of reasoning,&mdash;"Since
+there must have been some in these
+Churches who were only nominally and not really
+believers, the word <i>saints</i> must include such; therefore
+it can imply only an outward separation of men, apart
+from any determination of their inward state." If we
+do so, then everything the Apostle says to saints, their
+standing, their privileges, their obligations, and their
+hopes, will come to be strained and lowered in the
+interpretation, so as to mean only that such privileges
+and blessings are somehow attainable, and if attained
+may also on certain terms be secured. The interpretation
+of the Apostle's teaching on these subjects will, in
+short, be what it <i>must</i> be, if it is taken to apply at once,
+in his intention, to those who are indeed saints and to
+those who are not. This line, in point of fact, has been
+taken, in the interpretation of the Epistles, so as to
+resolve everything the Apostle says about the eternal
+life of saved men, as actually theirs, from their election
+downwards, into a mere matter of outward privileges.
+This view, no doubt, involves a straining of plain words.
+Yet it will always seem to force itself upon us, unless
+we hold fast (what is indeed demonstrably true) that
+when the Apostle speaks to saints, he says what should
+be said to those who are indeed saints, and on the
+understanding that those whom he addresses are such.</p>
+
+<p>In like manner, on the other side, we have a lesson
+to learn from the unhesitating way in which the
+Apostle writes to the saints, and sends the letter to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+the members of a Christian Church as the parties intended.
+He may have some things to reprehend; he
+may even have to express fears, when things have
+gone amiss, that some in the Church may yet prove to
+be no saints. Yet writing to the Church, he writes to
+saints. Let us learn from this what those lay claim
+to who become members of Christ's Church, and what
+responsibilities they take on. They claim, in Christ,
+the salvation which makes men saints&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, persons set
+apart under the influence of the Holy Spirit to enjoy
+Christ's forgiveness and to walk in His ways. Christ
+does this for us, if He does a Saviour's work. It is a
+thing incongruous, a thing, in the Apostle's view, not
+to be taken for granted, that any one shall hold his
+place in Christ's Church who is worldly, earthly, unholy.
+There may be such, but Paul will not assume
+it; he will not measure the Christianity of Christ's
+Church by any such standard. Neither will he go about
+to determine whether perhaps it is so or not in the case
+of any who are professing Christ in the ordinary way.
+<i>If</i> any have entered Christ's Church who are content to
+continue in worldliness and sin, not seeking in Christ
+the grace which saves, that is solely their own personal
+sin, and in it they lie unto the Lord. But not for that
+will the Apostle come down to speak to Christ's Church
+as if it should be thought of as a company to which
+holy and unholy may equally well belong. If any be
+there who are in no vital sense saints, their intrusion
+will not hinder Paul from speaking to the Church of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+God in its own proper character and according to its
+calling.</p>
+
+<p>But let it be remarked at the same time, that this
+same fact shows us that the Apostle was wont to judge
+of men and Churches charitably; yes, with a very large
+charity. We may be very sure that there was a good
+deal in all those Churches, and a great deal in some,
+that needed to be judged charitably. They were not all
+clear, eminent, conspicuous saints; so far from that,
+there might well be some whole Churches in which
+saintship was, so far as man's inspection could perceive,
+faint and questionable. But the Apostle was far from
+thinking of shutting out the man whose faith was weak,
+whose attainments were small, whose regard to Christ
+was but a struggling and germinating thing. Far from
+being disposed to shut him out, no doubt the Apostle's
+whole desire was to shut such an one in, among the
+saints in Jesus Christ.</p>
+
+<p>To be accepted in the Beloved, to be sanctified in
+Christ Jesus, is a very great thing. No less than this
+great thing Christ offers, and no less we humbly claim
+in faith. Also it is no less than this that Christ
+bestows on those who come to Him. Let Christians,
+on the one hand, look to Christ, as able and willing to
+do no less than this even for them; on the other hand,
+let them look to themselves, that they neither deceive
+themselves with false pretences, nor trifle idly with so
+great a gospel. And in the case of others, let hasty
+and needless adverse judgments be avoided. Let us<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+be glad to think that Christ may see His own, where
+our dim sight can find but scanty tokens of His work.</p>
+
+<p>Along with the saints the letter specifies, in particular,
+the bishops and deacons. The former were the officers
+who took the oversight, as the word implies; the
+deacons those who rendered service, especially in the
+Church's outward and pecuniary concerns. These two
+standing orders are recognised by the Apostle. It is
+obvious that this does not suggest diocesan Episcopacy,
+for that implies three orders, the highest being a single
+bishop, to the exclusion of others assuming the office
+in that place.</p>
+
+<p>It is more important to observe that the Epistle is not
+directed to the bishops primarily, or as if they were
+entitled to come between the people and the message.
+It is directed to all the saints. To them the Epistle, to
+them all the Scriptures belong, as their own inheritance,
+which no man may take from them. In so far as the
+bishops and deacons are distinguished from other
+saints, the Scriptures pertain to them that they may
+learn their own duty, and also may help the people
+in the use and enjoyment of that which is already
+theirs.</p>
+
+<p>Now follows the salutation&mdash;Grace be unto you and
+peace. This is the ordinary salutation, varied and
+amplified in a few of the Epistles. It may be said to
+express the sum of all Christian well-being in this life.</p>
+
+<p>Grace is, first of all, the word which expresses the
+free favour of God, manifested towards the unworthy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+in Christ Jesus. But it is further extended in meaning
+to that which is the fruit of this favour, to the principles
+and dispositions in the mind which result from grace,
+which recognise grace, which in their nature correspond
+to the nature of grace. In this sense it is said "grow
+in grace." Peace is the well-grounded tranquillity and
+sense of well-being which arises from the sight of God's
+grace in Christ, from faith in it, and experience of it.
+Grace and peace are the forerunners of glory. That is
+a blessed company to which so great a fulness of good
+is commended, as ordinarily theirs.</p>
+
+<p>And from whom is this good expected to proceed?
+From God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. The
+Father who loved us, the Son who charged Himself with
+the burden of our salvation, impart a grace and a
+peace fragrant with that Divine love and charged with
+the efficacy of that blessed mediation. If any one
+wonders why the Holy Spirit is left out, a reason may be
+given for it. For if we look to the substance of the
+blessings, what are this grace and peace but the Holy
+Spirit Himself dwelling in us, revealing to us the Father
+and the Son from whom He comes, and enabling us to
+continue in the Son and in the Father?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><i>THE APOSTLE'S MIND ABOUT THE PHILIPPIANS.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>"I thank my God upon all my remembrance of you, always in
+every supplication of mine on behalf of you all making my supplication
+with joy, for your fellowship in furtherance of the gospel from the
+first day until now; being confident of this very thing, that He which
+began a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Jesus Christ:
+even as it is right for me to be thus minded on behalf of you all,
+because I have you in my heart, inasmuch as, both in my bonds and
+in the defence and confirmation of the gospel, ye all are partakers
+with me of grace. For God is my witness, how I long after you all in
+the tender mercies of Christ Jesus. And this I pray, that your love
+may abound yet more and more in knowledge and all discernment;
+so that ye may approve the things that are excellent; that ye may be
+sincere and void of offence unto the day of Christ; being filled with
+the fruits of righteousness, which are through Jesus Christ, unto the
+glory and praise of God."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> i. 3-11 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE APOSTLE'S MIND ABOUT THE PHILIPPIANS.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>After the salutation, the first thing in the Epistle
+is a warm utterance of the feelings and the
+desires which Paul habitually cherishes in relation to
+his converts at Philippi. This is expressed vv. 3-11.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Note the course of thought. In ver. 3 he declares his
+thankfulness and in ver. 4 his prayerfulness on their
+behalf; and he puts these two together, without as yet
+saying why he thanks and what he prays for. He puts
+them together, because he would mark that with him
+these are not two separate things; but his prayer is
+thankful, and his thankfulness is prayerful; and then,
+having so much to be thankful for, his prayers became,
+also, joyful. The reason why, he presently explains
+more particularly. For, ver. 5, he had to thank God,
+joyfully, for their fellowship in the gospel in the past;
+and then, ver. 6, knowing to what this pointed forward,
+he could pray joyfully&mdash;that is, with joyful expectation
+for the future. And thus he prepares the way for telling
+what special things he was led to pray for; but first he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+interposes vv. 7 and 8, to vindicate, as it were, the right
+he had to feel so warm and deep an interest in his
+Philippian friends. The matter of his prayer follows in
+vv. 9-11.</p>
+
+<p>First he thanks God for grace bestowed upon the
+Philippians. As often as he remembered them, as
+often as he lifted up his heart in prayer to make request
+for them, he was cheered with the feeling that he could
+make request joyfully&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, he could rejoice over mercies
+already given. We know that the Apostle, in his
+letters to the Churches, is found always ready to evince
+the same spirit; he is prompt to pour out his thanks
+for anything attained by those Churches, either in gifts
+or grace. We find it so in his letters to the Churches
+of Corinth and Ephesus and Colossæ and Thessalonica.
+He does this, always, in a full and hearty way. He
+evidently counted it both duty and privilege to take
+note of what God had wrought, and to show that he
+prized it. Like John, he had no greater joy than to
+hear that his children walked in the truth; and he gave
+the glory of it to God in thanksgiving. In the case of this
+Church, however, the ground of thanksgiving was something
+that bound them to Paul in a peculiar manner,
+and touched his heart with a glow of tenderer love and
+gladness. It was, ver. 5, "their fellowship in the
+gospel (or rather, unto the gospel) from the first day
+until now." He means, that from their first acquaintance
+with the gospel, the Philippian Christians had,
+with unusual heartiness and sincerity, committed themselves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+to the cause of the gospel. They had made it
+their own cause. They had embarked in it as a fellowship
+to which they gave themselves heart and soul.
+There might be Churches, more distinguished for gifts
+than that of Philippi was, where less of this magnanimous
+spirit appeared. There might be Churches, where
+men seemed to be occupied with their own advantage
+by the gospel, their individual and separate advantage,
+but withheld themselves from the fellowship unto it,&mdash;did
+not readily commit themselves to it and to each
+other, as embarking wholly and for ever in the common
+cause. This misconception, this servility of spirit, is
+but too easy. You may have whole Churches, in which
+men are full of self-congratulation about attainments
+they make in the gospel, and gifts they receive by the
+gospel, and doctrines they build up about it&mdash;but the
+loving "fellowship unto it" fails. A large measure
+of a better spirit had been given to the Philippians
+from the first. They were a part of those Macedonian
+Churches, who "first gave their own selves" to the Lord
+and His Apostles, and then also their help and service.
+It was an inward fellowship before it was an outward
+one. They first gave their own selves, so that their
+hearts were mastered by the desire to see the ends of
+the gospel achieved, and then came service and sacrifice.
+Trials and losses had befallen them in this course of
+service; but still they are found caring for the gospel,
+for their brethren in the gospel, for their father in the
+gospel, for the cause of the gospel. This fellowship&mdash;this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+readiness to make common cause with the gospel,
+out and out, had begun at the first day; and after
+trouble and trial it continued even until now.</p>
+
+<p>The disposition here commended has its importance,
+very much because it implies so just a conception of the
+genius of the gospel, and so hearty a consent to it.
+He whose Christianity leads him to band himself with
+his fellow-Christians, to get good by their help, and to
+help them to get good, and along with them to do good
+as opportunity arises, is a man who believes in the work
+of the gospel as a vital social force; he believes that
+Christ is in his members; he believes that there are
+attainments to be made, victories won, benefits laid
+hold of and appropriated. He is in sympathy with
+Christ, for he is attracted by the expectation of great
+results coming in the line of the gospel; and he is one
+who looks not merely on his own things, but rejoices to
+feel that his own hope is bound up with a great hope
+for many and for the world. Such a man is near the
+heart of things. He has, in important respects, got
+the right notion of Christianity, and Christianity has
+got the right hold of him.</p>
+
+<p>Now if we consider that the Apostle Paul, "the slave
+of Jesus Christ," was himself a marvellous embodiment
+of the spirit he is here commending to the Philippians,
+we shall easily understand with what satisfaction he
+thought upon this Church, and rejoiced over them, and
+gave thanks. Was there ever a man who, more than
+Paul, evinced "the fellowship of the gospel" from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+first hour to the last? Was there ever one whose
+personal self was more swallowed up and lost, in his
+zeal to be spent for the cause,&mdash;doing all things for the
+gospel's sake that he might have part therein? Did
+ever man, more than he, welcome sufferings, sacrifices,
+toils, if they were for Christ, for the gospel? Was
+man ever possessed more absolutely than he with a
+sense of the worthiness of the gospel to be proclaimed
+everywhere, to every man&mdash;and with a sense of the
+right the gospel had to himself, as Jesus Christ's man,
+the man that should be used and expended on nothing
+else but upholding this cause, and proclaiming this
+message to all kinds of sinners? The one great object
+with him was that Christ should be magnified in him,
+whether by life or by death (ver. 20). His heart, therefore,
+grew glad and thankful over a Church that had so
+much of this same spirit, and, for one thing, showed
+this by cleaving to him in their hearts through all the
+vicissitudes of his work, and following him everywhere
+with their sympathy and their prayers. Some Churches
+were so much occupied with themselves, and had so
+little understanding of him, that he was obliged to write
+to them at large, setting forth the true spirit and manner
+of his own life and service; he had, as it were, to open
+their eyes by force to see him as he was. This was not
+needed here: the Philippians understood him already:
+they did so, because, in a degree, they had caught the
+contagion of his own spirit. They had given themselves,
+in their measure, in a fellowship unto the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+gospel, from the first day until now. They had
+claimed, and they still claimed, to have a share in all
+that befell the gospel, and in all that befell the Apostle.</p>
+
+<p>Paul ascribed all this to God's grace in them, and
+thanked God for it. True, indeed, much activity about
+the gospel, and much that looks like interest in its
+progress, may proceed from other causes besides a
+living fellowship with Jesus, and a true disposition to
+forsake all for Him. The outward activity may be
+resorted to as a substitute for the inward life; or it
+may express the spirit of sectarian selfishness. But
+when it appears as a consistent interest in the gospel,
+when it is accompanied by the tokens of frank goodwill
+and free self-surrender to the Church's evangelical life,
+when it endures through vicissitudes of time, under
+trial, persecution, and reproach, it must arise, in the
+main, from a real persuasion of the Divine excellence
+and power of the gospel and the Saviour. Not without
+the grace of God does any Church manifest this spirit.</p>
+
+<p>Now to the Apostle who had this cause of gladness
+in the past, there opened (ver. 6) a gladdening prospect
+for the future, which at once deepened his thankfulness
+and gave expectancy to his prayers. "Being
+confident of this very thing, that He that hath begun a
+good work in you will perform it unto the day of Jesus
+Christ." "Being confident of this very thing" is
+equivalent to "Having no less confidence than this";
+for he desires to express that his confidence is emphatic
+and great.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>The confidence so expressed assumes a principle,
+and makes application of that principle to the Philippian
+saints.</p>
+
+<p>The principle is that the work of saving grace clearly
+begun by the Spirit of God shall not be destroyed and
+come to nothing, but shall be carried on to complete
+salvation. This principle is not received by all Christians
+as part of the teaching of Scripture; but without
+entering now into any large discussion, it may be
+pointed out that it seems to be recognised, not merely
+in a few, but in many passages of Holy Writ. Not to
+recite Old Testament indications, we have our Lord's
+word (John x. 28): "I give unto them eternal life, and
+they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck
+them out of My hand." And there is hardly an Epistle
+of our Apostle in which the same principle is not
+presented to us, stated in express terms, or assumed
+in stating other doctrines, and applied to the comfort
+of believers (1 Thess. v. 23, 24; 1 Cor. i. 8; Rom.
+viii. 30). The ultimate salvation of those in whom a
+good work is begun, is, in this view, conceived to be
+connected with the stability of God's purposes, the
+efficacy of the Son's mediation, the permanence and
+power of the Holy Spirit's influence, and the nature of
+the covenant under which believers are placed. And
+the perseverance thus provided for is supposed to be
+made good through the faith, patience, fear, and diligence
+of those who persevere, and by no means without
+these. As to the place before us, whatever exceptions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+and whatever distinctions may be taken on the subject,
+it must be owned that, gladly recognising Christian
+character and attainment as a fact, he finds therein a
+warrant for emphatic confidence about the future, even
+to the day of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>As to the application of this principle to the Philippians,
+the method in which the Apostle proceeds is
+plain. He certainly does not speak as by immediate
+insight into Divine counsels about the Philippians. He
+is directed to utter a conclusion at which he had arrived
+by a process which he explains. From the evidence of
+the reality of their Christian calling, he drew the conclusion
+that Christ was at work in them, and the further
+conclusion that this work would be completed. It may
+be asked how so confident an application of the principle
+now in view could be reached on these terms?
+How could the Apostle be sure enough of the inward
+state of his Philippian friends, to enable him to reason
+on it, as here he seems to do? In answer, we grant
+it to be impossible for any one, without immediate
+revelation on the point, to reach absolute assurance
+about the spiritual state of other people. And therefore
+we are to keep in view, what has already been
+suggested, that the Apostle, speaking to "saints,"
+really remits to themselves and to their Lord the final
+question as to the reality of that apparent saintship.
+But then, we are taught by the Apostle's example that
+where ordinary tokens, and especially where more than
+ordinary tokens of Christian character appear, we are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+frankly and gladly to give effect to those signs in our
+practical judgments. There may be an error, no doubt
+there is, in unbounded charity; but there is error also
+when we make a grudging estimate of Christian brethren;
+when, on the ground of some failing, we allow suspicion
+to obliterate the impressions which their Christian faith
+and service might fairly have made upon us. We are
+to cherish the thought that a wonderful future is before
+those in whom Christ is carrying on His work of grace;
+and we are to make a loving application of that hope
+in the case of those whose Christian dispositions have
+become specially manifest to us in the intercourse of
+Christian friendship.</p>
+
+<p>However, the Apostle felt that he had a special right
+to feel thus in reference to the Philippians&mdash;more,
+perhaps, than in regard to others; and instead of going
+on at once to specify the objects of his prayers for them,
+he interposes a vindication, as it were, of the right he
+claimed (ver. 7): "Even as it is meet for me to be thus
+minded with respect to all of you, because I have you
+in my heart, you who are all partakers of my grace,
+not only in the defence and confirmation of the gospel,
+but also in my bonds." As if he would say,&mdash;There
+are special ties between us, which justify on my
+part special tenderness and vigilance of appreciation
+and approbation, when I think of you. A father has a
+special right to take note of what is hopeful in his son,
+and to dwell with satisfaction on his virtues and his
+promise; and friends who have toiled and suffered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+together have a special right to cherish a deep trust in
+one another's well-tried fidelity and nobleness. Let
+strangers, in such cases, set, if they will, a slight value
+on characters which they hardly know; but let them
+not dispute the right which love has to scrutinise with
+delight the nobler qualities of those who are beloved.</p>
+
+<p>The Philippians were sharers of Paul's grace, as
+sharing his enthusiasm for the successful advocacy
+and confirmation of the gospel. So they had their
+share in the grace that was so mighty in him. But
+besides that, the Apostle's heart had been cheered and
+warmed by the manifestation of their sympathy, their
+loving thoughtfulness in reference to his bonds. So he
+joyfully owned them as partakers in spirit in those
+bonds, and in the grace by which he endured them.
+They remembered him in his bonds, "as bound with
+him." Every way their fellowship with him expressed
+itself as full and true. No jarring element broke in to
+mar the happy sense of this. He could feel that
+though far away their hearts beat pulse for pulse with
+his, partakers not only of his toil but of his bonds. So
+he "had them in his heart": his heart embraced them
+with no common warmth and yielded to them no
+common friendship. And what then? Why then "it is
+meet that I should be thus minded," "should use love's
+happy right to think very well of you, and should let
+the evidence of your Christian feeling come home to
+my heart, warm and glowing." It was meet that Paul
+should joyfully <i>repute them to be sincere</i>&mdash;to be men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+cleaving to the gospel in a genuine love of it. It was
+meet that he should <i>thank</i> God in their behalf, seeing
+these happy attainments of theirs were so truly a
+concern of his. It was meet he should <i>pray</i> for them
+with joyful importunity, counting their growth in grace
+to be a benefit also to himself.</p>
+
+<p>It would be a helpful thing if Christian friends
+cherished, and if they sometimes expressed, warm hopes
+and expectations in behalf of one another. Only,
+let this be the outcome of truly spiritual affection.
+Paul was persuaded that his feelings arose from no
+mere human impulse. The grace of God it was which
+had given the Philippians this place in his heart. God
+was his record that his longing after them was great,
+and also that it was in the mercies of Christ. He
+loved them as a man in Christ, and with Christlike
+affections. Otherwise, words like these assume a canting
+character, and are unedifying.</p>
+
+<p>Now at last comes the tenor of his prayer (ver. 9):
+"That your love may abound yet more and more in
+knowledge and all discernment; so that ye may approve
+the things that are excellent," and so on.</p>
+
+<p>Let this first be noted, that it is a prayer for growth.
+All that grace has wrought in the Philippian believers,
+everything in their state that filled his heart with
+thankfulness, he regards as the beginning of something
+better still. For this he longs; and therefore his heart
+is set on progress. So we find it in all his Epistles.
+"As ye have received how ye ought to walk and to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+please God&mdash;so abound more" (1 Thess. iv. 1). This
+is a very familiar thought, yet let us spend a sentence
+or two upon it. The spiritual prosperity of believers
+should be measured not so much by the point they have
+reached, but by the fact and measure of the progress
+they are making. Progress in likeness to Christ,
+progress in following Him; progress in understanding
+His mind and learning His lessons; progress ever
+from the performance and the failures of yesterday to
+the new discipline of to-day,&mdash;this is Paul's Christianity.
+In this world our condition is such that the business
+of every believer is to go forward. There is room for
+it, need of it, call to it, blessedness in it. For any
+Christian, at any stage of attainment, to presume to
+stand still, is perilous and sinful. A beginner that
+is pressing forward is a happier and a more helpful
+Christian than he is who has come to a stand, though
+the latter may seem to be on the borders of the land of
+Beulah. The first may have his life marred by much
+darkness and many mistakes; but the second is for the
+present practically denying the Christian truth and the
+Christian call, as these bear on himself. Therefore
+the Apostle is bent upon progress. And here we have
+his account of that which suggested itself to him as the
+best kind of progress for these converts of his.</p>
+
+<p>The life of their souls, as he conceived it, depended
+on the operation of one great principle, and he prays
+for the increase of that in strength and efficacy. He
+desires that their love may abound more and more.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+He was glad to think they had shown, all along, a
+loving Christian spirit. He wished it to grow to its
+proper strength and nobleness.</p>
+
+<p>No one doubts that, according to the Scriptures,
+love is the practical principle by which the fruits of
+faith are brought forth. The Christian character
+peculiarly consists in a Christlike love. The sum of
+the law from which we fell is, Thou shalt love; and,
+being redeemed in Christ, we find the end of the commandment
+to be love, out of a pure heart, and a good
+conscience, and faith unfeigned. Redemption itself is
+a process of love, setting forth from heaven to earth to
+create and kindle love, and make it triumph in human
+hearts and lives. Every one that loveth is born of
+God and knoweth God. No point is so well settled.
+Nobody doubts it.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, alas! how many of us are truly aware of the
+great meaning which apostolic words, which Christ's
+words, carry, when this is spoken of? or how shall it
+be made inwardly and vividly present to us? In the
+heart of Christ, who loved us and gave Himself for us,
+was a great purpose to awaken in human hearts a deep
+and strong affection, kindred to His own&mdash;true, tender,
+steadfast, all-prevailing, all-transforming. Apostles,
+catching the fire in their degree, were full of the
+wonder of it, of the glad surprise and yet the sober
+reality of it; and they carried about the gospel everywhere,
+looking to see men thrill into this new life, and
+become instances of its strength and gladness. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+we? Let each man answer for himself. He is a happy
+man who can answer clearly. What is it to have love
+for the inspiration of the heart and the life: love submerging
+the lower cravings, love ennobling and expanding
+all that is best and highest, love consecrating
+life into a glad and endless offering? Which of us has
+that within him which could break into a song, like the
+thirteenth chapter of Corinthians, rejoicing in the goodness
+and nobleness of love? "That your love may
+abound." In our tongue it is but one syllable. So
+much the easier for our perversity to slide over the
+meaning as we read. But all our earthly life is too
+short a space for learning how deep and how pertinent
+to ourselves this business of love is.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt, the kindness the Philippians had shown
+to the Apostle, of which he had been speaking,
+naturally prepares the way for speaking of their love,
+as the verse before us does. But we are not to take
+the word as referring only to the love they might bear
+to other believers, or, in particular, to the Apostle.
+That is in the Apostle's mind; but his reference is
+wider, namely, to love as a principle which operates
+universally&mdash;which first holds lowly fellowship with the
+love of God, and then also flows out in Christian affection
+towards men. The Apostle does not distinguish
+these, because he will not have us to separate them.
+The believer has been brought back in love to God, and
+having his life quickened from that source he loves
+men. The manward aspect of it is made prominent in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+the Bible for this reason, that in love towards men the
+exercise of this affection finds the most various scope,
+and in this way also it is most practically tested. The
+Apostle would not grant to any of us that our profession
+of love to God could be genuine, if love did
+not exert itself towards men. But neither would he
+suffer it to be restricted in the other direction. In the
+present case he gladly owned the love which his
+Philippian friends bore to himself. But he sees in
+this the existence of a principle which may signalise its
+energy in all directions, and is able to bear all kinds of
+good fruit. Therefore his prayer fixes on this, "that
+your love may abound."</p>
+
+<p>Now here we must look narrowly into the drift of
+the prayer. For the Apostle desires that love may
+abound and work in a certain manner, and if it shall,
+he assures himself of excellent effects to follow.
+Perhaps we may best see the reason which guided his
+prayer, if we begin with the result or achievement he
+aimed at for his Philippian friends. If we can understand
+that, we may the better understand the road by
+which he hoped they might be carried forward to it.</p>
+
+<p>The result aimed at is this (vv. 10, 11): "that ye
+may be sincere and without offence until the day of
+Christ; being filled with the fruits of righteousness,
+which are by Jesus Christ, to the glory and praise of
+God." The last end is the glory and praise of God.
+This, let us be assured, is no mere phrase with the
+Apostle. All these things are real and vivid to him. If<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+he were to come among us, knowing us to be professed
+believers, then, strange as some of us may think it, he
+would actually expect that a great degree of praise and
+glory to God should accrue out of our lives. The time
+he fixes on for the manifestation of this, the time when
+it should be seen how this has come to pass, is the
+day of Christ. That great day of revealing shall
+witness, in particular, the consummate glory of Christ's
+salvation in His redeemed. And he prays that unto
+that day and at that day they may be sincere, without
+offence, filled with fruits of righteousness.</p>
+
+<p><i>First</i>, sincere: that signifies simplicity of purpose,
+and singleness of heart in following out that purpose.
+Sincere Christians cherish in their hearts no views, no
+principles, adverse to the Christian calling. The test of
+this sincerity is that a man shall be honestly willing to
+let light shine through him, to evince the true character
+of his principles and motives. Such a man is on the
+road to the final, victorious, and eternal sincerity. For
+the present there may be within him too much of that
+which hinders him, and mars his life. But if he is set
+on expelling this, and welcomes the light which exposes
+it, in order that he may expel it, then he has a real,
+present sincerity, and his course is brightening towards
+the perfect day.</p>
+
+<p><i>Second</i>, without offence. This is the character of
+the man who walks without stumbling. For there are
+obstacles in the way, and they are often unexpected.
+Grant a man to be in a measure sincere&mdash;the call of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+gospel has really won his heart. Yet as he goes, there
+fall in trials, temptations, difficulties, that seem to come
+upon him from without, as it were, and he stumbles:
+he fails to preserve the uprightness of his life, and to
+keep his eye fixed with due steadiness on the end of
+his faith. Suddenly, before he is well aware, he is
+almost down. So he brings confusion into his mind,
+and guilt upon his conscience; and in his bewilderment
+he is too likely to make worse stumbles ere long. He
+who would be a prosperous Christian has not only
+to watch against duplicity in the heart: he must give
+diligence also to deal wisely with the various outward
+influences which strike into our lives, which seem often
+to do so cruelly and unreasonably, and which wear
+some false guise that we had not foreseen. Paul knew
+this in his own case; and therefore he "studied to
+keep a conscience void of offence." We may have
+wisdom enough for our own practice as to this, if we
+know where to go for it.</p>
+
+<p><i>Third</i>, filled with fruits of righteousness&mdash;which is
+the positive result, associated with the absence of guile
+and the freedom from stumbling. A tree that bears
+any fruit is alive. But one that is filled with fruit
+glorifies the gardener's care. "Herein is My Father
+glorified, that ye bear much fruit; so shall ye be My
+disciples." Distinct and manifold acts of faith and
+patience are the proper testimonies of the soul that is
+sincere and without offence.</p>
+
+<p>This is the line of things which the Apostle desires<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+to see running its course towards the day of Christ.
+Now let us ask, In what circumstances is the believer
+placed for whom Paul desires it?</p>
+
+<p>He is placed in a world that is full of adverse
+influences, and is apt to stir adverse forces in his own
+heart. If he allows these influences to have their way&mdash;if
+he yields to the tendencies that operate around
+him, he will be carried on in a direction quite different
+from that which Paul contemplates. Instead of sincerity,
+there will be the tainted, corrupt, divided heart; instead
+of freedom from offence, there will be many a fall, or
+even a complete forsaking of the way; instead of fruits
+of righteousness filling the life, there will be "wild
+grapes." On the other hand, if, in spite of these
+influences, the Christian is enabled to hold his course,
+then the discipline of conflict and trial will prove full of
+blessing. Here also shall the promise be fulfilled that
+all things work together for good to them that love God.
+Strong temptations are not overcome without sorrow
+and pain; but being overcome, they turn out ministers
+of good. In this experience sincerity clears and
+deepens; and the bearing of the Christian acquires a
+firmness and directness not otherwise attainable; and
+the fruits of righteousness acquire a flavour which no
+other climate could have developed so well. This hard
+road turns out to be the best road towards the day of
+Christ.</p>
+
+<p>The effect, then, of the circumstances in which the
+believer is thus placed will be according to the way in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+which he deals with them. But plainly, to deal rightly
+with them, implies a constant effort of JUDGING the
+things within him and without him, the world within
+and the world without, that he may "approve what is
+more excellent"&mdash;that he may choose the good and refuse
+the evil. Discerning, distinguishing, as to opinions,
+influences, feelings, habits, courses of conduct, and so
+forth, so as to separate right and wrong, spiritual and
+carnal, true and false, must be the work in hand. There
+must be the prevailing practical mind to elect and to
+abide by the proper objects of choice, to cleave to the
+one and to put away the other.</p>
+
+<p>So we can understand very well, if the Philippians
+were to be sincere, without offence, filled with fruits of
+righteousness, that they must, and ever more and more
+searchingly and successfully, "approve the things that
+are more excellent." The phrase is also rendered "try
+the things which differ"; for the expression implies
+both. It implies such a putting to proof of that which
+is presented to us, as to make just distinctions and give
+to each its proper place&mdash;silver on the one side, dross
+on the other. What is the whole life and business of
+the Philippians, of any Christians, as Christians, but
+that of following out perpetually a choice, on given
+principles, among the multitude of objects that claim
+their regard? The fundamental choice, arrived at in
+believing, has to be reiterated continually, in a just
+application of it to a world of varying and sometimes
+perplexing cases.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>When we have all this in view it is easy to understand
+the scope of the Apostle's prayer about the
+growth and education of their love. <i>Out of love this
+needed discrimination must come.</i> For</p>
+
+<p>1. No practical discriminations or determinations are
+of any worth in God's sight except as they are animated
+by love, and, indeed, determined by it. If a
+Christian should choose anything, or reject anything,
+yet not in love, his choice as to the matter of fact may
+be right, but for all that the man himself is wrong.</p>
+
+<p>2. Love alone will practically carry through such
+habitual discrimination, such faithful and patient choice.
+Love becomes the new instinct which gives life, spring,
+and promptitude to the process. When this fails, the
+life of approving the things that are more excellent
+will fail; the task will be repudiated as a burden that
+cannot be endured. It may still be professed, but it
+must inwardly die.</p>
+
+<p>3. Nothing but love can enable us to see and to affirm
+the true distinctions. Under the influence of that
+pure love (that arises in the heart which God's love
+has won and quickened) the things which differ are
+truly seen. So, and only so, we shall make distinctions
+according to the real differences as these appear in
+God's sight. Let us consider this a little.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently among the things that differ there are
+some whose characteristics are so plainly written in
+conscience or in Scripture, that to determine what
+should be said of them is matter of no difficulty at all.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+It is no matter of difficulty to decide that murder and
+theft are wrong, or that meekness, benevolence, justice
+are right. A man who has never been awakened to
+spiritual life, or a Christian whose love has decayed,
+can make determinations about such things, and can
+be sure, as he does so, that as to the thing itself he
+is judging right. Yet in this case there is no just
+apprehension of the real difference in God's sight of
+the things that differ, nor a right mind and heart to
+choose or to reject so as to be in harmony with God's
+judgment.</p>
+
+<p>And if so, then in that large class of cases where
+there is room for some degree of doubt or diversity,
+where some mist obscures the view, so that it is not
+plain at once into what class things should be reckoned&mdash;in
+cases where we are not driven to a decision by a
+blaze of light from Scripture or conscience&mdash;in such
+cases we need the impulse of the love which cleaves to
+God, which delights in righteousness, which gives to
+others, even to the undeserving, the brother's place in
+the heart. Without this there can be no detection of
+the real difference, and no assurance of the rectitude
+of the discrimination we make.</p>
+
+<p>Now it is in such matters that the especial proof and
+exercise of religious life goes on. Here, for example,
+Lot failed. The beauty of the fair and prosperous
+valley so filled his soul with admiration and desire, that
+it chilled and all but killed the affections that should
+have steadied and raised his mind. Had the love of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+the eternal and supreme maintained its power, then in
+that day when God on the one hand and Lot on the
+other looked down on the plain, they would have seen
+the same sight and judged it with the same mind.
+But it was otherwise. So the Lord lifted up His eyes
+and saw that the men of Sodom were wicked and
+sinners before the Lord exceedingly; and Lot lifted up
+his eyes and saw only that the plain was well watered
+everywhere, as the garden of the Lord, as the land of
+Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>But the love of which the Apostle speaks is the
+breath of the upper world and of the new life. It
+cleaves to God, it embraces the things which God loves,
+it enters into the views which God reveals,&mdash;and it
+takes the right view of men, and of men's interest and
+welfare. The man that has it, or has known it, is
+therein aware of what is most material. He has a
+notion of the conduct that is congruous to love's nature.
+What love knows, it is the nature of love to practise,
+for it knows lovingly; and at every step the practice
+confirms, establishes, and enlarges the knowledge. So
+the genuine growth of love is a growth in knowledge
+(ver. 9)&mdash;the word implies the kind of knowledge that
+goes with intently looking into things: love, as it
+grows, becomes more quick to see and mark how
+things really are when tried by the true standard.
+Conversing practically with the mind of God in the
+practice of life, love incorporates that mind and judges
+in the light of it. This prepares a man to detect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+the false and counterfeit, and to try the things that
+differ.</p>
+
+<p>Not only in knowledge shall love grow, but "in all
+discernment," or perception, as it might be rendered.
+There may be instances in which, with our best
+wisdom, we find it hard to disentangle clear principles,
+or state plain grounds which rule the case; yet love,
+growing and exercised, has its percipiency: it has that
+accomplished tact, that quick experienced taste, that
+fine sensibility to what befriends and what opposes
+truth and right, which will lead to right distinctions
+in practice. So you discriminate by the sense of taste
+things that differ, though you can give no reason to
+another, but can only say, "I perceive it." In this
+sense "he that is spiritual judgeth all things."</p>
+
+<p>For all this the aid of the Holy Spirit is held out
+to us, as we may see in 1 John ii. He makes love
+to grow, and under that master influence unfolds the
+needed wisdom also. So comes the wisdom "from
+above, which is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and
+easy to be entreated, full of mercy and of good fruits,
+without partiality and without hypocrisy" (James iii. 17).
+It is hidden from many wise and prudent, but God has
+often revealed it unto babes.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><i>HOW THE PHILIPPIANS SHOULD THINK OF<br />
+PAUL AT ROME.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>"Now I would have you know, brethren, that the things which
+happened unto me have fallen out rather unto the progress of the
+gospel; so that my bonds became manifest in Christ throughout the
+whole prætorian guard, and to all the rest; and that most of the
+brethren in the Lord, being confident through my bonds, are more
+abundantly bold to speak the word of God without fear. Some
+indeed preach Christ even of envy and strife; and some also of good
+will: the one do it of love, knowing that I am set for the defence of
+the gospel: but the other proclaim Christ of faction, not sincerely,
+thinking to raise up affliction for me in my bonds. What then? only
+that in every way, whether in pretence or in truth, Christ is proclaimed;
+and therein I rejoice, yea, and will rejoice. For I know that this
+shall turn to my salvation, through your supplication and the supply
+of the Spirit of Jesus Christ, according to my earnest expectation and
+hope, that in nothing shall I be put to shame, but that with all
+boldness, as always, so now also Christ shall be magnified in my
+body, whether by life, or by death."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> i. 12-20 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>HOW THE PHILIPPIANS SHOULD THINK OF PAUL
+AT ROME.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>Having poured out his feelings about those dear
+friends and children in the Lord at Philippi, the
+Apostle recognises corresponding feelings on their part
+towards him. These must naturally be feelings of
+anxiety to know how it was with him in body and
+spirit, and how far he had been protected and sustained
+amid the dangers and sorrows of a prisoner's lot. On
+this then he is glad to be able to give them good
+tidings. He can do so, because he is in the hands
+of a wonder-working Lord, who turns the shadow of
+death into the morning. Hence his history as well as
+theirs (ver. 11) is moving towards the glory and praise
+of God.</p>
+
+<p>The Apostle's affairs had seemed to be full of trial to
+himself, all the more that they bore so discouraging an
+aspect towards the cause to which he was devoted.
+He had been for years a prisoner. The work of
+preaching to the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of
+Christ had been stopped, except as the narrow opportunities
+of a prisoner's life offered scant outlets for it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+He had, no doubt, his own share of experiences tending
+to depress and embitter: for in his day philanthropy
+had not yet done much to secure good treatment for
+men situated as he was. Still more depressing to an
+eager soul was the discipline of delay: the slow, monotonous
+months passing on, consuming the remainder of
+his life, while the great harvest he longed to reap lay
+outside uncared for, with few to bring it in. Meanwhile
+even the work done in Christ's name was largely
+taking a wrong direction: those who under the Christian
+name preached another gospel, and perverted the gospel
+of Christ, had a freer hand to do their work. Paul, at
+least, had no longer the power to cross their path.
+Ground on which he might have worked, minds which
+he might have approached, seemed to be falling under
+their perverting influence. All this seemed adverse&mdash;adverse
+to Paul, and adverse to the cause for which he
+lived&mdash;fitted therefore to awaken legitimate concern:
+fitted to raise the question why God's providence should
+thus depress the heart and waste the life of an agent so
+carefully prepared and so incomparably efficient.</p>
+
+<p>Most likely these things had tried the faith of Paul
+himself, and they might distress and perplex his loving
+friends at Philippi. It was right to feel that these
+providences were trying; but one might be tempted
+also to conclude that they were in every sense to be
+lamented. So much the better it was, therefore, that
+the Apostle could testify how here also all things
+were working for good, and in particular were turning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+out to be for the furtherance of the gospel. This was
+taking place in two ways at least.</p>
+
+<p>First, Paul's imprisonment had become the means
+of bringing to the knowledge of the gospel many who
+were not likely ever to hear of it in any other way;
+for his bonds had become manifest in Christ in the
+Prætorium, and in all other places. The precise meaning
+of the several words here used has become matter
+of discussion; but the general result is much the same
+whatever view is taken of the matters debated. The
+word translated "palace" in the Authorised Version
+(Marg. Cæsar's Court) may perhaps refer to the quarters
+of the guard, in the immediate neighbourhood of the
+palace. Prisoners whose cases were in a special
+manner reserved to the Emperor were sometimes
+confined there. And Paul, whether actually confined
+there or not, must have come into contact with the troops
+stationed there, for we know he had been delivered to
+the captain of the guard (Acts xxviii. 16<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>). Then the
+"all others" (Marg. of A.V.) may probably mean the
+rest of the Emperor's household (comp. ch. iv. 22), and
+would naturally be connected with it in the minds of
+men, so that a mere indication like this was enough.
+For, in a military system such as that of the Empire
+was, the soldiers and officers of the guard formed an
+important part of the household. That household,
+however, was an immense affair, including hundreds or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+even thousands of persons&mdash;mostly freedmen or slaves,
+performing all sorts of functions.</p>
+
+<p>Paul, then, in charge of the guard, coming in contact
+with individuals belonging to the various reliefs which
+successively had him in custody, spoken of as one reserved
+to the judgment of the Emperor himself, became
+known throughout the quarters of the guard, and to
+persons of the household of every rank and class. In
+point of fact we know and can prove from evidence
+external to the Bible that a few years later than this
+(perhaps even earlier than this) there were members of
+the household who were Christians. Before the end of
+the century a branch of the family which then occupied
+the imperial throne seems to have joined the Church,
+perhaps through the influence of a Christian nurse,
+who is commemorated in an inscription still preserved.</p>
+
+<p>But how did his bonds "become manifest in Christ"?
+The words no doubt mean that he became known extensively
+as a man whose bonds, whose imprisonment,
+was for his adherence to the name and doctrine of Jesus
+Christ. Let us consider how this would come about.</p>
+
+<p>There might, at first, be universal indifference with
+reference to the cause of this prisoner's confinement.
+When his character and statements led to some
+curiosity about him, men might find it difficult to
+understand what the real nature of this mysterious
+case could be. For while the charge, whatever form it
+took, was not yet a common one, we may be very sure
+that the man struck people as profoundly different from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+ordinary prisoners. For ordinary prisoners the one thing
+desirable was release; and they employed every artifice,
+and exhausted every form of influence and intrigue, and
+were prepared to sacrifice every scruple, if only they
+could get free. Here was a man who pleaded for truth;
+his own freedom seemed to be quite secondary and
+subordinate. So at last men come to an understanding,
+more or less, of the real cause of his bonds. They were
+bonds for Christ. They were the result of his adherence
+to the faith of Christ's resurrection, and to the
+truths which that great event sealed. They were connected
+with a testifying for Christ which had brought
+him into collision with the authorities of his own nation,
+which had set on Jews "everywhere" to "speak
+against" him (Acts xxviii. 22). And in his imprisonment
+he did not lay down his testimony, but preached with
+all his heart to every man who would hear him. This
+state of things dawned upon men's minds, so far as they
+thought about him at all; it became clear; it was
+"manifest in the Prætorium, and to all the others."</p>
+
+<p>One influence was at work which would at least
+direct attention to the case. There were certainly Jews
+in the household; there were also Jews in Rome who
+made it their business, for their worldly interest, to
+establish connections in the household; and about this
+time Jewish influence rose to the person nearest to
+Nero himself. There was therefore a class of persons
+in the household likely to feel an interest in the case.
+And on these most likely the influence of Jewish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+religious authorities would be exerted to produce an
+unfavourable opinion of Paul. It would be felt desirable
+that the Jews of the household should think of
+Paul as no loyal Jew, as a seditious person, and of his
+opinions as not legitimately pertaining to Jewish religion&mdash;as
+a religious belief and practice which Judaism repudiated
+and denounced. Thus, while Paul's case might
+begin to influence the guard, because members of it
+were personally in contact with him, in the rest of the
+household there was a class of persons who would feel
+an interest in discussing his case. One way or another,
+some impression as to the peculiar character of it was
+acquired.</p>
+
+<p>Now think how much was done when some view of
+the real nature of Paul's bonds had been lodged in the
+minds of these men. Think what an event that was in
+the mental history of some of these heathens of the old
+world. Paul was, in the first place, a man very unlike
+the ordinary type of movers of sedition. It seemed
+that his offence stood only in religious opinions or persuasions;
+and that itself, precisely in Nero's days, was
+a little singular to figure as the ground of political imprisonment.
+He was persecuted and endangered for
+his faith, and he neither denied nor disguised that
+faith, but spent all possible pains in proclaiming it.
+This was new. He had a faith, resting professedly on
+recent facts, which he proclaimed as indispensably
+necessary to be received by all men. This was new.
+He seriously told men, any man and every man, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
+their welfare must be attained through their being
+individually transformed to a type of character of the
+unworldliest type; he could press that alike on sordid
+Jews and gay young officers. This was new. He
+was a man who, in place of the ordinary anxieties and
+importunities of a prisoner, was ever ready to speak and
+plead in behalf of Christ, that singular young Jew who
+had died thirty years before, but whom Paul affirmed to
+be alive. And in all this, however it might strike one as
+foolish or odd, there were tokens of an honesty, a sanity,
+and a purity that could not be explained away. All
+this struck men who stood near the centre of a world
+falling many ways into moral ruin, as something strange
+and new. Paul's own explanation of it was in the one
+word "Christ." So his bonds were manifest in Christ.</p>
+
+<p>A few of them might have heard previously of
+Christianity as a new and a malignant superstition.
+But another conception of it reached them through the
+bonds of Paul. This imprisoned man was a fact to be
+accounted for, and a problem to be solved. In him
+was an influence not wholly to be escaped, an instance
+that needed a new interpretation. Many of them did
+not obey the truth, some did; but at least something
+had become manifest that could not easily be got rid
+of again,&mdash;the beginning, in their case, of that leaven
+which was eventually to revolutionise the thinking and
+feeling of the world. Remember also that most of these
+were men to whom Paul at liberty, speaking in synagogues
+and the like, would have found no access, nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+would he have come near the circles to which their influence
+extended. But now, being imprisoned, his bonds
+became manifest in Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Thus does it often come to pass that what seems
+adverse, proves to be on our side. Fruit is not always
+borne most freely when the visible opportunities of
+labouring are most plentiful. Rather the question is,
+how the opportunities given are employed, and how far
+the life of the labourer bears witness of the presence
+and power of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>But besides the direct impression on those who were
+outside, arising from the fact of Paul's imprisonment, it
+became the means of stimulating and reinforcing the
+labours of other Christians (ver. 14). It is not hard to
+see how this might be. From Paul's bonds, and from
+the manner and spirit in which they were borne, these
+brethren received a new impression as to what should
+be done and what should be borne in the service of
+Christ. They were infected with the contagion of Paul's
+heroism. The sources of Paul's consecration and of his
+comfort became more real to them; and no discouragement
+arising from pain or danger could hold its ground
+against these forces. So they waxed confident. While
+dangers that threaten Christians are still only impending,
+are still only looming out of the unknown future,
+men are apt to tremble at them, to look with a shrinking
+eye, to approach with a reluctant step. Now here
+in the midst of those Roman Christians was Paul, in
+whom were embodied the trouble accepted and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+danger defied. At once Christian hearts became inspired
+with a more magnanimous and generous spirit.
+Wherever dangers and hardships are endured, even
+apart from Christianity, we know how prompt the
+impulse is to rush in, to give help, and to share burdens.
+How much more might it be so here.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Not that the impulse to evangelistic earnestness,
+arising from Paul's presence in Rome, was all of this
+kind. It was not so. Some preached out of goodwill,
+in full sympathy with the spirit that animated Paul's
+own labours and sustained him in his trials. But some
+preached Christ out of envy and spite, and supposed to
+add affliction to his bonds. How are we to fit this into
+our notions of the Primitive Church?</p>
+
+<p>The truth is that, ever since the gospel began to
+be preached, unworthy motives have combined with
+worthier in the administration and professed service
+of it. Mixture of motive has haunted the work even
+of those who strove to keep their motives pure. And
+men in whom lower motive and worse motive had
+a strong influence have struck into the work alongside
+of the nobler and purer labourers. So it has
+pleased God to permit; that even in this sacred
+field men might be tried and manifested before the
+judgment of the great day; and that it might be the
+more plain that the effectual blessing and the true
+increase come from Himself.</p>
+
+<p>More especially have these influences become apparent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+in connection with the divisions of judgment
+about Christian doctrine and practice, and with the formation
+of parties. The personal and the party feelings
+have readily allied themselves, in too many men, with a
+self-regarding zeal and with envy or spite. And where
+these feelings exist they come out in other forms besides
+their own proper colours and their direct manifestation.
+More often they find vent in the way of
+becoming the motive power of work that claims to be
+Christian&mdash;of work that ought to be inspired by a
+purer aim.</p>
+
+<p>There were, as we all know, in the Church of those
+days powerful sections of professed believers, who contested
+Paul's apostleship, questioned his teaching, and
+wholly disliked the effects of his work. Perhaps by
+this time the strain of that conflict had become a little
+less severe, but it had not wholly passed away. We
+call these persons the Judaisers. They were men
+who looked to Jesus Christ as the Messiah, who owned
+the authority of His teaching, and claimed interest in
+His promises. But they insisted on linking Christianity
+to Jewish forms, and rules, and conditions of
+law-keeping, which were on various grounds dear and
+sacred to them. They apprehended feebly the spirituality
+and Divineness of Christ's religion; and what
+they did apprehend they wished to enslave, for themselves
+and others, in a carnal system of rules and
+ritual that tended to stifle and to bury the truth. With
+this there went a feeling towards Paul of wrath fear,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+and antipathy. Such men there were in Rome. Possibly
+there might even be a Christian congregation
+in the city in which this type prevailed. At any rate,
+they were found there. Before Paul's coming no very
+remarkable nor very successful efforts to spread abroad
+the gospel in that great community had been going on.
+But Paul's arrival made men solicitous and watchful.
+And when it was seen that his presence and the enthusiasm
+that gathered round him were beginning to
+give impulse and effect to the speaking of the word,
+then this party too bestirred itself. It would not&mdash;could
+not&mdash;oppose the carrying of the message of
+Christ to men. But it could try to be first in the field;
+it could become active, energetic, dexterous, in laying
+hold of inquiring and susceptible persons, before the
+other side could do so; it could subject Paul to the
+mortification, <i>the deserved mortification</i>, of failure or
+defeat, so far as these would be implied in his seeing
+the converts going to the side which was not his side.
+Evangelistic zeal awoke on these terms, and bestirred
+itself. And sheaves that in other circumstances might
+have lain untended long enough, were gathered now.</p>
+
+<p>This very same spirit, this poor and questionable
+zeal for Christ, still works, and does so plentifully.
+The activities of Churches, the alertness of Mission
+societies and agencies, still partake, in far too many
+instances, of this sinister inspiration. We ought to
+watch against it in ourselves, that we may overcome
+the evil and grow into a nobler temper. As regards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+others, we may, in special cases, see the working of
+such motives clearly enough, as Paul saw them at
+Rome. But usually we shall do well, when we can,
+to impute the work of others to the better side of their
+character: and we may do so reasonably; for as
+Christian work is far from being all of it so pure and
+high as we might desire, on the other hand, the lowly
+and loving temper of Christ's true followers is very
+often present and operative when it is not easy for us
+to see it. Let us believe it, because we believe in Him
+who worketh all in all.</p>
+
+<p>Now the Apostle, looking at this, is glad of it. He
+is not glad that any men, professing Christ, give way
+to evil and unchristian tempers. But he is glad that
+Christ is preached. There were cases in which he
+vehemently contended with such persons&mdash;when they
+strove to poison and pervert Christians who had learned
+the better way. But now he is thinking of the outside
+world; and it was good that the making known of
+Christ should gather strength, and volume, and extension.
+And the Apostle knew that the Lord could
+bless His own message, imperfectly delivered perhaps,
+to bring thirsty souls to Himself, and would not fail in
+His unsearchable wisdom to care for those who came,
+and to lead them in the ways He thought best. Let
+Christ be preached. The converts do not belong to
+the denominations, but first of all to Christ. Neither
+is it appointed that the denominations shall permanently
+hold those whom they bring in; but Christ can hold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+them, and can order their future in ways we cannot
+foretell.</p>
+
+<p>It is not true that the preaching of Christ serves no
+purpose and yields no fruit, in cases where it is not
+carried on in the right, or the best spirit. Indeed, God
+honours the pure, loving, lowly hearts, which He has
+Himself cleansed; they are appropriate agents for His
+work, and often receive a special blessing in connection
+with it. But God is not tied up to give no success to
+men acting under wrong motives: at least, if we are not
+to say He gives the success to them, yet in connection
+with them He is well able to take success to Himself.
+Through strange channels He can send blessings to
+souls, whatever He gives or denies to the unworthy
+workmen. But perhaps the success which attends such
+preachers is not remarkable nor very long continued.
+Souls truly gathered in will soon get beyond their
+teaching. At any rate, it is a poor business to be
+serving Christ upon the devil's principles. It cannot
+be good for us&mdash;whatever good may sometimes come
+thereby to others. Let us purge ourselves from such
+filthiness of the flesh and of the spirit.</p>
+
+<p>"Christ is preached." How glad the Apostle was
+to think of it! How he longed to see more of it, and
+rejoiced in all of it that he saw! One wonders how
+far the thoughts and feelings associated with these
+words in Paul's mind, find any echo in ours. Christ is
+preached. The meaning for men of that message, as
+Paul conceived it, grew out of the anguish and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+wonder of those early days at Damascus, and had been
+growing ever since. What might Christ be for men?&mdash;Christ
+their righteousness, Christ their life, Christ their
+hope; God in Christ, peace in Christ, inheritance in
+Christ; a new creature, a new world; joy, victory&mdash;above
+all, the love of Christ, the love which passes
+knowledge and fills us with the fulness of God. Therefore
+also this was the burning conviction in Paul's
+soul&mdash;that Christ must be preached; by all means, on
+all accounts, Christ must be preached. The unsearchable
+riches of Christ must be proclaimed. Certainly,
+whoever might do or not do, <i>he</i> must do it. He
+was to live for nothing else. "I Paul am made a
+minister of it." "Woe is unto me if I preach not the
+gospel."</p>
+
+<p>Lastly, as to this, not only does he rejoice that Christ
+is announced to men, but he has an assurance that this
+shall have a happy issue and influence towards himself
+also. What is so good for others shall also be found to
+contribute an added element of good to his own salvation;
+so good and rich is God, who, in working wide
+results of Divine beneficence, does not overlook the
+special case and interest of His own servant. This
+work, from which the workmen would shut Paul out,
+shall prove to pertain to him in spite of them; and he,
+as reaper, shall receive here also his wages, gathering
+fruit unto life eternal.</p>
+
+<p>For it is characteristic of this Epistle (ii. 17; iv. 10,
+18) that the Apostle reveals to his Philippian friends<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+not only his thoughts concerning the great objects of
+the gospel, but also the desires and hopes he had about
+his own experience of deliverance and well-being in
+connection with the turns and changes of progressive
+providences. Here, it is as if he said: "I confess I am
+covetous, not a little covetous, to have many children
+in Christ: I would fain be a link in many a chain of
+influences, by which all sorts of persons are reached
+and blessed in Christ. And here where I sit confined,
+and am also the object of envy and strife that are
+solicitous to baffle me, I can descry ties forming
+between my influence in my prison and results elsewhere
+with which I seem to have little to do. I can
+claim a something of mine, granted me by my Lord, in
+the Christianity of those who are kept far from me, and
+taught perhaps to doubt and dislike me. If I in my
+prison experience can but live Christ, then all sorts of
+effects and reactions, upon all sorts of minds, will have
+something in them that accrues as fruit to Christ&mdash;and
+something also that accrues as my Lord's loving
+recognition of me. Only do you pray&mdash;for this is a
+great and high calling&mdash;pray, you who love me, and
+let the Lord in answer plentifully give His Spirit; and
+then, while I lie here in the imprisonment which my
+Lord has assigned to me, and in which He vitalises me,
+oh how fruitful and successful shall my life be, what
+gain and wealth of salvation shall be mine! There
+shall be fruit for an Apostle still, coming in ways I
+cannot follow; and in it, and with it, the confirmation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+and deepening of my own eternal life. It shall turn
+to my salvation."</p>
+
+<p>So the eager Apostle, caged and cabined, triumphed
+still in Christ, assured that there was a way of dealing
+with his Lord's will, discouraging as that might seem,
+in which it would reveal both enlargement for the
+Kingdom and the most loving enrichment also for
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>This is a commonplace of Christianity. Christians
+trust in Christ to cause all to work for good. They know
+He can impart His most precious gifts through what seem
+adverse providences. But it is a memorable embodiment
+of this conviction that meets us in the Apostle's
+confidence, that when Christ's providence outwardly
+stops his work, it not the less pertains to Christ's
+wisdom to continue and extend his usefulness. The
+applications of the same principle to various cases in
+which Christians are trained through disappointment
+are innumerable. But mostly, even when, in a way,
+we are open to the lesson, we take it too easily. We
+forget that here also it is Christlike life and life in
+Christ that proves so fruitful and so happy. We do
+not apprehend how great a thing it is&mdash;what prayer it
+asks&mdash;what supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ. For
+the Apostle, as we learn from what presently follows,
+this blessing came in the line of "earnest expectation
+and hope." It was not an exceptional effort of faith
+which awoke in him so firm a confidence about his circumstances
+at Rome, and was rewarded so manifestly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+His whole life was set on the same key. He applied to
+that Roman experience the same mode of view which
+he strove to apply to every experience. This was his
+expectation&mdash;he was on the outlook for it&mdash;and this his
+hope, that not only in one great crisis, but all along his
+pilgrimage, his life should <i>eventuate</i> one way&mdash;should
+shape into glory to Christ. His whole life must turn
+out to be a loving, believing, effectual manifestation of
+the greatness and goodness of Christ. This was what
+rose before his mind as <span class="smcap">Success in Life</span>. His thoughts,
+his prayers turned this way. As some men's minds
+turn spontaneously to money, and some to family prosperity,
+and some to fame, and some to various lines of
+recreation or of accomplishment, so Paul's turned to
+this. And in this world of failure and disappointment,
+success welcomed him and gladdened him. His would
+have been the nobler life even if its expectation had
+been disappointed. But this is the life which cannot
+fail, because God is in it.</p>
+
+<p>There is a great admonition here for all of us who
+profess to be followers of Christ. Our line of service
+may not be so emphatically marked out for distinction,
+for special and exceptional eminence of doing and
+suffering, as Paul's was. But for every believer the
+path of service opens, however commonplace and
+undistinguished its scenery may be. And in some of
+its stages it takes, for all of us, the peculiar character,
+it assumes the distinguishing features which mark it
+out as Christian. Here, in Paul, we see the spirit that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+should inspire service, should make the strength, the
+peculiarity, the success of it, should be the quickening
+and gladdening influence of its efforts and its prayers.
+This ought to be for us also the longing outlook and
+the hope.</p>
+
+<p>Let us note also, before we pass on, that the Lord's
+personal kindness to ourselves is matter of legitimate
+rejoicing and legitimate desire. That may be gathered
+from almost every verse. There have been persons who
+conceived that a true Christian is to be so occupied
+with the thought of God's glory and will, or so occupied
+with the weal of others, as to have no personal desires
+or interests at all. This is a mistake. One of the most
+intimate and special channels in which the glory of God
+and the revelation of it are secured, is in the expression
+of His goodwill to His child's own heart. This is the
+privilege of faith, to cherish the expectation that His
+glory and our good are to agree well together. Only,
+as to the latter, let us leave it to Him how it is to come
+to pass; and then it will come divinely and wonderfully.
+"The Lord is my shepherd, <i>I</i> shall not want."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><i>THE CHOICE BETWEEN LIVING AND DYING.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>"For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain. But if to live in
+the flesh,&mdash;if this is the fruit of my work, then what I shall choose I
+wot not. But I am in a strait betwixt the two, having the desire to
+depart and be with Christ; for it is very far better: yet to abide in
+the flesh is more needful for your sake. And having this confidence, I
+know that I shall abide, yea, and abide with you all, for your progress
+and joy in the faith; that your glorying may abound in Christ Jesus
+in me through my presence with you again."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> i. 21-26 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE CHOICE BETWEEN LIVING AND DYING.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>At the close of the preceding section we see that the
+ruling principle of the Apostle&mdash;the earnest expectation
+and hope which inspired his life&mdash;came into
+special exercise at this time with reference to the possibility,
+and the likelihood, of an early and violent death.
+Dying for the name of the Lord Jesus, as well as
+enduring imprisonment for Him, might be near. He
+might not only be straitened in his labours, and secluded
+from the activities connected with his loved work on
+earth, but might be completely and finally withdrawn
+from it by Roman doom and execution. The Apostle's
+faith looked steadily at this final possibility. As at all
+times, so now also, Christ should be magnified in him,
+whether by life or by death.</p>
+
+<p>Now, when some great alternative of the future rises
+before a Christian,&mdash;some possibility which God's providence
+may turn either way,&mdash;it is natural that he
+should look heedfully to it, that he may order aright
+his faith and patience as the day of decision draws
+near. And it is natural in particular that his thoughts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+should be occupied by the consideration how far the
+one way of it is in itself more attractive to him than
+the other. For in view of that he has to watch his
+heart, that as to what seems more attractive he may
+not desire it idolatrously, nor let his heart be "overcharged"
+with it if it is realised; and that as to what
+seems less attractive he may await God's will with
+submission and faith, and welcome it, if so it come
+to pass, with sincerity. So also the Apostle fixes his
+eye, ponderingly, on this alternative of life or death,
+so strongly suggested by his circumstances. But, as it
+were, with a smile he recognises that to a man standing,
+as he did, in the light of Christ, it was hard to say
+which should attract him most. Life and Death&mdash;what
+had they once been to him? what were they still to
+many? To live, self&mdash;self pleased, provided for, contended
+for, perhaps fighting for itself a losing battle
+with a bitter heart; to die, a dark, dire necessity, full
+of fear and doubt. But now, to live is Christ. In all
+life as it came to him, in all its various providences, he
+found Christ; in all life, as it fell to him to be lived,
+he found the circumstances set for him and the opportunity
+given to follow Christ; in all the attraction and
+all the pressure, the force and strain of life, he found
+the privilege of receiving Christ and employing Christ's
+grace, the opportunity for living by the faith of the Son
+of God. That was all very real to him: it was not
+only a fine ideal, owned indeed but only distantly and
+dimly descried; no, it was a reality daily fulfilled to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+him. To live was Christ, with a support, an elevation,
+and a love in it such as the world knows not. That
+was good, oh how good! And then to die was better:
+to die was gain. For to die, also, was "Christ"; but
+with many a hindrance passed away, and many a conflict
+ended, and many a promise coming into fulfilment as
+here it could not do. For if, as to his own interest and
+portion, he lived by hope, then death was a long step
+forward into possession and realisation. By grace
+Paul was to show how he valued Christ; he was to
+show it in his life. And Christ was to show His care
+for Paul&mdash;in this life, no doubt, very lovingly; but more
+largely and fully at his death. To live is Christ&mdash;to
+die is gain; to be all for Christ while I live, to find at
+length He is all for me when I die!</p>
+
+<p>Which should he prefer, which should he pray for
+(subject to God's will), which should he hope for, life
+or death? The one would continue him in a labour
+for Christ, which Christ taught him to love. The
+other would bring him to a sinless and blessed fellowship
+with Christ, which Christ taught him to long for.
+Looking to the two, how should he order his desires?</p>
+
+<p>It is because he speaks as one always does speak
+who is pondering something&mdash;the words rising, as it
+were, from what he sees before him&mdash;that he speaks so
+elliptically in ver. 22. "But if to live in the flesh
+come to me, as its fruit and reward bringing...."
+What? The Apostle sees, but does not say: something
+that might well reconcile him to prolonged toil and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+suffering. But why produce the considerations on
+either side, why balance them against one another?
+It is too long, too difficult a process. And how can
+even an apostle confidently judge as to better or best
+here? "And what I shall choose, really I do not
+know." But this he knows, that so far as his own
+desires are concerned, so far as the possible futures
+draw his spirit, he is in a strait between two, having a
+desire to depart and to be with Christ, for that is far
+better; and yet that he should continue in the flesh is
+of more imperative necessity for the sake of friends like
+the Philippians.</p>
+
+<p>Not every Christian is in the state of mind which
+would naturally express itself as a desire forthwith to
+depart and be with Christ. The great hope claims its
+place in every Christian heart; but not in every case
+so as to inspire the longing to overleap all intermediate
+stages. Rather must we not say that there are periods
+of Christian experience, as there are also casts of character,
+for which it is more usual and natural to desire,
+if it be God's will, some further experience of life on
+earth? If this be immature Christianity, we will not,
+therefore, judge that it cannot be genuine.</p>
+
+<p>Yet to be ready, and, subject to God's will, desirous
+to depart, is an attainment to be aimed at and made
+good. Sooner or later it should come. It lies in the
+line of ripening Christian affection and growing Christian
+insight. For this is better. It is not that life in
+this world is not good: it is good, when it is life in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+Christ. It has its trials, its conflicts, and its dangers;
+it has also its elements of defect and evil: yet it is
+good. It is good to be a child of God in training for
+a better country; it is good to be one who carries
+the life of faith through the experiences of time. And,
+for some especially, there is a strong and not an unworthy
+attraction in the forms of exercise which open
+to us just in such a life as this, under the guarantee
+and the consecration of Christ. Knowledge opens its
+career, in which many a generous mind is drawn to
+prove its powers. Love, in all the variety of its calmer
+and its more ardent affections, sends a glow through life
+which gladdens it with promise. The tasks which call
+for practical effort and achievement stir vigorous natures
+with a high ambition. And when all these spheres
+are illuminated by the light, and dominated by the
+authority, and quickened for us by the love of Christ,
+is not life on those terms interesting and good? True,
+it is destined to disclose its imperfection. Our knowledge
+proves to be so partial; our love is so sorely
+grieved, so often bereaved, sometimes it is even killed;
+and active life must learn that what is crooked cannot
+wholly be made straight, and that what is wanting
+cannot be numbered. So that life itself shall teach a
+Christian that his longings must seek their rest further
+on. Yet life in Christ here upon the earth is good:
+let us say no unkind word of those who feel it so,&mdash;whose
+hearts, with true loyalty to Christ, would yet if
+it be His will put life fully to the proof before they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+go. Still, this must be said and pressed&mdash;let it be
+joyfully believed&mdash;that to depart is better. It is <i>far</i>
+better. It is better to be done with sin. It is better
+to be where all hopes are fulfilled. It is better to rise
+above a scene in which all is precarious, and in which
+a strange sadness thrills through our happiness even
+when we possess it. To be where Christ most fully,
+eminently, experimentally is, that is best. Therefore it is
+better to depart. Let mortality be swallowed up of life.</p>
+
+<p>It is not only better, so that we may own it so to be
+as a certainty of faith; but also so that we may and
+ought to feel it warming and drawing the heart with
+delight and with desire. It is not needful that we
+should judge more hardly of life on earth; but we might
+attain a far more gladdening appreciation of what it
+must be to be with Christ. With no rebellion against
+God's appointment when it keeps us here, and no
+grudging spirit towards earth's mercies and employments,
+we might yet have this thought of departing in
+God's time as a real and bright hope; a great element
+of comfort and of strength; a support in trouble; an
+elevating influence in times of gladness; an anchor
+of the soul, sure and steadfast, entering into that which
+is within the veil.</p>
+
+<p>The hope of the gospel implies it. If that hope is
+ours and is duly cherished, must it not assert itself and
+sway the heart, so as more and more to command the
+life?</p>
+
+<p>The earnest of the Spirit implies it. Of the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+substance of the life eternal a foretaste comes, in the
+presence and grace of the Spirit of love and comfort.
+Can that be with us, can that leaven work duly in our
+hearts, and not awaken longing for the full entrance into
+so great a good? It may be expected of us Christians
+that we should lift up our heads because redemption is
+drawing nigh.</p>
+
+<p>As for the Apostle, however, if the choice were his,
+he felt that it must fall in favour of still cleaving to the
+present life; for this, though less attractive to himself,
+was more necessary for the Churches, and, in particular,
+for his friends at Philippi. This was so clear to him
+that he was persuaded his life would, in fact, be prolonged
+by Him who appoints to all their term of
+ministry. Probably we are not to take this as a prophecy,
+but only as the expression of a strong persuasion.
+Work still lay before him in the line of training and
+cheering these believing friends, furthering and gladdening
+their faith. He hoped to see them yet, and to
+renew the old glad "fellowship" (ch. i. 5). So there
+should be for the Philippians fresh matter of exultation,&mdash;exultation
+primarily in the great salvation of Christ,
+but yet receiving impulse and increase from the
+presence and ministry of Paul. Mainly, they would
+be exceeding glad of Christ; but yet, subordinately,
+exceeding glad of Paul also.</p>
+
+<p>It is a striking thing to see how confident the
+Apostle was of the resources given to him to wield. He
+knew how profitable and how gladdening his coming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+would be to the Philippian believers. He admits no
+doubt of it. God has set him in the world for this,
+that he may make many rich. Having nothing, he yet
+goes about, as one possessing all things, to impart his
+treasures to all kinds of people. To disguise this would
+be for him mock humility; it would be a denying of
+his Master's grace. When ministers of Christ come
+aright to this impression of their own calling, then they
+are also powerful. But they must come to it aright.
+For it was not the Apostle's consciousness of himself,
+but his consciousness of his Master, that bred this
+superb confidence, this unabated expectation. In subordination
+to that faith the Apostle no doubt had
+specific reason to know that his own personal mission
+was of the highest importance, and was designed to
+accomplish great results. Ordinary ministers of Christ
+do not share this peculiar ground of confidence. But
+no one who has any kind of mission from Christ can
+discharge it aright if he is destitute of the expectancy
+which looks forward to results, and, indeed, to momentous
+results; for the reapers in Christ's harvest are to
+"gather fruit unto life eternal." To cherish this mood,
+not in the manner of a vain presumption, but in the
+manner of faith in a great Saviour, is the practical
+question for gospel ministers.</p>
+
+<p>Alike in the utterance of his mind about his
+Philippian friends, and in his explanations about himself,
+it is remarkable how thoroughly the Apostle
+carries his faith through the whole detail of persons<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+and things. The elements and forces of the Kingdom
+of God are not for him remote splendours to be
+venerated from afar. To his faith they are embodied,
+they are vitally and divinely present, in the history of
+the Churches and in his own history. He sees Christ
+working in the Philippian believers; he sees in their
+Christian profession and service a fire of love caught
+from the love of Christ&mdash;the increase and triumph of
+which he anticipates with affectionate solicitude. The
+tender mercies of Christ are the element in which he
+and they are alike moving, and this blessedness it is
+their privilege assiduously to improve. So he was
+minded in regard to all the Churches. If in any of
+them the indications are feeble and dubious, only so
+much the more intently does he scrutinise them, to
+recognise, in spite of difficulty, that which comes and
+only could come from his Master's Spirit. If indications
+too significant of a wholly different influence have
+broken out, and demand the severest rebukes, he still
+casts about for tokens of the better kind. For surely
+Christ's Spirit is in His Churches, and surely the seed
+is growing in Christ's field towards a blessed harvest.
+If men have to be warned that naming the name of
+Christ they may be reprobates, that without the Spirit
+of Christ they are none of His, this comes as something
+sad and startling to be spoken to men in Christian
+Churches. So also in his own case&mdash;Christ is speaking
+and working by him, and all providences that befall him
+are penetrated by the love, the wisdom, and the might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+of Christ. In nothing is the Apostle more enviable
+than in this victoriousness of his faith over the earthly
+shows of things, and over the unlikelihoods which in this
+refractory world always mask and misrepresent the
+good work. We, for our part, find our faith continually
+abashed by those same unlikelihoods. We recognise
+the course of this world, which speaks for itself; but we
+are uncertain and discouraged as to what the Saviour is
+doing. The mere commonplaceness of Christians, and
+of visible Christianity, and of ourselves, is allowed to
+baffle us. Nothing in the life of the Church, we are
+ready to say, is very interesting, very vivid, very
+hopeful. The great fire burning in the world ever since
+Pentecost is for us scarcely recognisable. We even
+take credit for being so hard to please. But if the
+quick faith and love of Paul the prisoner were ours, we
+should be sensitive to echoes and pulsations and movements
+everywhere,&mdash;we should be aware that the voice
+and the power of Christ are everywhere stirring in His
+Churches.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><i>UNDAUNTED AND UNITED STEADFASTNESS.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>"Only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ,
+that, whether I come and see you or be absent, I may hear of your
+state, that ye stand fast in one spirit, with one soul striving for the
+faith of the gospel; and in nothing affrighted by the adversaries:
+which is for them an evident token of perdition, but of your salvation,
+and that from God; because to you it hath been granted in the behalf
+of Christ, not only to believe on Him, but also to suffer in His behalf:
+having the same conflict which ye saw in me, and now hear to be in
+me."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> i. 27-30 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>UNDAUNTED AND UNITED STEADFASTNESS.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>At ver. 27 the letter begins to be hortative. Up to
+this point the Apostle has been taking the
+Philippians into his confidence, in order that they may
+share his point of view and see things as He sees
+them. Now he begins more directly to call them to the
+attitude and work which become them as Christians;
+but up to ver. 30 the sense of the dear tie between him
+and them is still very present, colouring and controlling
+his exhortations.</p>
+
+<p>"Be assured," he has been saying, "that by the
+grace of God, abounding amid trials, it is well with
+me; and I have very good hope of yet again enjoying
+this honour, that through my means it may be well with
+you:&mdash;<i>only</i> fix you on this, let this be your concern, to
+walk as it becomes the gospel: this is the ground on
+which you must win your victory; this is the line on
+which alone you can make any effectual contribution to
+our common welfare, and that of all the Churches." So
+the Apostle urges. For, let us be assured of it, while
+we debate with ourselves by what efforts and in what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+lines we can do some stroke of service to the good
+cause, or to some special representative of it, after all
+the greatest and weightiest thing by far that we can
+do is to be thoroughly consistent and devoted in our
+own Christian walk, living lives answerable to the
+gospel.</p>
+
+<p>The original suggests that the Apostle thinks of the
+Philippians as citizens of a state, who are to carry on
+their life according to the constitution and laws of the
+state to which they belong. That citizenship of theirs,
+as we shall afterwards see, is in heaven (ch. iii. 20),
+where Christ their head is gone. The privilege of
+belonging to it had reached them through the call of
+God. And it was their business on the earth to act out
+the citizenship, to prove the reality of it in their conduct,
+and to manifest to the world what sort of citizenship
+it is. Now the standard according to which this
+is to be done is the gospel of Christ&mdash;the gospel, not
+only as it contains a code of rules for practice, but as it
+reveals the Saviour to whom we are to be conformed,
+and discloses a Divine order of holiness and grace to
+the influence of which our souls are to bow. And
+indeed, if our thinking, and speaking, and acting held
+some proportion to the gospel we profess to believe;
+if they corresponded to the purity, the tenderness, the
+Divine worth of the gospel; if from step to step of life
+we were indeed building ourselves on our most holy
+faith, what manner of persons should we be? This
+opens more fully in the next chapter.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>But we are tried by circumstances; and the same
+Christianity will take different manifestations according
+to the circumstances in which it is unfolded. For every
+Christian and for every Christian community much depends
+on the shaping influence of the providences of life.
+The Apostle, therefore, must have regard to the circumstances
+of the Philippians. We are all ready, commonly,
+to exert ourselves, as we say, to "improve our circumstances";
+and, in one view, it is natural and fitting
+enough. Yet it is of more importance&mdash;much more&mdash;that
+in the circumstances as they stand we should bear
+ourselves in a manner worthy of the gospel. Some of
+us are ready to stir heaven and earth in order that
+certain unwelcome conditions of our lot may be altered
+or abolished. It would be more to the point to walk
+with God under them as long as they last. When they
+have passed away, the opportunity for faith, love, and
+service which <i>they</i> have furnished will have passed
+away for ever.</p>
+
+<p>The Apostle, therefore, specifies what he wished to
+see or hear of in the Philippian Church, as proper to
+the circumstances in which they stood. He calls for
+steadfastness as against influences that might shake
+and overthrow, put in motion against them by the
+enemies of the gospel.</p>
+
+<p>The words suggest the strain of the situation as it
+was felt in those small early Churches. It is difficult
+for us adequately to conceive it. There was the unfriendly
+aspect both of Roman law and of public opinion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+to unauthorised religious fraternities; there was the
+hostility of ardent Jews, skilful to stir into activity
+enmities which otherwise might have slumbered;
+there was the jealousy of religious adventurers of all
+kinds with whom that age was becoming rife. But
+besides, there was the immense pressure of general
+unbelief. Christianity had to be embraced and maintained
+against the judgment and under the cool
+contempt of the immense majority, including the wealth,
+the influence, the wisdom, the culture&mdash;all that was
+brilliant, imposing, and conclusive. This temper was
+disdainful for the most part: it became bitter and
+spiteful if in any instance Christianity came near
+enough to threaten its repose. It found, no doubt,
+active interpreters and representatives in every class,
+in every family circle. Christianity was carried forward
+in those days by a great spiritual power working with
+the message. It needed nothing less than this to sustain
+the Christian against the deadweight of the world's
+adverse verdict, echoing back from every tribunal by
+which the world gives forth its judgments. Then,
+every feeling of doubt, or tendency to vacillate, created
+by these influences, was reinforced by the consciousness
+of faults and failings among the Christians themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Against all this faith held its ground, faith clinging
+to the unseen Lord. In that faith the Philippians were
+to stand fast. Not only so; looking on "the faith" as
+if it were a spiritual personality, striving and striven
+with, they were to throw their own being and energy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+into the struggle, that the cause of faith might make
+head and win fresh victories. The faith is knocking
+at many doors, is soliciting many minds. But much
+depends on ardent and energetic Christians, who will
+throw their personal testimony into the conflict, and
+who will exert on behalf of the good cause the magic of
+Christian sympathy and Christian love. So they should
+be fellow-athletes contending on the side of faith, and
+in the cause of faith.</p>
+
+<p>In our own day a livelier sense has awakened of the
+obligation lying upon Christians to spend and be spent
+in their Master's cause, and to be fellow-helpers to the
+truth. Many voices are raised to enforce the duty.
+Still, it cannot be doubted that in most cases this aspect
+of the Christian calling is too languidly conceived and
+too intermittently put in practice. And many in all the
+Churches are so little qualified to labour for the faith, or
+even stand fast in it, that their Christianity is only held up
+externally by the consent and custom of those about them.</p>
+
+<p>At this point and in this connection the Apostle
+begins to bring forward the exhortation to peace and
+unity which goes forward into the following chapter.
+Apparently no steadfastness will, in his view, be "worthy
+of the gospel," unless this loving unity is added. If there
+was a common instinct of worldliness and unbelief,
+giving unity to the influences against which the Philippians
+had to contend, the operation of a mighty uniting
+influence was to be expected on the other side, an
+influence Divine in its origin and energy. The subject<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+is brought forward, one can see, in view of tendencies
+to disagreement which had appeared at Philippi. But
+it was a topic on which the Apostle had intensely strong
+convictions, and he was ever ready to expatiate upon it.</p>
+
+<p>We need not be surprised at the earnestness about
+peace and unity evinced in the Epistles, nor think it
+strange that such exhortations were required. Consider
+the case of these early converts. What varieties of
+training had formed their characters; what prejudices
+of diverse races and religions continued to be active in
+their minds. Consider also what a world of new truths
+had burst upon them. It was impossible they could at
+once take in all these in their just proportions. Various
+aspects of things would strike different minds, and
+difficulty must needs be felt about the reconciliation of
+them. In addition to theory, practice opened a field of
+easy divergence. Church life had to be developed, and
+Church work had to be done. Rules and precedents
+were lacking. Everything had to be planned and built
+from the foundation. The very energy of the Christian
+faith tended to produce energetic individualities. If all
+these things are weighed, instead of being surprised at
+the rise of difficulties we may rather wonder how
+interminable disagreement was averted. The temper
+of "standing fast" might seem perhaps likely rather to
+aggravate than to alleviate some of these sources of
+discord.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, to the Apostle's mind a glorious
+unity was one especial mark of the triumph of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+Kingdom of God. That expressed the victory in all
+the members of the new society of one influence proceeding
+from one Lord; it expressed the prevalence of
+that new life the chief element of which is the uniting
+grace, the grace of love. It should not be difficult
+to understand the value which the Apostle set on this
+feature in the life of Churches, how he longed to see it,
+how he pressed it so ardently on his disciples. Sin,
+dividing men from God, had divided them also from
+one another. It introduced selfishness, self-seeking,
+self-worship, self-assertion, everything that tends to
+divide. It rent men into separate interests, societies,
+classes, worships; and these stood over against one
+another isolated, jealous, conflicting. Men had long
+ago ceased to think it possible to have things otherwise
+ordered. They had almost ceased to desire it. How
+eminently then did the glory of the redemption in Christ
+appear in the fact that by it the dispersed out of all kinds
+of dispersion were gathered into one. They were bound
+to one another as well as to Christ: they became more
+conscious of oneness than ever they had been of
+separation. It testified to the presence and working
+of Him who made all, and from whom all, by different
+paths, had gone astray.</p>
+
+<p>The means by which this unity was to be maintained
+was chiefly the prevalence of the Christian affections in
+the hearts of believers&mdash;the presence and power of that
+mind of Christ, of which more must be said in connection
+with the following chapter. Certainly the Apostle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+regards this as, at any rate, the radical security for unity
+in life and work, and without it he does not suppose
+the unity for which he cares can exist at all. In this
+connection it is worth observing that the unity he is
+thinking of is chiefly that which should bind together
+the members of those little communities which were
+rising up in various places under his ministry. It is
+the harmony of those whose lot is cast in the same
+place, who can influence one another, whose plain
+business it was to confess Christ together. Wider
+unity was supposed indeed, and was rejoiced in; but the
+maintenance of it had not yet become so much a practical
+question. This continued to be the case for some
+time after the Apostolic period. Men were anxious to
+hold each local congregation together, and to avert
+local splits and quarrels. If that were done, it seemed
+as though nothing further were urgently needed.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the same principles establish the unity of the
+visible Church throughout the world, and indicate the
+discharge of the duties which are necessary in order to
+the expression of it. Christians differ indeed among
+themselves upon the question how far the Church has
+received organic institutions fitted to give expression or
+embodiment to her unity; and diversity of judgment on
+that point is not likely soon to be removed. For the
+rest the main thing to observe is that Christ's Church
+<i>is</i> one, in root and principle. This applies not only to
+the Church invisible, but to the Church visible too.
+Only the latter, as she falls short in all service and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+attainment, falls short also in expressing her own unity
+and in performing the duties connected with it. On the
+one hand they err who think that because the state of
+the visible Church is marred by divisions, therefore unity
+in her case is a dream, and that the unity of the Church
+invisible is alone to be asserted. On the other hand
+they err who, on much the same grounds, conclude
+that only one of the organised communions can possess
+the nature and attributes of the visible Church of
+Christ. The visible Churches are imperfect in their
+unity as they are in their holiness. In both respects
+their state is neither to be absolutely condemned nor
+to be absolutely approved. And no one of them is
+entitled to throw upon the rest all the blame of the
+measure of disunion. Any one that does so becomes
+a principal fomenter of disunion.</p>
+
+<p>This is too wide a subject to follow further. Meanwhile
+it may be gathered from what has been said that
+the most direct application of the Apostle's language
+must be, not to the mutual relations of great communions,
+but to the mutual relations of Christians
+in the same local society. There is great room for
+such an application of it. Exaggerated statements may
+sometimes be made as to the indifference of Christians
+in modern congregations to one another's weal or woe;
+but certainly very often self-will and bitter feeling are
+allowed to prevail, as if the tender ties and solemn
+obligations of Christian fellowship had been forgotten.
+And very often mutual ignorance, indifference, or silent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+aversion mark the relations of those who have worshipped
+God together for long years. Certainly there
+is either some element lacking in the Christianity
+which is supposed to sustain Church life of this kind,
+or else the temperature of it must be low. Hence it
+comes, too, that the edification of Christians has so
+largely dissociated itself from the fellowship of the
+Churches to which they still resort, and seeks support
+on other lines. It was not so in those earliest Churches.
+The life and growth of the Christians were nursed in
+the Church meetings. There they gathered to read
+and sing and pray and break bread; to strengthen
+one another against Pagan violence and seduction; to
+love one another, as bound together by ties which
+Pagans never knew; to endure together the scorn and
+wrong which Christ's name might bring upon them;
+and not impossibly, after they had thus fought side by
+side, to die together one triumphant martyr death.
+Similar conditions have more or less returned again
+whenever the Churches have been tolerably pure and
+united, and have at the same time been subjected to
+some sharp pressure of persecution.</p>
+
+<p>They were to stand fast then in one spirit, cherishing
+that "spirit of the mind" which is the immediate fruit
+of the working of the One Spirit of God, the common
+gift of the Father. It is supposed that Christians know
+what this is and can recognise it. But they might not
+be solicitous enough to maintain it, and they might be
+betrayed into preferring a spirit of their own. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+Holy Spirit's influence, creating in each of them the
+new spirit of the mind, would be the key to right conduct
+in their common life. It would inspire a purer wisdom
+and a higher motive than the flesh supplies. Recognising
+it in one another, they would find themselves
+confirmed and cheered, established against external
+opposition and internal strife. Too easily we content
+ourselves with thoughts, words, and deeds which
+come only from our own private "spirit" and which
+are governed by that. We are too careless of living
+in a higher region. For the want of this some persons
+among us are infidels. They think they can account
+for all they see in Christians from the men's own spirit.
+Their cavil is by no means always true or fair; yet it
+finds too much plausible support.</p>
+
+<p>The same unity in the one spirit, with its accompanying
+vitality, gladness, and courage, was to characterise
+their active labours in the gospel. Let it be
+remembered that men do not make this attainment in
+a moment by stepping across some definite line. They
+grow into it by sincerity of aim, and by steadfast
+endeavour in the strength of Christ. In this way the
+"fellowship unto the gospel" (ver. 5), already so
+happily characteristic of the Philippians, was to grow
+yet more in cordiality, devotedness, and power.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, what were they to make of the attacks
+directed against them by those who hated the gospel?
+This was no doubt a very practical question. Although
+persecution of the Christians had not yet revealed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+energy it was afterwards to assume, their lot was often
+hard enough. The first burst of trial of this kind
+exerts a very depressing influence on some minds:
+with others the prolonged endurance of it, wearing out
+the spirit, is the more dangerous experience. Either
+way the dark cloud is felt, suddenly or gradually,
+shutting out the sky. This feeling of depression and
+dismay is to be steadfastly resisted. Enmity, unpleasant
+and ominous as it may be, is not to perturb
+or move you. It is not to be regarded as a reason for
+depression or an augury of defeat. Far otherwise:
+here should be discerned and grasped a token of
+salvation given by God Himself.</p>
+
+<p>It has been said that earthly prosperity was the
+promise of the Old Covenant, but adversity that of the
+New. This is, at least, so far true, that the necessity
+and benefit of chastening are very plainly set before us.
+Such discipline is part of the salvation secured for us;
+it is necessary to lead us aright to final well-being; and
+it will be administered to God's children as He sees fit.
+When it comes, it does not necessarily indicate special
+Divine displeasure, still less Divine ill-will. It does
+indicate that we have lessons to learn, attainments to
+make, and faults to be purged out; it indicates also
+that God is taking loving pains with us for these ends.
+All these things ought to be very certain to Christians.
+Yet some Christians, when their own turn comes, find
+it very hard to believe so much. Pains, losses, and
+disappointments, coming in the very forms they most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+deprecate, wear such an unfriendly aspect, that they
+can only feel scorched and affronted; and the hurt
+spirit breaks out in a querulous "Why?" To be so
+thrown off our balance is a failure of faith.</p>
+
+<p>But Paul is occupied here with the spirit in which
+one special form of trial is to be dealt with. Antipathy,
+contempt, and persecution are bitter, very bitter to
+some sensitive souls; but when they come upon us as
+followers of Christ, and for His sake, they have a consolation
+proper to themselves. They are to be borne
+gladly, not only because all chastening is guided by
+fatherly love and wisdom, but because this kind of
+suffering is our glory. It comes to believers as part of
+their fellowship with Christ; and it is such a part
+of that fellowship as carries with it a peculiar power of
+assurance and confirmation. Christians share with
+Christ the enmity of the world's unbelief, because
+they share with Him the knowledge and love of the
+Father. If, indeed, by indulging self-will and passion
+(though perhaps under religious forms) we bring enmity
+on ourselves, then we suffer as evil-doers. But if we
+suffer for righteousness, the Spirit of glory and of God
+rests upon us. Some share of suffering for Christ
+comes, therefore, as God's gift to His children, and
+ought to be valued accordingly.</p>
+
+<p>As to the exact point of the Apostle's remark on the
+"token" of perdition and of salvation, two views may be
+taken. In the line of what has just been said, he may
+be understood to mean simply that when God allows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
+believers to suffer persecution for Christ's sake, it is a
+sign of their salvation; just as, on the contrary, to be
+found opposing and persecuting God's children is a sign
+and omen of destruction. As if he said: "It is not you
+but they who have cause to be terrified: for lo! thine
+enemies, O Lord, for lo! thine enemies shall perish."</p>
+
+<p>This is a scriptural view. Yet both here and in
+2 Thess. i. 6 it is perhaps more precise to say that for
+the Apostle the special sign of salvation on the one side,
+and destruction on the other, is the patience and calmness
+with which Christians are enabled to endure
+their trials. This patience, while it is a desirable
+attainment on their part, is also something secured
+for them and given to them by their Lord. It is
+very precious and should be earnestly embraced. In
+this view the Apostle says: "In no wise be terrified
+by your adversaries; and this tranquillity of yours
+shall be a sign, on the one part, of your salvation, and
+also, on the other part, if they repent not, of their destruction.
+For this tranquillity is a victory given to you
+by God, which endures when their malice is exhausted.
+Does it not tell of a power working for you which
+mocks their malice, a power which is well able to
+perfect your salvation as well as to overthrow the
+enemies of God? So you find coming into experience
+that which beforehand was given you by promise.
+It <i>was</i> given you to believe in Christ, and also to
+suffer for Him. Now that you find yourselves enabled
+to suffer for Him so calmly, will not that become a sign<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+to confirm all you have believed?" For the tranquillity
+of spirit into which faith rises under persecution
+is an evidence of the source from which it comes.
+Much may be borne by resolute men for any cause in
+which they have embarked. But very different from
+this striving of the human heart hardening itself to bear,
+in order that an enemy's malice may not spy out its
+weakness, are the calmness and patience given to God's
+children in the hour of trial. That bespeaks an inward
+support more mighty than all sorrow. The Divineness
+of it becomes still more conspicuous when it approves
+itself as the One Spirit, triumphing in persons of
+diverse tempers and characters. This has been a sign
+to many an unbeliever filling him with rage and fear.
+And to the children of God it has been the Spirit witnessing
+with their spirit that they <i>are</i> His children.</p>
+
+<p>The Apostle will not allow it to be overlooked that
+in this point as in others his Philippian friends and
+he are tied together in closest fellowship. This conflict
+of theirs is the same which they had heard of
+and seen as proceeding in his case too. Perhaps we
+may say of this that it admonishes us not to think
+too meanly of our own Christian experience, and of
+the questions and decisions which it involves. The
+Apostle knew that his Philippian friends regarded his
+conflict as something conspicuous and great. He was
+a standard bearer, on whom much depended; and then,
+all the movements of his soul were magnanimous and
+grand. But their own experience might seem petty&mdash;almost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+mean; their trials not very serious, and their
+way of dealing with them at times so halting and half-hearted,
+that it seemed an offence against humility to
+make much account of them. If this was the true view,
+then also it must be Christ's view; and so a very
+depressed way of looking at their calling and their
+encouragements might set in. The Apostle will not
+allow this. He thinks, and they are to think, that it
+is the same question that is being fought out in their
+case as in his&mdash;the same forces are arrayed against
+one another in both cases&mdash;and the victory in both cases
+will be equally momentous. So he would quicken their
+sense of the situation by the energy and vivacity of his
+own convictions. It is unquestionable that Christians
+suffer much loss by indulging a certain bastard humility,
+which leads them to underrate the solemnity of the
+interest attaching to their own history. This renders
+them inattentive to the serious eyes with which Christ
+their Master is looking down upon it.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>THE MIND OF CHRIST.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>"If there is therefore any comfort in Christ, if any consolation of
+love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any tender mercies and compassions,
+fulfil ye my joy, that ye be of the same mind, having the
+same love, being of one accord, of one mind; doing nothing through
+faction or through vainglory, but in lowliness of mind each counting
+other better than himself; not looking each of you to his own things,
+but each of you also to the things of others."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> ii. 1-4 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE MIND OF CHRIST.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>In the verses last considered the Apostle had begun
+to summon his Philippian friends to Christian
+duty. But so far his words bear the character only of
+occasional exhortation, which falls naturally in as he
+dwells upon his own circumstances and on theirs.
+Associated as they have been and are, let there be no
+mistake as to the central bond between him and them.
+Let the Philippian believers partake increasingly in his
+own glowing apprehensions of the Christian calling.
+Let them abound in the loving, steadfast, energetic, expectant
+life in which men are united who have become
+acquainted with Christ.</p>
+
+<p>But he thinks fit to press the theme in a more set
+and deliberate way. For it is no light thing to awaken
+in men's hearts a right impression of what it is to be a
+Christian; or if it has been awakened, to nurse it to
+due strength. These Christians possessed some insight
+into the world of truth which held the mind of
+Paul; they had some experience of evangelical impression:
+in these things they had a happy fellowship<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
+with one another and with their great teacher. But
+all this must be affirmed and embodied in the conflict
+and ministry of Christian life. It must prove strong
+enough for that. Deeds are the true confession of our
+faith; they are the verification of our religious experience.
+And in this practical form we must overcome,
+not the temptations of other people or other ages, but
+our own. There is no more dangerous working of
+unbelief than that in which it never questions the
+doctrinal theory, but renders our Christianity cold and
+slack, and leads us to indulge a preference for a religion
+that goes easy. Could we but see as we are seen, we
+should find this to be a matter of endless lamentation.</p>
+
+<p>Temptations to rivalry and discord were working
+at Philippi. We are not obliged to think that they
+had gone very far; but one could see a risk that
+they might go further. The Apostle has it in his heart
+to expel this evil, by promoting the principles and
+dispositions that are opposed to it. And in this work
+the Philippians themselves must embark with all their
+might.</p>
+
+<p>It has been remarked already that causes are easily
+found to account for rivalries and misunderstandings
+springing up in those primitive Christian congregations.
+The truth is, however, that in all ages and conditions
+of the Church these dangers are nigh at hand. Self-seeking
+and self-exaltation are forms in which sin
+works most easily, and out of these come rivalry and
+discord by the very nature of the case. Eager grasping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+at our own objects leads to disregard of the rights and
+interests of others; and thence come wars. Danger in
+this direction was visible to the Apostle.</p>
+
+<p>It may be asked how this should be, if the Philippians
+were genuine and hearty Christians, such as the
+Apostle's commendations bespeak them? Here a
+principle comes to light which deserves to be considered.
+Even those who have cordially embraced Christianity,
+and who have loyally given effect to it in some of its
+outstanding applications, are wonderfully prone to stop
+short. They do not perceive, or they do not care to
+realise, the bearing of the same principles, which they
+have already embraced, upon whole regions of human
+life and human character; they do not seriously lay to
+heart the duties Christianity imposes or the faults it
+rebukes in those departments. They are pleased to
+have won so much ground, and do not think about the
+Canaanites that still hold <i>their</i> ground. So, in whole
+regions of life, the carnal mind is allowed to work on,
+undetected and practically unopposed. This tendency
+is aided by the facility we have in disguising from
+ourselves the true character of dispositions and actions,
+when these do not quite plainly affront Christian rules.
+Self-assertion and bad temper, for example, can put
+on the character of honest firmness and hearty zeal.
+More particularly, when religious principles have led
+us into certain lines of action, we are apt to take for
+granted that all is right we do in those lines. Religious
+zeal leads a man to take trouble and incur responsibility<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+in Church work. Under this notion, then, he readily
+persuades himself that all his Church work is conscientious
+and disinterested: yet it may be largely and
+deeply tainted with the impulses of the fleshly mind.
+In a measure it might be so here. The Philippians
+might be generally a company of sincerely Christian
+people. And yet the churchmanship of some of them
+might disclose sad tokens of selfishness and bitterness.
+Therefore they must be called to give heed to the
+principles and to give effect to the motives that expel
+those sins.</p>
+
+<p>In all this we may feel ourselves in the region of
+commonplaces; we know it all so well. But the very
+point in hand is that for the Apostle these are not
+commonplaces. He is greatly in earnest about the
+matter, and his heart is full of it. We do not understand
+him until we begin to sympathise with his sorrow
+and his anxiety. This is for him no mere matter of
+expediencies or of appearances. He is striving for the
+victory of grace in the souls of his beloved friends; for
+the glory of Christ; for his own comfort and success as
+Christ's minister. All these are, as it were, at stake
+upon this question of the life of the Philippian Church
+proving to be, under the influence of Christ, lowly,
+loving, and answerable to the gospel.</p>
+
+<p>No one more than Paul appreciates the value of
+good theological principles; and no one more than he
+lays stress on the mercy which provides a gracious and
+a full salvation. But no one more than he is intent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
+upon Christian practice: for if practice is not healed
+and quickened, then salvation ceases to be real, the
+promises wither unfulfilled, Christ has failed. We
+may well feel it to be a great question whether our own
+sympathy with him on such points is growing and
+deepening. The Kingdom of God within us must exist
+in a light and love for which goodness is a necessity,
+and evil a grief and heart-break. But if it is not so
+with us, where do we stand?</p>
+
+<p>In four clauses the Apostle appeals to great Christian
+motives, which are to give strength to his main appeal&mdash;"If
+there be any comfort (or store of cheering counsel)
+in Christ Jesus, if any consolation of love, if any fellowship
+of the Spirit, if any tender mercies or compassions";
+in a fifth clause he draws a motive from
+the regard they might have for his own most earnest
+desires&mdash;"fulfill ye my joy"; and then comes the exhortation
+itself, which is to unity of mind and heart&mdash;"that
+ye be of the same mind, having the same love,
+being of one accord, of one mind." This, in turn, is
+followed by clauses that fix the practical sense of the
+general exhortation.</p>
+
+<p>It has been made a question whether the Apostle
+means to say, "If there be among you, Philippians,
+influences and experiences such as these," or "If there
+be anywhere in the Church of God." But surely he
+means both. He appeals to great practical articles of
+faith and matters of experience. The Church of God
+believes them and claims a part in them. So does the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+Church of Philippi, in its degree. But there may be a
+great deal more in them than the Philippian believers
+are aware of,&mdash;more in them as truths and promises;
+more in them as contemplated and realised by riper
+Christians, like Paul himself. He appeals, certainly, to
+what existed for the faith of the Philippians; but also to
+that "much more" which might open to them if their
+faith was enlarged.</p>
+
+<p>The "comfort" or cheering counsel "in Christ" is the
+fulness of gospel help and promise. Great need of this
+is owned by all believers; and, coming as needed succour
+to them all, it may well bind them all together in the
+sense of common need and common help. As it comes
+from the good Shepherd Himself to all and each, so it
+is conceived to be ever sounding in the Church, passing
+from one believer to another, addressed by each to
+each as common succour and common comfort. Hence,
+in the next place, there comes into view the mutual
+ministry of "consolation" which Christians owe to one
+another, since they "receive" one another, and are to
+do to one another as Christ has done to them. Here
+the consolation acquires a special character, from the
+individual affection and friendship breathed into it
+by the Christian, who carries it to his neighbour to
+encourage and cheer him on his way. This love of
+the Christian to his brother, which comes from God, is
+itself a means of grace; and therefore the "consolation
+of love" deserves to be distinctly named.</p>
+
+<p>The "fellowship of the Spirit" (see 2 Cor. xiii. 13)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+is the common participation of the Holy Spirit of God
+in His gracious presence and working. Without this
+no one could have a real share in Christian benefits.
+The Spirit reveals to us the Son and the Father, and
+enables us to abide in the Son and in the Father. He
+brings us into communion with the mind of God as
+revealed in His word. He makes real to us the things
+of the Kingdom of God; and it is He who opens to us
+their worth and sweetness, especially the lovingkindness
+which breathes in them all. Through Him we
+are enabled to exercise Christian affections, desires, and
+services. It is He, in a word, through whom we are
+participant in the life of salvation; and in that life He
+associates together all who share His indwelling. The
+Apostle supposes that no Christian could ever contemplate
+without, shall we say, a pang of gratitude, the
+condescension, the gentleness, and the patience of this
+ministration. And as all Christians are recipient together
+of so immense a benefit, they might well feel it as a bond
+between them all. But more especially, as the Holy
+Spirit in this dispensation evinces a most Divine love
+and kindness&mdash;for what but love could be the spring of
+it?&mdash;so also the upshot of all His work is the revelation
+of God in love. For love is at the heart of all God's
+promises and benefits: they are never understood until
+we reach the love that is in them. And God is love.
+So the love of God is shed abroad in the hearts of
+believers through the Holy Spirit given to them.
+Hence this is the leading view of that which the Spirit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+comes to do: He comes to make us members of a
+system in which love rules; and He inspires all loving
+affections and dispositions proper to make us congruous
+members of so high and good a world.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, in the fourth place, it is to be supposed
+that "tender mercies and compassions" in human
+breasts are abundant where the fellowship of the Spirit
+is. How abundant they <i>might</i> be: surely also in some
+measure they must be present; they must abound, amid
+all human infirmities and mistakes. All kinds of gentle,
+friendly, faithful, wise and patient dispositions might
+be expected. They are the fruits of the country in
+which Christians have come to dwell.</p>
+
+<p>To all these the Apostle appeals. Perhaps a pathos
+is audible in the form of his appeal. "If there be any."
+Alas! is there then any? Is there some at least, if not
+much? For if all these had been duly present to the
+faith and in the life of the Church, they would have
+spoken their lesson for themselves, and had not needed
+Paul to speak for them.</p>
+
+<p>The form of appeal "Fulfil ye my joy" brings up
+one more motive&mdash;the earnest desires of one who loved
+them wisely and well, and whom they, whatever their
+shortcomings, loved in turn. It is worth observing that
+the motive power here does not lie merely in the consideration
+"Would you not like to give me pleasure?"
+The Philippians knew how Paul had at heart their true
+welfare and their true dignity. That which, if it came
+to pass, would so gladden him, must be something great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+and good for them. If their own judgment of things
+was cold, might it not take fire from the contagion of
+his? The loving solicitude of a keener-sighted and a
+more single-hearted Christian, the solicitude which
+makes his heart throb and his voice tremble as he
+speaks, has often startled slumbering brethren into a
+consciousness of their own insensibility, and awakened
+them to worthier outlooks.</p>
+
+<p>In regard to all these considerations, the main point
+is to catch sight of the moral and spiritual scenery as
+the Apostle saw it. Otherwise the words may leave us
+as dull as they found us. For him there had come into
+view a wonderful world of love. Love had come forth
+preparing at great cost and with great pains a new
+destiny for men. Love had brought in Paul and the
+other believers, one by one, into this higher region.
+And it proved to be a region in which love was the
+ground on which they stood, and love the heaven over
+their heads, and love the air they breathed. And here
+love was coming to be their own new nature, love
+responsive to the love of Father, Son, and Spirit, and
+love going out from those who had been so blessed
+to bless and gladden others. This was the true, the
+eternal goodness, the true, the eternal blessedness; and
+it was theirs. This was what faith embraced in Him
+"who loved me and gave Himself for me." This was
+what faith claimed right to be and do. If this was not
+so, Christianity was reduced to nothing. If a man have
+not love, he is nothing (1 Cor. xiii.). "Is there any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+truth at all in this glorious faith of ours? Do you
+believe it at all? Have you felt it at all? Fulfil then
+my joy." Unity of mind and of heart is the thing
+inculcated. Under the influence of the great objects of
+faith and of the motive forces of Christianity this was
+to be expected. Their ways of thinking and their ways
+of feeling, however different, should be so moulded in
+Christ as to reach full mutual understanding and full
+mutual affection. Nor should they rest contented
+when either of these failed: for that would be contentment
+with defeat; but Christ's followers are to aim at
+victory.</p>
+
+<p>It is obvious to say here that cases might arise in
+which turbulent or contentious persons might make it
+impossible for the rest of the Church, however well disposed,
+to secure either one accord or one mind. But
+the Apostle does not suppose that case to have arisen.
+Nothing had occurred at Philippi which Christian
+sense and Christian feeling might not arrange. When
+the case supposed does occur, there are Christian ways
+of dealing with it. Still more obviously one might say
+that conscientious differences of opinion, and that even
+on matters of moment, must inevitably occur sooner or
+later; and a general admonition to be of one mind does
+not meet such a case. Perhaps it may be said in reply
+that the Church and the Christians have hardly conceived
+how much might be attained in the way of agreement if
+our Christianity were sincere enough, thorough enough,
+and affectionate enough. In that case there might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+be wonderful attainment in finding agreement, and in
+dismissing questions on which it is not needful to agree.
+But, if we are not to soar so high as this, it may at
+least be said that, while conscientious diversities of judgment
+are not to be disguised, they may be dealt with,
+among believers, in a Christian way, with due emphasising
+of the truth agreed upon, and with a prevailing
+determination to speak truth in love. Here again,
+however, the Apostle recognises no serious difficulty of
+this kind at Philippi. The difficulties were such as
+could be got over. There was no good reason why
+the Philippians should not in their Church life exhibit
+harmony: it would be so, if Christian influences were
+cordially admitted into minds and hearts, and if they
+made a fit estimate of the supreme importance of unity
+in Christ. The same thing may be said of innumerable
+cases in later times in which Christians have divided
+and contended. It is right to say, however, that these
+considerations are not to be applied without qualification
+to all kinds and degrees of separation between Christians.
+It is a cause for sorrow that denominational
+divisions are so many; and they have often been both
+cause and consequence of unchristian feeling. Yet
+when men part peaceably to follow out their deliberate
+convictions, to which they cannot give effect together,
+and when in doing so they do not unchurch or condemn
+one another, there may be less offence against Christian
+charity than in cases where a communion, professedly
+one, is the scene of bitterness and strife. In either<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+case indeed there is something to regret and probably
+something to blame; but the former of the two cases is
+by no means necessarily the worse.</p>
+
+<p>In following out the line of duty and privilege set
+before them by the Apostle, Christians have to get the
+better of arrogance and selfishness (vv. 3, 4).</p>
+
+<p>In the Church of Christ no man has a right to do
+anything from a spirit of strife or vainglory. Strife is
+the disposition to oppose and thwart our neighbour's
+will, either from mere delight in contest, or in order to
+assert for our own will a prevalence which will gratify
+our pride; and this is the animating principle of
+"faction." "Vainglory" is the disposition to think
+highly of ourselves, to claim for ourselves a great place,
+and to assert it as against the claims of others. In the
+jostle of the world it may perhaps be admitted that
+forces acting on these lines are not without their use.
+They compensate one another, and some measure of
+good emerges from their unlovely energies. But such
+things are out of place among Christians, for they are
+right against the spirit of Christianity; and Christianity
+relies for its equipoise and working progress on principles
+of quite another kind. Among Christians each
+is to be lowly-minded, conscious of his own defects
+and of his ill-desert. And this is to work in the way
+of our esteeming others to be better than ourselves.
+For we are conscious of our own inward and deep
+defect as we cannot be of any other person's. And it
+is abundantly possible that others may be better than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+we are, and safe for us to give full effect to that possibility.
+It is said, indeed, that we may possibly have
+conclusive reason to believe that certain other persons,
+even in Christ's Church, are worse than we are. But,
+apart from the precariousness of such judgments, it is
+enough to say it is not for us to proceed on such a
+judgment or to give effect to it. We all await a higher
+judgment; until then it becomes us to take heed to our
+own spirit and walk in lowliness of mind.</p>
+
+<p>Selfishness ("looking to its own things," ver. 4), as
+well as arrogance, needs to be resisted; and this is
+an even more pervading and inward evil. In dealing
+with it we are not required to have no eye at all to
+our own things; for indeed they are our providential
+charge, and they must be cared for; but we are
+required to look <i>not only</i> on our own, but every man
+on the things of others. We have to learn to put
+ourselves in another's place, to recognise how things
+affect him, to sympathise with his natural feelings in
+reference to them, and to give effect in speech and
+conduct to the impressions hence arising. So a Christian
+man is to "love his neighbour as himself"&mdash;only
+with a tenderer sense of obligation and a consciousness
+of more constraining motive than could be attained by
+the Israelite of old. Lovingly to do right to a brother's
+claims and to his welfare should be as cogent a principle
+of action with us as to care for our own.</p>
+
+<p>Arrogance and selfishness&mdash;perhaps disguised in
+fairer forms&mdash;had bred the disturbance at Philippi.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+The same baleful forces are present everywhere in all
+the Churches to this day, and have often run riot in
+the House of God. How shall the ugliness and the
+hatefulness of the every-day selfishness, the every-day
+self-assertion, the every-day strifes of Christians,
+be impressed upon our minds? How are we to be
+awakened to our true calling in lowliness and in love?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>THE MIND OF CHRIST (Continued).</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>"Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: who,
+being in the form of God, counted it not a prize to be on an equality
+with God, but emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant, being
+made in the likeness of men; and being found in fashion as a man,
+He humbled Himself, becoming obedient even unto death, yea, the
+death of the cross. Wherefore also God highly exalted Him, and gave
+unto Him the name which is above every name; that in the name of
+Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven and things on earth
+and things under the earth, and that every tongue should confess
+that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span>
+ii. 5-11 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE MIND OF CHRIST (Continued).</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>It proves hard to make us aware of the sin and the
+misery involved in the place commonly allowed to
+<span class="smcap">Self</span>. Some of its conspicuous outrages on Christian
+decency we do disapprove and avoid: perhaps we have
+embarked in a more serious resistance to its domination.
+Yet, after all, how easily and how complacently
+do we continue to give scope to it! In forms of self-assertion,
+of arrogance, of eager and grasping competition,
+it breaks out. It does so in ordinary life, in what
+is called public life, and, where it is most offensive of all,
+in Church life. Hence we fail so much in readiness to
+make the case of others our own, and to be practically
+moved by their interests, rights, and claims. There
+are certainly great differences here; and some, in
+virtue of natural sympathy or Christian grace, attain
+to remarkable degrees of generous service. Yet these
+also, if they know themselves, know how energetically
+self comes upon the field, and how much ground it
+covers. Many among us are doing good to others;
+but does it never strike us that there is a distant and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+arrogant way of doing good? Many in Christian
+society are kind, and that is well; but undoubtedly
+there are self-indulgent ways of being kind.</p>
+
+<p>Having to deal with this evil energy of self, the Apostle
+turns at once to the central truth of Christianity, the
+person of Christ. Here he finds the type set, the
+standard fixed, of what Christianity is and means: or
+rather, here he finds a great fountain, from which a
+mighty stream proceeds; and before it all the forms of
+self-worship must be swept away. In bringing this
+out the Apostle makes a most remarkable statement
+regarding the Incarnation and the history of our Lord.
+He reveals, at the same time, the place in his own
+mind held by the thought of Christ coming into the
+world, and the influence that thought had exerted on
+the formation of his character. He bids us recognise
+in Christ the supreme exemplification of one who is
+looking away from his own things&mdash;whose mind is
+filled, whose action is inspired by concern for others.
+This is so at the root of the interposition of Christ to
+save us, that the principle becomes imperative and
+supreme for all Christ's followers.</p>
+
+<p>We have to consider the facts as they presented
+themselves to the mind of Paul, according to the
+wisdom given to him, that we may estimate the motive
+which he conceives them to reveal, and the obligation
+which is thus laid upon all who name the name of
+Christ and take rank among His followers.</p>
+
+<p>The Apostle, let us first observe, speaks of the Incarnation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+as that reveals itself to us, as it offers itself
+to the contemplation of men. To involve himself in
+discussion of inner mysteries concerning the Divine
+nature and the human, and the manner of their union,
+as these are known to God, is not, and could not, be
+his object. The mysteries must be asserted, but much
+about them is to continue unexplained. He is to appeal
+to the impression derivable, as he maintains, from
+the plainest statement of the facts which have been
+delivered to faith. This being the object in view,
+determines the cast of his language. It is the <i>manner</i>
+of being, the <i>manner</i> of living, the <i>manner</i> of acting
+characteristic of Christ at successive stages, which is
+to occupy our minds. Hence the Apostle's thought
+expresses itself in phrases such as "<i>form</i> of God,"
+"<i>form</i> of a servant," and the like. We are to see one
+way of existing succeeding another in the history of
+Christ.</p>
+
+<p>First, our Lord is recognised as already existing
+before the beginning of His earthly history; and in that
+existence He contemplates and orders what His course
+shall be. This is plain; for in the seventh verse He
+is spoken of as emptying Himself, and thus assuming
+the likeness of men. For the Apostle, then, it was a
+fixed thing that He who was born in Nazareth pre-existed
+in a more glorious nature, and took ours by a
+notable condescension. This pre-existence of Christ is
+the first thing to consider when we would make clear
+to ourselves how Christ, being true man, differs from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+other men. In this point Paul and John and the
+writer to the Hebrews unite their testimony in the
+most express and emphatic way; as we hear our Lord
+Himself also saying, "Before Abraham was, I am,"
+and speaking of the glory which He had before the
+world was. But what manner of existence this was is
+also set forth. He "existed in the form of God." The
+same word "form" recurs presently in the expression
+"the form of a servant." It is distinguished from the
+words "likeness," "fashion," which are expressed by
+other Greek terms.</p>
+
+<p>Frequently we use this word "form" in a way
+which contrasts it with the true being, or makes it
+denote the outward as opposed to the inward. But
+according to the usage which prevailed among thinking
+men when the Apostle wrote, the expression should
+not be understood to point to anything superficial,
+accidental, superimposed. No doubt it is an expression
+which describes the Being by adverting to the attributes
+which, as it were, He wore, or was clothed with. But
+the word carries us especially to those attributes of the
+thing described which are characteristic; by which it
+is permanently distinguished to the eye or to the mind;
+which denote its true nature because they rise out of
+that nature; the attributes which, to our minds, express
+the essence. So here. He existed, how? In
+the possession and use of all that pertains to the Divine
+nature. His manner of existence was, what? The
+Divine manner of existence. The characters through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+which Divine existence is revealed were His. He subsisted
+in the form of God. This was the manner of it,
+the glorious "form" which ought to fix and hold our
+minds.</p>
+
+<p>If any one should suggest that, according to this
+text, the pre-existent Christ might be only a creature,
+though having the Divine attributes and the Divine
+mode of life, he would introduce a mass of contradictions
+most gratuitously. The Apostle's thought is simply
+this: For Christ the mode of existence is first of all
+Divine; then, by-and-by, a new form rises into view.
+Our Lord's existence did not begin (according to the
+New Testament writers) when He was born, when He
+was found in fashion as a man, sojourning with us.
+He came to this world from some previous state. One
+asks from what state? Before He took the form of
+man, in what form of existence was He found? The
+Apostle answers, In the form of God.</p>
+
+<p>To Him, therefore, with and in the Father, we have
+learned to ascribe all wisdom and power, all glory and
+blessedness, all holiness and all majesty. Specially,
+through Him the worlds were made, and in Him they
+consist. The fulness, the sufficiency, the essential
+strength of Godhead were His. The exercise and
+manifestation of all these was His form of being. One
+might expect, then, that in any process of self-manifestation
+to created beings in which it might please
+Him to go forth, the expression of His supremacy and
+transcendence should be written on the face of it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>The next thought is expressed in the received translation
+by the words "thought it no robbery to be equal
+with God." So truly and properly Divine was He that
+equality with God could not appear to Him or be
+reckoned by Him as anything else than His own. He
+counted such equality no robbery, arrogance, or wrong.
+To claim it, and all that corresponds to it, could not
+appear to Him something assumed without right, but
+rather something assumed with the best right. So
+taken, these words would complete the Apostle's view
+of the original Divine pre-eminence of the Son of God.
+They would express, so to say, the equity of the situation,
+from which all that follows should be estimated.
+Had it pleased the Son of God to express only, and to
+impress on all minds only His equality with God, this
+could not have seemed to Him encroachment or wrong.</p>
+
+<p>I think a good deal can be said for this. But the
+sense which, on the whole, is now approved by commentators
+is that indicated by the Revised Version. This
+takes the clause not as still dwelling on the primeval
+glory of the Son of God, and what was implied in it,
+but rather as beginning to indicate how a new situation
+arose, pointing out the dispositions out of which the
+Incarnation came. "He counted it not a prize to be on
+an equality with God." To hold by this was not the
+great object with Him. In any steps He might take,
+in any forthgoings He might enter on, the Son of God
+might have aimed at maintaining and disclosing equality
+with God. That alternative was open. But this is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+what we see: no holding by that, no solicitude about that
+appears. His procedure, His actings reveal nothing of
+this kind. What we see filling His heart and fixing
+His regard, is not what might be due to Himself or
+assumed fitly by Himself, but what might bring deliverance
+and blessedness to us.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the contrary, "He emptied Himself, taking the
+form of a servant, being made in the likeness of men."
+In the Incarnation our Lord assumed the "form" of a
+servant, or slave: for in the room of the authority of
+the Creator, now appears the subjection of the creature.
+He who gave form to all things, and Himself set the
+type of what was highest and best in the universe,
+transcending meanwhile all created excellence in His
+uncreated glory, now is seen conforming Himself to the
+type or model or likeness of one of His creatures, of
+man. He comes into human existence as men do, and
+He continues in it as men do. Yet it is not said that
+He is now merely a man, or has become nothing but
+a man; He is in the likeness of men and is found in
+fashion as a man.</p>
+
+<p>In taking this great step the Apostle says "He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+emptied Himself." The emptying is perhaps designedly
+opposed to the thought of accumulation or self-enrichment
+conveyed in the phrase "He counted it not a
+prize." However this may be, the phrase is in itself
+a remarkable expression.</p>
+
+<p>It seems most certain, on the one hand, that this
+cannot import that He who was with God and was God
+could renounce His own essential nature and cease to
+be Divine. The assertion of a contradiction like this
+involves the mind in mere darkness. The notion is
+excluded by other scriptures; for He who came on earth
+among us is Immanuel, God with us: and it is not
+required by the passage before us; for the "emptying"
+can at most apply to the "form" of God&mdash;the exercise
+and enjoyment of Divine attributes such as adequately
+express the Divine nature; and it may, perhaps, not
+extend its sense even so far; for the writer significantly
+abstains from carrying his thought further than the bare
+word "He emptied Himself."</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, we are to beware of weakening
+unduly this great testimony. Certainly it fixes our
+thoughts on this, at least, that our Lord, by becoming
+man, had for His, truly <i>for His</i>, the experience of human
+limitation, human weakness and impoverishment, human
+dependence, human subjection, singularly contrasting
+with the glory and plenitude of the form of God. This
+became His. It was so emphatically real, it became at
+the Incarnation so emphatically the form of existence
+on which He entered, that it is the thing eminently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+to be regarded, reverently to be dwelt upon. This
+emptiness, instead of that fulness, is to draw and fix
+our regard. Instead of the form of God, there rises
+before us this true human history, this lowly manhood&mdash;and
+it took place by His emptying Himself.</p>
+
+<p>Various persons and schools have thought it right to
+go further. The word here used has appeared to them
+to suggest that if the Son of God did not renounce His
+Godhead, yet the Divine nature in Him must have
+bereaved itself of the Divine attributes, or withheld
+itself from the use and exercise of them; so that the
+all-fulness no longer was at His disposal. In this line
+they have gone on to describe or assign the mode of
+self-emptying which the Incarnation should imply.</p>
+
+<p>It does not appear to me that one can lay down
+positions as to the internal privations of One whose
+nature is owned to be essentially Divine, without falling
+into confusion and darkening counsel. But perhaps we
+may do well to cherish the impression that this self-emptying
+on the part of the eternal Son of God, for our
+salvation, involves realities which we cannot conceive
+or put in any words. There was more in this emptying
+of Himself than we can think or say.</p>
+
+<p>He emptied Himself when He became man. Here
+we have the eminent example of a Divine mystery,
+which, being revealed, remains a mystery never to be
+adequately explained, and which yet proves full of
+meaning and full of power. The Word was made flesh.
+He through whom all worlds took being, was seen in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+Judæa in the lowliness of that practical historical manhood.
+We never can explain this. But if we believe
+it all things become new for us: the meaning it proves
+to have for human history is inexhaustible.</p>
+
+<p>He emptied Himself, "taking the form of a servant,"
+or bondslave. For the creature is in absolute subjection
+alike to God's authority and to His providence;
+and so Christ came to be. He entered on a discipline
+of subjection and obedience. In particular He was
+made after the likeness of men. He was born as other
+children are; He grew as other children grow; body
+and mind took shape for Him under human conditions.</p>
+
+<p>And so He was "found in fashion as a man." Could
+words express more strongly how wonderful it is in the
+Apostle's eyes that <i>He</i> should so be found? He lived
+His life and made His mark in the world in human
+fashion&mdash;His form, His mien, His speech, His acts,
+His way of life declared Him man. But being so, He
+humbled Himself to a strange and great obedience.
+Subjection, and in that subjection obedience, is the part
+of every creature. But the obedience which Christ
+was called to learn was special. A heavy task was
+laid upon Him. He was made under the law; and
+bearing the burden of human sin, He wrought redemption.
+In doing so many great interests fell to Him to
+be cared for; and this was done by Him, not in the
+manner of Godhead which speaks and it is done, but
+with the pains and labour of a faithful servant. "I
+have a commandment," He said, as He faced the Jews,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+who would have had His Messianic work otherwise
+ordered (John xii. 49).</p>
+
+<p>This experience deepened into the final experience of
+the cross. Death is the signature of failure and disgrace.
+Even with sinless creatures it seems so. Their
+beauty and their use are past; their worth is measured
+and exhausted; they die. More emphatically in a nature
+like ours, which aims at fellowship with God and
+immortality, death is significant this way, and bears the
+character of doom. So we are taught to think that
+death entered by sin. But the violent and cruel death
+of crucifixion, inflicted for the worst crimes, is most
+significant this way. What it comprehended for our
+Lord we cannot measure. We know that He looked
+forward to it with the most solemn expectation; and
+when it came the experience was overwhelming. Yes,
+He submitted to the doom and blight of death, in which
+death He made atonement and finished transgression.
+The Incarnation was the way in which our Lord bound
+Himself to our woful fortunes, and carried to us the
+benefits with which He would enrich us; and His
+death was for our sins, endured that we might live. But
+the Apostle does not here dwell on the reasons why
+Christ's obedience must take this road. It is enough
+that for reasons concerning our welfare, and the worthy
+achievement of the Father's Divine purposes, Christ
+bowed Himself to so great lowliness. A dark and sad
+death&mdash;a true obedience unto death&mdash;became the portion
+of the Son of God. "I am the Living One, and I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+dead." So complete was the self-emptying, the humiliation,
+the obedience.</p>
+
+<p>"Therefore God also hath highly exalted Him, and
+given Him the Name that is above every name." For
+still we must think of Him as One that has come down
+into the region of the creatures, the region in which we
+are distinguished by names, and are capable of higher
+and lower in endless degrees. God, dealing with Him
+so situated, acts in a manner rightly corresponding to
+this great self-dedication, so as to utter God's mind
+upon it. He has set Him on high, and given Him the
+Name that is above every name; so that Divine honour
+shall be rendered to Him by all creation, and knees
+bowed in worship to Him everywhere, and all shall
+own Him Lord&mdash;that is, partaker of Divine Sovereignty.
+All this is "to the glory of the Father," seeing that in
+all this the worthiness and beauty of God's being
+and ways come to light with a splendour heretofore
+unexampled.</p>
+
+<p>So then, we may say, perhaps, that as in the humiliation
+He who is God experienced what it is to be man,
+now in the exaltation He who is man experiences what
+it is to be God.</p>
+
+<p>But the point to dwell on chiefly is this consideration&mdash;What
+is it that attracts so specially the Father's
+approbation? What does so is Christ's great act of
+self-forgetting love. That satisfies and rests the Divine
+mind. Doubtless the Son's pure and perfect character,
+and the perfection of His whole service, were on all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+accounts approved; but specially the <i>mind</i> of Christ
+revealed in His self-forgetting devotion. <i>Therefore</i> God
+has highly exalted Him.</p>
+
+<p>For, in the first place, Christ in this work of His is
+Himself the revelation of the Father. All along the
+Father's heart is seen disclosed. It was in fellowship
+with the Father, always delighting in Him, that the
+history was entered on; in harmony with Him it was
+accomplished. Throughout we have before us not only
+the mind of the Son, but the mind of the Father that
+sent Him.</p>
+
+<p>And then, in the next place, as the Son, sent forth
+into the world, and become one of us, and subject to
+vicissitude, accomplishes His course, it is fitting for the
+Father to watch, to approve, and to crown the service;
+and He who has so given Himself for God and man
+must take the place due to such a "mind" and to such
+an obedience.</p>
+
+<p>Let us observe it then: what was in God's eye and
+ought to be in ours, is not only the dignity of the person,
+the greatness of the condescension, the perfection
+of obedience and patience of endurance, but, in the
+heart of all these, <i>the mind of Christ</i>. That was the
+inspiration of the whole marvellous history, vivifying it
+throughout. Christ, indeed, was not One who could so
+care for us, as to fail in His regard to any interest of
+His Father's name or kingdom; nor could He take any
+course really unseemly, because unworthy of Himself.
+But carrying with Him all that is due to His Father,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+and all that befits His Father's Child and Servant, the
+wonderful thing is how His heart yearns over men,
+how His course shapes itself to the necessities of our
+case, how all that concerns Himself disappears as He
+looks on the fallen race. A worthy deliverance for
+them, consecrating them to God in the blessedness of
+life eternal&mdash;this is in His eye, to be reached by Him
+through all kinds of lowliness, obedience, and suffering.
+On this His heart was set; this gave meaning and
+character to every step of His history. This was the
+mind of the good Shepherd that laid down His life for
+the sheep. And this is what completes and consecrates
+all the service, and receives the Father's triumphant
+approbation. This is the Lamb of God. There never
+was a Lamb like this.</p>
+
+<p>How all this was and is in the Eternal Son in His
+Divine nature we cannot suitably conceive. In some
+most sublime and perfect manner we own it to be there.
+But we can think of it and speak of it as the "mind of
+Christ": as it came to light in the Man of Bethlehem,
+who, amid all the possibilities of the Incarnation, is
+seen setting His face so steadily one way, whose life is
+all of one piece, and to whom we ascribe <span class="smcap"><small>GRACE</small></span>. "Ye
+know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ." <i>Therefore</i>
+God has highly exalted Him, and given Him the Name
+that is above every name. <i>This</i> is the right way. <i>This</i>
+is the right life.</p>
+
+<p>Are we followers of Christ? Are we in touch with
+His grace? Do we yield ourselves to His will and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+way? Do we renounce the melancholy obstructiveness
+which sets us at odds with Christ? Do we count it
+our wisdom now to come into His school? Then, let
+this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus,
+this lowly, loving mind. <i>Let it.</i> Look not every man
+on his own things, but every man also on the things of
+others. Do nothing through strife or vainglory. In
+lowliness of mind let each esteem the other better than
+himself. Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and
+envy, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all
+malice: and be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted,
+forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake
+hath forgiven you. If there is any comfort in Christ, if
+any consolation of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit,
+if any tender mercies and compassions, let this be so.
+Let this mind be in you; and find ways of showing it.
+But, indeed, if it be in you it will find ways to show
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>The Church of Christ has not been without likeness
+to its Lord, and service to its Lord: yet it has come
+far short in showing to the world the mind of Christ.
+We often "show the Lord's death." But in His death
+were the mighty life and the conclusive triumph of
+Christ's love. Let the life also of Christ Jesus be
+manifest in our mortal body.</p>
+
+<p>We see here what the vision of Christ was which
+opened itself to Paul,&mdash;which, glowing in his heart,
+sent him through the world, seeking the profit of many,
+that they might be saved. This was in his mind, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+wonderful condescension and devotion of the Son of
+God. "It pleased God to reveal His Son in me."
+"God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness,
+hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the
+knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ
+Jesus." "Ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,
+how that though He was rich yet for our sakes He became
+poor, that we through His poverty might be made
+rich." "He loved me and gave Himself for me." And
+in various forms and degrees the manifestation of this
+same grace has astonished, and conquered, and inspired
+all those who have greatly served Christ in the Church
+in seeking to do good to men. Let us not separate ourselves
+from this fellowship of Christ; let us not be
+secluded from this mind of Christ. As we come to
+Him with our sorrows, and sins, and wants, let us
+drink into His mind. Let us sit at His feet and learn
+of Him.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>A line of contemplation, hard to follow yet inspiring,
+opens up in considering the Incarnation of our Lord as
+permanent. No day is coming in which that shall have
+to be looked upon as gone away into the past. This is
+suggestive as to the tie between Creator and creature,
+as to the bridge between Infinite and finite, to be evermore
+found in Him. But it may suffice here to have
+indicated the topic.</p>
+
+<p>It is more to the point, in connection with this
+passage, to call attention to a lesson for the present<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+day. Of late great emphasis has been laid by earnest
+thinkers upon the reality of Christ's human nature.
+Anxiety has been felt to do full right to that humanity
+which the Gospels set before us so vividly. This has
+been in many ways a happy service to the Church. In
+the hands of divines the humanity of Christ has sometimes
+seemed to become shadowy and unreal, through
+the stress laid on His proper Godhead; and now men
+have become anxious to possess their souls with the
+human side of things, even perhaps at the cost of leaving
+the Divine side untouched. The recoil has carried men
+quite naturally into a kind of humanitarianism, sometimes
+deliberate, sometimes unconscious. Christ is
+thought of as the ideal Man, who, just because He is the
+ideal Man, is morally indistinguishable from God, and
+is in the closest fellowship with God. Yet He grows on
+the soil of human nature, He is fundamentally and only
+human. And this, it is implied, is enough: it covers all
+we want. But we see this was not Paul's way of thinking.
+The real humanity was necessary for him, because he
+desiderated a real incarnation. But the true original
+Divine nature was also necessary. For so he discerned
+the love&mdash;the grace, and the gift by grace; so he felt
+that the Eternal God had bowed down to bless him in
+and by His Son. It makes a great difference to religion
+when men are persuaded to forego this faith.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>WORKING AND SHINING.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>"So then, my beloved, even as ye have always obeyed, not as in my
+presence only, but now much more in my absence, work out your own
+salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God which worketh in
+you both to will and to work, for His good pleasure. Do all things
+without murmurings and disputings; that ye may be blameless and
+harmless, children of God without blemish in the midst of a crooked
+and perverse generation, among whom ye are seen as lights in the
+world, holding forth the word of life; that I may have whereof to
+glory in the day of Christ, that I did not run in vain neither labour
+in vain. Yea, and if I am offered upon the sacrifice and service of
+your faith, I joy, and rejoice with you all: and in the same manner
+do ye also joy, and rejoice with me."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> ii. 12-18 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>WORKING AND SHINING.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>After his great appeal to the mind of Christ, the
+Apostle can pursue his practical object; and he
+can do so with a certain tranquillity, confident that the
+forces he has just set in motion will not fail to do their
+work. But yet that same appeal itself has tended
+to broaden and deepen the conception of what should
+be aimed at. He had deprecated the arrogant and
+the selfish mind, as these are opposed to lovingkindness
+and regard for others. But now, in presence of
+the great vision of the Incarnation and obedience of
+Christ, the deeper note of lowliness must be struck in
+fit accord with that of love; not only lowliness in the
+way of doing ready honour to others, but deep and
+adoring lowliness towards God, such as is due both
+from creatures and from sinners. For if Christ's love
+fulfilled itself in such a perfect humility, how deeply
+does it become us to bear towards God in Christ a
+mind of penitence and gratitude, of loving awe and
+wonder, such as shall at the same time for ever exclude
+from our bearing towards others both pride and self-seeking.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+In this way the one practical object suggested
+by the circumstances at Philippi&mdash;namely, loving unity&mdash;now
+allies itself naturally with ideas of complete and
+harmonious Christian life; and various views of that life
+begin to open. But each aspect of it still proves to be
+connected with the gracious and gentle mind of Christ,
+in the lowly form of that mind which is appropriate for
+a sinner who is also a believer.</p>
+
+<p>So then they are to apply themselves to the "calling
+wherewith they are called," in a spirit of "fear and
+trembling." The phrase is a common one with the
+Apostle (1 Cor. ii. 3; 2 Cor. vii. 15; Eph. v. 6). He
+uses it where he would express a state of mind in
+which willing reverence is joined with a certain sensitive
+anxiety to escape dangerous mistakes and to perform
+duty well. And it is fitly called for here, for</p>
+
+<p>1. If lowliness so became the Divine Saviour, who
+was full of grace, wisdom, and power, then what shall
+be the mind of those who in great guilt and need have
+found part in the salvation, and who are going forward
+to its fulness? What shall be the mind of those who,
+in this experience, are looking up to Christ&mdash;<i>looking up
+to</i> lowliness? Surely not the spirit of strife and vainglory
+(ver. 3), but of fear and trembling&mdash;the mind
+that dreads to be presumptuous and arrogant, because
+it finds the danger to be still near.</p>
+
+<p>2. The salvation has to be wrought out. It must
+come to pass in your case in the line of your own endeavour.
+Having its power and fulness in Christ, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+bestowed by Him on you, yet this deliverance from
+distance, estrangement, darkness, unholiness, is given to
+believers to be wrought out: it comes as a right to be
+realised, and as a power to be exercised, and as a goal
+to be attained. Think of this,&mdash;you have in hand your
+own salvation&mdash;great, Divine, and wonderful&mdash;to be
+<i>wrought out</i>. Can you go about it without fear and
+trembling? Consider what you are&mdash;consider what
+you believe&mdash;consider what you seek&mdash;and what a
+spirit of lowly and contrite eagerness will pervade your
+life! This holds so much the more, because the
+salvation itself stands so much in likeness to Christ&mdash;that
+is to say, in a loving lowliness. Let a man think
+how much is in him that tends, contrariwise, to self-assertion
+and self-seeking, and he will have reason
+enough to fear and tremble as he lays fresh hold on
+the promises, and sets his face to the working out of
+this his own salvation.</p>
+
+<p>3. This very working out, from whom does it come?
+Are you the explanation and last source of it? What
+does it mean? Wherever it takes place, it means that,
+in a very special sense, God's mighty presence and
+power is put forth in us to will and to do. Shall not
+this thought quell our petulance? Where is room now
+for anything but fear and trembling&mdash;a deep anxiety to
+be lowly, obedient, compliant?</p>
+
+<p>Whether, therefore, we look to the history of the
+Saviour, or to the work to which our own life is
+devoted, or to the power that animates that work and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+on which it depends&mdash;in all alike we find ourselves
+committed to the lowly mind; and in all alike we find
+ourselves beset with a wealth of free beneficence, which
+lays obligation on us to be self-forgetting and loving.
+We are come into a wonderful world of compassionate
+love. That is the platform on which we stand&mdash;the
+light we see by&mdash;the music that fills our ears&mdash;the
+fragrance that rises on every side. If we are to live
+here, there is only one way for it&mdash;there is only one
+kind of life that <i>can</i> live in this region. And, being,
+as we are, alas, so strangely coarse and hard&mdash;even
+if this gospel gladdens us, there may well thrill through
+our gladness a very honest and a very contrite "fear
+and trembling."</p>
+
+<p>Now all this is by the Apostle persuasively urged upon
+his Philippian children (ver. 12): "As ye have always
+obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much
+more in my absence." For, indeed, it proves easy
+comparatively for our human indolence to yield to the
+spell of some great and forcible personality when he
+is present. It is even pleasant to allow ourselves to
+be borne on by the tide of his enthusiastic goodness.
+And when the Apostle was at Philippi, it might come
+easier to many of them to feel the force and scope of
+their calling in Christ. And yet now that he was gone,
+now was the time for them to prove for themselves,
+and evince to others, the durable worth of the great
+discovery they had made, and the thoroughness of the
+decision which had transformed their lives. Now, also,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+was the time to show Paul himself, that their "obedience"
+was of the deep and genuine quality which alone
+could give content to him.</p>
+
+<p>Such in general seems to be the scope of these two
+verses. But one or two of the points deserve to be
+considered a little before we go on.</p>
+
+<p>Mark how emphatically the Apostle affirms the great
+truth, that every good thing accompanying salvation
+which comes to pass in Christians is of the mighty
+power and grace of God. Therefore Christianity must
+stand so much in asking and in thanking. It is God
+that worketh in you. He does it, and no other than He;
+it is His prerogative. He worketh to will and to do.
+The inclination of the heart and the purpose of the
+will are of Him; and the striving to bring forth into
+act and deed what has been so conceived&mdash;that also is
+of Him. He quickens those who were dead in trespasses
+and sins; He gives the renewing of the Holy
+Ghost; He makes His children perfect, working in them
+that which is well pleasing in His sight through Jesus
+Christ. All this He does in the exercise of His proper
+power, in the "exceeding greatness of His power to us-ward
+who believe"&mdash;"according to the working of His
+mighty power, which wrought in Christ when He was
+raised from the dead." Apparently we are to take it
+that in the children of God there is the new heart, or
+new nature, in respect of which they are new creatures;
+and also the indwelling of God by His Spirit; and
+also the actual working of the same Spirit in all fruits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+of righteousness which they bring forth to the glory
+and praise of God. And these three are so connected,
+that regard should be had to all of them when we
+contemplate each.</p>
+
+<p>He worketh to will and to do. From Him all godly
+desires and purposes proceed&mdash;from Him, every passage
+in our lives in which the "salvation that is in Christ
+Jesus" is by us received, put to proof, wrought out
+into the transactions of our lives. It must be so, if
+we will only think of it. For this "salvation" involves
+an actual, and in principle a complete agreement
+with God, affirmed and embodied in each right thought,
+and word, and deed. Whence could this flow but from
+Himself?</p>
+
+<p>In their statements and explanations about this
+Christians have differed. The difference has been
+mainly on the point, how to make it clear that men
+are not dealt with as inert nor as irresponsible; that
+they must not hold themselves excused from working
+on the ground that God works all. For all agree that
+men are called to the most serious earnestness of
+purpose and the most alert activity of action; but the
+theorising of this activity occasions debate. It is
+from the motive of trying to make more room for these
+indispensable elements on the human side, that modes
+of statement have been suggested which limit or explain
+away the Apostle's statement here. The motive is commendable,
+but the method is not commonly successful.
+All efforts to divide the ground between God and man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+go astray. In the inward process of salvation, and
+especially in this "willing and doing," God does all,
+and also man does all. But God takes precedence.
+For it is He that quickeneth the dead, and calleth
+things that are not as though they were. Here we
+may say, as the Apostle does in another case, "This
+is a great mystery." Let us recognise it as a mystery
+bound up with any hope we ourselves have of proving
+to be children of God. And under the sense of it,
+with fear and trembling let us work, for it is God that
+worketh in us to will and to do.</p>
+
+<p>He worketh in us to will. When I trace back any
+of my actions to the fountain where it takes its rise <i>as
+mine</i>, I find that fountain in my will. The materials
+which I take up into my act, the impressions which
+gather together to create a situation for me, may all
+have their separate history going back in the order of
+cause and effect to the beginning of the world; but
+that which makes it mine, is that <i>I will</i>, <i>I choose</i>, and
+thereupon I do it. Therefore also it is that I must
+answer for it, because it is mine. I willed it, and in
+willing it I created something which pertains to me,
+and to no other; something began which is mine, and
+the responsibility for it cleaves only to me. But in the
+return to God through Christ, and in the working out
+of that salvation, there are acts of mine, most truly
+mine; and yet in these another Will, the Will of Him
+who saves, is most intimately concerned. He worketh
+in us to will. It is not an enslaving, but an emancipating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+energy. It brings about free action, yet such as
+fulfils a most gracious Divine purpose. So these
+"willings" embody a consent, a union of heart and
+mind and will, His and mine, the thought of which is
+enough to bow me to the ground with "fear and
+trembling." This is He who gathereth the dispersed
+of Israel into one.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the salvation is to be wrought
+out by us. To have faith in the Son of God in exercise
+and prevalence; to have heart and life formed to
+childlike love of God, and to the fulfilment of His will;
+to carry this out against the flesh and the world and
+the devil,&mdash;all this is a great career of endeavour and
+attainment. It is much to make the discoveries implied
+in it: finding out at each stage the meaning of it, and
+how it should take shape. It is much to have the heart
+brought to beat true to it, to love it, consent to it, be
+set upon it. It is much to embody it in faithful and
+successful practice in the rough school of life, with its
+actual collision and conflict. Now the nature and
+working of God's grace at each stage is of this kind,
+that it operates in three ways at least. It operates
+as a <i>call</i>, an effectual call, setting a man on to arise
+and go. It operates also in a way of instruction,
+setting us to learn lessons, <i>teaching</i> us how to live,
+as it is said in Titus ii. 11, 12. And it operates as a
+<i>power</i>, as help in time of need. He that sits still at
+the call&mdash;he that will not be considerate to learn the
+lesson&mdash;he that will not cast himself on the strength<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+perfected in weakness, that he may fulfil and do the
+Father's will&mdash;he is a man who despises and denies
+the grace of God.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Now what has been said of the believer's relation
+to the saving God, prepares the way for referring to
+his office towards the world. Here the moral and
+practical theme which is in the Apostle's mind all
+through proves again to be in place: the lowly and
+loving mind will best discharge that office towards the
+world, which the arrogant and distempered mind
+would hinder. "Do all things without murmurings
+and disputings, that ye may be blameless and
+harmless."</p>
+
+<p>A murmuring and disputatious temper&mdash;murmuring
+at what displeases us, and multiplying debate about
+it&mdash;is simply one form of the spirit which Paul deprecates
+all through this context. It is the sign of the
+disposition to value unduly one's own ease, one's own
+will, one's own opinion, one's own party, and to lie
+at the catch for opportunities to bring that feeling into
+evidence. Now observe the harm which the Apostle
+anticipates. It is your office to serve God by making
+a right impression on the world. How shall that come
+to pass? Chiefly, or at least primarily, the Apostle
+seems to say, by the absence of evil. At least, that
+is the most general and the safest notion of it, with
+which to begin. Some, no doubt, make impressions
+by their eloquence, or by their wisdom, or by their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+enterprising and successful benevolence&mdash;though all
+these have dangers and drawbacks attending them, in
+so far as the very energy of action provides a shelter
+for unperceived self-will. Still, let them have their
+place and their praise. But here is the line that might
+suit all. A man whose life stands clear of the world's
+deformities, under the influence of a light and a love
+from which the world is estranged, gradually makes an
+impression.</p>
+
+<p>Now murmuring and disputing are precisely adapted
+to hinder this impression. And sometimes they hinder
+it in the case of people of high excellence&mdash;people who
+have much sound and strong principle, who have
+large benevolence, who are capable of making remarkable
+sacrifices to duty when they see it. Yet this vice,
+perhaps a surface vice, of murmuring and disputing, is
+so suggestive of a man's self being uppermost, it so
+unpleasantly forces itself in as the interpretation of
+the man, that his real goodness is little accounted of.
+At all events, the peculiar purity of the Christian
+character&mdash;its blamelessness and harmlessness, its
+innocence&mdash;does not in his case come to light. People
+say: "Ah, he is one of the mixed ones, like ourselves.
+Christian devoutness suits some people: they are
+sincere enough in it very likely; but it leaves them,
+after all, pretty much as it found them."</p>
+
+<p>I say no more about murmuring and disputing as
+these reveal themselves in our relations to others. But
+the same spirit, and attended in its operations with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+same evil effects, may manifest itself in other ways
+besides that of unkindness to men. As frequently,
+perhaps, it may show itself in our behaviour towards
+God; and in that case it interferes at least as seriously
+with the shining of our light in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Just as in the camp of Israel of old on many
+memorable occasions there arose a murmuring of the
+people against God, when His ways crossed their will,
+or seemed dark to their wisdom; just as, on such
+occasions, there broke out among the people the expression
+of doubt, dislike, and disputation, and they
+criticised those Divine dealings which should have been
+received with trust and lowliness,&mdash;so is it also, many
+a time, in the little world within us. There are such
+and such duties to be discharged and such and such
+trials to be encountered&mdash;or else a general course of
+duty is to be pursued under certain discouragements
+and perplexities. And, you submit, you do these things.
+But you do them with murmuring and disputing in
+your heart. Why should it be thus? "How is it fit,"
+you say, "that such perplexities or such burdens should
+be appointed? Is it not reasonable, all things considered,
+that I should have more indulgence and greater
+facilities; or, at least, that I should be excused from
+this conflict and this burden-bearing for the present?"
+Meanwhile our conscience is satisfied because we have
+not rebelled in practice; and it takes no strict account
+of the fretfulness which marred our act, or
+the grumbling which well-nigh withheld us from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+compliance. You are called, perhaps, to speak to some
+erring friend, or you have to go on a message of mercy
+to some one in affliction. Indolently you postpone it;
+and your heart begins to stretch out its arms and to
+cling to the careless temper it has begun to indulge.
+At last conscience stirs, conscience is up, and you
+have to do something. But what you do is done
+grudgingly, with a heart that is murmuring and disputing.
+Again, you are called to deny yourself some
+worldly pleasure; in Christian consistency you have to
+hold back from some form of dissipation; or you have
+to take up a position of singularity and separation from
+other people. Reluctantly, you comply; only "murmuring
+and disputing." Now this inward temper may
+never come to any man's knowledge, but shall we
+suppose it does not tell on the character and the
+influence of the life? Can you, in that temper, play
+your part with the childlike, the cheerful, the dignified
+bearing, with the resemblance to Christ in your action,
+which God calls for? You cannot. The duty as to
+the husk and shell of it may be done; but there can
+be little radiation of Christ's likeness in the doing of it.</p>
+
+<p>Notice the Apostle's conception of the function which
+believers are to discharge in the world. They are set
+in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation. These
+words were applied to the children of Israel of old on
+account of the stubborn insubordination with which
+they dealt with God; and they were applicable, for
+the same reason, to the Gentiles, among whom the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+gospel had come, but who had not bowed to it. Judged
+by the high and true standard, these Gentiles were
+crooked and perverse in their ways with one another,
+and still more so in their ways with God. Among
+them the Christians were to show what Christianity
+was, and what it could do. In the Christians was
+to appear, embodied, the testimony proposed to the
+crooked and perverse nation, a testimony against its
+perverseness, and yet revealing a remedy for it. In
+the persons of men, themselves originally crooked and
+perverse, this was to become plain and legible. Now
+how? Why, by their being blameless and harmless,
+the sons of God without rebuke.</p>
+
+<p>It has been remarked already that the special way
+in which we are to manifest to the world the light of
+Christianity is here represented as the way of blamelessness.
+That man aright represents the mind of
+Christ to the world, who in the world keeps himself
+unspotted from the world,&mdash;in whom men recognise
+a character that traces up to a purer source elsewhere.
+As years pass, as cross lights fall upon the life, even
+in its most common and private workings, if it still
+proves that the man is cleansed by the faith he holds,
+if the unruly working of interest, and passion, and will,
+give way in him to motives of a higher strain, men
+will be impressed. They will own that here is something
+rare and high, and that some uncommon cause
+is at the bottom of it. For the world knows well that
+even the better sort of men have their weaker side,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+often plainly enough revealed by the trials of time.
+Therefore steadfast purity makes, at last, a deep
+impression.</p>
+
+<p>Innocence indeed is not the whole duty of a Christian;
+active virtue is required as well. The harmlessness
+called for is not a mere negative quality&mdash;it is supposed
+to be exhibited in an active life which strives to put on
+Christ Jesus. But the Apostle seems to lay stress
+especially on a certain quiet consistency, on a lowly
+and loving regard to the whole standard, which gives
+evenness and worthiness to the life. If you will do
+a Christian's office to the "perverse nation," you have
+to seek that they may have nothing against you except
+concerning the law of your God; you have to seek
+that your reproach may be exclusively the reproach of
+Christ: so that if at any time the malice of men seeks
+to misconstrue your actions, and lays to your charge
+things which you know not, your well-doing may silence
+them; and having no evil thing to say of you, they
+may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation
+in Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Strong appeals are made in our day to members of
+the Christian Church to engage actively in all kinds of
+Christian work. They are summoned to go forth
+aggressively upon the world's misery and sin. This
+has become a characteristic note of our time. Such
+appeals were needed. It is a shame that so many
+Christians have absolved themselves from the obligation
+to place at their Lord's service the aptitudes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+and the energies with which He has endowed them.
+Yet in this wholesale administration diversities are apt
+to be overlooked. Christians may be undervalued who
+do not possess qualities fitting them for the special
+activities; or, attempting these without much aptitude,
+and finding little success, they may be unduly cast down.
+It is important to lay stress on this. There are some,
+perhaps we should say many, who must come to the
+conclusion, if they judge aright, that their gifts and
+opportunities indicate for them, as their sphere, a somewhat
+narrow round of duties, mostly of that ordinary
+type which the common experience of human life supplies.
+But if they bring into these a Christian heart;
+if they use the opportunities they have; if they are
+watchful to please their Lord in the life of the family,
+the workshop, the market; if the purifying influence of
+the faith by which they live comes to light in the steady
+excellence of their character and course,&mdash;then they
+need have no sense of exclusion from the work of Christ
+and of His Church. They, too, do missionary work.
+Blameless, harmless, unrebuked, they are seen as lights
+in the world. They contribute, in the manner that is
+most essential of all, to the Church's office in the world.
+And their place of honour and reward shall be far
+above that of many a Christian busybody, who is too
+much occupied abroad to keep the light clear and bright
+at home.</p>
+
+<p>Blameless, then, harmless, unaspersed, must the children
+of God, His redeemed children, be. So will the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+light of Christian character come clearly out, and Christians
+will be "luminaries, holding forth the word of life."</p>
+
+<p>The word of life is the message of salvation as it sets
+forth to us Christ, and goodness and blessedness by
+Him. Substantially it is that teaching which we have
+in the Scriptures; although, when Paul wrote, the New
+Testament was not yet a treasure of the Churches, and
+the "word of life" only echoed to and fro from teacher
+to taught, and from one disciple to another. Still, the
+teaching rested on the Old Testament Scriptures understood
+in the light of the testimony of Jesus; and it was
+controlled and guided by men speaking and writing in
+the Spirit. What it was therefore was very well
+known, and the influence of it as the seed of life eternal
+was felt. It was for Christians to <i>hold by it</i>, and to
+<i>hold it out</i>,&mdash;the expression used in ver. 16 may have
+either meaning; and virtually both senses are here. In
+order to give light there must be life. And Christian life
+depends on having in us the word, quick and powerful,
+which is to dwell in us richly in all wisdom and
+spiritual understanding. This must be the secret of
+blameless Christian lives; and so those who have this
+character will give light, as holding forth the word of
+life. The man's visible character itself does this. For
+while the word and message of life is to be owned,
+professed, in fit times proclaimed, yet the embodiment
+of it in the man is the main point here, the character
+being formed and the practice determined by the
+"word" believed. So also we are said to live by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+faith of the Son of God. The life of faith on Him, is
+the life of having and holding forth His word.</p>
+
+<p>Here, as everywhere, our Lord goes first. The
+Apostle John, speaking in his Gospel of the Eternal
+Word, tells us that in Him was life, and the life was
+the light of men. It was not merely a doctrine of light;
+the life was the light. As He lived, in His whole
+being, in His acting and suffering, in His coming and
+staying and departing, in His Person and in His
+discharge of every office, He manifested the Father.
+Still we find it so; as we contemplate Him, as His
+words leads us to Himself, we behold the glory, the
+radiance of grace and truth.</p>
+
+<p>Now His people are made like Him. They too,
+through the word of life, become partakers of true life.
+This life does not dwell in them as it does in their Lord,
+for He is its original seat and source; hence they are
+not the light of the world in the same sense in which
+He is so. Still they are luminaries, they are stars in
+the world. By manifesting the genuine influence of the
+word of life which dwells in them, they do make manifest
+in the world what truth and purity and salvation are.
+This is their calling; and, in a measure, it is their
+attainment.</p>
+
+<p>The view of the matter given here may be compared
+with that in 2 Cor. iii. 4. Christ, the Father's Word,
+may also be regarded as the Father's living Epistle.
+Then those who behold Him, and drink in the significance
+of this message, are also themselves, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+their turn, Epistles of Christ, known and read of all
+men.</p>
+
+<p>So to shine is the calling of all believers, not of some
+only; each, according to his opportunities, may and
+ought to fulfil it. God designs to be glorified, and to
+have His salvation justified, in this form. Christ has
+said, in the plainest terms, "Ye are the light of the
+world." But to be so implies separateness from the
+world, in root and in fruits; and that is for many a
+hard saying. "Ye are a holy nation, a peculiar people,
+that ye should show forth the praises of Him who
+called you out of darkness into His marvellous light."</p>
+
+<p>In the sixteenth and following verses comes in again
+Paul's own share in the progress and victory of the
+Christian life in his friends. "It would be exceeding
+well," he seems to say, "for you; how well, you may
+gather partly from learning how well it would be for me."
+He would have cause to "rejoice in the day of Christ"
+that he had "not run in vain, neither laboured in vain."
+What might be said on this has been anticipated in
+the remarks made on ch. i., ver. 20 fol. But here the
+Apostle is thinking of something more than the toil
+and labour expended in the work. More than these
+was to fall to his lot. His life of toil was to close in a
+death of martyrdom. And whether the Apostle was or
+was not enabled to foresee this certainly, doubtless he
+looked forward to it as altogether probable. So he
+says: "But if I be offered (or poured out as a drink-offering)
+in the sacrifice and service of your faith, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+joy and rejoice with you all; and do ye also likewise
+joy and rejoice with me."</p>
+
+<p>To see the force of this expression we must remember
+that it was an ancient custom to seal and complete
+a sacrifice by the pouring out of a libation on the altar
+or at the foot of it. This might be intended as the
+crowning testimony of the abundant freewill with which
+the service had been rendered and the sacrifice had been
+offered. To some such rite the Apostle alludes when
+he speaks of himself&mdash;that is to say, of his own life&mdash;as
+poured forth at the sacrifice and service of their faith.
+And it is not hard to understand the idea which dictates
+this mode of speech.</p>
+
+<p>We read in Romans xii. an exhortation to the saints
+to yield themselves a living <i>sacrifice</i>, which sacrifice is
+their reasonable <i>service</i>. They were to do so in the
+way of not being conformed to the world, but transformed
+by the renewing of their minds. So here: the
+course of conduct which the Apostle had been exhorting
+the Philippians to pursue was an act of worship or
+service, and in particular it was a sacrifice, the sacrifice
+of their faith, the sacrifice in which their faith was
+expressed. Each believer in offering this sacrifice acts
+as a priest, being a member of the holy priesthood
+which offers to God spiritual sacrifices (1 Peter ii. 5).
+Such a man is not, indeed, a priest to make atonement,
+but he is a priest to present offerings through Christ
+his Head. The Philippians, then, in so far as they
+were, or were to be, yielding themselves in this manner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+to God, were priests who offered to God a spiritual
+sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>Here let us notice, as we pass, that no religion is worth
+the name that has not its sacrifice through which the
+worshipper expresses his devotion. And in Christian
+religion the sacrifice is the consecration of the man and
+of his life to God's service in Christ. Let us all see
+to it what sacrifices we offer.</p>
+
+<p>This doctrine, then, of the priesthood and the sacrifice
+was verified in the case of the Philippians; and, by the
+same rule, it held true also in the case of Paul himself.
+He, as little as they, was priest to make atonement.
+But certainly when we see Paul so cordially yielding
+himself to the service of God in the gospel, and discharging
+his work with such willing labour and pains,
+we see in him one of Christ's priests offering himself to
+God a living sacrifice. Now is this all? or is something
+more to be said of Paul? More is to be said;
+and although the point now in view is not prominent
+in this passage, it is present as the underlying thought.
+For the whole sacrifice of holy life rendered by the
+Philippians, and by his other converts, was, in a sense,
+the offering of Paul also; not theirs only, but his too.
+God gave him a standing in the matter, which he, at
+least, was not to overlook. God's grace, indeed, had
+wrought the work, and Paul was but an instrument;
+yet so an instrument, that he had a living and abiding
+interest in the result. He was not an instrument
+mechanically interposed, but one whose faith and love<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+had wrought to bring the result to pass. To him it had
+been given to labour and pray, to watch and guide, to
+spend and to be spent. And when the Apostle saw the
+lives of many true followers of Christ unfold as the
+result of his ministry, he could think that God owned
+his place too in bringing all this tribute to the temple.
+"God grants me a standing in the service of this
+offering. The Philippians bring it, each for himself, and
+it is theirs; but I also bring it, and it is my offering
+too. God takes it at their hand, but also at my hand,
+as something which with all my heart I have laboured
+for and won, and brought to His footstool. I also have
+my place to present to Christ the sacrifice and service
+of faith of all these men who are living fruits of my
+ministry. I have been minister of Christ to these
+Gentiles, 'ministering the gospel of the grace of God,
+that the offering up of these Gentiles might be acceptable,
+being sanctified by the Holy Ghost. I have
+therefore whereof I may glory through Jesus Christ'"
+(Rom. xv. 16, 17).</p>
+
+<p>There remains but one step to be made, to reach the
+seventeenth verse. Consider the Apostle's heart glowing
+with the thought that God counted the holy fruits of
+those believing lives to be sacrifice and service of his,
+as well as theirs, and accepted it not only from their
+hands, but from Paul's too. Consider the gladness with
+which he felt that after all his toil and pains he had this
+great offering to bring, as <i>his</i> thank-offering to his Lord.
+And then imagine him hearing a voice which says:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+"Now then, seal your service, crown your offering; be
+yourself the final element of sacrifice; pour out your
+life. You have laboured and toiled, spent years and
+strength, very willingly, and most fruitfully: that is
+over now; one thing remains; die for the worthy name
+of Him who died for you." It is this he is contemplating:
+if I <i>be</i> poured out at the sacrifice and service
+of your faith; if I am called to go on and to complete
+the sacrifice and service; if one thing more alone is left
+for Paul the aged and the prisoner, and that one thing
+be to lay down the life whose labours are ending; if the
+life itself is to run out in one final testimony that my
+whole heart, that all I am and have are Christ's,&mdash;shall
+not I rejoice? will not you rejoice with me? That will
+be the final identification of my life with your sacrifice
+and service. It will be the expression of God's accepting
+the completed gift. It will be the libation that
+crowns the service. I am not to be used, and then set
+aside as having no more interest in the results. On the
+contrary, your Christianity and mine, in the wonderful
+relation they have to one another, are to pass to God
+together as one offering. If, after running and labouring,
+all issues in my life being finally poured out in martyrdom,
+that, as it were, identifies me finally and inseparably
+with the sacrifice and service which has filled your
+lives, and also my life. It becomes one complete
+offering.</p>
+
+<p>It may give cause for thought to ministers of the
+gospel that the Apostle should so vitally and vividly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+connect himself with the results of his work. It was
+no languid, no perfunctory ministry that led up to this
+high mood. His heart's blood had been in it; the
+strength and passion of his love to Christ had been
+poured out and spent on his work and his converts.
+Therefore he could feel that in some gracious and
+blessed way the fruits that came were still his&mdash;given
+to <i>him</i> to bring to the altar of the Lord. How well
+shall it be with the Churches when the ministry of their
+pastors burns with a flame like this! What an image
+of the pastoral care is here expressed!</p>
+
+<p>But may not all Christian hearts be stirred to see
+the devotedness and the love which filled this man's
+soul? The constraining power of the love of Christ so
+wrought in him that he triumphed and rejoiced both in
+bringing and in becoming an offering,&mdash;breaking out, as
+it were, into sacrifice and service, and pouring out his life
+an offering to the Father and the Son. All hearts may
+be stirred; for all, perhaps, can imagine such a mood.
+But how many of us have it as a principle and a
+passion entering into our own lives?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>TIMOTHY AND EPAPHRODITUS.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>"But I hope in the Lord Jesus to send Timothy shortly unto you,
+that I also may be of good comfort, when I know your state. For I
+have no man likeminded, who will care truly [genuinely] for your
+state. For they all seek their own, not the things of Jesus Christ.
+But ye know the proof of him, that, as a child serveth a father, so he
+served with me in furtherance of the gospel. Him therefore I hope to
+send forthwith, so soon as I shall see how it will go with me: but I
+trust in the Lord that I myself also shall come shortly. But I counted
+it necessary to send to you Epaphroditus, my brother and fellow-worker
+and fellow-soldier, and your messenger and minister to my
+need; since he longed after you all, and was sore troubled, because
+ye had heard that he was sick: for indeed he was sick nigh unto
+death: but God had mercy on him; and not on him only, but on me
+also, that I might not have sorrow upon sorrow. I have sent him
+therefore the more diligently, that, when ye see him again, ye may
+rejoice, and that I may be the less sorrowful. Receive him therefore
+in the Lord with all joy; and hold such in honour: because for
+the work of Christ he came nigh unto death, hazarding his life to
+supply that which was lacking in your service toward me."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span>
+ii. 19-30 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>TIMOTHY AND EPAPHRODITUS.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>The outpouring of his thoughts, his feelings, and
+his desires towards the Philippians has so far
+spent itself. Now he turns to mention the steps he is
+taking, in response to their communication, to express
+practically his love and his care for their welfare. Yet
+we must carry along with us what has just been said
+of the Christian service and sacrifice, and of the tie
+between the Apostle and his converts; for these thoughts
+are still in the Apostle's mind, and they gleam through
+the passage which now comes before us.</p>
+
+<p>Paul had been contemplating the possibility of dying
+soon in his Master's cause: no doubt it was an alternative
+often present to his mind; and we see with
+what a glow of high association it rose before him.
+Still he, like ourselves, had to await his Master's will,
+had meanwhile to carry on the business of his life, and
+indeed (ch. i. 25) was aware that the prolongation of his
+life might very likely be a course of things more in the
+line of God's purpose, and more serviceable to the
+Churches at Philippi and elsewhere. So, while he has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+expressed the mood in which both they and he are to
+face the event of his martyrdom, when it comes, he does
+not hesitate to express the expectation that he may be
+set free and may see them again. Meanwhile he has
+made up his mind ere long to send Timothy. Timothy
+will bring them news of Paul, and will represent the
+Apostle among them as only a very near and confidential
+friend could do; at the same time he will
+bring back to Paul an account of things at Philippi,
+no doubt after doing all that with God's help he could
+to instruct, correct, and edify the Church during his
+stay. In this way a sustaining and gladdening experience
+for the Philippian Christians would be provided;
+and, at the same time, Paul too (I <i>also</i>, ver. 19)
+would be gladdened by receiving from so trustworthy
+a deputy a report upon men and things at Philippi.
+In connection with this declaration of his intention,
+the Apostle reveals some of the reflections which
+had occupied his mind; and these suggest several
+lessons.</p>
+
+<p>1. Notice the spirit of self-sacrifice on Paul's part.
+Timothy was the one thoroughly trusted and congenial
+friend within his reach. To a man who was a prisoner,
+and on whom the burden of many anxieties fell, it was
+no small ease to have one such friend beside him. Our
+blessed Lord Himself craved for loving human fellowship
+in His time of sorrow; and so must Paul do also.
+Yet all must give way to the comfort and well-being of
+the Churches. As soon as Paul can descry how it is to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+go with him, so that plans may be adjusted to the likelihoods
+of the situation, Timothy is to go on his errand
+to Philippi.</p>
+
+<p>2. Notice the importance which may justly attach
+to human instrumentalities. One is not as good as
+another. Some are far more fit for use than others are.
+The Apostle thought earnestly on the point who was
+fittest to go, and he was glad he had a man like
+Timothy to send. It is true that the supreme source of
+success in gospel work is God Himself; and sometimes
+He gives unexpected success to unlikely instruments.
+But yet, as a rule, much depends on men being adapted
+to their work. When God prepares fresh blessing for
+His Church, He commonly raises up men fitted for the
+service to be rendered. Therefore we do well to pray
+earnestly for men eminently qualified to do the Lord's
+work.</p>
+
+<p>3. Timothy's special fitness for this mission was that
+he had a heart to care for them, especially to care for
+their true and highest interests. So far, he resembled
+Paul himself. He had the true pastoral heart. He
+had caught the lessons of Paul's own life. That was
+the main thing. No doubt he had intellectual gifts,
+but his dispositions gave him the right use of gifts.
+The loving heart, and the watchfulness and thoughtfulness
+which that inspires, do more to create pastoral
+wisdom than any intellectual superiority. Timothy had
+a share of the "mind" of Christ (ver. 5), and that made
+him meet to be a wise inspector and adviser for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+Philippians, as well as a trustworthy reporter concerning
+their state and prospects.</p>
+
+<p>4. What is most fitted to impress us, is the difficulty
+which Paul experienced in finding a suitable messenger,
+and the manner in which he describes his difficulty.
+He was conscious in himself of a self-forgetting love
+and care for the Churches, which was part, and a great
+part, of his Christian character. He was ready (1 Cor.
+x. 33) to please all men in all things, not seeking his
+own profit, but the profit of many, that they might be
+saved. He looked out for men among his friends
+whose hearts might answer to him here, but he did not
+find them. He had no man likeminded. One indeed
+was found, but no more. As he looked round, a sense
+of disappointment settled on him.</p>
+
+<p>One asks of whom this statement is made&mdash;that he
+finds none likeminded&mdash;that all seek their own? Probably
+not of Epaphroditus, for Epaphroditus goes at any
+rate, and the question is about some one in addition,
+to be, as it were, Paul's representative and commissioner.
+Nor are we entitled to say that it applies to
+Tychicus, Aristarchus, Marcus, and Jesus, mentioned
+in Colossians iv. For these men might not be with
+the Apostle at the precise moment of his writing
+to the Philippians; and the character given to them
+in the Epistle to the Colossians seems to set them
+clear of the inculpation in this passage: unless we
+suppose that, even in the case of some of them, a failure
+had emerged near the time when the Epistle was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+written, which vexed the Apostle, and forced him to
+judge them unprepared at present for the service. It
+will be safest, however, not to assume that these men
+were with him, or that they are here in view.</p>
+
+<p>Still, the sad comment of the Apostle must apply
+to men of some standing and some capacity,&mdash;men
+of Christian profession, men who might naturally be
+thought of in connection with such a task. As he
+surveyed them, he was obliged to note the deplorable
+defect, which perhaps had not struck himself so forcibly
+until he began to weigh the men against the mission he
+was planning for them. Then he saw how they came
+short; and also, how this same blight prevailed generally
+among the Christians around him. Men were not
+"likeminded"; no man was "likeminded." <i>All</i> seek
+their own, not the things which are Jesus Christ's. Is
+not this a sad saying? What might one expect at
+the outset of a noble cause, the cause of Christ's truth
+and Church? What might one count upon in the circle
+that stood nearest to the Apostle Paul? Yet this is the
+account of it,&mdash;All seek their own, not the things which
+are Jesus Christ's.</p>
+
+<p>Is it any wonder that the Apostle pleads earnestly
+with Christians to cherish the mind of "not looking
+each of you to his own things" (ver. 4); that he presses
+the great example of the Saviour Himself; that he
+celebrates elsewhere (1 Cor. xiii.) the beauty of that
+love which seeketh not its own and beareth all things?
+For we see how the meaner spirit beset him and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+hemmed him in, even in the circle of his Christian
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>What does his description mean? It does not mean
+that the men in question broke the ordinary Christian
+rules. It does not mean that any Church could have
+disciplined them for provable sins. Nay, it does not
+mean that they were destitute of fear of God and love
+to Christ. But yet, to the Apostle's eye, they were too
+visibly swayed by the eagerness about their own things;
+so swayed, that their ordinary course was governed
+and determined by it. It might be love of ease, it might
+be covetousness, it might be pride, it might be party
+opinion, it might be family interests, it might even be
+concentration on their own religious comfort:&mdash;however
+it might be, to this it came in the end, All seek
+their own. Some of them might be quite unsound,
+deceivers or deceived; especially, for instance, if Demas
+(2 Tim. iv. 10) was one of them. But even those of
+whom the Apostle might be persuaded better things,
+and things that accompany salvation, were so far gone
+in this disease of seeking their own, that the Apostle
+could have no confidence in sending them, as otherwise
+he would have done, on a mission in which the mind
+and care of Christ were to be expressed to Christ's
+Church. He could not rely on a "genuine care."</p>
+
+<p>You mistake if you suppose this faulty state implied,
+in all these cases, a deliberate, conscious preference of
+their own things above the things of Jesus Christ. The
+men might really discern a supreme beauty and worth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
+in the things of Christ; they might honestly judge that
+Christ had a supreme claim on their loyalty; and they
+might have a purpose to adhere to Christ and Christ's
+cause at great cost, if the cost must finally be borne.
+And yet meanwhile, in their common life, the other
+principle manifested itself far too victoriously. The
+place which their own things held&mdash;the degree in which
+their life was influenced by the bearing of things on
+themselves, was <i>far</i> from occupying that subordinate
+place which Christ has assigned to it. The things of
+Jesus Christ did not rise in their minds above other
+interests, but were jostled, and crowded, and thrust
+aside by a thousand things that were their own.</p>
+
+<p>You may not cherish any avowed purpose to seek
+your own; you may have learned to love Christ for
+the best reasons; you may have the root of the matter
+in you; you may have made some sacrifices that
+express a sense of Christ's supreme claims: and yet
+you may be a poor style of Christian, an inconsistent
+Christian, a careless, unwatchful Christian. Especially
+you may habitually fail to make a generous estimate of
+the place to be given to the things of Jesus Christ.
+You may not be reckoned so defective either in general
+judgment or in your own esteem, because you may
+come up very well to what is usually expected. And
+yet you may be allowing any Christianity you have to
+be largely stifled and repressed by foreign and alien
+influences, by a crowd of occupations and recreations
+that steal heart and life away. You may be taking no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
+proper pains, no loving pains, to be a Christian, in
+Christ's sense of what that should be. Though only at
+the beginning of the conflict, you may be living as if
+there was scarcely a conflict to be fought. And so in
+practice, in the history of your hours, you may be seeking
+your own things to an extent that is even disgraceful
+to Christian religion. You may allow your course of
+thought and action to be dictated by that which is of
+self, by gain, self-indulgence, or frivolity, to a degree
+that would even be appalling if your eyes were opened
+to discern it. We all know that in religious exercises
+formality may usurp a large place, even in the case of
+men who have received power for reality. Just so in
+the Christian course, and under the Christian name and
+calling, what is "your own" may be suffered to encroach
+most lamentably on the higher principle; so that an
+Apostle looking at you must say, "They all seek their
+own, not the things that are Jesus Christ's." You are
+not faithful enough to apply Christ's standard to your
+heart and ways, nor diligent enough to seek His Spirit.
+Perhaps if you were strongly tempted to deny Christ,
+or to fall into some great scandalous sin, you would
+awaken to the danger and cling to your Saviour for
+your life. But as things go commonly, you <i>let</i> them
+go. And the consequence is, you are largely losing
+your lives. What should be your contribution to the
+good cause, and so should be your own gladness and
+honour, never comes to pass. Some of you have
+thoughts in your own minds upon this point, why you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+do not seem to find any doorways into Christian usefulness.
+You do wish to see Christ's cause prosper. Yet
+somehow it never seems to come to your hands to do
+anything effectually or fruitfully for the cause. What
+can the reason be? Alas, in the case of how many the
+reason is just what it was in the case of Paul's friends:
+you are so largely seeking your own things, not the
+things that are Jesus Christ's, that you are not fit to be
+sent on any mission. If the Apostle could say this to the
+Christians of his day, how great must be the danger still!</p>
+
+<p>Now if we look at it as part of the experience of
+Paul the Apostle, to find this temper so prevailing
+around him, we learn another lesson. We know
+Paul's character, his enthusiasm, the magnanimous
+faith and love with which he counted all to be loss in
+comparison of Christ. And yet, we see what he found
+among the Christians around him. This has been so
+in every age. The unreasonableness, faintheartedness,
+and faithlessness of men, the unchristlikeness of Christians,
+have been matter of experience. If our hearts
+were enlarged to plan and endeavour more generously
+for Christ's cause, we should feel this a great trial. All
+large-hearted Christians have to encounter it. Let it
+be remembered that it is not peculiar to any age. The
+Apostle had full experience of it. "Demas hath forsaken
+me, having loved this present world.... Alexander
+the coppersmith did me much evil.... At my
+first answer no man stood with me, but all men forsook
+me" (2 Tim. iv. 10-16). Let us be assured, that if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+Christ's work is to be done, we must be prepared not
+only for the opposition of the world, but for the coldness
+and the disapprobation of many in the Church&mdash;of some
+whom we cordially believe to be, after all, heirs of the
+kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>Timothy is to go to Philippi, and is to bring to Paul
+a full report. But, at the same time, the Apostle finds
+it necessary to send Epaphroditus, not, apparently, with
+a view to his returning to Rome again, but to resume
+his residence at Philippi. It seems, on all accounts,
+reasonable to believe that Epaphroditus belonged to
+the Philippian Church, and was in office there. In
+this case he is to be distinguished from Epaphras
+(Col. iv. 12), with whom some would identify him, for
+no doubt Epaphras belonged to Colossæ. Epaphroditus
+had come to Rome, bearing with him the gifts
+which assured Paul of the loving remembrance in which
+he was held at Philippi, and of the abiding desire to
+minister to him which was cherished there. His own
+Christian zeal led Epaphroditus to undertake the duty,
+and he had borne himself in it as became a warm-hearted
+and public-spirited Christian. He had been
+Paul's brother and fellow-workman and fellow-soldier.
+But, meanwhile, the Apostle was aware how valuable
+his presence might be felt to be at Philippi. And Epaphroditus
+himself had conceived a longing to see the
+old friends, and to resume the old activities in the
+Philippian Church. For he had been sick, very sick,
+almost dead. Amid the weakness and inactivity of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+convalescence, his thoughts had been much at Philippi,
+imagining how the brethren there might be moved at
+the tidings of his state, and yearning, perhaps, for the
+faces and the voices which he knew so well. Paul
+was accustomed to restrain and sacrifice his own feelings;
+but that did not make him inattentive to the
+feelings of other people. Trying as his position at
+Rome was, he would not keep Epaphroditus in these
+circumstances. He had had great comfort in his company,
+and would be glad to retain it. But he would be
+more glad to think of the joy at Philippi when Epaphroditus
+should return. So he gives back Epaphroditus.
+As he does so he admonishes his friends to value
+adequately what they are receiving. Paul was sending
+to them a true-hearted and large-hearted Christian;
+one who allowed nothing&mdash;neither difficulties nor risks&mdash;to
+stand in the way of Christian service and Christian
+sympathy. Let such men be had in reputation. It is
+a lawful and right thing to make a high estimate of
+Christian character where it eminently appears, and to
+honour such persons very highly in love. If <i>they</i> are
+not honoured and prized, it is too likely that others
+will be whom it is not so fit and so wholesome to
+admire. And the ground of admiration in the case of
+Epaphroditus sets once more before us the theme of
+the whole chapter: Epaphroditus was to be had in
+reputation because he had approved himself to be one
+seeking not his own, one willing to lay down his life
+for the brethren.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>NO CONFIDENCE IN THE FLESH.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>"Finally, my brethren, rejoice in the Lord. To write the same
+things to you, to me indeed is not irksome, but for you it is safe.
+Beware of the dogs, beware of the evil workers, beware of the
+concision: for we are the circumcision, who worship by the Spirit of
+God, and glory in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh:
+though I myself might have confidence even in the flesh: if any other
+man thinketh to have confidence in the flesh, I yet more: circumcised
+the eighth day, of the stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a
+Hebrew of Hebrews; as touching the law, a Pharisee; as touching zeal,
+persecuting the Church; as touching the righteousness which is in
+the law, found blameless. Howbeit what things were gain to me,
+these have I counted loss for Christ. Yea verily, and I count all things
+to be loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my
+Lord."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> iii. 1-8 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>NO CONFIDENCE IN THE FLESH.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>The third chapter contains the portion of this
+Epistle in which, perhaps, one is hardest put to
+it to keep pace with the writer. Here he gives us one
+of his most remarkable expositions of true Christian
+religion as he knew it, and as he maintains it must essentially
+exist for others also. He does this in a burst of
+thought and feeling expressed together: so that, if we
+are to take his meaning, the fire and the light must
+both alike do their work upon us; we must feel and see
+both at once. This is one of the pages to which a
+Bible reader turns again and again. It is one of the
+passages that have special power to find and to stir
+believing men.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it seems to find its place in the letter almost
+incidentally.</p>
+
+<p>It would seem, as some have thought, that in the
+first verse of this chapter the Apostle begins to draw
+his letter to a close. Cheerful words of farewell begin
+to shape themselves. At the same time a closing
+reference is in view to some practical danger that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
+required to be guarded against. Almost suddenly
+things take a new turn, and a flood of great ideas
+claim and take their place.</p>
+
+<p>"Finally, my brethren, rejoice in the Lord." Rejoice,
+Be of good cheer, was the common formula of
+leave-taking. The same word is translated "farewell"
+in 2 Cor. xiii. 11 (Authorised and Revised Versions).
+But the Apostle, especially in this Epistle, which is
+itself inspired by so much of Christian gladness, cannot
+but emphasise the proper meaning of the customary
+phrase. Rejoice, yes, rejoice, my brethren, in the Lord.
+The same turn of thought recurs again in ch. iv. 4.
+What it is fitted to suggest will be equally in place
+when we reach that point.</p>
+
+<p>Now he seems to be on the point of introducing
+some subject already referred to, either in this or in
+a previous Epistle. It concerned the safety of the
+Philippians, and it required some courteous preface in
+touching on it once again; so that, most likely, it was
+a point of some delicacy. Some have thought this topic
+might be the tendency to dissension which had appeared
+in Philippi. It is a subject which comes up again in ch. iv.:
+it may have been upon the point of coming up here.
+The closing words of ver. 1 might well enough preface
+such a reference. The theme was not so pleasant as
+some of those on which he had written: it might be
+delicate for him to handle; and it might call for some
+effort on their part to take it well. Yet it concerned
+their safety they that should fully realise this element<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+of the situation, and should take the right view of it.
+Therefore also the Apostle would not count it irksome to
+do his part in relation to it. People entangled in a fault
+are in circumstances not favourable to a right estimate
+of their own case. They need help from those who
+can judge more soundly. Yet help must be tendered
+with a certain considerateness.</p>
+
+<p>But at this point a new impulse begins to operate.
+Perhaps the Apostle was interrupted, and, before he
+could resume, some news reaches him, awakening
+afresh the indignation with which he always regarded
+the tactics of the Judaisers. Nothing indicates that the
+Philippian Church was much disposed to Judaise. But
+if at this juncture some new disturbance from the
+Judaisers befell his work at Rome, or if news of that
+kind reached him from some other field, it might
+suggest the possibility of those sinister influences
+finding their way also to Philippi. This is, of course,
+a conjecture merely; but it is not an unreasonable one.
+It has been offered as an explanation of the somewhat
+sudden burst of warning that breaks upon us in
+ch. iii. 2; while, in the more tranquil strain of
+ch. iv., topics are resumed which easily link themselves
+to ch. iii. 1.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>Still, even if this denunciation of Judaising comes in
+rather unexpectedly, it does not really disturb the main
+drift of the Epistle, nor does it interfere with the
+lessons which the Philippians were to learn. It rather
+contributes to enforce the views and deepen the impressions
+at which Paul aims. For the denunciation
+becomes the occasion of introducing a glowing description
+of how Christ found Paul, and what Paul found in
+Christ. This is set against the religion of Judaising.
+But at the same time, and by the nature of the case,
+it becomes a magnificent exposure and rebuke of all
+fleshly religionising, of all the ways of being religious
+that are superficial, self-confident, and worldly-minded.
+It also becomes a stirring call to what is most central
+and vital in Christian religion. If then there was at
+Philippi, as there is everywhere, a tendency to be too
+easily contented with what they had attained; or to
+reconcile Christianity with self-seeking; or to indulge
+a Christianised arrogance and quarrelsomeness; or, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+any other shape, "having begun in the spirit to be made
+perfect in the flesh,"&mdash;here was exactly what they
+needed. Here, too, they might find a vivid representation
+of the "one spirit" in which they were to
+"stand fast," the "one soul" in which they were to
+"labour" together (ch. i. 27). That "one spirit" is
+the mind which is caught, held, vitalised, continually
+drawn upwards and forwards, by the revelation and
+the appropriation of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>The truth is that a remiss Christianity always becomes
+very much a Judaism. Such Christianity assumes
+that a life of respectable conventions, carried on within
+sacred institutions, will please God and save our souls.
+What the Apostle has to set against Judaism may very
+well be set against that in all its forms.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep an eye on the dogs, on the evil workers, on
+the concision." The Judaisers are not to occupy him
+very long, but we see they are going to be thoroughly
+disposed of. Dogs is a term borrowed from their own
+vocabulary. They classed the Gentiles (even the
+uncircumcised Christians) as dogs, impure beings who
+devoured all kinds of meat and were open to all kinds
+of uncleanness. But themselves, the Apostle intimates,
+were the truly impure, shutting themselves out from the
+true purity, the heart's purity, and (as Dr. Lightfoot expresses
+it) "devouring the garbage of carnal ordinances."
+They were also evil workers, mischievous busybodies,
+pertinaciously busy, but busy to undo rather than to
+build up what is good, "subverting men's souls"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+(Acts xv. 24). And they were the concision; not the
+circumcision according to the true intent of that ordinance,
+but the concision, the mutilation or gashing.
+Circumcision was a word which carried in its heart a
+high meaning of separation from evil and of consecration
+to the Lord. That meaning (and therefore also the
+word which carried it) pertained to gospel believers,
+whether outwardly circumcised or not. For the Judaising
+zealots could be claimed only a circumcision
+which had lost its sense, and which no more deserved
+the name,&mdash;a senseless gashing of the flesh, a concision.
+All these terms seem to be levelled at certain persons
+who are in the Apostle's view, and are not unknown to
+the Philippians, though not necessarily resident in that
+city.</p>
+
+<p>For any full statement of the grounds of the Apostle's
+indignation at the Judaising propaganda, the reader
+must be referred to the expository writings on other
+Epistles, especially on those to the Corinthians and to
+the Galatians. Here a few words must suffice. Judaising
+made the highest pretensions to religious security
+and success; it proposed to expound the only worthy
+and genuine view of man's relation to God. But in
+reality the Judaisers wholly misrepresented Christianity,
+for they had missed the main meaning of it. Judaising
+turned men's minds away from what was highest to
+what was lowest,&mdash;from love to law, from God's gifts
+to man's merits, from inward life and power to outward
+ceremonial performance, from the spiritual and eternal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+to the material and the temporary. It was a huge,
+melancholy mistake; and yet it was pressed upon
+Christians as the true religion, which availed with God,
+and could alone bring blessing to men. Hence, as our
+Lord denounced the Pharisees with special energy,&mdash;sometimes
+with withering sarcasm (Luke xi. 47),&mdash;so,
+and for the same reasons, does Paul attack the Judaisers.
+The Pharisees applied themselves to turn the religion of
+Israel into a soul-withering business of formalism and
+pride; and Paul's opponents strove to pervert to like
+effect even the gracious and life-giving gospel of Christ.
+To such he would give place, no, not for an hour.</p>
+
+<p>Two things may be suggested here. One is the
+responsibility incurred by those who make a religious
+profession, and in that character endeavour to exert
+religious influence upon others. Such men are taking
+possession, as far as they can, of what is highest and
+most sacred in the soul's capacities; and if they misdirect
+the soul's life here, if consciously or unconsciously
+they betray interests so sacred, if they successfully
+teach men to take false coin for true in the matter of
+the soul's dealings with God and with its own welfare,
+their responsibility is of the heaviest.</p>
+
+<p>Another point to notice is the energy with which the
+Apostle thinks it right to denounce these evil workers.
+Denunciation is a line of things in which, as we know very
+well, human passion is apt to break loose&mdash;the wrath of
+man which worketh not the righteousness of God. The
+history of religious controversy has made this very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
+plain. Yet surely we may say that zeal for truth must
+sometimes show itself in an honest indignation against
+the wilfulness and the blindness of those who are
+misleading others. It is not always well to be merely
+mild and placable. That may arise in some cases from
+no true charity, but rather from indifference, or from an
+amiability that is indolent and selfish. It is good to
+be zealously affected in a good thing. Only, we have
+reason to take heed to ourselves and to our own spirit,
+when we are moved to be zealous in the line of condemning
+and denouncing. Not all who do so have
+approved their right to do it, by tokens of spiritual
+wisdom and single-hearted sincerity such as marked
+the life and work of Paul.</p>
+
+<p>The Judaisers put abroad the false coin, and believers
+in Christ, whether circumcised or not, had the true.
+"We are the circumcision, who worship by the Spirit
+of God, and who glory in Christ Jesus, and who put
+no confidence in the flesh." Such are truly Abraham's
+children (Gal. iii. 29). To them belong whatever relation
+to God, and interest in God, were shadowed forth
+by circumcision in the days of old.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt, the rite of circumcision was outward;
+and no doubt it came to be connected with a great
+system of outward ordinances and outward providences.
+Yet circumcision, according to the Apostle, pointed not
+outwards, but inwards (Rom. ii. 28, 29). Elsewhere he
+lays stress on this, that circumcision, when first given,
+was a seal of faith. In the Old Testament itself, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+complaint made by the prophets, speaking for God, was
+that the people, though circumcised in flesh, were of
+uncircumcised heart and uncircumcised ears. And God
+threatens to punish Israel with the Gentiles&mdash;the
+circumcised with the uncircumcised&mdash;because all the
+house of Israel are uncircumcised in heart.</p>
+
+<p>The true circumcision then must be those, in the
+first place, who have the true, the essentially true
+worship. Circumcision set men apart as worshippers
+of the true God: hence Israel came to be thought of as
+a people "instantly serving (or worshipping) God day
+and night." That this worship must include more
+than outward service in order to be a success&mdash;that it
+should include elements of high spiritual worth, was
+disclosed in Old Testament revelation with growing
+clearness. One promise on which it rested was: "The
+Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart, and the
+heart of thy seed, to love the Lord thy God with all
+thy heart, and with all thy soul, that thou mayest live."
+The true circumcision, those who answer to the type
+which circumcision was meant to set, must be those who
+have the true worship. Now that is the worship "by the
+Spirit"; on which we shall have a word to say presently.</p>
+
+<p>And again, the true circumcision must be those who
+have the true glorying. Israel, called to glory in
+their God, were set apart also to cherish in that connection
+a great hope, which was to bless their line,
+and, through them, the world. That hope was fulfilled
+in Christ. The true circumcision were those who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+welcomed the fulfilment of the promise, who rejoiced in
+the fulness of the blessing, because they had eyes to
+see and hearts to feel its incomparable worth.</p>
+
+<p>And certainly, therefore, as men who had discovered
+the true foundation and refuge, they must renounce and
+turn from the false trust, they must put no confidence
+in the flesh. Is this, however, a paradox? Was not
+circumcision "outward, in the flesh"? Was it not
+found to be a congruous part of a concrete system,
+built up of "elements of this world"? Was not the
+temple a "worldly sanctuary," and were not the sacrifices
+"carnal ordinances"? Yes; and yet the true
+circumcision did not trust in circumcision. He who
+truly took the meaning of that remarkable dispensation
+was trained to say, "Doth not my soul wait on God?
+from Him cometh my salvation." And he was trained
+to renounce the confidences in which the nations
+trusted. Hence, though such a man could accept
+instruction and impression from many an ordinance
+and many a providence, he was still led to place his
+trust higher than the flesh. And now, when the true
+light was come, when the Kingdom of God shone out in
+its spiritual principles and forces, the true circumcision
+must be found in those who turned from that which
+appealed only to the earthly and the fleshly mind,
+that they might fasten on that in which God revealed
+Himself to contrite and longing souls.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>The Apostle therefore claimed the inheritance and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+representation of the ancient holy people for spiritual
+believers, rather than for Judaising ritualists. But
+apart from questions as to the connection between successive
+covenants, it is worth our while to weigh well
+the significance of those features of Christian religion
+which are here emphasised.</p>
+
+<p>"We," he says, "worship by the Spirit of God." The
+Holy Spirit was not absent from the old economy.
+But in those days the consciousness and the faith of
+His working were dim, and the understanding of the
+scope of it was limited. In the times of the New
+Testament, on the contrary, the promise and the
+presence of the Spirit assume a primary place. This
+is the great promise of the Father which was to come
+into manifestation and fulfilment when Christ had
+gone away. This, from Pentecost onwards, was to be
+distinctive of the character of Christ's Church. According
+to the Apostle Paul, it is one great end of Christ's
+redemption, that we may receive the promise of the
+Spirit through faith. So, in particular, Christian worship
+is by the Spirit of God. Therefore it is a real and
+most inward fellowship with God. In this worship it
+is the office of the Holy Spirit to give us a sense of the
+reality of Divine things, especially of the truths and
+promises of God; to touch our hearts with their goodness,
+on account especially of the Divine love that
+breathes in them; to dispose us to decision, in the
+way of consent and surrender to God as thus revealed.
+He takes the things of Christ, and shows them to us.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+So he brings us, in our worship, to meet with God,
+mind to mind, heart to heart. Although all our
+thoughts, as well as all our desires, come short, yet, in
+a measure, a real consent with God about His Son and
+about the blessings of His Son's gospel comes to pass.
+Then we sing with the Spirit, when our songs are
+filled with confidence and admiration, arising out of a
+sense of God's glory and grace; and we pray in the
+Holy Ghost, when our supplications express this loving
+and thankful close with God's promises. It is our
+calling and our blessedness to worship by the Spirit of
+God. Much of our worship might fall silent, if this alone
+should be upheld: yet this alone avails and finds God.
+Whatever obscures this, or distracts attention from it,
+whether it be called Jewish or Christian, does not aid
+worship, but mars it.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that the presence of the Spirit of God is not
+discernible otherwise than by the fruits of His working.
+And the difficulty may be raised, how can we, in practice,
+be secure of having the Spirit, thereby to worship
+God? But, on the one hand, we know in some
+degree what the nature of the worship is which He
+sustains; we can form some conception of the attitude
+and exercise of soul towards Christ and God
+which constitutes that worship. We do therefore
+know something as to what we should seek; we are
+aware of the direction in which our face should be
+set. On the other hand, the presence of the Spirit
+with us, to make such worship real in our case, is an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+object of faith. We believe in God for that gracious
+presence, and ask for it; and so doing, we expect it,
+according to God's own promise. On this understanding
+we apply ourselves to find entrance and
+progress in the worship which is by the Spirit.</p>
+
+<p>All appliances which are supposed to aid worship,
+which are conceived to add to its beauty, pathos, or
+sublimity, are tolerable only so far as they do not
+tend to divert us from the worship which is by the
+Spirit. Experience shows that men are extremely
+prone to fall back from the simplicity and intentness
+of spiritual worship; and then they cover the gap,
+which they cannot fill, by outward arrangements of an
+impressive and affecting kind. Outward arrangements
+can render real service to worshippers, only if they
+remove hindrances, and supply conditions under which
+the simplicity and intentness of the worship "by the
+Spirit" may go on undisturbed. Very often they have
+tended exactly in the contrary direction; not the less
+because they have been introduced, perhaps, with the
+best intentions. And yet the chief question of all is not
+the more or less, the this or that, of such circumstantials;
+but rather what the heart fixes on and holds by.</p>
+
+<p>Again, we "glory in Christ Jesus." Christians are
+rich and great, because Christ Jesus assumes a place in
+their mind and life, such as makes them partakers of
+all spiritual blessing in Him. They glory, not in what
+they are, or do, or become, or get, but in Christ.
+Glorying in anything implies a deep sense of its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+wonderfulness and worth, along with some persuasion
+that it has a happy relation to ourselves. So Christ is
+the power and wisdom of God, the revelation of the
+Father, the way to the Father, the centre of blessing,
+the secret of religious restoration, attainment, and
+success: and He is ours; and He sets the type of
+what we through Him shall be. To glory and triumph
+in Christ is a leading characteristic of Christian religion.</p>
+
+<p>And so, then, we "put no confidence in the flesh." If
+in Christ, under the revelation which centres in Him,
+we have found the way to God and the liberty to serve
+God, then all other ways must be for us <i>ipso facto</i>
+exposed and condemned; they are seen to be fallacious
+and fruitless. All these other ways are summed up in
+"the flesh." For the flesh is human nature fallen, with
+the resources which it wields, drawn from itself or from
+earthly materials of some kind. And in some selection
+or combination of these resources, the religion of the
+flesh stands. The renunciation of trust in such ways
+of establishing a case before God is included in the
+acceptance of Christ's authority and Christ's salvation.
+This condemns alike the confidence in average morality,
+and that in accredited ecclesiastical surroundings. It
+condemns confidence in even the holiest Christian rites,
+as if they could transfer us, by some intrinsic virtue,
+into the Kingdom of God, or could accredit our standing
+there. The same holds of confidence in doctrines,
+and even of confidence in sentiments. Rites, doctrines,
+and sentiments have their place of honour, as lines in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+which Christ and we may meet. Otherwise they all
+fall into the category of the flesh. Many things the
+flesh can do, in worship as in other departments; but
+it cannot attain to the worship that is by the Spirit of
+God. Much it can boast of; but it cannot replace
+Immanuel; it cannot fill the place of the reconciliation
+and the life. When we learn what kind of confidence
+is needed towards God, and find the ground of it in the
+Christ of God, then we cease to rely on the flesh.</p>
+
+<p>At this point the Apostle cannot but emphasise his
+own right to speak. He appeals to his remarkable
+history. He knows all about this Judaic religion,
+which glories in the flesh, and he knows also the
+better way. The experience which had transformed
+his life entitled him to a hearing; for, indeed, he, as no
+man else, had searched out the worth of both the ways
+of it. So he is led into a remarkable testimony regarding
+the nature and the working forces of true Christian
+religion. And this, while it serves the purpose of
+throwing deserved disgrace on the poor religion of
+Judaising, serves at the same time a higher and more
+durable purpose. It sets the glory of the life of faith,
+love, and worship, against the meanness of all fleshly
+life whatever; and thus it vividly impresses on all
+hearers and readers the alternatives with which we
+have to deal, and the greatness of the choice which we
+are called to make.</p>
+
+<p>If Paul decries the Jewish glorying in the flesh, it is
+not because he lacked ground, that had enabled him to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+cherish it and might enable him still to do so. "I also
+have material enough of fleshly confidence:&mdash;if any
+other thinks to have confidence in the flesh, I more."
+Then comes the remarkable catalogue of the prerogatives
+which had once meant so much for Saul of
+Tarsus, filling his heart with confidence and exultation.
+"Circumcised the eighth day"&mdash;for he was no proselyte,
+but born within the fold: "of the stock of Israel"&mdash;for
+neither had his parents been proselytes: in particular,
+for he was one whose pedigree was ascertained and
+notorious, "of the tribe of Benjamin": "an Hebrew of
+Hebrews"&mdash;nursed and trained, that is to say, in the
+very speech and spirit of the chosen people; not, as
+some of them, bred up in a foreign tongue, and under
+alien influences: "concerning the law, a Pharisee"&mdash;that
+is, "of the strictest sect of our religion" (Acts
+xxvi. 5); for, as a Pharisee, Saul had given himself wholly
+to know the law, to keep the law, to teach the law. More
+yet&mdash;"as to zeal, a persecutor of the Church"; in this
+clause the heat of the writer's spirit rises into pathetic
+irony and self-scorn: "This appropriate outcome of
+carnal Judaism, alas, was not lacking in me: <i>I</i> was
+not a Judaiser of the half-hearted sort." The idea is,
+that those who, trusting in fleshly Judaism, claimed
+also to be Christians, knew neither their own spirit,
+nor the proper working of their own system. Saul of
+Tarsus had been no such incoherent Jew; only too
+bloodily had he proved himself thorough and consistent.
+Lastly, as to "law righteousness," the righteousness of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
+compliance with rules, he had been unchallengeable;
+not a pharisaic theorist only, but a man who made
+conscience of his theory. Ah! he had known all this;
+and more, he had been forced in a great crisis of his
+life to measure and search out the whole worth of it.</p>
+
+<p>"But what things were gain to me"&mdash;the whole class
+of things that ranked themselves before my eyes, and
+in my heart, as making me rich and strong&mdash;"those
+I have esteemed" (in a mass) "to be loss for Christ."
+They ceased to be valuable, they began to be reckoned
+as elements of disadvantage and of loss, in comparison
+of Christ. Nor these things only, but even all things&mdash;"Yea
+doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the
+excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord."
+"All things" must include more than those old elements
+of fleshly confidence already enumerated. It must
+include everything which Paul still possessed, or might
+yet attain, that could be separated from Christ, weighed
+against Him, brought into competition with Him&mdash;all
+that the flesh could even yet take hold of, and turn into
+a ground of separate confidence and boasting. So the
+phrase might cover much that was good in its place,
+much that the Apostle was glad to hold in Christ and
+from Christ, but which yet might present itself to the
+unwatchful heart as material of independent boasting,
+and which, in that case, must be met with energetic and
+resolute rejection. "All things" may include, for
+instance, many of those elements of Christian and
+Apostolic eminence which are enumerated in 2 Cor. xi.;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+for while he thankfully received many such things, and
+lovingly prized them "in Christ Jesus," yet as they
+might become occasions to flatter or seduce even an
+Apostle&mdash;betraying him into self-confidence, or into the
+assertion of some separate worth and glory for himself&mdash;they
+must be rejected and counted to be loss.</p>
+
+<p>The difficulty for us here is to estimate worthily the
+elevation of that regard to Christ which had become
+the inspiration of the life of Paul.</p>
+
+<p>At the time when he was arrested on the road to
+Damascus, God revealed His Son to him and in him.
+Paul then became aware of Jesus as the Messiah of his
+people, against whom his utmost energies had bent
+themselves&mdash;against whom he had sinned with his
+utmost determination. That discovery came home to
+him with a sense of great darkness and horror; and,
+no doubt, at the same time, his whole previous conceptions
+of life, and his judgments of his own life, were
+subverted, and fell in ruins around him. He had had
+his scheme of life, of success, of welfare: it had seemed
+to him a lofty and well-accredited one; and, with whatever
+misgivings he might occasionally be visited, on the
+whole he thought of himself as working it out hopefully
+and well. Now on every side were written only defeat,
+perplexity, and despair. But ere long the Son of God
+was revealed in his heart (Gal. i. 16) as the Bearer of
+righteousness and life to sinners&mdash;as the embodiment
+of Divine reconciliation and Divine hope. In this
+light a new conception of the world, a new scheme of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
+worthy and victorious life, opened itself to Paul&mdash;new
+and wonderful. But the reason of it, the hopefulness
+of it, the endless worth of it, lay chiefly here, that God
+in Christ had come into his life. The true relation of
+moral life to God, and the ends of human life as judged
+by that standard, were opening before him; but, if that
+had stood alone, it might only have completed the
+dismay of the paralysed and stricken man. What
+made all new was the vision of Christ victoriously
+treading the path in which we failed to go, and of Christ
+dying for the unrighteous. So God came into view,
+in His love, redeeming, reconciling, adopting, giving
+the Holy Spirit&mdash;and He came into view "in Christ
+Jesus." God was in Christ. The manifold relation of
+the living God to His creature man, began to be felt
+and verified in the manifold relation of Christ the Son
+of God, the Mediator and Saviour, to the broken man
+who had defied and hated Him. Christ henceforth
+became the ground, the meaning, and the aim of Paul's
+life. Life found its explanation, its worth, its loving
+imperative here. All things else that once had value
+in his eyes fell away. If not entirely dismissed, they
+were now to have only such place and use as Christ
+assigned to them, only such as could fit the genius of
+life in Christ. And all new prerogatives and attainments
+that might yet accrue to Paul, and might seem
+entitled to assume value in his eyes, could only have
+the same subordinate place:&mdash;Christ first, whose light
+and love, whose power to fix and fill and attract the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+soul, made all things new; Christ first, so that all the
+rest was comparatively nowhere; Christ first, so that
+all the rest, if at any time it came into competition with
+Him, if it offered itself to Paul as a source of individual
+confidence and boasting, is recognised as mere loss,
+and in that character resolutely cast away.</p>
+
+<p>This had become the living and ruling principle with
+Paul; not so, indeed, as to meet with no opposition,
+but so as to prevail and bear down opposition. Enthusiastically
+accepted and embraced, it was a principle
+that had to be maintained against temptation, against
+infirmity, against the strong tides of inward habit and
+outward custom. Here lay the trial of Paul's sincerity
+and of Christ's fidelity and power.</p>
+
+<p>That trial had run its course: it was now not far
+from its ending. The opening of heart and mind to
+Christ, and the surrender of all to Him, had not been
+the matter merely of one hour of deep impression and
+high feeling. It had continued, it was in full force still.
+Paul's value for Christ had borne the strain of time, and
+change, and temptation. Now he is Paul the aged,
+and also a prisoner of Christ Jesus. Has he abated
+from the force or cooled from the confidence of that
+mind of his concerning the Son of God? Far otherwise.
+With a "Yea doubtless" he tells us that he
+abides by his first conviction, and affirms his first
+decision. Good right he had to testify. This was not
+a matter of inward feeling only, however sincere and
+strong. He had been well proved. He <i>has</i> suffered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+the loss of all things; he has seen all his treasures&mdash;what
+are counted for such&mdash;swept away from him as
+the result of unflinching faith and service; and he
+counts all to be well lost for Christ.</p>
+
+<p>This passage sets before us the essential nature of
+Christianity&mdash;the essential life of a Christian, as
+revealed by the effect it has on his esteem for other
+things. Many of us, one supposes, cannot consider it
+without a sense of deep disgrace. The view here given
+awakens many thoughts. Some aspects of the subject
+must be dwelt upon for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>Those things that were gain, all things that can be
+gain, such are the objects Paul here reckons with. The
+believing mind concerning Christ carries with it a
+changed mind as regards all these.</p>
+
+<p>Apparently, in some deep sense, there arises for us
+in this world an inevitable competition between Christ
+on the one hand and <i>all things</i> on the other. If we
+should say <i>some</i> things, we might be in danger of
+sliding into a one-sided puritanism. But we escape
+that risk by saying, emphatically, <i>all</i> things. A decision
+upon this has to be reached, it has to be maintained,
+it is to be reaffirmed in particulars, in <i>all</i> particulars.
+For we must remember that the heart of Paul, in this
+burst of loyalty, is only echoing the call of Christ:
+"He that loveth father or mother more than Me, is
+not worthy of Me." Let us repeat it, this applies to
+<span class="smcap"><small>ALL</small></span> things. Because a certain way of feeling and thinking
+about these things, and especially about some of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+them, is present with us all, which asserts itself against
+this principle, therefore Christian life, however rich and
+full, however gracious and generous its character truly
+is, must include a negative at the base of it. "Let a
+man deny (or renounce) himself, and take up his cross."</p>
+
+<p>That life should be subjected to this severe competition
+seems hard: we may repine at it, and count it
+needless. We may ask, "Why should it be so? Why
+might not Christ take His place in our regard&mdash;His first,
+His ideal, His incomparable place&mdash;and, at the same
+time, all the other things take their place too, each in
+due order, as the true conception of human life may
+imply, and as the claims of loyalty to Christ may
+dictate? Why should not each take its place, more
+prominent or more subordinate, on a principle of harmony
+and happy order? Why should life be subjected
+to conflict and strain?" We may dream of this; but it
+will not be. We are such persons, and the world about
+us is so related to us now, that the "all things" are found
+continually claiming a place, and striving to make good
+for themselves a place in our heart and life, that will
+not consist with the regard due to Christ. They can
+be resisted only by a great inward decision, maintained
+and renewed all along our life, for Christ and against
+them. The nearest approach the believer makes in
+this life to that happy harmony of the whole being
+which was spoken of just now, is when his decision for
+Christ is so thorough and joyful, that the other elements&mdash;the
+"all things"&mdash;fall into their place, reduced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+into obedience by an energy that breaks resistance.
+Then too, in that place, they begin to reveal their
+proper nature as God's gifts, their real beauty and their
+real worth.</p>
+
+<p>But then, in the next place, though the decision
+cannot be escaped, yet, let us be assured, there is in
+this no real hardship. To be so called to this decision
+is the greatest blessedness of life. There is that in
+Christ for men, on account of which a man may gladly
+count all else but loss, may count it abundantly well
+worth his while to make this choice. Christ as binding
+us to God, Christ as the living source of reconciliation
+and sonship, Christ as the spring of a continually
+recruited power to love and serve and overcome,
+Christ as assuring to us the attainment of His own
+likeness, Christ as the Revealer of a love which is more
+and better than all its own best gifts&mdash;Christ discloses
+to us a world of good, for the sake of which it is well
+done to cast, if need be, all else away. It proves reasonable
+to reject the importunate claim which other things
+make to be reckoned indispensable. It proves natural,
+according to a new nature, to hold all else loosely, that
+we may hold this one interest fast.</p>
+
+<p>Yet this is not to be done or endeavoured by dismissing
+out of life all that gives character and movement
+to human existence. Not so: for indeed it is
+human life itself, with its complex of relations and
+activities, that is to receive the new inspiration. The
+decision is to be made by accepting the principle that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
+life, throughout, must be life in Christ, life for Christ;
+and by setting ourselves to learn from Him what that
+principle means. Of the "all things" many must continue
+with us; but if so, they must continue on a new
+principle: no longer as competitors, certainly not as
+allowed competitors, but as gifts and subjects of
+Christ, accepting law and destination from Him. Then,
+also, they may continue to carry with them many a
+pleasant experience of our Master's providential goodness.
+The effort to comply with Paul's example by
+mutilating human life of some of its great elements has
+often been a sincere and earnest effort. But it implies
+a distorted, and eventually a narrowed view of the
+Christian's calling. For, short of suicide, we can
+never deal with <span class="smcap"><small>ALL</small></span> things on that principle of simple
+amputation. Now the Apostle says <i>all things</i>: "I count
+all things to be loss."</p>
+
+<p>Let this, however, be noted, that loyalty requires
+something more than merely a new valuation of things
+in our minds, however sincere that valuation might be.
+It demands also actual sacrifice, when duty or when
+faithful service calls for it. Paul's Christianity was
+prompt to lay down, as circumstances in the course
+of following Christ might demand, everything, anything,
+even that which, in other circumstances, might
+retain its place in life, and be counted, in its own
+place, seemly and welcome. Not only shall a man
+<i>count</i> all to be loss for Christ: he shall actually, when
+called upon, suffer the loss of anything or of all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+things. No Christian life is without its occasions when
+this test has to be accepted. Most Christian lives
+include lessons in this department at the very outset.
+Some Christian lives are very full of them,&mdash;full, that is,
+of experiences in which contented submission to privation,
+and cheerful acceptance of trouble and danger,
+must approve the sincerity of the esteem for Christ our
+Saviour which is the common profession of us all. So it
+was with Paul. He had suffered the loss of all things.</p>
+
+<p>It is because the "all things," in their infinite variety
+of aspect and influence, tend so constantly to come into
+competition with Christ, to our great hurt and danger,
+that they must be so emphatically repudiated, and
+counted to be "loss." They are loss indeed, when
+they succeed in taking the place they claim, for then
+they impoverish our life of its true treasure. We may
+suffer this encroachment to take place stealthily&mdash;all
+but unconsciously. All the more fit it is that we
+should learn to assert loyalty to our Lord with a magnanimous
+vigilance. It becomes us to set His worth
+and claims emphatically, with a "yea doubtless,"
+against the poor substitutes for which we are tempted
+silently to exchange Him. If not, we are likely to
+come back to that sad stage which has been already
+brought before us (ch. ii.), the condition of those
+Christians who "all seek their own, not the things
+which are Jesus Christ's."</p>
+
+<p>Let us own, however, that men are trained in different
+lines of discipline to the same great result. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
+lesson broke into the life of Paul with astounding force
+at one great crisis. Some, on the contrary, begin
+their training in little instances of early life, and under
+influences working too gently to be afterwards recalled.
+Gradually they grow into a clearer perception of the
+gifts Christ offers and of the claims He makes; and
+each step of decision paves the way to new attainments.
+The experience of all Christians, however
+diversified their training may be, is harmonised in the
+fidelity of each to the light he has, and of all to the
+Lord who calls them all to follow Him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>THE KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>"Yea verily, and I count all things to be loss for the excellency
+of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I suffered
+the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may gain
+Christ, and be found in Him, not having a righteousness of mine own,
+even that which is of the law, but that which is through faith in
+Christ, the righteousness which is of [from] God by [upon] faith:
+that I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection, and the
+fellowship of His sufferings, becoming conformed unto His death;
+if by any means I may attain unto the resurrection from the dead."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span>
+iii. 8-11 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Alexander Knox, in a letter to a friend,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
+makes the following remark: "Religion contains
+two sets of truths, which I may venture to
+denominate <i>ultimate</i> and <i>mediatory</i>: the former refer
+to God as an original and end; the latter to the Word
+made flesh, the suffering, dying, rising, ruling Saviour;
+the way, the truth, the life. Now I conceive these two
+views have almost ever been varying, in the minds even
+of the sincerely pious, with respect to comparative consequence;
+and, while some have so regarded the
+ultimate as in some degree to neglect the mediatory,
+others have so fixed their view on the mediatory as
+greatly and hurtfully to lose sight of the ultimate."
+This writer refers to Tillotson on one side, and Zinzendorf
+on the other, as instances of these extremes; and
+indicates that perhaps his own leaning might be a little
+too much in the former direction.</p>
+
+<p>It can hardly be doubted that there is something in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+this suggestion. In the guidance and training of the
+soul some aim mainly at right dispositions towards
+God and His will, without much dwelling on what
+Knox calls mediatory truths; because they assume that
+the latter exist only with a view to the former; and if
+the end has been brought into view and is coming to
+be attained, there is no special need of dwelling on the
+means. Others aim mainly at receiving the right impressions
+about Christ dying and rising, and at complying
+with the <i>way</i> of salvation as it is set forth to us in
+Christ; because they are persuaded that here the secret
+lies of all deliverance and progress, and that the end
+cannot otherwise be reached. And Mr. Knox suggests,
+with truth most likely, that such persons have often
+so occupied themselves with what may be called the
+means of salvation, that they lose sight in a great
+degree of the end to which all tends&mdash;life in God, life
+in fellowship with His loving goodness and His holy
+will.</p>
+
+<p>What application these views may have to divergences
+of our own day it would take too long to consider. Mr.
+Knox's remark has been referred to here in order to throw
+light on the mental attitude of Paul. Paul will hardly
+be accused of losing sight of the ultimate truths; but
+certainly he delights to view them through the mediatory
+truths; and he strives to reach the ultimate victory,
+through the most realising application to his heart and
+life of what those mediatory truths embody and disclose.
+Through the mediatory truths the ultimate ones reveal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+themselves to him with a wealth and an intensity otherwise
+unattainable. And the eternal life comes into
+experience for him as he takes into his soul the full
+effect of the provision which God has made, in Christ,
+to bestow eternal life upon him. That order of things
+which is mediatory is not regarded by Paul only as a
+fitting introduction, on God's part, to His ultimate procedure;
+it is also in the same degree fitted to become
+for the individual man the medium of vision, of assurance,
+of participation. In other words, Paul finds God
+and makes way into goodness through Christ; and not
+through Christ merely as an embodied ideal, but through
+union to Christ Divine and human, Christ living, dying,
+rising, redeeming, justifying, sanctifying, glorifying. He
+never pauses in any of these, so as to fail in looking
+onward to God, the living God. But neither does he
+pass on to that goal so as to disregard the way unto the
+Father. If he could have foreseen the method of those
+who are striving in our day to bring men to the blessedness
+which Christianity holds out by dwelling exclusively
+on Christian ethics, he might have sympathised with their
+ethical intensity; but he would surely have wondered
+that they failed to find in Christianity more pregnant
+springs of motive and of power. Perhaps he would
+even be moved to say, "O foolish Galatians (or Corinthians),
+who hath bewitched you?" Not less, it must
+also be said, might he wonder at many a gospel preacher,
+who rehearses the "way of salvation" until the
+machinery clanks and groans, unable apparently to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+divine&mdash;unable, at least, to bring out&mdash;that glory of
+God in it, that wonderful presence and influence of
+infinite holiness, goodness, and pity, which make the
+gospel the power of God.</p>
+
+<p>We, meanwhile, shall do well to imitate the charity
+of Mr. Knox, who cordially owned the Christian piety
+of those who might go too far either way. Few of us,
+indeed, can dispense with the charity that is tender to
+partial and imperfect views. But if we are to understand
+Paul, we must find our way into some sympathy
+with him here; not only as he is seen on this line to
+have attained so far in saintship, but as he is seen to be
+sure that this way lay much more&mdash;that on this line
+his road lay to the glory that should be revealed. He
+could contemplate the practice and growth of piety in
+many lights; yet it came home to him most evidently
+as growth in the knowledge and in the appropriation of
+Jesus Christ.</p>
+
+<p>He has cast away for the sake of Christ the treasures
+so much valued by the Jews, and many a treasure
+more. But what he would chiefly impress on the
+minds of those to whom he writes is not so much the
+amount of what he has cast away, but rather the worth of
+that which he has found, and more and more is finding.
+The mass of things set down for loss is a mere stepping-stone
+to this central theme. But though he tells us what
+he thought and felt about it, most of us learn but slowly
+how much it meant for him. When we sit down beside
+the Apostle to learn his lesson, we become conscious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+that he is seeing what we cannot descry; he is sensitive
+to Christ through spiritual senses which in us
+are torpid and undeveloped. Christ holds him all
+through. It is faith, and love, and gratitude; it is
+self-devotion, and obedience, and wonder, and worship;
+and, through all, the conviction glows that Christ is
+his, that in Christ all things have changed for him.
+"In Christ we have redemption through His blood, the
+forgiveness of sin. He hath made me accepted in the
+Beloved. I live; yet not I, but Christ. In Christ, old
+things have passed away, all things are made new.
+Christ is made of God unto us wisdom, righteousness,
+sanctification, and redemption. Who shall separate us
+from the love of Christ?" The intense heat of this
+conception of Christ, it must once more be said, gives
+its distinctive character to the religious life of Paul.
+May we not say that the lamentable distinction of a
+great deal of current Christianity is the coldness of
+men's thoughts about their Saviour? The views of
+many may be characterised as "correct, but cold."
+Only what can be more incorrect, what can more
+effectually deny and controvert the main things to be
+asserted, than coldness towards our Saviour, and cold
+thoughts of His benefits? This we should hold to be
+unpardonable. We never should forgive it to ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>"For the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus."
+Christ had come into the life of Paul as a wonderful
+knowledge. Becoming thus known to him, He had transformed
+the world in which Paul lived, and had made him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+conscious of a new order of existence, so that old things
+passed away and all became new. The phrase employed
+combines two ideas. In the first place, Paul felt Christ
+appealing to him as to a thinking, knowing nature.
+Various influences were reaching him from Christ which
+bore on heart, will, conscience: but they all came primarily
+as a revelation; they came as light. "God, who
+commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath
+shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge
+of the glory of God in the face of Christ Jesus." In
+the next place, this discovery came with a certain
+assuredness. It was felt to be not a dream, not a fair
+imagination only, not a speculation, but a knowledge.
+Here Paul felt himself face to face with the real&mdash;indeed,
+with fundamental reality. In this character,
+as luminous knowledge, the revelation of Christ challenged
+his decision, it demanded his appreciation and
+adherence. For since Christ claims so fundamental a
+place in the moral world, since He claims so intimate
+and fruitful a relation to the whole state and prospects
+of the believing man, acquaintance with Him (at least,
+if it be acquaintance in Paul's style) cannot pause at
+the stage of contemplation: it passes into appropriation
+and surrender. Christ is known as dealing with
+us, and must be dealt with by us. So this knowledge
+becomes, at the same time, experience.</p>
+
+<p>Hence, while in ver. 8 the Apostle speaks of himself
+as encountering all earthly loss that he may <i>know</i>
+Christ, in ver. 9 it is that he may <i>gain</i> Christ and may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+be <i>found in Him</i>. Christ so came into the field of
+his knowledge as to become the treasure of his life,
+replacing those things which heretofore had been gain,
+and which now figured as loss. When Paul turned
+from all else to know Christ, he turned, at the same
+time, to have Christ, "gaining Him," and to be Christ's,
+"found in Him."</p>
+
+<p>Christ, in fact, comes to us with commandments,
+"words" (John xiv. 23), which are to be kept and done.
+He comes to us, also, with promises, the fulfilment of
+which, in our own case, is a most practical business.
+Some of these promises concern the world to come; but
+others apply to the present; and these, which lie next us,
+either are neglected, or are embraced and put to proof,
+every day of our lives. Besides all this, Christ comes to
+us to fix and fill our minds, and to endear Himself to us,
+in virtue simply of what He is. So viewed, He is to be
+owned as our best Friend, and indeed henceforth, with
+reverence be it said, by far our nearest Relation. This
+is to be, or else it is not to be. Each day asks the
+question, Which? Paul's Christianity was the answer
+to that question. How his answer rings in all our
+ears! Our Christianity also is making its reply.</p>
+
+<p>Both as to knowledge and as to experience the type
+was fixed from the first: there could be no doubt about
+either. But both were to deepen and widen as life
+went on. Christ was apprehended at first as a wonderful
+Whole of good; but so that indefinite fields of
+progress were continually to open up. In the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+first days a knowledge dawned, for the sake of which
+all else was counted loss; yet a world of truths
+remained to know, as well as of good to experience, for
+the sake of which also all else should continue to be
+counted but loss. This, in fact, is only one way of saying
+that Christ and His salvation <i>were</i> realities, divinely full
+and worthy. Being real, the full acquaintance with all
+they mean for men can only arise in a historical way.
+Paul therefore emphasises this, that real Christianity,
+the right kind of Christianity, just because it has found
+a treasure, is set on going on to find that same
+treasure still further and still more (comp. ch. i. 9). If
+the treasure is real and the man is in earnest, that will
+be so. Such had been the course of his own Christian
+life from the first. Now, though many years have
+disciplined him, though changing experiences have
+given him new points of view, still, no less than at the
+first, his rejoicing in the present goes hand in hand
+with reaching onward to the future. The one, in fact,
+is the reason of the other. Both are rational, or
+neither. He <i>has</i> counted all to be loss for the excellency
+of the knowledge which has broken upon his
+soul: and still he presses on, that he <i>may</i> know; for
+the same strong attraction continues and grows.</p>
+
+<p>Before passing to details, something more should
+perhaps be said of this magnificent generality, "the
+knowledge of Christ."</p>
+
+<p>Christ is first of all known historically; so He is
+presented to us in the Gospels. His story is part of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+the history of our race. He passes through youth to
+manhood. We see Him living, acting, enduring; and
+we hear Him teaching&mdash;wonderful words proceed from
+His mouth. We contemplate Him in His humiliation,
+under the limits to which He submitted that He might
+share our state and bear our burdens. In the pathways
+of that Jewish life He discloses a perfect goodness
+and a perfect dignity. We see especially that
+He cherishes a purpose of goodwill to men which He
+bears to them from the Father. It overflows in all His
+words and works, and in the prosecution of it He moves
+on to lay down His life for us. This is the beginning
+of the knowledge of the Only Begotten of the Father,
+full of grace and truth. Much may as yet be undefined;
+many questions may crowd on us that receive as
+yet no precise answer; nay, much may seem to us as
+yet to be strangely entangled in the particulars of an
+individual and of a provincial existence. But this
+presentation of Christ can never be dispensed with or
+superseded; and, for its essential purpose, it never can
+be surpassed. For this is the Life. "The Life was
+manifested, and we have seen it, and show unto you
+that Eternal Life, which was with the Father, and was
+manifested unto us."</p>
+
+<p>This vision, which the Gospels set before us, was
+also before the mind of Paul. And words of our Lord,
+delivered in His earthly ministry, and preserved by
+those who heard Him, were treasured by the Apostle
+of the Gentiles, and reproduced to guide the Churches<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+as need required. Yet there is a sense in which we
+may say that it is not exactly the Christ of the Gospels
+who comes before us in the Pauline writings. The
+Christ of Paul is the Lord who met him by the way.
+It is Christ dead, risen, and ascended; it is Christ
+with the reason and the result of His finished work
+made plain, and with the relation unveiled which He
+sustains to men who live by Him; it is Christ with
+the significance of His wonderful history for believers
+shining out from Him&mdash;Christ <i>vestitus Evangelio</i>.
+Now He has gone up above all worlds. No longer
+is He hedged about by necessities of mortal life; no
+longer tied by earthly bonds to some places and some
+men and one nation. He is glorified; all fulness
+dwells in Him; all God's purposes are seen to centre
+in Him. And then, by His death and resurrection,
+the tie between Him and His people is unveiled to
+faith, as it could not be before. They are one with Him&mdash;in
+Him redeemed, endowed, triumphant, glorified.
+Every Christian privilege and attainment, every grace,
+every virtue and good gift, takes on a celestial
+character, as it is seen to be an element in our fellowship
+with Christ. The state of Christians is seen
+reflected in their Head. And, in turn, Christ is seen,
+as it were, through the medium of the relation which
+He sustains to them, and of the wealth of good arising
+to them by it. It is Christ as He is to His people,
+Christ as He is set in the centre of the world of good
+that radiates to them all, whom Paul wonders at and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+worships. And he finds all this to be rooted in our
+Lord's death upon the cross, which was the crisis of
+the whole redemption. All that follows took character
+and efficacy from that death.</p>
+
+<p>A special insight into all this was included in the
+wisdom given to Paul. And yet this view of things
+does not turn out to be something diverse or alien
+from what the Gospels set before us. Rather it is
+the gospel story revealing its native significance and
+virtue along many lines which were not so distinct
+before.</p>
+
+<p>But now all this, in turn, leads us to the third aspect
+of the case. What Christ is and what He does may
+be described; but there is a knowledge of it which is
+imparted practically, in the progressive history of the
+believer. According to the Christian teaching, we
+enter, as Christians, on a new relation; and in that
+relation a certain blessed well-being is appointed to
+us. This well-being is itself an unfolding or disclosure
+of Christ. Now this well-being comes home to us
+and is verified in the course of a progressive human
+experience. Life must become our school to teach us
+what it all means. Life sets us at the point of view
+now for one lesson, now for another. Life moves and
+changes, and brings its experiences; its problems, its
+conflicts, its anxieties, its fears, its temptations; its
+need of pity, pardon, strengthening; its experience of
+weakness, defeat, and disgrace; its opportunities of
+service, self-denial, fidelity, victory. For all these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+occasions Christ has a meaning and a virtue, which,
+in those occasions, is to become personal to ourselves.
+This makes knowledge indeed. This becomes the vivid
+commentary upon the historical and the doctrinal instruction.
+Life, <i>taken in Christ's way</i>, along with prayer
+and thought, manifests Christ's meaning, and makes it
+real to us, as nothing else can. It furnishes the stepping-stones
+for passing onward, in the knowledge of
+Christ.</p>
+
+<p>This also was Paul's condition, though he was an
+inspired man. He too was fain to improve his knowledge
+in this school. And when we take all three
+aspects together, we shall see how truly, for Paul and
+for us, the knowledge of Christ is, on the one hand, so
+excellent from the first, that it justifies the great decision
+to which it calls us; and, on the other hand,
+how it creates a longing for further insight and fresh
+attainment. The latter we see in the Apostle as
+plainly as the former. From the first, he knew in
+whom he believed, and was persuaded that for His
+sake all else was to be resigned. Yet to the end he
+felt the unsatisfied desire to know more, to gain more;
+and his heart, if we may apply here the Psalmist's
+words, was breaking for this longing which it had.</p>
+
+<p>It was remarked above that the "excellency of the
+knowledge of Christ" in ver. 8 corresponds in the
+Apostle's thought to the "gaining" of Christ and being
+"found in Him" of ver. 9; and this may be the best place
+to say a word on these two phrases. To gain Christ,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
+points to a receiving Christ as one's own; and the
+Apostle uses the phrase so as to imply that this finding
+of Christ, as One who is gained or won, was still going
+on; it was progressive. Clearly also the alternative is
+implied, that what is not gained is lost. The question
+in the Apostle's life, about which he was so decided,
+was about no less than losing or gaining Christ. The
+phrase "be found" points to the verification of Paul's
+relation to Christ in his history and in its results. That
+relation is contemplated as something that <i>proves</i> true.
+It turns out to be <i>so</i>. We shall best understand the
+phrase as referring, not to some one future date at
+which he should be so found, but rather to present and
+future alike. As men, or angels, or God, or Christ
+might view him, or as he might take account of his own
+state, this was what he would have <i>found</i> in regard
+to himself. Every way he would be found in Christ.
+The form of expression, however, is specially appropriate
+here, because it fits so well into the doctrine
+of righteousness through Christ, which the Apostle is
+about to emphasise. A similar remark applies to the
+expression "in Christ" so frequently occurring in the
+Pauline writings. This is usually explained by saying
+that the Apostle sets before us Christ as the sphere of
+his spiritual being&mdash;in whom he lived and moved&mdash;never
+out of relation to Him, and not so related to any
+other. Such explanations are true and good: only we
+may say that the pregnant strength of the expression
+seems to be weakened even by the best explanations.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+The relation in view is too wonderful ever to be
+adequately described. The union between Christ and
+His Church, between Christ and the believing man, is
+a mystery; and, like all objects of faith, it is dimly
+apprehended by us for the present. But the certainty
+of it, and its wonderfulness, we should never allow
+ourselves to overlook. Christ is able to bring men into
+fellowship with Himself, to assume responsibility for
+them, to represent their interests and to care for their
+good; and men may receive Christ into their lives; with
+a completeness on both sides which no explanations can
+adequately represent. The identification with Christ
+which the phrase suggests naturally fits what follows.</p>
+
+<p>Now the Apostle goes more into detail. He tells us
+what were for him the main articles of this good state
+of being "found in Christ." He indicates, with a
+certain eager gratitude, the main lines along which the
+benefits of that state had come into experience, and
+along which he was pressing on to know the fulness of
+Christ. First, in Christ he has and shall have not his
+own righteousness, which is that of the law, but that
+which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness
+which is of God by faith. Then, secondly, he has in
+hand a practical knowledge of Christ, culminating in the
+complete deliverance of the resurrection. It includes
+two aspects or elements; Christ known in the power
+of His resurrection, and Christ known in the fellowship
+of His sufferings.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing then which rises distinctly into view<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
+in connection with being found in Christ is the possession
+of the new righteousness. We have seen already
+that value for righteousness such as is of law, and hope
+of achieving it, had been associated with Paul's old
+days of Jewish zeal. He then stood on the law, and
+gloried in the law. But that had passed away when
+he learned to count all things loss for the excellency
+of the knowledge of Christ. Ever after, the contrast
+between the two ways of seeking "righteousness"
+continued to be fundamental in Paul's Christian
+thinking.</p>
+
+<p>The law here in view was the whole revealed will
+of God touching man's behaviour, coming as a will of
+authority, requiring obedience. The discussion in the
+earlier chapters of the Epistle to the Romans makes this
+plain. And Paul's way of keeping the law, in those old
+days, though it was necessarily too external, had not
+been so merely external as is sometimes supposed. His
+obedience had been zealous and resolute, with as much
+heart and meaning as he could put into it. But law-keeping
+for righteousness had been the principle of it.
+The Jew was placed under a law; obedience to that law
+should be his pathway to a destiny of incomparable
+privilege and gladness. That was the theory. So
+believing, Paul had given himself with zeal to the work,
+"living in all good conscience before God." A great
+change had now befallen him; but that could not
+imply on his part a renunciation of God's law. The
+law, better understood indeed, and far more inwardly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+apprehended, still retained for Paul its great outlines,
+and was reverenced as Divine. It was holy and just
+and good. It was felt still to shed its steadfast light
+on human duty, awakening and illuminating the conscience;
+and therefore it revealed most authentically
+the moral situation, with its elements of failure, and
+danger, and need. The law stood fast. But the
+scheme of life which stood in keeping the law <i>for
+righteousness</i> had passed away for Paul, vanishing in
+the light of a new and better day.</p>
+
+<p>Here, however, we must ask what the Apostle means
+when he speaks of the righteousness which is by the
+faith of Jesus Christ, the righteousness which is of
+God unto or upon faith. Great disputes have arisen
+over this question. We must endeavour to find the
+Apostle's main meaning, without involving ourselves
+too much in the mazes of technical debate.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF FAITH.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>"Not having a righteousness of mine own, even that which is of
+the law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness
+which is of [from] God by [upon] faith."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> iii. 9 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF FAITH.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>Righteousness is a term which is applied in
+different ways. Often it denotes excellence of
+personal character. So used, it suggests the idea of a
+life whose manifestations agree with the standard by
+which lives are tried. Sometimes it denotes rectitude
+or justice, as distinguished from benevolence. Sometimes
+a claim to be approved, or judicially vindicated,
+is more immediately in view when righteousness is
+asserted. Paul himself freely uses the word in different
+applications, the sense, in each passage, being determined
+by the context. Here we have the righteousness
+of faith, as distinguished from the righteousness
+of works, or righteousness by the law. The passage
+belongs to a large class in which righteousness is
+spoken of as accruing, through Christ, to those who are
+unrighteous, or whose own righteousness has proved
+unreliable. Let us try to fix the thought which the
+Apostle designed to inculcate in such passages.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>The Apostle, then, conceives of the righteousness,
+of which he has so much to say, as God's: it is the
+"righteousness of God" (Rom. i. 17, iii. 22, x. 3). Yet
+it is not God's in the sense of being an attribute of His
+own Divine nature: for (in the passage before us) it is
+called "the righteousness <i>from</i> God"; it arises for us
+by our faith in Jesus Christ; and so (2 Cor. v. 21)
+"we are made the righteousness of God in Christ."
+It is, therefore, something that is from God to us believing,
+a "gift of righteousness" (Rom. v. 17). At the
+same time it is not, on the other hand, an attribute
+or quality of the human mind, whether natural or imparted;
+for it is something "revealed" (Rom. i. 17).
+Also, it is opposed to the wrath of God. Now, that
+wrath is indeed an element of our state as sinners, but
+not a feature of our character. Further, it could not be
+said of any internal character of our own, that we are
+to be "obedient," or are to "submit" to it (Rom. x. 3).</p>
+
+<p>In the latter part of Romans v. we have set before us
+two counter conceptions: the one of sin and condemnation,
+deriving from Adam, antecedent to the personal
+action and offence of those who descend from him; the
+other of free gift unto justification, following from the
+righteousness or obedience of Christ, this being a gift of
+grace abounding unto many. In either case the Apostle
+sees arising from one a relation which pertains to
+many, and which brings forth its results to them: on
+the one hand, sin and death; on the other, righteousness
+and life. In both cases a common relation is recognised,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+under which individuals are found existing; and
+in either case it traces up to the one&mdash;to Adam or to
+Christ. Whatever difficulties may be felt to attach
+to this passage, the Apostle's doctrine of the righteousness
+of faith must be understood so as to agree with
+the way of thinking which the passage expresses.</p>
+
+<p>It appears, then, that the righteousness which is
+from God, unto or upon faith, expresses a relation
+between God and believers that is the proper basis for
+fellowship with God, confiding on their part, communicative
+of the best blessings on His. It is analogous
+to the relation conceived to arise when a perfectly
+righteous man is approved and set apart to weal; and
+like that it stands in contrast with the relation due to
+sin as it incurs wrath. It follows that this righteousness,
+if it exists or becomes available for those who
+have sinned, includes the forgiveness of sins. But it
+includes more than forgiveness, in so far as it is not
+merely negative. It is the concession to us of a standing
+which is a positive basis for experiences, pointing
+towards eternal life, and rising into it.</p>
+
+<p>This relation to Himself God has founded for us
+sinful men in Christ, and specially in His atonement.
+It is part of what is divinely held out to us, as life or
+well-being in Christ. When we do awaken to it, our
+whole religious attitude towards God takes character
+from it, and is to be ordered accordingly. This way of
+being related to God is called God's righteousness, or
+righteousness "from God," because it is not set up by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
+us, but by God's grace, through the redeeming work of
+Christ ("being justified freely by His grace, through
+the redemption that is in Christ Jesus"&mdash;-Rom. iii. 24).
+On the other hand, it is righteousness "of faith," or
+"through faith of Christ," because faith subjects itself to
+the order of grace, revealed and made effectual in Christ,
+and therein finds the reconciliation. For the believing
+man the relation becomes effectual and operative. He
+is "accepted in the Beloved." He is "constituted
+righteous" (Rom. v. 19), and his intercourse with his
+Heavenly Father regulates itself accordingly, he being
+justified "from&mdash;or upon&mdash;his faith." The harmony
+with God on which he has entered becomes, in some
+degree, matter of consciousness for himself (Rom. v. 1).
+With this connection of things in view, the Apostle
+teaches that righteousness is imputed, or reckoned, to
+him who believes in Jesus (Rom. iv. 24).</p>
+
+<p>Whatever opinion we may choose to entertain of this
+scheme, it ought not to be disputed that this, in general,
+is Paul's conception of the matter.</p>
+
+<p>However, let us emphatically note that it is as "in
+Christ," "found in Him," the Apostle possesses this
+form of well-being. If there be such a thing as a real
+union between the Saviour and Paul, then in the
+Saviour and with the Saviour Paul is thus righteous.
+The faith to which this righteousness arises is faith
+that unites to Christ, and not any other kind of faith.
+And so, if it be possible for Paul to fall from Christ,
+then also he must fall from the righteousness of faith.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+In Christ a relation to God appears, made good, maintained,
+and verified, in which He gathers to Himself
+and comprehends all true believers: "for which cause
+He is not ashamed to call them brethren." Hence also
+this Christian benefit, though it is distinguishable, is
+not separated radically from the other benefits. It is
+not possible to take the one and leave the rest; for
+Christ is not divided. But there is an order in His
+gifts; and, for Paul, this gift is primary. God is ours
+in Christ; therefore religion, true religion, may begin
+and go on.</p>
+
+<p>It is of weight with Paul that this righteousness of
+faith, arising for him who is "found" in Christ, is
+founded for us in the atonement. That is to say, the
+new relation is not represented as a relation created for
+us by a mere Divine fiat that it shall be so. It is
+represented as arising for sinful men out of the redemption
+of Christ; which redemption is represented
+as in its own nature fitted to fructify into this result,
+as well as into other fruits which are due to it.
+Christ's atonement is the way which grace has taken
+to bring in the righteousness of faith. In particular,
+we are made righteous (in this sense) through Christ,
+in a manner corresponding to that in which He was
+made sin for us (2 Cor. v. 21). Hence the blood, the
+sacrifice, the obedience of Christ are referred to on all
+occasions, in connection with the righteousness of faith,
+as explicative causes to which this is to be traced.
+The relation is first of all a relation completely grounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+and made good in Christ; and then we are participant
+in it with Him, in virtue of our faith in Him.</p>
+
+<p>Clearly the Apostle thinks of this righteousness of
+faith as something very wonderful. It is for him
+fundamental. It is the first article in which he celebrates
+the worth of the knowledge of Christ; no doubt,
+because he felt it transforming his whole moral and
+spiritual experience; and, in particular, because it contrasted
+so vividly with the nugatory righteousness of
+earlier days.</p>
+
+<p>In earlier days Paul sought righteousness&mdash;an approved
+and accepted standing with God&mdash;by the works
+of the law. That project failed when the great discovery
+on the road to Damascus showed him to himself
+as all astray; in particular, when the law itself, coming
+home to him in the fulness of its meaning, both revealed
+to him the beggarliness of his own performance,
+and, at the same time, stung into appalling activity
+ungodly elements within him. Then he saw before
+him the law rising from its deep foundations in eternal
+strength and majesty, imperative, unalterable, inexorable;
+and over against it his own works lay withered
+and unclean. But another vision came. He saw
+the Son of God in His life, death, and resurrection.
+Mere love and pity were the inspiration of His coming:
+obedience and sacrifice were the form of it. So in that
+great vision one element or aspect that rose into view
+was righteousness,&mdash;righteousness grounded as deep
+as the law itself, as magnificent in its great proportions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
+as little subject to change or decay, radiant with
+surpassing glory. As he saw, and bowed, an trusted,
+he became conscious of a new access and nearness to
+God Himself; he passed into the fellowship of God's
+dear Son; he found acceptance in the Beloved. Here
+was the answer to that woful problem of the law:
+righteousness in Christ for a world of sinners, coming
+to them as a free gift to faith. Here was the strong
+foundation on which faith found itself set to learn its
+lessons, and perform its service, and fight its battles.
+In Christ he received the reconciliation&mdash;merciful, and
+also righteous. As Paul thought of the ground on
+which he once had stood, and of the standing granted
+to him now, "in Him,"&mdash;it was with a "yea doubtless"
+he declared that he counted all to be loss for the gain
+of Christ, in whom he was found, not having his own
+righteousness, which was of the law, but that which is
+by the faith of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Righteousness of faith, as the Apostle conceives it,
+is to be distinguished from personal righteousness, or
+goodness, as an attribute of human character, but yet
+is most closely connected with it. Righteousness of
+faith opened what seemed to Paul the prosperous way
+into righteousness of daily living. In the very hour
+when he first believed for righteousness, he felt himself
+entering a kingdom of light, and love, and power, in
+which all things were possible; and ever after the same
+order of experience verified itself for him afresh. The
+righteousness of faith being the relation in which,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
+through Christ, he found himself standing to God, fixed
+at the same time his relation to all Christian benefits,
+including, as a principal element, conformity to the
+likeness of Christ. To the man in Christ all these
+benefits pertained; in Christ he could claim them all:
+in Christ he found himself before doors that opened
+of their own accord to let him in; in Christ it proved
+to be a fit thing, grounded deep in the congruities
+of God's administration, that God should be for him;
+therefore, also, the pathway of holiness lay open before
+him. The fulness of blessing had not yet come into
+possession and experience. But in the righteousness
+of faith he apprehended all blessings as stretching out
+their hands to him, because through Christ they ought to
+be his. That he should find himself in a relation to God
+so simple and so satisfying was wonderful; all the more,
+when it was contrasted with the condemnation belonging
+to him as a sinner. This was the righteousness
+from God to faith, in the strength of which he could
+call all things his own.</p>
+
+<p>If Paul had succeeded in the enterprise of his earlier
+days, when he sought righteousness by the law, he
+would, as he hoped, have found acceptance in the end;
+and various blessings would have followed. He would
+have emerged from his task a man stamped as righteous,
+and fit to be treated accordingly. That would
+have been the end. But now, in reference to his present
+enterprise, he has found, being in Christ, acceptance at
+the beginning. So often as faith lifts him into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+heavenly places where Christ is, he finds all things to
+be his; not because he has achieved righteousness, but
+because Christ has died and risen, and because God
+justifies him who believes in Jesus. The platform he
+hoped to reach by the efforts of a lifetime is already
+under his feet. Paul faces each arduous step in his
+new enterprise, strong in the conviction that his standing
+before God is rooted, not in his doings nor in his
+feelings, but in his Saviour in whom he holds the
+righteousness of faith.</p>
+
+<p>We need not conceal from ourselves, however, that
+many find the doctrine thus ascribed to Paul unacceptable.
+If they do not count it positively misleading,
+as some do, they yet regard it as unprofitable
+theory.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from objections drawn from theology or
+morals or texts, they argue, for example, that it is all
+in the air, away from real experience. Christian
+religion is a practical matter,&mdash;a question of improved
+dispositions, improved habits, and improved prospects.
+If, through Christ, such things as these arise for us,
+if, through Him, influences reach us that tend to such
+results, then those are the practical specimens which
+interpret to us a Saviour's kindness. To know Christ
+in these must be the true knowledge of Him. To
+carry us away beforehand into the region of a supposed
+relation to God is a precarious, and may be a delusive
+business; it is, at any rate, a dogmatic nicety rather
+than a vital element in religion. If we are to experience<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
+God's mercy or Christ's kindness in any practical form,
+then that is to be so; and it is shorter to say so at
+once. Let us fix on that, without interposing any
+doctrine of "righteousness by faith."</p>
+
+<p>But it must be said, in reply, that to speak of this
+righteousness of faith as unpractical, is a strange mistake.
+All religion aims at fellowship with God; and
+in Christian religion that fellowship becomes real and
+authentic in Christ. Through all exercises and attainments
+of Christian religion that are genuine, this thread
+goes. We have access to God, and we abide in the
+Father and the Son. How imperfectly this takes place
+on our part need not be said. The imperfection on our
+part is, indeed, only exceeded by the condescension
+on His. Yet our faith is that this is real, otherwise
+Christianity would not be for us the opening of an
+eternal blessedness. How can it be judged unpractical,
+if God reveals to men, first, that in the room of those
+confused and melancholy relations to God which arise
+for us out of our own past history, He has constituted
+for us a relation, apprehensible by faith, in which we
+find ourselves pardoned, accepted, commended to God
+to be made partakers of life eternal; and, secondly,
+that this is grounded in the service and sacrifice of His
+Son, sent forth to save us; so that we enter this
+relation and hold it, not independently, but in fellowship
+with the Son of God, His sonship becoming the
+model of ours? Is this unpractical? Is it unpractical
+to be conscious of such a relation between God and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+men, for ever embodied and made accessible in His
+Son our Saviour? Is it unpractical to apprehend God
+in the attitude towards us which is due to such a
+relation, and to take, ourselves, the attitude of gratitude
+and penitence and trust which on our side corresponds
+to it? It cannot be unpractical. It may be pernicious,
+if it takes the form of a cold, presumptuous arrogance,
+or of a self-satisfied Pharisaism; that is to say, if God
+be not in it. But if God in Christ is reaching us along
+those lines, or if we, alive to His eternal character, and
+conscious of our guilt and need, are reaching out to
+real relations and real fellowship with Him through
+His Son our Lord, then it cannot be unpractical. And,
+indeed, however men may differ as to theological
+explanations, some sense of the worth of the thing
+intended has reached the hearts of all true Christians.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the state of the case will more clearly appear
+if we fix attention on one Christian benefit. Let us
+take the forgiveness of sins.</p>
+
+<p>Forgiveness of sins is the primary grace, and it sets
+the type of the grace to which we owe all benefits.
+Forgiveness, as it were, leads in all other blessings
+by the hand; or, each blessing as it advances into a
+Christian life comes with a fresh gift of forgiveness in
+the heart of it. If this is so, then the tendency, which
+is observable in various quarters, to pass forgiveness
+by, as a matter of course, and to hurry on to what
+are reckoned more substantial, or more experimental
+benefits, must be attended with loss. It must, so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
+far, damage our conceptions of the manner in which
+it befits God to bestow blessings on sinful men, and
+also our conception of the spirit in which we should
+receive them.</p>
+
+<p>But then, in the next place, the forgiveness of sins
+itself is referred to the mediation of Christ, and the
+work accomplished in that mediation, as its known
+basis. Forgiveness of sins was to arise out of an
+order of grace, embodied in history&mdash;namely, in the
+history of the Incarnate Son of God; and we are not
+entitled to take for granted it could fitly arise otherwise.
+Apparently Christ Himself came into the inheritance
+which He holds for us, by an order of things which it
+was imperative on Him to regard, and by a history
+which He must fulfil. And we, believing in Him, find,
+in consequence, a new place and standing; we receive
+a "gift of righteousness" which contains the forgiveness
+of sins; we obtain, through Christ, a mode of
+access to God, of which forgiveness is a feature. So
+the place of forgiveness in the Divine administration
+is vindicated and safe-guarded; and while forgiveness
+comes to us as a gift of the Father's compassionate
+heart, it is found to be true also that "Christ washed
+us from our sins in His own blood." "God sent His
+Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem
+them that were under the law." "God hath sent Him
+forth for a propitiation, through faith in His blood, to
+declare His righteousness for the remission of sins that
+are past, ... that He might be just, and the Justifier<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+of him that believeth in Jesus." Our forgiveness is a
+free gift of God's goodness; yet also, it is our participation
+with Christ, sent to us from the Father, in a
+wonderful relation which He has come to hold to sin
+and to righteousness. If we overlook this, we conceal
+from ourselves great aspects of the work undertaken
+for us by the love of God.</p>
+
+<p>But if forgiveness, which is itself a meeting with
+God in peace, refers itself to the mediation of Christ as
+preparing for us a blessed relation to God&mdash;a righteousness
+of faith&mdash;how should our whole fellowship with
+God, in grace, fail to presuppose the same foundation?</p>
+
+<p>But argument upon this topic might lead us far.
+Let us close the chapter in another vein.</p>
+
+<p>All religion, worth recognising in that character,
+implies earnestness, serious aspiration and endeavour.
+It supposes human life to place itself under the influence
+of an order of motives that is to be comprehensive
+and commanding. And this is true also of Christian
+religion. But Christian religion, as we know, does
+not begin with a consciousness of ability to achieve
+success; it is not grounded in an expectation that by
+strenuous or apt effort of ours, we may achieve the
+aims and secure the benefits at which religion points.
+That is not the root of Christian religion. It begins
+with a consciousness and confession of weakness: the
+soul owns its incompetency to deal with the great
+interests that reveal themselves in the light of Christ;
+it is without strength for tasks like these. And so the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
+deepest and earliest exercise of Christian religion is
+Prayer. It asks great things from a great God. "This
+poor man cried," and the Lord heard him. Paul's
+Christianity began thus: "Behold, he prayeth."</p>
+
+<p>Now just so Christian religion does not begin with a
+consciousness of deserving something, or an idea that
+by taking pains we may deserve something, may single
+ourselves out for at least some modest share of favourable
+recognition. Rather it often begins with the fading
+away of such ideas when they were present before.
+Christian religion roots itself in the confession of sin,
+and therefore of ill-desert; it signalises itself by a
+deepening sense of the seriousness of the situation in
+this respect. With this it comes face to face before
+God. "I will confess my transgressions unto the
+Lord." "God be merciful to me a sinner." We have
+nothing that is not sinful to bring before Him; so, at
+length, we come with that. It is all we have. Our
+prayer rises not merely out of the sense of weakness,
+but out of the consciousness of demerit.</p>
+
+<p>But in Christian religion we are aware, as of strength
+which can remedy our weakness, so of forgiveness
+which can put away our sins. "There is forgiveness
+with Thee." "Through this Man is preached to us the
+forgiveness of sins." It is clear also that this forgiveness
+comes, wherever it comes, as full and free forgiveness,
+"forgiving you all trespasses." So that in
+Christian religion we listen at Christ's feet to the
+testimony directed to all penitent believers, that instead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
+of reckoning in part or whole about the guilt of sins
+committed, we are to find God in Christ to be One who
+simply puts away our sin. That shall hold us apart
+from God no more. Rather, the putting of it away
+brings with it the strangest, lowliest access to God.
+"O God, thou art my God." "Who is a God like unto
+Thee?" Forgiveness is by no means mere immunity
+(least of all for Christian religion). Punishment, certainly,
+in the sense of the separation and evil which sin
+deserves, passes away. But forgiveness, in Christian
+religion, is forgiveness <i>with the Forgiver in it</i>. We
+meet God in the forgiveness of sins. We abide with
+God in the forgiveness of sins.</p>
+
+<p>Forgiveness, too, as we already foresee, is but the
+foundation and beginning of a history in which we
+are called to go forward. This history may have sad
+passages in it; but in going forward in it in faith we
+are assured that on God's part it is a history of most
+painstaking and most sublime benefaction: all of it
+ordered so as to be of a piece with His sending of His
+Son; all of it instinct with the grace of our Lord Jesus
+Christ. Faith looking to Christ believes this, and
+receives it. And to faith upheld by Him on whom we
+trust all this is more and more made good, and comes
+true. It is a history of progress in true goodness.
+And the end is life everlasting.</p>
+
+<p>Now the words before us suggest, upon the one
+hand, very strongly, the simply gratuitous character of
+the Christian benefits, and the sense of undeserved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
+kindness with which they are to be received. In
+Christian religion we begin as those who have no
+righteousness, who plead no merit, who owe and are
+to owe all to Divine mercy. From the base upwards
+Christian religion is a religion of grace; and "it is of
+faith, that it might be by grace." Whatever activities,
+whatever successes may fall into the Christian's career,
+whatever long possession of accustomed good may
+eventually mark his experience, all is to be informed
+and inspired by this initial and perpetual conviction,
+"Not having mine own righteousness, which is of the
+law."</p>
+
+<p>At the same time, the same words of the Apostle
+suggest very strongly the Divine stability of the good
+which meets us in Christ. A very strong foundation
+has been laid for those who flee for refuge to lay hold
+of the hope set before them in the gospel. To our
+sense, indeed, things may seem to be most mutable.
+But when faith reaches to the things not seen, it learns
+another lesson. In Christ believers are graced with
+entrance into an order of salvation divinely strong and
+durable. When God gave us Christ, He gave us, in a
+sense, "all things," and indeed all things ordering
+themselves into an eternal expression of fatherly love
+and care. In Christ comes into view not goodness
+only, but goodness allying itself for us with Wisdom
+and Power and Right. It makes its way by incarnation
+and atonement and resurrection to a kingdom which,
+being first Christ's, appointed to Him, is also His<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+people's, appointed to them. Now a relation to God
+which looks forward to all this, which is the basis for it
+and the entrance to it, descends on the believing man
+through Christ. It is due to Christ that it should
+come so. It is the Father's loving will that it should
+be so. All that is needful to ground and vindicate that
+most gracious relation is found in Christ, who of God
+is made unto us righteousness; in whom we hold the
+righteousness which is of God on faith.</p>
+
+<p>The Apostle's course of thought has not led us to
+raise any question about the nature and the virtue of
+the faith which apprehends and receives the righteousness
+of God. It is a subject on which much has been
+said. What seems needful here may be soon spoken.</p>
+
+<p>The only way of entering on new relations with God,
+or ourselves becoming new men, is the way of faith.
+This Christian way is the only way. Every other is
+simply impossible. Let any man seriously try it, and
+he will find it so. But the question, What kind of
+faith? is best answered by saying, Such faith as is
+called for by the object of faith set before us, when that
+is honestly and intently regarded. As the gospel is,
+the faith must be; for the gospel is the instrument
+by which faith is evoked, sustained, and guided. The
+great object of faith is God, graciously revealing Himself
+through Christ. Every genuine aspect of this revelation
+takes its significance from its disclosure of God.
+The faith, so called, which misses this, is wrong faith;
+the faith which marks and welcomes this is right faith.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+And such faith is already, even in its earliest life,
+breaking forth into repentance and love and obedience.
+It must be, for God is in it.</p>
+
+<p>So, to confine ourselves to the aspect of things which
+occupies this chapter, the faith which meets God in the
+forgiveness of sins through Christ, and genuinely
+accepts from Him the wonderful position of holding
+fellowship with God forgiving, is already, virtually,
+repentance as well as faith. The man who so meets
+with God, is therein agreed with God about his own
+sin: he feels God to be in the right and himself to be
+wholly in the wrong; he feels, in particular, God to be
+most sublimely and conclusively in the right in the holy
+pity of His forgiveness. The man who does not feel
+this, is <i>not accepting forgiveness</i>. He may be posturing
+as if he were, but he is not doing it.</p>
+
+<p>There is just one difficulty in faith&mdash;the difficulty of
+being real. But when it <i>is</i> real, it makes all things
+new.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>RESURRECTION LIFE AND DAILY DYING.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>"That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection, and the
+fellowship of His sufferings, becoming conformed unto His death; if
+by any means I may attain unto the resurrection from the dead."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span>
+iii. 10, 11.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>RESURRECTION LIFE AND DAILY DYING.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>We have still other aspects to consider of that
+"gain" which the Apostle descried in Christ,
+for the sake of which he had cast so much away.</p>
+
+<p>To prize the righteousness of faith was an element
+in the true knowledge of Christ; but it was so far from
+exhausting that knowledge, that it only opened a door
+of progress, and brought near the most stirring possibilities.
+For, indeed, to be found in Christ having
+that righteousness meant that God in Christ was his,
+and had begun to communicate Himself in eternal life.
+Now this must still reveal itself in further and fuller
+knowledge of Christ. According to the Apostle's conception,
+that which Christ means to be to us, that
+which we may attain to be by Christ, opens progressively
+to the soul that has been won to this pursuit; it
+comes into view and into experience in a certain growing
+knowledge. It is a practical historical career; and
+the Apostle was set on achieving it, not by strength or
+wisdom of his own, but by the continual communication
+of grace, responding to desire and prayer and endeavour.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>We must not forget, what has more than once been
+said, that this earthly life of ours is the scene in which
+the discipline goes on, in which the career is achieved.
+It is the calling here and now, not at some other stage
+of being, that the Apostle is thinking of for himself and
+for his disciples. And as earthly life is the scene, so
+earthly life also furnishes the occasions and opportunities
+by which the knowledge of Christ is to
+advance. Any other way of it is for us inconceivable.
+This life in all the various forms which it assumes for
+different men, in all the changing experiences which it
+brings to each of us&mdash;life on the earth we know so
+well&mdash;with its joy and sorrow, its labour and rest, its
+gifts and its bereavements, its friends and foes, its
+times and places, its exercise and interest for body
+and mind, for intellect and heart and conscience, with
+its temptations and its better influences,&mdash;life must
+furnish the opportunities for acquiring this practical
+knowledge of Christ. For that which falls to us, if
+we are in Christ, is a certain blessed well-being (itself
+an unfolding of Christ's wisdom and grace). And this
+must impart itself, and reveal itself, in our actual experience,
+but in an experience which we pass through
+under the guidance of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>This familiar life, then, is the scene; it alone can
+furnish the opportunities. And yet what the Apostle
+apprehends, as coming into possession and experience,
+is a life of a higher style, a life set on a nobler key: it
+is a life that has its centre and source and true type<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+elsewhere; it belongs to a higher region; indeed, it is
+a life whose perfect play pertains to another, coming
+world. Capacity for such a life is not something superhuman;
+it is congenital to man, made in the image of
+God. And yet, if these capacities unfold, man's life
+must, in the end, become other than we know it now;
+with a new proportioning of elements, with a new
+order of experience, with new harmonies, with aptitudes
+for love and service and worship that are beyond us
+now. Only now, they begin and grow; they are now
+to be aimed at, and realised in earnest and firstfruit,
+and embraced in hope. For they are elements in the
+knowledge of Christ, who is ours to know.</p>
+
+<p>This is indicated in the Apostle's aspiration after
+knowing Christ in the power of His resurrection, and
+his yearning if by any means he might attain to the
+resurrection of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The resurrection of Christ marked the acceptance of
+His work by the Father, and revealed the triumph in
+which that work ended. Death and all the power of
+the enemy were overcome, and victory was attained.
+For one thing, the resurrection of Christ made sure the
+righteousness of faith. He rose again for our justification.
+So every passage of the Apostle's life which proved
+that his confidence in that respect was not vain, that
+God in Christ was truly his God, was an experience of
+the power of Christ's resurrection. But the resurrection
+of Christ was also His emergence&mdash;His <i>due</i> emergence&mdash;into
+the power and blessedness of victorious life. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+the Person of Christ life in God, and unto God, had
+descended into the hard conditions set for Him who
+would associate a world of sinners to Himself. In the
+resurrection the triumph of that enterprise came to
+light. Now, done with sin, and free from death, and
+asserting His superiority to all humiliation and all
+conflict, He rose in the fulness of a power which He
+was entitled also to communicate. He rose, with full
+right and power to save. And so His resurrection
+denotes Christ as able to inspire life, and to make it
+victorious in His members.</p>
+
+<p>When, then, Paul says that he would know Christ
+in the power of His resurrection, he aims at a life
+(already his, but capable of far more adequate development)
+conformed to the life which triumphed in the
+risen Christ, one with that in principle, in character,
+and in destiny. This was, in the meantime, to be
+human life on the earth, with the known elements
+and conditions of that life; including, in Paul's case,
+some that were hard enough. But it was to be transformed
+from within, inspired with a new meaning and
+aim. It was to have its elements polarised anew,
+organised by new forces and in a new rhythm. It was,
+and was to be, pervaded by peace with God, by the
+consciousness of redemption, by dedication to service.
+It was to include a recoil from evil, and a sympathy
+with goodness,&mdash;elements these which might be so far
+thought of as a reverting to the unfallen state. But it
+had more in it, because it was based on redemption,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+and rooted in Christ who died and rose again. It was
+baptised with the passion of gratitude; it was drawn
+into the effort to build up the Redeemer's kingdom;
+and it aimed at a better country.</p>
+
+<p>So while the life we know so well was the sphere in
+which this experience fulfilled itself, the longings it
+included pointed to an existence higher up and further
+on&mdash;to an existence only to be reached by resurrection
+from the dead, an existence certainly promised to be so
+reached. All the effort and the longing pointed to that
+door of hope; Paul was reaching on to the resurrection
+of the dead. For that blessed resurrection would consummate
+and fulfil the likeness to Christ and the
+fellowship with Him, and would usher into a manner
+of being where the experience of both should be
+unimpeded. The life of "knowing Christ" could
+not be contented here, could not rest satisfied short
+of that consummation. For indeed to be with Christ
+and to labour for Christ here on earth was good;
+yet so that to depart and be with Christ was far
+better.</p>
+
+<p>We have here to do with the active and victorious
+aspect of Christian life, the energy in it that makes it
+new and great. It holds by a title and it draws from a
+source which must be looked for, both of them, high
+up in heaven. Something in it has already triumphed
+over death.</p>
+
+<p>It may be felt, however, that there is some danger
+here lest the great words of Paul may carry us off our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
+feet, and divorce us from <i>terra firma</i> altogether. Some
+one may ask, But what does all this mean in practice?
+What sort of life is it to be? Apostles can soar, perhaps;
+but how about the man in the workshop or in the
+counting-house, or the woman busied in family cares?
+A life in "the power of a resurrection" seems to be
+something that transcends earthly conditions altogether.
+These are perfectly fair questions, and one should try
+to meet them with a plain reply.</p>
+
+<p>The life in view is first of all goodness in its ordinary
+sense, or what we call common morality&mdash;common
+honesty, common truthfulness, common kindness. "Let
+him that stole steal no more, but rather let him labour";
+"Not slothful in business"; "Lie not one to another,
+seeing ye have put off the old man with his deeds."
+But then this common morality begins to have an uncommon
+heart or spirit in it, by reason of Christ. So
+a new love for goodness and a new energy of rejection
+of evil begin to work; also, a new sensitiveness to
+discern good, where its obligation was not felt before,
+and to be aware of evil which, before, was tolerated.
+Moreover, in the heart of this "common morality" the
+man carries about a consciousness of his own relation
+to God, and also of the relation to God of all with whom
+he meets. This consciousness is very imperfect, sometimes
+perhaps almost vanishes. Yet the man is aware
+that an immense truth is here close to him, and he has
+begun to be alive to it. This consciousness tends to
+give a new value to all the "moralities": it awakens a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
+new percipiency as to good and evil; in particular, the
+great duty of purity in relation to the man himself, and
+to others, acquires a new sacredness. The place and
+claims of self also begin to be judged by a quite new
+standard. In all directions possibilities of good and
+evil in human life are descried; and the obligation to
+refuse the evil and to choose the good presses with a
+new force. So far, the remark made a little ago is
+justified, that the Christian life of Paul was a life that
+had begun to point practically towards sinlessness,
+towards what we call an unfallen state; however far
+off it might be, as yet, from that attainment. But this
+would be a very limited account of the matter. The
+whole region of duty and privilege Godwards is lighted
+up now by the faith of redemption in Christ; that not
+only awakens gratitude, but inspires a new passion of
+desire and hope into all moral effort. And the man,
+being now aware of a kingdom of goodness set up by
+Christ, which is making its way to victory against all
+the power of evil, and being aware of the agencies by
+which it works, must give himself in his own place to
+the service of that kingdom, that he may not hurt but
+help the cause which it embodies. The new life is
+therefore to be an energetic life of the plainest goodness.
+Only faith places it in relation to the world of faith, and
+inspires it with the passion of love and gratitude, and
+amplifies it by the new horizons that fall back on all
+sides, and gives it a goal in the hope of life eternal.</p>
+
+<p>Returning to the instance of the Apostle Paul, one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+observes from his account of it that the regard of the
+believer to Christ, such regard as may actually be
+attained and operative in this life, ought to fructify into
+desires and prayers that point beyond this life, and
+reach out to the resurrection of the dead. There is a
+contentedness with life here that is not Christian. It
+would agree well with a thankful use of earthly comforts,
+and a cheerful serenity amid earth's changes, that we
+should feel our home and our treasure to be in another
+place, and the enjoyment of them to lie in a coming
+world. Not otherwise shall we know how to make a
+right Christian use and have a right Christian enjoyment
+of this life. We are not prepared to get the full
+good of this world until we are ready and willing to go
+out of it.</p>
+
+<p>Let it be observed, also, how the Apostle strove to
+"attain" the resurrection of the dead. The great
+things of the Kingdom of God are exhibited in various
+connections, none of which are to be overlooked. One
+of these connections is here exhibited.</p>
+
+<p>We know that in Scripture a distinction is made
+between the resurrection of the righteous and the
+resurrection of the wicked. A solemn obscurity rests
+on the manner and the principles of the latter, the
+resurrection to shame. But the resurrection of the
+just takes place in virtue of their union to Christ; it is
+after the example of His resurrection; it is to glory and
+honour. Now this resurrection, while it is most obviously
+a crowning blessing and benefaction coming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+from God, is represented also as having the character
+of an attainment made by us. The faith in which we
+turn to God is the beginning of a course leading to the
+"end of our faith, the salvation of our souls." This
+end coincides with the resurrection. Then the hour
+comes which completes, then the state arrives in which
+is completed, the redemption of the man. The resurrection
+rises before us, therefore, as something which,
+while on the one hand promised and given by God,
+is, on the other hand, "attained" by us. Our Lord
+(Luke xx. 35) speaks of those who shall be "counted
+worthy to attain that world, and the resurrection of the
+dead."</p>
+
+<p>The resurrection is promised to believers. It is
+promised to arise to them in sequel to a certain course&mdash;a
+history of redemption, made good in their lives. How
+shall the disciple verify his expectation of this final
+benefit? Not surely without verifying the intermediate
+history. The way must point towards the end&mdash;<i>at
+least</i>, must <i>point</i> towards it. A resurrection state, if
+it be like Christ's, how much must it include! What
+purity, what high aptitudes, what delicate congenialities!
+The desires of the true Christian life, its aspirations and
+efforts, as well as the promises which animate and the
+influences which sustain it, all point in this direction.
+But how if in any case this prove unreal, deceptive; how
+if it be ostensible only? How if no real changes take
+place, or if they die out again? What if soul and body
+rise unchanged, the soul polluted, and so the very body<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+bearing the stamp of old sins? What if the murderous
+eye of hate, or the lurid eye of lust, shall look into the
+eyes of Him whose eyes are as a flame of fire? Accordingly
+this connection of things is impressed upon us by
+our Apostle (Rom. viii. 11): "<i>If</i> the Spirit of Him that
+raised up Christ from the dead dwell in you, He that
+raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your
+mortal body by His Spirit which dwelleth in you."
+While we live here, our body, however disciplined, must
+still be the body of our humiliation (ver. 21); and sin
+continues to beset even renewed souls. But if the
+Spirit of grace is even now bringing all into subjection
+to the obedience of Christ, enabling us to die to sin
+and to live to righteousness, that points forward to the
+completion of the work, in the resurrection to glory.</p>
+
+<p>This, then, is one view in which the Apostle realises
+the solemnity and interest of Christian life. It is the
+way that leads up to such a resurrection. The resurrection
+rises before him as the consummate triumph of that
+life for which he came to Christ, the life which he longs
+perfectly to possess, perfectly to know. The success
+of his great venture is to meet Him in the rising from
+the dead; his course, meanwhile, is a striving onwards
+to it. How was it to be reached? In order to that,
+much must still be brought into experience of the
+resurrection power of Christ. Only in that strength
+did Paul look to be carried to the point at which, ending
+his course, he should lie down (if he died before Christ
+come) in the blessed hope of the rising from the dead.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
+For this he looked to Christ to work mightily in him;
+for this he owned himself bound, under the grace of
+Christ, to strive mightily, if "by any means" he might
+attain to it. So great is this consummation; so great
+are those things which fitly lead up to it. Is it not a
+great view of Christian religion that it sends men onward
+in a life in which they "attain" to the resurrection of
+the dead? Must not that be a great history of which
+this is the appropriate close?</p>
+
+<p>Paul, then, was eager to go forward in a life intense
+and mighty, drawing on a great power to sustain it,
+and rising into splendid effects and results. But yet,
+in respect of some of its aspects, it rather seemed to
+the Apostle to be a certain deliberate and blessed dying.
+At least, the life must fulfil and realise itself along such
+a dying; and this also, this emphatically, he pressed
+on to know&mdash;"the fellowship of His sufferings, being
+made conformable to His death."</p>
+
+<p>Our Lord's life on earth, strong and beautiful though
+it was, was really at the same time His procedure towards
+death. He lived as one laying down His life,
+not merely in one great sacrifice at the close, but from
+step to step along His whole earthly history. With no
+touch of the morbid or the fanatical, yet His course, in
+practice, had to be one of self-impoverishment, of loneliness,
+of acquaintance with energetic hostility of sin
+and sinners. It had to be so if it was to be faithful.
+He knew not where to lay His head; He endured the
+contradiction of sinners against Himself; He came unto<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
+His own, and His own received Him not. Even His
+friends, whom He so loved, and who loved Him in
+their imperfect way, did not love Him wisely or
+magnanimously, and constantly became occasions of
+temptation which had to be resisted. Pain and trial
+were the inevitable characters of the work given Him
+to do. It lay in His calling to put a strong and faithful
+negative on the natural desire for safety, for happiness,
+for congenial society and surroundings, for free and
+unembarrassed life. All this He had steadily to postpone
+to a period beyond the grave, and meanwhile
+make His way to the final crisis, at which, under a
+mysterious burden of extreme sorrow, accepted as the
+Saviour's proper portion, He died for our sins. By
+this sacrifice He did, no doubt, relieve His followers of
+a burden which they never could have borne. But yet
+in doing so He made it possible for them to enter,
+happily and hopefully, on a life so far like His own.
+Their life, too, comes to be governed by a decision,
+maintained and persisted in, <i>for</i> God's will, and against
+the impulse, in their case the impure and treacherous
+impulse, of their own will. They also, in their turn,
+but under His influence and with His loving succour,
+have so to live as in that life to die. They learn to say
+"No" for their Master's sake to many objects which
+strongly appeal to them. They consent to postpone
+the period of perfectly harmonious life, free and unimpeded,
+to the time which lies beyond death. They
+must count their true life to be that which, perfectly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
+conformed to and associated with their Master's life,
+they shall live in another scene of things. Meanwhile,
+as to the elements of this world, the life which stands
+in these must die, or they must die to it, growing into
+the mind of their Lord.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to speak of this without, on the one
+hand, conveying a strained and unreal view of the
+Christian's attitude towards the present life, or, on the
+other hand, weakening too much the sense of "conformity
+to His death." In the first place, the Christian's
+dying is mainly, and certainly it is first of all, a
+dying to sin, a mortifying the flesh with the affections
+and lusts. It is the practical renunciation of
+evil, along with the maintenance of the watchfulness
+and self-discipline needed in order to be ready to renounce
+evil when it comes. Evil has to be rejected,
+not merely by itself, but at the cost of those earthly
+interests which are involved in the surrender to it,
+however dear or constraining those interests may
+seem to be; so that conformity to Christ's death, if
+it covered no more, would still cover a great deal of
+ground. But it seems to cover something more&mdash;namely,
+a general loosening of the grasp upon this life,
+or on the temporary and sensible elements of it, in
+view of the worth and certainty of the higher and the
+better life. This life, indeed, as long as we are in it,
+can never lose its claims upon us, as the sphere of our
+duty, and the scene of our training. Here we have our
+place to fill, our relations to sustain, our part to play,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+our ministries to perform. In all these ways of it we
+have some good to do, of lower or loftier kinds; in all,
+we have many lessons to learn, which crowd upon us
+to the last; through all, we have to carry the faith of
+the unseen Kingdom and the unseen Lord; and in all
+these aspects of earthly life, if God gives us any cheering
+experience of earthly brightness, surely it is to be
+taken most thankfully. It is a poor way of construing
+the conformity to Christ's death, to renounce interest
+in the life of which we are a part, and the world which
+is the scene of it. But the interest should fasten more
+intently on the things which interest our Lord, and
+eagerness of spirit about earthly good for ourselves
+must give place and subside.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, when one thinks of the beauty and sweetness
+of much that pertains to our earthly existence,
+and of the goodness of God in material or temporal
+gifts, and of the thankfulness with which Christian
+hearts are to take these when they are given, and are
+to walk with God in the use of them, one feels the risk
+of involving oneself here in extravagance or in contradiction.
+We are not going to maintain that the Apostle
+would shut himself out, or us, from interest or delight
+in the innocent beauty or gladness of the earth. But
+yet, is it not true that we are all passing on to death,
+and in death are to be parted from all this? Is it not
+true that as Christians we consent to dying; we count
+it the good discipline of Christ's people that they should
+die, and pass so into the better life? Is it not true<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
+that our life as Christians should train us to maintain
+this mind deliberately and habitually, calmly and
+gladly? For indeed this life, at its purest and best,
+still offers to us a vision of good that is apt to steal our
+hearts away from the supreme good, the best and
+highest. Now that best and highest rises before us, as
+practically to be made ours, in the resurrection.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, it is well, no doubt, that we should
+cherish a frank and thankful gladness in all earthly
+good and earthly beauty that can be taken as from the
+Father's hand. Yet there should grow upon us an
+inward consent, strengthening as the days go by,
+that this shall not endure; that it shall not be our
+permanent possession; that it shall be loosely held,
+as ere long to be parted from. Such a mind should
+grow, not because our hearts are cold to the present
+country of our being, but because they are warming
+towards a better country. These earthly things are
+good, but they are not ours; we have only a lease
+of them, terminable at any time. Who shall bring
+us to that which is, and shall eternally be, our very
+own?</p>
+
+<p>So Christ our Master passed through life, with an
+open eye and heart for the fair and the lovable around
+Him, for flowers and little children, and for what was
+estimable or attractive in men, even in a natural way.
+Surely all was dear to Him on which He could see the
+trace of the Creator's holy hands. Yet He passed on
+and passed by, going forward to death and consenting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
+to die, His face set steadfastly to a joy before Him
+which could not be realised by lingering here.</p>
+
+<p>Now let this be especially observed, that while we
+may here recognise a practical lesson to be learned, the
+wisest of us may also recognise it as a lesson we could
+not undertake to teach to ourselves. To oppose sin,
+when conscience and God's word warn us of its
+presence, is at least something definite and plain. But
+how to take the right attitude and bear the right mind
+towards this various, manifold, engrossing, wonderful
+human life, as it unfolds for us here&mdash;how shall that be
+done? Some have tried to answer by amputating large
+sections of human experience. But that is not the way.
+For, indeed, it is in human life itself&mdash;in this present,
+and, for the present, the only form of our existence&mdash;that
+we must take the right view of human life, and form
+the right mind about it. Moreover, our conditions are
+varying continually, from the state of the little child,
+open to every influence that strikes the sense, to the
+state of the old man, whom age is shutting up in a
+crippled and stunted existence. The just equipoise of
+soul for one stage of life, could it be attained, would not
+be the just equipoise for the next.</p>
+
+<p>The truth is, there is no ready-made theory here for
+any of us. All our attainments in it are tentative and
+provisional; which does not hinder, however, that they
+may be very real. When we believe in Christ we
+become aware that there is a lesson in this department
+to be learned, and we become willing, in a measure, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
+learn it. But we should learn little were it not for three
+great teachers that take us in hand.</p>
+
+<p>The first is the inevitable conflict with sin and
+temptation. The Christian must, at all events, strive
+against known sin, and he must hold himself ready to
+resist the onset of temptation, watching and praying.
+In this discipline he soon learns how sin is entangled
+for him with much that in other respects seems desirable
+or good; he learns that in rejecting sin he must forgo
+some things which on other accounts he gladly would
+embrace. It is often a painful conflict through which
+he has to pass. Now in seeking help from his Lord,
+and entering into the fellowship of the mind of Christ,
+he is not only strengthened to repel the sin, but also
+learns to submit willingly to any impoverishment or
+abridgement of earthly life which the conflict entails.
+He is taught in practice, now in one form, now in
+another, to count <i>all</i> things but loss&mdash;to lower the
+overweening estimate of earthly treasure and let it go,
+dying to it with his dying Lord.</p>
+
+<p>Then, besides, there is the discipline of suffering.
+Sorrow, indeed, is not peculiar to Christians. Of it, all
+are partakers. But Christian endurance is part of a
+fellowship with Christ, in which we learn of Him. In
+the warm air of prosperity a hot mist rises round the
+soul, that hides from view the great realities, and that
+deceives and misleads us with its vain mirage. But in
+suffering, taken in Christ's way and in fellowship with
+Him, in the pain of disappointment and of loss, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
+especially in the exercise of submission, we are taught
+feelingly where our true treasure is; and we are trained
+to consent to separations and privations, for the sake
+of Christ, and under the influence of the love of
+Christ.</p>
+
+<p>And, lastly, the growth of Christian experience and
+Christian character deepens our impressions of the
+worth of Christ's salvation, and gives more body and
+more ardour to Christian hope. As that world with its
+perfect good draws the believer, as it becomes more
+visible to faith and more attractive, his grasp of this
+world becomes, perhaps, not less kindly, but it becomes
+less tenacious. Knowledge, such as the schools of earth
+afford, we still feel to be desirable and good. Love,
+under the conditions which earth supplies for its exercise,
+we still feel to be very dear. The activities
+which call out courage and resource, we still feel to
+be interesting and worthy. Yet knowledge proves to
+be but in part. And love, if it does not die, needs for
+its health and security a purer air. And in the
+problems of active life failure still mingles with success.
+But the love of God which is in Jesus Christ grows
+in worth and power; so that, in new applications of the
+principle, we learn afresh to "count all things but loss
+for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ."</p>
+
+<p>In a word, then, that we may grow into the mind
+of Christ, sufferings and self-denials are appointed to
+come into experience. He sets them for us; we should
+not wisely set them for ourselves. They come in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
+conflict with sin or in the ordinary discipline of life.
+Either way they become for believers the fellowship of
+Christ's sufferings; for they are taken in Christ's way,
+under His eye, endured in the strength of His truth and
+grace and salvation. So believers become more conformable
+to His death. Hence this discipline of trial
+is indispensable to all disciples.</p>
+
+<p>Some such view of the ends of Christ in regard to
+separation from sin and disengagement from the life
+which is doomed to die, we suppose to have been
+before Paul's mind. He had come to Christ for life,
+abundant and victorious, such as should be answerable
+to the power of Christ's resurrection. But he
+saw that such life must fulfil itself in a certain dying,
+made good in a fellowship of Christ's sufferings; and
+it must find its completeness and its peace beyond
+death, in the resurrection of the dead. Did he flinch
+or shrink from this? No: he longed to have it all
+perfectly accomplished. His knowledge of Christ was
+to be not only in the power of His resurrection, but in
+the fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable
+to His death.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever mistakes have been made by followers of
+the ascetic life, it is a mistake on the other side to
+neglect this element of Christianity. He who is not
+self-denied, and that cheerfully, to the danger and
+seduction of <i>lawful</i> things, is one who has not his loins
+girt nor his lamp burning.</p>
+
+<p>It is worth our while to mark the thoroughgoing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+sincerity of the Apostle's Christianity. Not merely did
+he in general embrace Christ and salvation: but with
+the utmost cordiality he embraced the method of Christ;
+he strove after fellowship with Christ's mind in living,
+and also in dying; he did so, though the fellowship
+included not only the power of His resurrection, but the
+fellowship of His sufferings. He longed to have it all
+fulfilled in his own case. So he strove toward the
+resurrection of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>In parting from these great Christian thoughts we
+may note how fitly the power of Christ's resurrection
+takes precedence of the fellowship of His sufferings and
+the being made conformable to His death. Some have
+thought that, as death comes before resurrection, the
+order of the clauses might have been inverted. But it
+is only through the precedent virtue of Christ's resurrection
+that such a history is achieved, either in Paul
+or in any of us. We must be partakers of life in the
+power of Christ's resurrection, if we are to carry through
+the fellowship with the suffering and the death.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>CHRISTIAN LIFE A RACE.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>"Not that I have already obtained, or am already made perfect:
+but I press on, if so be that I may apprehend that for which also I
+was apprehended by Christ Jesus. Brethren, I count not myself yet
+to have apprehended: but one thing I do, forgetting the things which
+are behind, and stretching forward to the things which are before, I
+press on toward the goal unto the prize of the high calling of God in
+Christ Jesus. Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded:
+and if in anything ye are otherwise minded, even this shall God
+reveal unto you: only, whereunto we have already attained, by that
+same rule let us walk.</p>
+
+<p>"Brethren, be ye imitators together of me, and mark them which
+so walk even as ye have us for an ensample."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> iii. 12-17 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>CHRISTIAN LIFE A RACE.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>Various passages in this Epistle suggest that the
+Apostle's Philippian friends or some of them
+were relaxing in diligence; they were failing perhaps
+to lay to heart the need of progress, less sensitive than
+they ought to be to the impulse of Christianity as a
+religion of effort and expectancy. Some of them, it
+might be, were inclined to think of themselves as now
+pretty well initiated into the new religion, and as pretty
+thorough adepts in its teaching and its practice; entitled
+therefore to sit down and look round with a certain
+satisfaction and complacency. If it were so, the tendency
+to division would be accounted for. Arrogance in
+Christians is a sure preliminary to heats and disputings.
+At all events, however it might be at Philippi,
+an insidious complacency in little improvements and
+small attainments is not unknown among Christians.
+It is, one may fear, a common impression among us
+that we are fair average Christians,&mdash;a feeling perhaps
+not so cherished as to make us boast, but yet so
+cherished as to make us feel content. And, alas! the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
+very meaning of Christianity was to inspire us with a
+spirit that would refuse so to be contented.</p>
+
+<p>Some feeling of this kind may have led the Apostle
+to lay stress on the onward energising character of
+Christianity as <i>he</i> knew it. This was the manner of
+his regard to his Lord. At the foundation of his
+religion there was, indeed, the faith of a wonderful gift
+of righteousness and life. That gift he welcomed and
+embraced. But it wrought in him eagerness of desire,
+and intentness of purpose, to secure and have all that
+this gift implied. It stirred him to activity and progress.
+His was not the Christianity of one who counts himself
+to have already obtained all into possession, nor of one
+who finds himself landed already in the state at which
+the Christian promises aim. Rather he is one set in
+full view of a great result: some experience of the
+benefits of it is already entering into his history; but it
+is yet to be brought to pass in its fulness; and that must
+be along a line of believing endeavour, Christ working
+and Paul working, Christ faithful with Paul faithful.
+"I follow after, if that I may lay hold and extend <i>my</i>
+grasp, seeing Christ has laid hold with <i>His</i> grasp on
+me." Christ had a purpose, and has mightily inaugurated
+a process through which this purpose may be
+achieved in the history of Paul. And as Christ lays
+His grasp on Paul, behold the purpose of Christ
+becomes also the purpose of Paul, and <i>he</i> now throws
+himself into the process with all his force, to apprehend
+that for the sake of which Christ apprehended him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>Here Paul signalised one distinguishing attribute of
+genuine Christianity as he knew it. He did not yet
+count himself to have laid complete grasp on the whole
+of Christian good. In a very important practical sense
+salvation was still something ahead of him, as to the
+final, secure, complete possession; Christ Himself was
+an object still before him, as to the knowledge and the
+fellowship for which he longed. But one thing is vital
+and distinctive. "This Saviour with His salvation holds
+me so, that I count all but loss for Him. He holds me
+so, that forgetting all that lies behind, I bend myself to
+the race, stretching out towards the goal at which the
+prize of the high calling of God in Christ is won. That
+is <i>my</i> Christianity." He who had suffered loss of all
+for Christ, he who so burned with desire to know Him
+in His righteousness, in the power of His resurrection,
+in the fellowship of His sufferings, is far from thinking
+he has reached the goal. Because the knowledge of
+Christ is so great a thing in his eyes, therefore, on the
+one hand, all he has attained as yet seems partial and
+imperfect; but for the same reason, on the other hand,
+he feels the great attraction by which all his powers are
+drawn into the endeavour which so great a prize shall
+crown.</p>
+
+<p>The question may here be put how the consistency
+of the gospel can be made out if we are called to rest
+and rejoice in Christ, and if, at the same time, we find
+ourselves committed to so absorbing a struggle for a
+prize. If God will have us, it may be said, to seek and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
+strive that we may obtain, then we must do so because
+it is His will. But where is the connection of things
+that will avert inconsistency, and bring out a reasonable
+continuity of principles, between the call to rest
+on Christ for full salvation, and the call to run a race,
+and so run as to obtain? For answer it is to be remembered,
+in the first place, that (as commonly happens
+in matters where life and its activities are concerned)
+the difficulty concerns only the adjustment of our
+theory; it begins to vanish when we come to practice.
+When we are in vital contact with the spiritual realities
+themselves, we find both elements of the case to be
+true for us, and each indispensable to the truth of the
+other. The rest of faith and the fight of faith belong
+to each other. But not to dwell on so general a consideration,
+two lines of thought may be suggested to
+those who are conscious of embarrassment at this point.</p>
+
+<p>First, let it be considered that the faith of a Christian
+embraces real relations with the living God, different
+from anything that is possible to unbelief. Through
+Christ we believe in God. Those relations are conceived
+to be real and vital from the first, though the
+perfect experience of all that they imply belongs to the
+future. Faith means that from the outset of believing
+we are to be to God, and God is to be to us, something
+different from what the flesh perceives. Christ believed
+in is an assurance that so it is and shall be. But now,
+the state of men is such, as long as they have to carry
+on a life of faith in a world of sense and sin, that this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
+faith of theirs presently meets with flat contradiction.
+The course of the world treats it all as null. Sin in
+their own hearts, and many experiences of life, seem to
+negative the pretensions and the claims of faith. And
+strong temptations whisper that this high fellowship
+with a living God not only does not exist, but that it
+is not desirable that it should. So that from the outset
+and all along, faith, if it is not content to be a mere
+dream, if it will count for a reality, must contend for
+its life. It must fight, "praying always with all
+prayer," to make good its ground, and to hold on to its
+Lord. It is indeed the nature of faith to rest, for it is
+a trust; not less certainly faith is under necessity to
+strive, for it is challenged and impeached.</p>
+
+<p>It lies therefore in the very nature of the case that,
+if faith is in earnest in embracing real and progressive
+salvation, it must find itself drawn into conflict and
+effort to assert the reality and to experience the progress.
+The opposition it meets with ensures this.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, it is the nature of the gospel to
+set men free for active service. It supplies motives,
+therefore, for enterprise, diligence, and fidelity; and
+it provides a goal towards which all shall tend. So
+men become fellow-labourers with their Lord. And if
+it is intelligible that the Lord should exert continual
+care for them, it ought to be intelligible also that they
+are to be exercised in a continual care for Him; care,
+that is, for the discharge of the trust which they hold
+from Him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>The Apostle dwells on all this, evidently because he
+felt it to be a point of so great importance in practical
+Christianity. In this world the right Christian is the
+man who knows well he has not attained, but who
+devotes his life to attaining. Paul brings this out by
+means of the image of a race for a prize, such as might
+be seen in the public games. This is a favourite
+illustration with him. His use of it illustrates the
+way in which things that are steeped in worldliness
+may aid us in apprehending the things of God's
+kingdom. They do so, because they involve elements
+or energies of man's nature that are good as far as they
+go. As the Apostle thought of the racers, prepared by
+unsparing discipline, which had been concentrated on
+the one object; as he thought of the determination
+with which the eager runners started, and of the way
+in which every thought and every act was bent upon
+the one purpose of success, until the moment when the
+panting runner shot past the goal, it stirred him with
+the resolve to be not less eager in his race; and it made
+him long to see the children of light as practical and
+wise as, in their generation, the children of this world are.</p>
+
+<p>As usual in the case of illustrations, this one will not
+hold in all points. For instance, in a race one only
+wins, and all the rest are defeated and disappointed.
+This is not so in the Christian race. The analogies lie
+elsewhere. In order to run well the runners submit to
+preparation in which everything is done to bring out
+their utmost energy for the race. When the race<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
+comes each competitor may possibly win: in order to
+win he must put forth his utmost powers; he must do
+so within a short period of time; and during that time
+nothing must distract him from the one aim of winning.
+He does this for a benefit embodied in, or symbolised
+by, the prize which rewards and commemorates his
+victory. These are the points in which the races of
+public games afford lessons for the Christian race. In
+the former the fact that the success of any one competitor
+deprives the others of the prize they seek, is the
+circumstance that puts intensity into the whole business,
+and makes a real race of it. So also in the spiritual
+antitype there are elements which make the race most
+real, though they are elements of another kind.</p>
+
+<p>The prize can be nothing else than the life eternal
+(1 Tim. vi. 12) which comes, as we have seen, into full
+possession at the resurrection of the dead. He whose
+favour is life confers it. The bestowment of it is conceived
+as taking place with gladness and with honourable
+approbation: "Well done, good and faithful
+servant; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." The
+prize stands in strict connection with the perfecting of
+the believer: the time of receiving the prize is also the
+time of being presented faultless. Neither prize nor
+perfectness is attained here; neither is attained unless
+sought here; and the blessedness bestowed is connected
+in fact and measure with the faith and diligence
+expended on the race. On all these accounts the prize
+is spoken of as a crown: a crown of glory, for it is very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
+honourable; a crown of life, incorruptible, that fadeth
+not away, for it shall never wither on the brow, as the
+wreaths of those earthly champions did. Now to run
+his race was for Paul the one thing. He had not yet
+attained; he could not sit still as if he had: it was his
+living condition that he must run, as one not <i>yet there</i>,
+following on in earnest that he might actually have the
+prize.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps some one may regard it as objectionable to
+conceive practical Christianity as a race for a prize.
+This seems, it may be said, to subordinate the present
+to the future, this world to the other world, and, in particular,
+virtue to happiness; because in this way the
+efforts of goodness here are conceived only as a means
+to enjoyment or satisfaction there. We reply that the
+prize does indeed include joy, the joy of the Lord.
+But it includes, first of all, goodness, consummate in
+the type of it proper to the individual; and gladness
+is present no otherwise than as it is harmonised with
+goodness, being indeed her proper sister and companion.
+Besides, the elements of the gladness of that state
+come in as the expression of God's love&mdash;a love both
+holy and wise. Communion with that love is the true
+security for goodness. It is equally absurd to suppose,
+on the one hand, that when that love fills the heart with
+its unreserved communication there can fail to be gladness;
+and, on the other hand, to suppose that fellowship
+with it can be other than the proper and supreme object
+of a creature's aspiration.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>There is no unworthiness in devoting life to win this
+prize; for it is a state of victorious well-being and well-doing.
+The highest goodness of all intervening stages
+is to aspire to that highest goodness of all. Whatever
+we may do or be, meanwhile, is best attained and done
+as it confesses its own shortcoming, and hopes and
+longs to be better and to do more.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that a complete gift of eternal life is held
+out to us in Christ, and it is faith's part to accept that
+gift and to rest in it. But yet part of that gift itself
+is an emancipation of the soul; in virtue of this the
+man becomes actively responsive to the high calling,
+reiterates his fundamental decision all along the detail
+of mortal life, affirms his agreement with the mind and
+life of his Lord, approves himself faithful and devoted,
+and runs so as to obtain. All this is in the idea of
+the gift bestowed, and is unfolded in the experience of
+the gift received. So the prize is to arise to us as the
+close of a course of progressive effort tending that
+way: the reality of the prize corresponds to the reality
+of the progress; the degree of it, in some way, to the
+rate of that progress. The progress itself is made
+good, as we have said, by perpetually re-affirming the
+initial choice; doing so in new circumstances, under
+new lights, with a new sense of its meaning, against
+the difficulties implied in new temptations; yet so as
+ever, in the main, to abide by the beginning of our
+confidence. With all this let it be remembered that
+the time is short; and it will be understood that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
+Christian life, so viewed, assumes the character, and
+may well exhibit the intensity and pressure, of a race.</p>
+
+<p>How far short men fall of the great idea of such
+a life&mdash;how they flinch from the perfectness of this
+Christian imperfection&mdash;need not be enlarged upon.
+But if any life is wholly untrue to this ideal, the
+Apostle seemingly could not count it Christian. This
+one thing <i>he</i> did, he bent himself to the race. For if
+the ultimate attainment has become very attractive, if
+the sense of present disproportion to it is great, and
+if, in Christ, both the obligation and the hopefulness
+of reaching the perfect good have become imperatively
+plain, what can a man do but run?</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Verses 15 and 16 state the use which the Apostle
+desires his disciples to make of this account of his own
+views and feelings, his attitude and his effort,&mdash;"As
+many of us as are perfect."</p>
+
+<p>Since the Apostle has disclaimed (ver. 12) being
+already perfected, it may seem strange that he should
+now say, "As many of us as are perfect." His use
+of language in other places, however, warrants the
+position that he is not speaking of absolute perfection,
+as if the complete result of the Christian calling had
+been attained. Rather he is thinking of ripe practical
+insight into the real spirit of the Christian life&mdash;that is
+to say, advanced acquaintance, by experience, with the
+real nature of the Christian life. He uses this word
+"perfect" in contrast to "babes" or "children" in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
+Christ. These last are persons who have been truly
+brought to Christ; but their conceptions and their
+attainments are rudimentary. They have not attained to
+large insight into the means and ends of the Christian
+life, nor to any ripe acquaintance with the position of
+a Christian man, and the relation he holds to things
+around him. They are therefore unready to face the
+responsibilities and perform the duties of Christian
+manhood. Hence the translators of the Authorised
+Version, in some passages, render the same word so as
+to bring out this sense of it. So 1 Cor. xiv. 20, "Be
+not children in understanding: howbeit in malice be
+ye children, but in understanding be men" (&#964;&#7953;&#955;&#949;&#953;&#959;&#953;),
+and Heb. v. 14, "Strong meat belongs to those that
+are of <i>full age</i>" (&#964;&#949;&#955;&#949;&#7985;&#969;&#957;).</p>
+
+<p>It cannot be doubted, however, that the word is
+used here with a certain emphatic significance in
+reference to the previous disclaimer, "I am not yet
+perfected." In the Philippians, or in some of them, Paul
+apprehended the existence of a self-satisfied mood of
+mind, such as might perhaps be warrantable if they
+were now perfect, if Christianity had brought forth all
+its results for them, but on no other terms. In contrast
+to this he had set before them the intense avidity
+with which he himself stretched out towards attainment
+and completeness which he had not reached. And
+now he teaches them that to be thus well aware how
+far we are from the true completeness, to be thus
+reaching out to it, is the true perfection of our present<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
+state: he only is the perfect Christian who is "thus
+minded"; who knows and feels how much remains to
+be attained, and gives himself up to the effort and the
+race under that inspiration. It is as if he said: Would
+you approve yourselves to be believers, advanced and
+established; would you show that you have come to a
+larger measure of just views and just feelings about the
+new world into which faith has brought you; would
+you have the character of men well acquainted with
+your Lord's mind about you, with your own position in
+relation to Him; in short, would you be perfect, fully
+under the influence of the Christianity you profess:&mdash;then
+let you and me be "thus minded"; let us
+evince the lowly sense of our distance from the goal,
+along with a living sense of the magnificence and
+urgency of the motives which constrain us to press
+on to it.</p>
+
+<p>For is there such a thing attainable here as a
+Christian perfectness, a ripe fulness of the Christian
+life, which exhibits that working of it, in its various
+forces, which was designed for this stage of our history?
+If so, what must it be? That man surely is the perfect
+man who fully apprehends the position in which the
+gospel places him here, and the ends it sets before him,
+and who most fully admits into his life the views and
+considerations which, in this state of things, the gospel
+proposes. Then, he must be a man penetrated with a
+sense of the disproportion between his attainment and
+Christ's ideal, and at the same time set on fire with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
+desire and hope of overcoming it. Has a man experienced
+many gracious dealings at his Lord's hands,
+has he made attainments by grace, has he come to a
+Christian standing that may be called full age, would
+he be what all this would seem to imply,&mdash;then let him
+take heed to be "thus minded." Otherwise he is
+already beginning to lose what he seemed to have
+attained.</p>
+
+<p>It is not so surprising, and it is not so severely to be
+reprehended, if those fail in this point who are but
+children in Christ. When the glorious things of the
+new world are freshly bursting into view, when the
+affections of the child of God are in their early exercise,
+when sin for the present seems stricken down,
+it is not so wonderful if men suppose danger and
+difficulty to be over. Like the Corinthians, "now they
+are full, now they are rich, now they have reigned as
+kings." It has often been so; and at that stage it may
+be more easily pardoned. One may say of it, "They
+will learn their lesson by-and-by; they will soon find
+out that in the life of a Christian all is not triumph
+and exultation." But it concerns those who have got
+further on, and it is expected of them, that they should
+be "thus minded" as the Apostle Paul was. It is a
+more serious business for them to be of another mind
+on this point, than for those who are only children in
+Christ. It tends to great loss. Are we, says the
+Apostle, come to a point at which we may be thought
+to be&mdash;may hope we are&mdash;experienced believers, well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
+acquainted now with the salvation and the service, men
+in Christ? Then as we would ever act in a manner
+answerable, at this stage, to the gospel and to our
+position under the gospel, let us be thus minded; forgetting
+that which is behind, reaching forth to that
+which is before, let us press toward the mark. For at
+each stage of progress much depends on the way in
+which we deal with the position now attained, with the
+views which have opened to us, and with the experiences
+that have been acquired. This may decide whether the
+stage reached shall be but a step towards something
+better and more blessed, or whether a sad blight and
+declension shall set in. There are Christian lives
+to-day sadly marred, entangled and bewildered so that
+one knows not what to make of them, and all by reason
+of failure to be "thus minded."</p>
+
+<p>A man is awakened to the supreme importance of
+Divine things. At the outset of his course, for years
+perhaps, he is a vigorous and growing Christian. So
+he comes to a large measure of establishment: he
+grows into knowledge of truth and duty. But after
+a time the feeling creeps into his mind that matters
+are now less urgent. He acts rather as a man disposed
+to keep his ground, than as one that would advance.
+Now he seems to himself to lose ground somewhat,
+now to awaken a little and recover it, and on those
+terms he is fairly well contented. All this while it
+would be unjust to say that he does not love and serve
+Christ. But time passes on; life draws nearer to its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
+close. The period at which God's afflictions usually
+multiply has arrived. And he awakens at last to
+see how much of his life has been lost; how extensively,
+though secretly, decay has marred his attainments and
+his service; and how little, in the result, of that
+honourable success has crowned his life which once
+seemed fair before him.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us be thus minded." Let Christians be admonished
+who have for some time been Christians,
+and especially those who are passing through middle
+life, or from middle life into older years. There is
+enchanted ground here, in passing over which too many
+of Christ's servants go to sleep. Leave that which is
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>Let us be thus minded: but this proves hard. One
+may see it in a general way to be most reasonable, but
+to come up to it in particulars is hard. In all particular
+cases we are tempted to be otherwise minded. And in
+many particulars we find it very difficult to judge the
+manner of spirit that we are of. Were all right in us,
+absolutely right, rectitude of disposition and of moral
+action would be in a manner instinctive. But now it
+is not so. With reference to many aspects of our life,
+it is very difficult to bring out distinctly to our own
+minds how the attitude that becomes us is to be attained
+and maintained. The difficulty is real; and therefore
+a promise is annexed. "If in anything ye be otherwise
+minded." That may realise itself in two ways. You
+may be distinctly conscious that your way of dealing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
+with some interests which enter into your lives is
+unsatisfactory, is below your calling and privilege as a
+Christian; and yet you may find it hard to see how
+you are to rise into the worthier life. It is like a
+problem which you cannot solve. Or, again, you may
+fear that it is so; you may fear that if things were
+seen in the true light it would turn out so. But you
+cannot see clearly; you cannot identify the faulty
+element, far less amend it. Here the promise meets
+you. "If in anything ye be otherwise minded, God
+shall reveal even this unto you." Keep your face in
+the right direction. Be honestly set on the attainment,
+and the way will open up to you as you go. You will
+see the path opening from the point where you stand,
+into life that throughout is akin to the aspiration and
+the achievement of the life of Paul.</p>
+
+<p>Paul here has regard to a distinction which theorists
+are apt to overlook. We have a sufficient objective
+rule in the word and example of Christ. This may be
+summarised in forms easily repeated, and a man may,
+in that respect, know all that need be said as to what
+he is to do and to be. But in morals and in spiritual
+life this is only the beginning of another process&mdash;namely,
+the subjective individual entrance into the
+meaning of it all and the practical appropriation of it.
+I know the whole of duty on the human side: I am to
+love my neighbour as myself. It is most essential to
+know it, and a grand thing to have consented to make
+a rule of it. But, says one, there remains the difficulty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
+of doing it? Is that all? I reply. There is another
+previous difficulty. I can preach a sermon on loving
+my neighbour as myself. But what does that mean,
+for me, not for any one else, but for myself, on a given
+day in November, at half-past one in the afternoon,
+when I am face to face with my neighbour, who has
+his merits, and also his defects, being, perhaps, provoking
+and encroaching, with whom I have some
+business to arrange? What does it mean then and
+there and for me? Here there opens the whole
+question of the subjective insight into the scope and
+genius of the rule; in which problem heart and mind
+must work together; and commonly there has to be
+training, experience, growth, in order to the expert and
+just discernment. Short of that there may be honest
+effort, blundering most likely, but honest, and lovingly
+accepted through Christ. But there ought to be growth
+on this subjective side.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, when progress has been made here it
+imposes responsibility. Have you been carried forward
+to such and such degrees of this subjective
+insight? Then this ought to be for you a fruitful
+attainment. Do not neglect its suggestions, do not
+prove careless and untrue to insight attained. Whereto
+we have attained, "by the same rule let us walk,"&mdash;or,
+as we may render it, "go on in the same line." So
+new insight and new achievement shall wait upon our
+steps.</p>
+
+<p>Generally, if their Lord had carried the Philippians<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
+forward to genuine attainments of Christian living, then
+that history of theirs was a track which reached further
+on. It was not a blind alley, stopping at the point
+now reached. It had had a meaning; there was some
+rationale of it; it proceeded on principles which could
+be understood, for they had been put in practice; and
+it demanded to be further pursued. There is a continuity
+in the work of grace. There is a rational
+development of spiritual progress in the case of each
+child of God. What God means, what the direction
+is in which His finger beckons, what the dispositions
+are under the influence of which His call is complied
+with and obeyed,&mdash;these are things which have been
+so far learned in that course of lessons and conflicts,
+of defeats and backslidings, restorations and victories,
+which has brought you so far. Let this be carried out;
+keep on in the same road. Whereto you have attained,
+go on with the same.</p>
+
+<p>But such an admonition at once raises a question;
+the question, namely, whether we are at <i>any</i> stage in
+the pathway of Christian attainment, whether there is
+for us as yet <i>any</i> history of a Divine life. Among those
+who claim part in Christ's benefits are some whom the
+grace of God has never taught to deny ungodliness and
+worldly lusts, and to live soberly, righteously, and godly;
+for they have been persistently deaf to the lesson.
+There are some who do not know how Christ turns
+men from darkness to light, and from the power of
+Satan unto God. To them the line of admonition now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
+in hand does not apply: to exhort them to "walk on
+in the same" would be to perpetuate for them a sad
+mistake. Their course has been dark and downward.
+Therefore to the admonition already given, the Apostle
+adds another. "Brethren, be followers together of me,
+and mark (keep sight of) them who walk so as ye have us
+for an example." Do not mistake the whole nature of
+Christianity; do not altogether miss the path in which
+God's children go. It is one spirit that dwells in the
+Church; let not your walk forsake the fellowship of
+that spirit. Christians are not bound to any human
+authority: Christ is their Master. They must sometimes
+assert their independence, even with respect to
+the maxims and manners of good people. Yet there is
+one spirit in God's true Church, and there is in the
+main one course of life which it inspires. God's children
+have not been mistaken in the main things. In
+these, to forsake the spirit and the way of Christ's flock
+is to forsake Christ.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>ENEMIES OF THE CROSS</i>.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>"For many walk, of whom I told you often, and now tell you even
+weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ: whose
+end is perdition, whose god is the belly, and whose glory is in their
+shame, who mind earthly things."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> iii. 18, 19 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>ENEMIES OF THE CROSS.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>The New Testament writers, and not least the
+Apostle Paul, are wont to bring out their conception
+of the true Christian life by setting it vividly in
+contrast with the life of the unspiritual man. They
+seem to say: "If you really mean to say No to the one,
+and Yes to the other, be sincere and thorough: compromises
+are not possible here." So 1 Tim. vi. 10:
+"The love of money is the root of all evil: which while
+some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and
+pierced themselves through with many sorrows. But
+thou, O man of God," etc. Or Jude 18: "mockers,
+walking after their own ungodly lusts. These are
+they who separate themselves, sensual, having not the
+Spirit. But, ye beloved," etc. Here in like manner the
+course of worldliness and self-pleasing life is sketched in
+concrete instances, that its sin and shame may be felt,
+and that by contrast the true calling of a Christian may
+be discerned and may be impressed on the disciples.</p>
+
+<p>It may be taken as certain that the Apostle is not
+speaking of mere Jews or mere heathen. He is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
+speaking of professing Christians, whose practical life
+belied their profession. In general they are enemies
+of the cross of Christ; that is the first thing he thinks
+fit to say of them. And here it may be asked whether
+the Apostle has in view, if not Jews, yet the Judaising
+faction about which he had already said strong things
+in the beginning of this chapter. Some have thought
+so; and it must be owned that antagonism to the
+cross, ignorance of its virtue, and antipathy to its
+lessons, is exactly what the Apostle was wont to
+impute to those Judaisers; as may be seen in the
+Epistle to the Galatians, and in other Pauline writings.
+But it is preferable, as has been already indicated,
+to take it that the Apostle has turned from the particular
+issue with those Judaisers; and having been
+led to declare emphatically what the life of Christianity
+was in his own experience and practice, he
+now sets this life in Christ not merely against the
+religion of the Judaisers, but in general against all
+religion which, assuming the name of Christ, denied the
+power of godliness; which meddled with that worthy
+name, but only brought reproach upon it. It is quite
+possible indeed that here he might have in view some
+of the Judaisers also; for there was a sensual side
+of popular Judaism which might be represented also
+among the Judaising Christians. But it is more likely
+that the Apostle's eye is turning mainly to another
+class of persons. It seems that in the early Churches,
+especially perhaps at the time when the later Epistles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
+were written, a recognisable tendency to a loose and
+lawless Christianity was finding representatives. Warning
+against these was needed; and they embodied a
+form of evil which might serve to show the Philippians,
+as in a mirror, the disaster in which an idle, self-satisfied,
+vainglorious Christianity was like to land its votaries.</p>
+
+<p>What first strikes the Apostle about them is that
+they are enemies of the cross of Christ. One asks,
+Does he mean enemies of the doctrine of the cross, or
+of its practical influence and efficiency? The two are
+naturally connected. But here perhaps the latter is principally
+intended. The context, especially what follows
+in the Apostle's description, seems to point that way.</p>
+
+<p>When Christ's cross is rightly apprehended, and
+when the place it claims in the mind has been cordially
+yielded, it becomes, as we see in the case of Paul himself,
+a renovating principle, the fountain of a new view
+and a new course. That immense sacrifice for our
+redemption from sin decides that we are no more to
+live the rest of our time in the flesh to the lusts of men
+(1 Peter iv. 1). And that patience of Christ in His
+lowly love to God and man under all trial, sheds its
+conclusive light upon the true use and end of life, the
+true rule, the true inspiration, and the true goal. So
+regarded, Christ's cross teaches us the slender worth,
+or the mere worthlessness, of much that we otherwise
+should idolise; on the other hand, it assures us of redemption
+into His likeness, as a prospect to be realised
+in the renunciation of the "old man"; and it embodies an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
+incomparable wealth of motive to persuade us to comply,
+for we find ourselves in fellowship with Love unspeakable.</p>
+
+<p>Under this influence we take up our cross; which is
+substantially the same as renouncing or denying ourselves
+(Matt. xvi. 24) carried practically out. It is
+self-denial for Christ's sake and after Christ's example,
+accepted as a principle, and carried out in the forms in
+which God calls us to it. This, as we have seen, takes
+place chiefly in our consenting to bear the pain involved
+in separation from sin and from the life of worldliness,
+and in carrying on the war against sin and against the
+world. It includes rejection of known sin; it includes
+watchfulness and discipline of life with a view to life's
+supreme end; and so it includes prudential self-denial, in
+avoiding undue excitement and over-absorbing pleasure,
+because experience and God's word tell us it is not safe
+for our hearts to be so "overcharged" (Luke xxi. 34).
+This cross in many of its applications is hard. Yet in
+all its genuine applications it is most desirable; for in
+frankly embracing it we shall find our interest in salvation,
+and in the love which provides it, brought home
+with comfort to our hearts (1 Peter iv. 14).</p>
+
+<p>It seems, then, that there are professing Christians
+who are enemies of the cross of Christ. Not that it is
+always an open and proclaimed hostility; though, indeed,
+in the case of those whom Paul is thinking of, it
+would appear to have revealed itself pretty frankly.
+But at all events it is a real aversion; they would have
+nothing to do with the cross, or as little as they may.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
+And this proves that the very meaning of salvation, the
+very end of Christ as a Saviour, is the object of their
+dislike. But in Christianity the place of the cross is
+central. It will make itself felt somehow. Hence
+those who decline or evade it find it difficult to do so
+quietly and with complacency. Eventually their dislike
+is apt to be forced into bitter manifestation. They
+begin, perhaps, with quiet and skilful avoidance; but
+eventually they become, recognisably, enemies of the
+cross, and their religious career acquires a darker and
+more ominous character.</p>
+
+<p>It is, however, an interesting question, What draws
+to Christianity those who prove to be enemies of the
+cross? Nowadays we may explain the adhesion of
+many such persons to Christian profession by referring
+to family and social influences. But we can hardly set
+much down to that score when we are thinking of the
+days of Paul. It cannot be doubted that some persons
+were then strongly drawn by Christianity, who did not
+prove amenable to its most vital influence. And that
+may persuade us that the same phenomenon recurs in
+all ages and in all Churches. For different minds there
+are different influences which may operate in this way.
+Intellectual interest may be stirred by the Christian
+teachings; the sense of truth and reality may be appealed
+to by much in the Christian view of men and
+things; there may be a genuine satisfaction in having
+life and feelings touched and tinged with the devout
+emotions which breathe in Christian worship; there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
+may be a veneration, real as far as it goes, for some
+features of Christian character, as set forth in Scripture
+and embodied in individual Christians; and, not to
+dwell on mere particulars, the very goodness of Christian
+truth and life, which a man will not pay the cost of
+appropriating to himself, may exert a strong attraction,
+and draw a man to live upon the borders of it. Nay,
+such men may go a good long way in willingness to do
+and bear for the cause they have espoused. Men have
+run the risk of loss of life and goods for Christianity,
+who have yet been shipwrecked on some base lust
+which they could not bring themselves to resign. And
+who has not known kindly, serviceable men, hanging
+about the Churches with a real predilection for the
+suburban life of Zion,&mdash;men regarding whom it made
+the heart sore to form any adverse judgment, and yet
+men whose life seemed just to omit the cross of Christ?</p>
+
+<p>In the case of those whom Paul thinks of there was
+no room for doubt as to the real nature of the case;
+and therefore the Apostle cannot too emphatically bring
+it out. He puts first the most startling view of it.
+Their end is destruction. Not salvation, but destruction
+is before them, although they name the name of
+Christ. Destruction is the port they are sailing for: that
+is the tendency of their whole career. Their place must
+be at last with those on whom the day of the Lord brings
+sudden destruction, so that they shall not escape. Alas
+for the Christians whose end is destruction!</p>
+
+<p>"Their god is their belly." Their life was sensual.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
+Most likely, judging from the tone of expression, they
+were men of coarse and unblushing indulgence. If so,
+they were only the more outstanding representatives of
+the sensual life. The things which delight the senses
+were for them the main things, and ruled them. They
+might have intellectual and æsthetic interests, they
+might own family and social connections, they certainly
+did attach importance to some religious views and some
+religious ties; but the main object of their life was to
+seek rest and content for those desires which may have
+rest apart from any higher exercise or any higher portion.
+Their life was ruled and guided by its lower and sensual
+side. So their belly was their god. Yet they claimed
+a place in the Christian fellowship, in which Christ has
+revealed God, and has opened the way to God, and brings
+us to God. But their thoughts ran, and their plans
+tended, and their life found its explanation, <i>bellywards</i>.
+This was <i>their</i> god. Their trust and their desire were
+placed in the things which the flesh appreciates. These
+they served, and of these they took on the likeness.
+They served not the Lord Jesus Christ, but their own
+belly. One cannot think of it, without grave questions
+as to the direction in which life preponderates. That
+would seem to indicate our god. One does not
+severely judge "good living." And yet what may
+"good living" denote in the case of many a professing
+Christian? In what direction do we find the tides of
+secret and unrestrained thought setting?</p>
+
+<p>And they glory in their shame. In this Epistle and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
+elsewhere, one sees the importance attached by the
+Apostle to that which a man glories in, as marking his
+character. For himself, Paul gloried in the cross of
+Christ: he counted all things but loss for the knowledge
+of Christ. And these men also were, or
+claimed to be, in Christ's Church, in which we are
+taught to rate things at their true value and to
+measure them by the authentic standard. But they
+gloried in their shame. What they valued themselves
+upon; what they inwardly, at least, rejoiced
+in, and applauded themselves for; what they would,
+perhaps, have most cheerfully dwelt upon in congenial
+company, were things of which they had every reason
+to be ashamed&mdash;no doubt, the resources they had
+gathered for the worship of this god of theirs, and the
+success they had had in it. For example, such men
+would inwardly congratulate themselves on the measure
+in which they were able to attain the kind of satisfaction
+at which they aimed. They gloried in the degree in
+which they succeeded in bringing about a perfect
+accommodation between themselves and the objects
+which sense alone appreciates, and in producing a
+harmonious and balanced life, set on that key. Really,
+it should have been to them a cause of grief and shame
+to find themselves succeeding here, and failing in attaining
+a right relation to Christ and to the things of
+God's kingdom, to righteousness, godliness, faith, love,
+patience, meekness. So they gloried in their shame.
+This was seen in their lives. Alas, is there no reason<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
+to fear that when the thoughts of all hearts are revealed,
+too many whose lives are subject to no obvious reproach
+shall be found to have lived an inward life of
+evil thought, of base desire, of coarse and low imagination,
+that can only rank in the same class with these&mdash;men
+whose whole inward life gravitates, and gravitates
+unchecked, towards vanity and lust?</p>
+
+<p>In a word, their character is summed up in this, that
+they mind earthly things. That is the region in which
+their minds are conversant and to which they have
+regard. The higher world of truths and forces and
+objects which Christ reveals is for them inoperative.
+It does not appeal to them, it does not awe them, it
+does not govern them. Their minds can turn in this
+direction on particular occasions, or with a view to
+particular discussions; but their bent lies another way.
+The home of their hearts, the treasure which they seek,
+the congenial subjects and interests, are earthly.</p>
+
+<p>Since this whole description is meant to carry its
+lesson by suggestion of contrast, the clause last referred
+to brings powerfully before us the place to be given to
+the spiritual mind in our conception of a true Christian
+life. In the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans
+we are told that to be carnally minded&mdash;or the minding
+of the flesh&mdash;is death, but the minding of the spirit is
+life and peace. Care, therefore, is to be taken of our
+thoughts and of our practical judgments, so that they
+may be according to the spirit. Effort in this direction
+is hopeful effort, because we believe that Christ grants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
+His Spirit to hallow those regions of the inward man
+by His illuminating and purifying presence. It cannot
+be doubted that many lives that were capable of yielding
+much good fruit, have been frittered away and wasted
+through indulged vanity of thought. Others, that are
+methodical and energetic enough, are made sterile for
+Christian ends by the too common absence or the too
+feeble presence of the spiritual mind. It is not altogether
+direct meditation on spiritual objects that is here
+to be enforced. That has its important place; yet certainly,
+frank converse with the whole range of human
+interests is legitimately open to the Christian mind.
+What seems to be essential is that, through all, the
+regard to the supreme interests shall continue; and
+that the manner of thinking and of judging, the modes
+of feeling and impression, shall keep true to faith and
+love and Christ. The subject recurs in another form
+at the eighth verse of the following chapter.</p>
+
+<p>Probably, as was said, the Apostle is speaking of a
+class of men whose faults were gross, so that at least
+an Apostolic eye could not hesitate to read the verdict
+that must be passed upon them. But then we must
+consider that his object in doing this was to address
+a warning to men to whom he imputed no such gross
+failings; concerning whom, indeed, he was persuaded
+far other things, even things that accompany salvation;
+but whom he knew to be exposed to influences tending
+in the same direction, and whom he expected to see
+preserved only in the way of vigilance and diligence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
+Outstanding failures in Christian profession may startle
+us by their conspicuous deformity; but they fail to
+yield us their full lesson unless they suggest the far
+finer and more subtle forms in which the same evils
+may enter in, to mar or to annul what seemed to be
+Christian characters.</p>
+
+<p>The protest against the cross is still maintained even
+in the company of Christ's professed disciples. But
+this takes place most commonly, and certainly most
+persuasively, without advancing any plea for conduct
+grossly offensive, or directly inconsistent with Christian
+morals. The "enemies of the cross" retreat into a
+safer region, where they take up positions more capable
+of defence. "Why have a cross?" they say. "God
+has not made us spiritual beings only: men ought not
+to attempt to live as if they were pure intelligences or
+immaterial spirits. Also, God has made men with a
+design that they should be happy; they are to embrace
+and use the elements of enjoyment with which He has
+so richly surrounded them. He does not mean us to
+be clouded in perpetual gloom, or to be on our guard
+against the bright and cheering influences of the earth.
+He has made all things beautiful in their time; and He
+has given to us the capacity to recognise this that we
+may rejoice in it. Instead of scowling on the beauty
+of God's works, and the resources for enjoyment they
+supply, it is more our part to drink in by every sense,
+from nature and from art, the brightness, and gladness,
+and music, and grace. Let us seek, as much as may be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
+in this rough world, to have our souls attuned to all
+things sweet and fair."</p>
+
+<p>There is real truth here; for, no doubt, it lies in the
+destiny of man to bring the world into experience
+according to God's order: if this is not to be done in
+ways of sin and transgression, it is yet to be done in
+right ways; and in doing it, man is designed to be
+gladdened by the beauty of God's handiwork and by
+the wealth of His beneficence. And yet such statements
+can be used to shelter a life of enmity to the
+cross, and they are often employed to conceal the more
+momentous half of the truth. As long as the things
+of earth can become materials by means of which we
+may be tempted to fall away from the Holy One, and
+as long as we, being fallen, are corruptly disposed to
+make idols of them, we cannot escape the obligation to
+keep our hearts with diligence. So long, also, as we
+live in a world in which men, with a prevailing consent,
+work up its resources into a system which shuts God
+and Christ out; so long as men set in motion, by means
+of those resources, a stream of worldliness by which we
+are at all times apt to be whirled away,&mdash;so long every
+man whose ear and heart have become open to Christ
+will find that as to the things of earth there is a cross
+to bear. For he must decide whether his practical life
+is to continue to accept the Christian inspiration. He
+must make his choice between two things, whether he
+will principally love and seek a right adjustment with
+things above, with the objects and influences of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
+Kingdom of God, or whether he will principally love
+and seek a right, or at least a comfortable adjustment
+with things below. He must make this choice not once
+only, but he must hold himself at all times ready to
+make it over again, or to maintain it in reiterated applications
+of it. The grace of Christ who died and rose
+again is his resource to enable him.</p>
+
+<p>Every legitimate element of human experience, of
+human culture and attainment, is, doubtless open to the
+Christian man. Only, in making his personal selection
+among them, the Christian will keep sight of the goal
+of his high calling, and will weigh the conditions under
+which he himself must aim at it. Still every such
+element is open; and all legitimate satisfaction accruing
+to men from such sources is to be received with thankfulness.
+Let all this be recognised. But Christianity,
+by its very nature, requires us to recognise <i>also</i>, and
+<i>in a due proportion</i>, something else. It requires us to
+recognise the evil of sin, the incomparable worth of
+Christ's salvation. Along with these things, duly
+regarded, let all innocent earthly interests take their
+place. But if we are conscious that as yet we have
+very incompletely established the right proportionate
+regard, is it any wonder if we are obliged to keep
+watch, lest the treacherous idolatry of things seen and
+temporal should carry us away,&mdash;obliged to accept the
+cross? We are obliged; but in the school of our
+Master we should learn to do this thing most gladly,
+not by constraint, but of a ready mind.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>The ideal life on earth no doubt would be a life in
+which all was perfectly harmonised. The antagonism
+of the interests would have passed away. Loyalty and
+love to God's kingdom and to His Son would embody
+themselves in all human exercise and attainment as in
+their proper vesture, each promoting each, working
+together as body and soul. There are Christians who
+have gone far towards this attainment. They have
+been so mastered by the mind of Christ, that while, on
+the one hand, they habitually seek the things above,
+on the other hand there is little trace of bondage or of
+timorousness in their attitude towards the bright aspects
+of earthly experience. Some of them were happily
+carried in early days into so clear a decision for the
+better part; some emerged later, after conflict, into so
+bright a land of Beulah, that they find it easy, with
+little conflict and little fear, to take frank use of forms
+of earthly good which other Christians must treat with
+more reserve.</p>
+
+<p>This is one of the reasons why we must not judge
+one another about these things; why we must not lay
+down absolute rules about them; why even our recommendations
+must be provisional and prudential only.
+It is at the same time a reason for the more fidelity in
+each of us towards himself, to see that we do not trifle
+with the great trust of regulating our own life. It is
+possible to give to God and to Christ a recognition
+which is not consciously dishonest, and yet to fail in
+admitting any deep and dominant impression of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
+significance of Christ's redemption for human life. So
+the heart is yielded, the time is surrendered, the
+strength is given to attractive objects, which are not
+indeed essentially immoral, but which are suffered to
+usurp the heart, and to estrange the man from Christ.
+Such persons prove enemies of the cross of Christ:
+they mind earthly things.</p>
+
+<p>Since the earthly side of human life, with its sorrow
+and joy, its work and its leisure, is legitimate and
+inevitable, questions arise about adjusting details.
+And in particular, those who retain a relation to
+Christianity while they cherish a worldly spirit, take
+a delight in raising questions as to the forms of life
+which are, or are not, in harmony with Christianity,
+and as to whether various practices and indulgences
+are to be vindicated or condemned. It is a satisfaction
+to persons of this sort to have a set of fixed points laid
+down, with respect to which, if they conform, they may
+take the credit of doing so, and if they rebel, they may
+have the comfort of feeling that the case is arguable:
+as indeed these are often matters upon which one
+may argue for ever. Now what is clearly prohibited or
+clearly warranted in Scripture, as permanent instruction
+for the Church, must be maintained. But beyond that
+point it is often wisest to refuse to give any specific
+answer to the questions so raised. The true answer
+is, Are you a follower of Christ? Then it is laid on
+your own conscience, at your own responsibility, to
+answer such questions for yourself. No one can come<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
+in your place. You must decide, and you have a right to
+decide for yourself, what course is, for you, consistent
+with loyalty to Christ and His cross. Only it may be
+added, that the very spirit in which one puts the question
+may be significant. One who minds earthly things will
+put the question in one way; one whose citizenship is
+in heaven, in another. And the answer which you
+attain will be according to the question you have put.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>OUR CITY AND OUR COMING KING.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>"For our citizenship is in heaven; from whence also we wait for a
+Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ: who shall fashion anew the body of
+our humiliation, that it may be conformed to the body of His glory,
+according to the working whereby He is able even to subject all things
+unto Himself."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> iii. 20, 21 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>OUR CITY AND OUR COMING KING.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>To live, amid the things of earth, and in constant
+converse with them, a life in the power of
+Christ's resurrection, and in the fellowship of His sufferings,
+was the Apostle's chosen course; in which
+he would have the Philippians to follow him. For a
+moment he had diverged to sketch, for warning, the
+way of the transgressors, who spend their lives intent
+on the things that pass away. Now he brings the
+argument to a close, by once more proclaiming the
+glory of the high calling in Christ. As the Christian
+faith looks backward to the triumph of Christ's resurrection,
+and to the meekness of His suffering, and
+receives its inspiration from them, so also it looks
+upward, and it looks forward. It is even now in
+habitual communion with the world on high; and it
+reaches on towards the hope of the Lord's return.</p>
+
+<p>"Our citizenship is in heaven." The word here
+used (comp. i. 27) means the constitution or manner
+of life of a state or city. All men draw much from the
+spirit and laws of the commonwealth to which they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
+belong; and in antiquity this influence was even
+stronger than we commonly find it to be in our
+day. The individual was conscious of himself as a
+member of his own city or state. Its life enfolded his.
+Its institutions set for him the conditions under which
+life was accepted and was carried on. Its laws determined
+for him his duties and his rights. The ancient
+and customary methods of the society developed a
+common spirit, under the influence of which each
+citizen unfolded his own personal peculiarities. When
+he went forth elsewhere he felt himself, and was felt to
+be, a stranger. Now in the heavenly kingdom, which
+had claimed them and had opened to them through
+Christ, the believers had found their own city; and
+finding it, had become, comparatively, strangers in
+every other.</p>
+
+<p>A way of thinking and acting prevails throughout
+the world, as if earth and its interests were the whole
+sphere of man; and being pervaded by this spirit, the
+whole world may be said to be a commonwealth with
+a spirit and with maxims of its own. We, who live in
+it, feel it natural to comply with the drift of things in
+this respect, and difficult to stand against it; so that
+separation and singularity seem unreasonable and hard.
+We claim for our lives the support of a common understanding;
+we yearn for the comfort of a system of things
+existing round us, in which we may find countenance. It
+was urged against the Christians of the early ages that
+their religion was unsocial&mdash;it broke the ties by which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
+men held together; and doubtless many a Christian, in
+hours of trial and depression, felt with pain that much
+in Christian life offered a foundation for the reproach.
+On the other hand, those who, like the enemies of the
+cross, refer their lives to the world's standard, rather
+than to Christ's, have at least this comfort, that they
+have a tangible city. The world is their city: therefore
+also the prince of it is their king. But the Apostle,
+for himself and his fellows, sets against this the true
+city or state&mdash;with its more original and ancient
+sanctions; with its more authoritative laws; with its
+far more pervading and mighty spirit, for the Spirit
+of God Himself is the life which binds it all together;
+with its glorious and gracious King. This commonwealth
+has its seat in heaven; for there it reveals its
+nature, and thence its power descends. We recognise
+this whenever we pray, "Thy will be done in earth as
+it is in heaven." This, says the Apostle, is our citizenship.
+The archaism of the Authorised Version, "Our
+conversation" (that is, our habitual way of living) "is
+in heaven," expresses much of the meaning; only the
+"conversation" is referred, by the phrase employed in
+the text, to the sanctions under which it proceeds, the
+august fellowship by which it is sustained, the source
+of influence by which it is continually vitalised. Our
+state, and the life which as members of that state we
+claim and use, is celestial. Its life and strength, its
+glory and victory, are in heaven. But it is ours, though
+we are here on earth.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>Therefore, according to the Apostle, the standard of
+our living, and its sanctions, and its way of thinking and
+proceeding, and, in a word, our city, with its interests
+and its objects, being in heaven, the earnest business of
+our life is there. We have to do with earth constantly
+and in ways most various; but, as Christians, our way
+of having to do with the earth itself is heavenly, and
+is to be conversant with heaven. What we mainly
+love and seek is in heaven; what we listen most to
+hear is the voice that comes from heaven; what we
+most earnestly speak is the voice we send to heaven;
+what lies next our heart is the treasure and the hope
+which are secure in heaven; what we are most intent
+upon is what we lay up in heaven, and how we are
+getting ready for heaven; there is One in heaven whom
+we love above all others; we are children of the
+kingdom of heaven; it is our country and our home;
+and something in us refuses to settle on those things
+here that reject the stamp of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>Does this go too high? Does some one say, "Something
+in this direction attracts me and I reach out to it,
+but ah! how feebly"?&mdash;then how strongly does the
+principle of the Apostle's admonition apply. If we own
+that this city rightfully claims us, if we are deeply
+conscious of shortcoming in our response to that claim,
+then how much does it concern us to allow no earthly
+thing that by its own nature drags us down from our
+citizenship in heaven.</p>
+
+<p>It is in heaven. Many ways it might be shown to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
+so; but it is enough to sum up all in this, that One has
+His presence there, who is the Life and the Lord of this
+city of ours, caring for us, calling us to the present
+fellowship with Him that is attainable in a life of faith,
+but especially (for this includes all the rest) whom we
+look for, to come forth from heaven for us. He has
+done wonders already to set up for us the grace of the
+kingdom of heaven, and He has brought us in to it; He
+is doing much for us daily in grace and in providence,
+upholding His Church on earth from age to age; but
+this "working" is proceeding to a final victory. He
+is "able to subject all things to Himself." And the
+emphatic proof of it which awaits all believers, is that
+the body itself, reconstituted in the likeness of Christ's
+own, shall at last be in full harmony with a destiny of
+immortal purity and glory. So shall the manifestation
+of His power and grace at last sweep through our whole
+being, within and without. That is the final triumph
+of salvation, with which the long history finds all its
+results attained. For this we await the coming of the
+Saviour from heaven. Well therefore may we say
+that the state to which we pertain, and the life which
+we hold as members of that state, is in heaven.</p>
+
+<p>The expectation of the coming of Christ out of the
+world of supreme truth and purity, where God is known
+and served aright, to fulfil all His promises,&mdash;this is the
+Church's and the believer's great hope. It is set before
+us in the New Testament as a motive to every duty,
+as giving weight to every warning, as determining the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
+attitude and character of all Christian life. In particular,
+we cannot deal aright with any of the earthly
+things committed to us, unless we deal with them in
+the light of Christ's expected coming. This expectation
+is to enter into the heart of every believer, and no one
+is warranted to overlook or make light of it. His
+coming, His appearing, the revelation of Him, the
+revelation of His glory, the coming of His day, and so
+forth, are pressed on us continually. In a true waiting
+for the day of Christ, is gathered up the right regard to
+what He did and bore when He came first, and also a
+right regard to Him as He is now the pledge and the
+sustainer of our soul's life: the one and the other are
+to pass onward to the hope of His appearing.</p>
+
+<p>Some harm has been done, perhaps, by the degree
+in which attention has been concentrated on debatable
+points about the time of the Lord's coming, or the order
+of events in relation to it; but more by the measure in
+which Christians have allowed the world's unbelieving
+temper to affect on this point the habit of their own
+minds. It must be most seriously said that our Lord
+Himself expected no man to succeed in escaping the
+corruption of the world and enduring to the end, otherwise
+than in the way of watching for his Lord (see
+Luke xii. 35-40&mdash;but the passages are too numerous
+to be quoted).</p>
+
+<p>And the Apostle lays an emphasis on the character
+in which we expect Him. The word "Saviour" is emphatic.
+We look for a Saviour; not merely One who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
+saved us once, but One who brings salvation with Him
+when He comes. It is <i>the</i> great good, in its completeness,
+that the Church sees coming to her with her
+Lord. Now she has the faith of it,&mdash;and with the
+faith an earnest and foretaste,&mdash;but then salvation
+comes. Therefore the coming is spoken of as redemption
+drawing nigh, as the time of the redemption
+of the purchased possession. So also in the Epistle
+to the Galatians the end of Christ's sacrifice is said to
+be to "deliver us from this present evil world."</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless it is unwise to lay down extreme positions
+as to the spirit in which we are to deal with temporal
+things, and especially with their winning and attractive
+aspects. Christian men, at peace with God, should not
+only feel spiritual joy, but may well make a cheerful use
+of passing mercies. Yet certainly the Christian's hope
+is to be saved out of this world, and out of life as he
+knows it here, into one far better&mdash;saved out of the
+best and brightest state to which this present state of
+things can bring him. The Christian spirit is giving
+way in that man who, in whatever posture of his
+worldly affairs, does not feel that the present is a state
+entangled with evil, including much darkness and much
+estrangement from the soul's true rest. He ought to
+be minded so as to own the hope of being saved
+out of it, looking and hasting to the coming of the
+Lord.</p>
+
+<p>If we lived out this conviction with some consistency,
+we should not go far wrong in our dealings with this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
+present world. But probably there is no feature in
+which the average Christianity of to-day varies more
+from that of the early Christians, than in the faint
+impressions, and the faint influence, experienced by
+most modern Christians in connection with the expectation
+of the Lord's return.</p>
+
+<p>As far as individual life goes, the position of men in
+both periods is much the same; it is so, in spite of all
+the changes that have taken place. Then, as now, the
+mirage of life tempted men to dream of felicities here,
+which hindered them from lifting up their heads to a
+prospect of redemption. But now, as then, counter
+influences work; the short and precarious term of
+human life, its disappointments, its cares and sorrows,
+its conflicts and falls, conspire to teach even the
+most reluctant Christian that the final and satisfying
+rest is not to be found here. So that the difference
+seems to arise mainly from a secret failure of faith
+on this point, due to the impression made by long
+ages in which Christ has not come. "Where is the
+promise of His coming? All things continue as they
+were."</p>
+
+<p>This may suggest, however, that influences are recognisable,
+tending to form, in modern Christians, a
+habit of thought and feeling less favourable to vivid
+expectation of Christ's coming. It does not arise so
+much in connection with individual experience, but is
+rather an impression drawn from history and from the
+common life of men. In the days of Paul, general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
+history was simply discouraging to spiritual minds.
+It led men to think of all creation groaning together.
+Civilisation certainly had made advances; civil government
+had conferred some of its benefits on men; and,
+lately, the strong hand of Rome, however heavily it
+might press, had averted or abridged some of the evils
+that afflicted nations. Still, on the whole, darkness, corruption,
+and social wrong continued to mark the scene,
+and there was little to suggest that prolonged effort
+might gradually work improvement. Rather it seemed
+that a rapid dispensation of grace, winning its way by
+supernatural energy, might well lead on to the winding
+up of the whole scene, sweeping all away before the
+advent of new heavens and a new earth. But, for us,
+nineteen hundred years have well-nigh passed. The
+Christian Church has been confronted all that time
+with her great task; and, however imperfect her light
+and her methods have often been, she has set processes
+agoing, and pressed on in lines of action, in which she
+has not been without her reward. Also the public
+action of at least the European races, stimulated and
+guided by Christianity, has been inspired by faith in
+progress and in a reign of justice, and has applied
+itself to improve the conditions of men. How much of
+sin and pain still afflict the world is too sadly evident.
+But the memory of the successive lives of saints,
+thinkers, men of public spirit and devoted public action,
+is strong in Christian minds to-day&mdash;it is a long, animating
+history. And never more than at the present<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
+time did the world press itself on the Christian mind as
+the sphere for effort, for helpful and hopeful achievement.
+All this tends to fix the eye on what may
+happen <i>before</i> Christ comes; for one asks room and
+time to fight the battle out, to see the long co-operant
+processes converge upon their goal. The conflict is
+thought of as one to be bequeathed, like freedom's
+battle, from sire to son, through indefinite periods
+beyond which men do not very often look. And, indeed,
+the amelioration of the world and remedy of its
+ills by works of faith and love is Christlike work.
+The world cannot want it; the fruit of it will not be
+withheld; and the hopeful ardour with which it is pursued
+is Christ's gift to His people. For Christ Himself
+healed and fed the multitudes. Yet all this shall
+not replace the coming of Christ, and the redemption
+that draws nigh with Him. The longing eyes that
+gaze into the prospects of public-spirited beneficence
+and Christian philanthropy, do well; but they must
+also look higher up and further on.</p>
+
+<p>One thing must be said. It is vain for us to suppose
+we can adjust beforehand, to our own satisfaction, the
+elements which enter into the future, so as to make a
+well-fitted scheme of it. That was not designed. And
+in this case two ways of looking at the future are apt
+to strive together. The man who is occupied with
+processes that, as he conceives, might eventuate in
+a reign of goodness reached by gradual amelioration,
+by successive victories of the better cause, may look<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
+askance on the promise of Christ's coming, because he
+dislikes catastrophe and cataclysm. First the blade,
+then the ear, then the full corn in the ear, is his motto.
+And the man who is full of the thought of the Lord's
+return, and deeply persuaded that nothing less will
+eradicate the world's disease, may look with impatience
+on measures that seem to aim at slow and far results.
+But neither the one mode of view nor the other is to
+be sacrificed. Work is to be done in the world on the
+lines that promise best to bless the world. Yet also
+this faith must never be let down&mdash;The Lord is coming;
+the Lord shall come.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>How decisive the change is which Christ completes at
+His coming&mdash;how distinctive, therefore, and unworldly,
+that citizenship which takes its type from heaven
+where He is, and from the hope of His appearing&mdash;is
+last of all set forth. Paul might have dwelt on many
+great blessings the full meaning of which will be unfolded
+when Christ comes; for He is to conform all
+things to Himself. But Paul prefers to signalise what
+shall befall our bodies; for that makes us feel that not
+one element in our state shall fail to be subjected to the
+victorious energy of Christ. Our bodies are, in our
+present state, conspicuously refractory to the influences
+of the higher kingdom. Regeneration makes no improvement
+on them. In our body we carry about with
+us what seems to mock the idea of an ethereal and
+ideal life. And when we die, the corruption of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
+grave speaks of anything but hope. Here, then, in
+this very point the salvation of Christ shall complete
+its triumph, saving us all over and all through. He
+"shall fashion anew the body of our humiliation, that
+it may be conformed to the body of His glory."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>For the Apostle Paul the question how the body is
+to be reckoned with in any lofty view of human life had
+a peculiar interest. One sees how his mind dwelt
+upon it. He does not indeed impute to the body any
+original or essential antagonism to the soul's better life.
+But it shares in the debasement and disorganisation
+implied in sin; it has become the ready avenue for
+many temptations. Through it the man has become
+participant of a vivid and unintermittent earthliness,
+contrasting all too sadly with the feebleness of spiritual
+impressions and affections, so that the balance
+of our being is deranged. Nor does grace directly
+affect men's bodily conditions. Here, then, is an
+element in a renewed life that has a peculiar refractoriness
+and irresponsiveness. So much is this so that sin
+in our complex nature easily turns this way, easily
+finds resources in this quarter. Hence sin in us often
+takes its denomination from this side of things. It is
+the flesh, and the minding of the flesh, that is to be
+crucified. On the other hand, just because life for
+us is life in the body, therefore the body with its
+members must be brought into the service of Christ,
+and must fulfil the will of God. "Yield your bodies a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
+living sacrifice." "Your bodies are temples of the Holy
+Ghost." A disembodied Christianity is to the Apostle
+no Christianity. There may be difficulties, indeed, in
+carrying this consecration through, elements of resistance
+and insubordination to be overcome. If so, they must
+be fought down. "I keep under my body and bring
+it into subjection, lest I prove a castaway." To be
+thorough in this proved hard even for Paul. "Who
+shall deliver me from the body of this death?"&mdash;a text
+in which one sees how the "body" offered itself as the
+ready symbol of the whole inward burden and difficulty.
+So the body is dead because of sin: dying, fit to die,
+appointed to die, and not now renewed to life. "But
+if the Spirit of Him that raised up Christ from the dead
+dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead
+shall also quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit
+that dwelleth in you." Then, limits now imposed on
+right thinking, right feeling, right acting, shall be found
+to have passed away. Till then we groan, waiting for
+the adoption, the redemption of the body; but then
+shall be the manifestation of the sons of God. To
+Paul this came home as one of the most definite, practical,
+and decisive forms in which the triumph of
+Christ's salvation should be declared.</p>
+
+<p>The body, then, by which we hold converse with the
+world, and by which we give expression to our mental
+life, has shared in the evil that comes by sin. We find
+it to be the body of our humiliation. It is not only
+liable to pain, decay, and death, not only subject to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
+much that is humbling and distressing, but it has
+become an ill-adapted organ for an aspiring soul. The
+bodily state weighs down the soul, when its aspirations
+after good have been rekindled. It is not wholly unconnected
+with our physical state that it is so hard to
+carry the recognition of God and the life of faith into
+the comings and goings of the outward life; so hard to
+wed the persuasions of our faith to the impressions
+of our sense. But we look forward to our Lord's
+coming with the expectation that the body of our
+humiliation shall be transfigured into the likeness of
+the body of His glory. In this we discern with what
+a pervading energy He is to subdue all things to
+Himself. Love in righteousness is to triumph through
+all spheres.</p>
+
+<p>We have more than once acknowledged how natural
+it is to dream of constructing a Christian life on earth
+with all its elements, natural and spiritual, perfectly harmonised,
+each having its place in relation to each so as
+to make the music of a perfect whole. And in the
+strength of such a dream, some look down on all
+Christian practice as blind and narrow, which seems to
+them to mar life by setting one element of it against
+another. It must be owned that narrow types of
+Christianity have often needlessly offended so. Nevertheless
+we have here a new proof that the dream of
+those who would achieve a perfect harmony, in the
+present state and under present conditions, is vain.
+A perfect Christian harmony of life cannot be restored<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
+in the body of our humiliation. The nobler part is to
+own this, and to confess that amid many undeserved
+good gifts, yet, in relation to the great hope set before
+us, we groan, waiting for the redemption; when Christ
+who now fits us to run the race and bear the cross
+shall come and <i>save</i> us out of all this, changing the
+body of our humiliation into the likeness of the body
+of His glory.</p>
+
+<p>Against the ways of Jewish self-righteousness, and
+against the impulses of fleshly minds, the Apostle had
+set the true Christianity&mdash;the methods in which it
+grows, the influences on which it relies, the truths and
+hopes by which it is mainly sustained, the high citizenship
+which it claims and to the type of which it
+resolutely conforms. All this was possible in Christ,
+all this was actual in Christ, all this was theirs in Christ.
+Yet this is what is brought into debate, by unbelief and
+sin; this against unbelief and sin has to be maintained.
+Some influences come to shake us as to the truth of it&mdash;"It
+is not so real after all." Some influences come to
+shake us as to the good of it&mdash;"It is not after all so very,
+so supremely, so satisfyingly good." Some influences
+come to shake us as to our own part in it&mdash;"It can
+hardly control and sustain my life, for after all perhaps&mdash;alas,
+most likely&mdash;it is not for me, it cannot be for me."
+Against all this we are to make our stand, in and with
+our Lord and Master. He is our confidence and our
+strength. How the Apostle longed to see this victory
+achieved in the case of all these Philippians, who were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
+the treasure and the fruit of his life and labour! Be
+decided about all this, be clear about it, cast every other
+way of it from you. "Therefore, my dearly beloved
+brethren, my joy and crown, so stand fast in the Lord,
+my dearly beloved."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>PEACE AND JOY.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>"I exhort Euodia, and I exhort Syntyche, to be of the same mind
+in the Lord. Yea, I beseech thee also, true yokefellow, help these
+women, for they laboured with me in the gospel, with Clement also,
+and the rest of my fellow-workers whose names are in the book of
+life.</p>
+
+<p>"Rejoice in the Lord alway: again I will say, Rejoice. Let your
+forbearance be known unto all men. The Lord is at hand. In
+nothing be anxious; but in everything by prayer and supplication
+with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God. And
+the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall guard your
+hearts and your thoughts in Christ Jesus."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> iv. 2-7 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>PEACE AND JOY.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Lightfoot has observed that the passages
+in the Acts of the Apostles which record the
+Macedonian experiences of Paul, have a good deal to
+say about women (Acts xvi., xvii.). They convey the
+impression that in Macedonia women had a position
+and exercised an influence, at least in religious matters,
+that was not usual in the Greek world. And he has
+appealed to the remains of ancient Macedonian inscriptions
+to support the general idea that exceptional
+respect was accorded to women in that country. Here,
+at any rate, we have two women of note in the Church
+at Philippi. They might, very likely, possess social
+standing and influence. They had been qualified to
+render, and in point of fact did render, important help
+in setting forward the cause of Christ in that city. We
+cannot doubt therefore that they were warm-hearted
+Christian women, who had deeply felt the power of the
+gospel, so that, like many of their sisters in later days,
+they gladly embarked in the service of it. In those
+days such service on the part of women implied no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
+small effort of faith; and doubtless it had cost them
+something in the way of cross-bearing. But now,
+disagreements and estrangement had fallen out between
+them. Most likely the keen practical energies, which
+made them serviceable Christians, had brought about
+collision on some points in which their views differed.
+And then they had not managed the difference well.
+Self came in, and coloured and deepened it. Now, one
+may think, they were in danger of being always ready
+to differ, and to differ with mutual distrust and dislike.</p>
+
+<p>People cannot always think alike, not even Christians
+who share the same service. But there is a Christian way
+of behaving about these inevitable divergences. And,
+in particular, in such cases we might be expected to
+show a superiority, in Christ our Lord, to minor differences,
+not allowing them to trouble the great agreement
+and the dear affection in which Christ has bound us.
+Whatever is to be said about a difference, as to its
+merits, the main thing that has to be said about it often
+is, "You should not have let it come between you. You
+should, both of you, have been big enough and strong
+enough in Christ, to know how to drop it and forget it.
+In making so much of it, in allowing it to make so much
+of itself, you have been children, and naughty children."</p>
+
+<p>What this difference was we do not know; and it is
+of no consequence. Paul does not address himself to
+it. He holds both parties to be in the wrong now, and,
+for his purpose, equally in the wrong; and he addresses
+entreaty to both, in exactly the same terms, to agree in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
+Christ and be done with it: no longer to allow this thing
+to mar their own edification and hinder the cause of
+Christ. Yet, while he is sure that this is the right way,
+he does not conceal from himself how difficult human
+nature finds it to come happily out of such a complication.
+So he appeals to some old comrade at Philippi,
+whom he calls his "genuine yokefellow," to lend a
+hand. A Christian bystander, a friend of both parties,
+might help them out of the difficulty. In this connection
+the Apostle's mind goes back to happy days of
+cordial effort at Philippi, in which these women, and the
+"yokefellow," and Clement, and others had all been at
+work, shoulder to shoulder, all rejoicing in the common
+salvation and the joint service.</p>
+
+<p>In difficulties between Christians, as between other
+people, wise and loving friendship may perform the most
+important services. Selfishness shrinks from rendering
+these; and on the other hand, meddlesomeness, which is
+a form of egotism combined with coarseness, rushes in
+only to do harm. Wisdom is needed, mainly the wisdom
+which consists in loving thoughtfulness. The love
+which seeketh not her own, and is not easily provoked,
+is much called for in this ministry of reconciliation.</p>
+
+<p>These good women had little idea, probably, that
+their names should come down the ages in connection
+with this disagreement of theirs; and they might have
+deprecated it if they had thought of it. But let them
+be remembered with all honour&mdash;two saints of God,
+who loved and laboured for Christ, who bore the cross,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
+and each of whom was so important to the Church, that
+it was a matter of public interest to have this difficulty
+removed out of the way of both. As to it, we of later
+times have not succeeded in keeping Christian activity
+so free of personal misunderstandings as to be entitled
+on this account to assume any attitude of superiority.
+Let us think only with tenderness and affection of those
+venerable and beloved, those long-remembered mothers
+in Christ, Euodia and Syntyche.</p>
+
+<p>The commentators have tried to divine something
+further about this "true yokefellow"; but with no
+success. As to Clement, some have been willing to
+identify him with the Clement known to have laboured
+in the first age at Rome, and who is reported to have
+been the writer of a well-known Epistle from the
+Church at Rome to that at Corinth. He, again, has
+been by some identified with another Clement, also a
+Roman, a near relation of the Emperor Domitian, whom
+we have reason to believe to have been a Christian.
+Both identifications are probably mistaken; and the
+Clement now before us was no doubt resident at
+Philippi, and belonged to a somewhat earlier generation
+than his Roman namesake. The Roman world was
+full of Clements, and there is nothing surprising in
+meeting several Christians who bore the name.</p>
+
+<p>With the "yokefellow" and with Clement, the Apostle
+recalls other "labourers" who belonged to the fellowship
+of those gospel days at Philippi. We are not to think
+that they were all gifted as teachers or preachers; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
+they were zealous Christians who helped as they could
+to gather and to confirm the Church. Paul will not
+give their names; but it must not be thought that the
+names have ceased to be dear and honourable to him.
+"They shall not be in my letter," he says, "but they
+are written in even a better place, in the book of life.
+They are precious, not to me only, but to my Master."
+Here, again, if any one had asked Paul how he ventured
+to speak with so much assurance of the condition of
+persons whose course was not yet ended, he would
+no doubt have replied, as in ch. i. 7: "It is meet for
+me to think thus of them, because I have them in my
+heart: because both in my bonds, and in the defence
+and confirmation of the gospel, they all are partakers
+with me of grace."</p>
+
+<p>These personal references indicate that the main
+burden of the Apostle's thought in the Epistle has been
+disposed of, and that it is drawing to a close. Yet
+he finds it natural to add some closing admonitions.
+They are brief and pithy; they do not seem to labour
+with the weight of thought and feeling which pours
+through the preceding chapter. Yet they are not quite
+fragmentary. A definite conception of the case to be
+provided for underlies them, and also a definite conception
+of the way in which its necessities are to be met.</p>
+
+<p>He had been pouring out his soul on the subject of
+the true Christian life&mdash;the deep sources from which it
+springs, the great channels in which it runs, the magnificent
+conditions of Christ's kingdom under which it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
+becomes possible and is accomplished. But yet,
+another order of things crosses all this. It is the incessant
+detail of human life on earth, with its pettiness
+and superficiality, and yet with its inevitable hold upon
+us all. How much we are at the mercy of it! How
+hard to keep quite true to the grand music of the
+gospel we believe, amid the multifarious patter of the
+incidents of life, playing on the surface only, but on the
+sensitive surface of our being. The case of Euodia
+and Syntyche was itself but an illustration, of the commonest
+kind, of the liability of believing lives to be
+swayed and marred in this way. For all these little
+things claim attention; they assume a magnitude that
+does not belong to them, and they take a place to
+which they have no right. Can anything be said to
+help us to some prevailing mood, in which we shall be
+likely to take the right attitude towards these elements
+of life, and, at the same time, to keep due touch with
+the springs of our spiritual welfare?</p>
+
+<p>The Apostle reverts to the significant "good-bye"
+which was heard at the beginning of the third chapter.
+"Rejoice," "Be of good cheer," was the usual farewell
+salute. He had begun to use it, in the third
+chapter, with an emphasis on the native signification of
+the word. Now he resumes it more emphatically still,
+for here he finds the keynote which he wants: "Rejoice
+in the Lord alway; again I will say it, Rejoice."</p>
+
+<p>If joy be possible, it would seem to need no great
+persuasion to induce men to embrace it. But, as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
+matter of fact, Christians fail greatly here. In the
+Old Testament there are abundant exhortations to
+Israel to rejoice in the Lord: the Lord being Jehovah,
+without further distinction or limitation; and the ground
+of rejoicing being His revealed character, especially
+His mercy and His truth, and the fact that He is
+Israel's God. Here the Lord is our Lord Jesus, in
+whom the Father is both known and found. Now, to
+rejoice in Him is, and should be recognised as being,
+for believers, the most direct inference from their faith.
+For if this Lord be what the believer holds Him to be,
+then there is more in Christ to make him glad, than
+there can be in anything whatever to make him sorry.
+This applies even to remembered sin; for where sin
+abounded, grace doth much more abound. If indeed
+the joy be really in the Lord, it will be found to agree
+well with humility and penitence, as well as with diligence
+and patience; for all these things, and whatever
+should accompany them, come naturally from faith in
+Christ. But not the less, joy should have its place and
+its exercise.</p>
+
+<p>If one will think of it, it will be plain that rejoicing
+in the Lord just denotes this, viz., that the influence of
+the objects of faith has free play through the soul. It
+is well that faith should bring our intellective powers
+under its influence&mdash;that we should be brought to a
+vivid sense of the reality of Christ, and that our minds
+should work in reference to Him as they do in reference
+to things which are felt to be real, and which claim<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
+to be understood. That is well, even if as yet some
+malign force seems to impede cordial appreciation and
+personal fellowship. It is well, again, if Christ is felt
+drawing out personal trust, and with that, genuine
+affection, so that the heart beats with desire and admiration,
+even though for the present that can only be
+under the burden of a perplexed and sorrowful mind.
+But when the conviction makes way through all the
+soul, first that Christ is most real, and second that
+Christ is most good and desirable, and thirdly that
+Christ is for me, and when the soul surrenders
+thoroughly to it all, then gladness is the token that
+faith is playing freely through the human soul, throughout
+all its provinces. It is the flag hoisted to signify
+that Christ is believed and loved indeed. On the other
+hand, wrong is done to the Lord, and an evil report
+is brought up upon Him, when those who profess to
+believe in Him, fail to rejoice in Him.</p>
+
+<p>You well may rejoice in the Lord; you ought surely
+to do it. You ought to give yourselves time to think
+and feel so as to rejoice; you should be ashamed to fail
+to rejoice. You do not apprehend aright your position
+as a believer, you do not take the attitude that befits
+you, if the Lord believed in, though perhaps He makes
+you diligent, and patient, and penitent, and thankful,
+does not also make you heartily glad. Let the elements
+of this gladness come warm home to your heart, and
+do their work. Then you will realise, as, short of this,
+you never can, how the believer rises above the things<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
+that threaten to entangle him, and can do all things
+through Christ that strengtheneth him.</p>
+
+<p>And, in particular, how influential this is to preserve
+men from being unduly moved and swayed by the
+passing things of time! These sway us by joy and
+grief, by hope and fear; and what an inordinate
+measure of those affections they do beget in us! But
+let the great joy of the Lord have its place, and then
+those lesser claimants will have to content themselves
+with smaller room. A great grief shuts out lesser
+griefs. When a woman has lost her son, will she
+grieve greatly for the loss of her purse? So a great
+joy keeps down the excess of lesser joys. A man that
+has just won the heart and hand of the woman he loves,
+will not be greatly concerned about winning or losing
+at some game. He will be about equally glad either
+way. So he whose heart thrills with the joy of Christ
+will feel the pleasure and the pain of earthly things;
+but they will not master him, nor run away with him.</p>
+
+<p>According to the Apostle, a believer in the way of
+his duty, if he cherishes this joy, may ordinarily have
+a great deal of it. And, as it were, he urges us: "Now
+do not be moved away from it. Do not be so foolish.
+Various things will come, all sorts of things, claiming to
+preoccupy your mind, so that for the present this joy
+shall fall into the background. They claim it&mdash;and far
+too often they are allowed to succeed. Do not let them.
+'Rejoice in the Lord <i>alway</i>; again I will say, Rejoice.'"</p>
+
+<p>Always: for many believers rejoice in the Lord<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
+sometimes; for example, in hours of undisturbed meditation.
+But when they go out into the stir of life, to
+meet experiences which either greatly gratify or greatly
+grieve them, then it seems fit that the new passion
+should have its turn, and the heart insists on this
+indulgence. So also when some great hope absorbs
+the mind, or some great anxiety weighs upon it, the
+soul seems fascinated with the coming good or ill, and
+hangs upon the prospect as if nothing else for the
+present could be minded. Now the Apostle does not
+say that insensibility is the duty of Christians in these
+circumstances. Indeed it is because these experiences
+do interest and impress, that they become an effective
+instrument of Divine training. But Christ is fit to be
+rejoiced in, right through all vicissitudes; and common
+experiences, duly dealt with, ought to throw into relief
+the reasons why He must still be cause of gladness,
+whatever may be felt about other things. This maintained
+joy of the Lord&mdash;a rejoicing faith, a rejoicing
+love, a rejoicing obedience&mdash;this is the temper in virtue
+of which all else of life will fall into its due place, and
+will assume its just proportion. "Though the fig tree
+shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vines;
+the labour of the olive shall fail, and the fields shall
+yield no meat; the flock shall be cut off from the fold,
+and there shall be no herd in the stalls: yet I will
+rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation"
+(Hab. iii. 17, 18).</p>
+
+<p>So then, "Let your moderation (or forbearance) be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
+known to all men." The word here used expresses a
+state of mind opposed to the eagerness that overrates
+the worth of our personal objects, and to the arrogance
+that insists on our own will about them. Some would
+render it "considerateness." It is a temper which
+dictates a gentle and forbearing way of dealing with
+men. This is the appropriate evidence that the impetuosity
+of the heart about earthly things has been
+assuaged by the unseen presence and the influence of
+Christ. Christ seen, felt, and rejoiced in, is the secret
+of this moderation. A great vision of faith, and that
+not a vision which is dreaded, but a vision which is
+loved, brings the movement of the soul into a happy
+order. Now, not only so: not only does the love of
+Christ, unseen and absent, work in this way; but Christ
+is coming and is near. The hopes connected with Him
+are soon to be realised, the gladness of fellowship with
+Him is soon to be complete. The Lord is at hand.
+"Be patient therefore, brethren, unto the coming of
+the Lord. Stablish your hearts. The coming of the
+Lord draweth nigh" (James v. 7).</p>
+
+<p>For believers, as we have already seen, the coming
+of the Lord is, according to the New Testament, the
+great hope. Then the joy in the Lord is to be complete
+and crowned. Those who apprehend that glad day as
+near are not supposed to be capable of yielding up their
+hearts to the uncontrolled sway of mere earthly interests.</p>
+
+<p>Here, however, a question arises. Paul speaks of
+the day as near, and calls on his disciples to live under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
+the influence of that belief. He does not merely say
+that it <i>may</i> be near, but that it is. Yet we now know
+that the day was then more than eighteen hundred
+years away. In the light of this fact, one asks what
+we are to make of the statement before us, and what
+we are to make of the view of Christian life which the
+statement implies.</p>
+
+<p>Our Lord expressly withheld from His disciples all
+definite statement of times and seasons in this connection.
+Yet the Early Church with one consent
+expected the Lord to come within comparatively few
+years (what are commonly called few), and language
+shaped itself in accordance with that impression. We
+have here, however, more than a mere mode of phrasing.
+The nearness of Christ is emphasised as the ground on
+which Christian experience ought to build. Was not
+this a mistake?</p>
+
+<p>But one may ask in reply, Was it after all untrue that
+Christ's coming was near then, or that it is near now?
+Even if anticipations in our own day which bring it
+within a generation are to fail again, as they have always
+done before, shall we think that the Lord is not near?</p>
+
+<p>There is a nearness which pertains to all future
+events which are at once very great and important, and
+also are absolutely certain. Being so great, involving
+interests so great, and being contemplated in their
+inevitable certainty, such events can loom large upon
+the eye, and they can make their influence felt in the
+present, whatever tale of days may interpose before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
+they actually arrive. If, for instance, one were told of
+a friend, whom he supposed he might meet at any time,
+"You shall certainly see him six months hence," the
+reply might be, "Six months! That is a long time to
+wait." But if he were told with infallible authority,
+"Six months hence you shall die," would he then say,
+"It is a long time"? Would he not feel that it was
+near? Would not an event so momentous as death, so
+inclusive of all interests and all issues, prove able to
+stretch, as it were, across six months, and to come into
+each day, as part of that day's concern? So of the
+coming of Christ. It is the great event for the individual,
+the Church, the world. All issues run up to it;
+all developments are broken off by it; all earthly
+histories await its decision. To it all earthly movement
+tends; from it all that lies beyond is dated. It
+is the great gate of the world to come. Let us think
+what it means: and suppose we could be assured that
+it is still ten thousand years away, shall we say, "How
+far off it is"? Not if we believe in its certainty, and
+realise what it means. If we do so, our hearts will
+stir and thrill as we hearken how the surges of the
+eternal world are beating on the thin barrier of ten
+thousand years. Come when it may, it comes hasting
+to us, pressing before it all that lies between, big with
+the decisions and the fulfilments of Eternity. If we
+truly believe and rightly estimate it, we shall feel that it
+is near&mdash;even at the door. We shall be aware whenever
+we look forward that beyond all possible events of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
+earthly history it rises high, catching and holding our
+gaze, and hurrying toward our individual selves not one
+whit the less because it aims at others too.</p>
+
+<p>We are apt to ask why the words of warning and
+encouragement in reference to the future are not connected
+with the prospect of death, rather than with that
+of the Lord's return; for death certainly is the topic
+generally selected for such purposes by moralists and
+preachers of more recent days. The answer may
+partly be, that the possibility and likelihood of the Lord's
+return, even in the lifetime of themselves and their contemporaries,
+might render it more natural for the Apostles
+to fix all but exclusively on that. Yet this will not
+suffice. For nobody could overlook the fact that some
+believers were dying, and that death before the Lord's
+return might well be the portion of more. Besides, in
+particular circumstances, death does come into view in a
+perfectly easy and natural way, as at ch. i. 23; and the
+bearing of it on what lies nearer is considered. The
+true answer is that death is <i>not</i> the great expectation
+of the believer&mdash;not death, but victory over death, consummated
+and conclusively manifested when the Lord
+comes. This expectation certainly is associated with
+the solemn prospect of judgment; but not so as to
+quench the gladness of the hope for those who love the
+Lord and have trusted in Him. This is our expectation&mdash;"the
+Lord Jesus Christ, who is our hope"
+(1 Tim. i. 1). Death is a great event; but it is
+negative, privative, and, after all, provisional. True,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
+it seals us up for the coming of the Lord, and so, in
+many respects, it may be, for many purposes, practically
+identified with that coming. The sermons which are
+preached upon it, commonly from Old Testament texts,
+are, no doubt, well grounded and edifying. But the
+New Testament, speaking to believers, all but constantly
+passes on to the day of the Lord as the true
+focus of the future; and it will be well for us to conform
+our thinking and our feeling to this model. No one
+can estimate, who has not made it a matter of personal
+study, how large and how influential a place this topic
+takes in New Testament teaching.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, no doubt, the vicissitudes and the possibilities
+of earthly life press upon us. Now the Apostle
+provides a special additional relief for that. We are
+not merely prepossessed with a joy that should fortify
+us against undue disturbance from this source, but we
+have access in all things to the mind and heart of our
+Father. We can bring our thoughts and wishes about
+them all into contact with the deep, true thoughts and
+with the fatherly love of God. The incidents and the
+possibilities of life exercise us: they tend to become
+anxieties, keen and wearing; and anxieties are the
+materials of disturbance and temptation. "Be anxious
+about nothing; but in all things by prayer and supplication,
+with thankfulness, let your requests be made
+known unto God."</p>
+
+<p>This is the practical way of getting continually to
+those springs of joy which comfort and establish the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
+heart. The way to be anxious about nothing is to be
+prayerful about everything.</p>
+
+<p>It is promised that when we pray in faith God hears
+us, and that he that asketh receiveth. However, this
+does not mean that whatever appears to us desirable
+shall certainly be brought to pass in answer to prayer.
+That would be to sacrifice our own welfare, and also
+the order of God's world, to our shortsightedness and
+vanity. There is great reason to believe indeed that
+those who live by prayer find many a desire granted,
+and many a burden lifted, in token of God's loving
+interest in them, and the heed He gives to their
+prayers. But we are not to start from a general
+principle that we are to get all our own way by praying.
+Two things we may fix upon. First, the absolute
+promises of the gospel, the blessings which pertain to
+eternal life, are given to us through prayer. "This
+poor man cried, and the Lord heard him." Secondly,
+concerning all other things, we have access to God in
+prayer, as to One who grudges us no good thing; we
+are to express our anxieties and our desires, and to
+receive the assurance that they are lovingly considered
+by One who knows our frame and understands our
+troubles. Often the answer comes, even in small
+things. But, generally, we may in this point have an
+absolute assurance that we shall either have what we
+ask, or else something which God sees to be better
+for us than that.</p>
+
+<p>It is this second article of the doctrine of prayer that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
+is chiefly in view here. The prayer of faith must be a
+prayer of thanksgiving, because faith knows how much
+it owes to God. "Thou hast not dealt with us after
+our sins." At the same time it has supplications and
+requests, over and above the great petition for life
+eternal. For our daily human experience is God's providence
+to us. It exercises our thoughts and feelings,
+and sets agoing contemplations and desires, which
+may be shortsighted and erring, but, so far, they are
+the best that we can make of it; or, if not the best,
+they have the more need to be corrected. Here, then,
+we are encouraged to pour out our hearts to God. We
+are to do it with submission: that is one of the best
+parts of the privilege, for our Father knows best. At
+the same time, we are to do it with supplication; we
+not only may, but we should. Our desires should all
+be made known in this quarter; nowhere will they
+have a kindlier hearing. So, last of all, we come, not
+only touching eternal life, but touching each day's
+concerns, into a blessed agreement with God our Father
+through Christ. It is agreed, that He takes loving
+charge of our anxieties and desires, as One who would
+withhold no good from us; and it is agreed, that we
+put unreserved confidence in Him,&mdash;in which confidence
+we say, "Abba, Father; not our will, but Thine be done."</p>
+
+<p>The confidence we have that all this is most real and
+solid, and not merely a deceptive piece of religious
+acting, comes to us in the channel of the faith and
+experience which have been fulfilled in God's children<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
+from the first; but it is most emphatically confirmed
+and made sure to us by Christ. He has taught us to
+pray. His is the religion in which men pray. Under
+His influence we come away from ceremonial utterances,
+and also from the despairing experiments of
+supplication with which, in other religions, men assail
+the heavens; and, hand in hand with that loving
+Mediator, we pray. Prayer, when it is real, when it
+is "in the Holy Spirit," is a wonderfully simple and a
+wonderfully great thing.</p>
+
+<p>So it comes to pass that the peace of God which
+passeth all understanding is found. For this great and
+deep agreement with God in Christ, about all things
+great and small, is the very entrance into the peace of
+God Himself, and is the participation of it. In this, as
+in other aspects, things are daily realised in the history
+of believers, that pass all understanding, because God
+in Christ is in the matter. The infinite and eternal
+life is wedding itself to us and our affairs. It may be
+understood, finally, that this peace, arising to Christians
+at the throne of grace, guards their minds and hearts.
+It guards them against being overcharged, outworn,
+surprised; it guards them against being carried captive
+by earthly care. Yet this peace does not disable them
+for earthly business. Rather, because their main interests
+are so secure, it gives them calmness and clearness;
+it supplies them a moral vantage ground from
+which to dispose of all earthly affairs.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>THE THINGS TO FIX UPON.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>"Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things
+are honourable [venerable], whatsoever things are just, whatsoever
+things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of
+good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think
+on these things. The things which ye both learned and received and
+heard and saw in me, these things do: and the God of peace shall
+be with you."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span> iv. 8, 9 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE THINGS TO FIX UPON.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>The topics last considered bring us naturally to
+the remarkable exhortation of vv. 8 and 9. This
+proceeds on the same view of the moral and spiritual
+situation, and completes what the Apostle has to say in
+reference to it.</p>
+
+<p>If men are to live as citizens of a heavenly commonwealth,
+on great principles and to great ends, it is, as
+we have seen, a very practical question, What to do
+about the inevitable play and onset of this changing
+earthly life, which assails us with motives, and detains
+us upon interests, and inspires us with influences, of its
+own. These cannot be abjured: they are not easy to
+harmonise with the indications of that loftier and purer
+world; they are prone to usurp the whole heart, or at
+least a very undue share of it. This is the practical
+problem of every honest Christian. In reference to
+the solving of it the Apostle had suggested the place
+given to Christian joy; he had suggested also the place
+and power of prayer. These were indications as to
+the spirit and the method in which a believer might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
+bring into play the resources of the Kingdom of Christ
+to control and subjugate those insubordinate forces.
+But might not all this seem to be too negative? Does
+it not speak too much of holding off and holding in?
+After all, do not all human experiences constitute the
+scene in which we are both formed and tried? What
+can we make of life unless we are interested in it?
+How otherwise can we even be religious in it? What
+<i>is</i> life, if it is not a scene of inquiry and of search set in
+motion by the objects around us, a scene in which we
+like and dislike, hope and fear, desire and think? The
+answer is, Yes, we are to be keenly interested in the
+experiences of life, and in the possibilities it opens.
+Life is our way of existing; let existence be animated
+and intense. But while the aspects of it that are merely
+transient are to have their place, and may attract a
+lively interest, there are other aspects, other interests,
+other possibilities. All the transient interests have an
+outgate towards such as are eternal. Life is the experience
+of beings that have high capacities, and can
+rise to noble destinies. It is the experience of societies
+of such beings, who mould one another, exchanging
+influences continually. The changing experience of
+human life, when seen in the true light, is found to add
+to all its lower interests a play of interests that are
+more interesting as well as more worthy. It is iridescent
+with lights which it catches from the infinite and the
+eternal. Every step of it, every turn of it, asks
+questions, offers opportunities, calls for decisions, holds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
+out treasures, which it is the business of a lifetime to
+recognise and to secure. It has gains, it has victories,
+it has accomplishments, it has glories, which need not
+lead us to deny its lower interests, but which we may
+reasonably feel to be far the higher. Endless shades,
+and forms, and types of goodness, of being good, getting
+good, doing good, gleam reflected to us from the changing
+experience. Goodness is not one monotonous
+category embodied in some solemn phrase, and exhausted
+when that is learned. There is no end to the
+rich variety in which it is offered, and in which it is to
+be caught, understood, appropriated. And life, through
+all the manifoldness of its legitimate interests, and its
+illegitimate possibilities, is the scene in which all this
+passes before us, and asks to be made ours. The
+Apostle says to us, Think on these things. Take
+account, that is, of what they are, and what their
+worth is. Lay forth on these the care and pains, which
+spent themselves before on mere pain and pleasure,
+loss and gain. Reckon what these are, search out
+their nature, prove their capabilities, appropriate and
+enjoy them. <i>Think</i> on these things. So earthly life,
+through all its busy processes, shall acquire a nobler
+interest; and it shall begin, at the same time, to
+minister with unexpected readiness to your true welfare.
+Enter then, or press on, in this wide field. Be
+this your passion and pursuit; that which unifies your
+life, and draws all its resources towards one result.</p>
+
+<p>We may be helped to fix more firmly the point of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
+view from which this striking catalogue of good things
+is drawn up, if we observe that the Apostle collects
+all these excellences under the notion of "a virtue and
+a praise." Let us consider how men are trained to
+progressive conceptions of virtue and praise. For
+virtue and praise, both name and notion, have had
+a large place in men's minds and a great influence on
+their actions. How has this influence been sustained
+and made to grow?</p>
+
+<p>Men are conscious of obligations; and they are
+aware, more dimly or more clearly, that the standard
+of those obligations must exist somehow above themselves.
+It is a standard not of their own creation, but
+such as claims them by an antecedent right. Yet if
+each individual could hold himself apart, forming his
+own conceptions of fit and right for himself without
+regard to others, the standard would tend downwards
+rapidly, because moral judgment would be warped by
+each man's selfishness and passion, excusing evil in his
+own case and putting it for good. Even as it is, this
+has taken place only too widely. But yet the tendency
+is powerfully counteracted by the fact that men do not
+exist, nor form their notions, in that separate way.
+A principle within them prompts them to seek one
+another's approbation, and to value one another's good
+opinion. Indeed the consciousness that what is law
+for me is law for others, and that they are judging as well
+as I, is one of the forms in which we realise that duty
+descends upon us all, from some august and holy source.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>This principle of regarding the judgment and seeking
+the approbation of others, has had an enormous effect
+on men and on society. For though men are skilful
+enough, in their own case, in averting or silencing the
+admonition of the monitor within, they have little
+reluctance to make full use of their sense of right in
+scrutinising one another. They judge, in their thoughts
+about each other, with far more clearness, shrewdness,
+and certainty than they do about themselves. Men do
+in this way make requirements of one another, which
+each of them might be slow to make from himself.
+This is a great operative force in all cases; and in
+those cases in which, in any society, vivid convictions
+about truth and duty have taken possession of some
+minds, the principle we are speaking of propagates an
+influence through the whole mass, with effects that
+are very striking.</p>
+
+<p>This mutual criticism of men "accusing or else
+excusing one another," has had a great effect in
+sustaining what we call common morals. But especially
+let it be observed that this criticism, and the
+consciousness of it, stimulating the higher class of
+minds, sustains and develops the finer perceptions
+of morality. There are minds that eminently strive
+for distinction in things that are counted for a virtue
+and a praise. And through them is developed in the
+general mind the approving perception of more delicate
+shades of worthy conduct, which in a coarser age were
+unperceived or unheeded. These come up in men's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
+mutual judgments; they are scrutinised; they interest
+the mind and take hold of it. So, whether in the case
+of those who begin to pay respect to such forms of
+good because they perceive that others approve of them,
+or in the case of those who, when those forms of good
+are thus presented, perceive a worth in them and take a
+pride in living up to them for their own sake,&mdash;in both
+cases, the creating and sustaining of the higher standard
+depends on the principle we have now before us.</p>
+
+<p>Thus there arises, for example, the code of honour,
+the fine perception of what is socially right, becoming,
+and graceful. Men, no doubt, are always to be found
+who cultivate the nicest sense of this, not from a mere
+desire that others should know it, but because they see
+it to be desirable in itself, and because they shun the
+sense of inward disgrace that follows when they fall
+below their own standard. Yet it is the process of
+mutual criticism which develops the consciousness, and
+it is this which, on the whole, sustains it.</p>
+
+<p>Thus we find in the world not merely a sense of
+duty, but something that has spurred men on to things
+counted for a virtue and a praise. Outside of all
+Christian influences, wonderful examples are found
+of self-sacrificing devotion to the noble and the true.
+Men have eagerly pursued the nicest discriminations of
+duty and honour, that they might be, and might show
+themselves to be, accomplished, finished, not merely in
+some things, but in whatever things were counted to be
+the proper tokens of a noble mind.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>Well now, the Apostle is not shutting out from his
+plan of mental life the attainments made in this way in
+the true or the good, even apart from Christian teaching.
+Far less is he excluding the human social method,
+in which mind whets mind, and one stirs another to
+discern and appropriate what is for a virtue and for a
+praise. He supposes this mode of influence to go on
+in Christianity more successfully than ever. And he
+is not at all excluding the natural life of men; for that
+is the scene, and that yields the materials, for the
+whole process. But he does suppose that now all old
+attainment shall be set in a new light, and acquire a
+new life and grace, and that new attainment shall come
+wonderfully into view by reason of the new element
+which for us has entered into the situation. And what
+is this element? Is it that we recognise around us
+a society of Christians with whom we share a higher
+standard, and with whom we can give and take the
+contagion of a nobler conception of life? Yes, no
+doubt; but far before that, the great new element in
+the situation is the Lord&mdash;in whom we trust and
+rejoice.</p>
+
+<p>It is always human duty to have regard to the will
+of God, however it may reach us. But when you are
+called to know the Lord and to rejoice in Him, when
+He vouchsafes Himself to be yours, when you begin to
+enjoy His peace, and to walk with Him in love, and to
+have it for your hope to be with Him for ever, then
+you are placed in a new relation to Him. And it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
+such a near and dear relation on both sides that much
+may be expected from you in it. If this be so, you are
+now dealing with Him <i>always</i>; not merely in direct acts
+of worship, but in your thoughts, your feelings, your
+words, your business, your common intercourse with
+men, and all your daily life, you walk with Him. You
+cannot repudiate having so much to do with Him, unless
+you will repudiate your Christianity. Then, if so,
+something new is expected. A new test of the becoming,
+of that which is for a virtue and for a praise, has
+come into operation, and has become intelligible to you;
+and it is a test of new delicacy and new force. It
+is expected we should recognise it. Not now the
+mutual judgments merely of erring men, but His mind
+and His will, what He delights in and approves,&mdash;this
+begins to solicit us and press upon us, for we walk with
+Christ. That this "walk" of ours may escape being
+mean, coarse, offensive, we have great lessons to learn.
+We have to learn what, in His judgment, as seen by
+His eye, as tried by the sensibilities of His heart, are
+the things that are true and venerable and just, what
+with Him counts for a virtue and a praise.</p>
+
+<p>And here, indeed, is our crown. The crown of
+honour which man cast away when sin gained him,
+was the approbation of the Lord. But now we are set
+on afresh to seek it, testing our ways by the perception
+of that which He approves; or, on the other hand,
+what He counts to be mean and degrading, fit to be
+recoiled from and rejected. It is our calling (whatever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
+our attainment may be) to be more sensitive to the
+nicest touches of truth and honour towards our Lord
+than ever we were towards men. And this does not
+apply only to some narrow field of life. It goes
+through all relations, up to God and Christ, and out
+through all duties and ties. The great calling reaches
+wide and far; it is very high and noble: we cannot
+pretend to disclaim it, unless we disclaim the Lord.
+This way lies God's crown. Win it; wear it; let no
+man take thy crown.</p>
+
+<p>When our Lord's mind and heart are said to be
+the test, this does not exclude our profiting by our
+fellows, accepting the admonition contained in human
+judgments, and especially in those of Christian people.
+Great good comes to us in such channels. Only now
+the judgment of our fellows is to refer itself always to
+a further standard; and a new Presence brings new
+tenderness and grace, new depth and significance, to
+every suggestion of right feeling and worthy life. This
+is the light and this the influence under which we are
+to learn what shall be counted for a virtue and for a
+praise. And we must bend our mind to <i>think upon it</i>,
+if we are to learn our lesson.</p>
+
+<p>We must think upon it. For, on the one hand, it is
+not "some things," but "whatsoever things." What
+should we say of a man who proposed in his dealings
+with others to do "some things" that are honourable,
+but not all things, not "whatsoever things"? And, on
+the other hand, we may be further off from even a small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
+measure of attainment in this field than we are disposed
+to think. Christians who, as to all social excellence, as
+that is commonly understood between man and man,
+are unexceptionable, may be sadly blind to the requirements
+of an honourable walk with God; may be sadly
+wanting even in the conception of what is due in all
+love and honour to Christ, and to men for His sake.
+Men may be the soul of honour and delicacy in their
+ways, judged from the world's point of view; yet not
+far from a savage coarseness in the manner of their life
+judged by Christ's standard. We would not needlessly
+wound another's feelings; but with what indifference
+have we "grieved the Spirit." We would
+shrink from saying anything to our fellows that is
+deceitful and hypocritical: can we say as much for our
+prayers? In our common life we maintain truth in
+the ordinary sense between men; but do we loyally
+express and act out the truth by which God's children
+live in our speech and action among men? Is there
+that fine congruity of our bearing to the truth we live
+by, which becomes a child of God?</p>
+
+<p>We are greatly hindered here by the assumption
+we make, that when we have mastered the form of
+knowledge concerning the will of God, we then know
+all about our calling. It is a great delusion. We
+must not only sit down at the feet of Christ to learn
+from Him; but also, with a watchful eye on the phases
+of life, catching the lessons which things and men
+afford, we must be trained to know and sharpened to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
+loving discernment as to our Master's mind, and so,
+as to what is honourable and right-minded, refined and
+noble, in a walk with God. We do not easily emerge
+from the meanness of our spirits; we do not easily
+shake off that insensibility to what is spiritually fair
+and fit, on which the angels look down with pity and
+wonder.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, says the Apostle, <i>think</i> on these things,
+the things which in the Lord's kingdom and under the
+Lord's eye are well-pleasing, and count for a virtue
+and a praise; think on those things which are related
+to His esteem, and to the esteem of persons who learn
+of Him, as various excellences are to the common
+judgment of the world. Do so, for here you are close
+to the genuinely and supremely true and good; and this,
+as was said before, is your crown.</p>
+
+<p>The Apostle is thinking of a perception of duty and
+privilege attained not merely by studying a catalogue of
+virtues, but by a far finer and more living process&mdash;by
+life that is instinct with observant watchfulness, that
+is frank in self-criticism, that is recipient of the light
+flashing from the experience and the censure of others:
+all this under constant regard to the Lord, and leading
+us into fuller sympathy with Him.</p>
+
+<p>That this is so, appears from the Apostle's way of
+arranging the particulars of his exhortation. He does
+not merely desire his disciples to discern what is right
+in general: but he would have them grow into a vital
+knowledge, so as to feel the right in those matters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
+where the shading becomes delicate; where it may
+be difficult to distinguish argumentatively an absolute
+right and wrong, but where a mind purged and trained
+in the Master's school can well discern a difference.
+"Whatsoever things are true"&mdash;which includes not only
+veracity and fidelity, but also whatever in conduct and
+temper God's truth requires as agreeable to itself; and
+then "Whatsoever things are venerable"&mdash;the character
+that emerges when all that is congruous to truth, in its
+finest filaments and ramifications, has been developed,
+and has assumed its own place. "Whatsoever things
+are just"&mdash;rightfully due on all hands to God and to man;
+and then "Whatsoever things are pure"&mdash;the character
+that recoils from all that sullies, from the smallest
+shade or infection of iniquity. "Whatsoever things
+are lovely"&mdash;the dear or amiable, whatever draws out
+love, cherishes it, befits it; and then "Whatsoever
+things are of good report"&mdash;actions that can hardly be
+more discriminatingly classified than by saying that the
+heart is pleased to hear of them; it confesses that they
+are of a good name, of a welcome sound; they are like
+some delicate sound or odour on which you dwell with
+delight, but cannot definitely describe it. In a word,
+"If there be any virtue, and if there be any praise,
+think on these things." Study them, look out for them,
+learn to recognise them, to know their worth, to pursue
+them lovingly through all their manifestations.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, let it be said once more, the Apostle is not
+open to the objection that he calls us to a mere retreat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
+from energetic life. To such a call men have always
+replied, that they find in themselves capacities wonderfully
+adapted to grapple with life, and to do so with
+interest and with energy. Virtually the Apostle says,
+Yes, true; and life has aspects to interest the mind,
+and results to engage the will, which are its noble and
+its imperative possibilities: for the followers of Christ
+these become dominant; they afford noble scope for
+all human faculty; and all forms of life are dignified
+as they become subservient to these supreme interests
+and aims. <i>Now</i>, lay forth the care and pains that
+fastened before on mere joy and sorrow, hope and
+fear, on a certain <i>thinking</i> and making <i>account</i> of the
+true, the venerable, the just, the pure, the lovely, that
+which is of good report. Reckon what they are; search
+out their nature; make them your serious object.
+"O man of God, flee those things; but follow after
+righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, meekness."</p>
+
+<p>But progress is not to be made in this line by mere
+subtle refining and contemplation. If there was any
+danger that the Apostle's call to "think" might be
+interpreted that way, presently it is corrected. The
+thinking is to be practical thinking, bending itself to
+action. "What things ye have received and learned"&mdash;those
+practical points in which the Apostle always
+taught his Gentile converts to put to proof the grace of
+Christ; and "What ye have heard and seen in me"&mdash;in
+a man poor, tried, persecuted, a man whose life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
+was rough and real, who knew weakness and sorrow,
+who bore heavy burdens, that were not proudly paraded,
+but which brought him lowly and weary to Christ's feet,&mdash;these
+things <i>do</i>. That is the road to the attainments
+on which I bid you <i>think</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"And the God of peace shall be with you." In those
+ways (for they are His own ways) God walks with
+men; and peace with God, spreading out into peace
+with men, becomes the atmosphere in which such
+wayfarers move.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>GIFTS AND SACRIFICES.</i></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>"But I rejoice in the Lord greatly, that now at length ye have
+revived your thought for me; wherein ye did indeed take thought,
+but ye lacked opportunity. Not that I speak in respect of want: for
+I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therein to be content. I know
+how to be abased, and I know also how to abound: in everything
+and in all things have I learned the secret both to be filled and to be
+hungry, both to abound and to be in want. I can do all things in
+Him that strengtheneth me. Howbeit ye did well, that ye had fellowship
+with my affliction. And ye yourselves also know, ye Philippians,
+that in the beginning of the gospel, when I departed from Macedonia,
+no Church had fellowship with me in the matter of giving and receiving,
+but ye only; for even in Thessalonica ye sent once and again unto
+my need. Not that I seek for the gift; but I seek for the fruit that
+increaseth to your account. But I have all things, and abound: I am
+filled, having received from Epaphroditus the things that came from
+you, an odour of a sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable, well-pleasing to
+God. And my God shall fulfil every need of yours according to His
+riches in glory in Christ Jesus. Now unto our God and Father be
+the glory for ever and ever. Amen.</p>
+
+<p>"Salute every saint in Christ Jesus. The brethren which are with
+me salute you. All the saints salute you, especially they that are
+of Cæsar's household.</p>
+
+<p>"The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phil.</span>
+iv, 10-23 (R.V.).</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>GIFTS AND SACRIFICES.</i></h3>
+
+
+<p>The Apostle had urged joy in the Lord, and a
+moderation visible to all men. If any one
+supposes that in doing so he recommended a stoical
+temper, insensible to the impressions of passing things,
+the passage which now comes before us will correct
+that error. It shows us how the Apostle could "rejoice
+in the Lord," and yet reap great satisfaction from
+providential incidents. "I rejoiced in the Lord greatly,
+that now at last you have revived your thought for
+me," or, as in the older version, "that your care for me
+has flourished again."</p>
+
+<p>Worldly eagerness, and worldly care and anxiety
+about persons and things, are rebuked by the spirit of
+rejoicing in the Lord. But the persons and the things
+about us all have a connection with the Lord, if we
+have eyes to see it, and hearts to mark it; and that is
+<i>the chief thing about them</i>. They are in the Lord's
+world, the Lord calls us to have to do with them: as
+for the persons, they are, some of them, the Lord's
+servants, and all of them the Lord calls us to love and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
+to benefit; as for the things, the Lord appoints our lot
+among them, and they are full of a meaning which He
+puts into them. So regard to the Lord and a spirit
+of rejoicing in Him may pervade our earthly life. The
+worldly eagerness and worldly care must be controlled.
+There is no avoiding that conflict. But now&mdash;shall we
+in faith give ourselves to learn the true rejoicing in the
+Lord? If not, our Christianity must be at best low
+and comfortless. But if we do, we shall be rewarded
+by a growing liberty. The more that joy possesses us,
+the more will it give occasion to the finest and freest
+play of feeling in reference to passing things; and some
+of these which, on other accounts, might seem insignificant,
+will begin to yield us an abounding consolation.</p>
+
+<p>These Philippians, who had given early proof of
+attachment to the gospel, had lately, for some reason or
+other, been unable, "lacked opportunity," to minister
+to the wants of Paul. Now the winter, whatever it was,
+that hindered the expression of their goodwill was gone,
+and their care of Paul flourished again. Did the
+Apostle think it needful to freeze up the feelings of
+satisfaction which this incident awakened? No: but
+in his case those feelings, having spiritual elevation,
+became so much the more deep and glad. He rejoiced
+greatly in this; and still, he was rejoicing in the Lord.
+Let us mark how this comes out both when we consider
+what was <i>not</i> the spring of his gladness, and what it was.</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I speak in respect of want." It was
+not the change from want to comparative plenty that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
+explained the nature of his feelings. Yet he evidently
+implies that he <i>had</i> been in want, strange as that may
+seem in a city where there was a Christian congregation.
+But though the removal of that pressure would
+no doubt be thankfully taken, yet for a man whose
+gladness was in the Lord no mere change of that kind
+would lead to "rejoicing greatly." "I speak not in
+respect of want: I have learned, in whatsoever state I
+am, therewith to be content. I know how to be abased,
+and I know also how to abound: in everything and in
+all things have I learned the secret (have been initiated)
+both to be filled and to be hungry, both to abound and
+to be in want. I can do all things through Him that
+strengtheneth me."</p>
+
+<p>"Therewith to be content." Paul had learned to be
+so minded that, in trying circumstances, he did not
+anxiously cast about for help, but was sufficed: his
+desires were brought down to the facts of his condition.
+In that state he counted himself to have enough. He
+knew how to suit himself to abasement, that common
+experience of the indigent and friendless; and he
+knew how to suit himself to abundance, when that
+was sent: each as a familiar state in which he made
+himself at home&mdash;not overgrieved or overjoyed, not
+greatly elevated or greatly depressed. "I have been
+instructed," or initiated (the word used by the
+heathen of introduction to the mysteries), "not only into
+the experience of those conditions, but into the way of
+taking kindly with them both." Mark how his words<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
+follow one another: "I have learned"&mdash;been put
+through a course of teaching and have had a teacher;
+"I know"&mdash;it has become familiar to me, I understand
+it; "I am initiated"&mdash;if there is a secret in it, something
+hidden from the natural man, I have been led into
+that, out and in, through and through.</p>
+
+<p>If we would know by what discipline the Lord
+trained Paul to this mind, we may listen to what Paul
+himself says of it (1 Cor. iv. 9-13): "I think God hath
+set forth us the apostles last of all, as men doomed to
+death: for we are made a spectacle unto the world....
+Even unto this present hour we both hunger, and thirst,
+and are naked, and are buffeted, and have no certain
+dwelling-place; and we toil, working with our own
+hands: being reviled, we bless; being persecuted, we
+endure; being defamed, we entreat: we are made as
+the filth of the world, the offscouring of all things,
+unto this day" (see also 2 Cor. vi. 4, xi. 23). If,
+again, we would know the manner of his training in
+such experiences, take 2 Cor. xii. 8, 9: "Concerning this
+thing I besought thrice that it might depart from me.
+And He said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee;
+for My strength is made perfect in weakness. Most
+gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities."
+Also how his faith wrought and gathered strength in
+all these, we may see from Rom. viii. 24-28: "We are
+saved by hope.... If we hope for that which we see not,
+then do we with patience wait for it. Also the Spirit
+helpeth our infirmity: for we know not how to pray as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
+we ought; but the Spirit Himself maketh intercession
+for us.... And we know that all things work together
+for good to them that love God." So "being
+strengthened with all might, according to His glorious
+power, to all patience and longsuffering with joyfulness"
+(Col. i. 11), he was able to say, "I can do all things
+through Christ which strengtheneth me."</p>
+
+<p>This was the course, and this the fruit, of Paul's
+biography. But each Christian has his own life, the
+tenor and the upshot of which should not be wholly
+estranged from Paul's.</p>
+
+<p>Now what it was that did move him so to rejoice is
+explained when he speaks of the Philippians "holding
+fellowship with his affliction"; and, again, when he
+says, "I desire fruit that may abound to your account."
+He saw in their succour the blessed unity of Christ's
+living Church, the members having mutual interest, so
+that if one suffers all suffer. The Philippians claimed
+a right to take part as fellow-members in the Apostle's
+state and wants, and to communicate with his affliction.
+And this was only a continuation of their former
+practice in the beginning of the gospel. This, as a
+fruit of Christ's work and of the presence of His Spirit,
+refreshed the Apostle. It was a manifestation in the
+sphere of temporal things of the working of a high
+principle, communion with the common Lord. And it
+betokened the progress of the work of grace, in that the
+Philippians were not weary in well-doing. So it was
+fruit that abounded to their account.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>It may be noticed that the directness and frankness
+of the Apostle's speech to the Philippians on these
+matters convey a testimony to the generous Christian
+feeling which prevailed among them. He speaks as
+one who feared no misconstruction. He does not fear
+that they will either mistake his meaning or do wrong
+to his motives; as he, on the other side, puts no other
+than a loving construction upon their action. He could
+not so trust all the Churches. In some there was so
+little of large Christian sympathy that a complaining
+tone in such matters was forced on him. But in the
+case of the Philippians he has no difficulty in interpreting
+their gift simply as embodying their earnest claim
+to be counted "partakers of the benefit," and therefore
+entitled to bear the burdens and alleviate the sufferings
+of Paul. Gladly he admits and welcomes this claim.
+It is worth observing that the way of giving vent to
+Christian feeling here exemplified was apparent at
+Philippi from the very first. Not only did it appear
+when Paul departed from Macedonia (ver. 15); but,
+before that, the earliest convert, Lydia, struck the keynote,&mdash;"If
+ye judge me faithful in the Lord, come into
+my house" (Acts xvi. 15). Both in individuals and in
+Churches, the style of feeling and action embraced at
+the outset of Christianity, under the first impressions,
+often continues to prevail long after.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Now, in virtue of this liberality, Paul had all and
+abounded. He had desired to see the old spirit flourish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
+again, and he had his wish. "I have all: I feel greatly
+enriched since I received the things sent by Epaphroditus."
+What gladdened him was not the outward
+comfort which these gifts supplied, but much more, the
+spiritual meaning they carried in their bosom. Let us
+see how he reads that meaning.</p>
+
+<p>This gift comes to him. As it comes, what is it?
+From its destination and its motives it takes on a
+blessed character. It is "an odour of a sweet smell,
+a sacrifice acceptable, well-pleasing unto God." <i>This</i>
+was what came to the Apostle: something that was
+in a peculiar manner God's own, something which <i>He</i>
+regarded, set value on, and counted precious. Further,
+it turned out to be something in connection with which
+the assurance ought to go forth, "My God shall fulfil
+every need of yours." They had ministered to Paul's
+need, in faith, love, thankfulness, and loyal care of
+Christ's servant. Christ counted it done to Him: as
+such He would surely repay it, supplying their need
+with that considerate liberality which it becomes Him
+to exhibit. Observe, then, the position in which the
+Apostle finds himself. He is himself the object of
+Christian kindness; affections wrought in the Philippians
+by the Holy Ghost are clinging to him and caring
+for him. He is also one so linked with God's great
+cause, that offerings sent to him, in the spirit described,
+become an "odour of a sweet smell, an acceptable
+sacrifice to the Lord." Also this supply of <i>his</i> need
+is so directly a service done to Christ, that when it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
+done, God, as it were, stands forth directly on His
+servant's behalf: <i>He</i> will repay it, supplying the need
+of those who supplied His servant. Poor though Paul
+may be, and sometimes sad, yet see how the resources
+of God must be pledged to requite the kindness done to
+him. All this made him very glad. His heart warmed
+under it. What a blessed, happy, secure, and, looking
+forward, what a hopeful state was his! This came
+home to him all at once with the Philippians' gift. No
+wonder that he says, "I have all and abound."</p>
+
+<p>If any one chooses to say that all this was true about
+the Apostle, and he might have known it, apart from the
+gift, and even if it had never come, that may be a kind
+of truth, but it signifies exactly nothing to the purpose.
+It is one thing to have a doctrine which one knows: it is
+another thing to have the Holy Spirit setting it home
+with a warmth and glory that fills the man with joy.
+The Spirit of God may do this without means, but often
+He uses means, and, indeed, what we esteem little means;
+by little things carrying home great impressions, as out
+of the mouths of babes and sucklings He perfects praise.
+When a child of God is cast down, no one can tell out
+of how small a thing the Spirit of God may cause to
+arise a peace that passeth all understanding.</p>
+
+<p>Christianity confers great weight and dignity on little
+things. This gift, not in itself very great, passing
+between Christians at Philippi and an Apostle imprisoned
+at Rome, belongs after all to an unearthly
+sphere. Paul sees its connection with all spiritual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
+things, and with the heavenly places where Christ is.
+And it comes to him carrying a rich meaning, preaching
+everlasting consolation and good hope through grace.</p>
+
+<p>Mark, again, the illustration of the truth that the
+members have need of one another, and are compacted
+by that which every joint supplieth, according to the
+effectual working in the measure of every part. The
+strong may benefit by the weak, as well as the weak
+by the strong. This Apostle, who could do all things
+through Christ who strengthens him, might be very far
+more advanced as a Christian than any one in Philippi.
+Possibly there was nothing any of them could say, no
+advice they could tender to him in words, that would
+have been of material benefit to the Apostle. But that
+which, following the impulse of their faith and love,
+they did, <i>was</i> of material benefit. It filled his heart with
+a joyful sense of the relation in which he stood to them,
+to Christ, to God. It welled up for him like a water-spring
+in a dry land. No one can tell how it may
+have conduced to enable him to go forward with more
+liberty and power, testifying in Rome the gospel of God.</p>
+
+<p>Nor must we omit the comfort to all who serve God
+in their generation arising from the view which the
+Apostle is here led to take. There may be trials from
+without and trials from within. Still God careth for
+His servant. God will provide for him out of that
+which is peculiarly His own. God so identifies him
+with Himself, that He must needs requite all who
+befriend him out of His own riches in glory.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>So far for the bearing of the case on Paul. We have
+still to look a little into the view given of this Philippian
+gift on its own account. It is emphatically called
+a sweet savour, an offering acceptable and well-pleasing
+to God. We have seen already (ch. ii. 17) that believers
+are called upon to offer themselves as a sacrifice; and
+now we see also that their obedience, or that which
+they do for Christ's sake, is reckoned as an offering to
+God. So it is said (Heb. xiii. 16) "to do good and to
+communicate forget not, for with such sacrifices God
+is well pleased." It need hardly be said they are not
+sacrifices to atone for sin. But they are offerings
+accepted by God, at His altar, from His children's hands.
+They suitably express both the gratitude of believers to
+God, and the sincerity of their Christianity in general.
+God grants us this way of expressing the earnestness
+of our regard to Him: and He expects that we shall
+gladly avail ourselves of it; our obedience is to assume
+the character of a glad and willing offering. The
+expressions used by the Apostle here assure us that
+there is a Divine complacency in the manifestation of
+this spirit on the part of God's children. The heart of
+Him who has revealed Himself in Christ, of Him who
+rested and was refreshed on the seventh day over His
+good and fair works, counts for a sweet savour, acceptable
+and well-pleasing, the works of faith and love
+willingly done for His name's sake.</p>
+
+<p>In this connection it is fit we should remember that the
+view we take of money, and the use we make of it, are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
+referred to with extraordinary frequency in the New Testament,
+as a decisive test of Christian sincerity. This
+feature of Bible teaching is very faintly realised by many.</p>
+
+<p>The other point noteworthy in relation to this
+Philippian gift is the assurance that it shall be recompensed.
+God will not be unfaithful to reward
+their work and labour of love, in that they have
+ministered to His servant.</p>
+
+<p>We are not to shrink from the doctrine of reward
+because it has been perverted. It is true the good
+works of a Christian cannot be the foundation of his
+title to life eternal. They proceed from the grace of
+God; they are very imperfect and mixed at their best.
+Yet they are precious fruits of Christ's death, and of
+God's grace, arising through the faith and love of
+souls renewed and liberated. When a penitent and
+believing man is found devoting to God what he is
+and has, doing so freely and lovingly, that is a
+blessed thing. God sets value on it. It is accepted
+as fruit which the man brings, as the offering which
+he yields. The heart of Christ rejoices over it.
+Now it is fit that the value set on this fruit should
+be shown, and the way God takes to show it is
+to reward the service. Such a man "shall in no
+wise lose his reward." God orders the administration
+of His mercy so that it really comes in a way of
+recompense for works of faith and labours of love.</p>
+
+<p>This may well convince us that the kindness of our
+Father is measureless. He omits nothing that can win<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
+His children's love, and bind them to Himself. Might
+not those servants who have gone furthest and done
+most, feel it almost a bitter thing to hear reward
+spoken of? For if their service could be far more
+worthy, it could not amount to an adequate expression
+of gratitude for all their Father has done for them.
+Yet He will certainly reward. Cups of cold water given
+to disciples shall have remembrance made of them, by
+Him who reckons all those gifts to be bestowed upon
+Himself. Every way God overwhelms His children with
+His goodness. There is no dealing with this God,
+otherwise than by confessing that every way we are
+debtors. It is vain to think of paying the debt, or relieving
+oneself of any of the weight of obligation. Only
+we may with all our hearts give glory to Him to whom
+we owe all.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly the Apostle closes in a doxology: "Now
+unto our God and Father be glory for ever."</p>
+
+<p>Among the salutations with which the Epistle winds
+up, every one must be struck with that which goes in
+the name of "those of Cæsar's household." Bishop
+Lightfoot has annexed to his Commentary an essay
+on this topic, which collects, with his usual skill, the
+available information. It was remarked in connection
+with ch. i. 12, that Cæsar's household was an immense
+establishment, comprehending thousands of persons,
+employed in all sorts of functions, and composed
+chiefly, either of slaves, or of those who had emerged
+from slavery into the condition of freedmen. Indications<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
+have been gathered from ancient mortuary inscriptions
+tending to show that a notable proportion
+of Christians, whose names are preserved in this way,
+had probably been connected with the household. At
+the end of the first century, a whole branch of the
+Flavian imperial family became Christian; and it is
+possible, as indicated in an earlier page, that they
+may have done so under the influence of Christian
+servants. This, however, fell later. The Apostle
+wrote in Nero's days. It is certain that at this time
+singularly profligate persons exercised great sway in
+the household. It is also certain that powerful Jewish
+influences had got a footing; and these would in all
+likelihood act against the gospel. Yet there were also
+Christian brethren. We may believe that Paul's own
+work had operated notably to produce this result (ch.
+i. 12). At all events, there they were. Amid all that
+was vile and unscrupulous, the word of God had its
+course; men were converted and were sanctified by
+the washing of water by the word. Then, as now, the
+Lord gathered His elect from unlikely quarters: how
+secure soever the strong man's goods seemed to be,
+his defences went down before the might of a stronger
+than he. Probably the Christians in the household
+belonged chiefly or exclusively to the lower grades of
+the service, and might be partly protected by their
+obscurity. Yet surely entanglements and perplexities,
+fears and sorrows, must often have been the portion of
+the saints of Nero's household. Out of all these the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
+Lord delivered them. This glimpse lets us see the
+process going on which by-and-by made so strange
+a revolution in the heathen world. It reminds us also
+for what peculiarities of trial God's grace has been
+found sufficient.</p>
+
+<p>"The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your
+spirit." This is the parting benediction; certainly an
+appropriate one, for the whole Epistle breathes the same
+atmosphere. The Epistle would not fail of its effect,
+if their spirit retained the consciousness of the grace of
+Christ; if throughout their life they owned its sway,
+and felt its attraction, its charm, its power to elevate
+and purify and comfort.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>In following the course of thought and feeling
+which this letter embodies, we have seen the Apostle
+touch various topics. They rise into view as pastoral
+care, or friendly feeling, as outward circumstances
+suggest them. The demands of Christian friendship,
+the responsibilities of the Christian ministry, the
+trials of Christian endurance; what is due from an
+apostle, or from a Church member; how life and death
+are to be confronted; what is to be done about dangers
+and faults; how pride and self-will are to be judged
+and remedied; how the narrow heart is to be rebuked
+and enlarged; how the life of a disciple is to
+become luminous and edifying,&mdash;in reference to all,
+and all alike, he speaks from the same central position,
+and with the same fulness of resource. In Christ<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
+revealed, in Christ received and known, he finds the
+light, and the strength, and the salve, which every case
+requires. Each new demand unlocks new resources,
+new conceptions of goodness and of victory.</p>
+
+<p>So, in one great passage, in the third chapter,
+catching fire, as it were, from the scorn with which
+a religion of externals fills him, he breaks forth into a
+magnificent proclamation of the true Christianity. He
+celebrates its reality and intensity as life in Christ&mdash;Christ
+known, found, gained&mdash;Christ in the righteousness
+of faith and in the power of resurrection. He
+depicts vividly the aspiration and endeavour of that
+life as it continually presses onward from faith to
+experience and achievement, as it verifies relations
+to a world unseen, and looks and hastes towards a
+world to come. Then the wave of thought and feeling
+subsides; but its force is felt in the last wavelets of
+loving counsel that ripple to the shore.</p>
+
+<p>One feels that for Paul, who was rich in doctrine,
+doctrine is after all but the measure of mighty forces
+which are alive in his own experience. No doctrine,
+not one, is for the intellect alone: all go out into
+heart and conscience and life. More than this: he lets
+us see that, for Christians, Christ Himself is the great
+abiding means of grace. He is not only the pledge and
+guarantee that holiness shall be reached: He is Himself
+our way of reaching it. He is so for the Christian
+societies, as well as for the individual Christian soul.</p>
+
+<p>One cannot but wonder sometimes in reading Paul's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
+Epistles what manner of congregations they were to
+whom such remarkable letters were sent. Did they
+understand the deeper and loftier passages? Were
+Paul and they on common ground? But the answer
+may be, that whatever they failed to attain, they at
+least apprehended a new world created for them by
+the interposition of Christ&mdash;new horizons, new possibilities,
+new hopes and fears, new motives, new consolations,
+new friendships, and a new destiny. The
+grace of Christ had made all new&mdash;in which process
+they themselves were new. Their "spirit" had become
+like a lyre new-strung to render new harmonies. And
+the great thoughts of the Apostle, if not always grasped
+or followed, yet made every string vibrate&mdash;so much on
+his part and so much on theirs being sensitive to the
+grace of our Lord Jesus.</p>
+
+<p>Ere long they all passed away: Paul beheaded at
+Rome, as the story goes; the Philippian converts dying
+out; and the world changing in manners, thought, and
+speech, in all directions. But the message entrusted
+to Paul lives still, and awakens the same response in
+the hearts of Christians of to-day, as it did among the
+Philippians when first read among them. It still assures
+us that the highest thing in life has been found,&mdash;that
+it meets us in Him who came among us meek, and
+having salvation.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This, however, is omitted in critical editions.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Various shades of meaning have been proposed. Meyer, whose
+opinion has weight, virtually interprets in this way: He did not
+reckon equality with God (which was His) to imply or to be fitly
+exercised in acquisition, or in accumulation of benefit to Himself: and
+Hofmann, after supporting another view, appears (in his <i>Hist. Schrift.
+N. T.</i>) to agree with this. To be equal to God, and to put forth power
+for His own enrichment, were for the Son very different things. The
+one He possessed: the other He renounced.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> In the text Ewald's suggestion is followed, in the form given to
+it by Lightfoot. Meyer's view, however, may seem simpler to some
+readers. He thinks that "the same things" of ch. iii. 1 are the
+warnings against Judaising which actually follow in ver. 2. According
+to Meyer, the Apostle had already, in a previous Epistle, warned
+the Philippians against the Judaisers, and he considers it "safer" for
+them and "not irksome" to himself to repeat the admonition. In
+this view the connection between vv. 1 and 2 may be stated in this
+way: "Rejoice in the Lord;" and, need I repeat it?&mdash;yes, it is better
+that I should repeat it,&mdash;rejoicing in the Lord is wholly contrary to
+that boasting in the flesh which characterises some great religious
+pretenders well known to you and me. Beware of them! The
+energetic scorn of the phrasing is explained by supposing that the
+circumstances and the argument of the former Epistle had led to this
+animated denunciation, so that the Apostle recapitulates phrases
+that were well remembered in the Philippian congregation.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> <i>Remains</i>, iv., p. 156.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The statement which follows in the next six paragraphs is
+partly based on Pfleiderer, <i>Paulinismus</i>, p. 172 fol. He will perhaps
+be regarded as a tolerably impartial reporter on this point.</p></div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tn">
+<h3>Transcriber's note:</h3>
+<p>Variations in spelling have been preserved except in obvious cases of
+typographical error. Hyphenation is inconsistent.</p>
+
+<p>Page 331: The transcriber has supplied the word "a"&mdash;"who has not made it a matter of personal
+study".</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Expositor's Bible: The Epistle to
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+</pre>
+
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